When the US House passes a bill that is intended to give college students a break in the price of their text books, this will be a first for the senate regarding text book price legislation.

Many college universities and state colleges will implement additional measures to make sure that text book legislation is more difficult than the house proposes, but this is the first time that this has been done. Legislation was sponsored last year by a republican senator and this lead to text books being required to go through a central review committee that would give proposals for price increases and quality assurance.

There are many college students that view the price of text books as a huge burden, this causes many students that work part time to have to take on more hours just to pay for essential costs of being a student.

Among other things, the legislation would require:

University bookstores to sell books without expensive add-on products such as CDs or study guides, whenever possible. Such bundled packages can greatly increase student costs for books.

Faculty to submit lists of required textbooks to the university bookstore in time to make sure enough books are available for students enrolled in classes.

Faculty to limit use of new editions of books when changes from a previous edition are minimal, thus making used books available.

The bill is now before the full Senate. Both chambers of the General Assembly have to approve each other’s bill.
Textbook publishers opposed the legislation. Bundled packages often save students money - that’s what publishers believe, however, this is slightly biases since they are the ones that control the prices.

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Don’t listen to the “paperless office” rhetoric. If it’s that “paperless” how come printer sales are going through the roof and an ever increasing number of books are published every year?

Just like TV did not replace radio, digital media and computers will never replace books. These two media, paper and digital, will continue to exist side by side just like TV and the radio.

Just like the digital media faces the peril of getting wiped away and thus need to backed up regularly, paper also has its enemy - time.

Millions of rare and valuable volumes are crumbling away in the nation’s libraries and museums, and are attacked by mold, mildew, humidity, bugs, rats, and worse.

The chief culprit is the WOODEN PULP which has a very high acid content.

Did you know that most of the books published between 1840 and 1980 are printed on high-acid paper manufactured from wood pulp?

That’s why about 120 million volumes are getting cracked and brittle with every passing day. Some just disintegrate when you lift them up and open their cover. They are like very old patients that need to be handled and treated extremely gently.

There are various book restoration centers and programs around the United States and one good one is at Sheridan Libraries Preservation Department of Johns Hopkins University. Here, trained students and curators do their best, resources and funds permitting, to bring some of decaying treasures of the past back to life.

However, a change of mentality across the land is probably what’s needed to save this precious link we have to the recorded past. Most of us do not think of a book as something that needs “service.”

“To have a library without an active preservation department is like buying a Rolls Royce and never taking it to be serviced,” is how Johns Hopkins faculty member Stephen G. Nichols put it in the latest issue of the JOHNS HOPKINS Magazine (June 2006, pp. 32-28). “For some reason, people think books don’t need to be serviced, but that is just not the case.”

Given the lack of adequate resources to save all the rare books facing extinction, someone suggested that “perhaps encapsulating a little-used damaged book in mylar could be the best way to preserve it until it’s needed by a user” (ibid, p.38).

I also have a suggestion:

Since most of the damage occurs due to the presence of humidity, mildew or certain other microorganisms in the AIR, can these books be saved by keeping them in VACUUM CHAMBERS?

No air, no decay, it seems to me. And in the meanwhile average users can access these treasures through their digitized copies on the Internet.

Ugur Akinci, Ph.D. is a Creative Copywriter, Editor, an experienced and award-winning Technical Communicator specializing in fundraising packages, direct sales copy, web content, press releases, movie reviews and hi-tech documentation. He has worked as a Technical Writer for Fortune 100 companies for the last 7 years.

In addition to being an Ezine Articles Expert Author, he is also a Senior Member of the Society for Technical Communication (STC), and a Member of American Writers and Artists Institute (AWAI).

You can reach him at writer111@gmail.com for a FREE consultation on all your copywriting needs.

You are most welcomed to visit his official web site http://www.writer111.com for more information on his multidisciplinary background, writing career, and client testimonials. While at it, you might also want to check the latest book he has edited: http://www.lulu.com/content/263630

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Below are a few great places I’ve found to learn about the latest business and self-improvement books. Hopefully they will inspire you to pick up a book or 3 to improve your life and your world!

Fast Company’s book club (http://www.fastcompany.com/bookclub)

Fast Company is one of my favorite magazines, they have a great website, and they do some great things for the latest and greatest books. They often will offer book excerpts and author interviews you can’t get anywhere else.

800CEORead.com

A great site that offers all the latest business books. Go quickly to the “Keen Thinker” section and check it out. What’s especially great about this site is there is a section for book excerpts on their blog, often done with comments by the author. And even better…there are podcasts here so you can listen to a 30 minute or so discussion about the book or about some other really interesting topic. Worth your time, for sure.

FirstLookBooks.com

A great service of Harper Collins, where they offer free looks at first books, if you qualify. Definitely worth at least checking out. My first book from them was Freakonomics, and I must say, I was not disappointed. Great stuff!

Your local bookseller - Ask her or him what they’re reading, what they’ve noticed has sold, or what they think about the latest stuff. They spend a lot more of their time in the bookstore than you do, so why wouldn’t they have some valuable insight?

Amazon.com - Best Sellers or What’s New sections

Amazon really is the biggest book seller, and though you may not find the latest and greatest, you will definitely find some great books here at a great price.

bloglines.com

(search for leadership or self-improvement books)
Read what the bloggers are talking about, and maybe sign up for a feed or 50. I have found so many fantastic books with my FREE bloglines subscription, and I am able to quickly read through thousands of postings all in one spot.

New York Times Best Seller List - A great resource to see what others are reading, although I would recommend my other resources first.

Phil Gerbyshak leads a team of people as manager of an IT Help Desk in Milwaukee, WI, and finds that sharing his knowledge is a crucial component for success as a leader and as a person. Phil’s personal philosophy is paraphrased from Tim Sanders’ fantastic book Love is the Killer App: “Share your knowledge, your network, and your love. The rest will follow.” Feel free to contact Phil at http://makeitgreat.org or call 414.640.7445 anytime.

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