Ninety-four Years of Editorial Freedom C I be Lit 43U 4 Thunder Mostly cloudy with a chance of thunder showers and a high in the mid-70s. . XCI V-No. 31 Copyright 1983, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, October 12, 1983 Fifteen Cents Ten Paaes a i yaa Devaluation has Israelis -^ neoaFxia i . :y4 ,: ?k.: 'F kv w b 'oy ki' ^ . . . :. , C¢ .. "' :. :. Ada a P . ..;., ..iM : to stores }'r Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Peace camp participant Shirley McRae helps sew epitaph banner for missiles. Women pitch tents From AP and UPI TEL AVIV, Israel- Israel's new government devalued the currency 23 percent yesterday and raised the price of basic foods 5 percent, setting off a stampede to buy meat, milk and bread before the increases took effect. The devaluation of the Israeli shekel and the price hikes were adopted at a nine-hour overnight Cabinet meeting held just hours after Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir was sworn in by Parliament as Menachem Begin's suc- cessor. MOTORISTS quickly lined up at gas stations and shoppers flooded stores to dump their devalued currency and buy goods before prices rose. The main purchases were basics like frozen meat, milk, flour, bread and cooking oil, whose prices were to go up 50 percent today as a result of a reduc- tion in government subsidies. "It is a madhouse," said one shopper. "I only went to buy milk for my baby but some other women were filling their shopping carts like there was no tomorrow." PRICES of imported goods were immediately effected .by the devaluation. Car prices were to go up by from $1,875 to $6,325. Autos are im- ported an heavily taxed. The cheapest models cost about $1,000. The austerity measures, prompted by a widening trade deficit and a threatened collapse of bank stocks, spelled the end of a period of more than two years in which Israelis have en- joyed a rapidly rising standard of living. .Most significant was Finance Minister Yoram Aridor's warning that the government would depart from the custom of automatically compensating wage-earners for price hikes. UNTIL NOW, salaried people have received a hike of 85 percent of the in- flation rate every three months, but Aridor said this time he would not pay the full compensation. The Histradrut labor federation said it would call a two-hour nationwide strike tomorrow to protest the measures. . "I have no doubt we will all be poorer," said Chaim Levy, a business administration professor at Jerusalem's Hebrew University. ARIDOR said the new measures and a planned $1 billion cut in government spending could tame Israel's annual 125 percent inflation and reduce its $4 billion foreign trade deficit. Exactly three years ago, the shekel was worth six to the dollar. But three years of triple-digit inflation reduced its value against the dollar nearly 14- fold. Paradoxically, those three years have.been the most prosperous for the average citizen since Israel became a state in 1948. W hen he took office in February 1981, Aridor threw out the austerity measures to which Israelis were ac- custome, cut taxes and kept the shekel artificially high, believing he could create a climate of falling prices that would reduce inflation. for peace By JEANETTE FUNK A group of Ann Arbor women have set up a tem- porary campsite on Hill Street in protest against the rms race and military spending. The omenset up the camp, located on the front lawn of the Quaker House at 1420 Hill St., over the weekend. The camp officially started on Sunday with a hunger march, and runs until Oct. 21. THE CAMPERS ARE conducting workshops throughout the week "to make women more aware of the issues of peace and war," said Dee Axelrod, a member of the Ann Arbor Women's Peace Camp. The workshops are designed to teach decision-making and leadership skills to women, she said. The campers picked Ann Arbor because the headquarters of Williams International, a company that builds engines for Cruise missiles, is located here. The women also are protesting the deployment of Cruise and Pershing missiles in western Europe. "(Williams International) essentially hielps facilitate the arms race," said Barbara Wetula, a University graduate student in community health nursing. AXELROD SAID SHE thinks women must share a leadership role in society: "Women are historically peacemakers.. .and men have been taught to be more aggressive," she said. Three women at the Hill Street site traveled from a peace camp in Seneca Falls, N.Y. to support the Ann Arbor movement. The Seneca Falls camp started on July 4 in protest against weapons construction at the Seneca Army Depot. "The weapons are extinct before they're ever com- pleted," said Greta Alexander, one of the women from Seneca Falls. "They're ten years ahead on the drawing board of what they're building. They want more, more, more. There's never enough." There is sleeping space for at least 50 people at the Hill Street location and the campers said they hoped to number at least that many by this weekend. University presidents ask state for $90 mllion By JACKIE YOUNG The presidents of Michigan's top three research universities are asking 1Governor James Blanchard to sponsor a $90 million public works program to modernize research facilities at the state institutions. The request comes at a time when recent tax increases have aided the state's cash flow and make fun ding of higher education more viable. OVER THE PAST two years Univer- sity research facilities and equipment have become outdated and run-down because of dwindling state funds, University officials say. Michigan State University and Wayne State University, which stand beside the University of Michigan as the state's "prestigious three" resear- ch institutions, also have been damaged by falling state revenues and fewer dollars spend on higher education. Early last September, the presidents of all three schools began meeting with Blanchard's Commission on Jobs and Economic Development. If the state hopes to maintain the excellence of its research institutions and expects them to participate in revitalizing the state's economy, it will have to pay the price, they say. "YOU CAN'T undertake research when you don't have the proper facilities to do it," said University Vice President for State Relations Richard Kennedy. "Over the past few years (the University) has not been keeping up with the replacement of equip- ment." In just two years the University has fallen far short of the equipment necessary to good research, Kennedy said, adding the problem will continue to get worse if nothing is done in the future. Kennedy said the situation has almost reached a crisis stage because the University has become "handicap- ped" by the loss of state funds. THE PROBLEM in the past has been a matter of a "lack of capacity" on the state's part, said Kennedy, adding that the governor and legislature "showed great courage this year in implemen- ting the new tax program." "Now we can take the measures to restore the damage that has been done and get the economy of the state back on track," Kennedy said. But he said he thinks the governor and legislature are sympathetic to the problems the presidents have outlined. Pete Plastrik, director of Blan- chard's cabinet council on jobs and economic development, said his staff is studying what role the state gover- nment should play in expanding research and development at the top three universities. Plastrik also said an increase in state supported research in areas such as the Molecular Biology Institute at MSU is one possibility. Expanding the role of private businesses in the funding of higher education is also being discussed, Plastrik said. Daily Photo by DOUG McMAHON Bouquet of balloons Leigh Bennett struggles with her helium-filled birthday balloons and tries to keep her feet on the Hill St. Sidewalk yesterday. Kennedy ...research facilities underfunded To DAY- Meet the press E VER WONDER WHO's responsible for cam- pus groups like the Michigan Student Assembly, and the University Activities Center, or campus minority af- fairs? It's Vice President for Student Services Henry John- bicentennial time capsule. The book, included in one of two time capsules buried Monday, was a last minute addition by a child-one of many spectators who accepted an in- vitation to put something in the capsules before they were buried. Within hours, switchboards at newspapers and radio and television stations in the area lit up with calls from residents irate over what they considered to be an ethnic slur. Julie Strzempek of nearby Three Rivers vowed to get the book removed from the capsule if "I have to get a shovel and do it myself. When they open the capsule 50 or 100 years from now, they will think this book represents the world we live in today," she said. But Longmedow Bicen- sville, Ind. man was rescued after golfers at Howell Park heard his cries for help from the bathhouse, officials said. When he was found, the 155-pound Helmling was stuck tightly in the 11-inch-wide chimney. "There was no opening at the bottom, except for a 4- by 4-inch inspection plate," said Evansville Fire Dept. Capt. Fred Taylor. "He was lucky his breathing wasn't impaired." Taylor and three other fire fighters chisled, sawed, pried, and pulled Helmling free shortly before 10 a.m. Sunday. After a check- up at a nearby hospital, Helmling was charged with attem- pted burglary and became lodged again-this time in the Vanderburgh County Jail, police said. Q would pay any volunteers with a perfect set of teeth - that is, those without any cavities - if they would agree to sub- mit to observation by dental students. " 1970 - A faculty and student advisory committee to the Engineering Placement service turned down a request to bar Dow Chemical Co. from recruiting on campus, but promised to investigate charges from five students that Dow practiced racially and sexually discriminatory hiring practices. "1977 - An estimated 2,000 students wore yellow ar- mbands to protest a decision by Ohio's Kent State Univer- sity trustees to build a gymnasium on the spot where 1i E I I