 Sneezing, coughing, fevers, and dizziness are all signs that this year's flu season is back in action. Because this money is 5-20% of Americans contract the illness, Boston University Student Health Services has scheduled a series of flu clinics on campus to ensure all students get the protection they need. Helen Williams, the nurse practitioner at the BU Occupational Health Center, believes every student should watch out for those symptoms and act appropriately if they begin to get sick. If someone has the flu, usually the signs and symptoms are the fever, the tired, achiness. You don't usually get an upper respiratory infection, so to speak, like a runny nose or a sputum, but that could come secondary, so you could have a secondary infection from the flu. In as far as treatment, usually stay home and rest and drink plenty of fluids and eat a proper diet is the menu for that. As we get further into this year's flu season, both students and faculty are taking advantage of the vaccinations on campus. Nurses are saying that even the scaredy cat should take advantage of this opportunity. So let's take a look and see what the Boston University Medical Group has to say about it. We're very skittish of needles. We will, you know, take care of you. We've given out maybe 3,000 vaccines so far this year. We hope to give out another couple of hundred, but we all need to do it together. We need to protect each other. The vaccination clinic will continue on the Charles River campus until Friday, November 1st. With BU TV, I'm Kirsten Glavin reporting in Boston.