University Daily Kansan, November 18, 1981 Page 9 ASK to seek students' views By MICHAEL ROBINSON Staff Reporter The KU chapter of the Associated Students of Kansas, responding to charges that last week's ASK legislative assembly did not represent Kansas students, in submitting a request on legislative issues to KU students. ASK officials said yesterday that the charges, made Sunday by Verne Harnish, Wichita State University's ASK board member, are that legislative assembly delegations violated the ASK constitution by not taking a "good faith" effort to learn their constituents' views. Harnish's charge centers on a portion of the ASK constitution that states the legislative assembly must "represent and express the views of member students in the governmental decision making process, provided that the views of the members have a substantial majority of the members have the views they represented." The questionnaire, which will be available at ballet boxes during Student Senate elections today and tomorrow, is to encourage students to claim that it did represent its students. Members of the KU delegation said that the tax, which would be paid by producers of oil, natural gas and coal in the state, would provide more funds for Kansas schools—including colleges and universities. "I don't know why he thinks there wasn't a good faith effort made by the LA," said Maria McDougall, the KU coach. "I think Harush was unavailable for comment." Other delegations opposed the tax. But Mark Tallman, Fort Hays State University student body president and newly elected ASK executive director, said that ASK's support of a mineral severance tax was the heart of the problem. "I think the severance tax was far and away the main thing behind this," Tallman said. "There's a clear regional problem." "The whole problem stems from the fact that there is no appellate mechanism." She said that if the legitimacy of last week's assembly were challenged, past assemblies, and even ASK's answer to client representation, could be questioned. McDougal said that in order to change the stands taken by the legislative assembly, the assembly would need to reconvene, an idea that she opposed. Besides the mineral severance tax, the questionnaire asks for student opinions on: Tallman said the regional problem was the basis for the dispute, and he added that there was no mechanism in the ASK constitution for challenging stands taken by the legislative assembly. - A 13 percent increase in faculty salaries at Regents schools. "The problem is there is no clearly defined action that can be taken," Talman said. "There's nothing in the book that provides for that other than the LA itself." - 10 cent per gallon beer tax, which would be used to finance alcohol treatment and education centers in the state for women and young adults. December deadline set for ski trip November Special Snow-loving students only have until Dec. 1 to sign up for SUA's "Ski the Summit" trip to Dillon, Colo. The AIA program adverser, said yesterday. "The beauty of staying in Dillon is that you can go skiing at several different nearby slopes." Wee said. - A 100 percent waiver of fees for graduate students. Free shuttle buses will transport students from Dillon to the Breckenridge, Keystone and Arapahoe Basin slopes. Wee said about 40 students usually went on the SUA's ski vacations. - A Course Equivalency Guide to tell students which courses would transfer to other colleges and universities in the state. - Diversitie of state funds from companies and banks that hold interest in South Africa. Besides the January trip, SUA is sponsoring spring break vacations to Padre Island, Texas, Daytona, Fla.; and Tasos, N.M. 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