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VOLUME 25, ISSUE 6 67 PURDUE P E R S O N A L I Z E D P R I N t Gold and Black • 2605 Yeager Road • West Lafayette, IN 47906 • 1-800-876-4678 Visit the store at GoldandBlackDigital.com for this and other great Purdue Fan items! o My check or money order made payable to GOLD AND BLACK ILLUSTRATED is enclosed. o Please charge to my: o Visa o MasterCard o American Express o Discover Card No._________________________________________________ Exp. Date ___________________ (Charge Will Appear On Your Statement As Gold and Black Illustrated) Name________________________________________________ Sec. Code # ___________________ Address ___________________________________________________________________________ City________________________________________________ State______ Zip _________________ (REQUIRED) Daytime Phone #: (_________) _______________________________________________ Email Address: ______________________________________________________________________ QTy. ITEm DESCRIPTION PRICE TOTAL Purdue Pub Print $49.95 ea. Subtotal Sales Tax (IN 7%) TOTAL Personalized 11x14 Purdue pub print. 13x16 MDF frame w/styrene image protection. (Ships via UPS Ground •No P.O. Boxes, please.) $ 49 95 FREE S&H! Your last name or business name appears on this personalized Purdue pub sign! Your full name is also imprinted as "proprietor." Please print clearly . . . Type size is relevant to number of letters. (Item #7512) LAST NAmE OR BUSINESS NAmE (UP TO 12 CHARACTERS TOTAL) PROPRIETOR'S FULL NAmE (UP TO 18 CHARACTERS TOTAL) "You would hope not. But you never know," Hazell said. "It could potentially (matter) in recruiting if it's that drastic. If you going head-to- head on (recruiting) a guy. "Most of it's geographic driven, but sometimes there is a skewed amount that goes to an advantage to (another school)." Recent football signee Wyatt Cook, who enrolled in mid-June, said he could see the disparity creating an issue for recruits. But he thinks it depends on each prospect. "Some players won't care, players like me, because most of that money, I'll be giving to my help family to help traveling to games and with regular living," said Cook, who is from Mary- land. "Some kids see it as 'I get that extra money in my pocket, I can get tattoos, I can pay for a phone, I can finally get a car.' "If a kid loves football, like me, I could be getting zero and I'd still be coming to Purdue even if anoth- er school (can offer) me $10,000. I love Purdue. On the other hand, kids are going to care about the money. There's only so much you can say with amount of money they're going to give them, there's only so much. It really depends on the person." Part of Burke's messages to his coaches is not to let it matter. He knows they'll have to be equipped to answer those type of questions, but he'd rather they stay above the fray. Knowing they can't do anything to set the amounts — "no more than I can create an admission to Purdue," Burke said — he wants them to stick to the facts while re- cruiting. "Our coaches, I think, have to be smart enough to say, 'What they're giving you and what we're giving you gives you the equivalent ex- perience,'" Burke said. "If you can get in front of a kid, if they're go- ing to make a mistake and they're a price-buyer and they don't want to understand what the numbers mean, you may lose some kids. But I think over time, once people get used to it, it'll be no big deal." j

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