tic Battalion Should athletes receive monthly allowances? — Page 9 Vol.82 No.96 GSPS 045360 12 pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, February 11, 1987 s eniois: [itoaint'J kidnappers laid to be ^negotiating ith Israel :e :rf«r| imes. iR. ai , longt of dai such r'e for vernm )romi idles psveh esedte ■ BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Mos lem kidnappers were reported try ing to strike a deal with Israel on liesday that would tree 400 Arab prisoners in exchange tor three Americans and an Indian held in Beirut and a captured Israeli air man. ■ The Christian-run Voice of Leb- an m and the Moslem-run Voice of [the Nation radio stations quoted “re- jlirts from Washington and other capitals” as saying the captors might ■ working through the Red Cross for an exchange. ■ In Geneva, the International Committee of the Red Cross denied involvement in any negotiations. ■ Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir of Isiael said Ids government would be willing to consider a direct request for negotiations, but added that no ■ch request has been made. ■ Israeli officials say Washington "■s not asked Israel to meet de- Pands by the kidnap group, the Is- jBnicjihad for the Liberation of Pal estine, to release 400 prisoners in exchange for the lives of the four ed- iucaiors it holds. ejected [H White House spokesman Marlin Ijp. Fjt/water told reporters in Washing- er,noti»h <,n > "() ur terrorism policy remains rmmilJe same, and I reiterate once again d medii® 11 we vv ‘^ n 01 ransom hostages,nor will we encourage other countries lo do so.” il ■A group called the Revolutionary Justice Organization renewed a threat Tuesday to harm hostages if ^ th< United States takes military ac tion, i page 111 ■ it holds American hostages Jo- the ifseph James Cicippio, 56, of Valley sion pi forge. Pa., acting comptroller at the American University of Beirut, and ixecutivt 1 Edward Austin Tracy, 56, a writer inistrali« who formerly lived in Burlington, icil does Vt., and Jean-Louis Normandin, 35, race thei a French television engineer, ved. If; One hostage did gttin his freedom in Beirut on Tuesday. Police said ig fort JackSeikalv, 50, a wealthy Lebanese- "Exactk American kidnapped four days ago, was freed unharmed after his family paid a “sizable ransom.” Need A Light? Pete McDonald, a senior electrical engineering major, gets in a little practice for the MSC Variety Photo by Doug LaRue Show by juggling flaming torches. McDonald per forms his act while riding a unicycle. Probe reveals McFarlane tried to kill himself WASHINGTON (AP) — An in vestigation concluded that former presidential adviser Robert C. Mc Farlane attempted suicide, a police source said Tuesday, while authori ties said officially only that there was no evidence of foul play in McFar- lane’s Valium overdose. “There’s not going to be any rul ing that it was an attempted suicide,” said Harry Geehreng, spokesman for the Montgomery County Police in suburban Maryland. “We are sat isfied that there was no crime and there’s no further legal action to be taken.” But a source close to the investiga tion, speaking on condition of ano nymity, said the police had deter mined McFarlanes ingestion of 25 to 30 tablets of Valium, a tranquil izer, was an attempt to take his own life. The source also confirmed that police learned that McFarlane, Presi dent Reagan’s former national secu rity adviser, had written a note that his wife Jonda carried to the hospi tal. However, police did not know the contents of the note, the source said. Geehreng said he knew nothing of the note, and McFarlane’s attor ney Peter Morgan declined com ment on the matter. T he 49-year-old McFarlane, who associates said recently has been in severe pain with a back ailment, was rushed to the hospital Monday morning, shortly before he was to testify before the presidential com mission set up to investigate the Na tional Security Council’s role in the Iran arms-sale crisis. He was listed in good condition Tuesday at Bethesda Naval Hospital in suburban Maryland and was vis ited by his wife, hospital spokesman Lt. Russ Sanford said. He said Mc Farlane was not receiving telephone calls. White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said Reagan had not tried to contact his former aide, but that the president and first lady Nancy Reagan planned to telephone Mrs. McFarlane. He said Reagan likely would call McFarlane “when it is ap propriate.” Fitzwater said the White House “had no inside information or medi cal information” to comment on the reported suicide attempt. Mrs. McFarlane, meanwhile, is sued a terse statement saying, “Boh and the children and I appreciate enormously the great love and sup port that we are getting from friends and strangers alike.” McFarlane, who stands alone in his public insistence that Reagan gave prior approval to sending arms to Iran, was to testily behind closed doors Monday before the three- member presidential commission headed by former Sen. John Tower of Texas, said the panel’s spokes man, Herbert E. Hetu. Texas officials: Prisons face another closure has highest reported theft rate in SWC or the f By Doug Driskell Reporter n tneeuH^ reported 834 thefts in the 1985- eiiitanf ^6 school year- gave Texas A&M an- to be a ol her record — the highest number )neofil °E thefts in the Southwest Gonfer- astnui en< c ’ sa '