David Lynch's latest is playing tonight at the Michigan Theater. Patricia Arquette stars in Lynch's latest bizarre film filled with the director's classic twists and turns that basically make no sense at all. Showtime is 9:15 p.m. and tickets are $5 for students, $6.50 for others. Monday April 14,1997 Local author Henkin reads at Drum tonight By Jessica Eaton For the Daily Flannery O'Connor said that every- e who lives to the age of 10 has had W ugh experience to write about. Joshua Henkin, the author of "Swimming Across the Hudson; has taken those experi- ences of his own and put them into a fiction work that . Jo University Prof. Charles Baxter calls "consistently ving and won- fully accomplished." Henkin will read his experiences from his first novel at Shaman Drum this evening. Henkin refers to his development as a writer as a simple series of coinci- dences. Studying political theory in college, he planned to go to graduate school either in political science or phi- losophy and to become "an academic of sorts." He applied for scholarships in England and didn't get them, so he Aan writing for a magazine in California. "I saw how much bad stuff was being written. I had always wanted to do it but thought I couldn't, but I felt oddly encouraged. If there were so many other people who were trying and failing, I should be willing to try and fail," Henkin said. Henkin, an Ann Arbor resident, received his MFA from the University * 1993. He has received a PEN Syndicated Fiction Award, Hopwood awards in the short story, novel, and essay categories, . and a James Fellowship for Novel in Progress from the Heekin Foundation for "Swimming Across the Hudson." His works have been published in the New York Times, The Nation, The Southern Review and elsewhere. He presently teaches inde- pendent fiction writing workshops in n Arbor. "Swimming Across the Hudson" is I the story of an adopted young man's search for his own identity through the discovery of his birth mother. It explores the questions of upbringing and heritage. Said Henkin, "I think adoption served the part of a metaphor. I'm interested in characters who E V I E W have trouble with the relationship shua Henkin between the past Tonight at 8 and the present, Shaman Drum characters who Free have trouble mov- ing on because of the past. The fact that he (Ben Suskind, the main character) is adopted and the Jewish tradition both serve as a way for the present and the past to get melded. "I once had a teacher who said you should write what you know about what you don't know or write what you don't know about what you know. That's what I was doing here; I was writing what I knew about what I didn't know. The facts of the book are not borrowed from my life. But the feeling about the book, relations between generations, losing a parent, surely are borrowed from my own life. The texture of the book comes from my own experience. It gets turned into art in some ways. You need to know me well in order to know the ways in which it's about me and the ways in which it's not;' Henkin said. When asked to give some advice to student writers, Henkin stressed the value of reading. "I've had students who want to write but don't want to read, and I think that if you don't like to read, you're not going to be passionate enough about the language. A lot of people have this romantic image of a writer as someone who hangs out in a cafe in Paris, or roughs it in the Himalayas. I think that time is better spent writing or reading than it is trav- eling through the Himalayas. I'm all for the Himalayas, but it shouldn't be a tax deduction because it helps you write.' Kula Shaker (from left) Alonza Bevan, Crisplan Mills, Paul Winter-Hart and Jay Darlington. Kula Shaker makes waves in Detroit By Brian Cohen For the Daily Don't look now, but it's happening again. The Beatles did it first with talent and charm, Oasis did it with less talent and more vulgarity, and now the invasion from across the Atlantic is continuing with another group of lads who are poised to follow in the hallowed footsteps of their fellow countrymen. Yet aside from the fact that they might share a love of tea and crumpets as their afternoon snack of choice, Kula Shaker don't have St all that much in common with their British contemporaries. They don't make the tabloid headlines with loose- lipped tales of alleged cocaine use or destruction of hotel property. Instead, wide-eyed mystic Crispian Mills and his band of retro-cosmic gurus have pushed a new approach to pop music - one that encompass- es everything from the lore of the Arthurian Grail to Indian mysticism, but not excluding a deep apprecia- tion for late '60s music or, of course, an obsession with Spinal Tap. Kula Shaker's success has been remarkable over- seas. Along with the rest of the population, they wit- nessed their debut album "K" sell at a faster rate in its first three weeks than Oasis' "Definitely Maybe," not to mention a string of Top 10 singles, and an invitation to last year's Knebworth Festival, which turned more than 125, 000 fans into believers. Fresh from a sold-out tour of Japan, Kula Shaker are now on their second official tour of the U.S., and on Friday, they brought their melodic blend of Eastern influenced vibes to a sold-out St. Andrew's Hall in Detroit. Even from their laid-back-yet-determined attitude 1 displayed before the show, it was clear Kula Shaker had only one thing on their minds: To slay the multi- headed dragon of American listeners by making the strongest impression they possibly could. As soon as Mills emerged from the darkness on stage and began wailing on the intro to the stellar opener "Hey Dude," it was clear that Kula Shaker was going to do just that. Sporting a freshly chopped Ziggy Stardust- E V I E W esque hairdo rather than his tradi- Kula Shaker tional flowing golden locks, Mills held the audience captive from t. Andrew's Hall note one. The soulful "Knight on April 11, 1997 the Town" followed next, 'which kept the momentum swirling, as did the rough rawness of "303."'A spirited rendition of the hippie-cynical "Grateful When You're Dead/Jerry Was There" came next as the spotlight shined brightly on Mills while he delivered an impressive off-the-cuff solo half-way through. Although Sir Crispian corrals much of the attention on stage, Kula Shaker is in no way a one-man show. Clad in tight black-and-white checkered flares, bassist Alonza Bevan showed his musical prowess not only with his athletic bass lines, but also with his fine tuned back-up vocals. Jay Darlington's handiwork on the Hammond organ and the mellotron enriched Kula's live sound with a lush quality, and drummer Paul Winter-Hart's frantic and youthful approach to his unconventional drum kit boosted the crowd to a whole new level of energy. "We're gonna play a country and western song now," Mills joked before kicking into the as yet unrecorded newbie "For This Love.' Easily the high- light of the performance, Kula Shaker's chemistry mixed flawlessly on this enchanting rocker as Mills and Bevan's vocals melted over top a combination of psychedelic keyboards and jagged guitar. Continuing to tear through most of "K' Mills next led into "Tattva." While it was the first single to grab the attention of American listeners, Friday's perfor- mance had its slight difficulties (Mills actually turned around to shoot a nasty look at Winter-Hart after a missed drum beat half way through the tune). Technical problems continued as the Hammond gave out on part of "Hollow Man,although the song's gor- geous melody was still able to seep through. "We must have a cup of tea someday," Mills teased before drenching the crowd in the thick driving b-side "Gokula.' It was here that the magic returned on stage: as Mills and Darlington exchanged solos and laughs, while Winter-Hart kept a driving beat in the back. The. band's current single, "Hush," a cover of the 1968' Deep Purple hit, kept the retro vibe pulsating as Mills feverishly shook his head while playing his guitar on his knees. Following a short recess, Kula Shaker returned to the screaming audience with the keyboard ladened "In To The Deep" and the galloping "Smart Dogs?'.On the latter, Mills climbed on top of the Hammond during an elongated free-form jam and extended his arms as if he were "a spaceman sitting in the sky." After re-tun- ing his guitar, Mills and company eased into "Govinda," which enveloped the crowd in a mesner- izing haze and then finished them off with a swirling punch of guitar. With an affinity for the spiritual and a style deeply. rooted in the grooves of the late '60s, Kula Shaker has risen above the water in the sea of imitators in todAy music world. Having a hit debut album and an amaz- ingly energetic live stage presence packed into their still growing repertoire, Kula Shaker is ready to bring its magical mystery tour to the rest of America and launch itself into the stardom the group deserves. Author and Ann Arbor resident Joshua Henkin will read from his first novel, "Swimming Across the Water," at Shaman Drum tonight at 8 p.m. WANTED Volunteers for Sleep Research Studies Men and Women (agef t145) Who Have: NoDifficulty In Sleeping Men and Women Difficulty n Sleeping If you're interested In..... Visual Basic, OLE, Active X, Visual C++, Custom Control Building, SQL/ODBC, M, QuakeC Client Server, or Web Programming ...then we're interested in you. MICHIGAN EC@RDSIJ scheduled for (tuesday) s rneeleasdatsecs suectopii i chageswithoutn oicepsrry w 0d- I e A' Volunteers needed for a study of the common cold on sleep. (You do not need to have a cold in order to participate) I I