Thursday, November 28, 1978 5 Vaccinations start today at Watkins University Dally Kansar Swine flu vaccinations for people aged 18 to 44 will be given from 2 to 17:30 p.m. today, tomorrow and Monday, and from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday, at Watkins Memorial Hospital as part of Douglas County's public swine flu immunization program. The shots are intended for faculty, staff and students, Martin Wollmann, director of health services, said yesterday. The monovalent vaccine, which is effective against swine flu only, will be administered each of the four days, he said. will be airobi of Soviet I, some have grave sending le that Soviet arm in app If the momented, be ef kind of sth. At move orwell's People with an allergy to eggs shouldn't receive the vaccine, Wollmann said. fronting moral and rules the sound a time sessions for But the arch and to pre- have believes in believe in rules their full to deny arguably artificial ence inhers will refuse to or their ences on the church live in an A final report on a possible trash-burning steam plant for the University of Kansas was received Tuesday by the Office of Facilities Planning. From page one The report, from the firm of Henningson, Durham and Richardson, Omaha, highly recommended the plant for KU, Mary Lovett, a assistant to the chancellor, said yesterday. The proposed site is about two blocks west of Iowa Street on West Campus. Report favors trash-burning plant at KU The final report differed little from a draft report released by the Omaha firm in 1987. The approval of the plant is now in the hands of the Board of Regents and the landlord. He said, however, that fee assessments and any adjustments would be handled by the Office of Admissions and Records and the Department of Education could not assess or adjust fees. The idea was originally developed by William Smith, dean of the School of Engineering. Campus fees . . . Navy Bowman, assistant dean of the School of Education, who is in charge of student teachers, said some students had tried to complain that he was far no one had complained to him about it. cieved her diploma at the end of the school year without complications, she said, when she later requested a copy of her transcript and found that it was a hold on it because she owed the $83. TO GET A copy of the transcript for a job, to get information and asked he to write a check for the 833. Campus privilege fees change from semester to semester as some individual fees are changed. This semester students pay the largest single fee is $8.50 or health fees. UP UNTIL about two years ago, he said, students in the MITEC program were given the alternative of paying either full tuition, including the campus privilege fees, or straight tuition fees of $205, if they didn't use campus facilities. After meetings in which representatives of the Office of Admissions and Records and the School of Education were present, it was decided that all student teachers, except those receive credit for student teaching only would have to pay full tuition, Bowman said. According to the fall 1976 timetable, only those students enrolled in student teaching credit whose total enrollment throughout the semester is in teaching are eligible to receive a rate. That rate is $14 an hour for Kansas students and $40 an hour for nonresidents. THE FEEs cover only instruction in classes and library privileges. Student Health service benefits, Union facilities and campus events admissions at student rates aren't available to those paying at the field-work rate. "I think if we tried to have varied fees, it would be hard to administrate," Bowman said. A past study showed that about 60 per cent of the students in the MITTEC program He said there had been problems with the optional fee plan because some students who didn't pay for the services still used them. With all the inequities, the only fair way was to charge everybody the same fee because most were getting the services anyway. We Write All Risks Automobile Insurance commute to their student teaching jobs, he said. "TRYING TO decide who's committing, and who isn't a bag of worms we couldn't get." Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass. There are about 120 students in this semester's program, and 140 enrolled for the fall. There are approximately 40 per cent who live in the MITTE regions while they student teach would contribute more than $4,000 in tuition, fell and more than $4,700 in the spring. Other student teachers either teach only eight weeks out of town and take block courses on campus the rest of the semester, or teach in a summer camp where they're close to campus facilities. Because adequate fuel supplies to serve KU in the future are questionable, a trashburning plant would be economical and save fuel, earlier reports indicated. KU's trash-burning plant would comprise three parts—a storage area for the trash, a furnace where the trash would be burned to produce steam, and a cleaning apparatus that would remove odors and debris particles from plant emissions. Douglas, Jefferson and Franklin counties would provide trash for the plant. Symphonies interested in the 2 Year Program should contact Capt. John B. Mackenzie, Air Force RDCs - Gateway to a Great Way of Learning. Air Force RDCs - Gateway to a Great Way of Learning. Place a Kansan want ad Call 864-4358 ©1976 The Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis.