Monday • September 1, 1997 L The Battalion IFESTYLES Less book for more buck PC REPAIR SPECIALIST Our College Station office seeks an experienced PC tech with knowledge of PC hardware and ability to perform component level repair. We can offer full-time or part-time hours to fit your schedule and offer up to $15 per hour. To apply, stop by our Recruiting office in the Metro Centre in Bryan, Tuesday - Thursday after 12 p.m. or call 1-800-883-3031. E.O.E. UNIVERSAL COMPUTER SYSTEMS, INC. http://www.ucs-systems.com Every semester, Aggies participate in book-buying, the costly tradition By Stephen Wells Staff writer O K, everybody has just moved to Ag- gieland. They have taken care of tuition, cleaned up their new homes and gone Jloafew parties. Now they need books. Some may feel the need to sell a lot of plasma after iheyhave left the bookstore. College students need to accept that book prices are high. Shri Parchure, Loupot’s book de partment manager, said running a bookstore is jus!like running any other business. “Book prices are high when they come in here,” Parchure said. “We have to pay more for our books than a normal bookstore." He went on to say it is a matter of supply and demand, but College Station’s abundance of kookstores creates competition that drives down the prices. "[In] this town, people have a bookstore near- iliywherever they live,” Parchure said. “You have lie bookstores on Northgate and Southgate. You ilso have the MSC Bookstore and the stores on Harvey road. It is very convenient for the stu dents of A&M to have so many bookstores.” This reduces prices and increases accessibil ity; both are good for students. “Even the on-campus bookstore is owned by a corporation in New York,” Parchure said. All of the off-campus bookstores are owned or were started by Aggie graduates. Since prices are so similar for books, buying them becomes a matter of convenience and style. How students like to shop is also a determining factor in where they shop. “It’s like going to Luby’s,” Parchure said. “Some people do not like to stand in line so they do not go. Some go because they like to see what it is they are getting before they pay for it. At the MSC, you see what you are getting. At Loupot’s, we get your books for you. It is just a matter of taste.” To help curb some of the cost for school sup plies, many students choose to buy only their books at bookstores and get other supplies else where. Students who buy in bulk at Office Max or Office Depot save money by going out of then- way to get essential supplies. Another method of saving cash is buying used books. All used books are on average 25 percent cheaper than their new counterparts. Mack Paradowski, a junior environmental design ma jor, has a theory for book-buying. “Just get somebody’s books that they could n’t sell back,” Paradowski said. “The only dif ferences between the editions will be the prac tice problems.” Other students buy their outside of class read ing books and read them quickly so they can turn them in for a full refund. Still, books are an expensive investment. Some students spend $200 for books. Others, like Nicole Brenneman, a freshman biology major, spent upwards of $400, even with the used book discount. Expectations for the cost of books vary from students to student. “I spent $415 on books and I still have anoth er book to buy,” Brenneman said, “I expected to pay a lot less than that.” Many freshmen are surprised when they see their first bill for books. Others are pessimistic at the outset to avoid the heartache of hundreds of their dollars spent in a manner of seconds. Travis Lott, freshman animal science major, summed up his feelings with a simple prediction. “I haven’t bought my books yet, but when I do I bet I’ll get screwed,” Lott said. Summer movies make impression LOS ANGELES (AP) — The 1997 summer movie season was touted as te most competitive ever. It lived up oils billing. When the Labor Day weekend’s re- sipts are tallied, summer sales will be larrowly — perhaps no more than 1 Jercent — ahead of last year’s sum- /er record of $2.38 billion, Exhibitor delations Co. estimated. But the results came at a high price: Production and marketing budgets *ere up as much as 25 percent from syear ago. Several wildly expensive summer movies, including Batman and Robin and Speed 2: Cruise Control, f ailed miserably. Actual admissions were probably down from a year ago; the record- breaking numbers are largely attribut able to costlier movie tickets — now $9 in some urban markets. The five highest-grossing films be tween Memorial and Labor Day were, in order, Men in Black, The Lost World: Jurassic Park, Air Force One, My Best Friend’s Wedding and Face/Off In their wake were dozens of also-rans, movies that barely made enough money to pay the caterer. “It was absolutely the most com petitive summer ever,” said Robert Bucksbaum, publisher of Reel Source, a newsletter for industry insiders and movie theater owners. RATED BEST TASTING PIZZA BY THE BATTALION! WELCOME BOCK AGGIE SPECIAL valid 9-1-97 thru 9-3-97 Any 2 PIZZAS for *9.90 Dine-ln Only. TAMU Student ID required. SOUTHWESTERN FOOD & WOOD-FIRED PIZZAS 1905 TEXAS AVE., SOUTH * 764-8717 Deliveries Daily 11 AM - PM and 5 PM - 9 PM. All Major Credit Cards Accepted. MSC ["OWN 8c I ALL o. Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity. Inc, SaturdaySeptember 6, 1997 Rudder Auditorium ir Texas A81AA University ; The L,\dy of ’' 8:36 RAjC./ ' J $12.50 pre-sale A LiL Keke $ I. S-DO at tlre door jfjE'i Ticket* AvAilAbic at MSC Ekwc Office 1409)845 1234 i ; ’A ® % • A*- festTS-iStH ts> » IVt’Kins with pteiMe (C ,h „m ,4 yoisr spedal VWi W* ^ thrv , ( . 0} Oay* pnor >" the '■ t > «o« fck r “» ; (Vs-sn) you m the best of our ahtiu* MILITARY DEPOT imm Dire? 105 WALTON DRIVE COLLEGE STATION, TX 77840 ON THE CORNER OF TEXAS AVENUE & WALTON DRIVE ACROSS FROM THE MAIN ENTRANCE OF TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY ^©§=7®‘Z}=H ®®(o BONFIRE POTS CORPS SUPPLIES HUNTING, CLIMBING, AND CAMPING GEAR FLAGS - all 50 states - over 70 countries - novelty DISCOUNT CARDS ARE AVAILABLE BRING IN THIS AD FOR 10% OFF ANYTHING IN THE STORE WELCOME* BACK For all the styles and all the savings, Post Oak Mall is the only place to shop, You’ll find all your favorite stores . . . plus special offers for Aggie shoppers. SIDEWALK SALE AUG. 29 - SEPT. 1 This Friday through Monday, our Sidewalk Sale’s the place to find really cool stuff at really great prices! PICK UP YOUR FREE CHECKBOOK Filled with valuable coupons and save money at dozens of your favorite stores. Available at the Customer Service Booth, * while supplies last. SAVE YOUR RECEIPTS AND GET $5 FREE Starting today, check out Post Oak Mall’s great stores and spend just $65. Present your mall receipts at our Customer Service Booth and we’ll give you a $5 Gift Certificate to spend on anything you want at any of our stores. Quantities limited, good while supplies last. SATURDAY & SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 6 & 7 Welcome Back Party . . . All Aggies are invited to a very collegiate weekend, sponsored by Post Oak Mall and Aggie 96FM. Pick up some pointers on campus life and get your FREE “Fall at the Mall” gift pack. Plus, at 2pm on Saturday, enjoy our “What’s Fashionable for Fall” show. Bealls, Dillard's, Foley's, JCPenney, Sears, Service Merchandise, The Food Court and 105 Specialty Stores. Open Monday-Saturday 10 to 9, Sunday 12 to 6. Your Gift Certificate Connection ... Call Our Customer Service Booth 764-0777. Texas 6 Bypass at Highway 30, College Station ) ) 5 5 s 5 3 J ) 3 3 1 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 ) i 3 3 3 n 3