t The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, December 9, 1981-Page 5 Fans remember Lennon's death By The Associated Press Thousands of Beatles fans paid tribute yesterday to John Lennon on the first anniversary of his slaying at an outdoor concert and vigil in his native Liverpool. A local band kicked off the event with the early Beatles classic "Eight Days a Week," and the largely young crowd roared. Like their predecessors in the Fab Four's heyday in the mid-1960s, teenagers in the audience - a new generation of Beatles fans - jumped up and down and screamed. "I'M MEMORY-LANING, if not Penny-Laning, tonight," said disc jockey Bob Wooler, emcee at the free concert, which took place in bitter cold weather in a square outside Liverpool's St. George's Hall. At vigils and concerts and meetings - in Liverpool,' in New York and around the world - fans recalled Len- non as a rock 'n' roll dreamweaver, working class hero and househusband. "If the rain comes, they run and hide their heads," the former Beatle once sang. BUT ABOUT 100 wet and cold fans at- tended a morning vigil outside the Dakota, the apartment building where Lennon lived and died. They stood behind police-barricades outside the dark neo-Gothic building, holding flowers, candles and umbrellas as a steady, cold rain fell. Lennon's widow,,Yoko Ono, apparen- tly was not inside. A spokesman said she had gone off in seclusion with her six-year-old son, Sean, to meditate. IN SAN FRANCISCO, where Lennon performed his last live concert as a Beatle in 1966, a man and a woman protesting the nuclear arms race and marking the anniversary of Lennon's death, climbed up the side of a high-rise office building. They were identified as Edwin Drummond, 36, an experienced British- born climber, and Lia Simnachet', 21. The climbers halted between the eighth and ninth stories when building officials removed a pane of glass from a window on the ninth floor, blocking their ascent. THE PAIR unfurled a banner saying, "Imagine No Arms" and showing three clenched fists - one clutching a flower - beneath a broken bomb. 13 killed in coal mine explosion WHITWELL, Tenn. (AP) - An ex- plosion ripped through a coal mine shaft yesterday, killing 13 miners 1,200 feet underground, authorities said. It was the third mine disaster in the Ap- palachian coalfields in the last five days. Emergency rescue teams equipped with air tanks and masks had to crawl through a shaft only 36 inches wide in some places to reach the men, a mine company spokesman said. The cause of the explosion had not been determined. WILLIAM ALLISON, president of Tennessee Consolidated Coal Co., said in a statement that all 13 men had been found "and there were no survivors." None of the victims was immediately identified: The disasterleft 24 men dead in mine accidents since last Thursday. It was the worst coal mine accident since 15 men were killed last April 15 in an ex- plosion at a mine near Redstone, Colo. ALLISON'S STATEMENT said the explosion occurred at about noon CST in what is known as the 003 section of the No. 21 mine operated by Grundy Mining Co., a subsidiary of Tennessee Consolidated. The mine is about 30 miles northwest of Chattanooga in a mountainous area of southeastern Ten- nessee. John Parish, press secretary to Governor Lamar Alexander, said in Nashville that an investigation into the cause of the explosion was under way. Steve Blackburn, a spokesman for Tennessee Consolidated, said no one' answered when officials tried to call the miners, through an underground telephone from an office three miles from the shaft. Mike Caudill, an assistant operations officer with the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency, said the Ten- nessee Mine Disaster team from the state Labor Department was also on the scene, along with the Marion County. Sheriff's office and the Emergency Management Agency. C lea nting u pDaily Photo by DEBORAH LEWIS 1 Troy Byrd is busy removing the graffiti from the walls of Angell Hall yesterday. Undoubtedly, the artwork will show it- self again soon on yet another empty space. 'U' prof reports on oudook for state auto industry From wire reports The American automobile industry is in the process of moving out of the United States-and foremost among the losers will be the state of Michigan, war- ned Ross Wilhelm, a professor in the Graduate School of Business Administration. "We will only keep the automobile industry here if we restore the conditions that brought about the enormous growth in car ownership from the turn of the century up until the mid-1960s," Wilhelm said. IN A PAPER for the Michigan BankersAssociation Bank Management Conference in Dearborn, Wilhelm described four factors that have made this an automobile-based world: rising real consumer in- comes, a favorable political climate, declining real cost of cars, and declining real price of gasoline. Wilhelm said the "outlook is mixed. The short-run outlook and the outlook for the decade is favorable for the economy, and the nation. But the outlook for our state is not bright and we have a long way to go to im- prove it," he said. TMeanwhile, at yesterday's meeting of the United. Auto Worker's Executive Board, contract con- cessions were on the agenda but the union leaders. reached no decision on whether to change their previously strong "no givebacks" stance. EARLIER, UAW President Douglas Fraser had confirmed the board would discuss contract con- cessions at its quarterly meeting-but declined to predict what the 18-member board would decide to do on the issue. /- The board meets each quarter, but this week's meeting is in the spotlight because of the industry's continued slump. Autos in#November sold at the lowest rate in 22 years, and more than 190,000 hourly workers are now on indefinite layoff. President Reagan's refusal to call a White House summit on the depressed auto industry as requested by the Michigan congressional delegation is "tragic and unbelievable," one of the congressmen said yesterday. THE 11 DEMOCRATS and S Republicans sent the president a letter Oct. 23 asking for a meeting either with him or with top cabinet officials to discuss what can be done to turn the industry around. Rep. James Blanchard (D-Mich.) said he received a brief letter from Gregory Newell, special assistant to the president, explaining that such a meeting pould not be arranged "in the immediate future." "I think i' an incredible response," said Blan- chard. ". . . I think the lack of a sense of urgency here points up the need for such a summit if only to educate the president on how the economy works. It's tragic and unbelievable." In an attempt to "turn around our unfair negative image," the UAW will take to the airwaves this week with a series of pro-union television commercials. The commercials will feature a strong "The UAW wants to make America work again" message and give credit to auto companies for design and engineering improvements made during the past few years. I Study reports conflicts with work, children (Continued from Page 1) important assistants who shared-her my life. That should be a boon for those goals for the child. But the more con- around me," Mrs. B said. 4 flicted mother tended to feel com- MANY WORKING mothers must hire petitive, or in some way ambivalent, babysitters to take care of their toward the care providers they chose. children wuring the day. This often This attitude increased the doubts and leads to problems in the mother/child pressures they felt about their own relationship, Plunkett said. mothering role," Plunkett said. "The women who were relaxed and realistic about mothering tended to The image of the "chic" superwoman think of the child care provider as an who can easily balance job and home is . t false and harmful, she said. Mothering is not an easy job, and having doubts about it is natural, she added. Plunkett claimed there is no simple solution for women who are experien- cing great stress adjusting' to motherhood, but working at a regular job is not a valid escape from the pressure, she concluded. Mothers may need professional help in resolving their conflicts, and they must realize that it takes time to adjust to the new responsibilities of motherhood, Plunkett added. "In general, mothers who are conflic- ted about their work/mothering role may pass these problems on to their children," Plunkett said. "Working mothers who are happy about what they are doing for their families and thenselves should have children who are happy and well adjusted." City pigeon control guidelines proposed (tinued from Page 1) ldrpd'the ,upof n A itr I'M " h Pa lP trannuilize nr 1killn ioenns "th Dronmalstated ~~WL. '.11 E~~ VA IA ~~JA L~~J U'~ U fl~Ct* ~ t, ,S S. ~ .f* , * tric shock barriers on city buildings and implementing use of various chemicals to kill the birds. Electric shock devices would disper- se pigeons from the wired buildings, but not from surrounding structures. These devices would have to be regularly in- spected for maintenance reasons and would be more expensive than the use of chemicals, the proposal stated. THE CHEMICAL Avitrol - which was used until recently by the Univer- sity and the Downtown Business Development Association - created "a strong adverse public reaction," ac- cording to the proposal. The committee wrote that it con- than desirable control method because of its inhumane and adverse public relations characteristics." Avitrol can be lethal or disorienting to pigeons, depending on the ,dosage. Some poisoned birds were killed when they flew into cars and buildings. Strychnine, another chemical recommended in the proposal, affects the birds quickly and minimizes the dispersion of the dead pigeons. "Its primary drawback," the proposal stated, "is the potential for accidental ingestion by other birds and animals, and possibly humans." ALPHA CHLOROSE, a tranquilizer, "can be used to humanely capture, i~ 1qu 1 , p gli 'Cii, 6 proposal noted. It is also less expensive than most of the other chemicals recommended. The use of Phenobarbitol, a bar- biturate, was another possible drug mentioned for usage in the proposal. It was the least expensive chemical cited. "There is no single successful for- mula that is applicable in all instances where. control action is needed," the "Nothing should be done unless the situation is investigated, including nesting, roosting, and feeding habits of the pigeons," Liska-Stevens said. Committee chairman Guy Larcom said he was pleased with the commit- tee's work. "These are the things the city should consider when issuing a permit (to allow a resident to kill pigeons)," he said. 'I 1 THE HOW TO BE A GOOD NEIGHBOR" CAPTION CONTEST In Columbia Pictures' new hit comedy NEIGHBORS, John Belushi and P in 1 Aykroyd take a laugh-provoking approach to "How To Be A Good Neigh- bor." To enter this contest, write in your ideas on the same subject by captioning this photo from NEIGHBORS. _ I 1I s'I I1 f 4. // 1 .. *-k 1 r~.- 1 -- l