nesday, November 19, 1969 College Station, Texas Page 7 THE BATTALION thletic Costs Soar To $3.5 Million At Ohio State |y Will Grimsley Special Correspondent lOLUMBUS, Ohio (&) — It ts $10,000 a year to put shoes Ohio State’s champion foot- team and the annual tele- me bill in the past decade has jped from $7,000 to $23,000. hese are just a couple of the ftdental expenses in the mak- a I and sustaining of a big time lege power. The Buckeyes ex it to go in the red as much as ; —■quarter of a million dollars l/pl ~The FiMs year. waived staijl'For years we were able to M a rv Wotirate within our budget, but ekle MikeTjIthe last two or three years 0 °dson, a I have been forced to dip into immediately» reserve capital,” E. E. Ber- rement. Ohio State business man- :r, said Tuesday. “Expenses going out of sight.” lie Buckeyes’ plight, despite tinuing success on the field sell-out gates, is typical of financial squeeze being ex- ienced by college athletic de- tments throughout the coun- Ikyrocketing costs are plagu- teams from the effete Ivy igue to the booming Pacific ist and from the Middle West the bowl-conscious Southeast- and Southwest Conferences, 'inancial difficulties forced tre Dame this week to break 5-year tradition and accept a to the Cotton Bowl. 'he drain has become so se- that many college adminis- rs are urging a de-emphasis the return of one-platoon foot- and agreements to cut down recruiting. The matter will weighed at the annual Na- lal Collegiate Athletic Associ- ONS NTOWN SCREST ation convention at Washington, D. C., in January. The alternative could be ath letic bankruptcy, explained Ber nard. “A university attempting to keep pace in a major confer ence must put seven or eight men on the road. They visit fami lies of prospects, entertain, in vite visits to the campus. “Transportation fares are up. Hotel accommodations are twice and three times what they once were. In some places, you can’t get a good dinner for less than $7.50 to $9.00. “The question is how many of us can maintain the current pace.” Ohio State is the nation’s No. 1 college football team, winner of 22 games in a row. It suits up about 80 husky athletese ob tained through a high-pressure recruiting program. It has a student body of 43,000. The Buckeyes had their fifth straight home game sell-out against Purdue last Saturday— 85,027 — and boosted its five- game home attendance for the season to 431,175, the highest college football attendance in 20 years. Ohio State has led the nation in attendance 12 straight years. The price of tickets is $6 and $7. “These figures are very decep tive,” Bernard explained. “Of the 85,000 who see one of our games, some 30,000 are students and faculty, admitted for a cut- rate ticket ($14 a season for stu dents, $16 for faculty). “The student population explo sion is a problem on campuses everywhere. When it is all fig ured out, the average receipt for a ticket is $2.57.” The Ohio State’s athletic budg et — that includes all sports — is $3,319,378 for the current year. Bernard estimates expenditures will soar over $3.5 million, count ing capital expenses. One of the major expenses is grants-in-aid. Ohio State, as a Big Ten member, is allowed 30 football scholarships a year, six basketball and 34 for other sports — a total of 70. This means there are 280 students on the campus getting their educa tion paid free — tuition, books, fees and $15 a month for laun dry — from athletic funds, most ly football. “The cost of education has risen drastically,” Bernard said. “Not so long ago, this expense amounted to about $800 a year. Now it’s around $2,000 for an out-of-state student, around $1,- 500 for an in-state student. Other places, it may be more.” Ohio State maintains a well- paid coaching staff consisting of head coach W. W. “Woody” Hayes and nine assista nts. Coaches and trainers are a $357,- 000 item. Some Southern col leges have as many as 20 assist ants. “No one ever thinks of it, but we pay $64,000 a year for po licemen and gatemen,” the Ohio State business manager said. “Clothing and equipment amount to $39,200, not counting shoes; $20,000 is paid out for movies of games and practice sessions, $46,416 for local meals feeding the athletes; $18,000 for transportation and $77,000 for a retirement fund, for adminis trative personnel. “It costs a lot to field a col lege football team and run an athletic program — and the price keeps going up.” Otis Taylor Ready To Begin Again NEW YORK ) — When Cor nell Gordon sizes up his antag onists in the private war of pro football’s catchers and corner- backs, Otis Taylor comes out larger than life. “They say he’s something like 6-foot-3 and 220 pounds, but he seems a lot bigger than that to me,” the New York Jets’ corner- FOR ONE WEEK ONLY. ■ n If 14-Oz.T/ w ;am )c ELLED fS 99c 13-Oz. v { 9 $1 It u. 19c Lb. ^ Bag 1 Lb.* Chicken House NORTH GATE 3 pc. Special of Chicken - 89c FREE DORM DELIVERY man mused last Sunday after a losing battle with Taylor and the Kansas City Chiefs. Taylor, making his first start in a month, snared three touch down passes — the last two de spite broken ribs as the Chiefs mauled the Jets 34-16 in a matchup of American Football League division leaders. The swift, strong — and often- injured — receiver was selected Tuesday as the AFL Offensive Player of the Week by The As sociated Press. Taylor, out of action for three weeks with torn stomach mus cles, bounced back with a flour ish, taking an 18-yard payoff pitch from Len Dawson on the Chiefs’ first play from scrim mage. The five-year pro from Prairie View snapped a second quarter tie with a seven-yard scoring grab and tallied again in the finale on a 10-yarder. Taylor had a fourth touch down catch nullified by a hold ing penalty, but finished with seven receptions for 96 yards. “On a given day, anything can happen,” he said, brushing off his big comeback just as he had shrugged off Jet defenders and the nagging pain from the rib in jury. “We beat a good football team and I’m just happy I had a good game. I was due for one.” Sophomore flanker John Dobbs of the Air Force Academy foot ball team is the son of Bobby Dobbs, former Army player who coaches the University of Texas at El Paso. SENIOR BOOT SPECIAL CHRISTMAS PORTRAITS IN LIVING COLOR 16x20—*69 50 1st Print — reg. 85.00 10x16-*39 so 1st. Print — reg. 50.00 I SUTPHEN’S f) J 5tudl0 North Gate in the middle of the block THAT’S FAR ENOUGH Lynn Odom (67) and Ed Ebrom combine to knock Rice quarterback Stable Vincent out of bounds in Saturday’s 7-6 loss to the Owls. The Greensboro, N. C., native kept the Ag gie defensive end busy all afternoon with his end sweeps. (Photo by Mike Wright) Billy Bob Barnett Wishes He Had It To Do Over Again If Billy Bob Barnett had it all tod do over again, athletic history at Texas A&M might have been a bit different. “Now I wish I had tried to play football and basketball when I started at A&M,” the defensive end from Brenham said. Instead, Barnett decided to give all his attention to basketball, and the result was a pair of All-South- west Conference citations and an SWC title, which ranks as Bar nett’s greatest thrill. With his basketball eligibility expired, Barnett came out for football last spring. His height (6-5), agility and good hands in dicated that tigth end might be his position. Considering that he hadn’t played football for four years, Barnett did a good job at the position in the spring. Then came the fall and Barnett was up from his basketball weight of 218 to 250. A combination of the added weight and the experi ence needed to play offense— plus already having a pretty good tight end in Ross Brupbacher— dictated a shift to defense. It took Barnett all of three games before he was the No. 1 right defensive end. With his size, strength and tremendous desire, it was just a matter of finding the right position. Coach Gene Stallings thinks he’s found “Billy Bob played well against TCU. He just gives great effort on every play. My only regret is that he isn’t a sophomore. He’s a good football player now, but if he had two more years, he’d be great,” Stallings says. Barnett’s progress gives A&M a pair of good defensive ends with senior Jimmy Piper on the left side. But Barnett’s not the kind of person to be satisfied with personal pgrogress—he wants' to win. For all your insurance needs UTATI 'ARM Jpl**-' See U. M. Alexander, Jr. ’40 * 221 S. Main, Bryan Jfkr^ 823-0742 INSURANCE State Farm Insurance Companies - Home Offices Bloomington, 111. ElREtE Texas Intercollegiate Student Association 1970 Charter Flights Date Depart To Date Depart To June 2 Houston London August 18 Brussels Houston June 3 Dallas London July 23 Brussels Dallas $285.00 round trip JUNE 7 NEW YORK - LONDON — AUGUST 12 BRUSSELS NEW YORK $215.00 round trip exclusively for University students, faculty, staff, and mem bers of their families. Sign Up Now .... 70 Seats Open!! $50.00 deposit for reservation—refundable to March 1 Contact Authorized T.I.S.A. Travel Agents: Memorial Student Center — 846-3773 . . tours . . . travel