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  • College Football Perfection: Local Product Becomes Champion with Indiana – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

    That’s right — the last week of college football was quite eventful. 


    Two weeks after the FCS College Football Championship Game — Emmaus, PA is still feeling ecstatic about the end of the season (and we don’t mean about the Eagles).

    Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

    About two hours north of Philadelphia is the small town of Macungie,  with a population of less than 4,000. And two weeks ago — Macungie and specifically Emmaus High School — had something big to celebrate.


    Indiana University starting Defensive Lineman Mario Landino, who played football at Emmaus High School, is now a College Football National Champion. 


    Indiana may have been known primarily for its basketball program, with legendary Coach Bobby Knight, and for the 1986 film Hoosiers starring Gene Hackman. Not anymore.

    And while 65 NCAA Football Teams have been undefeated since the AP started polling in 1936,  Indiana is only one of two teams to finish 16–0. The other — the 1894 Yale Football Team. Indiana ran through their 2025 D1 College Football season, including a 13–10 win over Ohio State.

    In the 2025 CFP Playoff — the Hoosiers beat the University of Oregon 56–22 in the Peach Bowl and a 27–21 win two weeks ago on Monday night in the CFP Championship over the University of Miami.


    In 2024 , Emmaus High School won its first-ever Eastern Pennsylvania Conference League Title.

    They then reached the PIAA District XI 6A Championship Game, but ultimately lost to Parkland.


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    Michael Thomas Leibrandt

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  • Another Chapter in Philly College Football History – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Another Chapter in Philly College Football History – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    Our Football Roots Run Deep.
    It Started with the College Game.

    If you’d been a die-hard football fan in Philly in the early 20th century — attending games at Franklin Field — you would have almost certainly not expected to spend Sunday’s routing for an NFL Franchise.

    It would be 1924 before Philadelphia actually had an NFL Team and another eight years before the Eagles.


    Philly still has the oldest stadium in operation today: Franklin Field.

    Dating back to April 1895, Franklin Field first opened as a location for 5,000 fans to see the Penn Relays. No college football stadium in America has seen more.


    On Friday night — in a college football matchup that was first played one hundred and forty-five years ago in 1879 and then renewed again after 1893 — Yale played the University of Penn. Yale has the lead in the series 51–37–1 and won the game 31–10 while stifling Penn’s offense. Quarterback Aiden Sayin left the game with an injury in the first quarter, giving way to Liam O’Brien and freshman Karson Siqueiros-Lasky.

    Penn's Jared Richardson gets the Quakers on the board with a 18-yard touchdown reception in the first quarter at Delaware Stadium, Saturday, Sept. 21, 2024.
    Penn's Jared Richardson gets the Quakers on the board with a 18-yard touchdown reception in the first quarter at Delaware Stadium, Saturday, Sept. 21, 2024. PHOTO: William Bretzger/Delaware News Journal/USA TODAY NETWORK/Imagn Images

    For Garnett Valley High School football standout and Glen Mills, PA native Shane Reynolds — playing football for the Naval Academy isn’t just a chance to play — it’s a chance to serve; until this week — the Navy and Army were both ranked for the first time since 1960 and undefeated in football — a feat that hasn’t been done since 1945. While Army sat idol after a 45–28 win last week against East Carolina — #24 Navy was throttled by #12 Notre Dame — and saw Philly native Shane Reynolds gain only six yards of offense.


    If you were a young football fan in Philly, you may have witnessed the 1899 Army-Navy Game at Franklin Field.

    The City that’s hosted the most meetings of the last regular-season college football games each year?


    Yup, it’s Philadelphia.
    Ninety, to be exact.

    PHOTO: William Bretzger/Delaware News Journal/USA TODAY NETWORK/Imagn Images

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    Michael Thomas Leibrandt

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  • Brown, Yale, and Columbia are among 5 elite schools that agreed to pay $104.5 million to students after being accused of colluding to limit financial aid

    Brown, Yale, and Columbia are among 5 elite schools that agreed to pay $104.5 million to students after being accused of colluding to limit financial aid

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    • Five more elite schools agreed to a settlement to resolve claims they colluded on financial aid.

    • The 2022 lawsuit accused nearly 20 top schools of working in a “price-fixing cartel” to limit aid to students.

    • They did not admit any wrongdoing, and current and former impacted students will receive cash payments.

    Five more elite schools have now agreed to a settlement to put claims they colluded to limit financial aid to rest.

    On Tuesday, Emory, Yale, Brown, Columbia, and Duke agreed to pay a collective fine of $104.5 million to resolve allegations against 17 top schools that concerned the way each of them allocated financial aid.

    In January 2022, five former students who attended Duke, Northwestern, and Yale, filed a lawsuit against 17 elite schools over their participation in a group called the 568 Presidents Group, which allowed the schools to develop common standards for allocating financial aid.

    The lawsuit accused those schools of engaging in a “price-fixing cartel that is designed to reduce or eliminate financial aid as a locus of competition,” according to the original filing. The named schools did not admit any wrongdoing, and the five latest institutions to reach a settlement joined the University of Chicago, which was the first school to reach a $13.5 million settlement in August.

    Brown spokesperson Brian Clark said in a Tuesday statement that “we vehemently believe that the claims had no merit, but given the time and financial resources required to take this case to trial, we determined that our resources are better spent resolving this matter and supporting the education of our students.”

    The settlement amounts from each school are as follows:

    • Brown: $19.5 million

    • Columbia: $24 million

    • Duke: $24 million

    • Emory: $18.5 million

    • Yale: $18.5 million.

    Current and former students included in the settlement class will receive cash payments if they were enrolled in one of the named schools’ undergraduate programs full-time, received need-based financial aid from the school, and whose tuition, fees, room, or board was not fully covered by the financial aid they received. The settlement class includes:

    • Students who attended UChicago, Columbia, Cornell, Duke, Georgetown, MIT, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Penn, Rice, Vanderbilt, and Yale from fall term 2003 through the settlement approval date

    • Students who attended Brown, Dartmouth, and Emory from fall term 2024 through the settlement approval date

    • Students who attended CalTech from fall term 2019 through the settlement approval date

    • And students who attended Johns Hopkins from fall term 2021 through the settlement approval date.

    The other schools named in the original lawsuit have yet to announce trial dates or progress toward reaching a settlement. Settlement class members can expect to be included in an email campaign to notify them of the cash payments no later than 30 days after the court order, the settlement filing said.

    Additionally, while not all of the named schools have agreed to a settlement, students who attended each of the schools are still eligible to receive the cash payments.

    Class members can access a website that includes more information on the next steps in the settlement. According to the website, “payments for claims will vary depending on a number of factors. Assuming that about half of the 200,000 Settlement Class members submit timely claims (at a later date), and that the Court awards the attorneys’ fees and costs as requested, the average claimant will receive about $750 from these Settlements.”

    Read the original article on Business Insider

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  • TMA Names Kristopher Driggers Assistant Curator, Schmidt Curator of Latin American Art

    TMA Names Kristopher Driggers Assistant Curator, Schmidt Curator of Latin American Art

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    Press Release



    updated: Jan 31, 2019

    The Tucson Museum of Art (TMA) announces the appointment of Kristopher Driggers as TMA’s Assistant Curator, Bernard and Jeanette Schmidt Curator of Latin American Art. Currently, a lecturer at University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, the nation’s second-largest Hispanic-serving Institution, Driggers will finish his semester of teaching and join TMA full time in early May to manage and develop TMA’s Latin American, Spanish Colonial, post-Colonial, and Latin American folk art collections, with emphasis on pre-Columbian art. Until then, he will be making visits to Tucson for collection research in preparation for the installation of the collection at TMA’s forthcoming Kasser Family Wing. 

    Driggers, who obtained his bachelor’s degree in History of Art from Yale University in 2011 and his master’s degree in Art History from the University of Chicago in 2014, expects to obtain his Ph.D. in Art History, Pre-Columbian and Colonial Latin American Art from the University of Chicago in May. He participated in the Center for Curatorial Leadership Mellon Seminar in Curatorial Practice in New York in 2017.

    According to TMA CEO Jeremy Mikolajczak, “Kristopher’s range of study, international research and experience will provide the vision and practical skills to present, interpret and build TMA’s pre-Columbian collection, install the Kasser Family Wing, and produce insightful publications, public lectures, and symposia.”

    While at Yale, Driggers held multiple fellowships, including the Josef Albers Traveling Fellowship which allowed him to travel and study pre-Columbian objects in Mexico, Guatemala and Peru. He has worked as a development coordinator at the McNay Art Museum in San Antonio, Texas; a curatorial employee in African Art at the Yale University Art Gallery; and an intern in the curatorial departments of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires.

    Before beginning his teaching position in Texas last year, Driggers conducted fieldwork for three years in Mexico City and surrounding regions, as well as in Madrid and other European collections. His research has been supported by a Ford Foundation Predoctoral Fellowship, among other awards.

    Driggers has written about his research for publication and has regularly presented his research at scholarly conferences. In 2017-18, he spoke at the Frick Collection in New York, the Newberry Library in Chicago, the Rare Book School at the University of Virginia, and in conferences in Mexico and Colombia, where he lectured in Spanish. He is organizing a panel on pre-Columbian art for the 2019 College Art Association conference on the topic of “Indigenous Languages of the Americas and the Language of Art History.”

    Driggers’ knowledge and commitment to the highest standards of scholarship and interest in engaging diverse communities will advance TMA’s reputation as a leader in Latin American art and its service to our distinctive art and multicultural communities.

    Press Contact: Cami Cotton
    Phone: (520) 616-2689
    Email: ccotton@TucsonMuseumofArt.org

    About the Tucson Museum of Art and Historic Block

    The Tucson Museum of Art and Historic Block’s mission is “Connecting Art to Life.” The museum was founded in 1924 and is located in the El Presidio Historic District of downtown Tucson. It is Southern Arizona’s premier presenter of fine art and art education programs.

    The museum features permanent and traveling exhibitions of Modern and Contemporary, Native American, American West, Latin American, pre-Columbian, European, and Asian art. The 74,000 square foot museum offers guided tours, and education programs. The museum’s historic block of 19th and 20th C. adobe and Mission Revival-style buildings, encompassing a four-acre city block, includes the John K. Goodman Pavilion, the highly acclaimed museum restaurant Café a la C’Art, the Museum Store, and additional exhibition spaces.

    TMA is a private 501(c)(3) charitable arts and education organization. For Tucson Museum of Art hours, admission prices, membership opportunities, and exhibitions, please visit TucsonMuseumofArt.org or call (520) 624-2333.

    Source: Tucson Museum of Art

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