the university faces 30 other lawsuits. 69-year-old sandusky was convicted last year. a 9-year-old girl from utah has died following a freak trampoline accident. she was playing with friends on the trampoline. she sat down to put on her shoes when a sudden gust of wind carried the trampoline 50 yards. that little girl was air lifted to the hospital. the 24-year-old marine finished five years of service and realized his dream when he made the middle tennessee state football team as a walk on freshman. he was declared ineligible because he played in recreational games in the marines. now the ncaa says he is reviewing the case and the final decision will be made.
12 cents to $4.61 a gallon that is the highest in the country. a vatican tribunal convicted the pope s former butler and sentenced him to 18 months in jail. he was found guilty of stealing pope benedict s private papers and leaking them to a reporter. and some of the jurors who convicted jerry sandusky said they plan to attend his sentencing on tuesday. and they tell the associated press they hope he ll be sent away for the rest of his life. the 68-year-old sandusky was convicted of child sexual abuse. for both presidential candidates, they are the most sought after votes. those would be the ballots of the undecided. a large group of that up in the air voting block sat down in colorado to watch the debate a few miles from the university of denver where it took place. nbc s ron allen sat down with them, and got their reaction in this report. reporter: who do you think won? when wednesday night s debate was over, a registered independent who voted for
just extradited from great britain. the cleric is accused of setting up a terrorist training camp in oregon and kidnapping two american tourists in yemen in 1998. al masri did not enter a plea. a vatican tribunal convicted pope s former butler and sentenced him to 18 months in jail. he was found guilty of stealing pope benedict s private papers and leaking them to a reporter. the cdc says the outbreak of meningitis rises to seven now. more than 50 people have been infected. and some of the jurors who convicted jerry sandusky say they plan to attend his sentencing on tuesday. they tell the associated press they hope that he ll be sent away for the rest of his life. the 68-year-old sandusky was convicted of child sexual abuse. sticker shock might be an understatement for californians trying to fill up their tanks today. today the price of regular gas in the golden state equaled an
the 12 who will hear the trial includes a penn state senior, a retired professor, and a woman who s been a football season ticketholder since 1970. as the prosecutor you want the jurors to strictly focus on the actions of jerry sandusky, not the actions of penn state. and the prosecutors as well as the judge and the defense attorney should be asking the jurors whether they will be able to separate the case. reporter: the 68-year-old sandusky has denied the allegations he molested ten victims over 15 years. attorney ben andreazzi represents the first of the alleged victims to testify, known as victim number 4 now 28 years old, he will bring with him a pile of evidence. expensive gifts prosecutors say he received from sandusky as a teenager. and perhaps the strongest physical evidence prose love letters to the boys allegedly written in sandusky s own hand. it may actually be the only thing in his life that ll be more difficult for him to handle other than the abuse which he suffere
administration officials supposedly stood chest to chest like a schoolyard fight. a new book tells of tensions in a white caught up in a war against terrorism. i m wolf blitzer, you re in the situation room. early hours away from a critical vote in wisconsin, an extraordinary i attempt to develop scott walker. the recall was stripping most public unions of collective bargaining rights. this war for wisconsin pits unions against tea party loyalists and it s attracted millions of and millions of dollars in outside money. it s also seen as a dress rehearsal for the presidential vote. let s go to the scene. madison s ted rollins is at the scene. reporter: you can a lot of an tigs pace when the vote takes place. voters have been inundated months, 16 months of eeds and money being spent in their states and the core of this is about unions. we talked to two teachers who are on opposite sides of this vicious battle. michelle and john are teachers in madison. craig is a teac