Page 6C/The Battalion/Monday, August 29, 1988 Football, Friends t>cFlowers from Nita’s A Winning Combination r> 71#*. FLOWERS. INC. 919 S, Texas Ave. 822-1488 822-2631 Felt Hat Cleaning and Renovations Old Hats Made To Look New. $29.50 All work done in our own Hat Factory by Professional Hatters. Satisfaction Guaranteed CUSTOM MADE HATS "The Best Little Hat Factory in the Brazos Valley" ^' Class of '72 Downtown 203 N. Main Street (409)822-4423 Bryan AGGIE GRILL 1 /4 lb. Aggie Burger w/cheese, fries 1 /2 lb. Super Aggie Burger w/cheese, fries Fajita Burger, fries Fajita Plate Chicken Fried Steak, gravy, fries, Tx. toast Chicken Fried Steak Sandwich, fries Chicken Breast Sandwich, fries BBQ Chicken, Baked Potato, salad Shrimp Platter, rice, salad Shish Kabob, rice, salad Bacon wrapped Filet, Baked Potato, salad Taco Super Nachos $1.85 2.85 2.99 3.99 2.50 2.50 3.15 2.95 3.50 2.75 5.00 .89 2.50 If you can find better food & prices EATTHERE! s S s S: Late Night Hours Sun-Wed 11am-10 pm Thurs - Sat 11 am - 2 am We Deliver ($4.00 minimum) 846-0142 110 College Main Across from Kinkos ^ THE AGGIE GRILL w/coupon exp. 9-15 <^l Super Aggie Burger $015 S w/cheese, fries ^ < 110 College Main 846-0142 ■ THE AGGIE GRILL | Chicken Fried Steak, I gravy, fries, Tx. toast I 110 College Main 846-0142 $015 w/cou P° n £m exp. 9-15 \?2222222Z2Z^2222&Z22ZZZZZZZ2Z2222± Students wait in long lines at the Texas A&M Bookstore during the first days of classes of the Spring 1988. Thousands usually wait until the first days of classes to buy and sell textbooks. spots. Wh Buying books tends to be expensive for everyone By Kelly S. Brown Reporter BUY HIGH and sell low —sounds like the reverse of a stock market tip — but when dealing with textbooks, it’s the price paid. Textbook prices are generally the same at College Station’s 1 1 bookstores. A student who just spent $40 on a biology book knows that he will get — at most — $20 if and when he re turns it. He wants to scream, ‘I’ve been robbed,’ and he wants someone to blame it on — be it the publisher, the wholesale dealer, the bookstore or the author — but there is no sin gle culprit. A&M Marketing professor and textbook writer Dr. O C Ferrell said the villain is the actual system itself. The system works something like this. PUBLISHERS ASK specialists, usually professors, in a subject to write a textbook. After it’s written, sales representitives find buyers. Buyers, after looking at many books from many companies, decide which textbook they want to use. Once de cided, a deal is made and an order is sent to the bookstores. The bookstores request books from the book companies. Seems simple, well — not quite. Lynne Williams, director of Sales, Marketing and Finance for St. Mar tins’ Press in New York City, said publishers are not making the enor mous clear-cut profit that people think they are. Publishers sell books to stores at either a net price or a 20 percent dis count. Bookstores lobbied against the 20 percent discount six years ago because they didn’t feel 20 percent was enough. Most bookstores still buy at the discount price. Williams said the jury is still out over which system is better. “We don’t just make up prices in our mind,” she said. “The price is decided by how much it costs to make the book, and what people don’t realize is that publishers make a very small profit.” “So much money goes into the publishing of a textbook, often a mil lion or more dollars, and we are try ing to satisfy several parts of an equation — buyers, professors and consumers — and that’s not easy be cause the three parts are in conflict. We try to make our prices as fair as possible for everyone,” Williams said. Kim Oles, a senior management major, knows in business things are not always fair. “I used to feel ripped off and thought it was a scam whenever I sold back a book for half what I paid and bookstores turn around and sell it for more. I know where the money is going and understand that profit is not a bad word, but I still think textbooks cost far too much,” she said. “The students are paying for the injustice in the system.” Williams said, “Costs include the physical book itself, which calls for an enormous amount of money. Some obvious costs include paper and ink, while different colors or special figures in a book raise the price. Research and development — as well as salaries — siphon a bulk of the money. Royalities have to be paid to the authors. However, by no means are writers becoming rich from book profits.” Apparently, neither are the bookstores. Howard DeHart, manager of the Memorial Student Center bookstore, said gifts and supplies are what money is spent oi in Se| many cies ti younp No' Bryan dents drinki drink Mo whoa restol Bi « “We don’t just make up prices in our mind. The price is decided by how much it costs to make the book, and what people don’t realize is that pub lishers make a very small profit. ” Lynne Williams, St. Martins’ Press P r books. The books are what lure the students in. “If I were to go into business for myself it wouldn’t be in the book in dustry,” DeHart said. “Books are solely for the student, not for bookstores to make huge profits. Be sides, books are the best and cheap est thing a student buys while in col lege.” COLLEGE STATION bookstore managers agree that a student spends an average of $200 to $300 each semester on books. One parent told the Battalion that he has spent $23,591.53 on his sons total four year education — 7 per cent of which was for books. Michael Kiely, a former bookstore manager, said bookstores don’t make more than 1 or 2 percent profit from new books. “Used books are where some of the profit is made. Most bookstores sell used books for 75 percent of the new selling price,” he said. Bookstores have different buy back policies, but most will give in cash 50 percent of the list price and as Kiely said, sell it back at one and a half of what the student paid for it. For example, if a student buys a book for $20 and sells it back for $10, the bookstore will re-sell it for $15. Bookstores, DeHart said, would rather sell used books and students would rather pay for used books, but there are never enough to go around. “Many students at A&M, espe cially engineering and business ma jors, don’t sell their books, and I think they should be commended for that,” he said. “However, bookstores lose money, because to compensate for the loss of supply on used books, they have to send for See Books, page 7 iS sors ui when shoulc tary b if they fuse t< menta Shr pots E wrong tary c< and c books, booksl fessoi booksl repres Reg anyon the pr new books and freight charges. WHILE STUDENTS swaj keep some and sell others tostrotf stores, the order to the publishe drops and the publishers getangr he said. “Used books,” Williams said, “cn into our market and cause our nei book prices to increase in price,i 0 feth much time and energy goes ini buying used books that, in theta run, it’s not worth it for bookstores to buy used books.” Not so said Kiely, whonowwoil for College Book Store, a wholesi company in Arkansas.The lishers are losing money but noli compared to the money they coii be saving if they really concentras on the internal control of theircot pany, he said. The internal control Kiely is® ering to is in the promotion C publicity department. “They spend an enornw amount of money trying to f schools to buy the books. IthastoJ done, but the high cost is whatsit batable,” Kiely said “Publishing companies have®; resentatives who go to schools or - -' schools have representatives comt : them for exhibits, and deals 2 made. Sure, the potential to see a book before he buys it,it publishing companies give theta ers complimentary books torevie They keep the book regardlesi whet her t hey buy it or not. Monet lost when the professor sells ac® plimentary book to a bools re...that’s not fair. The consumed sentially ends up paying for it.” PUBLISHING COMPANY also offer a lot of expensive i lives to the potential buyers, slides, films, computers, test bat and money for the department name several, Kiely said. “Thii also what is jacking up the priced the consumer and hurting him/ 1 is where the internal control to start in order for the price of® 5 books to go down.” Williams said marketing a book is part of the whole process? they have to offer incentives, says it makes them angry whenf® fessors sell a complimentary bool 1 a bookstore. It costs the compa' 5 money and hurts the consumer, said. “I don’t know if the profes* just don’t realize what they aredof or if they do realize it butdon’tc? 1 Many bookstores refuse to buy plimentary books. They can tel book is complimentary beo- there’s often a stamp, sticker something on the book sayingso Ferrell considers it highly unt? cal for a professor to sell his coup mentary book to a bookstore “The best correlation is phar® 15 doctors who receive sample dip free, sell the drugs to patients keep the money,” he said. PROFESSORS COULD give textbooks to libraries or stride 11 but to sell them for profit is abre?