The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 13, 1980-Page 11 Kennedy vows to run despite Carter's pleas for party unity Cheek to cheek President Carter and his wife, Rosalyn, dance together during an old fashioned backyard picnic held on the South Lawn of the White House Wednesday night for members of Congress. The guests dined on Mexican, Southern, and New England cuisine. Carter sends standby gas plan to Congress From AP and UPI WASHINGTON-Despite an appeal from President Carter for party unity, Sen. Edward Kennedy vowed yesterday to fight on, both in shaping the Democratic Party's 1980 platform and pursuing its presidential nomination. -Stand-iris for the president and his campaign challenger presented their views on major issues to the party's platform committee. Nowhere were their differences more starkly apparent than on the economy. LATER, AT A White House reception for committee members, Carter said he is "extremely eager to see rifts lealed." However, he said, there need be no "fear or consternation" if some disputes can't be settled in committee and must be put to the full Democratic. National Convention in August. Carter was represented at the hearing by chief domestic adviser Suart Eizenstat and national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski. They presented a statement in the president's behalf which called for "a continued policy of spending restraint ... consistent with our party's historic commitment to protect and aid the poor and the disadvantaged." Conspicuously missing from the 75- page Carter statement was any reference to a balanced federal budget. His top aides have said the goal of balancing the fiscal 1981 budget, which Carter promised as recently as March 14, may prove impossible because of recession-induced lees of tax revenues. BY CONTRAST, Kennedy proposed through Peter Edelman, his national issues director, a $12 billion spending program to ease the effects of recession and create jobs for the growing ranks of the unemployed. In his statement of suggestions on what the campaign platform should in- lude, the president rejected any such substantial spending and defended existing anti-recession aid programs. Edelman repeated Kennedy cam- paign themes, including a demand for a six-month freeze on wages andkprices, reimposition of price controls on oil, a phase-out of nuclear plants and an end to the MX missile system. CARTER'S SPOKESMAN voiced op- position to mandatory wage, price and energy controls, called for developing nuclear power as part of the nation's energy future, and held out the hope of tax cuts some day-but not now. Democratic National Chairman John White, who presided over yesterday's hearing, urged the committee not to "interpret differences among us as a divided party" but to use the platform- writing process as a chance to "bring our party together at a time when it needs to be brought together." Nine of the 15 panel members are Carter supporters, five support Ken- nedy and one, Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan of New York, is uncommit- ted. The platform members yesterday elected Detroit Mayor Coleman Young chairman of the Platform Committee, and created a drafting subcommittee to boil down all of the day's testimony into a coherent party creed for presentation June 21. The testimony will continue today. From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - President Carter sent Congress yesterday a proposed standby gasoline rationing plan which, in the event of a severe shortage, would set up a huge system for distributing "checks" redeemable for gasoline coupons. The plan in effect creates a "second currency" managed by an accounting system bigger than Social Security. UNLESS CONGRESS blocks the plan by a joint resolution within 30 days, the rationing system would be constructed over the next 12 to 15 months at a cost of some $103 million. Rationing would be put into operation only if the president found that the nation faced a shortage of at least 20 per cent, lasting at least 30 days, and if Congress did not block rationing within the 15 days after his announcement; or if Congress waived that standard and allowed rationing in a less severe emergency. Energy Secretary Charles Duncan, announcig the plan, said there is no need to put it into effect "in the foreseeable future." Gasoline supplies have been adequate and storage is greater than usual, he noted. BUT THE ARAB oil embargo of 1973- 74 and the Iranian revolution of late 1978 showed how swiftly shortages, could develop. Those two disruptions caused waiting lines or closings at many gas stations, but never came close to the 20 per cent shortage it would take to trigger rationing. Under the plan, government authorization "checks" would be mailed to motorists every three mon- ths. The checks could be exchanged for ration coupons at banks and other distribution points. And motorists could sell any unneeded coupons for whatever price the free market would bear. A one-gallon coupon could sell for $2 to $5 in the kind of severe shortage for which rationing is tailored, ad- ministration economists estimate. The department said, however, it would limit the number of ration allot- ments for a single person or household to curb any tendency to buy old "clunkers" and to keep affluent families with several cars from gaining an advantage. /The CONSER VA TOR Y N CO NCE RT SALAD BAR . SALAD BAR SAT., JUNE 14 ;:0PM uses only the freshest vegetables. 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