.9 ARTS Friday, January 6, 1989 The Michigan Daily BY LISA MAGNINO FOR the past two years or so, it has seemed that you can hardly turn around without seeing yet another book or movie about "the Vietnam experience." It's at the point where all of these recollections have little to no effect anymore. At first glance, University graduate Patricia Weaver Francisco's first novel, Cold Feet, could fit this category. Cold Feet, however, is set not in the jungles of Vietnam but in Ann Arbor;Cold Feet is not about a war veteran, but about Yoder, a war evader, who returns to Ann Arbor after six years in Canada. The cold reality of Cold Feet is warmed by Francisco's compassion- ate portrayal of Yoder, as she trans- forms Yoder's feelings into evoca- tive images. Before he left Ann Ar- bor, he remembers, "It had seemed then as if the world were a street dance on a summer day." When he returns, he finds a very different world, "(It's) impossible to account for so much lost time. It hadn't seemed lost until he'd gotten back." The reader feels Yoder's pain and disillusionment at seeing Sal, his college sweetheart, working at the same bank that they had protested against in college. However, Francisco does not in- dict those who changed their convic- tions: "Yoder is an extreme exam- ple," she says, "he was 'out of time'... Sal struggled with the transition 'in time.' She's hanging in there to slug it out." For Francisco, Cold Feet repre- sents her own attempt at "slugging it out. The seeds of the story were planted in a University creative writing class taught by Richard Ford. Francisco remembers, "Ford is a soft-spoken man ... but when he Page 10 t ebellum A 2 Patricia Weaver Francisco's Cold Feet examines the war at home - and the to redefine 'the perience.' war inside Vietnam Ex- He desires intimacy; as he watches his best friend and his lover, he comments, "This murmur of words and movement was intimacy and he wanted it," yet when he has a chance of obtaining it, he flees. Ultimately it is Yoder's reconciliation of his convictions with the existing situation that of- fers him the chance of intimacy - and Francisco does not believe that this reconciliation is only possible in fiction: "I do think people have reclaimed some sense of what they had 20 years ago. One person can do what they want; they don't have to answer to others' values. People are taking a quieter, more individual ap- proach." In keeping with the kinder, gen- tler nation that we've been promised? Well... no. "Lately I've been quite pessimistic about the fu- ture. I don't love what I see. I think it's important that we look at (the Vietnam experience) and talk about it so that we don't stumble again." Francisco's pessimism becomes even more evident in Yoder's com- mentary: "I know I sound like a folksinger, but I hate it when people say we were irresponsible. We were responsible toward a new world. Some of us. Not me, but people I knew. Everyone was trying to imagine - sometimes hallucinate - a new world. Because this one wasn't right - and it still is not right. Someday it's going to rot out from under us..." But despite all its warning flags, and all of its unsettling reminders of past mistakes, Francisco achieves an honesty and compassion usually passed by in the cynicism of con- temporary fiction. As Yoder says, Cold Feet does what anything worthwhile should: "It was good to be touched in the places that hurt." Griffith makes film Work BY MARK SHAIMAN Melanie Griffith is a Working Girl. No, this does not mean that she is a prostitute. Instead, each morning she takes the Staten Island Ferry to the big city, and when she gets to the office she replaces her high tops with the heels she has carried there. But along with her shoes, she has brought ambition, and the result is a modern, though tamed down, version of a Horatio Alger story. She may not be dirt poor to start with, and at film's end she isn't rich, but Griffith does embody the Amer- ican dream, which in today's business world and in more realistic terms can also be known as Survival of the Fittest. And Griffith is the fittest for the role. Director Mike Nichols, whose The Graduate still stands as the representative film about the lack of personal direction that characterized the '60s, may just have created a film that will represent the '80s in years to come. And he had the good sense to let Melanie Griffith be the true star of the film, especially considering her heavyweight co-stars Harrison Ford and Sigourney Weaver. returned the story, he just lost it. He said, 'This isn't a story, this is just the beginning ... it's full of ques- tions. You do something with it ... it's not done. But I was done. I didn't have anything else to say. "I found the story six years later and realized that I did have a lot more to say. (The experiences) were far enough away to have things to say. I finishedCold Feet to answer my questions about the future. Writing is the only way I can think." And often, inCold Feet , you'do see Francisco's thoughts at work. She adds the interior monologues of a variety of characters at the end of many chapters - monologues that don't follow "logical" chronological order but are somehow connected. Strands like these, that are seem- ingly unrelated, run throughout the novel, and, as Francisco explains, are actually complementary: "Writing is like weaving, and the themes are like threads. It takes lots of different threads to complete the process." By taking the strands of Vietnam, weaving in the mindset of the late '70s, and adding the eternal threads of love and death, Francisco has cre- ated a beautiful story that transcends the barrage of Vietnam works. Ulti- mately Cold Feet is a story not about a man evading the draft - an experience that few have had - but about a man evading emotions - an experience that everybody has had. See Working, Page 11 I THE MULTICULTURAL UNIVERSITY - Enlightenment, Empowerment and Equity: A Challenge of the King Legacy A commemorative symposium Sunday, January 15 Keynote address: The Honorable Willie Brown, Speaker California House of Representatives 4:30 p.m., Hill Auditorium Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Concert "Scenes From The Life of A Martyr" 8:00 p.m., Hill Auditorium January 15 and 16,1989 Monday, January 16 Plenary session: 8:30 a.m., Mendelssohn Theatre Speaker: Sharon Robinson, Executive Director, PUSH-Excel Unity March: 12:00 noon, from S. University and Washtenaw to the Diag Workshops will be held throughout campus beginning at 1:30 p.m. at The University of Michigan Closing Address: The Honorable Mayor, Andrew Young Mayor of Atlanta, Georgia 7:30 p.m., Hill Auditorium All events are free and open to the public. Sponsored by The University of Michigan Office of Minority Affairs. Seduction By Light By Al Young Delta Fiction Paperback $7.95 Billed as a "contemporary metaphysical comedy," Seduction by Light succeeds on all three counts. How the flimsy stuff of pop/junk culture (Joan Rivers, soap operas, a coke-sniffing sit-coin star named Fiona Prince) is molded into a solid metaphysical novel is the wonder of Al Young's handiwork. Mamie Franklin is the undeniable star of this Hol- lywood production. A middle-aged actor/singer/dom- estic/psychic/mother with a knack for telling a story, she lives and breathes every word of this novel. Her voice is as unsparingly candid as the Huckleberry Finn voice from that book made by Mr. Mark Twain. Her moves are as brassy and confident as the Count Basic Orchestra. "Oh I know him like the inside of my mouth," she says of a meddling neighbor. "Soon as Burley taken sick, her come old Sneaky Pete grinnin at me and of- ferin his help. Remember when Mike Todd died and suddenly up pop Eddie Fisher all up in Elizabeth Tay- lor's face, consolin Liz and seein her around?... hey that's the stuff you gotta watch." You gotta watch Mamie Franklin as she endures a cavalcade of semi-ridiculous characters, demanding her time, her love, and her considerable psychic abilities. Between a hedonistic but kindly employer, a flaky but earnest son, and a powerful but insecure old boyfriend, she's got her hands full. Add to that the death of her common-law husband and an earthquake that pulverizes x her Santa Monica home and you might be stuck with an intolerably hopeless catalogue of misfortunes. But Mamie manages to keep the whole raft afloat with her homespun wit and wisdom: "My theory is this," she says, "that a long time ago, we used to didnt talk at all, and yet we understood one another more or less perfectly, probably better than we do now with all the computers and word processors and, sattelites and lie detectors and push-button telephones- and answerin machines we got." Since Mamie's spirit is bigger than all outdoors - or as an Emily Dickinson poem spotted on her friend's t- shirt puts it, "The Brain - is wider than the sky," - the scope of the novel extends beyond the boulevards of Hollywood. A walk on the Astral Plane with her idof Benjamin Franklin takes her to the pyramids of Egypt and revolution-era France. While some might cringe at "A the stereotypically West Coast Shirley MacLaine-isms, all the talk of previous lives and de-materializing makes perfect sense in the context of the plot. It comes off as a hip-but-dignified answer to the classic journey- to the underworld. According to the back cover, Bill Cosby's known ', about Al Young for years. It's time for the general~ reading public to catch up with T.V.'s favorite dad. An acclaimed poet and jazz critic as well as novelist,, Young has produced in Mamie Franklin a bona-fide hero and in Seduction by Light a substantial, satisfy- ing novel. Luckily for us, he's paying Ann Arbor a visit next week for a reading in the Rackham East " Conference Room. -Mark Swarti A OF SA CALL FOR LS&A y u DEANNOMINATIONS . 81 * I 1 " The search for the next dean of Literature, Science I & Arts is underway. * * As a student YOUR input on this decision is * important. SPlease nominate any professor(s) whom you believe * would be an excellent candidate for this position. * Your suggestions are greatly appreciated, and vital to I I this decision process. * I I nominate: * I Dance Is For Everyone! ?Ulcfll jdzr baHllt anrld ballet floor- barre' by Ann ,Arbor's best instructors. * All levels: Beginner through advanced. Pre-school -The Ark will host a benefit Saturday night for the Shelter Association of Ann Arbor. Mr. B., boogie-woogie pianist, is probably the hottest Ann Arbor artist going right now, and he'll show his stuff, along with Tracy Lee Komarmy, vocalist of the legendary Tracy Lee and the Leonards, humorist O.J. Anderson, and songwriter Jay Stielstra. Go help out - tickets are only ten bucks. Showtime is 8 p.m. i SCHOLARSHIPS AVAILABLE Looking for a scholar- ship? Air Force ROTC has two- through four-year scholarships z 3s III i #'4