Page 6-Friday, February 11, 1983-The Michigan Daily .r-w' II me I.A B R 'R VALENTINES DAY A DUAL THEATRES GIVE YOUR SWEETHEART db 5th Ave .,,y I@resoo MOVIE GIFT CERTIFICATES % .. 1 'U' names four to research board COMING 2/18/83 DUDLEY MOORE IN "LOVE SICK" Sat. Sun $2.00 Shows Before 6:00 PM "WONDERFUL" NEW YORK TIMES "DON'T MISS IT'' US MAGAZINE "REMARKABLE" NEW YORKER ENDS TH URS FRI MON - 6:25, 8:10, 9:55 SAT SUN- 12:50, 2:40, 4:30, 6:25, 8:10, 9:55 By JIM SPARKS Three businessmen and one attorney will fill the final four spots on a panel set up to create the Michigan Research Corporation, the group's chairman an- nounced yesterday. Ted Doan, president of Doan Resour- ces, Inc., a Midland venture capital firm; Cyrus Moscow, a Detroit attor- ney; Monty Vincent, and executive at Gelman Sciences, Inc. of Ann Arbor; and Dwight Carlson, president of the Farmington Hills firm Perceptron, Inc., will join six University faculty members already named to the panel, said George Gamota, director of the University's Institute of Science and Technology. The Michigan Research Corporation is being created to help University faculty members market their resear- ch ideas in order to return profits to both faculty members and the Univer- sity. "Our biggest task is to try to identify good bets and line up the financial sup- port for those bets," Gamota said. The committee's first task will be to find an interim director and recom- mend a plan for forming the firm's board of directors, Gamota said. If the Regents approve the plan, the University will kick in $200,000 to establish the firm. The University's in- vestment would make it a minority stockholder in the firm, which would be 'controlled by its board of directors The corporation will identify Univer- sity research projects with market potential and try to match those up with the finances needed for production. Gamota said the committee will deliver its recommendations to the University's executive officers in early July. I 4 GOLDEN GLOBE WINNER BEST ACTRESS in a Drama MERYL STREEP SOPHIE'S KEVIN KLINE CHOICE I FRI MON - 6:45, 9:30 SAT SUN - 1:00, 3:50, 6:45, 9:30 I Civil rights meeting to feature Rosa Parks I By HALLE'CZECHOWSKI In celebration of black history month prominent civil rights activists and scholars will meet in Ann Arbor for an ROY GEIGER & LIVE BALD EAGLE NATIONAL WILDLIFE FEDERATION A presentation on Eagle Conservation Room: 1040 School of Nat. Resources Time: 7:30 p.m. Date: February 17 Subscribe to The Michigan Daily in-depth analysis of the movement. The conference, sponsored by the University's Center for Afroamerican and African Studies and the Black Student Union, will feature Rosa Parks, "the mother of the civil rights movement." She will speak tonight at 7 p.m. ALDON MORRIS, a sociology professor who organized the event said the conference goals are twofold. "We just decided since it had been 20 years since the march on Washington, it was time to look back at the (civil rights) movement and analyze it, and then see where we need to go from there," he said. Other speakers at the conference will be Law School Prof. Wade McCree, former U.S. solicitor general; Bernice Reagon, director of the Smithsonian In- stitution's Program in Black American Culture; and Rev. C.T. Vivian, former aide to Dr. Martin Luther King. Accompanying the conference is a photographic exhibit depicting the per- sonalities and confrontations of the movement, which is displayed at Trot- ter House. The programs are open to the public and will be held in the Graduate School of Business Administration's Hale Auditorium. President of the Independent Truckers Association, Michael Parkhurst, an- nounces at a Washington press conference the end of the truckers strike. Truckers' leader declare end to 12-day strike V. (Continued from Page 1) disagree with Parkhurst. HE'S GOT a piece of paper that's not worth the paper it's written on,' Sullivan yelled. Sullivan, who claimed to represent more than 35,000 truckers, including most of the steel haulers, said later that his committee would decide this weekend whether to continue the strike. Other truckers, angry over Parkhur- st's announcement, said they did not' regard the protest as over. DURING THE strike, Parkhurst had said repeatedly that protesting truckers would return to work only if Congress repealed the tax and fee in- creases. But he said yesterday that the commitment from the Congressmen was the best that could be achieved. It was not known how many of the truckers would follow Parkhurst's request to end the strike, but federal of- I llil SHABBAT StUdent Newspaper at The University of Michigan I I r----------- WRITE YOUR AD HERE! ----------- 1 1 I 1I I ii s am....em- ----CL I AND MAI LTODAY ! ---------- H ~USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST U * Words Days 1 2 3 4 5 add. 1 0-14 1.85 3.70 5.55 6.75 7.95 1.00 1 I I 15-21 2.75 5.55 8.3 10.10 11.90 1.60 Peaseindicte where this ad 22-28 3.70 7.40 11.10 13.50 15.90 2.20 istorun for rent 29-35 4.60 9.25 13.90 16.90 19.90 2.80 forsae help wanted 36-42 5.55 11.10 16.65 20.25 23.85 3.40 roommates 43-49 6.45 12.95 19.40 23.60 27.80 4.00 *e Each group of characters counts as one word. Hyphenated words over five characters count as two words. (this includes telephone numbers). Seven words equal one line. Advertisement may be removed from publication. For ads which required prepayment. there will be no refunds. All other ads will be billed according to the original number of days ordered. 5:55 PM - Conservative Services 5:40 PM - Orthodox Services 6:00 PM - Reform Services 7:10 PM - Dinner HILLEL Friday, Feb. 11 1429 Hill St. ficials said privately that they coa- sidered the protest virtually finish&d anyway. Parkhurst said that a letter being ci- culated in Congress by Rep. Dougla Applegate (D-Ohio) seeks a legislative review of the tax and fee boosts with the aim of making them more equitable for independent truck drivers. PARKHURST said it was "a com- mitment on the part of a substantial number of congressmen to "look at th taxes" and was the best he could have accomplished. Rep. Peter Kostmayer (D-Pa.), who also circulated the letter, called it "a commitment of a winningness to listen" to the truckers, and Applegate said .ht expected congressional hearings would be held. Parkhurst did not identify the 35 congressmen he said had agreed to hear the truckers' complaints. While the organizers planned their next move, the strike was losing steam around the country. Police reported few acts of violence, and no shortages of goods were attributed to the protest. TRUCK TRAFFIC was increasing s the number of reports of vandalism against operating rigs dropped sharply from last week, when more than 1,700 trucks were damaged, including 560 hit by gunfire. In addition to the lone fatality, 66 people have been injured and 95. people arrested in connectio with the strike. "It looks like the thing is over" Michael Pfleuger, an Agriculture Department official said Wednesday; He said fresh produce arriving in Ne York City had increased by 73 pereit over the previous week. The letter being circulated in Congress urged Speaker Thomas O'Neill and Rep. Dan Rostenkowski (t Ill.), chairman of the House Ways anrd Means Committee, to review trucker' complaints about the sharp, recent ir- creases in highway user fees on trucks. "The letter is a key to what out position will be," Parkhurst said. Parkhurst previously had saii Congress would have to roll back tl increase in user fees before the strike is halted. But before he met with hi regional representatives yesterda: Pakhurst said that if a substanti number of congressmen signed the let- ter, "there's a very good chance" hi group would urge drivers to halt thei protest.- Applegate and the three othe congressmen who are trying to end th strike began Wednesday to circulat their letter seeking a congressionI review of the fee increase and a 5-cen a-gallon boost in the federal excise ta on gasoline and diesel fuel whic> Congress enacted shortly before Christmas kinko's Copies Our Xerox 9500 offers offset quality & fast service F' I a 41 I --- a GIFT C ERTIFICATES-NO\A V ON SALE }'\,TIHE MOVIES AT BRIARWOOD I .4 4S STPTE 7693 *'dm-n u CPeny 1)J}; Mj fT 1, R t . 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