__ _ - - --___.__.. t Salt, not sodium, raises blood pressure BOSTON (AP) - Challenging a widely held belief, researchers say new findings suggest that ordinary table salt may be the only form of sodium that raises people's blood pressures. They cautioned, however, that their tentative results must be confirmed by other researchers before they are used to tell people what they can safely eat. But if the results, based on a small study, hold up, they will overturn one of medicine's most often-repeated doctrines: all sodium is bad for people with high blood pressure. "I hate to use the word 'bombshell', but I think it will startle many people," said Dr. R. Morris, one of the study's authors nand director of the General Clinical Research Center at the Univeristy of California, San Francisco. Table salt, which is sodium chloride, has long been known to raise blood pressure in people with hypertension. However, Morris said doctors frequently ask their patients to cut back on all forms of sodium, not just salt. "For many years the words 'sodium' and 'salt' have been used interchangeably," said Morris. "That was because people thought the only part of salt that was important was the sodium component. We are suggesting that it's not just sodium. It's sodium chloride." The Michigan Daily-Thursday, October 22, 1987- Page 3 Contras free priests after 11 days captivity MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) - A Roman Catholic priest said yesterday that he and one other clergyman held by U.S.-supported rebels for 11 days were free, after they had been threatened and treated badly. The Rev. Enrique Blandon radioed the Witness for Peace office (a religious group that opposes U.S. policies in Central America) from Wasala, 118 miles north of Managua, to say that he and the Rev. Adolfo Tiffer, a Seventh-day Adventist pastor, had been released. Contra spokesperson Marta Sacasa said in Miami that the two clergymen were freed in front of several witnesses at a home in El Ocote, about 124 miles north of Managua and near Waslala, where Blandon and Tiffer live. Blandon, in the radio call heard by several journalists, said they were kidnapped by a rebel chief who called himself "Cantinflas." "He threatened us with death and told us we would be in their power because we were dangerous people," he said. "They did not accept any argument. They are people you cannot talk with." Blandon said the two were in satisfactory physical condition. Tiffer did not speak in the radio call. In Miami, the rebels said Paul Alan Fisher, an American being held since Saturday, would be freed "as soon as there are secure circum- stances." "We have advised foreigners who are cooperating with the Sandinista government... that they have n o reason to be in military zones. It's a dangerous situation, " Sacasa said. The U.S.-backed Contras originally denied specifically that they were holding Blandon and Tiffer, who were with a local peace commission when they disappeared Oct. 10. Fisher has been in Nicaragua since April and is part of a 32- member team traveling through the countryside to check on reports of human rights violations by the Contras. The Sandanista government has declared a unilateral, partial cease-fire in four small areas of Nicaragua, including a region near Waslala. The dozens of local peace commissions it has set up in the zones have instructions to seek out and discuss truce terms with rebel field commanders. WEEKEND MAGAZINE Fridays in The Daily 763-0379 . Daily Photo by KAREN HANDELMAN Progress Construction workers at the new chemistry building site begin to build concrete steps of a lecture hall. MSAvoisopposition to code (continued from Page 1) In other business, the assembly passed a resolution which once again voices opposition to the proposed code of non-academic conduct. The resolution, sponsored by the Student Rights Committee, was brought up Tuesday night partly to make the assembly's stance on the code clear to new students. The resolution was also passed partly to allay fears that the assem- bly was softening on its code stance. "It's been questioned what MSA's position is on the code," said LSA representative Cheryl Tilles. Questions arose when the assembly failed to pass a resolution last week that asked University President Harold Shapiro to answer students' questions on the code. Many assembly members, how- ever, thought Shapiro answered pertinent questions about the code when the assembly met with Shapiro at his house earlier this month. Group mourns domestic violence victims at vigil TH E LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Campus Cinema Close Encounters of the Third Kind (Steven Speilberg, 1977) 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. Lorch Alien creatures come to this planet and force Richard Dreyfuss to play with his food and to dig up his garden. Actually, it is one of the best films in the extraterrestrial communication genre, and one Speilberg should be proud of. Meetings The Navigators' Christian Fellowship - 7:30 p.m., Michigan League, 3rd floor. For more information, call Jerry at 484-3443. Graduate Christian Fellowship - Panel discussion with University faculty and administrators on "The Nature of the University," 7:00 p.m., Room D, Michigan League. Miskatonic - Meeting, 8:00 p.m., Crofoot R o o m, Michigan Union. History Majors a n d Prospective History Majors - 4:30 p.m., Clements Library. U of M Outing Club Mass Meeting - 6:30 p.m., Anderson D, Michigan Union. Furthermore Music at Midday -Baritone Blane Shaw, with classical and spirituals singer Mark Smith. 12:15 p.m., Pendleton Room, Michigan Union. Pre-interview - Recruit U.S.A.: 2-6 p.m. Interested in technical w r i t i n g, communications, and engineering degree holders, Room 143 Chrysler. FMC Corporation-5- 7p.m., Room 1500 EECS. Sponsored by Society of Women Engineers. Food-processor Possib- ilities - Cooking tips. 7-9 p.m., Ann Arbor Y. Israel Information - Jewish Agency kibbutz-aliyah desk, answer questions and provide information about programs in Israel. Call for ar vn mnnt A '1 A A Safewalk - Night-time safety walking service. 8 p.m. - 1:30 a.m., Room 102, UGLi. National Collegiate Al- cohol Awareness Week - Jazz musicians and alcohol-free beverages. 9 p.m., The University Club, Michigan Union. Art display by Roger Hayes - "The Face of Hell is Military," Oct. 20-Nov. 13, 111 Art, 111 Third St. U of M Bowling Club - Men and women's tryouts for intercollegiate competition, 2-6 p.m., Colonial Lanes. Womyn's Fall Dance - Sponsored by Lesbian and Gay Law Students, Sat., Oct. 24, 9 p.m., Law Quad Lounge. Impact Jazz Workshop - 7-8:30 p.m., West Quad Wedge Room. The Waykools - A 50's style Rock and Roll band at the Heidelberg, 215 N. Main. Martial Arts Demon- stration - 7-8 p.m., Blue Lounge, Stockwell Hall. Speakers John Grube - "Careers in Commercial Banking", 4:30 p.m., Kresge Building, room K1320. Arlene Agus - Lecture and service celebrating and examining Rosh Hodesh, the monthly celebration of the new moon. 7:30 p.m., Hillel, 339 E. Liberty. Liz Hamp-Lyons - "Writing In-Class Essays", 4- 5:15 p.m., 219 Angell Hall. Dr. Lee Somers - At- mospheric and Oceanic Sciences, 8:30 p.m., Room 1520, School of Natural Resources. Kent Walley - "Dis- cipleship", 7 p.m., Room 126, East Quad. Dr. Jeffrey Parsons - "The Valley of Mexico Re- visited: Is the Laboratory Damaged Beyond Repair?", noon, Room 2009, Museums Building. Clint Hewitt - "Deve- lopment on Chinese University Campuses: What Lessons Can Be Learned?," 3-5 p.m., 1040 Dana Building. (Continued from Page 1) Kata Issari, the University's sexual assault counselor who works with the Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center (SAPAC), addressed the crowd "It's easy to get depressed because there's a lot of pain, but there are also a lot of inspirational moments. We have to focus on the small victories as we head toward the larger victory," she said. Ann Arbor has already taken several steps to end domestic violence, such as the designation of October as Domestic Violence Awareness Month and the city's Mandatory Arrest Ordinance which was established last May. The ordinance requires the arrest of men when their wives show evidence of physical abuse within 24 hours of a battery. Lou Okin, a coordinator of the vigil and Livingston County Shelter counselor for men who batter women, counsels men whose wives have left them, or threatened to leave them. He said counseling is only 10 Ak percent effective, though many men become less violent. Pam Kischa volunteer SAPAC coordinator, attended the vigil and said, "It's always really powerful to hear women speak out." As part of many activities in Domestic Violence Awareness Month, the ceremony was sponsored by SAFEhouse's Domestic Violence Project, the Ann Arbor Assault Crisis Center, the Washtenaw County Women's Crisis Center, and SAPAC. Cramer said one of every three women experience violence, and a third of all homicide victims are killed by their partners. The LSA Project for Language Research and Development, the Committee on Foreign Language Instruction and the Language Laboratory announce a Colloquium on Approaches to Foreign Language Testing October 24,1987 9am-4pm Hussey Room Michigan League SPEAKERS John Clark, Defense Language Institute Charles James, University of Wisconsin Dale Lange, University of Minnesota Charles Stansfield, Center for Applied Linguistics Marjorie Tussing, California FL Competency Project 1 SKI WEEKEND 101 at CRYSTAL MOUNTAIN s6per person group rate Includes: 2 nights lodging & day and night skiing Friday thru Sunday. ENROLL IN GOOD TIMES: 22 slopes, NASTAR, free beginners lesson, XC skiing with lighted night trail, movies, entertainment, heated outdoor pool. Group rates apply with 20 or more-special savings for group organizers. Y . 1\0 I