University Daily Kansan. April 6. 1984 Senate Page 5 continued from p. 1 to the budget request, such as the suicide rate of homosexuals and the possibility of homosexuals forcing their members to be member asked GLSOK for a membership. She said the committee's actions had led to a lower turnout at the last GLSOK dance and had reduced requests for speakers from GLSOK. Speaking in his own defense, Jay Smith, who also is a senator, said the removal of the four men from the Finance Committee would set a precedent for removal of any committee member who expressed his beliefs. The credibility of the Senate will be further eroded, he said, if student groups applying for the students' money can force the removal of committee members who do not agree with them. NEN STUCKER, graduate student senator, said she did not want to have to censor what she said during meetings and that being removed from a committee. "I'm worried about ending up in a group where I can't express my opinion," she said. Doug Stallings, a member of GLOSK, said that although he disagreed with the four men, he did not think they be removed from the committee. Any student can apply to Senate committees, he said, and students have a right to express their opinions "Here are supposedly open-minded groups pushing to get four men off a committee because the men don't agree with them." Stallings said. No discrimination has occurred, he said, because no group's funds have been cut. The Senate has the final vote on the budget. AFTER THE SENATE's vote not to dismiss the committee members, Andrew Helm, a member of the Free Speech Movement, said the Senate had failed to conduct a fair hearing because it had not heard evidence from the students who had been discriminated against. "Students are here bringing legitimate charges," he said, "and they are not allowed to speak." During Senate meetings, only senators can speak unless the Senate allows a senator to yield his time to a non-senator. Several times during the meeting the Senate allowed non-senators to speak. The Senate discussed the bill in a pro-con format for about an hour. Jon Glichrist, chairman of the Finance Committee, said the committee would resume budget deliberations Monday. Glichrist agreed Wednesday to postpone deliberations, which began a week ago, until the Senate voted on the charges. Board of Regents schools. Another bill is aimed at protecting about 450,000 residential and commercial rate payers from huge electricity rate increases predicted when the Wolf Creek nuclear plant near Burlington goes on line in Analysis continued from p.1 Some of the more important bills that the legislators have not resolved and that will have to be dealt with during the veto session include: *re*appraising and reclassifying property for tax purposes. *solving the problem of overcrowded prisons. *raising the drinking age for 3.2 percent beer from 18 to 19. *starting pari-mutuel betting on horse races. *cleaning up hazardous waste sites across the state and banning ground mining in the state.* Several of those issues lured KU students to the Capitol, most recently the proposal for raising the drinking age for 3.2 percent beer. During one Senate session, the Jayhawk mascot chided State Sen. Merrill Werts, R-Junction City, a Kansas State University fan, on his birthday. State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said the Legislature had stalled on several issues, some of them because they were complicated, and others because they were tainted by politics. DURING HEATED DEBATES, legislators have accused each other of tippingeer around issues colored with even a tinge of controversy. All 165 lawmakers are up for re-election in November. "Some issues, like the funding bills, just take a long time to get through both houses," he said. "But there have been political aspects." But State Rep. Ron Fox, R-Prairie Village, said that he thought this session had been productive and that politics had not played a leading role. "I haven't seen a lot of politics up here this session," he said. "Generally speaking, legislation has been directed much more toward constituents across the state, and the beneficial amount has been done that is good for the state, such as Wolf Creek." But yesterday on the Senate floor, State Sen. Edward Reilly Jr., R- Leavenworth, cited politics for hampering Senate work on a bill that would raise the drinking age for 3.2 percent beer from 18 to 19. "i am embarrassed by this whole process,' he said. He have hit an injury. "I will wait." Reilly said the Senate floor was not the place to resolve an emotional issue such as raising the drinking age. "It should have been in a conference committee and it should have been approved." El Salvador and not to overthrow the Sandinista government. Some of the Nicaraguan rebel leaders have said, "The aim they had was to oust the Sandinistas." continued from p. 1 The Senate also killed an amendment by Sen. Jim Sasser, D-Denn., who sought to ensure that military sites in Honduras be used only for training, that they would not be turned over to any other military or paramilitary group. SASSER'S AMENDMENT WAS rejected 50-44 despite warning that the Pentagon was building installations "capable of supporting a major armed intervention by U.S. troops in the region." Sasser said a total of 14 installations, including airfields, would have been built in Honduras by the end of the U.S. military exercise there. He said U.S. forces in Guatemala could be caught in a crossfire between Nicaraguan military and rebel forces Reagan had asked for $93 million in emergency military aid to El Salvador but agreed to a bipartisan compromise that trimmed the amount to $62 million. SALVADORAN ARMY TROOPS killed about 60 leftist guerrillas in two days as part of an offensive to drive guerrillas out of the northeast, said Lt. Col. Mauricio Guzman Aguilar, second in command of the 3rd Military Zone. He said the fighting in northeastern San Miguel province, the heaviest since a rebel attack killed 100 soldiers at the northern fort of El Paraiso Dec. 30, led by 16 guerrilla government soldiers and wounded 23 others. Clandestine guerrilla radio broadcasts reported that 12 troops were killed and 41 were wounded Monday in a 15-hour guerrilla attack on the 700-man paratroop battalion in Ciudad Barrios, 62 miles northeast of Sal Salvador. GEN. WALTER LOPEZ REYES was sworn in as new commander of the Honduran armed forces and said the decision to oust his predecessor was made to save the nation's democratic institutions The moderate Lopez Reyes, 43, was elected Wednesday by the Honduran congress to replace Gen. Gustavo Alvarez Martinez, who was forced to resign last week as commander of all forces, along with four other generals. Lopez, who has had extensive training in the United States, was the only surviving general of the purge in the Honduran armed forces. 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