MWSfcMITh Nobody like* It. but everybody hat to pay the high cost of college textbooks. BOOKSTORES PASS THE BUCK ON BOOK PRICES Complain all you want. High hook prices are part of going to college. Christopher Adasirwir/, I In- Daily Mini, U. of'Illinois Ylld VI II g«M*S. Students blame the bookstore* bookstore managei* blame the publish eis Publishei N point bat k to the honk stoics \nd college student* nationwide pa\ the pi it e Iowa State l semoi I n* Hamilton has paid it eight times now Hist veutrMet the i ost was a $250 tup to the tampus In »«>k stole to pun have lexdmoks for his tomv es hoi most in state students who attend then state utmeisities. $250 is about 1'» pet< etlt ot seat In tuition “When students aie test up with paving that unit It nit Mies on In inks. dies go bat k to wheie they bought them." Hamilton saw I hes go bat k to the plat e wheie stu dents olten susjH't t tilt's ale the sit tuns ol needlessls high textbook pines, set b\ then t ampus Utokstoies “Thes’re not out m the streets match ing. but students get outraged alxnit high texdxMtk pines." saw Fait Huang, semoi at the l of (lalifornia. IW-i keles llookstote owneis are aware most stu dents think the high prices are the work ot gieeds textbook department man agers hsrn publishing companies air cpiic k lo jHum out that bnokstoirs deter mine the pine »tmlrnh pas retailei* tack on an additional chaise that amounts to alwiui 2r> pel cent of the book pm e “Most students get mad at me. not the publisher. toi high prices," sass Isle Jennings, supervisor of I hr ( ampus Bookstore. an iudr|K*n1 a texifsook’s retail pi it e is pi e-ta\ me«nne foi the l m m »ksn h e \bout 21 I |n it ent of the retail prue jmss ft>t ex|K*ns<*s the bookstore iiums in receiving. hantlhng and selling the text Imm >ks All bookstore*, whethri the s are owned bt universities oi nt»t. pa\ those exjH iises \nd those t osts are jcavsrd on t«* students like \nd\ Harris, a senioi at the l of ()rrgon "The perception around here is pints milt h that the bookstore has us where dies want us to be and tan charge us as iniK h as thr\ want," I i.1111\ \a\s Mike hne/ie . 1111 c*c I«*i of ihr Pennsvl\.him State l bookstore, s.*\s tli.«t n simplv not Hue. .u least not at his uimersitv IxMiblotr “\\ ilh textbooks. we just .1 bo lit bleak even," kne/K sav* Most hookstotes, though, don't tome* e |» students Irving to avoid high pru ed trxihooks In t< njmhim to the- ee onomie me cnlive. trxtbook-iesale ptetgiams have grown within the p.iNt 10 seats. tne leasing veil nine o| um*(I behiks .nailable to students ane) spawning national companies that (iNxdiuate the distribution of used te xt lx M »ks Mam |M*e*ple- think the* huv hat k rnai ket tiiotecU students from high textbook pliers hv i< funding about Vr> to 10 pet e nit eil a te*xtbook s original retail value and selling used hooks at alxtui a JO to 2.r» |K*Ie eilt dis«e»unt. But the trxlliook le sale inehistix ne»l IxMikstoies a\at le e. is what drives pines se» high, mam textbook authois ami bookstoie oftu lalssav “Puhlishris and authors do not make am nioiiev on the irsale e»t textbooks e>nh on the sale e >t new lw m iks savs k lel«>n k ngei. autheu and biologv piotesvoi at l U Ita ( * dirge in Mie higan Because bus bae k maikets allow alw»ut five- students let use the same lxx>k. pub* lishets pm r lx h tks high ten oset ex|tenses that selling tin t| r lower [tile eel betoks would pav . savs Daviel IVnnrv . leXllwHtk author and matliematie s protevtoi at the l i tf( **t >| gta But e ven mote dist oiucTting to stu dents than high trxtlxtok pines air tin beh»kste>ie clerks whet tell students thev e aimol resell tlirii trxtliooks fwtausr stu denis next semestei will use a new edition of the- hook \ nr* edition means students next seniestei can t take Advantage «d the |iiwei-piic ed used (exilic m iks "What really gets me is di.it teat hris and puhhshris don't think thev can use the thud edition just lire a use the fouith edition has a new imri," Hamilton savs Prolcsvm who write iexd**>ks sav then (eel a lot ol pressure I rout publishers fot heejuent revisions. adding that publishers want ujMcxlatr materials in then Ixtoks so then lemam competitive with othet Im N»ks on the niiu ket "W hen vou sign a contiat t with a pulv lishei. the con ti at t savs how fircji lent In the book will he revised," savs Mn hael ( Hliome. Memphis State l commnnita t ions aits pi olessoi and to an t hoi of l*uMu Sftftikititf, a i ollege textl*>ok I iap|K*d In'tween the appe al ol used IxMik itiaikets and piotessots and puhhsh eis who t laim die used l*>ok maikets onh lilt lease* texdxHik Julies, stutleiits seem to have little t onliol ovei the high price «»l lexll>ookv But. unfortunateh, students and l*>ok stole oil ic ials sav then isit I much < ollege students t an dti to lower textl>«M>k pi it rs “I c ould tell students to complain to the puhlisheis But it wind got out that I told a hunch of students to 140 to the puhlislv eis. when I order lx»oks the next time, I just might heal. We don t have am Ivooks tor vou,” Iowa State’s [timings savs ► Cast your bet for the lucky bachelor Hiis ihe* '90s man forsaken his aniestral life- and mcnmiic his feat of column me in \ group oi letent l ot \Vimoni graduates all Delta Psi fraternity mem Ih is wouldn't Ik*l on it Ibex xe < reated the- Ikic heloi I rust ( orp . a fund that puts a premium on In-mg single I he fund is the brainc hild of New I lampshire entieprenem Dougi.es I- akin He sa\s V> fiat brothers got togethei to forin the c«uinflation late- last veal I hex fwmght $1 l shares in the- man oi men thex thought least likelx towed For now. the genetal |mm»I. whit h « omes t«» $‘2,000, will ai» rue interest as the share holders wait to learn who litanies, thus tendering aux share s bought in them worthless, and to find out who holds out the longest At that point, anxone with shares in the oldest bat helot will split the |H»t 1 knew this was something really tun. sax's hakin, whotoneeived the fund al a fra lernitv brother s wedding troth as a wax for c ollege buddies to st.iv in toniat t with eat h oilier and as a sei ions inve stment \ud serious it is irakm talks ot liquidity, sio< k splits, trailing and annual reports He saxs shares could come to be worth $1,000 a piece / hr Wall S tin l journal exen can led the news oi the unique eruleaxoi Kakrn is hoping othei groups ot voting men will 1m* impressed bx liat heloi Irust ( orp He- wants to expand bx t r eating sum lar funds tor fraternities ■Jeff (.rrmillion. Iktily Hri'nllr, biuisuiui Stale l . ► Undying spirit If I die befoi e- I wake, \ irginia let h nix semi (< > take l hr Me i ^i\ Funeral I ioincut HI.h k^huig. \ a , home ot i hr Ifokir* — rum of!ri%a sort la) < a\kn t< »i the (iu haul Ian it Ownci Buddy \1< ( oy says hr t ame* up with the idea altrt seeing a t askrt designed vuih thr ( InnHoii l tigei paw on lhr mode ot the lui Mr Ux»k it a step hlithrt anti t amr up v%ith an 1 K-gaugr steel t askrl. burgundy < olored vsith orange pinstriped edges and a huigundy velvet inirnoi I he taskri lid displays thr irttris “V 1 Mt ( a»v savs hr originally intruded the t asket (<» he a tonvrisation piece "fryrrvtxMh that's mtii it has liked thr wa\ it 1» m »ks." hr va\s I hat may lx hut |im ( arson, a ( Irmson junioi. says hr has no plans to Ik* huned in thr ( Irmson version “I am as big a ( Irmson tan as anyone, hut it still doesn t make a ditlrirnt r when you tr dead " I hr t askrt«i »sts alx »ut $2,100, and to date one* Virginia I rt h t.ui has Ix-rii laid to irst in his tram s colors ■ Maria Theresa (Gordon, the Pauano, V. of I rm, San Antonio