Hostage returns to freedom after 16 months By SUSANNE M. SCHAFER Associated Press Writer CONCORD, N.H. The Rev. Benjamin Weir is free after a 16- month kidnapping ordeal in Leb anon, but President Reagan said yesterday that he “will not be satis fied” until the six remaining Ameri can captives also are released. Weir was releasd to U.S. authori ties in Beirut on Saturday, but an announcement was withheld to de termine whether the release of the other Americans might also be ob tained. “We were trying to keep it so quiet because we don’t want to do anything that endangers the chances of the other six,” Reagan said at the conclusion of a speech promoting his tax reform proposal. But White House spokesman Ed ward Djerejian, briefing the press after Reagan’s speech, said it be came apparent Tuesday night that no more releases were “immi nent.” Unconfirmed reports about Weir’s release surfaced Sunday with an anonymous telephone call to the Reuters news agency. The Presbyterian Church said early Wednesday that Weir had been freed. Soon afterward, Reagan sup plied the official confirmation that Weir was “back in America, safe with his family.” “I am happy for him and his family,” the president said, “but I will not be satisfied and will not cease our efforts until all the hos tages, the other six, are released.” Later, as he boarded Air Force One to return to Washington, Rea gan held up six fingers and told reporters, “Six more to go.” Weir, 61, a Presbyterian min ister, was kidnapped by terrorists May 8,1984, in Beirut. Neither Rea gan nor Djerejian offered any de tails about his release. Djerejian said Weir was in Nor folk. Va., although a church official said later in the day that the min ister and his family had left the city “but we don’t know where they Tax plan may not be ready By JIM LUTHER Associated Press Tax Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. - Con gressional leaders agreed yester day that they will not be able to deliver tax overhaul legislation to President Reagan’s desk this year, as he wanted. “I don’t think it has any chance of getting through Congress this year,” House Speaker Thomas P. O’Neill Jr., D-Mass., said after a private meeting with Senate Ma jority Leader Robert Dole, R- Kan., and other top leaders from both sides of the Capitol to dis cuss the legislative agenda for the remainder of the year. Earlier in the day, Dole repeat ed to reporters his view that “I don’t see how we can finish it this year.” The comments came as Rea gan appealed for support of tax reform in a speech in Concord, N.H. O’Neill emphasized that the House still plans to take up the measure this year. “Are we trying to put it through the House? The answer is yes,” * O’Neill said. But, he added, “It’s taken us this long and it’ll take the Senate some time, too, I would imagine.” O’Neill said, “We’ve agreed that we’re going to be out of here before Thanksgiving” for the year. That means there would be no time on the congressional cal endar for passage of the tax mea sure. . Dole said that while the Senate would not act this year, he feels support will still be there at the beginning of next year in ef fect, a delay of only a few months. Reagan, however, has urged Congress to pass the tax legis lation as a Christmas present to the nation. The House Ways and Means Committee announced yesterday that its work on the proposed overhauling of the federal income tax system will be done behind closed doors. the daily are.” Doctors described Weir as being “in good mental and physical condition,” Djerejian added. He said the United States had “absolutely” made no deal with the terrorists who had held Weir. “Our position on negotiating with terror ists is very clear," he said. Asked if the United States had given up anything to win Weir’s release, the spokesman said, “I’m not going to get into that.” Djerejian refused to answer ques tions on why only Weir had been freed. But he said, “We have been in touch with a number of govern ments, and various contacts, in cluding the Syrian government.” Asked whether he would say the Syrians had been helpful in winning Weir’s release, Djerejian said, “Not specifically, I can’t say.” Reagan himself was asked upon returning to Washington whether Syria was involved in Weir’s re lease. “I can’t comment on that,” the president said. According to Djerejian, officials had hoped the release last week of the last Lebanese prisoners held at Israel’s Atlit prison camp “would improve the atmosphere in the re gion.” Following the release, he said, “We did enhance our efforts.” A State Department official, speaking only on condition of ano nymity, said Weir told debriefers that he had been held in Lebanon during the entire length of his cap tivity. The official said Weir had not been tortured and that, “for some one who’s gone through what he’s gone through, he’s in pretty good condition.” The official said Weir had been hospitalized for a medical checkup - after his release. The official declined to say whether Weir said he had been contact with the other six American hostages. Vice President George Bush has scheduled a meeting tomorrow with the families of the six remaining kidnapped Americans. Britain calls a halt to ousting Soviets By DAVID MASON Chief AP European Correspondent LONDON Britain called a halt yesterday to the exchange of diplo matic expulsions that began when the KGB's top agent in London defected. The end came after the Soviet Union ordered six more Britons out, making the score 31-31. The Kremlin, in its first major diplomatic imbroglio since Mikhail S. Gorbachev assumed power Mar. 11, made the unusual decision to retal iate in equal numbers to Britain’s expulsion of 25 alleged Soviet spies last Thursday and six more on Mon day. The Foreign Office said after Mos cow cpmpleted the second round Wednesday that it would not evict any more Soviets, insisting that it had not backed down and that Britain had come out ahead. Prime Minister Margaret Thatch er, who is on an official visit to Egypt, said, “We have eliminated the core of their (the Soviet) subversive and intelligence operation in Britain, so we shall not respond further to their wholly unjustified expulsions. ... I shall try to draw a line under it.” In Moscow, the official news agen cy Tass said Ambassador Bryan Car tledge was summoned to the Foreign Ministry yesterday morning and told that the Soviet Union expected Brit ain to stop its “unfriendly actions.” Tass initially reported that “a num ber of” Britons were being expelled for “impermissible activities,” and that the Soviet Union had resolutely protested their actions. A later dis patch told the Soviet public there were 62 Britons and Soviets involved. The cycle of ejections reduced the Collegian Another White House spokesman, Peter Roussel, said the president told Weir the United States would continue its efforts until all the hostages are freed. Roussel said those efforts would include “prayer as well as diplomacy.” He quoted Reagan as telling the freed American, “You are an inspi ration to the people of this country and to all who might find them selves in situations of similar ad versity.” National security adviser Robert McFarlane, speaking at the South ern Newspaper Publishers Associa number of British citizens in Moscow from 103 to 72 and the number of Soviets in London from 234 to 203. Britain started the scrap by expel ling 25 alleged Soviet agents last Thursday on information provided by Oleg A. Gordievski, 46, identified by the Foreign Office as the KGB station chief in Britain who defected recently and received political asylum. Gordievski is reported to have been a double agent for up to 15 years. The Soviet Union responded on Saturday, ignoring London’s warning not to retaliate and ordering an equal number of Britons out of Moscow. On Monday, Thatcher’s govern ment expelled six more men it said were second-rank intelligence opera tives, and the Kremlin matched that Wednesday by ejecting six more Bri tons. Those declared unwelcome by both sides were allowed three weeks to leave. It was the biggest spy confrontation between Britain and the Soviet Union since 1971, when London kicked out 105 alleged Soviet spies. The Kremlin reacted mildly, expelling only 18 Bri tons, 10 of whom had already left the Soviet Union, and the matter ended there. The only expulsions since were in a series of exchanges between 1981 and April of this year that cost the Soviets 12 alleged spies and Britain 8. Sir Geoffrey Howe, Britain’s for eign secretary, said yesterday in London: “The Soviet Union must bear the full responsibilty for this lamentable episode. This severe set back to United Kingdom-Soviet rela tions was not of our choosing.” Both he and Thatcher expressed hope that relations would improve Benjamin Weir tion meeting in Colorado Springs, said the administration also with held announcement of the release because Weir “deserves a normal family life.” Weir was kidnapped at 8:15 a.m. while walking in Moslem West Bei rut with his wife. Three men jumped out of a white Peugeot 504, forced him into the car and drove off, police said at the time. They said the car had no license plates. Weir, the oldest of the American kidnap victims, looked haggard and drawn in a photograph released to Beirut newspapers in June. Tater tots Scenes such as this were common at the Amish market yesterday. In this particular photo, Alvin (standing) and Jonnah Peachey (crouching), of RD 1, Belleville, were caught in the camera’s eye as they busily packed fresh potatoes. Thursday, Sept. 19,1985 Vol. 86, No. SO 16 pages University Park, Pa. 16802 Published by students of The Pennsylvania State University ©1985 Collegian Inc. Six Americans still held in Lebanon By LEE BYRD Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. - So now they are six a librarian, two educators, a priest, a journalist and a diplomat Americans still held hostage in Lebanon but not quite so forgotten on the day that President Reagan shared his “little news note” about the re lease of the Rev. Benjamin Weir. One of them, William Buckley, a political officer for the U.S. em bassy in Beirut, has been captive since March 18, 1984, longer than Weir or any of the others seized by radical Shiite Moslems in hopes of bartering their lives in exchange for comrades imprisoned in Ku wait. Buckley, 56, could lay claim to being the least discussed of the men called “The Forgotten Sev en” by anguished families and friends who have sought for months, with mixed success, to overcome the calculated silence of the administration by stirring a constant drumbeat of public inter est. Buckley, a native of Medford, Mass., and a former librarian, Army captain and building con tractor, is a bachelor and one of the State Department’s own. While the wives and sons and brothers and daughters of the oth ers have gone public to vent their sorrows, frustration and even their fury over the plight of their captive loved ones, Buckley has remained almost a footnote in the on-again, off-again drama. Weir, released over the weekend under circumstances still not fully known, was kidnapped on May 8, 1984. He is the second of his group to be freed; Jeremy Levin, former Beirut bureau chief of the Cable ■4 - News Network, was kidnapped on March 7, 1984. He broke away from his captors on Feb. 13 this year in what he now believes may have been an escape they deliber ately allowed. Weir and Levin, like the still imprisoned Buckley, had long sur passed the 444 days of captivity endured by Americans held hos tage in Iran during the adminis tration of Jimmy Carter. Peter Kilburn, 60, a librarian at American University, disap peared in Beirut on Dec. 3, 1984, and the shadowy group called the Islamic Jihad later claimed re sponsibility. But subsequent com munications and threats by the militants have not mentioned him and friends and officials fear for his condition. The university said he suffered “grave” ailments, in cluding heart and artery disease. Terry A. Anderson, 37, the chief Middle East correspondent for The Associated Press, was kidnap ped by gunmen on March 16,1985. His wife, Mikki, and 8-year-old daughter, Gabrielle, had left the city earlier because of concern for ' their safety. Anderson, a graduate of lowa State University, worked at AP bureaus in Tokyo and Jo hannesburg before being assigned to Beirut. The Rev. Lawrence Martin Jen co, 50, was seized on Jan. 8 this year. He is a Roman Catholic priest from Joliet, 111., and di- rected the church’s relief services in Lebanon, serving both Chris tians and Moslems. “He always said that if he were to die, he’d like to die as a missionary,” according to brother John Jenco of Joliet. Jenco’s sister, Mae Mihelich, said yesterday that Weir’s release means “We’re going to fight hard er. ” Collegian Photo I Mary Celentano /*0