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In stunning black and red gift box. Includes 12 handsome, durable playing boards, 200 chips in rich colors, com- plete instructions. A welcome gift. @ See Po-ke-no at your dealer’s today. If he doesn’t have it, send $2 for prompt, postpaid shipment. Address: U.S. Playing Card Co., Dept. C-4, Cincinnati, Ohio. Collier's for November 19, 1938 what they hope will prove to be the most detailed and authentic report ever com- piled on the financing of college football players. The report will be presented in secret, but it unquestionably will require Grenadier Guards to keep every news- paperman west of the Rockies from lis- tening at the keyhole. Each college town is morally certain that the most scan- dalous portions of the report will con- cern its bitterest athletic rival. The general trend of the questions has seeped out, and the public has gathered at least an inkling of what the inquisi- tive professors seek to know about the gravy train. The Players’ Catechism Here are some of the questions, as passed on by the athletes who have had to answer them: How did you happen to go to this par- ticular college? Did you pay your own transportation here? Were any special inducements made to you by alumni? Why did you select the courses you are taking? Did anyone connected with athletics tell you to register for easy subjects? What were your average grades in high school as compared with your grades in college? Do you have a tutor? Who pays him? Have you a job on the campus? Who got it for you? Do you actually have to work at it? Where do you get the money for your college tuition? For your board and room? For your clothes and other inci- dentals? What special favors are shown you because you play football? How many complimentary tickets do you get for each game? Do you sell them? To whom? What do you average each Saturday from the sale of these tickets? Have you a job in the summer? Who .: got it for you? Would it be taken away _ if you no longer played football? What is the total amount of assistance you receive each month in the college year from any source whatsoever? Do you get a scholarship from the college? Is this help entirely contingent on your participation in football? Atherton resorts neither to threats nor bombast in getting replies, although some of the coaches and athletic direc- tors think the specter of faculty disap- proval is threat enough. He merely makes it plain that his next move will be to check the truth of the answers. What is the cause of all this? What made the professors start talking about the gravy train at that conference meet- ing last December on Del Monte’s sun- bright shore? Why is the Far West the scene of the country’s first faculty-spon- sored, detective-conducted investigation of football proselyting? What started the whole rumpus? Tempting, indeed, are the rewards of football success on the Pacific Coast. The team annexing the conference cham- pionship automatically represents the region in the Rose Bowl. This usually adds about $85,000 to the athletic cof- fers of the college that gets the bid. Then there are all sorts of other post- season games—and the weather is balmy in California when New England is sheathed with ice. There also are gold watches and movie jobs for winning players, and fatter pay checks and greater glory for winning coaches. Some of the Pacific Coast Conference athletic departments have whopping in- comes from football. Numerous big games attract as many as 70,000 people. Even in the frontier Northwest, the teams of Oregon and Washington usually meet before a crowd of 35,000. And always at the end of the gridiron trail the treasure-trove of the Rose Bowl awaits the conference conqueror. None of this money goes to the ath- letes whose performances bring it in at the turnstiles. They get help from other sources. Some of them are given prefer- ence at actual jobs, such as mowing campus lawns, waiting on dormitory and fraternity tables, sweeping out build- ings and stacking books in the school library. Usually college towns reserve as many public pay-roll spots as possible for the lads who roll up touchdowns. Private jobs are also set aside for the football heroes. Captain Butch Morse of Oregon got a choice assignment tak- ing charge of a busy service station. Mitchell Frankovich, a_ triple-threat U. C. L. A. quarterback, was chauffeur for a while for Joe E. Brown, the wide- mouthed movie comedian. A mighty youth named Stanley Kostka followed Doc Spears from Minnesota to Oregon. He washed dishes for a while in the Far West. Then Spears quit as coach at Oregon. Kostka turned back toward the rising sun, and ended up in his home town as an All-Big Ten fullback for the Minnesota Gophers. In most conference colleges, athletic scholarship funds augment the money from jobs. The word “scholarship,” of course, refers exclusively to capacity on the gridiron rather than in the class- room. In some instances the “scholar- ships” are paid directly to the players. At other times they are applied in the form of vouchers against such routine expenses as campus tuition, fraternity dues and dormitory bills. The scholar- ship funds are obtained not out of foot- ball gate receipts, but are solicited from patriotic alumni and fervent sports fans. The University of Oregon Webfoots re- cently tried to get proselyting money by asking graduates to “give a buck for a Duck.” Alumni were canvassed with regular subscription blanks. Many of the athletic scholarship funds are thus financed with five- and ten-dollar drib- bles. Occasionally wealthy “angels” pour in.a whole golden stream at once. A few weeks ago several prominent industrial- ists added $2,700 in a single chunk to the gravy-train coffers of a conference team. All along the Pacific seaboard, par- ticular colleges are reputed to have in- dividual angels who are more than generous in keeping nimble athletes off the WPA. The Doheny oil family has been partisan to the football success of Southern California, and Joe E. Brown is a zealous enthusiast for U. C. L. A. An important oil magnate near Long Beach is reputed to have considerable to do with the number of California boys scor- ing touchdowns for Oregon State. A Way to Eliminate Hypocrisy And so the story goes. This is the background of the situation into which the professors have intruded Atherton and his investigation of athletic prose- lyting. — There is one group of football fans in the Far West who look at Atherton’s survey with considerable optimism. They think it may be the means of elim- inating hypocrisy from intercollegiate football. Once all the facts about the gravy train are known, they believe an effort will be made to adopt uniform standards for assistance to football players. This would do away with the camouflage of giving financial aid in the form of soft jobs and outright donations. The fans who take this position insist that some sort of help is necessary if a boy is to play football and keep up in his studies and at the same time meet the expenses of an education. Why not the same amount of assistance at each college? Why let the size of a school’s gravy train determine the quality of its football team? If Atherton’s peek into the proselyting problem does something about this situation, one group of fans, at least, will regard his enterprise as a success. FALLING HAIR ——— Scalp—Patchy Baldness? Glover’s Mange Medicine and systematic massage WAKES UP your scalp; activates the blood vessels and tissues. Its tonic-like effect makes your scalp glow and feel delight- fully refreshed. 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