Ken North- Continued from page 2 To me, students feel ASC is in its own little world. We have got to look beyond next year to two or three years from now. In the organizations that are elected by students, success can only be measured by student interest. A 27 per cent election indicated a lack of student support. I haven't seen that many students in the council or supporting the election. CLOSING STATEMENTS: A platform should be a detailed system of what you think are the critical needs. You must avoid generalities. You have a responsibility to be specific. Ours is clearly a radical position, but it is how we approach student government, and we feel it is an integral part of student government. I am disappointed in UP because they didn't express an opinion of what student government should do. In three semesters, I think they could have done much more than they have done. Some of the committees were eliminated, fine, but the questions I have are: why were they given the money in the first place and what has happened to the allocations to these committees. EFFECTIVE university speakers is a very good point. At the start of the year, Al and Janet indicated they would coordinate several activities. They felt SUA was in some instances doing a better job than the ASC was. SUA was assigned the responsibility, and, if at the start of the year this was given to SUA, our approach should be consistent This is indicative of a lack of delegation of power and coordination of responsibility. There may be a possibility that what we are doing oversteps the originally intended role of the ASC. Student roles are changing. The ASC has not been a real concern of the students themselves. It hasn't been producing. The most important emphasis must be efficiency in all areas. We must recognize this is a time of expanded responsibility. Needs exist. I think the UP platform is constricted in its approach to student government. Daily Kansas 5 Monday, April 17, 1967 Engineering grad degrees being studied The KU Graduate Council is meeting today to consider a proposal to grant degrees of master and doctor of engineering beginning next full. Final approval must be made by the Board of Regents for the program to become effective. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has promised $88,000 to help finance the first four candidates of the program. KU has requested a total of $400,000 over a four-year period from NASA. The proposal states the program will "produce graduate engineers who are better prepared to meet the demands of the country's increasingly complex industrial, military and space technology." William P. Smith, dean of the school of engineering and architecture and chairman of the Committee on Space Science, said actual technological problems will be confronted in the "professional degree program." When operating at capacity, the program as proposed, would produce 10 doctors and 30 masters of engineering, and 60 bachelors of science graduates a year beginning in 1972. Governor to host internat'I students Governor and Mrs. Robert Docking will host international students from colleges and universities in Eastern Kansas at a reception May 6, at Cedar Crest, the executive mansion in Topeka. CLARK COAN, KU DEAN of international students, said KU international students may sign up for the trip through April 20 in his office. 226 Strong Hall. The event will be the annual Day - in - Topeka, arranged by Governor and Mrs. Docking and the Washburn University People-to-People (P-to-P) council. KU P-to-P will provide transportation, leaving for Topeka at 8 a.m. Noise is quelled KU traffic officers answered a disturbance at 12:20 this morning at 1245 West Campus Road when members of several fraternities were reportedly throwing fire crackers. Police said men from Alpha KappaLambda, Tau Kappa Epsilon, and Lambda Chi Alpha were asked to leave the area. They said the men returned again at 1:23 a.m. and were asked to leave again. No one was charged. Meet the only man Kansas with 139 jets. Larry Teel TWA Campus Representative He's the guy to know when it comes to travel. TWA specially trained him to make it easy for you to go places in the U.S. and to Europe, Africa and Asia. He's the man to see forTWA 50/50 Club cards—you can get 'em right on the spot. Working with your local travel agent, he can help you with travel plans, tours, schedules, fares, ticket arrangements—right on campus. Easy? Just call Larry at VIctor 3-7810. Tell him where you want to go—and he'll warm up a jet. New AKL house dedicated Alpha Kappa Lambda's new $340,000 fraternity house was dedicated Saturday afternoon by Louis Bacon, national executive president of the fraternity. Donald Anderson, KU dean of men, received symbolic keys to the house, located at 2021 Stewart. Be an Indian giver! HOW! Give Los Indios Tabajaras' new album to your squaw. An exciting first from Los Indios Tabajaras! This new album features their excellent guitar techniques, framed for the first time in an orchestral setting of voices, strings and brass. Los Indios add a new dimension of sound to "Strangers in the Night," "Unchained Melody," "Sentimental Journey," "Frenesi," "Play a Simple Melody" and 6 more favorites in an album that's special in every way. Pick-um up heap soon! RCA VICTOR The most trusted name in sound