Name: Corrie Smith
Topic: Paying College Athletes?
Source #1 title: Touchdowns, Toddlers, and Taboos: on paying college Athletes and surrogate contract mothers
Source type (circle one): Book Internet Other
Source Information (URL address, author, date, publisher, etc.) http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2504511
Notes from this source (in your own words):
Chris Carter, a wide receiver became ineligible to play football while attending Ohio State University. During his sophomore year, he received a $ 5,000 interest free loan and monthly payments of $ 1,800.
Source #2 title: The Case for Paying College Athletes
Source type (circle one): Book Internet Other
Source Information (URL address, author, date, publisher, etc.) http://www.usnews.com/opinion/articles/2014/01/06/ncaa-college-athletes-should-be-paid Notes from this source (in your own words):
College sports industry generates $11 billion in annual revenues.
Fifty colleges annual revenues that exceed $ 50 million
Five colleges annual revenues that exceed $100 million
The NCAA member colleges continue to vote to forbid the sharing of revenues with student athletes.
“Veil of amateurism” maintains the wealth of college sports in the hands of a few administrators, athletic directors and coaches.
The “Veil” not only ensures great wealth for athletic directors, and coaches, but it also ensures sustained poverty for many of the athletes who provide their labor.
85% of the college athletes on scholarships live below the poverty line.
Source #3 title: Researcher Paying College Athletes
Source type (circle one): Book Internet Other
Source Information (URL address, author, date, publisher, etc.) http://www.cqpress.com/product/Researcher-Paying-College-Athletes.html Notes from this source (in your own words):
Athletes continue to play under a decades-old system in which scholarships pay for tuition, room, and board. But falls short of covering