The Michigan Daily-Friday, March 26, 1993- Page 9 ___Carter stretches human potential by Laura Alantas With phone number in hand, I reached for the phone. Just then, it rang. Joe Gold wanted to tell me that Christopher Carter, the "psychic entertainer" whose show "Theatre of Thoughts" I would be previewing, was at home and now would be a good time to call him for the interview I needed. I laughed. I told Joe thatI was just about to give Carter acall. In fact, I had the telephone number in front of me. "You see," said Joe, "I read your mind." Reading minds is what Chris Carter does. Well, sort of. "In essence, what I do is read minds by using psychologi- cal techniques and body language to interpret what people's thoughts are and to influence peoples' actions," said Carter. "I also use psychological techniques to make certain actions happen." Such a craft, Carter insists, does not result from some mystic hocus-pocus. Rather, he has developed his brain to respond to minute details and signals that most people ignore. "I have no special powers. What I do can be mastered by anybody who spends alot of time on it," Carterexplained. Through the synthesis of these multiple techniques, Carter has developed an hour long theatrical show in which he showcases his talents. He performs different "skits" to reveal the diversity of his talent. For example, a "Russian Roulette" sequence involves Carter subconsciously influencing an audience member to shoot him with the one paintball gun of the four offered that is not loaded. "The audience participates and is responsible for what happens. For this show to work well, it requires coopera- tion," said Carter. "Everything is an experiment, which is a nice way of saying that it doesn't always work." Audience involvement does not necessitate the audience believing all that they see. Said Carter, "I like people to maintain a skeptical attitude. It's incredibly healthy. There's nothing supernatural going on here, though. Anyone could learn to do this. There's really nothing to be skeptical about." Carter became interested in the ability to change people's actions without their knowledge while he was a drama student in college. "I was always anticipating the other actors' actions, so I eventually tried to enhance it and see if I could influence those actions," said Carter. From this experimentation, he developed a full time career. Carter now holds workshops for corporations that focus on motivational skills, and he also performs at private parties. No matter who his audience may be, all of Carter's performances have the unifying theme of the stretching of human potential. "My audience should be prepared to see a lot of para-normal, psychic things that are exciting and cool. They should also be prepared to admit that there's more they can do with their minds." THEATRE OF THOUGHTS will be peformed on Friday, March 26 at 8p.m. in the Pendleton Room of the Union. Tickets are $3. For tickets or more information call Joe Gold at 995-4519. Mad, bad and louder than you The time has come. Gather up those tired discs by Nitzer Ebb, KMFDM, Frontline Assembly, or any other sequence- happy, so-called 'industrial' band that fronts like they really matter. Burn 'em. Or better yet, trade 'em in at Wazoo and snag your bad self a copy of Cop Shoot Cop's latest mindfuck, "Ask Questions Later" (you'll have to wait 'til March 30, when it hits the streets). This bad-assed power(tool) quartet churn out the genuine article. CSC isn't another doodle-brained dancefloor schmaltz outfit. This tribe of two-bass players, a metalbox percussionist and sound-byte sample guru create gut-wrenching, avant-shard terrorism. "Ask Questions Later" attacks your frontal lobe like some sort of post-Phillip Glass classical train wreck, due to the dense and elaborate orchestration. Lastyear, CSC reduced the Blind Pig to a pile of smoldering rubble. Tomorrow night, they take on the foundation of Detroit's St Andrews Hall, along with art-grungesters Quicksand and Helmet's sonic cousins, Surgery. Tickets are $8.50 (in advance), all ages are welcome, and doors open at 7:30 p.m. Bring your pith helmet, unless you wanna leave with a plaster-caked and bleeding head. Notfor the faint of heart. Pantera's angry vision by Kristen Knudsen No one who has trudged through a rally in the Diag would argue with the assertion that the world has some problems. Racism, AIDS, the deficit, police brutality (and/or stupidity). Whose piss-poor excuse is this for a world? Indeed a good question, posed by Pantera on their first album "Cowboys From Hell." The anger continues on their second, "Vulgar Display of Power," wherein Pantera is self-described as "fucking hostile." But, again, this is not without reason. Vocalist Philip Anselmo, guitarist Diamond Darrell, drummer Vinnie Paul and bassist Rex have witnessed and endured enough of what Rex called "corporate fuckin' bullshit" to know that they don't like it. Their fairly resolute decision to stop making videos for an unsupportive MTV and release them instead on home video is just one response of many to the unfortunate state of affairs in America today. "'It's a pretty fucked up system," Rex said of the country's corruption in general. "Wejust have control freaks, police trying to arrest you for ajoint instead of tackling some fuckin' major problem down, just 'cause of the way you look or whatever." Pantera's view might sound negative, but deeper inspection of their lyrics reveals their constructive desire to see a change; even a hope that we can "unite and rise." In this way, Rex said that Pantera's aggression is released "through a positive channel." But the statement-packed songs are not in any respect meant to be political. "It's written from Phil's perspective of whathe sees everyday and the songs are just stuff that pisses him off from his point of view that certain day, but it's not saying politically let's go (and revolt, etc.). That's not the kind of band we are," Rex clarified. "It's not saying we can change the world; it's saying if you see this same kind of thing maybe you can relate to what we're doing." Basically what they're doing is making some pretty intense music, not recommended for those of the fragile heart (or eardrums). The music features a sound known by those-in-the-know as Power Groove, the heavy background which both matches and demands the harsh lyrics. "It's just an aggressive style of music and you can't write about daisies, or talk about walking through a field in the mist and the dew," Rex joked. Although he promised that Pantera's next album, which could be ready by the ' end of the year, will be "fuckin' heavy," Rex assured that Pantera's anger does not control their lives. "We get angry about different things but we have a good time just like anybody else, and we don't sit around just pissed at everything," he laughed. The outlet for Pantera's anger is their music, but like Rex said, the point is not to change the world. As far as change goes, Rex so eloquently concluded, "It's a long fuckin' road." Man, when these guys are mad, they're really mad - and when they're right, they're right. PA7NTERiAwiTf appear tomorrow night at 7p.m. with SACRED REICH at the State Theatre in Detroit. Doors open at 6. Tickets were $18.50, but sorry it's completely sold out. Morsel More Than a Mouthful Morsel. Baby. Where have ya been all my life? Why did you have to wait this long to nonchalantly waltz into my life? Why did I have to discover one of the most creatively fantastic and downright brilliant bands Ann Arbor's ever produced now, mere months before my departure from our fair burg? When an advance copy of their "G.IB.LE.T." ep mysteriously showed up on my doorstep, I had to wonder, "What is this?" Well, let me tell ya - this is crash and burn, this is apocalypse noize, this is it- Think Jane's Addiction on more estrogen and less smack. Crunch 'n' munch riffs battling power saws and she-devil, flute-treated vox. Kamikaze guitars plunging gleefully to their deaths, while one big mess o' drums drop-kick the whole mess into another dimension. Tonight Morsel celebrates the release of this slice of hellish heaven at Ypsi's Cross Street Station (511 W. Cross) with equally amazing bliss merchants Billy opening. If you ain't got a car, walk, catch the bus. Aloha Entertainment' s 4~4 24 T AT E T H E AT E 4 HOUR on State St. at Liberty MOVIELINE Golden Globe Shirley MacLaine ass Kathy Bates " Jessica Tandy Tom CRWSE * Du MooiE JACK NicHoLsoN NOMINATED FOR BEST PICTURE 2:00* 4:30 7:00 9:39 11:45* 2:00* 4:30 7:00 9:30 11:45* *PLEASE NOTE: 2: Show Sat/Sun Only " 11:45Show Fri/Sat Only Pantera says: whose piss-poor excuse is this for a world? mill T t ;' he Office of Minority Affairs is now accepting applications for Student Leader positions for the Wade H. McCree, Jr. Incentive Scholars Summer Program. Student Leaders work with a diverse group of high school students from the Detroit Metropolitan area who have been designated as University of Michigan Incentive Scholars. Student Leaders reside in the residence halls with the scholars and serve as role models and guides. Thva orrvide information about the trials and 11 11 11