The Ivy League is set to opt out of the impending House v NCAA settlement according to an email obtained by the Inquirer that was sent to all athletes in the conference from Ivy League executive director Robin Harris.
The Ivy League announced Tuesday that it will opt out of a proposed National Collegiate Athletic Association settlement, declining to provide current and former student athletes with direct compensation through revenue sharing.
A newly engaged Yale graduate student is gunned down by an unknown attacker after a fender bender. Was it extreme road rage or was he targeted? "48 Hours" correspondent Anne-Marie Green reports Saturday,
While the House settlement has not yet received final approval, many D-I schools have already begun preparing for its ramifications. VCU, whom Penn played in men’s basketball this season, recently announced that it would opt in to the settlement and pay a total sum of roughly $5 million to its athletes starting next fall.
An email from Ivy League Executive Director Robin Harris stated that the Ivy League student-athletes will continue to not receive shared revenue or direct N.I.L. payments from their universities
The Yale men’s basketball team defeated Columbia and Dartmouth to start their Ivy League season undefeated and establish themselves as an early favorite in the conference.
Showcasing a unique passion in interdisciplinary humanities is a powerful way for top students to stand out in Ivy League college applications and their future endeavors.
Ivy League Exec Dir Robin Harris in an email stated that the conference “will not participate” in the $2.8B settlement and that its athletic programs “will continue to not provide student-athletes with revenue sharing allocations,
More and more high schoolers are getting political on their college applications — and it’s paying off, even in the Ivy League, one college application counselor told The Post.
Trying to figure out who owns the most national championships in college football is not for the weak of heart. The sport has changed considerably since the sport's inaugural season -- 1869 -- when Princeton and Rutgers played twice and,
With the rise in Name, Image, and Likeness compensation for NCAA student athletes, a 70-year-old Ivy League policy may be holding the league back more than ever.
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