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VwU Rolling Rock** .*9.49 Coors Light 16 02. or Regular, warm ease •9.991 OM Milwaukee loose ease, warm. . . *6.29 # Zonm Asti Spumante750 ml.*4.99 Seagrams Wine Coolers4 pk.*2.79 Baileys Irish Cream 750 ml.*12.99 Retcher & Oakes Blush Sprite 4 pk.. *2.99 LeRoux Peach Schnapps t.7$.<8.99 <5 mail-in rebate makes net cost <8.99 ... and much, much more through 11-4-87 Just North of 27th & Vine 477-7516 Movie reveals Vietnam conflict with horrific but truthful images By Kevin Cowan Senior Reporter• “In The Year Of The Pig,” Shel don Film Theater, plays today at 7 p.m. and Saturday (no charge on Saturday) at 3,7 and 9 p.m. U.S.A., 1969,101 minutes. i | Movie Review 1 Emile de Antonio’s “In The Year 1 Of The Pig” further documents the hell on earth created by the American “police action” in Vietnam. Through vivid militant montage, Antonio shows the inhumane strong-arm tac tics used to wrestle women, children and men into non-human existence. Antonio combines documentary form with filmic aestheticism to create a political horror. “We must continue our bombing until we destroy every work of man if necessary,” said General Earle G. Wheeler. And bomb they did. We all know that. We all know five pounds of shrapnel were dropped on every square inch of Cambodia, as well as Vietnam: consistently cruel punish ment for crimes never committed. The camera’s eye catches Viet namese peasants on the natural turf, bowing and pleading like well-trained animals. The look of horror in their eyes is worlds more powerful than the shell-shock psychosis portrayed by the American veteran. Why? Because “our boys over there” were on the killing end of things. The Vietnamese were tortured, herded and killed. Antonio utilizes combat newsreel footage, authentic political commen tary — the incredible amount of disin formation spewed on the American populace — and current interviews with political theorists, war corre spondents and Vietnam veterans to relay the hideous barrage of war crimes committed by the powers that were. American intervention in Vietnam actually started in 1845, said a profes sor of Vietnamese literature at Cor nell. So it’s not one of those things that merely started to boil in the early 1950s. Intervention stepped up in 1945 when Ho Chi Minh held the high post in Vietnam. Paul Mus, professor of Buddhism at Yale, acting as nego tiator for the French president, De Gaulle, was sent to contact Minh for the first time. Mus informed Minh that De Gaulle wanted him to join the French Union. Minh asked what the union was: a circle or a square — a metaphor from a Confucian proverb. A square, to Confucius, was solidity, the earth; a circle was more associated with heaven and intelligence. Mus said he I didn’t know which it was, and Minh < reacted with surprise. His response to De Gaulle’s request: 1 “I have no army (it’s not true now), i I have no finance, I have no diplo- i macy, I have no public institutions, I i have just hatred. And I will not disarm I it until you give me confidence in I you.” I “Ho trusted us,” Mus said, “and we betrayed him.” Broken trust and lies stand front and center in Antonio’s work. He continually juxtaposes what we were told and what was actually happening. Upon the initial screening of “In The Year Of The Pig,” Antonio was criticized for turning out a severely slanted documentary, which he agrees with wholeheartedly. But in the light of the tainted information espoused by the U.S. government, a bit of bias towards the underdog seems insignifi cant. To document all aspects of the Vietnam incident in one film would be futile — nothing short of a 48-hour documentary. Actually, the incorpo ration of aestheticism and angle are refreshing from the normal set-cam era, medium close-up shots that plague so many documentaries. There’s nothing wrong with making the package visually pleasing. Con sidering the enormously intense con tent, within itself graphically disturb ing, a little internalized creation makes the viewing dramatically more rewarding. Shot after shot bounces back and forth between clean-cut army gener als and politic ians, repealing with glib lies the humane manner with which we are handling the Vietnam situ ation; then on to a militia brutalizing peasants into submission. “The prisoners were executed in our outfit as a standard policy,” said David K. Tuck, former U.S. private in Vietnam. A bush rattles with convulsive action, and the broken and maimed body of a Vietnamese peasant falls to the roadside. We are so inundated with Ameri can propaganda, it’s hard to believe that such demonic treatment of other human beings could go on, condoned, for decades. This is not the case, obviously, for the typical Vietnam peasant or soldier. For centuries they’ve been subject to aggressive domination by political institutions seeking power for their own good. The physical destruction of their vil lage does not mean the absence of existence. If their village is destroyed, the com m unal group remai ns together and rebuilds it from scratch. Antonio makes the point that the internalized ability to survive is one of the reasons Vietnam was a police action that could never be won. Antonio’s film is an abrasive mas terpiece worthy of standing front run ner in the Vietnam genre, striking a much-needed blow to the U.S. system of strong-arm domination. The time has come for Americans to realize the horror ever-present in so much of our foreign policy. Courtesy of Sheldon A scene from “In the Year of the Pig." ‘Laser Visions’at planetarium Mueller Planetarium has added a new series, “Laser Visions,” to its regular schedule of laser light shows. “Laser Gold” features music of the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s in a multimedia extravaganza. On Nov. 15 Chuck Berry, Elvis and other ’50s stars are featured in “’50s Flashback.” “Laser Rhapsody” (Sunday through Nov. 22) illustrates favorite artists such as Phil Collins; Crosby, Stills and Nash; Kenney G; and Fleet wood Mac. “All Hits Laser Show” (Nov. 1 and Nov. 29) rocks with the music of Whitesnake, Bon Jovi, Huey Lewis and the News, and others. “Laser New Age” (Nov. 8 and Dee. 6) is a fusion of classical, jazz and pop, such as Mannheim Steamroller, Paul Winter, George Winston and Shadow fax. All "Laser Visions” shows start at 3:30 p.m. on Sundays and last about 50 minutes. Admission is $3.50 for adults, S3 for high school and college students, and $2 for children under 12. Tickets for the shows will be sold at See LASER on 16