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The image presents a table comparing sales data from a college bookshop for February 2000, divided into non-book club members and book club members. Non-book club members' sales: fiction books - 44 (college staff), 31 (college students), 122 (members of public); non-fiction books - 29, 14, 20; magazines - 33, 12, 30; totaling 405 (college staff), 174 (college students), 204 (members of public). Book club members' sales: fiction books - 72; non-fiction books - 33; magazines - 46; totaling 151, 128, 109, respectively; overall totals: fiction books - 151, non-fiction - 128, magazines - 109; grand total - 1051 items.
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The table shows the sales of different types of publications in a college bookshop in February 2000. It compares purchases made by non-book club members and book club members.
Overall, non-fiction had the highest total sales, while fiction was the least popular. College students bought the largest number of magazines.
Among non-book club members, college students purchased 1,249 magazines, which was much higher than college staff (332) and members of the public (82). Students also bought 194 non-fiction books and only 31 fiction books. College staff bought 44 fiction books and 29 non-fiction books.
Book club members mainly preferred non-fiction, buying 942 copies. They purchased 76 fiction books and only 33 magazines. In total, non-fiction and magazines recorded higher sales compared to fiction.
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