V' Page 12 1 HE BATT ALION WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1981 RELAX! at Features TJ's Happy Hour V2 Price Drinks 4-7 p.m. (Mon.-Fri.) High-pressure selling is door-to-door staple Buyers lose patience or money £j RESTAURANT ^ AND ^ CLUB 696-0388 707 Complex on Texas Ave. To: ACCOUNTING MAJORS From: ACCOUNTING SOCIETY and BETA ALPHA PSI Subject: GAAP IS HERE! Greater Annual Accountant’s Playday ~ (and banquet) Thursday April 16, 1981 Events awards 5-K RUN banquet* TENNIS following GOLF Students, compete with professors and professionals! "More Information available at the ticket sales booth In front of the old Hospital Building. Tickets for the banquet are on sale now! By CAROLYN TILLER Battalion Reporter A college student buys an 18- piece set of cookware for $500; that is nine pans, five lids and four accessory items such as a food masher. A housewife buys a “revolu tionary” new vacuum cleaner for only $5 a week; at 108 weeks, the total is $540. A man goes to a dance studio for a free lesson and dances away with $6,250 worth to pay for. What do all these people have in common? They’ve been taken by a fast-talking salesman. People buy things at extreme prices or of bad quality that they don’t need or can’t afford because of poorly placed trust in a strange salesman. The salesman, like a snake with hypnotic power, con- People buy things at ex treme prices or of bad quality that they don’t need or can’t afford be cause of poorly placed trust in a strange salesman. vinces people to sign outrageous contracts. But the people falling under his trance aren’t stupid; rather they are naive and unprepared. “People are gullible and they think they’re going to get some thing for nothing,” said LeRoy Balmain, executive director for the Better Business Bureau of Brazos Valley. “They usually get burned.” It’s easier to trust a reassuring, smiling, neatly-dressed, com plimentary and intelligent person and the salesman knows it. He’s not stupid either; he’s done his homework and planned every thing for his favor. “The presentation is meticu lously planned, right down to the salesperson’s appearance, ges tures, and even jokes,” said Stephen A. Newman and Nancy Ken’s Automotive 421 S. Main — Bryan 822-2823 "A Complete Automotive Service Center" Tune-Ups • Brakes Clutches • McPherson Struts Front End Parts Replacement Standard Transmission Repairs All American Cars YW-Datsun-Honda Toyota Lawn Mower Repairs & Snapper Mower Sales (Master Card & VISA Accepted) ART AWARENESS DAY WED., MARCH 25th 1981 10am to 4-PM MSC FEATURING: 3 CARICATURE ARTISTS — in msc gallery 2 BANDS — msc main lounge AND MUCH MORE! PRESENTED BY MSC ARTS COMMITTEE Tnursday-Sundoy March 26-29,1981 Guest of Honor JOE HALDEMAN DEALERS’ ROOM, ART EXHIBITS, WRITERS’ WORKSHOP AUTOGRAPH PARTY, SPEECHES, PANELS, MASQUERADE, DAYTIME FILM PROGRAM, BANQUET, AND MORE! Thie year is 2024. a future you’ll probably live to see. ® ®|jD(^] Odd© THURSDAY Barbarellcr7:30p.m., A Boy and His Dog* 9:20p.m. FRIDAY: ANIMATION NIGHT Watership Down*7p.m., Wizards*8:50p.m., Allegro Non Troppo*10:40p.m., Fantastic Planet*12:30a.m. SATURDAY Close Encounters*7p.m., 2001*9:20p.m., Sleeper*! 1:45p.m., The Day the Earth Stood Still*l:30a.m. TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT THE M.S.C. BOX OFFICE ONt DAY FULL CON A&M Students $2.50 $4.50 Non-students $3.75 $7.50 Sponsored by MSC Cepheid Variable ATTN: Chemists and Physicists Students and faculty members are invited to a demonstration of our equipment for solar simu lation, high intensity illumination, and mono chromatic light handling. Date: Wednesday, March 25 Time: 9:30 A.M. to Noon Place: Old State Chemists Building Schoeffel Instruments Kramer, authors of Getting What You Deserve, A Handbook for the Assertive Consumer. They said one sales manual even told the seller how far he should stand from the door after ringing the doorbell. “It explains that when a woman opens the door and sees someone that far back, she will instinctively open the door wider,” they said. The salesman is polished and the consumer is at a disadvantage. It is impossible to prepare and know about every product sold door-to-door. But it is possible to know what to be suspicious of— to know a deceptive salesman’s moves. The deceiving salesman begins with door-openers — ways to get his foot in the door. Two common ones are misrep resenting the presentation length and making a free offer. Another is •' < - , ■ “People are gullible and they think they’re going to get something for no thing. ” Ed Kv e .\N e Another one of the professionals found at JTHEAR CILAjfjf 209 E. University 846-4771 to pretend to conduct a survey or test. A U.S. Department of Justice bulletin said. The consumer may also be told that he has been “specially selected.” A BBB consumer pamphlet said salesmen using this line are usually “buttering-you-up” for what they will sell to anyone who will buy. Once inside, some salesmen make it a rule to stay until a con tract is signed or he is thrown out, whichever comes first. People will buy something just to get the salesman to leave — that’s his idea. “Whether out of timidity, or a sense of politeness and hospital ity, few people threaten to have him physically removed,” New man and Kramer said. Balmain said it i to hurt these kind of sales | feelings. “It’s beensaidtoj before so many times, d med in their faces, thatiti) | hurt their feelings,” hej “They forget about you!(| they get to the next house,' But while he’s stijfatthtj I house, the salesman is liliej family friend, a psychiatreti mother-figure rolled into of Salesmen usually trytij contract signed inimei | They may offer a one-t day-only deal. “If they say now or never.] | main said, “you better Friend, it will be never.” The DepartmentofJustB let in said, "Neverallowasals son to pressure or rush y#j signing a contract thinir | take it home and reread? “It is always better tod least one day.” Newman and Kramer; “Fast-talking door-to-doori don’t give their victims fey reflect. Their carefully i chatter is designed to prodi| ill-considered, immediate j emotional response.” The salesman is not up — if he did, the perse: find time to think. The salesman’s nextstep||| rush to get the contract signes v i add the “only pennies a dav . ? These breakdowns in costi-Ep leading. “Pennies a day”cal ' up to a bundle and pay s stretch for longer time peril The best rule is to neve! anything without knowinga! out the product. People usually don’t pays tion to or are not concerned deceptive salesmen unti been had by one. Hindsight is a lot bettaj foresight,” Belmain said heard them tell me manyt Fisheri ‘They aren’t going to get» ified fo more. First time shame onS this sen Second time shame on me ifving t the IOC cord MSC VIDEO Presents The Making of STftRUJAftS Billy Crystal Life Goes to the Movies: Post LUor Era Son of Football Follies Meotloof & Journey Concert Second City TV #2 1 1 ■1 1 1 m E9 o 5 < Z N OH a a at full s lunch: speciaiIt. ► See schedule posted by TV Monitor in MSC Lounge, Serpentine Lounge or Health Center. 1st ANNUAL CHARITY CHILI COOK-OFF sponsored by TEXAS A&M KRUEGER DORM — Behind TEXAS HALL OF FAME grounds to benefit BRAZOS COUNTY HUMANE SOCIETY Attention all gourmets and Chili lovers! Krueger Dorm is sponsoring a CHARITY CHILI COOK-OFF on Sunday, April 5 for 8-5! Proceeds benefit the Brazos County Humane society to build an animal shelter. HOW TO ENTER: All entry forms may be picked up at the follow ing locations: Court’s Western Wear Locations Commons Front Desk Hail of Fame Student Programs Office — 2nd floor MSC Entry fees are $10.00. Rules will be supplied with entry forms. All entries must be mailed to the following address, postmarked no later than March 26. Charity Chill Cook-off Krueger Dorm #6 College Station, Texas 77840 Come on out and join the fun! Tickets are 1.00 in advance, $1.50 at the gate. We’ll have entertainment and other excit ing activities for you to enjoy!!! Featuring the Skiiiet Lickers of Dun COORS BEER Roy Jean of KORA