Is the Associated Students of Skyline College doing a good enough job of representing it’s night students?This was one of the main points of a weekly Nov. 20 meeting, and according to Bob Alberts, an ASSC senator “Are we representing them? Not very well I’d say.””[There are] no activities scheduled for night students” according to Alberts. Most clubs center their activities for the day students.According to the Office of Planning, Reasearch, and Instituation Effectiveness 39 percent of Skyline students go only for night classes, and 24 percent go for both night and day classes.At an ASSC even earlier in the year day students got free food, while night students only got planners and brochures. Furthermore most club activities are planned during the day, the ASSC office itself is only open late on Wednesdays. Alberts feels that night students may not be connecting to the college community enough.This underrepresentation could become a problem because “If we don’t represent them, they [the night students] will,” Alberts says. Some colleges have two ASSCs in which one represents the day time students and the other represents the night students.Several ideas were also proposed to alleviate the problem, such as other nights where the ASSC stays open late, hot cocoa nights, and open mike night type ideas.”As of right now we don’t have a committee but we are definitely open to it,” Commisioner of Public Records Kristi Parenti-Kurtilla says.” “The biggest thing now is we need students coming in. We really need input from the students.””I personally believe there could be more of an outreach, but there is a handbook,” Commissioner of Activities Wendy Smith said.Due to extreme difficulty in establishing a quorum no real decisions could be made, but this discussion will continue at the next ASSC meeting, on Tuesday, Dec. 4.Other things that were discussed at the meeting included:• Students with debt at Skyline was discussed at the College Budget Committee meeting. Other things brought up at the meeting included ideas for budget balancing.• The Health and Safety committee looked at a suggestion by Skyline Security to put more cameras up on campus. “They will do it,” said Senator Andrew Lee.• The Education Policy committee changed the requirements for repeating a class, in order to comply more correctly with state wide policies.”Students can’t enroll with more than 4 W’s for a class,” according to Commisioner of Publicity Vanessa Allas. “Before, a student could only repeat a class once without a petition now it’s two times.” Also, “Programs with less than 18 units can’t get a certificate without approval from the Chancellor’s office.”