Page 6 University Daily Kansan, April 21, 1983 Soldiers ambushed by Salvadoran rebels By United Press International! SAN SALVADOR, EI Salvador — GUERRA ambuladas a troop transport and wounded several soldiers participating in a major drive against leftist militants near Ei Salvador. The army officers said yesterday. The operation, in which an estimated 5,000 soldiers are mobilized, is attempting to push guerrillas from the Cerron Grande and 5 de November hydroelectric dams most of the country's electricity. Guerrillas attacked a security outpost in the San Salvador suburb of San Jose Las Flores, shutting down traffic on the highway that good for security and tourism but for security hours. No casualties were reported on either side. OFFICERS AT ARMY OPERATION headquarters in the garrison of Chalatenango, 26 miles northest of San Salvador, said rebels ambushed a troop transport near the city on Friday, 9 miles east of Chalatenango. "Several wounded soldiers" were taken out of the combat zone after the ambush late Tuesday, the officers said, adding that several other soldiers have been killed or wounded in the operation. Planes have run daily bombing missions since the drive began last Friday and heavy artillery are deployed throughout throughout the night, they said. Two weeks ago officers in the area said as many as 4,000 rebels were camped near the two dams, which have long been key targets of guerrilla sabotage. OFFICIALS AT THE NATION'S largest gold mine, Mineral San Sebastian, said rebels blew up valuable mining equipment that may take months to replace in an attack that caused $1 million in damage. Rebels killed six national guardmen, a civil defenseman and the daughter of a mine worker when they shot their way into the installation at Santa Rosa de Lima. 87 miles of the capital, local authorities said. The eastern 40 percent of El Salvador was without power in the wake of rebel attacks on the power grid, while rebels also blacked out a section of La Paz province, just south of San Salvador, local officials said. Newly appointed Defense Minister Gen. Carlos Eugenio Vides Cansanova yesterday ordered his first command changes, pulling an unaggressive commander out of a key zone, army spokesmen said. COMMANDERS WERE SHIFTED IN San Vicente, an eastern agricultural province where rebels have long been active, and in the northern Chalatenango province. A defense ministry spokesman said Vides Casanova made the changes in "order of the day." moving Col. Jose Alejandro Cisneros from commander of the Fifth Infantry Brigade of San Vicente to the office of the army's inspector general. He will be replaced by Col. Jose Dionisio Hernandez, Chalatenango commander. House approves finance bill The House voted to allocate $7.6 million to the University of Kansas yesterday to cover utility expenses for this year and next year and to begin a work-study program. The money for KU is part of a $30 million allocation to Board of Regents schools that was included in the omnibus budget in final appropriations on the session THE BILL, WHICH NOW goes to the Senate, would give KU $161,775 for the rest of fiscal year 1983 and $6 million for fiscal year 1984 for utility expenses. The allocation for utility expenses for existing buildings in FY 1984 would be 10 percent more than KU received in FY 1983. The $6 million allocation also would include money for utility expenses in new buildings. Those expenses are estimated at $1.60 a square foot a year. Gov. John Carlin originally had recommended a 20 percent increase in Regents utility budgets, but later decreased his recommendation to 15 percent. Driving in Style Kennedy Glass has the new line of Sunstyle Sunroofs! - Same day installation - Several different styles to choose from 730 New Jersey GLASS INC. Mastercard Visa CLASS OF 1983! Did you know that your KU Alumni Association— Helps keep track of your friends (through our extensive computer record-keeping system) Has an award winning publication in Kansas Alumni magazine Is your best way of keeping informed of major activities on the Hill? Center invite you up-to-date on alumni activities in your part of the coun- firm. After you leave campus, Will have a new on-campus home for Alumni in the Adams Alumni Center with dinner and private club (Realtors, real estate, etc.) Offer you low-priced, very beneficial group insurance 2. State Sen. Ron Hein, R-Topeka, carried the bill on the Senate floor and complained that the exemptions were defeating the bill's intentions to make records more accessible. it's our 100th生日 and you're our Centennial Class. Take advantage of this and many more benefits by joining the KU Alumni Association, a special association of 112 recruivers for May B3 graduates. Pomeroy complained that records would have been available to deranged persons. He also said such personal records as divorce proceedings would have been available upon request, had the proposal not been amended. Class of 1983—Be a Part of History! --were obtainable through other state agencies. TOPEKA - A struggling new Open Records Act loaded with 31 exemptions was weighed down with extra exclusions yesterday in the Senate. The changed proposal must be sent back to the House for approval and will probably not be enacted during this session, several senators said. "I have no problem at all with reasonable requests," he said. "But what records do those people have that can't be available somewhere else?" Hein said the Supreme Court should decide which records should be public. ASSOCIATION 1883·1983 For every 100 members belonging to the Alliance Association will receive a membership card and the clipboard to the Alliance Association. Originally the act would have declared a public policy that almost all public records would be open that are kept and maintained by public agencies. Before Pomeroy's amendments, he said, those officials would have been liable for proving that the records were accurate. Mr. Pomeroy asked the request took the question to court. Mailing Address ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Open records bill loaded with more exemptions By JEFF TAYLOR Staff Reporter WITH POMEROY'S CHANGES, public officials would be exempt if they do not maintain a public office more than 35 hours a week. State legislators would be exempt from the 35-hour guideline during sessions. SOME RECORDS WERE EX- CLOSED from the act, such as medical records and certain legal documents. Authors of the proposal suggested that the act be liberally interpreted. Illustrations by Paul Coker State Sen. Elwaine Pomeroy, R-Topeka, persuaded the Senate yesterday to approve additional changes in the act that he said would prevent "part-time" public officials from having to keep records open to the "We're going to have to have a little bit of flexibility over how this act is enforced," he said. Pomeroy complained that legislators, school board members, city and county commissioners, judges and other public officials would be swamped with requests for records that However, legislators have continued to add to a laundry list of exemptions. THE SANCTUARY THIS COUPON GOOD ANYTIME FOR A 50c PITCHER 1401 W. 7th 1 PER PERSON PER DAY VOID 5-5-83 Place a Kansan want ad. 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