2 Tuesday, February 5, 1974 University Daily Kansan Pre-Enrollment . . . From Page One mails to the department a card with the list of courses. Barket this process indicated to the department that the student would take the course so cards were pulled and reserved for him. KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY has used a pre-enrollment process for five and one-half years. E. M. Gerritz, dean of admissions and records there, said last week that K-State had changed to pre-enrollment to improve the advising of students and to make enrollment more convenient for them. The system at K-State allows the student to select the courses he wants to take, but not the times or teachers he wants to have. Students must be assigned an advising session with a faculty member, enrollment or the actual pulling of class cards, computer assignment to classes and registration and the mechanical operation of equipment and supplying student biographical data. The timetable of courses is available a Ladies' Nights Out. From Page One wrong," he said. "It was just strictly a business deal." The owner of the Bierstate refused to comment on the ruling or on the charges of CPA decided it wouldn't handle the case, but Johnson, a worker at CPA, was interested in the case and decided to pursue it with Outmeier. He said he and Quitmeir had inquired to several federal and state agencies before the election, where he was about a year ago. He said the Stable tried to justify the reduced rates by saying women were underrepresented. Quitmeier said he made the complaint while women were campaigning for equal pay and she should stand up for abolition of all discrimination against both men and women. He also said that he thought the women reduced rates was "prostituting females." Mike Johnson said Quitmeer had gone to the Consumer Protection Agency (CPA) last year to complain about the practice of bursing offering reduced prices to women. Two members of the University of Kansas track team pleaded innocent yesterday in Douglas County Court to charges of illegal possession of amphhetamines. Barry Schur, Tuson senior and holder of the Big Eight high jump record, was arrested Friday. Spinner Mark Lutz, Rochester, Minnesota, and Schur's roommate, was arrested yesterday by Douglas County sheriff's officers. 2 Track Stars Face Drug Rap Each posted $750 bond. Hearings were set for Feb. 26 for Schur and for Feb. 25 for Lutz. Last week Lutz was named the outstanding performer in the United States Track and Field Federation championships in Oklahoma City. semester in advance, Gerritz said. During the semester, a student and his adviser select the student's courses for the next semester. The student then fills out a card containing information. The times he will be available to take them. The class cards are pulled at this time. Shirley Gilham, director of Affirmative Action, said last night that she thought the reduced rates for women was due to it, suggesting it should be treated people differently in public. THIS INFORMATION is fed through a computer which assigns the student to a section of the courses he listed and prints out his schedule. The schedule is picked up during the registration process at the beginning of the next semester. "I wandered when this was going to happen," she said. "When we expect men to give up their special privileges, we should have to expect to give up ours." Gerritz said the computer kept class sizes equal so that at the end of registration, a person had an equal opportunity of getting into a class. He said the first semester of computerized pre-enrollment was a mess. That semester only 80 per cent of the students got the exact courses they had pre-enrolled for. "I was ready to take a boat to Australia," Gerrit said. Since the first time, the percentage of satisfied students has increased, Gerritz said, and the number of drops and adds has not increased. Buckley Criticizes . . . From Page One their work, but that getting students to serve on the committees was a problem Buckley said he thought students had to abide by committee decisions if 20 per cent representation was provided for, regardless of the committee's intentives attended the committee meetings. "By not attending," he said, "they have forfeited their right of representation." She said she was the only undergraduate who ever attended meetings of the community. Elizabeth Hogan, Wichita junior and student representative to the College Assembly, said she had noticed widespread problems with the assembly members on committees of the assembly. Bruce Keplinger, Llenaea senior and member of RPR, said he had written all nine departments on the committee's list at least twice. From some he never received a reply and he therefore assumed they were in compliance with the regulation, he said. Several departments told Kepler they were in compliance with the regulation, but some of these had graduate teaching and research experience in their policy-making committees, he said. This practice is in compliance with the letter of the regulation, Keeperi said, but it was not used. Both Keplinger and McLaughlin said the committee's investigation was severely hampered by a lack of diligence on the part of many committee members. Keplinger said the committee began its investigation last spring with 17 working members and only four or five were still involved last fall. Buckley said he thought that if it was found that some schools weren't practicing the 20 per cent student representation, suit would be brought before the University Judiciary. A committee member was charged with finding out how such a suit could be brought, Keplinger said, but that member never came back to committee meetings. Any student who felt he was not adequately represented on a policy making committee was denied access. McLaughlin said he had tried to check up on his committee's work but had had time to write or call only about 80 per cent of the committee that were investigated by the committee. correction State Rep. Lloyd Buszi, R-Lawrence, was incorrectly quoted in the Tuesday's Kansas as favoring raises of only 8.5 per cent for University of Kansas faculty members. The University favored the 10 per cent raises recommended by the Kansas Board of Regents. 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