Reality really sucks, doesn't it?
Guess hiding your head in the sand is much more preferable than admitting the truth that a college football coach gained, over time, so much power that he dictated much of how the university he worked for ran. And that power lead to a football-first focus from the uni. and the administration, much to the detriment of a bunch of children.
Deny all you want, but the Freeh Report, an investigation that Penn State commissioned (few seem to remember that little point), is not just a bunch of opinions from bureaucrats. The email trail, that rather pesky evidence they found, clearly demonstrates that the football program seemed to carry more influence than it should have, esp. from JoePa. It may be difficult to accept, but the facts are there.
JoePa lied about knowing about the sexual predator in his Grand Jury testimony. That in itself should be horrifying, but then to find out JoePa knew about Sandusky's "problem" for a long time and just hid it to keep the football program "clean" appearing is appalling.
But believe what you will. There will always be the tin foil hat wearers out there....just remember, Reynolds Wrap is much better for that use than WalMart tin foil. More durable and thicker---works better at deflecting those pesky facts and truth.
BTW.....as for this assertion:
Sorry, Penn State doesn't have the #1 grad. rate, not even in their own conference----Northwestern has that. Don't forget Notre Dame has a higher football player grad. rate than Penn State ( and always has). Also, remember Stanford, Vanderbilt, Duke, Rice, BC (among others) all consistently out-graduate Penn State.
In fact, in 2011, Penn State dropped out of the top ten BCS schools with the highest grad. rates for football players.
True, it's great Penn State consistently graduated most of its players, but it's not #1, and isn't #1......or #10.
Sources:
NCAA rankings for the years 2000-2003--
http://www.usatoday.com/sports/college/2010-10-27-ncaa-graduation-rates-study_N.htm
Rankings for 2011 season---
http://stanford.scout.com/2/1066657.html