Khomeini: Carter sounds like an empty drum on Iran stance From UPl and AP TEHRAN,-Iran-Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini said yesterday that President Carter sounds "like an empty drum" when he speaks about Iran and another influential member of the regime came out in favor of trying the American hostages as spies. Minister of State Dariush Foruhar, an influential member of the gover- nment and a close aide of Khomeini's, said the hostages should be tried as spies without delay. Those found in- nocent should be "immediately released," he said, but those found guilty "must be punished." AS KHOMEINI delivered his second major speech in two days, instructing Iranians on how he wants to carry out their revolution, Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh went to Oslo, Nor- way, to discuss the 221-day-old hostage crisis with members of the Socialist In- ternational. At the United Nations, American of- ficials sid the United States is "actively considering" asking the Security Coun- cil to pass another resolution ordering Iran to free the hostages. In other developments, Kurdish rebels blew up a major highway bridge and an armed group fired a rocket that set fire to an oil depot as renewed violence broke out in western Iran, reports said yesterday. MEANWHILE, IRANIAN Interior Minister Ayatollah Mohd Reza Mah- davi reported "a large number" of people have been killed in recent clashes between Iranian army troops and Kurdish groups in the nation's western sector. Kurdish spokesman Jalil Ghadani said the Irianian army and air force. had bombed "defenseless" Kurdish villages Monday and Tuesday. He said the air force dropped a bomb by mistake on army troops Tuesday, killing at least 80 soldiers. Meanwhile, in Pa'ris, former U.S. At- torney General Ramsey Clark charged yesterday that President Carter .was "dragging politics" into the legal process by asserting he should be punished for defying the ban on travel to Iran. Clark, underinvestigation on charges that carry penalties of up to 10 years in jail and $50,000 in fines, denounced the presidential travel ban as a bid to limit freedom. Carter told reporters aboard Air For- ce 1 Tuesday that he favored prosecution of Clark. "My inclination is to see the law carried out and Clark should be punished," he said. Reached at his Paris hotel, Clark in- dicated the president's statements could be prejudicial if charges should be filed. "I feel sad that Carter may want to prosecute," he said. "The president doesn't understand the rule of law. He is trying to politicize it. "The Department of Justice should review the facts," the former attorney general added. "Carter is dragging politics into this." Clark, one of the earliest supporters of the Iranian revolutionaries who over- threw the shah, is in Paris on a private visit. He currently plans to return to the United States Saturday. Use Daily Classifieds Japanese leader, Ohira dies at 70. tContinued from Page 1) a OHIRA WAS THE first Japantese nrima minister En die in office since World War II. Ito also told reporters the Cabinet had tentatively decided to send Foreign Minister Saburo Okita, Finance Minister Nohoru Takeshita and Inter- national Trade and Industry Minister Yoshitake Sasaki to the seven-nation economic summit June 22-23 in Venice, Italy. He said the decision will be made known today to the other countries at- tending the summit-the United States, West Germany, Britain, Italy, Canada and France. The prime minister was taken to a hospital May 31, the eve of Japan's current parliamentary election cam- paign. Aides said at the time he was suffering from an irregular pulse and fatigue. IN A SMALL MOSQUE near his home, Ayatollah Khomeini gives guidance and Islamic advice to Iranians. Earlier, he warned against internal strife and said his regime might self-destruct unless the Islamic hardliners halt their political war with President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr. Do a Tree TONIGHT a Favor: A a Favr: ATSECOND CH ANCE Recycle "H ET Your Daily FRIDAY, JUNE 13, 1980 Seymour Kaufman CHIEF OF NEUROCHEMISTRY LAB NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH BETHESDA, MARYLAND "Regulatory Properties of - Hepatic Phenylalonine Hydaroxylase" MHRI Conference Room 1057 r 12:00 noon Co-sponsored by section of Pediatric Neurology Departments of Pediatrics and Neurology CONTEACT LENSES soft and hard* contact lenses $210.00 includes exam, fitting, dispensing, follow-up visits, starter kits, and 6 mon-th checkup. * includes a second pair of hard lenses Dr. Peal C. Uslan, Optometrist 545 Church Street 769-1222 by appointment Ohira ... death surprises many