Page 10-Tuesday. August 12, 1980-The Michigan Daily STORM LEAVES WIDESPREAD FLOODING IN TEXAS Allen limps out of U.S. 0 FromUPland.AP HARLINGEN, Texas - The remnan- ts of Hurricane Allen, once described as the second largest Atlantic hurricane of the century, dealt Texas a parting blow with widespread flooding yesterday and dissolved into a soggy mess over Mexico. There were only three known Texas fatalities in the hurricane. Early hurricane warnings and the orderly evacuation of at least 200,000 persons from danger areas were credited with helping to keep the death toll down. "THERE'S GOING to be a lot of flooding," said state meteorologist Tom Larkin. "A lot of ground in the area west and south of San Antonio down to Alice has been saturated." However, National Weather Service meteorologist Gary Grice said the Minorities speak out Continu't-from Page 3, "higher priority status" from the Car- ter administration. Smeal said her organization will have to consider options outside the two major party presidential candidates. "We could work at state and local levels - we don't even have to support anyone on the national ticket," she said. NOW is asking the Democratic National Committee to include Minority Reports 10 and 11 in the Democratic platform. Minority Report 10 calls for the Democrats to withhold financial support and technical cam- paign assistance from candidates who do not support the Equal Rights Amen- dment; Number 11 opposes restrictions on Medicaid funding for abortions. Neither position has yet been of- ficially endorsed by the Carter camp. Americans consume more red meat r than any other nation. Consumption reached 18.3 million metric tons in 1979-nearly a fourth of the world total. summer-long heat wave had spared the state even more disastrous flooding. "With the ground so dry, it is absor- bing a lot of water," he said. "Many of the reservoirs are also down because of the drought, and they will hold a lot more water." ALLEN, BORN 12 days ago as a minor disturbance 4,000 miles away off the coast of Africa, killed 220 in Haiti, 16. in St. Lucia, three in the Dominican Republic, eight in Jamaica, one in Guadeloupe, three in Cuba, 13 in an evacuation helicopter crash off Louisiana, four in an oil rig off Louisiana, and three in Texas. The three Texas deaths included a 61- year-old Corpus Christi woman whose body was found with that of her cat in her submerged car on a narrow coastal peninsula, a 71-year-old man who suf- fered a fatal heart attack while trim- ming fallen trees at his Corpus Christi home, and a 61-year-old Harlingen woman who suffered a fatal heart at- tack at a Laredo hotel where she had taken refuge. After its landfall - with winds at half the speed feared - at 2 a.m. Sunday north of Brownsville, Texas, the hurricane bred inland tornadoes that injured 20 at a campground in San Mar- cos and caused $50 million damage at the Austin airport, primarily to cor- porate jets and hangers. The worst coastal damage appeared to be at the small fishing village of Port Mansfield. "The town's pretty well torn up, said Willacy County deputy sheriff Glen Fisk. "One-third of everything is gone." 4 I I BOATS, DOCKS, AND dockside buildings were left in ruins in the wake of Hurricane Allen, which hit the Gulf Coast Texas city of South Padre Island early Sunday. The hurricane lessened in intensity over the weekend, devastating parts of Mexico and Texas even as its winds decreased to 60 m.p.h. Suicide guide cancelled; puuisrersje LONDON (AP) - Britain's euthanasia society, "Exit," announced yesterday it would not publish a guide on how to kill yourself after being advised that publication might land its officials in jail. At a somber news conference, executives of the 45-year- old society declared the decision meant "tragedy and con- tinued distress and personal suffering" for thousands of in- curably ill people longing for death. F "IT IS A TRAGEDY for which our so-called civilized society should be condemned, but I am personally not prepared to go to jail," said Larry Hill, 63, a local gover- The University of Michigan nment official who is acting chairman of the society. School of Music Opera Theater "I don't believe our booklet would increase suicides E CENTER among the young or others mentally disturbed," Hill said. POWER C"They have the means to do it anyway, they merely need the determination. We are concerned with people who are not August 14-16 at 8:00 p.m. able to commit suicide unless they are helped." Last fall, the group, called "Exit, the Society for the August 17 at 3:00 p.m. Right to Die with Dignity," announced plans to publish a 30- page guide for people who wanted to know how to kill them- Tickets at PTP-Michigan League selves, which was to have been provided free of charge to Noon-5:00 p.m., M-F members. Viso/Master Charge by phone- THE BOOKLET, written with the help of two lawyers 764-0450 and a doctor, outlined four bloodless methods of suicide, in- cluding specific instructions on fatal overdoses of pills 4 -; ;Msbi*ut pregvription at-drug stores. a arrest Exit officials abandoned their plans, however, when lawyers advised that they could be prosecuted, and that the professionals who helped draw up the booklet risked losing the right to practice. Since Exit announced plans to publish the guide, member- ship has soared from 2,000 to 9,000, including hundreds of Americans. The membership fee is about $7 a year for residents of Britain, $23 for foreigners, and $69 for life. THE GUIDE WAS intended primarily for the painfully and incurably ill and aged persons who are incapacitated. The society had said that the booklet would be sold only to members of three month's duration, conceding that such a rule was scant precaution against its being acquired by the healthy in despair, including the impulsive. Most new members said they joined because they wanted the booklet. ABOUT 10 members said they'wanted to put the guide to immediate use, Exit spokesmen said. Some described wat- ching the lingering deaths of people they loved, and said they didn't want it to happen to them. A society spokesman predicted that the decision would cause a slump in its membership and a major battle at its annual meeting in October. He appealed to members not to quit, urging "all who are compassionate" to lobby British legislators and help Exit's long campaign to legalieteutianasia., I I I I