WEATHER INDEX Today, heat index 103-110 degrees, sunny and News Digest.2 humid with a high between 97 and 102, south Editorial 4 wind 15^25 miles per hour. Tonight, partly doudv. <5™* "' * Q K^TSday90TttySUnny>nOt“hOthi9h,n Arts & Entertainment.,!. .15 Classifieds.19 ; August 27,1990University of Nebraska-Lincoln Voi790 No72 Stores not to blame for text prices, managers say By Lee Rood Staff Reporter It’s got just about everything any one ever wanted to know about biology - and lots of colorful graphs and pictures to boot - but can students afford to pay $54 for a biol ogy textbook? Do they have a choice? Students at the University of Ne braska-Lincoln and across the Big Eight are paying higher overall prices for their textbooks again this year. Bookstore textbook managers say mW Course: Publisher's / mg Title: Price UNL Nebr. j MM I “Conceptual Physics” $35.00 $46,20 $46.65 / |Jf “Puntos De Partida” $36.50 $36.10 S36.50 Anthropology 100 “Culture, People & Nature” S29.50 S38.95 $39.30 Wm\ “A History of Western Society” $23.07 $30.50 S30.75 1||||' Political Science 100 \ f|i\ “American Government” $32.56 $44.30 S43.30 \ |S\ Biology 101 \ IpA “Biology” $40.76 $54.80 S54.35 \ there is not much they can do about it. _ Textbook managers at seven Big Eight bookstores said higher produc tion costs, better technology and cor porate takeovers of some large pub lishing houses contributed to a steady increase in textbook prices during the past several years. James Bellman, textbook manager for Nebraska Bookstore, said he had seen a steady increase in book prices over the last 20 years. Bellman recalled a book he pur chased for about $13.95 in 1971 when he was a freshman college student in Minnesota. That book now sells for $48.95 and. Bellman said, similar increases are not uncommon. Gwen Behrends, textbook man ager at the University Bookstore, estimated that the price of textbooks went up about 10 percent this fall. Behrends said she had witnessed similar increases every semester for the last three years. The increases, Behrends and other textbook managers said, are not the fault of university bookstores. Behrends and the other seven managers said the markup percentage they add to the publisher’s price tor a given textbook had remained steady for the past sev eral years. All officials at the seven Big Eight schools interviewed said they marked up their texts between 20 and 25 per cent to pay for overhead costs such as rent, shipping, utilities and employee salaries. Bookstore officials at the Univer sity of Missouri could not be reached for comment. Managers agreed that publishers generally were responsible for the higher prices. Publishers not only are paying more to produce and market a textbook today, but arc spending more on technology such as color repro duction. In addition, the managers -4 4 There have got to be big profits there, just got to be. Olsen CU textbook manager -99 said, publishers are beginning to supplement textbooks with expensive study guides and computer software. Cece Olsen, who has been a text book manager at the University of Colorado for the past 30 years, said many companies have found the publishing business to be profitable. Olsen and other managers said they had noticed that many publishers have become victims of major takeovers in recent months. That, Olsen said, is evidence enough that the business is lucrative. “There have got to be big profits there, just got to be,’’ Olsen said. Behrends said some publishers simply choose to charge more than others for the same amount of techni- .» cal matter. “So the same type of books will cost more from one publisher to an other,’’ she said. Other publishers control the mai ket on certain types of texts because their subject matter is highly special ized, Behrends said. Math, engineering, textile design and actuarial science books arc the most expensive, Behrends said. One engineering text — the most expen sive book at the University Bookstore — has a price tag of S140. Students who think textbooks fora particular course are too expensive may want to speak with their profes sors. Behrends said that while many professors were concerned about how much their texts cost, others don’t seem to care. “A lot of times, I’ll have a profes sor call me and say: ‘I’m considering three or four titles, can you check the prices?’’’ she said. “But some really don’t cane at all.’’ Iraqi actions hit home with Arab students on campus By Ryan Steoves Staff Reporter Although Iraqi President Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait has been condemned worldwide, the invasion has found champions among many Arab students i attending the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Most disliked Kuwait, saying its govern mem was arrogant, treated its foreign residents as second-class citizens, abused the appoint ments system, overproduced oil and was too stubborn in demanding war loans from its pro tector Iraq. They also say Iraq has a historical claim to Kuwait Although their opinions differ on U.S. in volvement, some students say it isn’t as black and white as a battle between Saddam and the United Slates. The students sec Israel as an integral link in the crisis. They say the Jewish state wants to use the situation to farther ex pand its borders. Those are radical views to Americans, who see a belligerent Iraqi aggressor as the prob lem. Arab students are aware their opinions are extreme to Americans. Many refused interviews and some demanded anonymity. They say they are afraid *>.- some of their government and the possible threat to their families back home, but most of the reaction of students and citizens in Lincoln. One Arab student who refused to reveal his name or homeland says he was afraid of a recurrence of the events of 1979, when bricks slammed through the windows of some Ira nian-Amencans during the hostage crisis. “Students have to know that what goes on there (in the Middle East) has nothing to do with us here,’ the student repeated many limes. “We came here to study, not to Fight.” The student also says Americans should live up to their belief in free speech and tolerate different views. Recent events in the United Stales confirm their fears. In San Francisco, a professor who told a newspaper he favored a negotiated set dement in die crisis received a death threat. Arab-Americans also have complained of un fair stereotypes surfacing. Arab students say the government — which some call run more by an association of mer •- bants than leaders — is marked by arrogance and greed. This is what got it into trouble, they say. Kuwait produced too much oil, pushing prices down and costing Iraq millions in lost revenue. The criticism shows part of the problem in the Middle East. Even though the region is abundant with oil, its distribution is not homo geneous - some countries have it, others do not. The unequal wealdi distribution and sec ond-class status felt by Arab foreigners in some countries discourages the Arab people, who See STUDENTS on 6 rress needs more space Growth spurs relocation By Jennifer O’Cilka Senior Reporter University of Nebraska Press employees will have the el bow room they need to fulfill the press’ expansion mission when plans for more space become reality, officials said. Willis Regier, press director, said administrators told him more space would be assigned to the press. The new location has not been identified. John Benson, director of Institu tional Research Planning and Fiscal Analysis, said his office was provid ’ tng information on several locations. Benson said he was not sure how [ long the study would take or when the press would have a new home. Regier said more space has been needed for a long time. The press lacked space because it has grown faster than expected, Regier said. With sales quadrupling in the past decade, employees lacked the room they needed to do their work. The press “is suffering from its own prosperity,” Regier said. “It has been successful in doing what the administration hoped - growing. It has grown at a faster rate than pre dicted .. Crowding of employees was one problem resulting from the rapid growth, Rcgier said. “They’ve had to double, triple up in offices. That automatically leads to all the syndromes of overcrowd ing: inefficiency, irritability, lack of access to facilities like the telephone,” he said. The University of Nebraska-Lin coln-based press has grown to be the second largest state university press in the nation, Regier said. Ten years ago, the Nebraska press was about the 26lh largest “I think that the press and the university have unlimited potential, but in limited space that potential will be boxed in until” sufficient space is available, Rcgier said. The press needs at least an addi tional 3,000 square feet of space for the current employees, Regier said. The press now is housed in 7,000 square feel on the third lloor of Ne braska Hall. But Regier said the press needs about 14,000 square feet of space “for the work we need to get done.” Regier said the optimum plan would include more than 20,000 square feet of space so the press could “fulfill the campus and public functions appro priate to a press our size and a univer sity our size.” See PRESS on 8 »_hiwit iwwMMgaa Sophomore Alan Hodges tries to slam one over the net during#al°gameno?^wcHman*° volleyball at a sand pit near AbeJ/Sandoz residence halls. Hodges and three others braved high temperatures Sunday afternoon to play the game.