Thursday, April 25, 1985/The Battalion/Page 5 — [R^Q 0 D=,[L= <^\M1 ^ ' mm Student publishes Best Buys’ Booklists bargain shopping spots By KAREN HELLER Reporter Elmer Diaz can save you money. Diaz, a senior industrial distribu tion major, has published “The Very Best Buys in Bryan/College Sta tion! ” a book which lists products and services ranging from “d’flea” for your dog to legal services for you. Diaz says the idea for the book :ame to him — indirectly — through lislove for pizza. “1 really love pizza and stuff like hat... I had a coupon for one place . , but I realized that there was heaper stuff elsewhere,” he says. Diaz says he and his friends tarted looking around and checking irices by making phone calls and vis- ts to different stores. “Prices skyrocket from one place to another,” Diaz says. The result of Diaz’s research is a wok which compares the everyday rices of various items and services uch as food, car repair and cloth- h He printed the book because he fealized the information could help Jther people, he says. He, his wife and some friends decided to publish heir findings. “Best Buys” sells for 12.95. I Diaz started bringing the book to campus about two weeks ago, and people seemed to like it. He Delongs to several organizations and has pre sented his book at the meetings. I “Reaction has been good,” Diaz says. “Not only does my book have prices, but it saves you a lot of gas and driving.” Some of the prices listed in the book have helped Diaz himself. While Diaz was trying to find the most inexpensive way to publish his book, he learned about printing prices in Bryan-College Station. ; “I learned as I went along,” Diaz says. Diaz, who will graduate in May, says his brother and a friend will continue to sell the book after he graduates. “Best Buys” will be printed three times a year, if there is sufficient demand, he says. feet ACnON\ mm Try our Battalion Classified! 845-2611 Warped by Scott McCullar B£V. VHf PHILOSOPHICAL TRivlAL PUKSUITGAME ASKS ALL KIM&OF WEIGHTY QUESTIONS. SOIAE OF \hE£E ARE KEALLV... ... V/AlT A MIVUTE, TH/5 CAKP... HAS - ^ A GREAT PLACE TO CALL “HOME” Quality Inside and Outside • Choice College Station Location • Spacious 2 BDRM Studio • Washer/Dryer Available or connection in each unit • Shuttle Bus • Pool • On-Site Manager Condominium “Apartments” For Lease Special Rates (for a limited time only) 846-4584 Office Hours: M-F 5PM-7PM SAT 10-4PM, SUN 2-5PM 100 Winter Park College Station Student starts out as 'hubcap king' Aggie creates businesses By LEIGH FORREST Reporter When John Robison was in the fourth grade, he was known as the “hubcap king.” Now, as a senior at Texas A&M and president of the Society for Entrepreneurship and New Ven tures, Robison’s business cards still introduce him as “His Majesty.” While looking for snakes, the “hubcap king” found old hubcaps in a ditch next to a well-traveled Hous ton road. He became so fascinated with the hubcaps, he started collect ing them in his garage. A neighbor suggested he sell the hubcaps, so Robison started going to the local grocery store to sell his wares. He would watch for cars to drive up with missing hubcaps, then he would make his move. “When they (the owners of the cars) came back out of the store, I would say, ‘I found these hubcaps in a ditch and I have one that would match yours,’ ” Robison says. “ ‘I could sell it to you for $10 when it would cost about $50 at a dealer ship.’ I would just act like a kid.” His acting paid off. Robison sold about eight to 10 hubcaps a day dur ing the summer. As sales increased and business expanded, the profits also grew. But, Robison didn’t care much about the money. “I’d just come home and give it to my mom and she would put it away,” he says. “I never knew what she did with it.” That money continues to collect interest in a money market account Robison’s mother started during his hubcap sales. After his initial success as the “hubcap king,” Robison says he didn’t nave time to go the grocery store to sell the hubcaps. So he relied on word-of-mouth to advertise his business. And it worked well. “I’d ask people where they heard about me,” ne says. “One lady says, ‘I was calling directory assistance to find a hubcap place and the opera tor told me she bought one from you.’ ” This early success with business inspired his later business ventures. Last fall, for example, a friend came to Robison with the idea to sell Hornbusters sweatshirts at A&M. Robison masterminded the success ful marketing plan and sales. Robison also owns his own com pany — Rayburn Consolidated In terests. RCI, formed by Robison and four friends, provides self-help pro grams for small businesses. RCI already has a seminar tenati- vely scheduled for September at the Houstonian Hotel. The seminar includes presenta tions by the Arthur Andersen ac counting firm; Carl Stevens, a well- known business consultant; and SMI, a small personal services com pany. Topics will include starting a business, setting goals and selling yourself and your ideas. But even with these business- oriented activities, Robison says his true love is real estate. “Whatever business I’m in, I’ll al ways put my money in real estate,” he says. And he’s successful at it, too. Ro bison received his real estate license as a senior in high school. Since then he has bought and sold foreclosed houses in Houston, when he has the time. John Robison: President of ENVE. His own company. Real es tate. That’s quite a load for a college se nior. Though his main interests for now are school, ENVE and RCI, Ro bison says he also finds time to par ticipate in the accounting society and the Aggie Club. In what spare time he has left, Ro- BOB BROWN UNIVERSAL TRAVEL COMPLETE, DEPENDABLE DOMESTIC AND WORLDWIDE TRAVEL • Airline Reservations • Hotel/Motel Accomodations • Travel Counsel • Rental Car Reservations • Tours • Charter Flights • FREE Ticket Delivery 846-8718 • Agency is fully computerized- 410 S. Texas/ Lobby of the Ramada Inn/College Station John Robison bison does impressions of Ronald Reagan, Johnny Carson and his pro fessors. He also visits his grandpa rents in College Station. “Like my mom says, I’ve got my hand in too many tills,” he says. So how does Robison participate in all his activities and still manage to be successful at everything? “I don’t tend to listen when peo ple tell me I can’t do something,” he says. “I’m a real positive person —al most to the point of being simple- minded. But if I get it set in my head that something’s going to work, I don’t listen to anyone else. “People limit what they can do with themselves. They set artificial limits and tell themselves they can’t do any more than that — and they won’t. If you say you can’t, you won’t, and that’s all there is to it.” But Wayne Roberts, his room mate, says he thinks Robison still might be limiting himself. “One of his goals is to be a million aire by the time he’s 26,” Roberts says. “That might be too lenient, be cause I think he can get his first mil lion his first year out of school.” t AL % 4^ (Eepijeth lUartaMe ^ * Tincf tlnliirnf TUursiatj, April 25 7:30 &3:15 p.m. llnratei* 70t5Ui>6«r Si. 00 t. 24 25 w^^p