The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, December 8, 1981-Page 3 City debates solutions - to its irr By STACY POWEL After more than two debate, the Ann Arbor Pig Committee will meet today its recommendation to City reduce the city's pigeon pop Guy Larcom, chairmanc mittee formed last Oct yesterday he will not r details of the. proposal unt committee votes on it. WHILE THE search for a' continues, many members munity said they question I any policy of pigeon disposa ' A primary issue is wh there is an overpopulationo said Eileen Liska-Stevens, a tie Huron Valley Huma Liska-Stevens and other the society said there may stantial enough numbers o warrant a plan to cc population. - Last fall, the University h to spread corn kernels satur chemical called Avitrol in a to be roosting sites of t 'pigeon pr Dozens of pigeons were killed or LL disabled by consuming the chemical. months of Eventually, protests from citizens eon Control groups led City Council to appoint the y to finalize committee to investigate other methods y Council to of control. ulation. "AVITROL IS a warning thing, of the com- unless the pigeons eat too much of it," ober, said said Larry Tuer, manager of RoseEx- elease any terminators, the company hired to con- il after the trol the pigeon population. "Then they'll die." "best way" Avitrol is a chemical which works on of the com- the central nervous system, inhibiting the need for the pigeon's ability to see, hear, and fly. 1. Its purpose is to make affected pigeons ether or not flap aroun, frightening others from the of pigeons," area. s member of Although Avitrol was not intended to ne Society. kill the pigeons, Liska-Stevens said that members of in addition to those pigeons killed direc- not be sub- tly by an overdose of Avitrol, many died f pigeons to from the drug's "side-effects." ontrol the Disoriented pigeons died' when they flew into cars and businesses, she ex- hired a firm plained. rated with a LISKA-STEVENS recommended that areas known periodic surveys of pigeon numbers be he pigeons. made to determine the extent of the )blem' problem. If there is a problem, she said, her organization has several "more humane ways of reducing the numbers of pigeons." If the surveys show that poison is necessary, Alpha Chlorose (a tranquilizer) and Pentobarbitol (a bar- biturate) are available. "They work like sleeping pills for humans," Liska- Stevens said. "The pigeons fall asleep, and the poison takes effect." Both Liska-Stevens and Doris Dixon, a member of the Fund for Animals, .have suggested "pigeon-proofing" the buildings, but said the University told them that the process would be too much trouble and too expensive with the number of buildings on campus. Pigeon-proofing requires closing in ledges with plywood or wire screen and removing nests from roosting areas. Windows would have to be replaced and barriers set up. "These are long-term solutions," said Liska-Stevens, "and it would take a few years to pigeon-proof the University. They would rather use strychnine and be done with it." Doily Photo by BRIAN MASC THIS PIGEON, resting comfortably on a Law Quad drain pipe, may not be here much longer, as a City Council-appoin- ted committee is working on a plan to effectively and inexpensively control Ann Arbor's pigeon population. OAS backs Salvadoran elections Working on The Daily Is a Great Experience! SHORT OR LONG Hairstyles for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State........668-9329 East U. at South U......662-0354 Arborland ..............971-9975 Maple Village..........761-2733 CASTRIES, St. Lucia (AP) - The Organization of American States voted 22-3 yesterday to support the plan of the U.$.-backed Salvadoran junta to hold general elections in an effort to resolve the civil war there. Mexico, Nicaragua and Grenada voted against. Four nations abstained - Panama, Trinidad and Tobago, Surinam and St. Lucia. THE UNITED States had strongly supported the resolution and U.S. diplomats exulted in the size of the vote - which they interpreted as'a show of support for U.S. policy toward El Salvador's elections. Leftist guerrillas are fighting to top- ple the civilian-military junta in El Salvador. The junta's President Jose Napoleon Duarte has insisted that the only way out of the civil war is through elections. He has said the leftist op- position behind the guerrilla movement could participate - if it first lays down its arms and constitutes itself into political parties. The resolution calls for OAS mem- bers to act as observers if asked by El Salvador in order to help guarantee the "purity" of the March 12 elections. MEXICO'S VOTE against the resolution was not a surprise, since it joined with France earlier this year in recognizing the political leadership of the guerrilla movement. H APPENINGS- HIGHLIGHT The Ann Arbor Democratic Party will hold a meeting of Democrats of the city's re-organized second ward to select a new party chairperson for the ward and to discuss City Council candidates and reapportionment. The meeting will be held tonight at 7:30 at the Union's Conference Room 1. CG-Day For Night, 7 & 9:05 p.m.,Lorch Hall. CFT-Cabaret, 4,7 & 9:15p.m., Michigan Theater. PIRGIM- Yellow Submarine, 7:30 & 9 p.m., 2003 Angell. SPEAKERS Geology- William Fyfe, "Evolution of Continents," 4 p.m., 4001 C.C. Little Building. Center for Chinese Studies-Albert Feuerwerker, "New Directions C6n- cerning Research and Exchange Programs with the People's Republic of China," noon, Lane Hall Commons Room. Western European Studies-Peter Wallensteen, "Focus of Sweden," 7 p.m., International Center. Ethics and Religion-Paulo Freire, "Education for Critical Consciousness in Africa & Latin America," 4 p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Ecumenical Campus Center-Teshome Wagaw, "The Development of Higher Education and Political Instability in Africa," noon, 603 E. Madison St. Chemistry-George Tarr, "The Chemistry of the Edman Degradation," 4 p.m., 1300 Chemistry. Nuclear Engineering-Ziya Akcasu, "Light Scattering Experiments in Non-Asymptotic Q Region," 4 p.m., Baer Room, Cooley. Bioengineering-Henry Wang, " 'Real' Engineering Aspects of Genetic Engineering," 4 p.m., 1213 E. Engineering Bldg. Psychobiology- Kenneth Rusiniak, "Odor-Taste Interactions During Con- ditioned Flavor Aversion," 12:30 p.m., 1057 MHRI. MISCELLANEOUS Writers in Residence Program-David Budbill reads his poetry, 8 p.m., East Quad Benzinger Library. Musical Society-Vienna Chamber Orchestra & Phillippe Entremont, 8:30 p.m., Hill Aud. UAC- Laugh Track, Dave Couralier, 9 p.m., 'U' Club; Impact Dance, 7 p.m., Union Ballroom. Union Arts Program-Sunday Funnies perform as Six Geese a Laying 12:15 p.m., Union Lobby. Women's Studies-Oldies But Goodies from the Fabulous 50s: Good Grooming For Girls, How Much Affection, and Why Study Home Economics, noon, 2235 Angell. Young Americans for Freedom-Mtg., 7 p.m., Union Conference Room 4. Ann Arbor Space Advocates-Mtg., 7:30 p.m., Union. Ann Arbor Go Club-Mtg., 7 p.m., 1433 Mason. His House Christian Fellowship-Mtg., 7:30 p.m., League Rooms D & E. Jackson Community College-Benefit performance, The Original World- Famous Fred Waring Musical Show, 8 p.m., Potter Aud., Jackson Com- munity College, Jackson. AAPL-Alfred Slote & Garnet Garrison, authors of The Santa Claus Killer, speak at "Booked For Lunch" program, 12:10p.m., public library. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of: Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI. 48109. THE PROJECT COMMUNITY Income Tax Assistance ProgramI .Detroit Edison helped me. 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