Tuesday, November 7, 2006

Dissentular election day miscellany

● Here's a link to Tan "FOF" Nguyen's campaign theme song: Stand By Our Tan.
Sometimes it’s hard to be a fighter.
Giving all you have to take a stand.
Oh, there are bad times, and there are good times
Dealing with things that you can’t understand....
One thing, though. Who's the "you" who "can't understand"? Clueless Tan or clueless fan?

When you can't afford to go buy the book (LA Times)
College student Rob Christensen has tried nearly every trick in the book to save money on the books.

Last year, Christensen said, he borrowed a psychology text from his university library and kept it all semester. It dawned on him that the fines (which turned out to be $8) would be less than the price (around $40).

…Three years ago, 43% of the students surveyed by the National Assn. of College Stores indicated that they "always purchase required textbooks." Last fall the figure sank to 35%....
SOCCCD Trustees Don Wagner and Tom Fuentes have pressured student government at the two colleges to make a greater effort to keep text book prices as low as possible. We salute you! (Profit from book sales is a major source of income for student government.)

O.C. Hires Monitors To Guard Against Voting Fraud
A special team of election monitors will be on hand to investigate irregularities in Orange County, where thousands of Hispanics received messages last month warning immigrants not to vote....
Anybody got time to put a tail on Tom today?

● Hey, has anyone seen the latest Lariat?

● Have you kept up with the new "grade grievance" policy. Say goodbye to the good--er, the bad--old days. Ask your Senate rep! Make 'em talk! No waterboarding though.

● THE ACCREDS ARE COMING. Just heard from IVC's Prez Roquemore that "[The ACCJC's] Dr. Deborah Blue...and Ms. Mary Halvorson will visit the college on Thursday, November 30, 2006..." How about Saddleback College's ACCRED visit?

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6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Regarding the cost of textbooks: one scandal is related to the money that student government scoop off the top.

Check out just how many of our students benefit from ASIVC activities, especially their $$$ junkets.

Maybe about 2 percent or 3. There's the scandal.

Anonymous said...

ASIVC benefits from the high cost of textbooks? How so?

Anonymous said...

Vote Republican!

Anonymous said...

wow - impressive get out the vote effort!

Anonymous said...

One of the benefits of working at a college bookstore for a few years is getting to figure out where the money goes. T-shirts? Backpacks?Thongs? License plate frames? 40% goes to the store. General books? 20-40%, if your store doesn't discount; same for technical books. But coursebooks? The bookstore realizes a profit of 10% or less on textbooks; most of the money goes to ever-more-greedy publishers, with a sizable and growing dollop going to fuel the transportation that gets the books into the store. The high price of textbooks is squarely on the head of the publisher, which does everything it can to stymie the market in used textbooks by changing editions frequently, making some of the content available only online with authenticated accounts, and so forth. People hate buying textbooks, because the market is truly extortionate, and that's especially true at the Lasers Bookstore (a/k/a that shack run by Follett.) I've seen trade titles I own made into textbooks and become 100% more costly.

Anyway, ASIVC is getting a very small part of what those books are going for. I say, let 'em keep it.

Rebel Girl said...

Jonathan:

You may be correct. I do, however, recall the occasions when this issue arose during board meetings. As I recall, there was a difference between the profit percentages for student government in the two colleges, and, in that comparison, IVC came out on the bottom. At the time, trustees asked what seemed to be a valid question: why take this much profit?

The other issue is indeed the more important one: it does seem that too few students benefit from the rather large amount of money that goes to student government. I may be mistaken, but that is my impression. I'm willing to be proved wrong.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...