RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 











Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 











RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 





















Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 





















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 













RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 












Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 












Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 






















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 














Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 













RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 























Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 














RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 
























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 















Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 
























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 

























Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

















Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 

























Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 
















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


















Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 


























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

















Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 

















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 



























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


















Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 


















Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 



















Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 




























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 






























Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 





























Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 




















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 





















Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 





















Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 






















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






















Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 































RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 























Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 


































RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
























Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 
































Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 
























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

























Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 

































RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 




































Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 

























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 





































Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 


































RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 



























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 






































Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 



































Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 


























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 




























RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 







































RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 




























Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 




































Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-10 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 



























Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 




Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread Dan Kaplan
I always thought it depends on the wording of the scholarship.  Some are
mentioned specifically as being guaranteed in the case of injury, which
would imply that others are not.

In this age of fewer and fewer scholarships available, it isn't surprising
that coaches would be hesitant to waste them on injured athletes.  Of
course, allowing scholarships to be yanked would be a dangerous precedent.
 A coach could run their athletes into the ground with the hope that a few
would excel, and those who get injured in the process can be replaced with
a new scholarship athlete.  On the other hand, said coach would develop a
bad reputation pretty quick.

Dan

--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by
personnel
 not connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University



=
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Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 






Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 







Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 








Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread Martin J. Dixon
Just got that for the 6th time?

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
  scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
  competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 






Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 










Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 











Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 












RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 













RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 




Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 













Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 





RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 






Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread koala
I feel like I'm standing on the edge of an internet Grand
Canyon hearing echos-

Can the athlete APPEAL...Appeal...appeal.?

What says the NCAA.AAAAAaaa?

They say YESYes...yes!

Can they lose the APPEALPeal.peal.?

YESYesyes!

Can we turn off this darned ECHo.echNonono..



Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 






RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the 
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not 
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 







RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 








RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 
















Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 

















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 


















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 










Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 


















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 











Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 



















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread malmo
Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

malmo

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose 
 athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

 practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and 
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 




















RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread malmo
I guess it's safe to say that Comedy Central thing goes right over your
head?

Ah say, ah say, ah made a funny an your not laughing, son! - Foghorn
Leghorn

malmo


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:31 PM
To: malmo
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?


NCAA by-law 15.3.2.4 Hearing Opportunity.  The institution's regular 
financial aid authority shall notify the student athlete in writing of
the 
opportunity for a hearing when the institutional financial aid based in
any 
degree on athletic ability is ... not renewed.  The institution shall
have 
established reasonable procedures for promptly hearing such a request
and 
shall not delegate the responsibility for conducting the hearing to the 
university's athletic department or its faculty athletics committee.

Floyd Highfill

Quoting malmo [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?
 
 malmo
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?
 
 
 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke 
 when
 
 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires 
 the schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by 
 personnel not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?
 
 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University
 
 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
 
  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained
in
 
  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
  
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
  
  Does anyone know of other examples?
  
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 












Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread Mike Prizy
It's a cyber stutter.

malmo wrote:

 Now WHAT was that thing about the appeals process?

 malmo

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 9:45 PM
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

 Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when

 scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires
 the
 schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel
 not
 connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

 Floyd Highfill
 New Mexico State University

 Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

  I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose
  athletics scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in

  practice and competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
  Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
  university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
  Does anyone know of other examples?
 
  Cheers? I think not. :-(
 
 
 
 










Re: t-and-f: Scholarships and Injuries?

2004-03-09 Thread fhighfil
Most Universities have an appeals process which athletes can invoke when 
scholarships are withdrawn unilaterally.  I believe the NCAA requires the 
schools to have such a process and it is to be conducted by personnel not 
connected with the athletic department.  Anyone else?

Floyd Highfill
New Mexico State University

Quoting Roger Ruth [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 I've just heard of an instance of a U.S. collegiate vaulter whose athletics
 scholarship has been withdrawn because injuries sustained in practice and
 competition prevent her from vaulting.
 
 Obviously, this is a pretty sleazy move on the part of her coach and
 university, but I'm wondering how usual it is for this to happen.
 
 Does anyone know of other examples?
 
 Cheers? I think not. :-(