The Michigan Daily-Thursday, February 3, 1983-Page 5 Truckers disrupt food By The Associated Press Food shipments to some Eastern cities were curtailed yesterday by a truckers strike that has erupted into warfare on the highways with more than 300 trucks damaged, one driver slain and 27 people injured. "It looks like war out there," said' Chief Deputy Edmory Rush in Colleton County, S.C., who was urging sheriff's departments in surrounding counties to step up patrols of major truck routes. "We don't want this to be a bloodbath." Officials at the giant Hunts Point Terminal Market in New York City said shipments of produce slowed to a trickle after remaining near normal during the first two days of the strike by the Independent Truckers Association. "Today it's dead," said Tom White, deputy manager of the market. Mike Pfluger of the U.S. department of Agriculture station at the market said wholesale prices had already jumped as much as 30 percent. Pfluger said supplies of beans, cauliflower, celery, eggplant, green peppers and tomatoes hve dropped. He noted that 70 percent to 75 percent of the area's fruit and produce arrives by truck. Some trucking companies in Canada have suspended shipments to the United States because of the violence. "A load of potatoes is not worth a life," said Gary Hatfield, a potato broker in Hartland, 'New Brunswick. But Terry Rodes, prsident of the New England Produce Center just outside Boston said, "So far, everyting is moving on schedule." Mike Parkhurst, head of the association which clais to represent 30,000 of the nation's 100,000 indepen- dent truckers who own and operate their own rigs, called the strike Monday to protest scheduled increases in fuel taxes in April and highway use feels in 1985. While the independents represent about a fifth of the nation's truckers, they haul about 90 percent of the produce. Many drivers were clearly f by the violence this week tha 155 trucks hit by gunfire, 167 by rocks and bricks, a few t ched, tires slashed, nailsa scattered on highways and cidents of vandalism and sab least 31 states. A member of the Teamst was shot in the neck and ki " driving near Newton Grove, Monday night. Another dr serioisly wounded by a guns unloading his truck in Utah year-old Pennsylvania girl s fractured skull when a brick off a truck into her family's remained in guarded conditi day. Much of the violence has Pennsylvania, Ohio and Mic Ohio, police say there have b than .60 incidents with 17 truc gunfire and about 35 pelted w and bricks. In Columbus, Ohio, yester gun-wielding men briefly hi shipments frightened Lawson Co. food delivery truck that t has seen was found abandoned a short time damaged later. rucks tor- "A man jumped up on the running and glass board on the driver's side," said the other in- driver, Verne DeVenney, 41. "He otage in at swore at me a lot. He said that Lawson's and Kroger's weren't going ers Union to run here." Police in Pennsylvania lied while say there have been at least 147 strike- N.C., late related incidents, with 36 trucks hit by river was gunfire, 87 damaged by rocks and two hot while cases of arson. and a 14- One of three truckers sitting at a uffered a table at a truck stop in Winfield W.Va., bounced yesterday produced by a small car. She derringer from his pocket. "If they on yester- shoot me, they'd better do it from long distance," said the trucker, who s been in refused to give his name. "Because if higan. In they get close to me, I'm going to blow een more their damned heads off." ks hit by with rocks d a y , twoia e a jacked a , OON Rights to cancer cure disputed AP Photo Pope John Paul II celebrates a solemn mass with the newly elevated Car- dinals last night in St. Peter's Basilica. 18 priests adde to College of Cardinals VATICAN CITY (AP) - Eighteen new princes of the Roman Catholic Church, resplendent in red vestments, became cardinals yesterday and were embraced by Pope John Paul II as symbols of the international faith.. The primate of John Paul's native Poland, the archbishop of Chicago, and the first cardinal resident in the Soviet Union were among the priests from 16 nations accepted into the College of Cardinals. THE 21/2-HOUR consistory - or gathering of the top-ranking church body - increased the number of Eastern bloc cardinals from five to nine. and gave three countries their first cardinals - Marxist-ruled Angola, predominantly Buddhist Thailand, and the Ivory Coast. "With the steady increase of the worldwide function of the College of Cardinals, the need was felt to ensure that it was matched ever more ac- curately by the college's actual com- position," the pope ,said in Italian during a public ceremony in the Paul VI audience hall. In a private gathering beforehand, 48 of the 120 incumbent cardinals met privately in the ornate Consistory Hall to hear John Paul read out the names of the new cardinals who waited outside. AFTER THEIR acceptance, the New NR dea (Continued trom Page 1) iit will be up to the Regents." Virginia Nordby, executive assistant to Univer- isity President Harold Shapiro, said i there was nothing in the Regents' by- ~laws which would conflict with Crowfoot's appointment. CROWFOOT said he is comfortable with the three-year position, and he said he understands the situation surrounding his unusual appointment. He added that he would like to guide the school to a point where a full nationwide search can be conducted. That point may be visible in the future, but the coming weeks will be traumatic for the school. Frye's action on the proposed budget cut will be a final decision unless the Regents question it at their next meeting. SNR students are talking to in- dividual Regents and staging protests on campus to gather support for the school in the final phase of the review. Crowfoot said the students have been "a posititve force in the review. They've just been incredibly supportive of the college." he said. "I certainly understand their concern and interests," Frye said of the studen- group filed into the modern audience hall to cheers from 8,000 flag-waving relatives and friends who had traveled from all over the world. John Paul, the first non-Italian pope in more than 450 years, has continued a trend begun by Pope John XXIII to in- ternationalize the church. Cardinals elect the pope and serve as his "senate," although they only ad- vise. Membership of the college in- creased to 138, but only 120 are under the age of 80 and eligible to vote. AS A CARDINAL, Archbishop Jozef Glemp of Warsaw will take home solid evidence of papal support that is expec- ted to help him in his dealings with Poland's Communist military gover- nment. Similar prestige goes to Archbishop Julijans Vaivods of Soviet Latvia, a noted author once imprisoned ina labor camp, and to Archbishop Alexandre do Nascimento of Lubango in the Marxist- ruled African nation of Angola. After the address, John Paul greeted the new cardinals in their own languages, and they approached the stage and recited vows of obedience. John Paul and the new cardinals later celebrated Mass at St. Peter's Basilica before 25,000 people, and the pontiff placed a gold ring on the right hand of each cardinal. SAN DIEGO (AP) - A Japanese researcher is fighting the University of California over ownership of a poten- tially valuable cancer teatment that was developed at the school using cells from the reseracher's own cancer- stricken mother. The researcher and his father, who owns a research firm at Osaka, Japan, have some of the antibody-producting cells because the son took them from a University of California-San Diego lab to treat his mother. That happened a year ago; the university kept it quiet and continued its tests. WHEN THE CASE was made public last week by the San Diego Union, the controversy seemed to center on whether patients who donate tissue samples should own part of the resear- ch product. Unviersity officials said Dr. Hideaki Hagiwara of Osaka took the cells without permission, claiming his family owned part of the new cell line because tissue from his mother's cervix was used to develop it. But now, Hagiwara and his father say the family's claim to part ownership of the "monoclonal antibody" is based on research Hagiwara did to develop it while a postdoctoral fellow at the school. MONOCLONAL antibodies are one of the most promising avenues in fighting some types of cancer because they produce antibodies specific to certain types of cells, such as cancer cells.The antibodies can seek out and destroy tumor cells without harming normal tissue. The antibodies are produced by "hybridoma" cells created by fusing anti-body producing spleen cells with long-living cancer cells. Nearly all previous hybridomas have combined human cancer cells and spleen cells from mice, which have limited success because patients often reacted to the alien mouse protein. Wiest Side Book Shop Used & rare books bought & sold Large selection of quality used paperbacks at '/2 cover price. KEROUAC POSTER 25th Anniversary of "On the Rood" $10.00 Limited Supply 113 W. 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