12A - The Michigan Daily -- Thursday, September 6, 2001 ARTS 'Startopia' combines sci-fi, action, strategy Hitchens questions the iconic Kissinger, his actions, motives By Jim Schiff Daily Fine Arts Editor "Startopia" is one of those rare games that successfully combines multiple genres into one phenomenal package. It's a little bit sci-fi, a little Grade: A- Startopia For PC their hands with game. bit action, and a lot of strategy. Eidos Interac- tive, creators of "Final Fantasy VII" and "Tomb Raider," has another hit on this engrossing In "Startopia," the player is put in control of a tri-level portion of a space station. You can either play in a campaign mode, in which each suc- cessive mission requires you to com- plete a more difficult task, or against computer or human players over the internet. The latter mode, called "sandbox," requires you to beat out your opponents for control of the entire station. The campaigns gener- ally allow you to build skills as you progress, and are narrated by a self- indulgent, haughty Englishman who sounds like actor Michael Caine with a pole up his rear. Station domination is a complex goal, and it requires the player to micromanage all aspects of the game at once. You have to build basic strue- tures that provide lodging, sanitation, food, and entertainment for your vari- ous worker aliens. There are nine dif- ferent races of aliens, and each works on a different facet of your station. The Kasvagorians, for example, are the first to fight off enemy players when under attack, and the Groulien Salt Hogs work in your factories to produce exchangeable goods. Each race also has distinct personalities that either add or detract from their productivity, depending on how skilled you are at controlling them. While most of "Startopia's" struc- tures benefit the player economically, others are designed purely for enter- tainment. Where the game really shines is in the designs of these edi- fices, which are both impressive graphically and refreshingly original. On the "entertainment deck," you can build love nests, general stores, dis- cos, hotels, bars, and giant tele- scopes. The Dahenese Sirens, for example, ensure that your residents receive plenty of love, and the Polvakian Gem Slugs will provide energy for your station if they are kept happy. On the "biodeck," you can support dozens of different environments on the same land mass. Each environ- ment supports a different type of plant, which in turn produces a crate of cargo. Your aliens also come up to the biodeck to swim around in water Courtesy of Eidos interactive Aliens race through the graphically pleasing 'Stankonia.' and to seek religious guidance from the Zedem Monks, another one of the alien races. Each of the three levels is crucial in making sure the station runs smoothly and your residents stay happy. In addition to its excellent graphics and sound, "Startopia" is simply a lot of fun. Each alien comes with a dis, tinct personality and history, includ- ing a "criminal record," and it's enjoyable to watch them dance or grow plants on the biodeck. "Star- topia" doesn't have the wicked sense of humor of games like "Dungeon Keeper 2," but it has enough life to keep you entertained hours. Drawbacks? "Startopia" only has a few. The game only comes with a brief manual, so you'll have to feel your way around the station before you get the hang of it. "Startopia" also isn't particularly difficult-the computer opponents don't attack you until late in the game when you've researched most of the technology. But in spite of a few letdowns, "Star- topia" is still as heavenly as its name. I The Trial of Henry Kissinger Christopher Hitchens Grade: A- Verso Books By Amer G. Zahr Daily Arts Writer Christopher Hitchens dedicates his recent book to "the brave victims of Henry Kissinger, whose example will easily outlive him." It is a quite a strong statement, befit- ting the engaging writing that fol- lows. "The Trial of Henry Kissinger" (Verso Books, 2001) outlines the ins and outs of the former Secretary of State's involvement in massacres, coups and assassination attempts in Indochina, East Timor, Chile, Bangladesh and Washington. In an interview for the BBC, Hitchens called his book "the case for the prosecution in a war crimes trial against Kissinger." As conscientious readers, we are of course fully within our rights to demand that Hitchens not only make his accusation, but also sustain them with clear evidence. Hitchens does this beautifully, by unearthing and referencing government documents and memos that have either never before been seen or very rarely been cited. Hitchens opens his catalogue of charges not with Cam- bodia or East Timor, but rather with a story very few of us have been privy to. He outlines Kissinger's role during the Paris peace talks on Vietnam in 1968. Kissinger was, at the time, not only serving as a non-official advisor to President Johnson's camp, but was also conveying infor- mation to the Nixon campaign on what terms were to be on the table during the talks. The Nixon campaign used this information, according to Hitchens, to create a back channel with the Vietnamese in order to assure them that they would get a better deal from an incoming Republi- can administration than they would from the president's. Of course, not only was it illegal on behalf of the Nixon campaign to intervene in state talks, but-the "better deal" promised by Nixon came some four years after 1968, and contained almost identical terms to those put on the table by the Johnson administration. During that interval, 20,000 Americans and innumerable amounts of Viet- namese lost their lives. The chief beneficiary of this action was Kissinger. For his troubles as a double agent, Hitchens tells us, Kissinger was made a national security advisor and subsequently Secretary of State. Hitchens writes of Cambodia, where Kissinger con- vinced his boss to widen the conflict with vast bombing in Cambodia and Laos. Evidence points to the fact that no one advocated that the U.S. go to war with these coun- tries. Nevertheless, conservative estimates are that U.S. forces killed 350,000 civilians in Laos and 600,000 in Cambodia. We also read Hitchens' accounts of-what took place in Bangladesh, where General Yahya Khan, using U.S.-supplied weapons, toppled the newly democratical- ly-elected government, murdering at least 500,000 civil- ians along the way. The National Security Council urged condemnation, while Kissinger staunchly refused. In the course of the killings, Kissinger corresponded with Khan and thanked him for his "delicacy and tact." In Chile, Hitchens informs us that the Secretary of State helped orchestrate the overthrow of democratically elected Salvador Allende in 1973, along with the assassi- nation of General Rene Schneider. As a result, Augusto Pinochet rose to power as moderates fled their homeland. Hit squads financed by the CIA tracked down Allende supporters and murdered them, including the car bomb- ing in Washington, DC of Allende's Foreign Minister, Orlando Letelier, as well as an aide named Ronni Moffitt. East Timor also makes Hitchen's book, as we are told of President Ford and Secretary Kissinger's meeting with Suharto in 1975, in which President Ford told reporters that the U.S. would not rec- ognize the newly freed nation of East Timor. Before Air Force One had landed back in America, Suharto marched into the tiny country, killing some 200,000 civilians. Finally, we hear of Kissinger's pos- sible involvement in assassination attempts against an influential Greek dissident journalist, with National Security Council documents to back r; up the claim. Hitchen's accusations are serious, and they call for us to reassess our own standards, or lack thereof. One of the author's underlying goals is to force us here in America to consider whether we are living by any double standards, calling for the Pinochets and Milosevics of the world to be brought in front of war crimes tri- bunals, all the while turning a blind eye to a possible war criminal in our own midst. 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