Vietnam vets at convention lobby Democrats for increased benefits By LORENZO BENET 1 Special to The Daily NEW YORK - Doug was sitting on the back of a truck in South Vietnam one afternoon in 1970 when two children - no more than 12 years old - rode up to him on a bicycle. One boy hop- ped off the bike, went over to Doug's truck, and rolled a grenade underneath it. Doug ran for his life as the truck exploded. The elapsed time bet- ween the jungle incident in Vietnam and Doug's arrival home to Massachusetts was only 48 hours. At home, Doug was a nervous wreck. He kept looking over his shoulder for the enemy, andfelt guilty about leaving hisfriends behind in Vietnam. It took Doug six years to get over what is known as the "Vietnam Stress Syndrome." This week, Doug (not his real name) and several of his fellow veterans are telling delegates to the Democratic National Convention here that years af- ter the close of the Vietnam era, the plight of veterans continues. The key needs of veterans today, according to lob- byist Kevin Kennedy, are: education benefits, read- justment programs, diagnosis and treatment of medical problems caused by the defoliant Agent Orange, and government action to determine what has happened to the 400 soldiers still listed as missing in action. KENNEDY, WHO said he is a victim of exposure to Agent Orange, claimed he has had five tumors removed from his body since he left the jungles-of Vietnam in 1972. "We were told we were spreading a defoliant; we were given no protective gear; we had no idea what was being sprayed," he said. "When it rained," Kennedy continued, the defoliant "would run into the water, so we ended up drinking it and washing ourselves with the stuff .' A REPORT published recently in the American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology found that Agent Orange causes birth defects, although those findings have been disputed by the government. Veteran and lobbyist George Driscoll related the following Agent Orange horror story: "A friend of mine fathered two healthy babies before he went off to Vietnam. After being exposed to Agent Orange, he came back home and had another child. That one was See VIETNAM, Page 7 The Michigan Daily Vol. XC, No. 59-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, August 13, 1980 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Denis ratf x platfor with som coneession From AP and UPI NEW 'YORK -- The Democratic National Convention shaped a platform for President Carter's re-election cam- paign yesterday - with unity con- cessions to Sen. Edward Kennedy, the conquered challenger who fought for planks he couldn't gain by compromise. Kennedy expressed confidence that the Democratic Party will reunite and "together we will march toward a Democratic victory in 1980." THAT WAS as close as he came to formally endorsing President Carter or urging his supporters to work for the Carter-Mondale ticket this fall. In mid-day voting that shaped Car- ter's re-election platform, Kennedy forces won convention approval of a provision pledging the party to the goal of a guaranteed job for every able- bodied American. It decided in Kennedy's favor on a full-employment plank which declared the guarantee of a job to be "our single highest domestic priority." The vote was 1,763.6 in favor of the Kennedy plank, 1,390.8 against it. KENNEDY BACKERS sought a plat- form pledge of immediate action of national health insurance, but that was rejected, 1,573 to 1,349. That kept the platform in tune with Carter's ap- proach, which is to phase it in gradually. The text of Kennedy's speech was filled with rhetoric reminiscent of his brothers John and Robert. "Let us pledge that we will neve& misuse unemployment, high interest rates and human misery as false weapons against inflation," he said. "Let us pledge that employment will be the first priority of our economic policy. "THESE ARE not simplistic pledges. Simply put they are the heart of our- tradition; they have been the soul of our party across the genertions." Time and time again he contrasted See DEMOCRATS, Page 8 SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY wears a smile yesterday as he waves upon arriving at the apartment of-a relative in New York. In his speech to the con- vention last night, Kennedy stopped short of formally endorsing President Carter. MORE CONVENTION COVERAGE INSIDE * New Yorkers react to the convention taking place in their city, labeling It a headache, an inconvenience, and a money-maker - Page 3 " The Democrats voted yesterday to add a far-reaching abortion- rights plank to their platform - Page 3 " Three Mile Island, Death, and the Statue of Liberty distributed blood-soaked money at a "No Nukes Die-in" - Page 3 " A host of delegates and media people agree the convention has become very dull - Page 5