THE BATTALION Page 6 College Station, Texas Thursday, June 1, 1961 Slight Limit Put On Scholarships By HAROLD V. RATLIFF Associated Press Sports Writer The Southwest Conference has placed a slightly flexible limit of 100 football and 20 basketball scholarships on its athletes. This figure will be arrived at through a two-year average and it isn’t likely anybody will howl if a school goes one or two over the mark. The conference, like most ath letic organizations, always puts in some exceptions when it passes a rule. This is because all angles of the situation are studied and there is no desire to penalize in cases of, hardship. The limit has two reasons: eco nomic and equalization of compe tition. It cost from $800 to $1,400 a year to house, feed and educate the athlete with denominational schools higher than state schools because of more tuition. If a school gives out 120 scholarships it is spending about $150,000. Add ing in the scholarships in other sports—which are not being lim ited—and the total would run around $200,000. That’s about all a collfege can afford to spend on the athletes since there are other expenses, like paying the coaches, Piaintai^iing stadiums, operating the non-paying sports, etc. The limit will prevent one school hogging all the athletes if it was so inclined—that is signing up more than it needed just to keep the others from getting their share. And it prevents the richer schools getting more athletes than the ones that don’t take in as much money at the gate. The limit also , will cut out the practice of “red shirting”—that is, having athletes lay out a season because they are not needed The schools can’t afford to red shirt because they won’t have a surplus of athletes. The practice of signing an ath lete for say track when he’s really going to play football so it won’t tount on the number in football will be eliminated. The rule says ‘500’ Drivers Meet To Collect $400,000 Purse By The Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS—The 33 driv ers in Tuesday’s golden anniver sary 500-mile auto race, some in bandages but all present, met Wed nesday night to divide $400,000. More than a quarter of the loot, depending on how many special accessory prizes he could claim, was earmarked for race winner A. J. Foyt of Houston and his car co-owners, Bob Bowes, Indianap olis manufacturer, and George Bignotti, Burlingame, Calif., mas ter mechanic and designer. Foyt’s average for the distance was 139.130 miles an hour; Sacks’ 139.Q41. Look your best at formal affairs Look your best on gala occa sions in formal clothes cleaned to perfection by us. Your “audience” will applaud 1 Try us soon. Campus Cleaners that any athlete who plans to par ticipate in football must be count ed as a football scholarship even though he’s going to play basket ball too. Any athlete who is going to play baseball and basketball must be signed as a basketball scholarship. A conference member can exceed the average under certain circum stances. If it loses athletes thru injury or illness or one flunks out of college, they can be replaced by signing other athletes even though it may put the school over the limit. While the conference announced that no penalties for violation of the rule were prescribed, this act ually is not the case. If a school exceeds the limit without justifi cation or valid excuse its case will be studied by the conference and penalties meted out. What the con ference meant to say was that there were not specific penalties, such as probation for a certain time, expulsion or fine but any penalty thought, just can be as sessed. It isn’t likely that the rule will have any effect on the way the conference members have been lim iting scholarships to 100 for foot ball and 20 for basketball on the average anyway. That’s why those figures were selected. But any way, it won’t bring a repetition of the story that went the rounds dur ing the two-platoon days: The coach asked the college pres ident for more football players. “How many do you have?” inquir ed the president. “We have 88,” said the coach. “Well, that’s eight teams isn’t it,” shot back the pres ident. “But,” wailed the coach, “we need a few substitutes.” SPORTS Rocky Ducks Flat Answer For Comeback By The Associated Press WASHINGTON—Former heavy weight champion Rocky Marciano ducked a flat answer Wednesday as to whether he might try a comeback. “I really don’t know,” Marciano told the Senate Antitrust and Mo nopoly subcommittee. “It’s an ex citing thought.” A newsman told Marciano he in terpreted this as meaning the door was not definitely closed to a comeback. “It’s pretty hard to close the last inch,” Marciano replied. The retired undefeated heavy weight champ was among wit nesses who testified in favor of the federal g-overnment helping to clean up boxing. The subcommittee, headed by Sen. Estes Kefauver, D-Tenn., has before it a bill sponsored by Kef auver and Sen. Clair Engle, D- Calif., to establish an office of boxing commissioner within the De partment of Justice. The hearings began Wednesday and will continue through Friday. Coidm TAPEREQ SPORTSHIRT W 11 I 4 % by A'| % * it s ii n v-4 U4IIP TTitwwsMl $2.95 Here’s the revolutionary NEW DIMENSION con tour tapered sportshirt in a shirtail button-down that rates raves. Ivy-inspired, this craft tailored Wash and Wear cotton batik by Truval is ideal for the youthful man with athletic build. It’s truly tapered for trim, neat fit. You’ll want several shirts in this "new con cept’’ by Truval! THE EXCHANGE STORE ‘SERVING TEXAS AGGIES” National Foes invade SWC Southwest Conference football teams will take on opponents this fall literally from all corners of the United States. The 24-game non-conference includes meetings with Washington State University (Texas), Southern California (SMU), UCLA (TCU), Florida (Rice) and Boston College (Texas Tech). Only two institutions—Louisiana State and the Air Force Academy —appear on the SWC non-confer ence slate more than once. Rice opens with LSU in Houston (Sept. 23) and A&M travels to Baton Rouge a week later to meet the Tigers. The Air Force Falcons invade Texas twice. They play SMU in Dallas (Oct. 7) and Baylor in Waco (Nov. 18). The Southeast Conference fur nishes five non-conference foes (Ole Miss, Georgia Tech and Mis sissippi State in addition to LSU and Florida) while the Far West offers four (California, USC, UCLA and Washington State). Conference teams will play 21 night games this fall, eight of them counting in the battle for the league championship. Every school opens its season on Sept. 23, and five of the teams will be playing home games. Inaugural games within the state of Texas include A&M vs. Houston at Col lege Station, Baylor vs. Wake For est at Waco, Rice vs. Louisiana State at Houston, SMU vs. Mary land at Dallas and TCU v; sas at Fort Worth. Texas and A&M, meeting! earlier this year than usic finish their schedules nits earlier than five of their The traditional Thanksgivii skirmish is booked for Not year - at College Station. Volume Arkansas is the only oil tution concluding its regl son in November, meeting! Tech at Little Rock on Novi \ HEAVY NORTHERN if BEEF SALE CHUCK ROAST Blade Cut CEilKK BOAST Center Cut Lb. ROUND BONE ARM f !CMST CMSC0 3 Lb. Can Hf: W' M irl PILLSBURY FLOUR 5 Lb. Bag ^ A CELERY ■ Stalk J J ex tin TOMATOES *g| A ® lb. 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