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Concussion Confusion
U. of Arizona was accused of keeping a star player on the field despite head injury that appeared to cause vomiting. But university officials say that's not what happened.
The Football Dividend
Each win in top programs can bring in more donations and more in-state students, study finds, but the gains are for athletics, not universities as a whole.
Trade-Off in NCAA Grad Rates
Graduation rates among Division I football and men's basketball teams have risen to new heights (above 70 percent), but athletes over all are getting degrees at lower rates than last year.

One Step at a Time
Different groups are taking various actions as concern about concussions grows, but some say a more unified approach is needed to reduce number of injuries.
Sports in the Board Room
Governing boards should be more involved in athletics oversight, for financial, ethical and academic reasons, a new report argues.

A New Playbook
Admissions directors at public flagship universities seek to define best practices for the potentially problematic area of admissions exceptions for athletics.

Physical Elimination
In dropping phys ed requirements, University of Chicago becomes latest institution to cut fitness and swim tests, the latter of which was required for graduation.
High-Stakes Test You Can't Prep For
More colleges are getting on board with random drug testing of athletes, while others that already did it are testing more often.
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