Page 6--Friday, August 4, 1978-The Michigan Daily Battered parents take their share of abuse NEW YORK (AP)-One morning, a the son asked. "You've still got me to Pennsylvania woman who divorced her hit you." husband because he beat her weekly An 81-year-old Chicago man was was punched in the mouth by their 17- chained to a radiator by his 19-year-old year-old son. "Aren't you happy now?" daughter. She stole $2,300 from him The Ann Arbor Film Cooperstve presents at MLB 4 FRIDAY, AUGUST 4 TO CATCH A THIEF (Alfred Hitchcock, 1955) 7only-MLB4 A suave, smooth, retired jewel thief (CARY GRANT-who else?) suspected of new thefts when an imposter copies his methods, falls in love with an ice-cold American girl (GRACE KELLY), who has a diamond-encrusted mother in tow and is turned on by the thought that Grant may be the real thief. Hitch- cock's funniest film.-"Champagne."-N.Y. TIMES. NORTH BY NORTHWEST (Alfred Hitchcock, 1959) 9 only-MLB This chic, crackerjack suspense classic features three American Landmarks- the U.N., Mt. Rushmore, and CARY GRANT. A sinister wit (JAMES MASON) and his kept man (MARTIN LANDAU) head an espionage ring that keeps try- ing to kill innocent Cary, an ad exec mistaken for on FBI agent. The crop-dust- ing sequence and the climactic chase across Mt. Rushmore are among Hitch- cock's best set-pieces. Music by Bernard Herrmann. "Aces."-N.Y. TIMES. Tomorrow: CHINATOWN & CARNAL KNOWLEDGE before she set him free seven days later. He told police from his hospital bed that he would not press charges. IN NEW YORK, a 19-year-old youth was arrested for thrashing his mother and stealing her money. Repeatedly. He tossed off a final plea as police led him away. "Aw, come on Ma. I only hit you a couple of times." The social workers and scholars who move about the veiled corridors of family strife say no one is sure how many parents are battered by their of- fspring. But they say that this most private of miseries-the son who slugs something all of-us found as we started to share information," said Sue Bienemann, director of a new coalition of 18 Pennsylvania projects for bat- tered wives. "It's a strange thing, because often- times the mothers are reluctant to disclose that their children beat them. They want to protect them. They don't want to get them into trouble," she ad- ded. AFTER INTERVIEWING more than 2,100 families, Gelles and Murrary Strauss, a University of New Ham- pshire sociologist, concluded that as 'Aren't you happy now?' the son asked. 'You're still got me to hit you.' I THIRD WEEK Mon., Tues.; Thurs., Fri. 7:30-9:45 Sat., Sun., Wed. 1:20-3:25-5:30-7:35-9:45 - - - STARTS TODAY Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 7:30-9:40 Sat., Sun., Wed. 1:25-3:30-5:30-7:35-9:40 ~PG, Could Conquer r4 NOW SHOWING Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 7:30-9:45 Sat., Sun., Wed. 1:15-3:20-5:30-7:35-9:45 1 his mother, the daughter who shoves her down the stairs-is more common than most would suspect. Through the burgeoning number of shelters for battered women, bits of in- formation have surfaced about of- fspring injuring their mothers. Next to nothing, however, is known about those who attack their fathers. "IT'S THE LAST family problem to be explored," said Richard Gelles, a University of Rhode Island sociologist. "It is a hidden problem, but it's PETER FALK In 1976 MURDER BY DEATH DAVID NIVEN ond PETER SELLERS loin Folk in Neil Simon's tongue-in- cheek tribute to the great detective filims of yesteryear. Five world famous sleuths are sent to a mil- lionaire's home to figure -out Tru- man Capote. Sat: CASABLANCA CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT at07:30 & 9:30 OLD ARCH A UD $1.50 many as one in 10 parents-both men and women-have been kicked, slugged, punched and otherwise bat- tered by their offspring. "The number may be higher, because not everyone will talk about it," Strauss said. The researchers believe one in five parents may have suffered lesser abuse at the hands of their children, an ex- pression, perhaps, of the adolescent turmoil that can bubble over: objects lobbed at their heads, shoving, pushing, furious verbal abuse. BUT AT ITS MOST explosive, Gelles says, thee is "stark evidence" that such physical abuse is learned at the knee of an assaultive parent. "Of the 5 or 6 million kids who assault their parents, about half are probably kids who've been assaulted by their parents," he said. Gelles and Strauss think the violence goes beyond self-defense or revenge. To strike out-to win by decking a parent-is the way these young people learned to handle family disagreemen- ts. COUNSELORS AT women's shelters agree. They contend that youths who batter their mothers learned abuse from their fathers-men who feel they can reign supreme over their households only by beating their wives.