C Nt'IZEN KAE Orson Welles' cinematic masterpiece, "Citizen Kane," will be shown tomorrow at the Michigan Theater at 1 p.m. The showing is free. Wednesd 9 lone 5, 19967 Jim Carroll to provide literary experience at Blind Pig y Karl Jones aily Arts Writer Some men are born with an excess of words inside of them. Jim Carroll is one of these men. When the words and the stories start flowing, the author of such critically acclaimed works as "The Basketball Diaries" and "Living at the Movies" has a way of letting time slip by unnoticed. "I'm not really 'on tour' right now," Carroll said. "Mainly in the past year, *ve been doing a lot of colleges. I mean, I've been with one of those giant speakers' agencies with like Diane Sawyer and Schwarzkopf and stuff. I guess I'm one of the few people who reads poems and does something like that." For Carroll, "something like that" could be one of his many creative out- lets, including spoken word or music. in his trip through Ann Arbor, how- er, he plans a strictly literary jour- ney. "I may not have any music backing me up, but I do have some lyrics from songs that I've written recently," he said. "I might just rap some of those. Sometimes they're better that way. Some songs can work fine without music." As far as a distinction between writ- ing song lyrics and writing poetry goes, *arroll insists that the lines are pretty clear-cut. "I hate when people call your lyrics 'poems.' Because in an aesthetic, spiri- tual sense, you're trying for the same affect on the audience - to affect not just the intellect but the heart, too. But in a technical sense, they're completely different," he explained. Carroll admitted that he wasn't lways into the poetry scene, though - pecially in the "Basketball Diary" years of his early adolescence. "I thought poetry was sissy stuff, like all the kids in the Irish Catholic neigh- borhood," Carroll said. "Then I got a scholarship to this real exclusive private school with these hip, rich kids, and I got into poetry there. But at Catholic school, this one brother was teaching me, and he liked my compositions in English, so he made me sports editor of the school newspaper. "He thought I had talent," Carroll continued. "So he made me cut out the The Blind Pig should provide an intimate atmosphere in which to view Jim Carroll. ''REV IEW Jim Carroll and Immigrant Suns Blind Pig r Friday,June 7 Doors open at 9:30 p.m Tickets $12.50 at the door sports in the New York Times and underline metaphors and similes, and I would use them in these things that I would write about. I can still remember lines that I wrote. Like there was this one guy named Morales, and he was a really good, fast runner, and at the track meet. I said, 'Morales walked away with everything but the floorboards.' And I'd use alliteration like 'Marvelous Morales' and stuff like that. Well, that was a little trite." By that summer, a 12-year-old Carroll had already develoned a love where the newspaper left off. "I started to write the diaries because I wanted to write a novel, but I just didn't have the wherewithal to sustain a plot idea and characters. So I just decided to write about my life - not in a 'dear diary' kind of way. I mean, I only wrote it on days that something anecdotally interesting happened. "And I don't know where (the writing talent) came from because no one in my family was artistic. In fact, they thought that wriiting made people a little sissy or something," Carroll laughed. When asked about the recent film version of his boyhood diaries, Carroll seemed pleased with the performances - especially Leonardo DiCaprio's portrayal of himself - but disappoint- ed with the script's overall bend from reality. "I thought the director just totally blew it at this certain point. It just got too dark or something," he said. Carroll plans to finish up two pend- ing novels sometime in the near future, which will be a step in a new direction for an author whose endeavors of that length have been autobiographical up to this point. "They're a big change for me ... They're in the third person. I've written short stories and stuff, but not a novel with a plot. It's like a real blessing, but it was kind of like a curse because two of them came at once." If Carroll is worried about finishing up both novels, he probably shouldn't be. The right words have been coming to him since his childhood days of shooting hoops and shooting drugs. And bad directors or not, you can bet Jim Carroll's story has not nearly come Barry White to sing deep at Fox Theater Barry White is to R&B what James Earl Jones is to acting. Both artists' rich, bass- toned voices have earned them great fame. If you wanted to hear Jones' booming speech you would have to check out a copy of "Star Wars," but if you'd like to expe- rience White's deep-voiced lyrics firsthand, you're in luck. He's coming to Detroit's Fox Theater. White is making his second appearance since the release of his latest LP, "The icon is Love" (A&M), and it can be expected that a fair portion of his concert this Sunday will feature songs from that album, especially his hit single "Come On" and the harmony-laced "Practice What You Preach." Of course, much of his show will feature many of his old-school hits. With a mus- cal career spanning further back than the years in which many of us were born, White has a virtual cornucopia of musical material with which to hit his crowd. The show starts at 8 p.m. on Sunday at the Fox Theater. Tickets are $37.50 ad can be purchased at the Fox Theater. - Eugene Bosren, Daily Arts Writer Leonardo DiCaprio, right, played Jim Carroll in Carroll's "Basketba UP .Unixversity of Michiigan Ho.Spitais Research :tor Pa ' LOSE TOIOLBS,'4 ANV He:althy .drug-free subjects between..1 845 3 Dded- 1 2 visiis and loo©d drawing. T-LlTliChromium Picolinate AVAILABLE AT Pars $10200 Rite Aid * Meijer's Inc. " For more inforniation. (all He 'Bellai 764-~>34 JUNE 12 -16 Michigan's Premier r ringall the Multi-tap lobster A ou can eat! ERVATIONS A MUST! ive Maine lbsters flown fresh daily! 13TH ANNUAL 338 S. State Street 996-9191 I IL