New beginning: Penn State plays first game minus Paterno since 1949

New beginning: Penn State plays first game minus Paterno since 1949

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Penn State interim coach Tom Bradley shares a moment with Bo Pelini after the game. (US Presswire) Penn State interim coach Tom Bradley shares a moment with Bo Pelini after the game. (US Presswire)

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- On a gorgeous sunny Saturday in Happy Valley -- Penn State found out what life after Joe Paterno was like. This was, in a way, the first day of the rest of Penn State's life: a future without Joe Paterno as coach.

This, obviously, was not your typical Saturday afternoon here. It has been anything but typical in the past week: sexual abuse allegations against a former defensive coordinator, including child rape, and then an alleged cover-up by the highest of university officials. And it was evident well before kickoff -- a kickoff notable because for the first time since since Nov. 19, 1949, Joe Paterno was not standing on the Penn State sideline.

A couple of hours before kickoff, a Penn State fan held up a sign as high as his arms would reach. This wasn't like most signs outside Beaver Stadium trying to buy or sell tickets: this sign had a much different message.

"The World Is A Dangerous Place Not Because Of Those Who Do Evil But Because Of Those Who Look On And Do Nothing." -- Albert Einstein

Nearby a woman, who was standing a few yards from a hill where nearly two dozen police officers on horseback were perched, passed out bookmarks, advocating for the prevention of child abuse. "May No Act Of Ours Bring Shame."

On another side of the stadium members of the Westboro Baptist Church protested the game being played and held up signs that read "God Hates You."

And then there was a bomb threat called in on Saturday morning that turned out to be a hoax.

The scene inside Beaver Stadium was just as surreal.

Ten minutes before kickoff the public address announcer asked for "a moment of silence for all those who have suffered from child abuse."

Then a few minutes later something truly special happened: both teams left their sidelines and met at midfield. Players from Nebraska and Penn State exchanged hand shakes and hugs. Then they gathered in a circle and took a knee in prayer. Never have 107,903 fans been this quiet.

The prayer -- and the silence -- lasted for at least a minute. Of everything involving Saturday’s 17-14 victory by Nebraska against Penn State, nothing came close to matching that moment.

"It was definitely cool," Nebraska freshman defensive tackle Chase Rome said. "As football players we feel for them. It was cool to show we sympathize with them. The whole situation is obviously awful. I can't imagine how they dealt with that."

Last weekend, former defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky was charged with sexually abusing eight boys over a 15-year period. Penn State's president, a vice president, the athletic director and Paterno all were fired for failing to alert the police following a 2002 incident.

After Paterno was fired by the school's Board of Trustees Wednesday night, Penn State's students rioted. They tipped over a television news van, tore down light poles and caused other vandalism.

On Friday night, however, thousands of students organized and held a candlelight vigil in front of "Old Main," the school's administration building.

Because of all those events, some folks, including Nebraska coach Bo Pelini, didn't feel like the Saturday's game should be played. But it was. And those in attendance witnessed history. In 1950, Paterno became a Penn State assistant until 1965 before becoming the Nittany Lions’ head coach in 1966.

Since Paterno took over for Rip Engle in 1966, there have been 889 head coaching changes in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS). Interim coach Tom Bradley taking over for Paterno was No. 890. To honor his father, assistant Jay Paterno wore one his father's white jackets. He also wrote a letter to his parents, that he hand delivered about 8 a.m. -- fours before kickoff.

Jay Paterno said the letter expressed: "Just how proud of them I am, and, Dad, I wish you were here."

"I think today it just made the healing process start to begin," Bradley said.

Added Penn State senior linebacker Nate Stubar: "It was a tough game. There were a lot of emotions going on."

None as much as the pregame prayer.

"It was deeply moving," Nebraska assistant Ron Brown said. "Imagine 106,000 people coming to a dead silence in respect and awe."

Brown said he received a call Friday from a member of Penn State's Athletes in Action ministry group. Both coaching staffs discussed the pregame prayer on Friday and Bradley and Pelini approved it later that night.

"We felt like we needed to make a statement to America amidst all the craziness, God is in control," Brown said. "There were some tragic things that are being uncovered and revealed. It just brings to mind where we're at in our country: all the things that are happening. Young lives that are deeply influenced [by] good, bad and ugly."

Hopefully this situation doesn't get any uglier.

"The message was: we were asking God to heal this place, asking the Lord that he would reveal himself through these young men," said Brown, who led the pregame prayer. "Right now there's a lot of questions, lot of embarrassments and a lot of issues for a lot of people.

"This [situation] will lead to all kinds of people coming forward with issues regarding child abuse, things we haven't even heard yet. It does need to be uncovered. It's a sad dilemma, a terrible epidemic. But God is a healer."

While Saturday was the first day in a long, long healing process for everyone with any ties to Penn State, it was also another day in trying to heal for those victims and their families.

No one should ever forget that.


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Penn State falls short without JoePa

Penn State falls short without JoePa

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CBSSports.com wire reports
Nov. 12, 2011

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- If they didn't know better, fans in Happy Valley would have thought they were watching Joe Paterno's team.

No. 12 Penn State played tough defense and basic offense. The Nittany Lions fought back when they were down, trying to rally from a 17-point deficit against No. 19 Nebraska on Saturday.

But on a day when the outcome was secondary, Penn State began the journey forward from a devastating scandal and the firing of Paterno with a draining loss, 17-14 to the Cornhuskers.

The game closed a tumultuous week that began with the arrest of former defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky on shocking child sexual-abuse charges. Major college football's winningest coach was pushed out in the aftermath.

"I was awful proud," said interim coach Tom Bradley, who took over for the 84-year-old Paterno. "They got down 17-0. They didn't quit. They hung tough."

No one would have blamed the Nittany Lions (8-2, 5-1 Big Ten) if they decided to pack it in. But they didn't.

Time expired after a fourth-down pass by Matt McGloin fell harmlessly to the ground. McGloin and his teammates soon turned toward the tunnel to file back to the locker room. Most were silent. Some had blank stares.

Afterward, linebacker Nate Stupar was heartened the team ended up following Paterno's advice.

"[Bradley] kept saying, 'Beat Nebraska. Do what JoePa said,'" said Stupar, who had a team-high 13 tackles. "Be a team and you'll be teammates for life and just keep that goal in mind. No matter what, stick together. That's what we did today."

Rex Burkhead ran for 121 yards and a touchdown for Nebraska (8-2, 4-2) before the Nittany Lions scored 14 points on two second-half touchdown runs by Stephfon Green. But a key drive ended when Silas Redd was stopped on the fourth down with 1:49 left at the Penn State 38.

School president Rod Erickson met the Nittany Lions in the locker room afterward and praised, "how much courage, how much heart, and how much character" the players had, he said.

Most Penn State fans heeded calls for a "blue-out," wearing the school's familiar dark blue in support of victims of child sexual abuse. Fans formed the outline of a blue ribbon in the student section.

"We are ... Penn State," roared the crowd through the afternoon, the signature State College cheer.

But this school's identity has forever changed.

"I think today it just made the healing process start to begin," Bradley said.

Sandusky, architect of the "Linebacker U" defenses, was charged last weekend with sexually abusing eight boys over 15 years. The athletic director and a university vice president were charged with perjury and failure to report a 2002 allegation to police, and Paterno was fired following mounting fury he did not do more about the charge -- that Sandusky assaulted a boy in the Penn State football showers -- than pass it along to his bosses. President Graham Spanier also was ousted for similar reasons.

The last time Penn State played a game at Beaver Stadium, on Oct. 29, Paterno was feted by Spanier for his 409th career victory, the most in Division I history.

On Saturday, he was nowhere to be found -- save for a few fleeting images on the video boards overhead. That was enough to get spontaneous cheers of "Joe Paterno!" ringing through the stands.

"In my opinion and a lot of others' opinion he's still going to be the best football coach who ever coached in college," receiver Derek Moye said. "It was an honor for me to play for him."

Paterno started as an assistant in 1950, then took over as head coach in 1966. It was Penn State's first game without Paterno on staff since Nov. 19, 1949, a 19-0 loss at Pittsburgh.

But in many respects, it was like any other fall Saturday in Happy Valley. Massive 6-foot-5 defensive tackle Devon Still hit ball carriers with typical ferocity and the Nittany Lions played another close, low-scoring game -- as they have all year.

Penn State's first play from scrimmage was a fullback run up the middle -- a Paterno favorite.

But the Nittany Lions' conservative offense struggled again. In the late-game sequence that ended with Redd getting smothered on fourth down, Penn State called four straight running plays.

Meanwhile, someone named "Paterno" wore a path on the sideline wearing jet black Nike sneakers.

Just not that Paterno.

Paterno's son, quarterback coach Jay Paterno, moved down from his usual spot in the press box to relay plays from the sideline -- a job once held by assistant coach Mike McQueary.

Where was Joe? It's uncertain, though he pulled into the garage at his home a couple of hours after the final gun.

"He wanted to make sure that the guys he coached and the guys he felt very close to would understand that he was part of us," Jay Paterno said. "He still wanted to be part of this and he was pulling for them and cheering for them."

McQueary was among the missing after being placed on indefinite paid leave Friday by the school. His name surfaced as a grand jury witness to the 2002 abuse charge. Sandusky, who retired in 1999 but lives in the area and had access to school facilities, maintains his innocence.

McQueary, Joe Paterno says, told him that Sandusky had behaved inappropriately, but not to the extent of the detailed testimony. Paterno then passed the information on to Curley, but the report was not given to police.

News of the scandal elicited threats to McQueary, the school said, and brought heightened security.

But there were no visible problems during the game.

"I'll be honest with you, going into this football game, I didn't think the game should have been played -- for a lot of different reasons," Nebraska coach Bo Pelini said. "I look at my job as a football coach is to educate, and to prepare the kids that come into the program for life."

By the second half, most Penn State fans seemed most concerned about whether the Nittany Lions could get back into the game.

The Corhuskers had surged early, with Burkhead gashing Penn State's staunch D on 25 carries. He motored 14 yards into the end zone with 8:51 left in the third quarter for a 17-0 lead.

Then came the second-half push from Green on Senior Day - his last game at Beaver Stadium.

The senior scored from 5 yards out with 5:07 in the third quarter, then added a 6-yard run at 5:42 of the fourth to get Penn State within three. Green finished with 71 yards on 17 carries.

But the offense faltered on two late drives, including the fourth-and-1 stop of Redd. Out of timeouts with 49 seconds left, the Nittany Lions got the ball back but could get no farther than their own 46 before McGloin's final incompletion as time expired.

The fans cheered anyway, and greeted the Nittany Lions with one more chorus of "We are ... Penn State."


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Ohio State players suspended for getting overpaid in summer jobs

Ohio State players suspended for getting overpaid in summer jobs

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Dan Herron was slated to return from a five-game suspension for receiving improper benefits. (Getty Images) Dan Herron was slated to return from a five-game suspension for receiving improper benefits. (Getty Images)

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Ohio State is in trouble with the NCAA again, this time because three Buckeyes players -- including two who have already been sitting out for taking cash and free tattoos -- accepted too much money for too little work in their summer jobs.

Last year's leading rusher, Daniel Herron, and the top returning receiver, DeVier Posey, along with offensive lineman Marcus Hall will not be permitted to play when the Buckeyes play at No. 14 Nebraska on Saturday.

Athletic director Gene Smith insisted at a Monday afternoon news conference that there was no "systemic" problem at Ohio State, which has admitted to having several players involved in different NCAA violations over the past 10 months.

He blamed it all on the athletes, former coach Jim Tressel and a booster who on Monday was banned from further contact with the Buckeyes.

"These failures are individual failures: failures of individual athletes, and as you know unfortunately a previous coach, and a booster," Smith said when asked if the latest violations will lead to more serious charges of lack of institutional control and failure to monitor from the NCAA. "So it's not a systemic failure of compliance. I'm optimistic and I'm confident that we will not have those charges."

Herron and Posey had five-game suspensions extended. They were expected to be reinstated to play this week but now Ohio State is hoping the NCAA might allow them back on the field for the seventh game.

Hall was suspended for the first time.

Two other players also were paid for the summer work, which included working at a car wash or picking up scrap metal. Defensive lineman Melvin Fellows is out with a medical hardship and starting linebacker Etienne Sabino has already been reinstated by the NCAA.

The booster who paid the players, a Cleveland-area businessman named Bobby DiGeronimo, was dissociated from the program after years of being a friend of Buckeyes football players and a major fan. Smith declined to answer a question about why Ohio State had not looked closer at DiGeronimo and his relationship with players.

Smith said he did not think the latest self-reported violations would cause the NCAA to come down harder on Ohio State's athletic programs. But he said he believed that it will now take longer for the committee on infractions to arrive at the penalties.

"It was anticipated that we would be able to complete these other issues to allow the committee on infractions to consider them and get us an answer in October," Smith said. "We were not able to accomplish that. So I anticipate the committee on infractions will take longer and give us an answer hopefully this fall."

The players were paid $15 an hour -- although they said they were not told how much they were going to be paid. According to Ohio State's self-report, Posey was overpaid $728, Herron and Fellows $293 apiece, Hall $233 and Sabino $60.

"They didn't register [these jobs] with the university. That was wrong, clearly. There was no safety net. Had they done that, the university could have checked to make sure everything was correct," said Larry James, attorney for Herron, Posey and other Ohio State players. "But they were truthful. They were not accused by Ohio State or the NCAA of ... lying. They were truthful, straightforward. They had no idea they were being overpaid."

Ohio State has had so many players suspended or in trouble that Smith, who spoke and answered questions for 18 minutes, has to differentiate between the tattoo-related violations -- "the broader issue" as he calls it -- and other suspensions.

The central allegations at Ohio State's hearing on Aug. 12 before the NCAA's committee on infractions dealt with players who were given improper benefits and the fallout from it -- which included 10-year coach Jim Tressel being forced to resign because he did not disclose information about violations and quarterback Terrelle Pryor leaving school a year early to jump to the NFL. Now a member of the Oakland Raiders, Pryor is currently under suspension from the league for his messy move to the NFL and his college problems.

Herron, Posey, left tackle Mike Adams and defensive end Solomon Thomas, along with Pryor and another player no longer attending Ohio State, were suspended in December for the first five games this fall.

Ohio State confirmed later Monday that Adams and Thomas have been cleared for the game in Lincoln, Neb., on Saturday.

All were found to have received cash and free or discounted tattoos from Edward Rife, the subject of a federal drug probe who later entered a guilty plea to money laundering and drug-trafficking charges unrelated to the Ohio State case and is awaiting sentencing.

Herron, Posey, Adams and Thomas were set to rejoin the team this week. The Buckeyes (3-2) are coming off a dismal 10-7 loss to Michigan State last week in their Big Ten opener.

Two players scheduled to start for the depleted Buckeyes in the season-opener against Akron -- tailback Jordan Hall (a high school teammate of Pryor's in Jeannette, Pa.), and cornerback Travis Howard, along with backup safety Corey "Pittsburgh" Brown -- were suspended shortly before the opener and sat out two games. The NCAA determined that the players had received $200 in cash for attending a charity event in February near Cleveland.

DiGeronimo helped to run that annual charity event, which Ohio State allowed players to attend in both 2007 and 2010.

Ohio State is awaiting the NCAA's report of sanctions for the Tressel/tattoo violations. The university has offered penalties including vacating the 2010 season's 12-1 record, returning bowl payments totaling almost $339,000 from last season, and accepting a two-year NCAA probation.

The NCAA could add to those sanctions, and could tack on penalties based on the subsequent investigation of players taking money at the charity event and being overpaid for their summer work.


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Numbers don't lie: Priorities are out of order at Ohio State

Numbers don't lie: Priorities are out of order at Ohio State

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Joe Bauserman (14) scrambles after his own fumble caused by Michigan State's Denicos Allen. (US Presswire) Joe Bauserman (14) scrambles after his own fumble caused by Michigan State's Denicos Allen. (US Presswire)

They booed Saturday at Ohio State because the Buckeyes lost to Michigan State. They booed the remaining innocent, eligible student-athletes who (we think) haven't taken extra benefits. They booed bad football. They booed bad football forgetting that better players were either suspended or had escaped to the NFL.

That's no way to impress Urban Meyer.

The accepted silver-and-gray lining resulting from the Buckeyes imminent NCAA-induced collapse is that the franchise will be driven so far into a ditch there will be no choice but to hire the nation's best free-agent coach.

A few things wrong with that: The penalties haven't even been handed down. It seems like there are as many boosters running wild in Columbus as NCAA investigators. Oh, yes and there's this: The flawed assumption that there would be someone around of sound mind and ethics to make the decision on Meyer.

Saturday showed us once again that the priorities are out of order in Columbus. How do we know this? The sun came up. To be fair, that makes Bucknuts no different than the fans in Norman, Eugene or Gainesville. Except that at none of those places is about to turn some free tattoos into a bonfire that burns down the football program.

The boo birds should have saved some of their invective for Monday afternoon. That's when AD Gene Smith looked the world in the eye and continued to tell them that all is well. If you consider alibis and excuses "well".

We don't understand that it's hard to oversee 1,090 athletes, he told us, with 200 new ones coming in each year. It's even harder to keep track of all those community service hours. And boosters. And summer jobs.

It turns out two of the Buckeye Five previously suspended five games for taking extra benefits -- 2010 leading rusher Dan Herron and top returning receiver DeVier Posey -- were caught taking even more extra benefits. Both allegedly were paid for work they didn't do during summer jobs. Posey also reportedly accepted a free round of golf.

This, while Ohio State is dealing with an amended notice of allegations in a still open-ended NCAA investigation.

Smith, president Gordon Gee and the compliance department keep coming to work each day. Buckeyes keep getting caught breaking NCAA rules. What's that definition of insanity again?

Smith tried to explain Monday how Herron, DeVier and three other players were paid for that work they didn't do during those summer jobs. He told us the unending problems aren't evidence of a "systemic" failing in Ohio State athletics. He explained why a guy named Bobby DeGeronimo had been disassociated from the program.

Certain people, he said, "went off the reservation."

Then Smith summed up the entire Tressel/email/Tatoogate/NCAA/suspension thing this way:

"It's not 30 players."

As in the number of players involved in wrongdoing. It's less than that.

That's comforting. What is this, Oklahoma in the 1980s or gangland Chicago in the 1930s?

It would be lazy at this point to write that Smith should lose his job. That's assumed. That finally hit home for me when I noticed who wasn't at the Monday presser. No one of substance. Certainly not Gee to crow, "I hope Gene doesn't fire me."

The money quotes have ended, along with accountability.

Smith should have been canned months ago, along with Gee and the entire compliance department. It's not personal. It's business. Sooner or later, whoever is in charge at Ohio State will realize it. The proud franchise being run off the road cannot sustain the damage.

Ain't life a ditch?

Just to sum up: Jim Tressel used ineligible players to win a Big Ten title and a Rose Bowl. Five players were suspended for the Sugar Bowl, and then allowed to play. Don't ask how or why.

Since then, Terrelle Pryor and Tressel "left" and both were suspended by the NFL before they were ever in the NFL.

There's more: That August infractions committee hearing that left more questions than answers. All along, there has been more self-rationalization than self-examination.

Those fans shamefully booed those innocent players. They booed the coach, Luke Fickell, who was doing nothing more than being loyal to his university by taking the job. The Buckeyes are 3-2 without the Buckeye Five. They may be 3-5 when they come out of a three-game stretch that next includes games at Nebraksa, at Illinois and at home against Wisconsin.

It wasn't supposed to be this bad this soon, but that's hardly the main issue. If and when Meyer wants to return to coaching, he wants to be at a place that has a chance to win. He wants to be backed by a strong athletic director and president. He wants to be able to recruit without a postseason ban.

Oops.

No matter how much Smith says his athletic department isn't, Ohio State now clearly has to be in line for failure to monitor and lack of institutional control. That means enhanced penalties. That means a dreaded bowl ban. Is has to. Everything has to be on the table since the NCAA is basically being mocked in this case.

Tattoogate has metastasized for so long that the original body ink has faded. That was the starting point. Who knows where it's going to end? When the NCAA comes to your town, it doesn't stop with the original allegations. It's a prostate exam for the entire athletic department. The whole process can make an AD want to jump off a cliff screaming, DiGeronimo!

There was big-time pressure on NCAA president Mark Emmert to begin with. He celebrates his first anniversary on the job this week needing a Hazmat unit to clean up the problems. Chief among them was perception, that the NCAA is unfair.

One player, Reggie Bush, took down USC. At Ohio State, the two-deep is being redefined as the number of players in violation of NCAA rules at any given moment. Nothing systemic to see here, though. Move along, folks. All is well.

"I know most people don't understand that," Smith said.

No, we don't. There are lots of sketchy people hanging around the program. There are lots of people doing bad jobs trying to track down bad things at Ohio State. I know, I know. That makes The university no different than a lot of places.

But that's another excuse. Take heart, though, Bucknuts. The numbers don't lie.

At least it's not 30 players.


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State Of Emergency - DEVIANCE (Full ISO 2003)

State Of Emergency - DEVIANCE (Full ISO 2003)

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Para PC Posteador: Anonimo | Fecha: 03/10/11 11:43 pm | Categoria: general | Visitas: 28

State of Emergency - DEVIANCE (Full ISO/2003)


State Of Emergency - DEVIANCE (Full ISO 2003)

State of Emergency - DEVIANCE (Full ISO/2003)

PC | 2003 | Publisher:Global Star Software | Developer:VIS Entertainment | 707.67 MB
Genre : shooter
The publishers of Grand Theft Auto III are back with another game geared towards a mature audience. But fans of GTA III should note that while State of Emergency contains adult themes and extremely violent gameplay, thats pretty much where the similarities end. Whereas GTA III was about creating a deep experience unlike any other video game, SOE is a throwback to arcade beat em ups like Smash TV and Double Dragon. However, the game takes the genre to a new level with mind blowing graphics.
In State of Emergency, you play as one of five selectable characters thats going up against the Corporation a tyrannical group that has the city in an iron grip. The city is in a state of disarray and the citizens are rebelling. Amazingly, up to 250 characters can riot onscreen at once. Its shocking that the developers were able to render so many moving characters while keeping a smooth frame rate. Basic gameplay consists of picking up numerous weapons and objects to cause as much damage as humanly possible. Providing context to the mindless violence are the revolution and chaos modes. The former is the games story mode and features more than 175 missions, while the latter is a single session mode with a few variations. For the most part, the game is an enjoyable cacophony of senseless violence, but there are some flaws. Although the revolution mode boasts an impressive number of missions, they do get repetitive. The game screams for a multiplayer mode, but its strictly one player. In spite of these flaws, the game remains addictive and fun. It bears repeating that gamers looking for another GTA III will not find it here: this game provides an arcadelike experience thats excellent, but in a very different way. Parents should note that this game carries a Mature rating for its blood, violence, and gore. Raymond M. Padilla Pros: Amazing number of characters onscreen simultaneously Simple beat em up gameplay A vast arsenal with which to inflict damage Cons: Missions get repetitive No multiplayer mode Bland soundtrack

Features
An underground rebel movement has formed against this oppression, and youve become a part of it cause chaos and destruction while sticking it to the Corporation
Play as one of five different rebel, each with unique strangths & weaknesses, and go out on deadly missions of subversion
Over 15 weapons to choose from, everything from a Molotov cocktail to a grenade launcher use them to attack gang members, smash store windows, and kill Corporation guards
Fight over 250 people at once in multiplayer mayhem youll witness fighting in the streets like never before!

Minimum System Requirements
System: PIII 600MHz or equivalent
RAM: 64 MB
Video Memory: 16 MB
Hard Drive Space: 500 MB

Recommended System Requirements
System: P4 or equivalent
RAM: 256 MB
Video Memory: 32 MB
Hard Drive Space 1550 MB
Other: Gamepad
State Of Emergency - DEVIANCE (Full ISO 2003)
State Of Emergency - DEVIANCE (Full ISO 2003)
State Of Emergency - DEVIANCE (Full ISO 2003)

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Ohio State vacates sugar bowl season 2010; Tressel goes into retirement

Ohio State vacates sugar bowl season 2010; Tressel goes into retirement

COLUMBUS, Ohio-Ohio State 2010 big ten Championship, 12-1 season, his victories over rival Michigan and in the sugar bowl-all the way. Coach Jim Tressel, and so is Star quarterback Terrelle Pryor.

Left behind: two years even imposed probation.

The question is, will be whether enough to Ohio State Football from more severe penalties in an upcoming trip to the NCAA Committee penalties for it, see Save.

In response to NCAA violations committed by football players, autographs and souvenirs for cash and Tätowierungen--traded and a coach, the steel - covered Ohio State of its official response issued on Friday. Athletic Director Gene Smith hoped it would appease the NCAA ethics police.

The measures of the school include clearing the Buckeyes WINS from last season, a year in the Ohio State titles and Michigan captured an unprecedented seventh straight game a record-tying of sixth straight big ten won.

"I know that this is important," said Smith. "It can display not externally so many people, but this is significant." If you think about all the other athletes who have participated in these games, these records are gone. ...

"The NCAA do, could?" "I can not only to speculate."

Tressel found out in April 2010, that his players improper benefits from a local tattoo salon owner. In spite of contractual and NCAA explaining duties, not someone at the University or the NCAA for more than nine months, report. And what was only a five-game suspension for five players suddenly bloomed in a-Dur injury, not eligible for the whole season 2010 contain player knowingly play the a coach.

"Coach Tressel accepted, that after he received the information, he knew the players could not sell have the memorabilia or preferential treatment," lawyer in response to the allegations be Tressel said by. "He mind also, that required him to the compliance office about possible infringements to notify of the higher education policy." "He explained his thinking at the time, but offers no apologies here for his decisions."

In a reversal, Ohio said State-which said that it asked hatte-resignation for the Tressel on 30 may - Friday, that now agreed an entry into retirement had can call it there. The school also said that he don't pay raised $250,000 fine for his actions against him. On top of that, Tressel received last month from his basic salary ($54,000), decided, if Ohio State before the NCAA offenses on the 12 August, and he and the University agreed that they will sue each other would not work together.

Only last month, Ohio State vowed President E. Gordon Gee, that Tressel "the fine will numbers."

Tressel's lawyer, Gene Marsh, confirms that the associated press earlier Friday that the former coach, who led the Buckeyes to the national title in 2002, would be on the page at Indianapolis, when Ohio State his day with the NCAA.

Smith said there was no proof that someone at the Ohio State except Tressel had any knowledge of the players injuries prior to January of this year.

Terrelle Pryor's victory in the Sugar Bowl has been erased from the record books. (AP) Terrelle Pryor victory in the sugar bowl has deleted were from the record books. (AP) The answer to the NCAA does not mean that Ohio State suffering of are. The governing body for college sports could be even tougher sanctions, such as impose a ban on postseason game and a decline in the scholarships. The NCAA is expected to pass its sanctions six to eight weeks after the August.

Although many Buckeyes fans of school blame compliance Department of the human rights abuses, Smith said that it had done its work. He promised, adaptations, such as athletes, monitored and trained but said that he was upset not to his employees with compliance Director Doug Archie or anyone else.

He said compliance would use "a lot of different strategies" to do a better job.

In arriving at self imposed penalties, said faculty athletic Representative John Bruno, Ohio State respondents other cases.

"We have precedents across the nation for similar types of injuries and have sanctions imposed either by [NCAA] or even imposed," he said. "They seem right be."

The scandal unfolded in two phases. First of all, OSU officials was the said trade with memorabilia and sales in December and five players for the first five games of 2011, and a player for the opener.

She had frequented a tattoo salon and sold autographs signed equipment, championship rings, and even a bowl of sportsmanship award-all contrary to the NCAA bylaws that prevent that benefit athletes from their name or fame.

Then in January, the University learned that Tressel was known about the human rights violations since April 2010. After him for weeks, the University urging him to resign on Memorial Day.

Smith said a constant drums of revelations and claims all as forced Ohio State "separate from Tressel". He said that he was stunned when he learned of the Tressel of deception.

"At the moment, Yes, I felt betrayed." "Why not bring that me?" Smith said. "But I have gone on."

Officials said Friday they believed that she had uncovered all possible infringements of football players.

"You never know, but we have done many of due diligence," said John Bruno, Faculty Athletics representatives. "We saw us weeks to months to find something else, and nothing has come up."

Pryor was one of the original group of players, who was suspended for the first five games of this year. But he left OSU tried his luck in the NFL soon after Tressel finish. The NCAA added a five game suspension for a further player earlier this week.

Almost the current Buckeyes seem more severe penalties are expected.

"We are only promised, 12 games," security Orhian Johnson said this week.

Caretaker manager Luke Fickell said his players in the summer air conditioning, have accepted many of the changes that he has implemented in the program, but no one knows how they will react when the sanctions are complete.

"I think they are buying, but you don't know," he said. "Happen to other adversities and other situations, you will see what happens."


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Tattoo salon owner scandal tied commits to Ohio State guilty

Tattoo salon owner scandal tied commits to Ohio State guilty

COLUMBUS, Ohio-tattoo salon owner Edward rife had to sell a lucrative side business hundreds of pounds of marijuana in Columbus, a second job, which federal prosecutors say let him pay to a luxury SUV $21,500.

But the rife confession to drug trafficking and money laundering charges Tuesday drugs could have unnoticed Federal Republic had investigators on an other rife that sideline stumbled: purchase of Ohio State memorabilia of football players or you discounts on tattoos for the elements.

This discovery triggered an NCAA investigation into the school led to coach Jim Tressel forced resignation, the departure of Star quarterback Terrelle Pryor and the suspension of four players for the first five games of next season and a game for a fifth player.

The University is precipitation, rings, which could include a variety of NCAA sanctions still with the scandal.

"Guilty, your honour" rife said US District Court judge Gregory Frost the question of how he wanted a count, money laundering, and an unprovoked conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute more than 200 pounds of marijuana advocate.

Afterwards, lawyer Stephen Palmer tried to distance its customers from the scandal.

"He was unfortunately a cog in the wheel," Palmer said after the hearing. "He had no intention of harm everyone in the program."

Clark, 31, could be a prison sentence of 20 years for money laundering and up to 40 years for drug trafficking face but probably much less under federal sentencing rules would get. Frost has set no sentencing date and prosecutors say, rife cooperation could determine drug trafficking the length of the sentence in an ongoing investigation.

Widespread, owner of fine line ink tattoos and body piercings on the West side of Columbus, was allowed until his conviction remain free.

Assistant for the U.S. Attorney Kevin Kelley said that the Government, not with the NCAA-or Ohio State research to support. He also said there was no evidence of Ohio State player marijuana operation involved.

In December Pryor and four other players of the Ohio, State were found to have received to cash and tattoos of rife in exchange for Buckeye signed memorabilia and championship rings discounted. By the NCAA, all were allowed to play in the Buckeyes 31-26, start victory over Arkansas in the sugar bowl with their five-game suspensions with the first game of the season of 2011. Another player, Jordan whiting, was suspended for a game.

After returning the team of New Orleans, investigators found that Tressel had learned involvement with rife in April 2010 on the players.

Clark had hired walk-on football player, Christopher met Cicero, a local lawyer and Ohio State this month but never Cicero to discuss his case. Cicero in detail the improper benefits from Tressel-e-mails sent, and the two trade ended a dozen emails on the subject.

Tressel had signed an NCAA compliance form in September said he had no knowledge of any wrongdoing by athletes. His contract, in addition to the NCAA rules specified that he had to tell his superiors or compliance department about any possible NCAA violations of the rules.

May 30 resigned Tressel, the National Championship and seven big ten titles at the Ohio State won. Pryor has also announced that he is leaving Ohio State.

Rife must also lose $50,000 in drug proceeds, but if he doesn't, that successfully he will keep the memorabilia found at his suburban Columbus home. The big ten championship rings include gold pants, trailers, autographed items and parts of soccer uniforms.

"Investigators determine was whether the seized Ohio State sports memorabilia of the rife with narcotics proceeds specifically acquired had," Robert Bogner, special said in court Tuesday agent in the internal revenue service criminal investigations unit from.

The drug trade during the investigation of a major marijuana and cocaine operation in Central Ohio experienced investigators said Bogner rife.


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Ten big boss Delany, Ohio State have contradictory timelines

Ten big boss Delany, Ohio State have contradictory timelines

Ohio State and big ten of Commissioner Jim Delany versions as and large violations were discovered earlier this year differ significantly, ESPN.com has discovered.

That could possibly to more NCAA control in an already result in deepening scandal at the school. Experts say that the NCAA Committee could cause penalties, the discrepancy, whether mistaken led investigators in the case, the E-mail to former coach Jim Tressel involved.

In comments to the Columbus Dispatch on Sunday, Delany said he learned that the now former coach charged e-Mails from the school and the NCAA in mid-January. The Kommissar--"surprised and disappointed" - that he learned the information at the same time as the school and the NCAA due to an open request is added.

Big Ten commissioner Jim Delany is a former NCAA investigator. (Getty Images) Big ten Commissioner Jim Delany is a former NCAA investigator. (Getty Images) When reached for comment, Delany confirms what he said shipping on ESPN.com on Wednesday by a big ten spokesman. Again, the question to clarify on Thursday and give a detailed chronology of the events, Delany said that his remarks on the paper is a "un refreshed memory."

The University of the NCAA self-reported says the school discovered the email "in the review information to an independent legal problem." Subsequent reports each akutalisiert dispatch following their release of self-reported say school, sanctions in relation to student athletes that the e-Mails were discovered during civil servants prepared the appeal of the players reinstatement case.

CBSSports.com obtained led all freedom of Information Act requests at the University. The earliest request came in documents released by a spokesman for school in 2011 by Bloomberg News requested a copy of the school of NCAA revenue and expenditure report on Jan. 20, all 11 days after the school reported that she the e-Mails became aware. Yahoo! Sports that submitted the message that Tressel knowledge of the NCAA had injuries with Buckeyes player, his first open records request to the school on February 28.

In his remarks Delany set Sunday, also, that he and the NCAA have been notified immediately, as soon as the mails found.

"" In the case of [Ohio State President] Gordon [Gee] and [Director] genes [Smith], let us put it this way: if they had information about the tattoo situation, it went to the NCAA, "Delany said the paper."If they had information about Jim, it went to the NCAA. "And pretty much in real time, I knew it."

But according to the school self-report and subsequent comments from Smith, Ohio State found the e-Mails on Jan. 13, interviewed Tressel three days later and then Delany on Feb. 2 and the NCAA informed a day later.

"As we back from the bowl game, we were discovered, by another process, which we collect the, that there are some details of one other thing was e-Mails that Coach Tressel had revealed that he had some knowledge of the matter with our athletes from students, had received", Smith told a press conference on 8 March. "We informed Commissioner Jim Delany and the next day, we notified the NCAA our matter."

"We asked them on 3 February to come and visit us in the investigation that was launched."

Michael L. Buckner, a lawyer, specialized cases in NCAA and has represented several schools in the enforcement, says that the discrepancy in the discovery of the e-Mails could have consequences for the school if it appears to the Committee on infractions in August.

"The NCAA will want in any case, find out how the institution out found on the allegations," he said. "Could an error of allegation monitor may it." If she about it because someone in an open records request sent found means then [Ohio State] out of offences by someone other external institution of this process cause the. "If found the vehicle about you through their own way out, which could then show, that set up what you do to find out, had allegations."

Buckner added that Delany or members of the school to face probably only serious consequences would if there was to deceive an intention NCAA investigators, as they discovered the violations of human rights.

"It could have been just a misunderstanding." Or it would have a different interpretation of the facts, "said Bucker." "Their aim will be as thorough as it can with its investigation of this claim."

Ohio State spokesman Jim Lynch, the question of discovered such as the school the E-mail, said that the University discovered the mails during an independent legal matter.

Two compliance experts, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the NCAA could review the notice of the charges they sent the school on April 21. A source said ESPN.com is adding an error of free monitor a way.

In April 2010 Tressel, memorabilia at a suspected drug dealer was informed participation in handling email of Star quarterback Terrelle Pryor and several other Buckeyes. As in this case resolved in the coming months, has been known that Tressel, could turn over the information to the compliance office and signed a statement saying: he had no knowledge of the events.

"Between the period from April 2, 2009, and January 15, 2010, football coach Jim Tressel violated the provisions of the NCAA bylaw 10.1 he not institutional officials of the information he received from April 2010 to notify, concerning possible violations of NCAA preferential treatment legislation with student athletes on the football team," said Ohio State self-report.

Delany, a former NCAA investigator himself, criticized for his role in lobbying for the not eligible Ohio State players in the sugar bowl despite NCAA commit injury to play. As the investigation in Ohio State extended and known Tressel's role in information, he later regrets his role in the matter.


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Guardian says that Pryor to will remain Ohio State for senior year

Guardian says that Pryor to will remain Ohio State for senior year

JEANNETTE, PA - Terrelle Pryor chose program in the country Ohio State once about every other major college football.

His godfather believes that Pryor will again attract the school.

Willie Burns, who lived guardian Pryor with while he was in the school, said Friday that he is confident the embattled quarterback return for his senior season-as short as it could be - and not the NFL supplemental draft request.

"I think, will be he in school," Burns said. "He loves football." Only time will tell. He could change his mind in a minute.

"But he when he leaves, someone under pressure from his Butt--bad."

Pryor's legal guardian says the embattled QB will stay at OSU but 'he could change his mind in a minute.' (Getty Images) Pryor's guardian says the competitive QB will remain at OSU but 'he could change their mind in a minute.' (Getty Images) Pryor with the Buckeyes trüb this week after coach Jim Tressel resigned in the midst of a widening NCAA investigation into possible violations of the school of the future. Already stopped Pryor was for the first five games next season for the sale of souvenirs for cash and tattoos, and face the star quarterback could be additional sanctions pending the outcome of an NCAA probe in his use of vehicles.

Burns, said he spoke to Pryor two days ago. And while they discuss not details of Pryor's football future, burns believes his godson wants to play for the Buckeyes in this fall.

"I asked him how he did and how he is mitkommend,", said the 63 year-old Burns, recently in the hospital after a small stroke. "He says, he only tried all this out of his head and his business." I like not to call the sport for him. He has enough people it questions. "If he wants to talk about, then I am his open-hearted."

How closely related in the soft hills of Western Pennsylvania has many residents of the city Burns of Pryor's appearance as a villain and the most responsible for Tressel's impressive setting, after a 10-year, trophy gefüllte run at the Ohio State were harassed.

Pryor has is not without bugs, and its share of errors. However, Burns, don't think, should focus the blame on Pryor.

"I hate Tressel go see." He is a good man and a good coach, "said Burns, the also a godfather for Ohio State running back Jordan Hall, a Pryor's high school teammates." "The way I heard it on this for a while at this guy tattoo go with Ohio State."

"It's only bad that Terrelle there went and committed." I know that he likes tattoos and all of this. I don't know what all. "We have spoken No."

Pryor has not publicly spoken since leading Ohio State to a 31-26 victory in the sugar bowl over Arkansas. The NCAA approved Pryor, offensive lineman Mike Adams, running back Daniel Herron, wide receiver of four Posey and defensive lineman Solomon Thomas play in the game despite finding that she had sold rings, trophies and apparel 2009. OSU's first five games, all five have to sit next season.

Pryor's Schweigen-- and Ohio State Skandal--have prompted rampant speculation, are his days behind Center for the Buckeyes. He promised Tressel he come back and play as a senior, but now that the coach sweater claims no longer around, it's hard to predict, what he would do next.

Situation complicates the NFL labor only questions.

Should be Pryor in the school, he could end a stellar career (he is 31-4 as a starter), its spotted image in the public to repair and may improve his chances, one of the top picks in the next year draft. When he falsely supplemental draft for the League - provided there is eine--he would promise to break to Tressel and enter per game, many that he still not prepared believe, play.

The 21-year-old know how he does it, is guessing, Pryor's high school coach that Ohio State no. 2 for another year.

"He's an incredible competitor and a great leader," said Ray Reitz, who highly 2007 won a State title in Jeannette with Pryor. "He wanted to have people show what he can do, and I think that he has decided, that see through." It is an unfortunate thing, what is gone. He is a good boy. He has a good heart has. He is not a vicious child. Half of the things people are saying is not true.

"He has made some mistakes." Who has not? "But to ruin it link to the Ohio State program is completely out of touch."

Sitting on his porch, burns Pryor's glory days when Jeannette - the incredible achievements, the recruiting circus, reminded the State title. He has heard the critics who believe Pryor stayed closer to home and gone, should have to Penn State.

But Burns has taken certain Pryor the right decision, and hopes that his godson makes another.

"Hopefully, he will hold it at Ohio State," he said. "So how the NFL is now, I am glad that he will remain there, because you don't know what the hell they're going to do." When he was looking at universities, he had so many of them, I told you it, making whatever I back will you 100 percent.

"I still think that he made the right choice."


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Ohio State refuses to give info on Pryor, mentor

Ohio State refuses to give info on Pryor, mentor

COLUMBUS, Ohio-Ohio State has data protection laws in the decline of cited hometown to the communication to and from coach Jim Tressel and other administrators about the relationship between star quarterback Terrelle Pryor and his mentor.

The associated press for on a public register query any e-Mails, notes, or other information about the relationship between Jeannette, PA, businessman Ted Sarniak and Pryor, which for the first five games this fall for the improper benefits from a Columbus tattoo salon owner suspended has been.

Ohio State is not releasing info regarding Terrelle Pryor's relationship with Ted Sarniak. (US Presswire) Ohio State is not releasing information about Terrelle Pryor relationship with Ted Sarniak. (US Presswire) In an e-Mail Friday Ohio State declined Office of Legal Affairs on the records release, because it said doing so would mean information without consent of the student.

"The University is prohibited from this information that can be linked to an individual reasonably," said the Office in the statement.

Data Protection Act protects records federal funding certain of studying at schools get. It includes usually personal information such as race, religion, notes, courses, who, presence, disciplinary and health records.

Ohio State requested other public records release by the AP. Among them, the reviews were Director of NCAA compliance, Doug Archie the Athletic Director Gene Smith and the school.

The AP requested Tressel of the evaluations of the past two years, but Ohio State spokesman Jim Lynch said those face to face between Tressel and Smith finished are and there is no written record.

Tressel will be investigated by the NCAA and Ohio State to know that his NCAA players had broken rules by accepting improper benefits. The 10-year coach of the Buckeyes learned in April 2010, that some players had sold memorabilia to the tattoo salon owner. His superiors he did not say what he knew instead forward an e-Mail with this information at Sarniak.

Even if forced, his superiors, saying the NCAA or its school compliance department about any knowledge of injuries, by January 2011 by the researchers faced not give up this information Tressel.

Archie was for the keep of the Ohio State athletic program "Out of prison," two years ago according to its evaluation praised.

Archie have very high marks on reviews, even though his Department at a press conference December held responsible was not fully to inform athletes about the dangers of selling autographed article or memorabilia. At this press conference Ohio State showed that Pryor and four other players for the five games for sale or trade Championship were suspended rings, uniforms and other memorabilia for cash and tattoos big ten.

"For this particular Bylaw, we were not as explicit as we would have to be," Smith said at the time. "Not as good a job we as we should have done." "In this context we must do better."

In his review 2009, senior associate AD Miechelle the highest Willis him gab-- "exceeds expectations" - see "relay important information to others timely," according to the records of the grade.

Archie was praised, in particular for his job and problem-solving.

"An area of strength for Doug," wrote Willis, according to the records. "Has much experience in this area, to know and understand what it takes to keep our program out of jail."

Thinking about these words on Friday, said Lynch, "How is plenty clear, the context and the use of quotation marks in this report show staff, that the comment was a colloquial way of describing of Doug Archie's performance." "It is the fact that Doug has built an excellent compliance program, and he continues to work hard - and effectively be - comes, the Athletics program with University, big ten and NCAA corresponds to rules and regulations."

Smith was also glowing reviews after his annual meeting with Ohio State President E. Gordon Gee.

In his recent review in the August 2010 Gee Smith, said "an excellent job takes you to the Department of athletics and achieve national prominence doing." Gee wrote also, that he called Smith "a role model for heads of State and Government."

In related news on Friday, Edward Clark, the Columbus-tattoo salon owner, was in federal court charged drug trafficking and money laundering with.


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