The Office of Financial Aid, 2011 Student Activities Building announces: G S L PRIORITY DEADLINE The priority processing deadline for Guaranteed Student Loans for FalI/Winter or Winter Only* is OCTOBER 30v 1981 Complete processing and fund disbursement cannot be as- sured for applications received in the Office after this date. * Last term of the loan period is Winter Term 1982. Page 8-Friday, October 30, 1981-The Michigan Daily' Anirmal.,House Students turn college food C.K. SPURLOCK AND PMeENT KENNY ROGERS L DVWTIE I MURFREESBORO, N.C. (AP)- The mayor yesterday lifted a state of emergency that was im- posed when a food fight at a college cafeteria escalated into a riot as students threw furniture as well as dinner. Ten students were arrested on felony charges of in- citing a riot after the incident at Chowan College in this northeastern North Carolina town Wednesday, Police Chief Robert Harris said. PHIL ROYCE, a Chowan spokesman, said the ringleaders of the food fight would be disciplined, with penalties ranging from work details to suspen- sion. The food fight broke out when about 600 students started hurling turkey, apples, mashed potatoes and bananas during a Halloween dinner., "Food was all over the ceiling," police officer Tommy Geesaid. "The floor was such a mess you couldn't walk on it. It was a total wreck." POLICE SAID the food fight turned into a riot when students started throwing plates and chairs. "It was funny for a while, but it got too funny," said Mayor W.W. Hill, who declared a state of emergency and banned sales of alcohol for 12 hours in the town of 3,500. Harris said the emergency declaration was needed to ban alcohol sales. THE STATE of emergency was lifted yesterday morning, but police said it would be reimposed if there were signs of trouble. Estimates of damage to the cafeteria ranged from $2,000 to $3,000. Harris, who entered the cafeteria with three other officers, said he found "students just screaming and hollering, throwing food and trays, breaking up fur- niture-they broke the door open, too." t Mto riot HE SAID police used dogs to break up the crowd and ordered students back to their dormitories. Chowan College's enrollment is 1,100. After the fight broke out, college officials locked the doors in an effort to calm the crowd; police said. Some students panicked when they could not escape and broke down the doors. "I locked the doors because I thought when they realized the doors were closed they would stop," said' assistant cafeteria manager Larry Lassiter. "But it got worse, so I opened the doors." NO SERIOUS injuries were reported. Students said the idea was born Wednesday after- noon at a local tavern where a crowd gathered to drink beer. They said someone stood up and announ- ced plans for a food fight at the Halloween dinner."" Harris said the students facing charges would ap- pear in court Tuesday. Eight of them remained in the Hertford County Jail on $2,000 bond, police said. WEST &. rE GALLAGHER KING of THE SLDG-o-guATIC . %.J"L-j I j 11 %A% Columbia crew readies shuttle for second flight 'IN THE ROUND ,"^ NEXT SUNDAY-NOV. 8-7:30 P.M. CRISLER ARENA Tickets are $15.00 and $12.50 and are available at the Michigan Union Ticket Office, Hudson's and CTC outlets. For mail order, send stamped, self- addressed envelope with acertified check or money order to Kenny Rogers Major Events, 530 South State, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. Good seats still available! A MAJOR EVENTS PRESENTATION Peofal-Managem Ken Kragen AN EVENING WITH CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)-Columbia's launchpad was cleared yesterday of all but essential workers as technicians installed ex- plosive devices before starting the five- day countdown for the space shuttles's second flight. The day long installation of ex- plosives on the launchpad began at 12:30 a.m. It included explosive charges to sever bolts to release spaceship at the moment of launch and charges which the range safety officer would detonate by radio signal to tear the vehicle apart in case it drifted off course toward a populated area. TODAY'S LAUNCHPAD schedule calls primarily for close-out work in preparation for starting the coun- tdown. The main goal of the flight is to prove that Columbia, which made a highly successful flight debut last April, can fly again. The countdown is to start at 1 a.m. EST Saturday, aimipg for a 7:30 a.m. Wednesday liftoff of the first spaceship ever ticketed for a return trip to orbit. The men who will fly the mission, astronauts Joe Engle and Richard Truly, were busy yesterday in a shuttle. simulator at the Johnson Space Center' in Houston. ASKED HOW the astronauts felt about the upcoming flight, the first space mission for both, space agency spokesman John Lawrence said: "They're really high, animated, ex- cited and enthusiastic. They can hardly wait." Engle and Truly spent the morning practicing different types of launch aborts and shifted in the afternoon to reentry and landing maneuvers. Today, the astronauts will fly to Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., to practice landing approaches in a Gulfstream II jet plane outfitted to handle like the shut- tle. Columbia once again is to land on the large Rogers Dry Lake at Edwards at the end of the planned five-day mission. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration hopes to gain enough experience and confidence at Edwards to begin returning the shuttle to a 15,000-foot Cape Canaveral landing strip by the fourth and final test flight in the shuttle program. THE ASTRONAUTS could escape by triggering ejection seats if range safety action became necessary. NASA hopes that Columbia and future shuttles each will be capable of 100 roundtrips into space. .;, CHUCK MANGIONE N NOVEMBER 18 Hill Auditorium in Ann Arbor -8 P.M. Tickets are $9.50, $8.50 and $7.50 and are on sale at the Michigan Union Ticket Of- fice, Hudson's and CTC outlets. TAKE OFF ON A CAREER AS A NAVY PILOT Be part of the Navy aviation team-a Navy pilot. As a Navy pilot, you'll fly some of the most sophisticated aircraft in the world. You'll gain early responsibility thanks to advanced technical training. And you'll have the chance for world wide travel. QUALIFICATIONS: Minimum BA/Bs degree (summer graduates may inquire). Applicants must pass aptitude and physical examinations and qualify for security clearance. U.S. citizenship required. BENEFITS: Excellent package includes 30 days' earned annual vacation. Medical/dental/low cost life insurance coverage and other tax-free incentives. Dependents' benefits available. Promotion programs included. PROCEDURES: Call Navy Management Personnel Office at: 1-800- 482-5140. (Continued from Page 1) Arabia's ambassador to the United States, was cautious in linking the sale to the removal of specific obstacles blocking the road to peace. "We are buying these planes to defend our coun- try," he said yesterday. Asked if his country is prepared to join the Camp David peace process, the ambassador suggested the burden of paving the way to peace rests with Israel. IN MOWCOW, the official Soviest news agency Tass said the AWACS sale fits "into Washington's longterm policy of increasing supplies of American weapons to this already explosive, region. All this pursues the goal of preparing for armed U.S. intervention in the case of a 'need' for a direct seizure of the oilfields." Paris' liberal Le Monde newspaper observed, "...It would serve nothing to deploy the quasi-Herculean efforts to get the Senate to swallow the sale of the AWACS if it was to returnl to the diplomatic apathy that until now has characterized the American attitude in the Israeli-Arab conflict." Le Monde noted the planes would not be delivered until 1985, "which leaves plenty of time to see if Saudi Arabia separates itself from the 'moderation' with which it is credited today." The French government, like other U.S. allies in Western Europe, issued no official reaction. AP Photo MEMBERS OF AN underwater expedition team go through mock exercises in preparation for the Nov. 4 flight of the Space Shuttle. AWACS sale draws mixed reaction abroad A MAJOR EVENTS PRESENTATION I Id 0 L j NOVEMBER 4-HILL AUDITORIUM The next time you pick up your car keys and head for the door, ask yourself whether a phone call could save you the trip-and the wasted AW