(6) Twice a week, an impoverished university student was paid to sort new arrivals nto the designated shelves. (7) And since the bookshop prided itself on its academic as well as general stock, the proprietors unashamedly collared university teachers who wandered in to browse, sat them down with a cup of tea and a couple of publishers' lists, and made them tick off titles that they thought the bookshop should consider ordering. 8) These teachers were happy to ensure that books they needed for their courses would be readily available to their students. (9) Many of them resented the University and Allied Bookshop for its entrenched, lethargic, unresponsive, and high-handed ways.
in the second paragraph (sentences6-9), the narrator indicates which of the following about imperial book depot business practices?
the staff acquire only those books that are most in demand.
the clerks prefer to help people find non-academic books and magazines
the owners empoly students and rely on teachers for information
stagf members are generally lazy and take too many breaks for tea