Show The Uuh 0 — 1 fnd ThunneU hat lost his lease lor Us photography business the SC According to Stadent Center Director Cary Chaahere the facility will provide space for a banking facility or a travel service Students to cc2 czi Fall tuition inrrcc: Students enrolling at Utah State Univcnky 1981 will see a In tuition In " change tion to the 125 isKrea percent by the Utah State Legislature The other change is a move to Ml e and students pay more cesnvaieat tuition than has been the case innewly the past when part-tim- e students have paid non The new schedule which proportionately frl appears in quarter class schedule causes a student ti ween 10 and 20 credit hours to pay a fl each credit hour added That is a rowlym more for 16 than for 15 and so on At the lower and upper ends of the scale are larger differences in cost per credit hour u but there is not as great a difTerential-betweein the middle and those on the ends as in dfe past It is planned that over a period of five years the differential will come to follow a strictly linear pattern It was noted that in the students past part-tim- e have in a sense subsidized students § load And a student could take 19 hours far the same tuition as for 1 1 hours for example The changes were made at the of the Utah commissioner of Higher Education The purpose is to permit a more flexible scheduling of classes to facilitate an open entry-ope-n wit and also to assure more equitable of no tion to part-tim- e students Under the new schedule regular — —mfrm tuition for one credit hour will be $35 Adlioul hours will cost S8 each through 7 hours ($143) each through 10 hours ($200) then $2 cadi 11 through 20 hours ($220) The cm per hour ttm 2 through 25 hours will go up in $5 inf——-- T for loads over 25 hours an xMimmI $23 per am£t will be charged nt For students one I b tl quarter full-tim- s n mh -- Bank to replace Thunnell's shop A petition is being circulated protesting the onceflatioa of the lease for Thunell’s Photography on the bottom floor of the Student Ceater The man behind the move Cordon HiUm says that he ian’t certain how well the P"00 d going but that he believes many mdrats are angry about the cancellation TTmacfl i lease to operate his camera and pharopphy shop in the Student Center was recently to provide space for other dent oriented businesses such as a bank or a -- agency according Gary Chambers Hilden said that he to Student Center Direc- - its will on the student body He said that the lease cancellation was not in the students’ interest "There’s no real sensible way that you could say that it was in anybody’s interest” he said "There’s extra room down there (in the Student Center) for a bank already” Chambers said that Hilden was wrong when he asserted in a letter to the editor of TV SWmm that students did not have a "voice in the dcduionJr‘ to put a bank in the Student Center and cancel Thunell’s lease In fact he said there are more voting student members of the student center objected to what he said a snivel my administration effort to impose (continued on page 11) t O non-reside- C2$XZ2&5CTJZ2 hours and in $16 steps from 21 t&m UI there will be an addittiooal charge of $£) per I h hour ' Fees are additional for all students Foreign students will pay the plus $10 h fr Student insurance program draws criddoinia Executive be '' Senate claims current policy may not overstated has worked with several students who TkJoUowtng is the mond dming uuh student so Tk Ptesent insurance mdVSUwdlk rrvuwd aeat jail revised at that time tht insurance and “dirk haor lent made jot 1 ft insurance program at conraced through kmhotZ? ®7kere U1 again whin a year Before it l "T"” " ' auction-bloc- "Udcm k M he bc reviewed with a fine ! ‘ ‘nJ!? vt T®® Vph ’ f professionals in- -' on the coverage the rejection of claims ° read or understand the method in which ® s sold ' tnJ1 k 1 -- rrgardine several areas been voiced by both “ not With the P'ciGcations of tPut that the coverage is ex- “dents don't read 7 eonunented Logan Terry He or-Gle- he said “felt they had been dealt a bad deal” The policy has “so many loopholes” according to Judy McKin- ney former ASUSU Executive Vice President who worked extensively with insurance problems and suggestions last year She felt the existing 15 exemptions of the policy allowed the insurance company too much leverage in rejecting claims An average of 2200 USU students have been enrolled in the sickness and accident insurance program this year To date Dance has paid on 552 claims in ’80-8- 1 and has declined a total of eight This indicates that approximately 25 percent of the USU policy holders benefits actually received insurance in enrolled individuals assuming the the program remained fairly constant The current policy “may not be meeting the needs” of certain students according to an ASUSU and legislation authored by McKinney last Senate Executive passed by the month Vet Dr John Carlisle director of student health services said that he hears relatively few complaints about the policy "Either the resolution n ti” it” he said meeting needs of certain students or else we just don’t here The USU student insurance pro- gram is contracted though Dance with Great Republic Life Insurance Co of California The policy specifications are tailored every three years by a campus committee consisting of ASUSU members the campus physi- cian and insurance office The group policy is then awarded to the lowest bidder which for the past three periods has been Dance So for $60 per year a single student is insured 24 hours a day 365 days a year as coverage continues through interim breaks Students may also purchase summer quarter insurance even if not enrolled in school “For the money you can’t get a better policy that covers more than this one” Terry commented “Fifteen dollars for a quarter of coverage is an outstanding deal” he said Coverage is by no means complete however If McKinney were running show she said die the policy-makin- g would also include coverage for eye and dental care preventative medicine gynecology maternity benefits and prescriptions which are all excluded on the current peftey She feh certain that stud would be better suited by a "bona-fide- ” company such as Cat Croaa ft Blue Shield which cancel handles both the University cf l&Ji and Weber State CoSege — rfem aa surance programs However t£ submitted two yean age fay that pany were between $3 and ’ higher per quarter I l±i policies currently avaiLlle to rodents i -- Quarterly insurance at U cJU C) u $25 per single attadent and Weber compared to the $13 foe USU Maximum payments at $5000 per iftaeaa wherein U and Weber ptSdei c :r hospital payments tion to £3 percent efr'-vi- ces up to t2SZ I —-— pay only a an O - rrs at o LU : trMIcf p 8 incurred a $15 tfe££L! thereafter for t “ f - r- - t cJt’ cri £ AcoonftgoCr: two USU V Cei V ) |