tcl tqtt t ± tttl Ninety-four years of editorial/freedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, July 17, 1984 Vol. XCIV, No. 25-S Coipyyight1984 Fifteen Cents Sixteen Pages Cuomo kicks < ."'^blasts".Reagan Associated Press New York City Mayor Cuomo gives the thumbs-up gesture during his keynote address last night at the opening of the 1984 Democratic National Convention in San Francisco. In his speech Cuomo accused President Ronald Reagan of turning the naton into a "Tale of Two Cities" divided between "the royalty and the rabble." 'U' delegation has high hopes for Hart From AP and UPI SAN FRANCISCO - Democrats op- ened their 39th national convention yesterday with a keynote address denouncing President Reagan's "hysterical commitment to an arms race," while Walter Mondale agreed to a unity summit with his two losing rivals for the presidential nomination. One speakers after another at the convention's opening session uttered the ritual victory predictions for the Democratic ticket, but Rep. Morris Udall offered a frank, hopeful assessment. "SURE WE'RE behind tonight and everybody knows it," he said. "But we've got 100 days to go." New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, Mon- dale's handpicked keynote orator, said that Reagan's policies could "lead us to bankruptcy or war ... Our policy drifts with no real direction other than an hysterical commitment to an arms race that leads nowhere - if we're lucky," he said. He appealed for party unity, and said in contrast that Republican policies "divide the nation into the lucky and the left out, the royalty and the rabble." He decried the current federal budget as "the largest in the history of the univer- se." JOAN MONDALE, wife of the nominee-in-waiting, watched the proceedings with the governor's wife as the crowd punctuated his speech with the shout, "Mario." Offstage, Hart and Jackson went through the motions of their own can- didacies. In one thing, Hart followed Mondale's lead, announcing that he wanted Ferraro as his running,, mate, too. Former President Carter, who preceded Cuomo to the platform, By NEIL CHASE Special to the Daily SAN FRANCISCO - The end of the winter semester may have brought a temporary end to political activity in Ann Arbor, but s number of people from the University, including a regent and at least seven students, are here to take part in the most exciting event of this year's campaign. Two key people in what might be called "the University of Michigan delegation" are not delegates or alter- nates. They are Gary Hart campaign organizers Mark Blumenthal and Marc Dann, LSA students for whom a trip to the convention was little more than a fantasy one year ago. "IT'S REALLY a neat feeling to be here," Blumenthal said. "I don't know what is going to happen the rest of the week but I feel like I accomplished a lot just by being here. We've changed the Democratic Party. We've surprised a lot of people and we will continue to do so.', This week Blumenthal is the Hart campaign's floor leader for the Michigan delegation. Through-out the convention, he will work closely with the 49 Hart delegates from Michigan and try to orchestrate a masterful political coup for the nomination of Gary Hart as the presidential can- didate. Walter Mondale appears to have 80 to 100 more votes than the 1,967 he needs to win the nomination on the first ballot. Hart supporters say such a move as See 'U', Page 7 received a standing ovation - but nowhere as much enthusiasm - as he launched an attack against the man who routed him in the 1980 election. AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland urged delegates to forget the "foul-ups and quarrels" of the past and concen- trate on electing Mondale-Ferraro. Inside the hall, former President Jimmy Carter, nominee of the last two Democratic conventions, said 10 minutes would be sufficient to speak his piece this time - "not counting the See DEMS, Page 3 Mondale to meet with Hart, Jacks on SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Walter Mondale, hoping to make peace with his Democratic rivals, arrived to collect the party's presidential nomination and scheduled a wide-open summit session yesterday with Gary Hart and Jesse Jackson. "I am willing to discuss anything they wish," Mondale told a news con- ference where he confirmed a three- way meeting had been scheduled for yesterday evening. THE 56-YEAR-OLD Former vice president - who initially had held out for one-on-one meetings - said he See MONDALE, Page 7 Inside: " All quotas on steel imports should be removed. See Opinion, Page 6. " Conan and Villella bring us cinematic aerobics. See Arts, Page 10. " The Tigers return home to face the White Sox. See Sports, Page 16. Outside: Cloud cover turning into thundershowers in the afternoon, with a high in the 80s. Consumers drops Midland plant From AP and UPI JACKSON - Consumers Power Co. yesterday gave up on protracted negotiations with critics of its Midland nuclear power plant and announced it will abandon the controversial project. The directors met for about 45 minutes by telephone before making the decision, said John Selby, chairman of Con- sumers Power. No further negotiations on completion of the plant were planned, Selby said after the unanimous vote by the utility's 13 directors. SELBY SAID the decision was made by Consumers' board because the firm - the nation's 10th largest utility - simply could not reach agreement with a group of industrial ratepayers which had become the key to the negotiations. With the customers' rejjection of the proposal, "Consumers Power has authorized the immediate 'shutdown" of the plant, Selby said. Midland, which was started in 1967, is the third nuclear power plant to be abandoned this year. The others were the marble Hill plant in Indiana and the Zimmer plant in Ohio. THREE-FOURTHS of the 6,300 workers on the job at Midland could be laid off within weeks, Selby said. More than 1,500 workers have already been laid off. see MIDLAND, Page 4