The Michigan Daily-Sunday, Nov Page 2-Sunday, November 4, 1979-The Michigan Daily film HAD NOX B Y TERR YLaBAN r 'I>I' It i 1 , y 11 l I (f lil 1 , 1.. ;i rli ... V. \ - in I ~11 t: 506" A" E lw ON \ I kv 'Zo i' I J J 'E 1 Lw.i p. II - II Lu.. wE-LI.--\\ SN1A~ K%.VE.U-CAMl * o --f e '1 Y I t. HA 1NA M AH-- t4A A HiA HA \NN Ac.TW(4> 1) AA N A M' itiW tO!Jw1~ (Continued from Page 6) frames right out of Murnau - notably an arching high-angle shot of Nosferatu loading coffins onto a coach- and finds an equivalent to the first movie's eerie black-and-white in a washed-out color scheme dominated by grays and greens. The photography during the Bremen sequences in particular is ex- traordinary. The whole town seems in- fected by a deadly haze, and Nosferatu's phantom ship, with its striking red sails, is-a haunting spectral image. What Herzog hasn't done is tran- sformed the material into something of his own; nor is he especially eager to fall back on the conventions of the genre. (I saw the movie at a Saturday matinee in Briarwood, and all the kid- dies who were there to see the Big Bad Vampire walked out half-way through; as a straight blood-thriller, Nosferatu can't cut it.) According to standard Dracula doctrine, of course, the vam- pire is driven to blood-sucking by a sexual impulse. The vampire myth seductively mingles sex and death as experiences in which one gives oneself up to the Other - to a journey of infinite mystery, outside the realm of every day consciousness. Herzog reveres the mystery of Nosferatu's menace over Dr. Von Helsing and his silly science. The dialogue is filled with lines like, "The absence of love is the most abject pain." Yet he doesn't bring out the sexual implications of the story with any more finesse than Murnau, whose Dracula was a fright but essentially de- sexualized. The gaffe is especially glaring in light of the casting of Isabelle Adjani as Lucy. Her face bleached of color and eyes sunk into their sockets, Adjani's sexual presence has been so systematically undercut that she's de- humanized. Since she's given very little chance to act, other than cowering behind her upturned hands and screaming, Fay Wray-style, Nosferatu's obsession with her doesn't make much organic sense; it's just another lousy given. Yet the real disappointment is the vampire himself. Coated in ghastly blue make-up, Klaus Kinski has been given some Mr. Spock ears and two rat- like front-teeth that protrude grotesquely over his lower lip. He's even got the long fingernails (and this time, they're real). But where he was the most striking thing in the film over a half-century ago, here, he's musty and classically "movie-ish"-a true Hollywood monster, out-of-kilter with his more subdued surroundings. We never feel the mad energy of his ob- session, because he isn't really a character - he's an idea - and his presence doesn't cloak the film in a kind of deathly murk. In the last scene inl Herzog's Aguirre, the conquista dreds of cha scamper ove The image s energy -''A spiritual dec scene in Nos army of whit ts don't give: of fact, they some nice ho -ME . . -~ - -. mu op, 8undaV G 162H31 51 610 7UB 8jU 91S b10 11 A CROSTIC PUZZLE I 21 U 22 K 23Ii 241 T 25L 261M S 42 i 1 i ____-L J 431R 441 N 451Q 461F > 5 6 K61 D 61 CF61 Lu7 871 F c io1 siia C 10 G13 A 128 K '129 -,1 - i - I ---I 1481N Q 1501 J 169U 1701Q 171) BY S TEPHEN J. POZSGA I Copyright 1977 INSTRUCTIONS Guess the words defined at the left and write them in over their numbered dashes. Then, transfer each letter to the cor- responding numbered square in the grid above. The letters printed in the upper-right-hand corners of the squares indi- cate from what clue-word a particular square's letter comes from. The grid, when filled in, should read as a quotation from a published work. The darkened squares are the spaces between words. Some words may carry over to the next line. Meanwhile, the first letter of each guessed word at'the left, reading down, forms an acrostic, giving the: author's name an4 the title of the work from whi h the quote is extracted. As words and phrases begin to form in the grid, you can work back and forth from clues to grid until the puzzle is complete. Answer to Last Week's Puzzle By the next morning, the seven Mercury astronauts were national heroes. It happened just like that. Even though so far they had done nothing more than show up for a press conference, they were known as the seven bravest men in America. Tom Wolfe, The Right Stuff * ~~ j Lucy Harker (Isabelle Adjani) is perplexed by her husband's (Bruno Ganz) delirious condition in internships (Continued from Page 3) It's getting more common for colleges and universities to sponsor in- ternship programs, but the University's Career Planning and Placement programs are more comprehensive than ones at most other schools because it is so well-staffed, director Liang said. The Washington and Business intern programs are unique in that staff members do the difficult, time- consuming groundwork of setting up in- ternships with offices and organizations. Students are coached in resume writing and interviewing. They often spend many hours hunched over typewriters, writing cover letters and resumes, filling out tedious ap- plications, and agonizing through in- terviews. Filtering through hundreds of inter- nship applications is just as time- consuming for personnel directors, but internships can be as valuable for com- panies as they are for students. Com- panies try to give their interns a good summer experience, the business school's Johnson said, because the student serves as a representative of the company after returning to cam- pus. Business intern program director Liang agreed. An employer doesn't have to invest much money or time in training interns, but still manages to get an important job done, Liang said. Often companies can save money by paying lower salaries to interns who do the same jobs as would a higher-paid permanent employee. Liang and corporate officials also said that internships are a way for organizations to recruit future em- ployees. "We've got a chance to look at A. GM product subject to recall campaigns in 19738 1975 (3 words) (Make £&Model) 8. Initiator of the conveyor belt assembly line (Full name) C. Curious: prying D. Support stockings (2 words) E. Throw out: evict F Expensive American classic car G. German automobile make (Comp.) H. Man famous for his razor I. Sum of the processes by which on animal or plant takes in and utilizes food substances Jvibrate abnormally 152 36 52 56 62 74 79 120 128 158 98 124 188 16 76 97 113 50 8 145 170 182 13 53 115 69 40 130 90 109 123 77 153 41 83 184 136 127 54 68 155 2 103 134 165 154 12 20 32 47 71 88 39 114 141 181 37 60 72 92 107 125 131 14 1 143 148 84 19 3 175 58 95- 21 34 48 55 78 119 164 167. 180 6 57 43 151 169 121 K. Mechanism for connecting the power of an auto engine to the road wheels L. Ring louder or more beautifully M. Aromatic seed spice N. Laughable: comical 0. Impressive; striking P. Ford Motor Co make 0. Open: complete (3 words) R. First Areericon spy to be caught and execued (Full nome S Coving tender T you dont succeed" 3 words) 15 49 23 67 91 129 147 108 166 179 111 118 26 116 35 186 161 51 70 138 27 172 144 82 100 106 101 5 45 81 149 93 38 104 135 7 112 122 17 65 139 94 133 159 59 85 75 160 177 168 102 28 11 24 33 171 86 150 46 187 44 64' 99 31 140 163 137 174 132 183 10 18 29 42 63 80 87 110 156 162 176 185 25 146 4 126 173 96 W 73 157 them," explained Herb Peters, of the office of College Relations at Ford Motor Company. Said Leo Perazza, director of student placement for GM, "We pay pretty good money," while in- terns get a crack at "more meaningful assignments." Since many other firms , also hire college undergraduates, "We're competing for students," Peters added. While the University's Washington and Business internships programs in- volve hundreds of students annually, various schools and departments work at helping students find summer jobs. The School of Business Administration guides students through the internship jungle by aiding them in contacting firms and training them in "search strategies," placement service director Johnson explained. Eighty per cent of graduate business students found career-related summer jobs, but, John- son pointed out, half found those jobs through their own initiative and contac- ts, while the other half relied on the of- fice. "It's an easier market for the MBA than the BBA ... but the summer market is still a tough one," Johnson said. Students with specific training such as accounting may find the search easier, Johnson added. Undergraduate business interns typically earn between $800 and $1,200 per month for a summer position and graduate students can make as much as $1,500 per month, ac- cording to statistics compiled by the business school placement office. While the School of Engineering's pla'eme.nt -office ,doe rt arrange sure e positions ,on. engineering students, a them contac Eva Rushlo school's pla few" sumn permanent Although jc an optimist graduates, they get as can," Rush them an ide into." Accor statistics, en an average$ But in a where the professiona summer int it is in a gl nalism. engineers t Robbins, Trucking Op Company, s But peopl probably w and receive those in e technologica veys have in years that sciences. Fa may provid a prospecti' ted to prov explained petition for se, he adde vital to 'gi market." In terms of your attrac- tiveness to an employer. . . it is greatly enhanced by an in- ternship.' University internship program director Cheryl Liang U Chrysler auto subject tor campaigns in 1970 1 (2 word)Make & M 22 66 89 142 117 105 170 9 3 f c.. . P- .. .. r r i . J,} .-ti ..i." . r 7 r. :f f _ , ,,1