^_______.___*_._-____ DANCE SHOES BALLET • JAZZ • TAP FOLK • MODERN j CAPEZIO • BLOCH • FREE 13 • CHACOTT LEO'S TIGHTS TOPS i CAPEZIO • DANSK1N • DANCE FRANCE MARIKA • BARISHNIKOV • and MORE! I Hours: Monday - Saturday 9:30-6:00 !! j Sundays 12.00-5:00 {I 41 W. Broadway Eugene Downtown Mall 686-2671 Book business is war in the ’90s CHICAGO (API — A paperback in one hand and a glass of caffe latte in the other, playwright Rinde Eckert feast* on the literature and ambienc e at the Barnes & Noble superstore on Chic ago's North Side The store's hunter green exterior, c arpeted floors and beamed c eilings invite l.c ken and Other read er* to lose themselves among 100.000 titles "I like the music 1 love having bookstores where they have chairs, where they encourage you to sit down and read." Ec keri said, sitting in the store's cafe "It's a little hit the sense of a library " Vast "superstores" are opening in e ities from New York to I .os Angeles in what some an* c ailing the bookstore wars of the 1990s. "The 90s are becoming probably the decade when the hook business in America is going to explode more than any other in this century." said Steve Riggio. exec utive vic e* president of New York-ltased Barnes A Noble. Some say the c ompetition is healthy and will enc ourage more people to read. "We believe the more bookstore's in Amerii a. the* better off America is going to In*." Riggio said Others warn that the huge chains opening many of the new bibliogiants are bent on driving neigh borhood bookstores out of business. "They're not in bookselling las .a use they love it. They re in it Itec ause it's good business.” said Bill Kurland, owner of Shakespeare A Co. on New York's Upper West Side "The chains have been predatory." In July. Kroch's A Brentano's. a 86-vear-old Chicago-based c hain, announced it is closing 10 of its 19 stores and blamed the failures partly on the* superstores In addition to a huge selection, many of the superstores have music and c nfes. Some lure cus tomers with author readings and signings Most offer deep discounts — up to 40 peri cut on .Yen York Times !>est sellers, for instance. Almost all superstores keep long hours Barnes A Noble, for example, is open seven days a week. 9 a m. to 11 p m. Smaller stores are employing survival tactics. Platypus Book Shop in suburban Evanston extended its hours after a Barnes & Noble moved in nearby But with just two full-time employees and two part-timers, there's no way to keep up, owner Margnet Schnabel said. In Santa Barbara. C'-a 11f . the Earthling Bookshop, struggling to compete with a Barnes Si Noble two blocks away, offers to deliver books and expanded its cafe "It’s easier to make profit on coffee than on books But I'm not a restaurateur," owner Penny Davies i omplained "I am a bookseller" And Kroch’s. long averse to discounting, is offer ing 40 percent off best sellers. According to a study done for the American Booksellers Association, Americans bought 822 million books, excluding children's titles, between April 1991 and March 1992, a 7 percent increase over the same period a year earlier. Sales during the first four months of 1993 totaled $2 M4 billion, compared with $2.57 billion a year earlier, according to preliminary estimates from the Census Bureau. Some bookshops contending with the super stores see being small as a virtue. "We've thought about the books for you. You don't have to look at every gardening hook ever published." said Pat Peterson, co-owner of Bar bara's Bookstore, a five-store Chicago chain. Some say the deck is stacked against small stores. Indeed, the Federal Trade Commission in 1988 charged six major publishers with discrimi nating against independent bookstores by selling to big chains at lower prices. But. Davies lamented, "by the time the FTC gets around to doing what they want to do, a great many booksellers will be out of business." Gen. Powell to tell life story in book NEW YORK (AP) — Gen. Col in Powell will recount his life from his early days in the Bronx to his rise to chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in a book to be written for Random House, which is reportedly paying him $t> 5 million The yet-to-be-titled work is planned for publication in 1995. Random House announced. The announcement did not dis close what Powell would lx* paid for world rights to the book. The New York T imes quoted unidentified rival publishers as saying Powell would be paid about Sfi.5 million, $1.5 million more than retired Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf reportedly earned for his memoirs. Powell's agent, Marvin Josephson of International Cre ative Management, declined to give a figure, but said "It's obvi ously a contract we're happy with. There were many publish ers interested." The general will work with a professional writer, Josephson said, but bas not begun inter viewing potential collaborators yet. Random House said Powell would begin work on the book after his retirement at the end of September. Powell, who joined the Army after attending public schools in the city's South Bronx, is the first black chairman of the Joint Chiefs. Open Your New Account In The EMU* U-LANE-O Credit Union will be opening new accounts in the EMU* from Monday, September 20 through Monday, September 27 for your convenience! * You can find us in the lounge area across from the Main Desk Store U-LANE-O CREDIT UNION 687-2347 . 11th & Ferry 465-8282 • 2840 Willamette ****************************) SRO Productions It's a Riot! 20 characters 14 men, 5 women, 1 dog 2 actors "Go ahead...laugh it up."—Oregonian Starring Ralph Steadman host of KUGN "Ralph Radio" also starring Jay Horenstein 4 performances Sept. 24, 25, & Oct. 1,2 7:30 P.M. Soreng Theatre. All seats $13.50 Tickets available at Hull ( enter Box Office. EMI) Main Desk or charge by phone 687-5000 iMMXMMWXMMMKMXMMMWKHWWwiww.-..