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The Collegiate Licensing Company (CLC) is an American collegiate trademark licensing and marketing company. Founded in 1981 by Bill Battle in Selma, Alabama, CLC is the largest and oldest collegiate licensing company in the United States and currently provides its services to more than 200 colleges and universities, athletic conferences, bowl games, the Heisman Trophy, and the NCAA.
Penn State University Athletic Conference: Penn State DuBois: Nittany Lions DuBois: Pennsylvania: Penn State University Athletic Conference: Penn State Fayette, The Eberly Campus: Nittany Lions Uniontown: Pennsylvania: Penn State University Athletic Conference: Penn State Greater Allegheny: Nittany Lions McKeesport: Pennsylvania: Penn State ...
This list also includes conferences in sports that the NCAA does not split into divisions. Central Collegiate Fencing Conference; Central Collegiate Ski Association – includes one junior-college team alongside NCAA-sanctioned teams; Coastal Collegiate Sports Association (women's beach volleyball) Collegiate Water Polo Association
At most colleges, athletics are a money-losing proposition that would not exist without billions of dollars in mandatory student contributions — a burden that grows greater every year, according to our review of five years of NCAA financial reports obtained through public records requests from 201 D-1 universities.
At Georgia State, athletic fees totaled $17.6 million in 2014, from a student population in which nearly 60 percent qualify for Pell Grants, the federal aid program for low-income students. The university contributed another $3 million in direct support to its sports programs.
SOURCE: Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, Norfolk State University (2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010). Read our methodology here. HuffPost and The Chronicle examined 201 public D-I schools from 2010-2014. Schools are ranked based on the percentage of their athletic budget that comes from subsidies.
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NCAA, seeking as much as $3 billion in retroactive NIL and broadcasting revenue payments, is the latest lawsuit expected to chip away at the NCAA’s bedrock of amateurism.