Paul Makes
It Clear: 'I Feel Fine'
London (AP)--"I am alive and well and concerned
about the rumors of my death," says Beatle Paul
McCartney. "But if I were dead, I would be the
last to know."
At least, that's what
the Beatles' business organization, Apple, said he
said. The millionaire pop musician was on a motoring
tour somewhere in England with his wife, two children
and a dog and refused to let it be known where he
could be found. Apple said yesterday that McCartney
telephoned the denial of his demise to London Tuesday
night.
"Paul
refuses to say anything more than that,"
said Derek Taylor, Apple's chief spokesman. "Even
if he appeared in public just to deny rumors it wouldn't
do any good. If people want to believe he's dead,
then they'll believe it--the truth is not at all persuasive."
Apple and U.S. news
media have been flooded with telephone calls and letters
about rumors in the U.S. that McCartney has been dead
for years. "They are all ridiculous," Apple
said. "It's a lot of nonsense," said fellow
Beatle John Lennon. The rumors are too stupid to bother
denying, said George Harrison, another member of the
famed quartet. Beatle drummer Ringo Starr could not
be reached for comment.
The rumors claim the
Beatles have been dropping clues since 1966 about
McCartney's supposed death. A disk jock for a Detroit
radio station claimed to have assembled numerous clues.
A record-spinner in New York was pulled off the air
for recounting the rumors that brought a flood of
telephone calls from fans and jammed the radio station's
switchboard. Dallas and Austin, Texas, reported rumors
were rampant there, and Mineapolis news media were
swamped with fans' queries. Most of the clues supposedly
appeared in Beatles album jackets.
The cover of the Beatles'
"Magical Mystery Tour" album is supposed
to reveal a phone number in London, which, when dialed,
answers: "Paul McCartney is dead." The number
is 231-7346. No such number exists on the London telephone
exchange. Another supposed hint was the license number
of a car in the picture on the cover of "Abbey
Road", the group's latest album. The license
plate was said to bear the characters "28 IF,"
interpreted by some to mean that if McCartney were
alive, he would be 28 years old. McCartney was born
June 18, 1942, which makes him 27--not 28--and the
license plate is "281 F" with the 1 a figure,
not a letter.
Ian MacMillan, the
photographer who took the picture for the album, said
the car "just happened to be standing there.
It had been left by someone on holiday--nobody with
any connection with the Beatles--and a policeman tried
to move it away for us, but he couldn't." In
the same photo, McCartney's feet are bare, which to
some is another sign of death. "It was a hot
day," said MacMillan, "and he just took
his shoes off and left them on the sidewalk. It didn't
seem symbolic to me."
On the the cover of
"Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band,"
the Beatles are wearing uniforms, and McCartney has
an emblem on the sleeve saying "OPD," which
some interpret to mean "officially pronounced
dead." The uniforms, complete the badge on McCartney's
sleeve, were rented from a costume shop, worn for
the picture, and returned.
-New York Newsday
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