The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, July 22, 1980- Second major storm in week hits Michigan By United Press International A second major storm in less than a week lashed Lower Michigan late Sun- day and yesterday, creating new problems for utility company crews still working overtime to restore power to thousands of blacked-out homes and businesses. Winds topping 70 mph, golfball-sized hail and torrential downpours cut a swath across the state from Lake City in the northwest to Monroe in the southeast. FUNNEL CLOUDS WERE spotted in Genesee, Saginaw and Van Buren coun- ties hut the National Weather Service said it had no reports of touchdowns or. Smajor damage. Fierce winds caused the roof of a Taco Bell restaurant to cave in in the Grand Rapids suburb of Wyoming late Sunday. Five persons were in the restaurant and one of them suffered minor injuries. The storm, coming just four days af- ter last week's killer storm, played havoc with the 55th annual Port Huron to Chicago yacht race during the weekend. The Coast Guard rescued 11 stranded crew members aboard the sailboat Notre Dame early Monday on Lake . Huron 18 miles east of Harbor Beach. A Coast Guard spokesman said the vessel had been adrift for about 12 hours. Two other boats lost their masts and were forced into port Sunday and another lost is rudder, race officials said. The storm knocked out electrical power to 30,000 Consumers Power Co. customers in Kalamazoo, Barry and Van Buren counties and another 14,000 in Kent County alone. Company officials said power was expected to be restored in most areas by late Monday. AP Photo A BOLT OF LIGHTNING struck St. Joseph, Mich., at midnight Sunday in yet another storm which has plagued south- eastern Michigan in the past few days. The storm knocked out electricity to about 4,000 homes, while 3,000 other house- holds are still without power as a result of last Wednesday's thunderstorm. Rain douses southern plains, elps end, heat' From UPI and AP Rain doused parts of the sunbaked southern plains yesterday for the first time in a month, loosening a sweltering stranglehold that has killed nearly 1,200 people, wiped out crops and livestock and is certain to send food prices soaring. - Nearly three-quarters of an inch of rain splashed over areas of northwest Oklahoma, providing welcome relief-if not an end-to the heat wave and drought. THE EARLY MORNING low tem- perature dipped to 79 degrees in Tulsa, Okla., the first time in 24 days the mer- cury had fallen below the 80-degree mark. Little Rock, Ark., reported a late-morning reading of 78 under cloudy skies. Readings had hit 100 by noon on most days last week. Meanwhile, an eight-lane commuter bridge in Baltimore buckled and New York City and Philadelphia asked their residents to conserve water yesterday as the month-long heat wave continued its spread into the populous Northeast. In New York City, a water-pressure emergency was declared, banning all lawn watering and unauthorized opening of fire hydrants. E. WILSON GOODE, Philadelphia's managing director, declared a water emergency for a second day after water pressure dropped to record low levels. Goode, who asked residents not to water lawns or wash their cars, said the decrease was caused by children illegally opening fire hydrants to cool off in the spray. An odd-even water rationing system for all outdoor uses of water, affecting M.D.s:No execution involvement CHICAGO (AP)-The chief doctors of two state prison systems yesterday: urged the American Medical' Association to take a strong stand against physician involvement in the newest form of legal execution-death by injection. Dr. Armond Start and Dr. Jay Har- ness said requiring doctors to supervise or administer the lethal dose would undermine medical ethics and make it harder to give' inmates ordinary medicala care. "ETHICALLY WE ARE sworn to do no harm. How in the world can I be in- volved in an execution and not violate my own ethics," asked Start, medical director of the Oklahoma Department of Corrections. He said neither he nor his staff would assist at executions. Harness, medical director of the Michigan Department of Corrections, cited the difficult "emotional issue" of capital punishment, but urged the AMA to act. Proponents say the new laws offer a more humane death than electrocution, poison gas, firing squad or other alter- natives. IN 1977 OKLAHOMA became the first state to pass such a law. Texas, Idado and New Mexico followed suit, although no prisoner has been put to death by in- jection. Michigan does not have a death penalty. None of the four states that have passed death-by-injection laws actually requires a physican to give the over- dose, but doctors are worried that other states may pass laws that do. The AMA's policy-making body, its House of Delegates, is considering a resolution that says a physician should not be an "active participant" in an execution but could pronounce the prisoner dead. THE HOUSE MAY vote on the resolution later this week. About 1,200 physicans are here for the five-day meeting, which ends Thursday. But several physicians at a commit- tee hearing yesterday said the 214,000- member organization should not take a stand. One delegate noted that the proposal calls for physicans to be "ex- cluded" from executions. "Does that mean he has to be out of the room or just turn his head. . . . I think we're getting into a thicket out of which we're not going to be able to ex- tricate ourselves," the delegates said. BUT DR. CARROLL Witten of Louisville, Ky:, said inaction would nean the AMA had "neglected to at- tend to one of the most important social and professional issues of our time." Two Harvard professors argued in a recent issue of the journal that doctors should not even pronounce death at drug executions. Witten said passage of the resolution- would not mean sanctions against physicians who chose to serve as executioners. "If a physican decides to volunteer, that's his right. But he should not be required by law to par- ticipate," he said. Appearing TOECGHTCA tC !W " some 25,000 people in northwest Baltimore and Baltimore County, was in effect for the second day yesterday. "We don't seem to be having too much success with our appeal to curtail use," said Walter Koterwas, head of the water division at the Baltimore Public Works Department. AT LEAST SIX people, most of them sitping in the unshaded upper deck at Baltimore's Memorial Stadium, passed out Sunday because of the heat at the Orioles-Texas Rangers baseball game. The temperature in- the city Sunday reached 102. In Brooklyn, N.Y., some people were without water as use in the city's five boroughs climbed from 1.5 billion gallons a day to 2.2 billion gallons, said Robert LePage, a fire official. "In some Brooklyn high-rises, the top floors of, say a 20-story apartment building, have no water whatever," LePage said. Temperatures dropped slightly in the parched Southwest, South and Midwest with rain expected to further dampen the mercury. At least 1,169 heat related deaths have been reported since the beginning of the heat wave last month. Missouri has been hardest hit with 291 deaths, followed by Tennessee with 143, and Arkansas 127. Texas, which has suf- fered through the longest and hottest stretch, reported 98. Billion's of dollars in crops, cattle and poultry have been wiped out by the blistering heat. THE PROSPECT FOR REVOLUTION IN THE UNDERDEVELOPED COUNTRIES: AN EXAMINATION OF THE ROLE OF AGRICULTURAL WORKERS IN GUADALUPE-MARTINIQUE Given by The Spark Sponsored by Ann Arbor Science for the People July 23, 7:30 Pendleton Room Michigan Union