Following directions can speed Drop/Add process j By Lee Rood Staff Reporter Students hoping to slide through general registration and Drop/Add should come pre pared and not be afraid to ask questions, said Ted Pfeifer, director of the Office of Registra tion and Records. To go through general registration, which is today and Friday in the Nebraska Union, stu dents need to pick up time appointment cards and check their eligibility for registration at the main level of the Administration Building. While checking eligibility, he said, students could discover they have a block on their registration or have not been properly admitted or readmitted — which could hold up their registration. After checking eligibility, Pfeifer said, stu dents should bring their appointment cards, S25 class registration deposit and plenty of course options to the Centennial Room in the Nebraska Union. Drop/Add, Tuesday through Sept. 5, also is in the Centennial Room and requires lime appointment cards from the Administration Building. Pfeifer said that unless the change in schedule was initiated by the university, Drop/ Add would cost $5. Pfeifer said more than 19,000 students al ready were registered, which was slightly more than the number registered at this time last year. He attributed the increase to students realizing that they had more opportunities when they registered early. Although he said he expected 2,000 to 3,000 students to attend Drop/Add each day, Pfeifer said students should move quickly once they’re in the door. “I expect a lot of students, but if you watch the lines I think you’ll see they move quite quickly,” he said. In order to avoid hassles, Pfeifer said, stu dents going through general registration and Drop/Add should follow directions, consult the posted open course list and find university employees dressed in red smocks when they need help. Pfeifer also said it was important for stu dents to keep copies of all transactions until the end of the semester when they receive final grade reports. Corrections can be made from those copies, he said. Both Drop/Add and general registration take place from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tony Schkade, assistant director of registra tion and records, said students could drop a full-semester course without the grade being reported on transcripts until Oct. 19, which is the last day to change a course Irom or to Pass/ No Pass. From Oct. 22 to Nov. 16, Schkade said, a student can drop a full semester course late with written permission from the instructor and receive a grade of “W” (withdrawal). Mini course lists with Pass/No Pass deadlines, with drawal periods and drop periods will be avail able the first week of classes. To find out how much tuition money will be refunded after dropping a course beyond Sept. 5, students should consult the schedule of classes, Schkade said. Welcome Back! 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I STUDENT DESK OR 3 SHELF BOOKCASE I WITH COUPON Excel,e« for home or office. #35201 (708070) I I i LOOK IN YOUR PHONE BOOK FOR YOUR j NEAREST PAYLESS CASHWAYS STORE I L........4 Subject matter is combined I for classes I By Kara Wells Staff Reporter_K Students enrolled in an introduc- K lory course in sociology, anthropol ogy or geography this fall will get the | impression they’real! taking the same class. The subject matter from three j courses has been combined and will be offered in separate classes in the | three departments. Although students now will not be able to gel credit for taking introduc tory courses in each of the three de partments, no students have com plained to course coordinator Lynn White, a professor of sociology at UNL. ‘‘I don’t think many students real ize this is a new class,” she said. White said the courses were com bined to comply with new general liberal education requirements set by the Steering Committee on the Chan- \ cellor’s Committee for General Lib eral Education. The new guidelines would require humanity, sociology and natural sci ence courses to be multidisciplinary I and multicultural, while including I human experience and objectivity. i nc sociology, amnropoiogy ana geography departments cooperated to fulfill the guidelines by offering the new course. The three departments share enough common subject matter so an incorporation will meet the new requirements, While said. Jeanne Kay, chairwoman for the department of geography, said the three classes would have different perspectives, but they would give students much the same information. “It will be like taking the same course twice if a student were to take both Anthropology 100 and Geogra phy 100,” she said. White said the new sociology class would not be much different from Sociology 153, which was taught last year. Sociology 1 (X) is an introductory course designed to teach students how humans and society are organized and how they operate, said Suzanne Ortega, a sociology instructor. Soci ology 100 is a revision of Sociology 153, which was dropped, she said. The three classes will have a ‘‘considerable overlap,’ ’ Ortega said. The Sociology 100 course will incor porate material from anthropology and geography. The new class will expose students to the anthropologi cal and geographical perspectives of sociology, she said. Students foiget information quickly. White said, and this class hopefully will help them learn a new way of thinking. “Hopefully the class will give them a more holistic social perspective,” she said. Kay said the new Geography 100 class would replace Geography 150, which dealt with culture on a global scale. Geography deals more with theories on regions, she said, and the new class will retain that perspective, but also will include units on cultures and societies. Each of the three classes will con tinue to use different textbooks. White said, but will use packets of readings from the other two classes.