The Michigan Daily Vol. XC, No. 62-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Soturday, August 16, 1980 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages Food prices skyrocket Thanks! I needed that.! Assistant conservator Jean-Louis Lachevre of Salem, Mass. applies a spray coat to Cyrus Dallin's 1908 bronze statue "Appeal to the Great Spirit" outside Boston's Museum of Fine Arts. Air pollution has accelerated deterioration and discoloration of the work and an industrial acrylis sealer is being used to protect it. Th ey're transient anarchis ts Reverse 4-month inflation decline WASHINGTON (AP) - Reversing. four months of declining inflation, food prices soared in July and led a surge in wholesale prices that was double the June rate, the government reported yesterday. Wholesale prices for finished goods increased by 1.7 per cent in July - the largest boost since November 1974. A full year's increase at that rate would result in inflation at the wholesale producer level of 22 per cent, more than twice the 10 per cent rate recorded in June. THE LABOR Department blamed most of the July inflation on a 3.8 per cent increase in food prices, due chiefly to one of the century's worst heat waves. Poultry prices jumped 23.5 per cent as millions of chickens were killed by the heat. "When you eliminate the zigs and zags, this report is perfectly consistent with our view that the best we can hope for in the next couple years is inflation of 10 per cent," said Lawrence Chimerine, chief economist for Chase Econometrics. The Federal Reserve Board, mean- while, issued a second report, which showed some improvement in the recession that has gripped the U.S. economy since February. Industrial production fell in July for the sixth straight month - but the decline was not nearly as sharp as in the second quarter. OUTPUT OF the nation's mines and factories tumbled by 1.6 per cent during the month, compared with a 2.4 per cent average in April, May, and June. That left production 9.0 per cent below the figure at the start of the year and 9.2 per cent under the July 1979 level. The Federal Reserve reported a 2.1 per cent curtailment in production of materials used to manufacture finished products. The 1.1 per cent decline in output of consumer goods in July was about the same in June but a con- siderable improvement over the previous two months. The report attributed that im- provement chiefly to a 9.0 per cent in- crease in production of automobile assemblies - resulting in an annual rate of 6.4 million unitA. The output of durable consumer goods (those with expected lives of more than three years) still was down 18.6 per cent from a year earlier. CHIMERINE, THE private analyst, See FOOD, Page 14 By MAUREEN FLEMING SpecialtoThe Daily NEW YORK - As for where Yippies come from: Someone coined the term, and a lot of people thought they fit the definition, so they sought each other out and formed a coalition of sorts. So explains Ruth, a self-proclaimed Yippie. Yippies are a group who don't believe in anything. They support "Nobody for president." If one asks them how they stand on an issue, they'll usually answer "nowhere." They do believe in anarchy. DURING CONVENTION week a group of approximately 50 to 75 persons (depending on who decided to camp that night), occupied the Sheep Meadow in Central Park. The group renamed the meadow "Freestate" and used the area as their temporary living space and headquarters for the protests in which they participated. Kat, a camper, has been on the road for four months. She went to a New Orleans rally four months ago, she said, and hasn't been home since. "I've been living for the last four months flat broke and I've been living like a king." Kat added that she has no income, and now takes no money from the government. She was on food stamps for awhile, and the government gave her so much money that one month she was able to open a bakery, she said. KAT HITCHHIKES everywhere. She started out traveling with her dog, but he was stolen in Ohio. Now she travels alone. Aron, who looks like he could be anywhere in his mid-30s to early 5os, still giggles when he thinks of the time he threw a pie in Phyllis Schafly's face. Joe has been to many protests now. He explained that he came to this one alone - as he usually does - and, having at- tended so many protests, knows much of the group here. "They are good people and alot of them are friends now," he said. NUMBER TEN BLEECKER is the Greenwich Village headquarters for the Yippies. According to Erica, a non- transient who lives at the place, the Yippies support them- selves by proceeds from Studio 10-a "politically motivated" night club located on the premises. Erica explained the studio gave them enough money to pay for things like Freestate. "After doing this for so long, we know where to get the stuff (food, flatbeds for signs, tents, speakers, etc.), cheap too, so it really doesn't cost us much to do it." Wednesday afternoon the group spent several hours discussing what it should do that evening. Chris wanted to storm Madison Square Garden. Donna wanted to block Lin- coln Tunnel. And Jeff wanted to "free" the steps in front of the Post Office (where police usually stand) so people atten- ding the anti-draft rally scheduled for that night would have some place to sit down. THEY ALSO ARGUED about whether a political statement should accompany their actions. That was a more difficult question because many of the group members See YIPPIES, Page 13