,1, The Michigan Doily-Sunday, January 27, 1980-Page 7 CARTER CREATES EFFICACIOUS IMAGE: Congress behina WASHINGTON (AP) - President 'Carter, his hand strengthened by crises abroad and political gains at home, is likely to get more from Congress in the coming months than he has at any time before, congressional leaders say. And, according to key Democrats, the president is combining his surge in popularity with a new political toughness they have not seen since he took office. "He's been much more willing to ap- preciate he's a politician, that it's not an immoral occupation, that there's nothing wrong with inviting people to the White House," said Rep. John Brademas of Indiana, the House Democratic whip. HOUSE AND Senate leaders are in broad agreement that Carter will get most of what he wants from Congress in the foreign policy arena. This, they say, is a direct and predic- table result of the Soviet thrust into Afghanistan and U.S. outrage at the continued holding of American hostages in Iran. Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd, (D-W. Va.), has already labeled the current session a "defense-minded" Congress., Administration proposals for rein- statement of standby draft registration and for increases in defense spending have already mustered wide support in Congress. THE DAY after Carter outlined this new hard-line foreign policy in his State of the Union address last week, the House had passed by a wide margin a resolution supporting his proposed boycott of the summer Olympics in Moscow if Soviet troops are not with- drawn from Afghanistan by Feb. 20. The measure comes up in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee tomorrow and is expected to get speedy attention by the full Senate. In another gesture of support for Carter's new foreign policy and in a clear jab at the Soviet Union, the House also rushed through a bill to give preferential trade treatment to the People's Republic of China. The votes on both bills showed a top- sy-turvy Congress in which traditional political labels did not seem to mean much. Right-wing conservatives voted for trade with what some of them are still calling "Red" China and traditional liberals voted to boycott the Olympics. "THERE IS a mood out there that we've got to be prepared -for conven- tional skirmishes, that we can't stop World War III with what we've got now," says House Speaker Thomas O'Neill (D-Mass.). He cited beavy sup- port for Carter's proposal to bring back military registration. To do so, the House leader said, would only be "following the will of America." Meanwhile, Carter has also been developing his abilities for dealing with British anti-n ukes British demonstrators gathered at London's Primrose Hill Fields yesterday to protest plans to transport nuclear waste by railroad through densely populated southern lengland. LE ADER APPE ARS DAY OF SL AIN BLACK'S FUNER A L: k K Viitcreates tension IDABEL, Okla. (AP) - State police and investigative agents prowled the streets of this troubled town yesterday after a Ku Klux Klan (KKK) leader scheduled a visit to coincide with the funeral of a slain black youth; It was the slaying of 15-year-old Henry Lee Johnson behind a whites- only nightclub that sparked a riot last Sunday that left two dead, four woun- ded and about $100,000 worth of proper- ty damage. "Things are out of hand here, it's not over," Harry S. Costilow, president of the Idabel chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), said yester- day. Bill Wilkinson, 37, of Denham Springs, La., the imperial wizard of the Invisible Empire KKK, said he planned to meet privately with local officials but Soviet soldier killed by snipers in Kabul (Continued from Page 1) WESTERN DIPLOMATS in Kabul also reported increased talk in the capital's markets and even government offices that the new leadership - the third Soviet-supported government in 22 months - will not last long.. "It is true that the Afghans are Bani-Sadr elected resi ent . in Iran (Continued from Page 1) Sadr was leading Friday's elections to become Iran's first president by a margin of more than 5-to-1 over his closest rival, Culture Minister and clergy candidate Hassan Habibi. As of 11:30 a.m. EST, Bani-Sadr had captured some 80 per cent of the vote in 13 cities and had more than five million votes to Habibi's 1.1 million, the radio said. No other rival in the race, in- cluding Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghot- bzadeh, even came close. Although Tehran Radio said that final results were not expected until tomorrow, it appeared that Bani-Sadr, a relative moderate and a close con- fidant of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, was assured of victory.. Khomeini himself spent another day 0 recuperating from heart trouble in a Tehran hospital, where the radio said he was examined Saturday by two heart specialists flown in from Lausan- -ne, Switzerland. For the first time, one of his Iranian . physicians' gave a Paris newspaper a detailed account of the 79-year-old leader's health. '"Contrary to what has been written in the foreign press, Khomeini did not suf- fer a heart attack," cardiologist Rachid Massumi told the newspaper Le Monde. "He suffered a coronary insufficiency which was first manifested 10 days ago, provoking a potentially dangerous situation." Massumi said Khomeini was : recovering well and that his "morale is excellent. I only reproach him for wan- :ting to read too many newspapers and for his impatience for wanting to leave the hospital." * For all the fanfare associated with the first presidential elections in Iranian history, the job itself will carry with it only as much power as Khomeini chooses to give the man who fills it. Despite Bani-Sadr's apparent con- fidence that he will be ahle to solve the embassy crisis, the decision to free the hostages still rests with Khomeini, who has sided with the embassy militants in the past. terrible rumor-mongers and have said the same about every new government since 1973," a Western diplomat said. "But the fact is that they have always been right." Int Kabul, witnesses said that at least one and possibly two Soviet soldiers were killed by sniper fire Friday - the first confirmed attack against Soviet troops inside the snowboudn Afghan capital.. EYEWITNESSES said the incident occurred in Kabul's northwestern Par- wan district early Friday afternoon. They said three Soviet soldiers were getting out of their jeep, apparently to buy cigarettes, when several shots rang out. One witness said he saw two of the soldiers fall to the ground, hit. A military ambulance took one of them away on a stretcher and his condition was not immediately known. The other, he said, lay on the ground dead. Nearly 10 million pesons served in the armed forces during the 11-year Vietnam era which began Aug. 5, 1964. Some 583,000 veterans joined the military after the official end of that conflict, May 7, 1975. planned no public appearances. Meanwhile, the funeral for Johnson was being held at a church about four miles outside town. Officials said local law officers would be on hand to prevent any disruption. "We do not want to be responsible for causing any kind of race riots or any kind of bloodshed," said John Clary, 20, of Moore, the local- kleagle - state leader - of the KKK. "We're not going down there to Idabel flapping Con- federate flags and wearing robes." Yesterday the town was peaceful. "It looks like a fairly normal Satur- day morning," said Mayor Rex Helms, noting shoppers on the sidewalks of the city's business district. However, agents of the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation with hand radios, state troopers and dozens of reporters were on the streets. Locally assigned officers were han- dling the patrol duties since the with- drawal Tuesday of the last of about 200 law officers called to the riot scene. Klan officials planned to meet secretly with an unidentified city of- ficial to discuss "proper measures" to take in the event of future racial strife in the southeastern Oklahoma com- munity of about 7,000. people, Clary said. A spokesman for the McCurtain County sheriff's office said officers had received reports of threats against local blacks as late as Saturday mor- ning. However, no violence was -repor- ted. Wade Watts, president of the Oklahoma NAACP, urged blacks in the city "not to dignify Wilkinson's visit by being enticed into subversive action." Two people, a white auxiliary deputy and a black resident of a nearby town, were killed and four people were woun- ded in gunfire that erupted last Sunday night following Johnson's death the night before. On Monday, first-degree murder charges were filed against Walter An- thony DeShazo, 29, of Horatio, Ark., in connection with Johnson's death. G1kIVENSITY fMUSICA L 'OCIETY presen t i ICarter Congress, leaders say. DEMOCRATIC leaders claim Carter has been inviting members to the White House more often and promising im- portant political favors - or threatening to withhold them - to achieve what he wants. This is an exer- cise in political hardball that Capitol Hill leaders said Carter did not engage in much before. "I could rattle off a whole list of things - but I won't - which have hap- pened at the White House which wil be politically helpful to the re-nomination of President Carter," Brademas said. "I won't say there's a new Jimmiy Carter - that's journalese," said the Democratic whip. "He's the same man and he must have been a good politician to get himself elected president of the United States. But I think he's stronger here, even as he is in the country." . Carter's victory last week in, the Democratic caucuses in Iowa and his handling of the crises in Iran ald Afghanistan cannot help but increase Carter's effectiveness in Congress. "The' perception of Carter hs changed," said Rep. Toby Moffett, (J?- Conn.), chairman of a Government Operations subcommittee and a key legislator on energy issues. 4 1 ai1 m 4 r t . The Feld Ballet Fr., Sat.,Sun. Feb.1,2,3 8:00, Power Center "He is the most talented classic choreographer of his generation anywhere in the world. He is an Americin national treasure, and should be so designated!"- Clive Barnes, The New York Times. Tickets available: $6.50, 8, 9, 10 Tickets at Burton Tower, Ann Arbor, Mich. 48109 Weekdays 9-4:30, Sat. 9-12. Phone 665-3717. \,.O PRESENTS H THE SPY WHO CAME IN FROM THE COLD (Mortin Ritt, 1966) John LeCarre's best-selling novel provides the basis for this breathtaking thriller of espionage intrigue, sp ies and counter-spires. Refusing to "come in from the cold"-make a des k job-Ric hard Burton takes on the most dangerous assignment of his career as a British agent. Oskar Werner is the East German who stalks. "Burton as the burnt-out hero is superb." -Brendan Gill. With CLAIRE BLOOM. 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