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Graham Spanier lost his job in the wake of the scandal over former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky. Spanier says he never knew Sandusky was molesting young boys.
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Dismissed because of evidence that he didn't do enough to alert authorities to a former assistant's abuse of young boys, Paterno knew he'd been ruined. "My name," he said, was "gone." Journalist Joe Posnanski's book goes on sale next week.
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The commission is worried the school's integrity standards and its financial footing, following the child sex abuse scandal.
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They say their decision to close shop makes an investigation unnecessary.
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The famous statue of beloved coach Joe Paterno will stand outside Penn State University's football stadium no more.
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One alleged victim testified he screamed, but no one could hear him from the basement.
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The alleged victim said Sandusky told him if he said anything about the abuse, he would never see his family again.
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McQueary, a key witness in the case against Jerry Sandusky, testified he saw him engaged in a clear sex act with a young boy in a campus shower.
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The trial of the former Penn State assistant football coach has begun. He's accused of sexually abusing 10 young boys over 15 years, beginning in the late 1980s. Sandusky has pleaded innocent.
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NPR's Jeff Brady talks with Weekend Edition Sunday host Rachel Martin about last week's jury selection process and what to expect from Monday's opening arguments in the trial of Jerry Sandusky, the former Penn State football coach.