The Michigan Daily-Friday, December 4, 1981-Page 7 D. B. SEATTLE (AP)-D. B. Cooper, who jumped into legend by jumping out of the back of a jetliner and vanishing with $200,000, probably was an aging, baumbling crook with nothing left to los, says the man who tracked the myth for a decade. .Dressed only in a dark business suit, white :shirt, narrow tie and loafers, Cooper disappeared literally into thin air the night of Nov. 24, 1971, somewhere over - southwest Washington. He parachuted out the back of a Northwest Airlines Boeing 727 with 10,000 $20 bills in a bank bag strap- ped to his body. ;AE BECAME the first, and only, ",successful' parachute skyjacker in American history. His notoriety helped lead to elaborate airport security systems and redesigns of the Boeing 727 jetliner so the rear door can't be opened in flight. "It's conjecture, but I think he was a stupid, desperate rascal, a brutal, un- scruplous man who endangered the lives o more than 400 people for money and caused his own death," says Ralph Himmelsbach, the FBI agent assigned to the Cooper case before he retired last year. "He was very likely an ex-con who was going to make one last, desperate go for the big one," the 56-year-old linmelsbach said. "If he made it fine. If riot, he probably felt he had very little to lfse." H E SAID Cooper bailed out while the plane was traveling at almost 200 mph at 10,000 feet, where the temperature was minus 7 and the wind chill factor a minus 69 on a raw and stormy night. Cooper jumped with two parachutes-an emergency chute in front that was "by simple, honest error" defective, and a small sport chute in back that would land a novice sky-diver "fast and hard," Him- melsbach said. He insisted the FBI did not plot to sabotage the jump because "we don't have the right to sentence anyone to death and what would have happened if he took a hostage," Some people like to think Cooper lives, such as sponsors of the annual "D. B. Cooper Festival" in Ariel, a town of two buildings near where Cooper is 'House of Bernarda depresses (Continued from Page 6) Eveland as the crazy grandmother, has all the best lines of the play, but she delivers them unconvincingly and with little or no inflection in her voice. The play was preserved by the stronger performances of the other four sisters, played by Maggie Fleming, Roya L. Meghnot, Ann Zald, and Margaret D. Gonzales. All four ac- tresses lend vitality and realism that is needed in such a sombre. play. Bickering and pouting, they well por- tray lonely women whose frustration at being locked away is beginning to eat away at their souls. Gonzales as Mar- tirio is especially powerful in her vin- dictiveness, and Zald is impressive as the shy Amelia. The earthy vitality of La Poncia, the family's outspoken maid, played by Helen Oravetz, lends texture to the per- formance. Sometimes her accent is ob- structive and she sounds more like someone's ethnic grandmother than a middle aged Spanish woman. But overall, her part is played very well. One is never drawn into the lives of these women because of the awkward stage movements and the sometimes weak acting. Still, the production was fairly successful in creating an aura of tragedy and entrapment. If one wants light hearted entertainment, then it is best to avoid "The House of Bernarda Alba." But if one is more in the mood 'for intense, if perhaps self-consciously tragic drama, the play is worth seeing. "The House of Bernarda Alba" runs through December 5, then continues the run from December 10-12. Cooper legend lives OFFICIAL UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN BLUEBONNET BOWL TOUR ON SALE Alumni Office, Michigan Union (Ground Level) 'It's conjecture, stupid, desperate but I think he was a rascal, a brutal, un- who endangered .the scrupulous man lives of more than 400 people for money and caused his own death.' -FBI agent Ralph Himmelsbach thought to have jumped. Once a year hundreds of people crowd into the Ariel Store and Tavern to buy T-shirts, swill beer and trade Cooper theories. "I think he got away because they didn't find anything but the money and who's to. say he didn't drop it to lead them off the trail," says Laural Fisher, who owns the store-tavern with her husband, Dave, president of the D. B. Cooper Fan Club. Who's to say, indeed? After 10 years of searching, "We know 1,000 people who he isn't and 1,000 places where he didn't land," says Dave Hill, FBI spokesman in Seattle. THE FBI FEELS Cooper's skeleton lies crumpled in the thick forests of southwest Washington. Conceivably, agents say, Cooper is buried under tons of volcanic ash because 150 square miles of the search area was coated by Mount St. Helens' eruption last year. But no one can prove Cooper isn't living a smug life of anonymity somewhere, enjoying the profits of his air piracy. The case remains the FBI's only major unsolved skyjacking-and his disappearing act is celebrated in twangy songs, T-shirts, an annual celebration in the tiny town of Ariel, Wash., and a new movie. TO PUBLICIZE the movie, The Pursuit of D. B. Cooper, Universal Studios offered $1 million for infor- mation leading to the arrest and convic- tion of Cooper, who's name probably wasn't even Cooper. The studio still has the money. His start as a folk hero began when a "Dan Cooper" bought a one-way ticket on Northwest Airlines Flight 305 from Portland, Ore., to Seattle. Moments after takeoff, Cooper han- ded a flight attendant a hand-written note, announcing the skyjacking and demanding $200,000 and four parachutes. He also opened his brief- case and showed her what she later said looked like a bomb. INSTRUCTIONS WERE radioed to the ground and, while the plane circled Seattle-Tacoma Airport, money and parachutes were rounded up. Cooper chain smoked filter-tipped cigarettes and bought and sipped two bourbon and water highballs during the negotiations. In Seattle, the 36 passengers and two flight attendants got off, while one flight attendant and three cockpit crew members stayed aboard. Cooper became fidgety' as refueling took too long and told the flight attendant, "Let's get this circus on the road." The plane took off for Reno, Nev., at 7:37 p.m., while a storm raged outside. Cooper was alone in the passenger sec- tion and the crew remained in the cock- pit. At 8:11 p.m., the crew noticed a drop in cabin pressure, indicating the plane's rear door was opened. FBI AGENTS who scrambled aboard in Reno found no trace of Cooper-and a legend was born. In February 1980, an 8-year-old boy picnicking with his family along the Columbia River west of Vancouver, Wash., unearthed packets of rotting $20 bills from the sand, which turned out to be $5,800 of Cooper's loot. A hunter on a road near Castle Rock found a placard which wind had ripped from the wall of the plane's stairwell when Cooper jumped, Himmelsbach said. )DAE BRUBECK Da ily 8-5 763-9060 FIESTA DE LA POSADA A CHRISTMAS CHORAL PAGEANT TUES., DEC. 15 8*P.M. HILL AUD. ANN ARBOR Also: Brubeck Quartet featuring "MADCAT" RUTH 6.50, 7.50, 8.50 Res. Sale at the Michigan Union Box Office and CTC Outlets. For Info call (313)763-6922 Group rates available col (313) 763-5924 6 U OLI AYI U-SAL A1 II,1 88 Save 20 % off regular price of every LP and prerecorded tape in stock... Fiday, December 4 only! 6 pm to midnight! Sve on everyondon recording in stock! 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