4 Page 6-Sunday, November 21, 1982-The Michigan Daily TVLISTINGS (Continued from Page 5) holiday approaches, members of the widely dispersed Walton clan try to organize a fami- ly reunion. 8 ®~ MOVIE ***1/ "The China Syn- drome" (1979) Jack Lemmon, Jane Fonda. After his warnings that an atomic power plant is headed for a meltdown go unheed- ed, a nuclear engineer takes over the control room. ®O f 6 eQ S THE MAGIC OF DANCE * JIM BAKKER Q 0 DBEST OF MIDNIGHT'SPECIAL 530 S( )NEWHART IDMOVIE * "Virus" (1982) Glenn Ford, Chuck Connors. A deadly virus is stolen from a military lab and unleashed on the popula- tion, spreading a trail of death and destruc- tion. '1000 ()CAGNEY & LACEY HBO18 MOVIE ***1/2 "Prince Of The City" (1981) Treat Williams, Jerry Orbach. A New York cop is caught between federal pressure and loyalty to his fellow officers during an investigation of widespread police corruption. 'R' ® THE GOLDEN AGE OF TELEVISION "The Comedian" Mickey Rooney stars as an egotistical comic who thrives as a, star by devouring everyone around him. SED FAITH FOR MIRACLES ©Q (ED 90 Q NEWS w S i la MOVIE ***/2 "Nothing Sacred" (1937) Fredric March, Carole Lombard. A terminally ill girl receives two weeks of pleasure as part of a publicity stunt. IQ ® THE NATIONAL I JOURNAL (140 ©S4SIX GREAT IDEAS 10MOVIE ** "How To Succeed With Sex" (1970) Zack Taylor, Mary Jane Car- penter. A young man uses the instructions contained in a sex manual to seduce his unwilling girlfriend. 'R' ® MOVIE **1/2 "Wanda" (1970) Barbara Loden, Michael Higgins. After a painful divorce and a series of loveless affairs, a woman finds herself attracted to a bumbling crook. PG' 1:06QDNEWS 1'1004381) 1) NEWS STO BE ANNOUNCED The University of Michigan Gilt (7 0 0SANFORD ANDSON © 0 DSOAP Q ® SPORTSCENTER Q ® DICK CAVETT E 0CMACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT 11:05 Q (D WOMAN WATCH ) 6 NEWS 11:30 (2) ()MADAME'S PLACE o () THE BEST OF CARSON ® D! 8 0 ( S ® Q PBS LATENIGHT ® ADVENTURES OF THE FALCON 0 0 ® BENNY HILL 0 0 CHARLIE'S ANGELS m MOVIE ** "Your Ticket Is No Longer Valid" Richard Harris, Jeanne Moreau. A love affair develops between a fading tycoon and a beautiful woman. m MOVIE *** "Ghost Story" (1981) Fred Astaire, John Houseman. Mysterious deaths begin to decimate the ranks of a small circle of elderly men who share both a monthly storytelling get-together and a 50- year-old secret. 'R' 11:350 0 (NEWS O ® DETROIT FIGHTS BACK Peter Arnett examines the plight of the American auto industry and what factories in Detroit are tryno to do to improve the situation. WEI MARY TYLER MOORE 12:006 Q IRONSIDE ®DNEWS 80 00THREE STOOGES O m BIG 10 FOOTBALL HIGHLIGHTS OS®TO BE ANNOUNCED 6 ST. LOUIS SYMPHONY Celebrate the world premiere of a new violin concerto by composer David Amram featuring soloist Charles Castelman. 12:05 0 ! ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE 12:15 A MOVIE "Keep Rolling" (1940) Gene Autry, Smiley Burnette. 12:300 ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT 0D UNTAMED WORLD 0 ED0MOVIE **** "Goodbye Again" (1961) Ingrid Bergman, Yves Montand. Neglected by her lover, a Parisian lady accepts the attentions of another man. 12:350 () THE LAST WORD O mE MOVIE * 1/2 "Goodbye, Charlie" (1964) Tony Curtis, Debbie Reynolds. Shot by an irate husband, a playboy is reincarnat- ed as a girl. bert and Sullivan Society presents i/i1P.rn 1:00 6 Q SATURDAY NIGHT 0 ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTER- MAN il HBO MOVIE **12 "So Fine" (1981) Ryan O'Neal, Jack Warden. A stuffy college professor saves his father's floundering gar- ment factory by inventing a new type of ladies' jeans. 'R' 0 GREAT PERFORMANCES 0y MOVIE * * V2 "They Met In Bom- bay' (1941) Clark Gable, Rosalind Russell. A pair of jewel thieves is forced into fighting the Japanese instead of searching for a trea- sure. 1:15 I®MOVIE ** "Lady For A Night" (1942) Joan Blondell, John Wayne. A woman from a gambing boat marries a man for his wealth and a much-coveted position in soci- ety. 1:30 Q ®INSIDE BASEBALL (R) E MOVIE * * "How To Succeed With Sex" (1970) Zack Taylor, Mary Jane Car- penter. A young man uses the instructions contained in a sex manual to seduce his unwilling girlfriend. 'R' Q MOVIE * * "Convoy" (1978) Kris Kris- tofferson, Ali MacGraw. Truckers and cops attempt to outwit one another in a rough- and-tumble war on wheels. 'PG' 1:35 d MOVIE **** "The French Con- nection" (1971) Gene Hackman, Fernando Rey. Two tough narcotics investigators foil a huge heroin deal. 2:00 ©Q CBS NEWS NIGHTWATCH O ® ROMANCE THEATRE ED THE MAGIC OF DANCE 10 i®FUTURE SPORT A scientific explora- tion of athletic performance which can aid athletes in improving their game. (R) ® MOVIE **'/2 "Wanda" (1970) Barbara Loden, Michael Higgins. After a painful divorce and a series of loveless affairs, a woman finds herself attracted to a bumbling crook. 'PG' 2:30 0 ® MOVIE ** '/ "I Love My Wife" (1970) Elliott Gould, Bt'enda Vaccaro. A young surgeon turns to extramarital affairs when he becomes bored with his job and family. y-SPORTSCENTER 2:35 DHBO MOVIE ** "Loophole" (1981) Albert Finney, Martin Sheen. A criminal mastermind and a respectable architect plan to execute an elaborate bank robbery from the sewers below the streets of London. 2:500(EDl0NEWS 2:55 0 MOVIE ** "Sweethearts On Parade" (1952) Ray Middleton, Lucille Norman. The teacher at a music school sees her ex-hus- band return to town as head of a carnival show. 3:00 ®BUDDY HOLLY: REMINISCING Twenty years after Holly's death, this program examines the legend of this remarkable '50s artist and explores the changes which have occurred in the lives of the members of his band, his widow, his family and the musical world. ©D m NEWS F3MOVIE * * "Your Ticket Is No Longer Valid" Richard Harris, Jeanne Moreau. A love affair develops between a fading tycoon and a beautiful woman. 3:05 O m MOVIE * * 12 "The Green Glove" (1952) Glenn Ford, Geraldine Brooks. A World War I veteran gets involved in murder when he returns to France in search of a jeweled glove hidden during the war years. 330 a mE TOM COTTLE: UP CLOSE O3® COLLEGE FOOTBALL Notre Dame Fighting Irish at Air Force Falcons (R) m MOVIE ** "Good Riddance" Charlotte Laurier, Maurie Tifo. A precocious 13-year- old's obsessive love for her mother provokes a destructive sibling rivalry. 4:00 EmPBS LATENIGHT ©DEDBARRY FARBER ® ST. LOUIS SYMPHONY Celebrate the world premiere of a new violin concerto by composer David Amram featuring soloist Charles Castelman. 4:20(0D HBO MOVIE ** 1/2 "Any Which Way You Can" (1980) Clint Eastwood, Sondra Locke. Before settling down with his girl and petorangutan, a bare-fisted fighter signs up for one last, lucrative match. 'PG' 4:30 0 G®NEWS 4:40® MOVIE **/2 "Slightly Honorable" (1939) Pat O'Brien, Broderick Crawford. An attorney attempts to uncover high-soci ety crime and crooked policemen. Federal tax breaks aid wealthy (Continued from Page 1) income exceeding $50,000 a year make up only 4.4 percent of all taxpayers, but pay nearly 33 percent of all taxes even after taking advantage of various tax credits. Reuss said the study was the "most current and thorough" analysis of revenue losses resulting from 33 separate exclusions, exemptions, deductions and other tax credits provided for under existing tax law. It shows, he said, that the "most progressive" tax breaks under current law include the earned income credit, exclusion of disability pay, exclusion of untaxed unemployment benefits and tax credit for the elderly. The Treasury analysis indicated that only 2.2 percent of the benefits from the tax credit for the elderly go to those with incomes exceeding $50,000 and that high income taxpayers get no benefits from the other three. The biggest loss, about $24.4 billion, comes from the exclusion of pension contributions and earnings from taxation. Only 26 percent of the benefits from such tax savings go to high- income taxpayers. The second biggest loss in tax revenues, $19.6 billion, comes from the deductibility of mortgage interest oOi owner-occupied homes. The more af- fluent taxpayers get 30 percent of the benefits from that tax break, according to the study. world terrorism: Harder to combat 4 or The King of Barataria December 8, 9, 10, 11 Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Ann Arbor, Michigan s-SU dent $4.0Ot, (Continued from Page 2) eight months of 1982. Targets include diplomats, security forces, synagogues, banks, politicians and unfortunate passersby. Public places. often bristle with preventive weaponry. Some embassies are for- tified, on sealed-off streets. Bomb squads haul away suspiciously parked cars. IN EXTREME response, generals in El Salvador and Guatemala allow mysterious agents to kill or torture suspected left-wing terrorists-or sym- pathizers-by the thousands, Western intelligence sources say. Democracies seek to safeguard in- stitutions despite the terrorist threat. Suspects must not only be identified but also convicted and, if arrested in another country, extradited. As a result, known terrorists can of- ten slip across unchecked borders and go free, protected by incompatible laws and political differences. CIA REPORTS identify more than 100 groups that used terror for political goals since 1968, from romantics who bomb empty buildings for lost causes to technology-equipped commandos who kill en masse. Some are agents of governments, such as Syria, who work behing diplomatic immunity, intelligence sources say. Many share safe houses, arms, money, training and techniques. "We have no evidence of any unified com- mand, but when terrorists come to a town, they know where to go," says a top Interpol officer in Paris. UNTIL RECENT waves of violence, France and Belgium were considered terrorist havens, and police admitted privately to an unwritten truce with ac- tivists who left their jurisdictions alone. After the Goldenberg's assault, French President Francois Mitterrand vowed to "tear out terrorism at its roots." He added a "public safety" department to his Cabinet, reinforced the police and ordered strict border controls. But France shelters 150,000 registered refugees, and uncounted ac- tivists, including wanted Italians, Latin American guerrillas and Middle Eastern dissidents. Despite orders, road borders remain casually watched. ' IMPORTANT sectors in France op- pose new police computers as a threat to civil rights. Many argue controls on foreigners violate a tradition of political asylum. Jealousies among French police for- SHORT OR LONG Hairstyles for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State........668-9329 East U. at South U........ 662-0354 Arborland .............. 9975 Maple Village ...........761-2733 see what they do.' -U.S. Terrorism expert ces, the paramilitary Gendarmerie and intelligence services have erupted in public acrimony, and officers accuse one another of hiding information. U.S. and European officials complain' they are often frustrated, or confused, when seeking French help. "THEY sometimes just let people go to avoid political hassles," one U.S. of- ficial says, upset at a recent refusal to return Vicker Tcharkhutian, an Ar- menian wanted for a Los Angeles bom-. bing. France, in 1978, freed Abu Daoud, suspected mastermind of the Munich Olympics massacre, refusing ex- tratition to West Germany of Israel. Italian prosecutors accuse France of having harbored Red Brigade kingpins. "Maybe they will help now that they need us," an Italian official says. "But we'll have to see." BUT THE Socialist government last year granted amnesty to Jean-Marc Rouillan, leader of the anarchist group Direct Action, who had been captured in a shoot-out. Justice Minister Robert Badinter argues terrorism must not distort legality. Interior Minister Gaston Def- ferre insists terrorists must fear punishment. When police arrested two Rouillan lieutenants recently, and linked ,them to Palestinian groups, a conservative cartoonist had Defferre telling Badinter: "Please don't free them before the weekend. I have to paint my house." Belgian police set up an anti- terrorist unit and decided to com- puterize records. But Belgium remains a favorite black market arsenal. "It's no secret that 3,000 pistols a year disap- pear from the national arms factory, and that's only part of it," a Belgian of- ficer remarks.' IN WASHINGTON, a Justice Depar- tment specialist observes: "Sure, police cooperate. But some terrorist groups can't be infiltrated, and if they are, no one wants to en- danger his own agent to help someone else. There is so much political turf to protect, even within individual coun- tries, that I don't think we'll ever see really effective cooperation." He says the FBI controls terrorism by pursuing every case to the end. "We spent $4 million and two years to find the guys who shot a Cuban diplomat," he says. AFTER MUNICH, authorities mounted such strike forces as west Germany's GSG-9 and Italy's "Leatherheads." They agreed on anti- terrorist conventions and shared what they learned. "We were caught off guard at first with no anti-terrorist apparatus," says Arturo Chiodi of the Italian Interior Ministry. "It was like building a For- mula One racing car while hurtling down the track." West Germany's Bundeskriminalamt, the BKA, uses computers that can rout out safe houses by analyzing electricity and telephone use patterns. Last year, 35,000 Germans called police with leads, prodded by large rewards and a sense of social discipline. ITALIAN police plea bargain, using information from repentant terrorists to catch those still at large. Terrorists also adapted. A secret British Army report on the Irish Republican Army typified assessments of other groups: "The mature terrorists, including the leading bombmakers, are usually suf- ficiently cunning to avoid arrest. They are continually learning from mistakes and developing their expertise." MOST NOW avoid confrontation, leaving victims rather than taking hostages in a method the IRA calls shoot and scoot.' They flee across borders, leaving confusing clues that create international legends and ob- scure tracks. "For a while, it was Carlos (Ilich Ramirez Sanchez), and police saw him behind every tree," says a Belgian specialist. "Now it is Abu Nidal." A Polish-made WZ-63 machine pistol is the presumed signature of Abu Nidal-Hassan Sabri al-Banna-a Palestinian dissident condemned to death by the Palestine Liberation Organization. HIS COMMANDOS are linked to anti- Semitic and anti-PLO attacks across Europe, including the June shooting of Israeli ambassador Shlomo Argov in London which triggered the Lebanon war. But the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the extremist PLO faction which mounted the Munich Olympics assault, remains a focal point of international terrorism. PLO Chairman Yasser Arafat renounced terrorism in the mid-1970s. But as one Arafat aide put it, "If established governments cannot con- trol all of their own people, how can you expect us to?" INTELLIGENCE sources say Israel's invasion of Lebanon cut into arms supplies to European groups and dismantled PLFP training centers. But one U.S. specialist sums up the lingering problem: "Even if you get the big guys, there are the little ones who get together in a back room' and decide to use terror for some cause. You can only wait to see what they do. It's a fact of life." 'Even if you get the big guys, there are the little ones who get together in a back room and decide to use terror for some cause. You can only wait and I OR I Coming Soon Look for -MOV IE in the next issue of your 4r college news- paper. >, , s,<.. '2 RAI ., '. °;." "%' NO f a