PENN STATE SCANDAL AFTERMATH ; Nittany Lions Vow to Stick TogetherThe Penn State football players looked on stoically as two oftheir teammates announced to the...Cohen, Rachel
The latest Penn State Nittany Lion football and recruiting news. Also featuring PSU basketball, hockey, volleyball, wrestling, and Big Ten sports.
The latest Penn State Nittany Lion football and recruiting news. Also featuring PSU basketball, hockey, volleyball, wrestling, and Big Ten sports.
He should have insisted that his former longtime assistant stay away from the football facility. But he didn't and because of it, the Paterno football reign appears to be ending. 19. The Penn State scandal -- Part II Joe must go? Joe Paterno is going, according to a...
This study explored the social network that developed amongst sports journalists as the Penn State football scandal evolved. The results suggest that Twitt... ME Hambrick,J Sanderson - 《Journal of Sports Media》 被引量: 8发表: 2013年 Being Penn State: The Role of Joe Paterno's Prototypicality...
Dan Jenkins, the award-winning author, sports writer and historian for the National Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame, said the nature of the Penn State scandal won't necessarily do long-term damage to college sports as a whole because it doesn't call into question the legitimacy ...
No. 12 Southern Methodist will face No. 5 Penn State in the opening round of the College Football Playoff after edging Alabama in the final rankings.
Heroes and Villains: A Cultural Analysis of the 2011 Penn State Football Child Abuse Scandal 来自 digitalcommons.bucknell.edu 喜欢 0 阅读量: 33 作者: J Kyle 摘要: In the wake of the sexual abuse of young boys being revealed to the public in November 2011, the Penn State community was ...
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP)— Penn State's costs related to the Jerry Sandusky scandal are approaching a quarter-billion dollars and growing, five years after the former assistant football coach's arrest on child molestation charges. The scandal's overall cost to the school has reached at least $23...
The NCAA's sanctions following the worst scandal in the history of college football stopped short of delivering the "death penalty" -- shutting down the sport completely. It actually did everything but kill it. "The sanctions needed to reflect our goals of providing cultural change," NCAA ...