The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, October 23, 1979-Page'; DESPITE PA YLESS PA YDA Y Wayne workers still on the jobI r DETROIT (UPI)-Most workers in vital Wayne County ETOIT UPMostyng wheobkdespiitls Wek'payneCout "If this hospital closes down because no one shows up f agencies are staying on the job, despite last week's payless work, what would happen to our patients?,They could be o payday. mothers or children, you know." Council 25 of the American Federation of State, Country The br c ou ke s2. and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) has urged its mem- bers to keep working, pending the outcome of a suit on the cough up their property taxes early, but there appeared little pay question. Aachance that would materialize. But a spokesman for the council, which represents 4,000 Paychecksfor 3,350 clerks, secretaries, administrato4 county workers, said many employees already live from and elected officials were printed but not issued last week payday to payday and simply can't afford to miss their and another 2,400 county workers face their first payless paychecks. payday this week. "WE'RE DEDICATED and in jobs that are important to About 800 employees were not affected by the county the people we serve," said a Wayne County General Hospital fiscal crisis because their salaries are paid from federal operator. ants. .Down with billboards! AP Photo A Maine state highway crew prepares to dismantle a billboard marking the beginning yesterday of enforcement of a 1977 state law banning unsightly billboards. A federal court upheld the law after a lengthy challenge from advertisers. The state has agreed to buy 226 signs for an average of $3,200 a sign. The total bill comes to $3.5 million. p Fin ally.. (Continued from Page 7) straight from "Heart of Darkness": Willard (Martin Sheen), a burnt-outi ,.S. Army intelligence officer, is sent ipriver from Saigon to Cambodia toi 4ssassinate Col. Walter Kurtz (MarlonI Orando), a brilliant Green Beret officer; Mho's gone insane, lording over the neighborhood Montegnard tribesmenI and turning them into a murderous ar- my. Conrad avoided easy moral formulas by swathing his scheme in richly meditative prose; Coppola attempts something similar with his rich, imagery and densely electronic soun- dtrack. Looking at the violence and atrocities, we're morally off-balance. In the most horrifying scene, Willard and his boat-mates (Sam Bottoms, Larry .Fishbourne, Albert Hall, and Frederic Forrest) massacre some Vietnamese peasants aboard a sam- pan; it's the perfect marriage of ruthlessness and convenience. Later, echoing that horror, Kurtz recounts a story of how some Viet Cong entered a South Vietnamese village, discovered the children had just been innoculated for polio, and cut off the innoculated arms. "The gi'nihs of that," exclaims Kurtz. "The will." In his murderous temple, adorned by disembodied heads and bathed in blood, Kurtz has staged similar scenes; he's taken war to its logical extreme, which makes him no "crazier" than anyone else fighting the war - just infinitely more efficient. Apocalypse Now neither endorses nor rejects that line of thinking. More to the ijoint, it recognizes Kurtz' implications as an historical reality. What nags at us slightly is the feeling that' Coppola didn't entirely trust his images to bring across his ambivalence toward the destruction in Vietnam. Willard's- diary-like narration is a frustratingly awkward attempt to spell out the film's ambiguities in pat formulas - a self- defeating proposition. Spoken by Sheen in a jaded monotone, the narration is occasionally illuminating; more often, it reduces the movie's grandest paradoxes to banal ironies. The Willard character in "Heart of Darkness" was named Marlowe; the Marlow Sheen most resembles is Philip - Raymond Chandler's burnt-out moralist of a detective. With lines like, "Charging a man with murder in this place was like handing out speeding tickets at the Indy 500," Sheen sounds as if he's making mental notes for some trashy novel he intends to write upon returning to the States. .a Coppola now! MICHAEL HERR, who wrote the narration, must have known what he was doing by making Sheen's journey into a grand pulp-novel adventure fan- tasy; unfortunately, his scheme works against Coppola's abstract designs. The whole feel of Apocalypse doesn't come from dialogue, but from its visual tex- tures and sounds: Landscapes ex- ploding into flames, scary/seductive whirring of helicopters. In fact, at its best, the movie captures the fear/thrill ambivalence of Dispatches, Herr's superb journal of war reportage. The book might have served as direct in- spiration for scenes like a bump-and- grind Playboy bunny show in a neon-lit outdoor arena, which plunges Americana at its gaudiest into the eerie surroundings of a military nightmare. The movie moves to even more crazed heights; Willard seems to have reached the eighth circle of chaos when he comes upon a group of black soldiers, firing into the darkness without benefit of a commanding officer. In his quest for the truly cosmic, Cop- pola ignored some of his greatest strengths as a filmmaker. Apocalypse Now boasts not a single memorable character. Sketchy characterizations worked just fine for Conrad, of course, and they work for Coppola, only one can't help wishing we could care about his crew of soldiers the way we care about the Corleones, or about Gene Hackman's forlorn wire-tapper in The Conversation. The four young soldiers on Willard's boat are defined by the broadest generalization: This one's hot- tempered, that one's a cut-up. Besides, they start going insane before we get a chance to know them. COPPOLA, I believe, tried to take his movie into a realm "beyond" charac- ter. He fashioned a visionary spectacle that becomes even less literal and more metaphysical as the journey progresses. When Willard finally reaches Kurtz' murderous haven, the images are so garishly morbid that one thinks of the Jonestown atrocities. The H AIRSTYLISTS For Men, Women and Children at DeScels Stylists Liberty off State-1-9329 EtU. at South U.-662-4354 Arborland-971-9975 Maple Village-761-2733 ultimate horror, though, is supposed to be the elusive figure of Kurtz himself, and Brando - though he gives a good performance - is not as transcendently evil as we might want. Coppola obviously hoped that the ac- tor's sheer physical presence could bring Kurtz the same haunting mystery that Klaus Kinski brought Herzog's Aguirre. He doesn't. That's why the final half hour never adds up to the sort of magical epiphany we so desperately want. Perhaps, like the handful of visionary epic filmmakers before him, Coppola set himself an impossible task. But if true greatness eluded him with Apocalypse Now, what's left is an ex- traordinary document of both Vietnam and a filmmaker's personal odyssey. As such, it looms over every American movie in recent memory. t1~ ~oun J 1k tWe Courd Presents I-ETA-Pi contest Prize is a Car 5-7pm Fri .Oct.26 Must be registered by 4:00 at the bar. (; 1140 S.University 668-8411 Mon.-Sat. 11am-2am Sun. 3pm-12am V Jvi I This little card is goingpae -9 ~- -. saa Michigan Union _1auin Lobby _---=.. 0 o S. University -- Madison Now you can use your Ann Arbor Bank Money North Campus Commons Machine Card at three new Parking Lot Entrance campus locations. Murtin-) MIf you have an Ann Arbor Dank :loney Machine card, you can do your personal banking business at three handy new locations. Bonistee Blvd For your convenience. Ann Arbor Bank has installed automated tellers on The ('niversity of Michigan campus. ou'l find the new machines in place at the Michigan U nion, the North Campus Commons, and-the Administrative Services Building at Hoover and Greene. And even though they might say "Ready Teller," you can still use 'Our Nloney Machine Card-the same card that fits our five other Fuller Rd Glacier Way machines- -to make withdrawals, deposits, transfer funds, even pay bills. Ann Arbor Bank and Trust. Finding new ways to make banking more convenient for V'o(). OCTOBER 27, 1979 A CAREER CONFERENCE FOR ACADEMIC WOMEN University of Michigan LS 9 A / Rackham Ph.D. Programs PRESENTED BY HIGHER EDUCATION RESOURCE SERVICE (HERS) IN COOPERATION WITH College of Literature, Science and the Arts, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies. The Office of Career Planning and Placement the HERS conference will emphasize the development of professional skills such as: RESUME WRITING " INTERVIEWING " NEGOTIATING " MENTORING " DEVELOP- ING PROFESSIONAL NETWORKS 0 DEVELOPING CAREER COOPERATIVES. HERS Director Lilli Hornig and Associate Director Martha Tolpin will join with I I Administrative Services Building /h'or eStreet Entrance Hoover St I I Demonstrations will be held 10 a.m.-2 p.m. October 25 and 26 at Michigan Union and North Campus Commons; and October 31 and November 1 at Hoover and Greene. D r----. 0