w. E rrr iro rr y The Michigan Daily-Thursday, January 12, 1978-Page 3 World coffee prices to stabilize IF YO)U SEE NE&rS E)4f? CALLZD5 AY .E. Brrreak out A Jackson State Prison inmate, clad only in a thin hospital gown, walked out of the University hospital into the early morning cold yes- terday and hasn't been seen since. Police say Thomas Stevens, 34, left his 10th floor hospital room about 2:30 a.m. and presumably went right on walking. Stevens, described as a white male, 5'9" with brown hair and a heavy mustache, is serving 4-5 years for carrying a concealed weapon. Police do not consider him dangerous. "He'd have to have been moving pretty fast in this cold before he got frostbite," speculated one police of- ficer. A license to do anything Would you vote for #62345? He's had all his shots and he's paper trained. Tags around the neck may not be necessary, but if a Kentucky legislator has his way, politicians will have to be licensed by their state before they can seek public office. "Think of it," says Rep. Bruce Blythe of the Kentucky House. "Doctors, lawyers, engineers, teachers, even barbers and beauticians, must have state government sanction in order to serve the public." Blythe's proposal would require an office-seeker to have a basic education and knowledge of government function and "other necessary requirements." The license would be good for four years. A spirited vacation Forget the Florida beaches. Forget the slopes of Aspen. The U.S. Travel Service now has the ultimate in vacationtours - a guide to the hangouts of ghosts and goblins and things that go bump in the night. The eight-page guide, "The Supernatural - Haunted Houses and Legendary Ghosts," lists 29 sites where the adventurous can hobnob with friendly and not-so friendly spirits. The list includes Southern plantations, boyhood homes, a governor's mansion, an Army fort and a U.S. battle- ship. Among the spooks in residence are said to be the ghost of General Robert E. Lee, hanging out at his childhood home in Alexandria, Va., and the ghosts of several Revolutionary War participants. Better than spen- ding the vacation with Aunt Gert and Uncle Edgar. 0 'Happenings... ...are primarily intellectual today. Quench your thirst for art at the art prints sale sponsored by the Mad Hatters Tea Party from 9 to 5 in both the Union lobby and the Fishbowl. The sale benefits the Child Care Action Center ... At 11, Edward Paul speaks on "Mixing and Product Distribu- tion for a Liquid-Phase, Second-Order Competitive-Consecutive Reac- tion" in 3515 E. Engin. ... If your mind is still holding up, drop over to 4001 C.C. Little at 4 to hear Dr. John Bird expound on "Plate Tectonics and Ore Deposits" ... Over at Hillel on 1429 Hill, a meeting for "Aliyah" and registration for Beit Midrash classes begin at 7 ... and if you want a little input on "Introduction to Digital Computers and Computing Languages" sign on with Bruce Carr at 7:30 in the Nat. Sci. Auditorium ... Have fun. . On the Outside.... Well, you can take off at least one of the three sweaters you've been wearing for the past week. You might even be able to turn the electric blanket down to 3. Today will border on livable with a high of 270 and a low of only 20. Expect some snow late this afternoon which may con- tinue tomorrow. Welcome back from the Ice Age! RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) - Coffee drinkers, jolted in the past by sharp price rises that have now drop- ped below their peak, can expect the cost of their beverage to hold steady during 1978, Brazilian coffee experts say. "Barring some major unforeseen problem, stability will be the watch- word in international coffee markets for several months to come," said a top analyst at the Brazilian Coffee Insti- tute. 'THE INSTITUTE expert, who asked not to be identified by name, said American consumers could expect to pay about $3.10 to $3.20 a pound over the next few months. "Maybe that's a little more than they are paying now, but we do not expect a substantial increase," he said. The expert predicted coffee will sell at about $2.10 per pound on interna- tional markets and added that super- market prices in the United States are usually about $1 higher than the inter- national market price. He said approximately 55.8 million bags of coffee, weighing 132 pounds each, will be available for export in 1978, compared to an average annual import demand by consuming countries for 76 million bags. Discounting stocks already in hand, the expert calculated a shortage of about 9 million bags. THE LARGEST exporter, he said, will again be Brazil which will supply 12 million bags out of a total 1977-78 pro- duction estimated at 16 million bags. Four million bags are needed for Brazilian domestic consumption. Colombia, the second largest producer, was expected to exprt six million bags. The remainder of the crop will come from Africa, Mexico, Central America and Indonesia. Before the 1975 frost Brazil's annual production averaged 22 million bags. It dropped to 6 million in 1975-76 and in 1976-77. Production is expected to re- cover fully in 1978-79 when a crop of 22 million bags is predicted.. The coffee price boom in late 1976 and early 1977 brought Brazil record in= come of $2.3 billion in 1976 and $2.6 billion last year, despite the smaller exports. Brazil's price per pound rose from an average 53 cents before the frost to a high of $3.63 during the boom: Last Decengber Brazil, which had withheld coffee from the market for nearly seven months to halt sliding prices, reduced its minimum export price from $3.20 per pound to $2.20 in a step that institute president Camilo Callazans said was "in accord with the realities of the market." HEW kicks-off new anti-smoking program THIS ADTO DINNER WASHINGTON (AP)-HEW Secre- tary Joseph Califano launched a massive government attack yesterday on cigarette smoking, declaring it "public health enemy No. 1" and a killer of thousands of Americans. Califano promised help for the nation's 54 million smokers to quit the habit. The government will expand its smoking research and urge broad- casters and educators to spread the message that "smoking maims, smoking kills." HE ANNOUNCED that a joint Health, Education and Welfare- Treasury Department task force will study the possibility of recommending that Congress raise the eight-cent-a- pack federal excise tax on cigarettes. The panel also will consider the possibility of graduating the tax accor- ding to the tar, nicotine and carbon monoxide in cigarettes. The .Tobacco Institute, voice of the $14 billion-a-year cigarette industry, at- tacked Califano's program before its unveiling and said the government should nbot intrude into people's per- sonal habits. Califano urged the Civil Aeronautics Board to ban all smoking on commer- cial flights. He announced a tightening of smoking restrictions in HEW buildings and urged industry and other federal agencies to follow his example. CALIFANO SAID a new Office on Smoking and Health with a $23 million budget will coordinate all HEW's $noking research and information ef- forts. It will spend $6 million next year orr-information and education, com- pared with less than $1 million last GUITAR CLASSES Right Hand Technique Basic Classical and Folk Reasonable Rates Guitar Gallery 286 Nickels Arcade 662-5888 year. i Califano announced his program on the 14th anniversary of former Surgeon General Luther Terry's famous report on smoking and health. Thirty million Americans have quit smoking since 1964, and the percentage of adult smokers has dropped from 42 per cent to 34 per cent. Smoking is "a major factor" in the premature deaths of at least 320,000 Americans each yar from heart disease, ing cancer and other 4iseases, Califano declared, saying the program would be "a counterweight to the in- dustry's blandishments" to youth to take up smoking. Dr. Sidney Wolfe, head of the Ralph Nader-linked Health Research Group, said that Califano should have forced hospitals to stop selling cigarettes. He added that if the government can spend "$250 million to combat a non-existent disease-swine flu," it should spend at least that much on smoking. - The Universityof Michigan Professional Theatre Frogram presents from Detroit greektown attic theatre STRE AMERS N.Y. DRAMA CRITICS AWARD BY DAVID RABE - .- 0 Jan. 19,20 8pm, Jan.21 2&8pm Residential College Theatre PTP Ticket Office, Mendelssohn Theatre Lobby For information;ca 33-764-0450 All seats $3.50 More than fifty percent of the world is starving. Another twenty percent, just plain hungry. And yet, in the face of starvation, they have hope. Hope that the rains will return to the African Plain. Hope that the Asian rice crop will be bigger this year. Hope that someone, anyone, with anything to offer will come to help them fight the battle for life. Someone in the Peace Corps. They'd like to stand up , .. for themselves, these prisoners of fate, but they'rejust too weak to stand up. But with the Peace Corps a flame begins to flicker. They've seen other like you before. Seen the changes you can bring. Two thousand wells on the parched earth of Sahel. Seen how their knowledge helped reduce the grain losses. Who are they? They're people pretty much like you. People with commitment and skills who've assessed their lives and decided there must be more than just having a job. They looked into themselves and knew it was time for the talk to end and the work to begin. They're very special people, these people. Totally prepared to give everything they've got. And getting back even more than they give. That's the beauty of the Peace Corps. The work is hard and the pay is lousy,c and the progress comes a drop at a time. But the rewards are infinite. Join the Peace Corps and then take a good long lool in the mirror. You'll never look the same to yourself again. The Peace Corps is alive and ell. Call toll free: 800-424-8580. Or write: The Peace Corps, Box A, Washington, D.C. 20525 .. A Public Service of This Newspaper & The Advertising Council Daily Official Bulletin Thursday, January 12, 1978 DAILY CALENDAR WUOM: "Cambodia: Behind the Curtain of Si- ;.fence. In April, 1975, the U.S. severed its diplomatic ties with the revolutionary government which had taken over in Cambodia. Reporter Paul Steinle, who ji, based in Hong Kong, has been able to piec to- .;gether what has happened during the past two years 4iy talking with diplomats and journalists who have ;;en there, and by talking with refugees who have lft, 10:00a.m. SMHRI: Barbara Turner, "Ontogeny of Glucocor- ,ticoid Binding in the Brain," 1057 MHRI, 3:45 p.m. *ATTENTION! Have received supply of appis. for openings in National Forests, Dept. Agri. also Nat. Parks, Bureau Interior. Pick up at your convenience. Apps. must be filed between Dec. 1 and January 15. Complete details available. i Discover jewelry, painting, art and cr the feeling crafty? batik, backstrap, and cord-weaving, clay workshops as well as drawing, photography, sculpture and 10 other raft classes with the collaborative col ObrQt lve 763-4430 2nd Fl. Michigan Union We've been, reading / 4 LIY +ui g HOUSING DIVISION RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATION FORMS FOR 1978-79 ACADEMIC YEAR Available Starting January 16, 1978 In Ms. Charlene Coady's Office, 1500 SAB POSITIONS INCLUDE: Head Resident, Resident Director, Assistant Resident Director, Resident Advisor, Head Librarian, Resident Fellow, CULS Counselor and Graduate Student Teaching Assistant Advisory positions require the completion of a minimum of 55 credit hours by the end of the 1978 Winter term for the Resident Fellows in Residential College, Resident Advisor and CULS Counselor positions: Graduate status for Graduate r Student Teaching Assistant in Pilot Program, Head Librarian, Head Resident and Resident Director positions. However, qualified undergraduate applicants } may be considered for the Resident Director positions. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a registered U. of M. student on the Ann Arbor Campus during the period of employment. (2) Must have completed a minimum of 55 credit hours by the end of the 1978 Winter term. (3) Preference will be given to applicants who have lived in residence halls at University level for at least one year. (4) Undergraduate applicants must have a 2.5 cumulative grade point average and graduate applitants must be in good academic standing at the end of the 1977 Fall term in the school or college in which they are enrolled. (5) Prefer- ence is given to applicants who do not intend to carry heavy academic schedules and who do not have rigorous outside commitments. (6) Applicants with children will 'not be considered. (7) Proof of these qualnification nsmv be reauired. since 1890- haven't you? r"A1 M5