Page 12-Thursday, May 7, 1981-The Michigan Daily 'Soap addicts' receive daily fix of 'General Hospital' at bar 4 BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - As 3 p.m. approaches, the addicts begin arriving for their daily fix. Some are in street clothes, but the serious cases wear masks, surgical scrub suits and an oc- casional plastic stethoscope. It's time for "General Hospital" - and a few beers. THE ABC SOAP opera is the hottest thing among student customers at P.J. Bottoms, a bar across from the State University of New York at Buffalo's Main Street campus. Bar owner Mark Teitelbaum said he is flabbergasted by the success of a "General Hospital Happy Hour" he launched a few months ago. "From a business point of view, we used to be virtually empty between 3 and 4 in the afternoon," he said. "Now we average about $200 a day. That's like going from zero to $1,000 in a week." THE DEAL IS SPELLED out in a flyer circulated around the campus. "5- cent Strohs drafts. 10 wings for $1.00!" it advertises. And "For those who dare to wear their scrubs - one free shot of schnapps!" Wings, as any true Buffalonian knows, are spicy chicken wings - a regional epicurean specialty. Scrub suits are the loose suits worn in operating rooms and popular recently as casual campus attire. Teitelbaum said he and his partner, Jeff Koch, heard about the popularity of green scrub shirts and had several hundred made up featuring the bar's 7 / 9 k k AP Photo Complete with operating room hair-covers on their heads and surgical masks around their necks, students Kim Horst (left) and Debbie Feldman are getting their daily "fix" of "General Hospital" at a bar near the State University at Buf- falo's campus. REPAY YOUR STUDENT LOAN WITHOUT PAYING A CENT Serve in the Army instead. If you've received a National Direct Student Loan or a Guaranteed Student Loan made after October 1, 1975, you can get %/ off your debt (or $1500, whichever is greater) for each year you serve in certain Army specialties. So you could be totally out of debt in three years or % out of debt in two years. (Only the Army offers a two-year enlistment). And you can even enlist in the Army Reserve and get 15% off (or $500, whichever is greater) for each year of part-time service. For more information, contact us and ask about loan forgiveness. name, two intertwined hearts, and the words "Love in the Afternoon," which ABC uses as an advertising phrase to promote its soap opera lineup. THE SHIRTS SOLD OUT at $3.50 each and they have ordered 500 more. Teitelbaum said he first noticed the "General Hospital" craze while cir- culating advertising in dormitories. At 3 p.m., the campus turned silent as students gathered around television sets. For a while, Teitelbaum and Koch hired an ambulance to park outside. It had its lights on in the beginning, but Teitelbaum said he stopped that after realizing that it had "negative con- notations." BECAUSE HE NEVER watches soaps himself, his staff keeps a close eye on "General Hospital" for him. "One day somebody shot somebody," he recalled. "The staff said, 'tomorrow's going to be really busy.' I said, 'Oh, sure.' The next day I came in it was packed. Wall to wall. "So the next day, I got an extra waitress. It was dead - because whoever it was was already shot. I gave up after that." UB students Debbie Feldman, 19, of Cheektowaga, and Kim Horst, 19, of Depew were among about 20 fans wat- ching a recent episode of the program at the bar. "Whenever I can, I watch them all, from 10:30 in the morning to 4 in the af- ternoon," Feldman said. Horst said she and other students like the programs because "the people on soaps do things other people just think of doing. . . It's like a make-believe world you just wish you could belong to. U.S. priest emerges in El Salvador FromAPandUPI SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador-An American Roman Catholic priest who was missing and feared dead for 10 days walked intoi the U.S. Embassy here yesterday afternoon, an embassy spokesman said. A man who appeared to be Roy Bourgeois, an American priest missing for 10 days in war-torn El Salvador, gave UPI a letter Wednesday saying he went underground to "join the poor." It was immediately impossible to verify if the letter came from Bourgeois, whose disappearance has caused the U.S.-backed junta con- siderable embarrassment because of fears he was kidnapped by rightist gunmen. The Rev. Roy Bourgeois, a 42-year- old Maryknoll priest based in Chicago, vanished April 26 after he left the Camino Real Hotel, reportedly to buy some medicine. a 0 ARMY BE ALL YOU CAN BE. SSG DAVE STANHOPE COLLEGE REPRESENTATIVE 668-2082 8 2 M _ y i g: n. Q r 6 s+ Y Y 2 i a t