2 Wednesday, January 30, 1980 University Daily Kansan UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Capsules From the Kansas's Wire Services Senate urges Olympic boycott WASHINGTON — The Senate voted overwhelmingly yesterday to urge all Americans, not just athletes, to boycott the 1980 Summer Olympics as a protest against the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan if the Games go on as scheduled in Moscow. The resolution offers an alternative to a byequet by urging the International Olympic Committee to cancel, postpone or relocate the games. The IOC members already have indicated they will reject this request. The vote in the Senate was 88 to 4. Unlike a similar measure adopted 386-12 last week by the House, the Senate resolution does not set a timetable for a pullout of Soviet troops from Afghanistan. No further action is expected on either resolution. Each is advisory and does not have the force of law. Plane's nosedive investigated KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Authorities deliving into details of a supersonic nosiveed by a TWA 720 above Michigan last April heard several stories yesterday about the crucial location of the flight engineer during the near-accident, including a personal denial that he left the cockpit. The testimony of Gary N. Banks, the engineer on the New York-to-Miami airport last April 4, conflicted with that of a federal investigator and an expert in transportation safety. The airport's sportation Safety Board hearing. Both the investigator and the attendant contend that Banks left the cockpit briefly to return food trays before the impact. Banks told interrogators that he had not the jet's cockpit before the dive. NTSB investigators have said the extension of one eight-foot wing slant a catapult was insufficient to avoid an incident, either by action of the crew or mechanical error. The airplane went into a dive at 39,000 feet that reached almost the speed of sound before it was over. Eight of the 89 persons on the flight were injured before the plane was brought under control and landed at Detroit. More found dead in shipwreck ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - Divers searching the flooded compartments of a sunken Coast Guard cutter found the bodies of five more sailors yesterday, raising the death toll to six, and hope was running out for 17 others missing following a collision with an oil tanker Monday night. Twenty-seven of the cutter's crewmen were rescued and one was found dead shortly after the collision. Some were found buried in piles of the Sunshine Island debris. Rescuer hoped that some crewmen had found lifesaving airpockets, but divers caught at the hall heured no response. They then began a slow search for an oxygen source. Meanwhile, survivors said they heard a collision alarm for only five seconds before the collision. The cutter sank almost immediately. A spokesman for the tanker's agent said the tanker carried 34 crewmen. No injuries were reported aboard the tanker. The spokesman, who preferred not to be identified, said the tanker carried 150,000 barrels of oil but did not spill its cargo. Coast Guard Capt. Marshal Gilbert said authorities were not sure what caused the collision in a section of the bay 200 to 300 yards wide. The moon was full, with visibility six to eight miles, winds about 23 mph and seas running at 2 feet, he said. Churches reject death penalty TOPEKA - Religious leaders told a legislative committee yesterday that Kansas did not need capital punishment because the state's murder rate was Sainte Delores Brinkel, representing the 21-member Coalition to keep Kansas Free of the Death Penalty, told the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee that the state's incidence of murder decreased 29.4 percent in 1979, and that neighboring states had similar reductions. "Legitimizing death solves nothing," Brinkel said. "The death penalty legalizes what we all abor-murder." William Arnold, representing Kansas Citizens for Justice, said the overwhelming majority of the state's churches had adopted formal resolutions against the law. One of the bills sponsored by State Sen. Ciroft, R-Cedar Point, and eight others, would limit the death penalty to murder by an intimate, multiple murder. When asked why the bill did not include all murders, Crofoot said he had left the bill intentionally loose to make it more attractive to Gov. John Carlton, who was considering a tax on gun purchases. The parents of slain Peabody banker Wilbur Avery attended but did not address the committee hearing yesterday. Wilbur Avery said his son's death emphasized the need for stricter means to deal with crime, including educational school children about crime and punishment. Comedian Durante dead at 86 HOLLWOOD-Jimmy Downton, the bony-knot comic with the outzured artful mix of articulation, fractured English and heart-warming dialogue. Durante was admitted to St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica on Jan. 7, suffering from acute lung congestion. The cause of death was listed as pneumonia complicated by the effects of previous strokes, said Chris Thomas, a hospital spokeswoman. Durante's routines were a show business staple for 64 years, and he was a leading star on radio and in early television. He made nearly 30 movies, and he had roles in more than 10 films. He became a star in a 1928 Zeeqfeld show which he had the力“Be nice to people on the way up. They're the same people you'll pass on the way down.” Missouri postpones ERA vote JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — The Senate sponsor of the Equal Rights Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, Sen. Wentworth D. O'SLanky, today, said she had If supporters felt it would have little effect, the ERA would be taken up, she said. But莎拉也 raised the possibility that the ERA might never come up for a campaign. **698327190** Giles said consideration of the ERA by the chamber would be postponed for a week or so to examine the impact of the possible draft of women into military service. On Monday, Giles said the draft issue probably would not affect the ERA debate in Missouri, since it was a traditionally anti-ERA argument anyway. In addition, Senate leaders said the ERA had little chance of passing anyway so any discussion of the draft would have no impact. Nine filed for Kansas primary TOPEAK One more candidate paid the $100 filing fee yesterday to Kansas. April 1 presidential preference primary, but he was not a participant. their horses, and he is the grandson of Crazy Horse, once chief of the Ogallala Indian Cains, called him "the lion who will be the eagle." He said he was a man born in the mountains. Joining the field of 8 other presidential hopefuls yesterday was Ray Rollinson, 50, a Democrat from Columbia, N.J. In addition, another candidate who filed last week dropped by the Capitol on his bus tour of the 48 contiguous states. Rollinson plumps in campaign literature to establish "permanent, involatile borders for Israel" as a solution to Middle East turmoil. Dad Badley Jr., 61, a Republican from Poughtiepeeke, N.Y., who filed last week, claimed he was told by God in a vision in 1985 to run for the presidency. He said he was not being paid for his role. Badgley is six feet tall and has a long gray bear. He carries a five-foot staff, and calls himself "the good sheepard." There is a chance of snow today with total accumulation of one to two inches. There will be small东asterly winds at 15 to 25 mph with a high of 21 degrees. Weather The snow should end by late evening with little additional accumulation expected. Winds should be from the east at 10 to 20 mph. The low (night) should U.S. diplomats slip out of Iran Six American diplomats who escaped capture when the U.S. Embassy was seized Nov. 4 shipout of Tehran after 12 weeks in hiding, helped by the Canadian Embassy and an elaborate ruse of false identities and forged documents, it was disclosed By The Associated Press Word of the dramatic flight from Tehran came as an Islamic leader Iranian Ayatollah Khomeini, a former Iraqi president, to make an emotional appeal for Iranians to support their new president, Abbasolain. The 79-year-old revolutionary leader, in an apparent illusion to his heart alchemist, called on irians to remain "without fear, without fear," and a person a person or a person goes ..." The last medical report on the hospitalized Khomeini listed him in satisfactory condition. There were new signs yesterday of friction between Bani Sadr and official backers of the Moslem militants holding some 50 American hostages at the U.S. Embassy. THE BOLD escape of a half-dozen U.S. diplomats from central Tehran caught the embassy militants off guard. bass nov. 40 press demands for the return of the ousted Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, there have been unconfirmed reports in Tehran that embaiss staff members who avoided capture were hiding inside the embattles of other friendly nations. "That's illegal! That's illegal!" one of the militants cried to a Western reporter. Ever since the militants seized the emwho also was employed as a consular assistant. Then, after Canada unexpectedly shut down its embassy Monday and withdrew its ambassador, the press published an article in yesterday's Press, saying some diplomatic and been hard hit by the diplomatic diplomacy had been spiritited out in the previous day or two under cover of false Canadian U. S. AND Canadian officials later confirmed the basics of the report. State Department officials said the Americans and Canadians all were at the Canadian mission. This seemed to indicate that some Americans had mission apparently gathered there later. CANADIAN FOREIGN Minister Flora Macdonald said the Americans stayed in the Tetrahomes of Canadian diplomats in Montreal, Canada and the Canadian passports, just before Canadian Ambassador Ken Taylor and the three remaining embassy staff members pulled The State Department identified the six who escaped at Mark Lijker, a consular officer in South Africa, was employed by the embassy as a consular assistant; Roger G. Anders, a consular officer; Joseph D. Staffoon an agricultural officer; Joseph D. Staffoon an agricultural officer, and his wife, katherine F. Stafford. The La Press report said Ambassador graduated from the University of American Embassy personnel or changed their papers to enable them to pass as American civilians, rather than become a military officer. A dispute between Bani Sai+ and the Iranian radio and television system, was the latest sign of potentially serious discord between president-elect and the embassy militants. THE CHAIRMAN of the five-man radio and television commission, Mosawi Khoei, is the Modem clergyman closest to Christofer and his wife as a liaison between them and Khomeini. Bian Sài had accused the state-run radio and TV of mad practice, laity and embitterment, Mr. Sài said. Friday's presidential election, and vowed to conduct a purge of elements hostile to the state. THE BEST FROM HOLLYWOOD! COMMONWEALTH THEATRES MOVIE MARQUEE Kramer vs. Kramer PG Granada Granada 803299 Varsity The Rose Hillcrest 914.5 5063 841-0000 1. The Electric Horseman 2. Going In Style 2. Going in Style Eve.7:15 and 9:45 2 Online Online Eve. 7:30 and 9:30 3. Wilderness Family Part Two Cinema Twin 113 Avenues 942-8400 Eve. 7:30 and 9:30 1. Guyana: Cult of the Damned Eve.7:30and9:30 Eve, 7:40 and 9:40 2. The Jerk Movie Information TELEPHONE 841-6418 It Doesn't Have to be July For King of Jeans to Throw a Sidewalk Sale All We Have to Do is Give You Terrific Bargains And Call it an Indoor Sidewalk Sale Today thru Sunday only Take a Walk on the Indoor Sidewalk You'll Find These Super Values Inside Don't Miss These and Other Outstanding Bargains at KING of Jeans 740 MASSACHUSETS