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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">APDecember 13, 2011: Jerry Sandusky, the former Penn State assistant football coach
charged with sexually abusing boys, leaves the Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte,
Pa.STATE COLLEGE, Pa Accused child molester Jerry Sandusky and his wife,
Dottie, are looking to sit down with Oprah, "60 Minutes," Barbara Walters
or the new "Rock Center" with Brian Williams, according to his lawyer.The
former Penn State defensive coordinator's attorney, Joe Amendola, has said that the
couple is contemplating doing a joint TV interview early next year, the
Harrisburg Patriot-News reported Tuesday.Earlier this month, Amendola reportedly invited several reporters to
his house for a football-watching party.An NBC News reporter, who was covering
the Sandusky sex abuse scandal, was arrested on a charge of drunk
driving early the next morning.To date, Sandusky has twice spoken briefly to
reporters but has yet to do a full, sit-down interview with the
press.Last month, Bob Costas gr
COLUMBIA, S.C. Two South Carolina legislators say state employees shouldn't have
to answer the phone with Gov. Nikki Haley's mandated cheery greeting unless
it's truly a great day in South Carolina.Democratic state Reps. John Richard
King and Wendell Gilliard have filed legislation saying no state agency can
force its employees to answer the phone with, "It's a great day
in South Carolina," as long as state unemployment is 5 percent or
higher. Their bill also would prohibit requiring the greeting as long as
all South Carolinians don't have health insurance.At a September meeting, Haley ordered
her Cabinet agencies to embrace the greeting, saying it could help change
the mood of state government. A Haley spokesman says the Republican governor
stands by the greeting.
BEIRUT The Syrian government released Wednesday 755 prisoners detained over the
past nine months in the regime's crackdown on dissent as observers toured
a flashpoint city to see whether authorities were complying with an Arab
plan to stop the bloodshed that has killed thousands.Violence continued in several
parts of the country, with activists saying two died in the Baba
Amr district of Homs, and at least four soldiers were killed in
an ambush carried out by a group of military defectors in the
country's south on Wednesday.The prisoners' release, reported by the state-run news agency
SANA, followed accusations by Human Rights Watch that Syrian authorities were hiding
hundreds of detainees from the observers now in the country.The New York-based
group said the detainees have been transferred to off-limits military sites and
urged the observers to insist on full access to all sites used
for detention.HRW's report, issued late Tuesday, echoes charges made by Syri
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