GOP platform panel adopts anti-ERA stance DETROIT (UPI) - A Republican platform subcommittee shunned the party's historical support for the Equal Rights Amendment yesterday and adopted tough, conservative, anti-ERA language as the GOP position for 1980. The panels action, which will be challenged by ERA supporters in the full Platform Committee later and perhaps on the convention floor next week, came although Ronald Reagan - who opposes ERA - said he could run on a platform supporting it. BACKING FOR the ERA has been in every Republican platform since 1940, but the new language would leave the issue up to state legislatures and blasts the Carter White House for pressuring states to ratify the amendment. Party moderates led by national Chairman Bill Brock, former Chairman Mary Louise Smith, Gov. William Milliken and members of the Republican Women's Task Force are expected to work to modify the language. But it appeared anti-ERA forces have the votes to keep out of the platform any language renewing support for the amendment. THE VOTE pleased Phyllis Schlafly, an anti-ERA leader, who had advocated the language that eventually was adop- ted. "I think that was a good compromise and is fine," she said. ERA opponents had not hoped to win such conservative language and some were prepared to compromise by leaving the issue out of the platform altogether. BY A VOTE of 11-4, the subcommit- tee defeated a move by ERA supporters to adopt the 1976 platform language, which read: "The Republican Party reaffirms its support for ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment. Our party was the first national party to endorse ERA in A mass raid by U.S. Army Air Force bombers wreaked severe damage on Tokyo Nov. 24, 1944. The first land- based attack on the Japanese capital, the raid was launched from Saipan in the Marianas. Despite the great distan- ce to be covered, each plane carried six tons of bombs. 1940. We continue to believe its us ratification is essential to ensure equal rights for all Americans. Then it approved a resolution by delegate Marilyn Thayer of New Orleans saying the GOP supports "equal rights and equal 6pportunities for women, without taking away traditional rights of women such as exemption from the military draft." AP Photo It said ratification of ERA is a state A ht issue, and assailed the White House and ANTI-ERA ACTIVIST Phyllis Schlafly, left, joins Tottie Ellis and Shirley federal departments for applying Curry at a session of the subcommittee on Human Resources that met yes- "pressure against states which refused terday in Detroit. The subcommittee came together as part of the platform to ratify ERA." hearings for the Republican National Convention, whose members decided yesterday to drop support of the ERA. Detrot AFSCME picket, lines honored b unions Y- DETROIT (UPI)-A large segment of Detroit's labor community pledged yesterday to honor picket lines set up by 9,000striking municipal workers ina walkout threatening to disrupt the Republican National Convention. In another wrinkle to the city's in- creasingly muddied labor picture, elec- trical workers in six area counties an- nounced plans to walk off the job at midnight in a contract dispute of their own. UNION SPOKESMEN, however, said they had "a commitment" to continue work on the convention, which opens Monday. The latest developments came as an angry Mayor Coleman Young warned "hell will freeze over" before the city gives in to the current contract deman- ds of striking city workers. Officials of 17 unions representing non-striking city employees and various trades met late yesterday to discuss the eight-day walkout by Coun- cil 25 of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Em- ployees. THOMAS TURNER, president of the Metropolitan Detroit AFL-CIO, said the union officials expressed "total support for AFSCME and their strike. "All the unions represented here today agreed that they will honor their AFSCME picket lines wherever they are put up," Turner said. "We ... have a united front in the labor community of this city." Turner then headed for a meeting with Young to outline the union pledge and try to move talks between the pity and AFSCME, whose strike has halted city buses, garbage pickups and other services. TURNER SAID HE was confident if the two sides would intensify negotiations, which were set to resume at 10 p.m. EDT, the walkout could be settled "in the next few hours if not the next few days." Represented at the earlier meeting were the United Auto Workers, Team- sters, Communications Workers of America, Detroit building and trades unions, Service Employees and unions representing Detroit police and firefighters. Although notinghe expected police and firefighters to "discharge their responsibilities," Turner said he would not be surprised to see them honor picket lines-even one around police headquarters. The dispute involving Local 58 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers was unrelated to the AFSCME walkout. IBEW officials said union members rejected a contract offer from the Southeast Michigan chapter of the National Electrical Contractors Association by a wide margin in a mail