Page 8-Thursday, May 18, 1978-The Michigan Daily (Continued fromPage 3) ACCORDING TO Breakey, the coun- c tcil tries to alter the drinking habits of chronic alcoholics and problem drinkers by helping them focus on their problem and "learn to drink in a way cmothat's not destructive" ifOClLSES OThe council is supported by the United Fund and some state money and 1 is staffed by trained counselors. The service is paid for on a scale deter- mined by the amount of treatment received. Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) also a ae operates in Washtenaw County. AA workers are volunteers, most of whom have been in the program themselves. work"-helping others who share their problem. GEORGIA DOMKE, an AA worker, takes calls from the AA switchboard in her own home and tries to persuade callers tocome to AA meetings. "Many times they just want to talk, but it depends on the situation and what condition they are in for what I say to them," said Domke. Local bartenders are perhaps all too aware of alcohol problems in the area. Most formulate their own policies for customers who have obviously ex- ceeded their drinking capacity. "THIS IS SOMETHING we deal with every day, not just one day or week a year," said Harvey Blanchard, I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I U I I I I I 1 I Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan I{!4%I1JIhI -"--------- WRITE YOUR AD HERE! ----------- I a -----------CLIP AND MAIL.TODAY!--__ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST WORDS 1 day 2 days 3 days 4 days 5 days 6 days addi. 0-10 1.15 2.30 3.05 3.80 4.55 5.30 .75 I1-15 1.40 2.80 3.70 4.60 5.50 6.40 .90 Please indicate 16-20 1.65 3.30 4.35 5.40 6.45 7.50 1.05 where this ad 21-25 1.90 3.80 5.00 6.20 7.40 8.60 1.20 is orun:m 26-30 2.15 4.30 5.65 7.00 8.35 9.70 1.35 for sale 31-35 2.40 4.80 6.30 7.80 9.30 10.80 1.50 hepwne 36-40 2.65 5.30 6.95 8.60 10.25 11.90 1.65 r personal e 41-45 2.90 5.80 7.60 9.40 11.20 13.00 1.80 etc. 46-50 3.15 6.30 8.25 10.20 12.15 14.10 1.95 Seven words per line. Each group of characters counts as one word. Hyphenated words over 5 characters count as two words-This includes telephone numbers. Mail with Check to: cl asifleds, The MIM D*noly 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 NAME _ ADDRESS CITY I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I proprietor of the Flame Bar. "We wat- ch people when they come in the door, and we don't serve them if they've had too much to drink." Tony Cellentani, a bartender at the Fireside Lounge, said it is sometimes hard to tell if a customer has had too much to drink. "Once I was ready not to serve somebody because they weren't walking straight," recalls Cellentani. "Then I found out his foot was in a cast." Nick Dmitre of the Liberty Inn said his policy is to "cut them off when I think they've had enough and they usually understand I'm doing it for their own good." Companies boycott Ugandan coffee By The Assciated Press Several of the nation's biggest coffee companies yesterday said they have stopped buying coffee from Uganda to protest policies of that nation's dic- tator, Idi Amin. The statements came a day after the House International Relations Commit- tee approved a resolution condemning Amin and calling on President Carter to "support. and where possible im- plement, measuressuch as an embargo on trade with Uganda . . . ." SOON AFTER the resolution passed, Folger Coffee Co., the largest American importer of coffee from Uganda, announced Tuesday that it would buy no more beans from the African nation because of Amin. Other firms which said they have already cut purchases included such major retail suppliers as General Foods, Nestle, and Hills Bros. The companies' action is not expec- ted to mean much to consumers' pocketbooks, however. HE NOTED THAT European coun- tries and roasters for the huge "in- stitutional" part of the coffee business-restaurants, office and fac- tory cafeterias and so on-would almost certainly continue buying ugan- dan coffee. During the first nine months of 1977, the latest period for which figures are available, Ameican companies bought 110.4 million pounds of coffee from Uganda, valued at $216.4 million, and Folger had been accounting for about one-fifth of the total. General Foods, the nation's largest coffee seller, said when asked yester- day that it hasn't bought any coffee directly from Uganda since December and will cease immediately any in- direct purchase through importers and brokers-a response to the congressional resolution. GENERAL FOODS sells several brands of coffee, including Maxwell House. The Nestle Company Inc., o White Plains, N.Y., said it had stopped buying Ugandan coffee a month ago, adding that Uganda had become a supplier of last resort anyway. As of April 20, the firm said, it had "decided to discon- tinue all Ugandan coffee purchases in light of requests made by members of U.S. Congress." A spokesman for Hills Bros. Coffee Inc., Sharon Swanson, said the com- pany's purchase of coffee from Uganda within the past year was less -than t5 per'cent'of alit tffce,ad* n de hdd' been bought since January.'t, '5-r PHONE a t inuinmmu~