NCAA Banned Drugs
This is an excerpt from the paper...
The issue at hand revolves around National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) legislation pertaining to banned drugs and ineligibility for athletes for use of banned drugs. The issue also revolves around civil action pertaining to ôwrongful death.ö The NCAA drug-testing program came into being with the approval of Proposal No. 30 at the January 1986 NCAA Convention and Proposal Nos. 52-54 at the January 1990 Convention, (NCAA, 2005-06). Within these proposals for a drug-testing program, the NCAA ôreaffirmed their dedication to the ideal of fair and equitable competitionö among student athletes, (NCAA, 2005-06, p. 1). Drug-testing legislation is contained within the NCAA Constitution 3.2.4.7 and 3.2.4.7.1. Athletes often use nutritional/dietary supplements but under NCAA law, ignorance of these substances containing banned substances is no excuse. Wrongful death is a civil rather than a criminal action, since the individual wrongfully dead cannot represent himself or herself. The inte
. . .
Some common words found in the essay are:
NCAA Constitution, Wheelerö Lighty, Rashidi Wheeler, Ultimate Punch, Kathy Flanagan, Badger Nov, Convention NCAA, Association NCAA, wrongful death, Law NCAA, Program Handbook, 2005 1, wrongful 2005, lighty 2005, rule law, drug-testing program, wrongful 2005 1, lighty 2005 1, ncaa drug-testing, wrongful death suits, ncaa banned, law ncaa, university contends, ncaa drug-testing program, wrongful death actions,
Approximate Word count = 692
Approximate Pages = 3 (250 words per page)
More Essays on NCAA Banned Drugs
|