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- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!bnr.co.uk!uknet!pavo.csi.cam.ac.uk!gjm11
- From: gjm11@cus.cam.ac.uk (G.J. McCaughan)
- Newsgroups: sci.math
- Subject: Re: High Prices of Math Books. I am pissed.
- Message-ID: <1993Jan6.151149.7824@infodev.cam.ac.uk>
- Date: 6 Jan 93 15:11:49 GMT
- References: <1icl8cINN983@roundup.crhc.uiuc.edu> <1icq06INNnft@master.cs.rose-hulman.edu> <1idj1gINNhah@roundup.crhc.uiuc.edu>
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- Organization: U of Cambridge, England
- Lines: 40
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-
- In article <1idj1gINNhah@roundup.crhc.uiuc.edu> hougen@focus.csl.uiuc.edu (Darrell Roy Hougen) writes:
- >goddard@NeXTwork.Rose-Hulman.Edu (Bart E. Goddard) writes:
- >
- >% In articles <> several well-meaning but misguided souls write:
- >%% Have they suddenly lost the ability to use the libraries?
- >% Just how many copies of a text book do you suppose a library carries?
- >
- >You said that college students didn't have the opportunity to read,
- >*not* just that text books were expensive. But if you want to devise
- >a solution, why not ask professors to require less expensive books in
- >their courses? There are many very high quality books that appear as
- >paper backs.
-
- Very many, perhaps. Not enough, once you get beyond a certain level.
- It seems clear that it would be better (and probably no more infeasible)
- to require publishers to bring books out in paperback. Note that I said
- "no more infeasible", not "no less feasible".
-
- >%% The idea that some are going without food is ridiculous.
- >
- >% No it isn't. I can't imagine a time in my future when I will cease to be
- >% bitter about the ignorant comments made by middle-class frat boys who've
- >% had everything handed to them on a silver-plated platter.
- >
- >I resent that. I have never belonged to a fraternity, I attended an
- >inexpensive undergraduate institution for lack of much choice and I
- >have worked hard for every penny in grad school. But I cannot see
- >sticking it to others to make my life easier. Enough of special
- >interest politics.
-
- So you think it is fair that people from poor families can't go to the
- best institutions without spending years making money first? There is
- much to be said for providing education on equal terms for all, or at
- least for discriminating on the basis of ability rather than of wealth.
- And it can be done without bankrupting the government; the UK has had
- such a system for ages, and it has worked all right.
-
- --
- Gareth McCaughan Dept. of Pure Mathematics & Mathematical Statistics,
- gjm11@cus.cam.ac.uk Cambridge University, England. [Research student]
-