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Reply To: | Michael J. Breitner |
Date: | Tue, 26 Sep 1995 10:37:19 -0400 |
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>Terry Kasdan writes:
>Furthermore, the ACHA requires its teams to comply with NCAA
>eligibility rules. If you can document a case in which this did not
>occur, perhaps you should report it to the ACHA!
Well.....sort of. There certainly are some NCAA eligibility rules that
ACHA uses. An example is the Canadian Major A rule. Were the ACHA
parts company is in financial matters. Specifically, scholarships and
recruiting. Remember that the ACHA was formed, in part, as a reaction
to the overwhelming complexity of NCAA rules. Therefore, the ACHA does
not want to go down the NCAA road of legislating every possible issue,
to the point that a 500+ page manual is required! The 94-95 version of
the ACHA policies manual was less than 25 pages.
I should also note that there is really no defined enforcement procedure to
implement ACHA rules. I'm not sure who someone would report eligibility
infractions to at the ACHA -- perhaps Leo Golembiewski, president of the
ACHA?
As to the level of play issue....I stand mute.
-
Michael J. Breitner, Assistant Director for Operations & Services
Memorial Union, North Dakota State University
[log in to unmask]
(701) 231-8236 // (701) 231-8043 fax
NOTE: All views expressed in this message are my own and may
not reflect the views or official position of North Dakota State University,
or any other sane person on this earth.
"The real question for 1988 is whether we're going to go forward to
tomorrow or past to the -- to the back!"
-- Vice President Dan Quayle
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