Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, June 17, 1984 Mondale begins to work on platform 41 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports NORTH OAKS, Minn. (AP) - Walter Mondale began putting his stamp yesterday on the Democratic Party platform he expects to carry into the fall campaign against President Reagan. At a, meeting with Rep. Geraldine Ferraro of New York, platform com- mittee chairman, Mondale suggested stronger language on arms control and economic growth than outlined in a staff draft. Mondale also said he wanted the plat- form to "draw the distinctions between the future that we would bring to the American people and that offered by the Reagan administration." FERRARO OFTEN is mentioned as a possible vice presidential candidate on a Mondale ticket, but she and the former vice president said they didn't discuss that during their two-hour meeting. "The issue did not come up," said Ferraro, who added that in her position she must be independent and able to work on the platform with Sen. Gary Hart and the Rev. Jesse Jackson. "We agreed early that this task of chairing the platform committee required that independence and that we were not going to discuss the possibilities of the vice presidency during this interval," said Mondale. At the Mondale headquarters, attor- ney Nikki Heideprien is pulling together polls, charts and statistics to determine how a woman would help or hurt the ticket. She will try to deter- mine how many voters a woman would attract, how many would be repelled and how it would help Mondale pick up electoral votes. Kathy Wilson, president of the National Women's Political Caucus, says, "There are some 30 million unregistered women who can make up Ferraro ... chairs platform committee for the good old boys who won't vote for a woman and who would probably go for Reagan anyway." Rep. Patrician Schroeder (D-Colo.), co-chair of Hart's campaign, said that if Mondale offers the No. 2 spot to Hart, he will have to accept it. "I don't see how he can turn it down," said Schroeder, dean of the congresswomen and frequently men- tioned herself as a possible nominee. "With the debts he's got and looking to 1988, I don't see the logic in turning it down.... It's not so much whether he'll accept, but whether he's given the choice." Judy Goldsmith, president of the National Organization for Women, told Mondale last week he won't have to worry about the South if he picks a woman. Flood's plague Midwest More than 1,000 people stayed away from their homes yesterday in Kansas and Missouri as the Missouri River spread out of its banks over thousands of acres of farmland following a week of thunderstorms, and more rain overnight forced evacuation of parts of Nebraska. Flash flood watches were issued for eastern South Dakota, eastern Nebraska and the western two- thirds of Iowa after a night in which up to 4 inches of rain fell on parts of Nebraska. Damage to property and crops in northwestern Missouri and nor- theastern Kansas rose past $100 million, according to estimates by various state officials. Both Missouri Gov. Christopher Bond and Kansas Gov. John Carlin appealed for federal disaster aid. Indian party leader killed NEW DELHI, India - Sikh militants shot and killed a local leader of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's party yesterday in the nor- thern state of Punjab where security forces braced for a new round of Sikh protests. Hardayal Singh, president of the Jalandhar district committee of Ghandi's ruling Congress Party in Punjab, was fired at by two gunmen who drove up to him in a car as he talked with friends, the Press Trust of India said. Pope attacks Swiss working conditions LUCERNE, Switzerland - Pope John Paul II yesterday challenged the Swiss to improve conditions for the foreign workers who fill their low-paying jobs, and questioned whether neutrality could protect the Swiss from the problems of the rest of the world. Foreign workers and the banking system are highly sensitive issues in Switzerland because both are essen- tial to its high standard of living., Nicaragua begins draft Nicaragua, saying the Reagan administration's "war-like attitude" toward Managua has forced it to make defense a top priority, yester- day called on men between the ages of 25 and 39 to register for the San- dinista army reserves. Nicaraguan Defense Minister Humberto Ortega, in comments published in.the official newspaper Barricada, said, "While the American administration maintains its war-like attitude toward Nicaragua, defense will be of priority for the countiy." Blacks unite for Democratic Convention at Mayors' Conference PHILADELPHIA - Black sup- porters of Walter Mondale gathered yesterday at the opening session of the annual U.S. Conference of Mayors meeting to search for ways to avoid warfare with black backers of the Rev. Jesse Jackson at the Democratic convention. Mayors from throughout the coun- try are attending the five day meeting, which opened Friday. It is the largest such gathering in con- ference history. Uruguay exile returns MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay - op- position leader Wilson Ferreira returned by ship yesterday to Uruguay after 11 years in exile and was arrested immediately by military government officials who sent navy warships to escort him to port in an apparent ruse that broke up a demonstration of about 50,000 supporters. Ferreira, who returned home to claim the presidential nomination of his Blanco party, was forced to sign a brief declaration before disem- barking at Montevideo port. It was not immediately known what the declaration said. Israelis injured in explosion A car carrying explosives blew up near three Israeli military vehicles in southern Lebanon yesterday, killing the car's driver and injuring five Israeli soldiers, the Israeli military commandssaid. The radio report said the car ex- ploded as it passed the second of the three Israeli personnel carriers on a highway eight miles south of Sidon, the provincial capital of southern Lebanon. Israeli reports conflicted with Lebanese reports that described the driver as a suicide bomber and said the automobile crashed into an ar- mored personnel carrier. 6 0 0 Youth Corps program extends application period (Continued from Page3) session. "I think we'll get more of an influx (of applications) after schools get out," said Edwin Cable, manager of the Michigan Employment Security Com- mission's Ann Arbor MESC office. The Ann Arbor office has received 119 applications, according to Cable. Youth Corps workers work in state parks, county fairs, and highway areas. The jobs consist mostly of clean-up work, according to Cable. The jobs will last 6 to 12 weeks with the average em- ployee working 10 weeks. Most em- ployees will make $3.35 an hour while some supervisory positions will pay up to $5.50 an hour. Applicants who are the head of a household and unemployed receive top priority in the selection process, said Cable. The unemployment rate for 16-19 year olds in the state was 27.1 percent for the last quarter of 1983, according to the MESC. To qualify for the program, applican- ts must be unemployed state residents 18 to 21 years old. The MESC offices will accept applications from 8:15 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Researehers release study: Seat belt fears unfounded (Continued from Page3),. drivers and passengers who remain in the car they survey says. "I WANT you to wear your seat belt to protect me," O'Day said, explaining that he also has two personal reasons for favoring seat belt use. The first, he says, is to avoid "the psychological haunting and heartache I will feel if I am the driver responsible for the fatality." O'Day said that if he should ever cause an accident he hoped the others involved would be wearing Member of the Associated Press Vol. XCIV- No. 18-S The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967X) is published Tuesday through Sun- day during the fall and winter terms and Tuesday, Friday, and Sunday during the spring and summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: September through April-$15.50 in Ann Ar- bor, $19.50 outside the city; May through August-$4.50 in Ann Arbor, $6.00 outside the city. Second-class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Business Manager .. . . STEVEN BLOOM Advertising Manager .. ...DAVID SPAK Editors in Chief . ... . .. ....... .. .... NEIL CHASE FSae Manager .. .. . MICHA EL MANASTER KAREN TENSA NeS udent Edition ... . RO MARK Opinion Page Editor ....CHARLES THOMSON Nn..Io, d~,, . JOE ORTIZ Arts ,Eit.. . .JOSEPHKRAUS STAFF MEMBERS: Ellen Abrahams. Janice Bologn,. SUSAN MAKUCH Ted Kotsakis, DouglasC.RMidlebrooksCyntia Sports Editor ...................... MIKE MCGRAW Tanya Tison, Kellie Worley. Associate Sports Editor .........PAUL HELGREN SALES REPRESENTATIVES :Don Boorstein, DRnCarlson, Kraig Cotton,.Sara Elizabeth Crsn-Rick Fieber,Lyn Fishman. Patty Rossman. PHONE NUMBEREAN ron (313) 7640552; t30379; Sports, 763-0376;Circulation,. 764-0558; Classified, 764-5557;Display Advertising, 764-0554; Biling,~ 764-0550. seat belts so that there would be less chance of a fatality. The second reason is an economic one. O'Day said that if more drivers wore seatbelts the costs of insurance and health care would go down. He ad- vocated passage of a law requiring Michigan drivers to wear seat belts. Passage of the law would reduce the cost of personal injury auto insurance rates by 20 percent, according to Automobile Club of Michigan spokesman Tom Freed. 01