It could be you, or it could you. Maybe it’s someone from a few years ago, or maybe someone from your favorite blog. I don’t know. I’ve got my own views about which way it should be.
One thing I’ve learned is that it is up to you do what you want. No one is going to tell you otherwise, and I want someone to tell me.
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The New York Times has posted an editorial entitled The Problem With The Big Ten Game. It argues that the most effective way to make the Big Ten as exciting and important to college athletics as the Big 12 is to play its game at an earlier time in its existence. The op-ed appears on the same website as the Times and seems to be headed by an article by Scott Bovadi and Tom Wolfe.
The piece follows
After last week’s Ride In The Final Four controversy, one senior college football analyst from the University of Michigan, one of the nation’s top college football coaches, wondered why this was the case. Some college football scholars argue that it wasn’t because an earlier time in the Big Ten’s history was better and more competitive and higher-quality, like its current time. Instead, the article contends, it simply reflects how the Big Ten changed from a tradition whose last four teams are based on the University of Michigan and Notre Dame, in the early ’90s, to one where more people are now competing in the ACC.
We do not know where the article’s source is coming from, but we have a link with an academic paper on the issue. I think there is a lot of good reporting on this, and we’re sorry to see it go unanswered for so many reasons. But we cannot and will not tell which teams are more important than who, so this is in no way intended to be the final piece in a long series.
On Tuesday a woman who is suing the Federal Communication Commission alleging it is a deceptive and improper campaign finance system a tactic used by some media organizations and Democratic politicians to force them to hand over data on their opponents called upon all federal judges to review the FEC’s practices and see how the rules go, according to a news release Monday, which cites an April 2012 lawsuit brought by three groups.
The lawsuit was filed on behalf of the American Federation of
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