The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 8, 1986 - Page 3 Nicaragua Survivor identified CIA agent lives through shoot-down MANAGUA, Nicaragua' (AP)-An american who survived when Sandinista soldiers shot down aI cargo plane said yesterday he is an aviation specialist who boarded the C-123 in El Salvador. Nicaraguan officials have claimed Eugene Hasenfus, 45, of Marinette, Wisconsin is an American military adviser serving in El Salvador and the transport shot down Sunday in southern Nicaragua was carrying weapons ammunition to rebels fighting the leftist Sandinistas. Officials in Washington denied any connection between Hasenfus and the U. S. government. Hasenfus was allowed to speak to local journalists briefly in San Carlos, a port on Lake Nicaragua near the crash site. He said the plane began its journey in Miami, picked him up in El Salvador, then took a Nicaraguan aboard in Honduras and entered Nicaraguan air space from Costa Rica at a site known as La Noca on the San Juan River. According to Hasenfus, the Nicaraguan was one of three men killed in the crash. It was not clear from the American's brief remarks whether he+ was a military man or a civilian. Nicaraguan army officers who accompanied Hasenfus said the other two men killed were Americans they identified as Wallace Blaine Sawger" Jr. and Bill Cooper. Their hometowns were not available. Nicaragua had said initially that all three dead men were Americans. The bodies were said to be in bad condition and still at the crash site in a remote jungle area north of the San Juan River, which helicopters had difficulty in reaching because of poor weather. Sandinista officials said the plane was shot down with a Soviet-made surface-to-air missile at a spot 35 miles north of Costa Rica and 91 miles southeast of Managua. The helicopters that picked Hasenfus up at the crash site were based at Juigalpa, about 60 miles east of Managua and 65 miles northwest of the crash site near the village of El Tule. The Defense Ministry said the downed plane carried 50,000 rounds of ammunition for Soviet-made AK- 47 rifles, rocket-propelled grenades, dozens of automatic rifles, jungle boots and other military supplies. Secretary of State George Shultz said in Washington that the plane did not belong to the U. S. government, and a CIA spokeswoman denied Sandinista claims that the survivor. was an employee of the intelligence agency. Shultz told reporters the aircraft "wasn't an American cargo plane" but was hired by "private people," including Americans. He did not name the people, "I don't know where he is and what he's doing," Hasenfus' wife, Sally, said in a telephone interview. "I only know what I see on the TV, too, and I really don't know any more." However, David Holliday, spokesman for the Senate Intelligence Committee, said Sally Hasenfus had called the State Department "and said her husband worked for CIA." And I. W. Stephenson, a retired pilot and aviation executive, said Hasenfus told him 20 years ago that he was going to work in Vietnam for Air America, then a CIA proprietary corporation. Associated Press Eugene Hasenfus, (right) is believed to be the lone survivor of an American-based cargo plane that was shot down in Nicaragua Sunday. ;Hasenfus is shown with his brother William in an undated family photo. Health foods aren't always healthful 11 I - - - -' - - Campus Cinema Free Voice Of Labor: The Jewish Anarchists (S. Fischler & J. Sucher, 1980), Alt Act, DBL/7:30 p.m., EQ126. Documentary about...well... Jewish anarchists. Anarchism In America (Steven Fischler & Joe Sucher, 1982), Alt Act, DBL/8:30 p.m., EQ126. From Sacco and Vanzetti to Jello Biafra. The Glen Miller Story (A. Mann, 1954), MTF, 7:45 p.m., Mich. Jimmy Stewart stars as the bandleader, the legend, the air- crash fatality. The Godfather (Francis Ford Coppola, 1972), Hill St., 8 pm., Hill St., The life of Vito Corleone and his Mafia family is documented in one of the greatest American films ever made. Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Caan, Diane Keaton, Robert Duvall. The Fountainhead (King Vi1or, 1949), AAFC, 7 & 9:05 p.m., MLB 3. Ayn Rand's conservative philosophy is expounded in the story of an architect who will settle for nothing less than perfection from himself. Gary Cooper. Performances Organ recitals-School of Music, 11 a.m. & 8:30 p.m., Hill Auditorium. Organ recital-School of Music, 3 p.m., First Baptist Church, 512 E. Huron. Speakers Janet Giele-"The Changing Life Patterns of Educated Women, 1910-1980," School of Education, 4 p.m., Tribute Room, 1322 School of Education Bldg. Jay Callahan-"Depression and Suicide," Catherine McAuley Health Center, 7 p.m., Mercywood Health Building. Robert Haselkorn- "Rear- rangement of Anabaena Nitro- gen-fixation Genes During Het- erocyst Differentiation," Divis- ion of Biological Sciences, 4 p.m., MLB 2. Anatoly Khazanov - "Con- temporary Soviet Anthro- pology," noon, Lane Hall Commons. Anatoly Khazanov-"No- mads and Pastoralists in the Past, Present, and Future," An- thropology and Classical Studies departments, Center for Russian and East European Studies, 4 p.m., 2009 Angell. John Deely-"Selecting the Best Treatment: Non-bayesian and Bayesian Approaches," Deparment of Statistics, 4 p.m., 451 Mason. Room, Frieze Bldg. J. Osborn-"AIDS: Five Years and Counting," School of Dentistry, 4 p.m., G390 Dentistry Bldg. S. Braun-"Identification of Structural Parameters by Overdetermination," 4 p.m., 1017 Dow Bldg. P. Gulyas-"Tandem Mass Spectrometry and its Applications in Chemistry," Chemistry Department, 4 p.m.,1200 Chemistry Bldg. K. Jung-"Mitomycines: Chemical Mechanism of Activation," Chemistry Depart- ment, 4 p.m., 1300 Chemistry Bldg. rMeetings International Business Club-5:15 p.m., K1310 Kresge Bldg. Michigan Gay Union-9 p.m., Guild House, 802 Monroe. Science Fiction Club, Stilyagi Air Corps-8:30 p.m., Michigan League Con- ference Rooms. Outing Club-Mass meeting, 8 p.m., 1209 Union. Committee on Ethics and Humanism in Medicine - Mass meeting, 6 p.m., 126 East Quad. Furthermore By ELLEN FIEDELHOLTZ Foods free of chemical pre- servatives that have not been stripped of their nutrients are better for you, but "health foods" don't H eal th Fi'tziess always fit that formula, according to a local nutritionist. James Coats, the vitamin consultant at Seva market on Liberty Street, said many people have misconceptions about how healthy "health foods" actually are. In other words, 100 percent natural doesn't necessarily mean 100 percent healthy. "CAROB CANDY is candy. It has sugar and the same hydrogenated fats found in choc- olate," Coats said. At the Ariel Health Food story on Maynard Street, students and senior citizens make up most of the clientele. "The students usually grab one of the trail mixes," said store employee Lisa Kilburn. "The nuts and fruit are a good quick snack." But are they good for you? Coats agreed that trail mix is better than a Snickers bar, but he called it simply "less of a bad thing." Many trail mixes and other bulk foods that students reach for are high in calories, but despite this, the bulk items turn over very quickly. Granola, one of the staples of health food stores, is See NATURAL, Page 8 Janis Michael-Phototype- setting and the Autologic Micro- 5 Typesetter, 3 p.m., 1013 NUBS. Registration required, 747-2424. Career Planning and Placement-"The Medical School Interview," 4:10 p.m., 3200 Student Activities Bldg. Career Planning and Placement-"Preparing for the Second Interview (Call Back/Plant Visit)," 4:10 p.m., 3200 Student Activites Bldg. Society of Women Engineers-Pre-interviews, 7 p.m., 1024 East Engineering Bldg. University Activities Cen- ter--Soph show auditions, 6:30 p.m., Anderson Room,Union. School of Art-Video, Art/New York, interviews with Hans Namuth, Cindy Sherman, and Robert Rauschenberg, photography exhibitions, 5:30 p.m., 2216-19 School of Art Auditorium. MicrocomputerEducation Center-Workshops: Basic Concepts of Programming, 10:30 a.m., 4003 School of Education Bldg.; Lotus 1-2-3, Part II, 8:30 a.m.; VersaTerm, 10:30 a.m., 3001 School of Education Bldg. CRLT-Workshop, S. Balius, "Using Bibliographic 'h " 7 n m CLASSES STARTING IN OCTOBER 203 E. Hoover 662-3149 CALL DAYS.,EVENINGS &WEEKENDS - WEM AMI. CENTECMLTD. TESTPREMRAToNSPECIALIS SSINCE 1938 The Ambassador Program Needs You! VOLUNTEER FOR MINORITY RECRUITMENT ACTIVITIES * Campus Visits " Phone Contacts " High School Visits " Special Projects SIGN UP TODAY! Undergraduate Admissions Office 1220 SAB Applications Taken Until Nov. 1 Oktoberfest WIl LADEN SIE HERZLICHST EIN vom 13.Okt. bis 17.Okt. 1986 Oktoberfest first began in 1810 as a 16-day festival, which ran from late September to early Oktober, to celebrate the up-coming wedding of Crown Prince Ludwig of Bavaria. Oktoberfestivities ... begin at 7:00 p.m. through 10:00 p.m. BOOT EATING - CHOCOLATE CAKE EATING - SUPER SLURPER SUCKER CONTEST - CREATIVE CARVING CONTEST - GERMAN TRIVIA CONTEST. Be our Oktoberfest guest and join our Oktoberfeast. German music, German food. .. Und eine wunderbare Zeit FOOD - BEER - PRIZES LIMITED EDITION T-SHIRTS - OKTOBERFEST STEINS FRANKENMUTH DINNERS - GIFT CERTIFICATES St. Pauli Girl & Hacker Pschorr Mosel and Rhine Wines All Schnapps on special Knackwurst mit Sauerkraut - Hot German Potato Saled - Warm Bavarian Pumpernickel Bread w/Butter - Bratwurst Daily Photo by PETER ROSS Jars of health food line the shelves of a local cooperative. HEALTH & FITNESS Reflections on Beauty V- Achieving Beauty Through Education Special Image and Health programs available for your group or organization. " Xia Fashion collec- tions for active and FULL PRIVILEGE professional women. ADULT MEMBERSHIPS " Evening presentation WHICH INCLUDE available for sororities and other groups NAUTILUS CLUB- interested. color analysis ONLY $290 PER YEAR " therapeutic European PRESENT THIS AD AND facials and care clinic. si SA VE 2 * wardrobe building. Good thru Oct. 31, 1986 Sandi Mackrill, Image Consultant ANN ARBOR "Y" Kerrytown " 2nd Floor " Ann Arbor 3505S. FIFTH AVE. (313)994-0448 * (313)994-4424 663536 GET YOUR ACT TOGETHER! Relaxers HiLites // d Haircuts NA CareFree 555 EastWiliam Tower Plaza - Suite 10G Ann Arbo .Ml48104 FREE 8 OZ. SHAMPOO39 (with service) WHY IS INSIGHT THE BEST SEMINAR AVAILABLE TODAY? If you want more will be happy to answer love, toy, confidence, any questions you might happiness and success in , have, give you your life- you can have information about these experiences and [ introductory evenings, much more! Insight has and familiarize you with developed heartfelt, our Gift of Giving practical tools for living program life more effectively, ranging in age from 18 to Call 313063-6890 successfully and lovingly. 90 are graduates of the We look forward to The six-day Insight Insight Awakening Heart hearing from you soon. Awakenling Heart Seminar, which has ______________ Seminar is conveniently reached the United The next available planned to allow you to Kingdom, France, Insight Awakening participate while Mexico. Australia, Heart Seminar continuing to meet your Canada Nigeria. o em e daily and family Venezuela and Colombia November responsibilities. Insight is as well as 26 cities 5 - 10 an educational format throughout the United 0 I