
Cam Newton throws for the assembled NFL folks, and not particularly well. (AP photo)
Over the weekend Cam Newton went to Indianapolis and did himself no favors. Cam Newton arrived at the NFL combine having already offered a quote that made him sound less like the anchor a franchise seeks and more like … Justin Bieber?
To Peter King of SI.com: “I see myself not just as a football player but as an entertainer and an icon.”
Also this, to Dan Wetzel of Yahoo! Sports: “I don’t want to sound arrogant, but I did something in one year people couldn’t do in their whole collegiate careers.”
Which, you’d have to say, sounded a tad arrogant. Then Newton ran for the assembled scouts and team execs and, you’ll be shocked to learn, ran pretty fast. Then he threw, which went less well. (He completed 11 of 21 passes, which is OK if you’re working against a real defense, which Newton wasn’t.) He also sought to deflect media inquiries about his wayfaring career, saying: “I’m not going to entertain anything that’s in the past. I’m all about the future.”
Speaking of that which Cam prefers not to speak: The latest development, if you care to call it that, regarding Newton and Auburn involves a tape Alabama entertainer/radio host Scott Moore says he has heard in which Cecil Newton, Cam’s father, discussing how much various schools were willing to pay for his son’s services as player/entertainer. The tapes are said to have been made by Mississippi State boosters John Bond and Bill Bell. According to Moore, Cam Newton was in the room during one taped exchange, although there’s no word on whether he identified himself by saying, “Hi, this is Cam, and I’m an icon.”
According to John Pennington of the invaluable Mr. SEC.com:
The word is spreading now that Moore will play the audio recordings on his new radio show in two weeks. Now, what kind of guy would try to build up an audience for the release of potentially groundbreaking news? Somebody trying to build up ratings in order to get his fledgling show into syndication (which Moore has admitted is a goal of his). It’s called a stunt. And this has all the makings of being just that.
For the record, Moore’s Web site — MooreVoices.com — features this description of himself and his talents:
Scott W. Moore is renowned for his college football acumen and uncanny ability to impersonate over 70 celebrities, sportscasters and college football coaches. He is sure to keep your audiences laughing with hilarious takes on Bobby Bowden, Steve Spurrier, Nick Saban, Pete Carroll, Bob Stoops, Ron Zook, Nick Saban, Pat Dye, Lou Holtz, Keith Jackson, Bill Clinton, George Bush and more!
One question: In addition to the always hilarious Bob Stoops, does Scott W. Moore now do an impression of Cecil Newton?
It’s hard to know how to take this. On the one hand, you have one entertainer (Moore) saying he has heard a recording of a conversation for which another entertainer (Cam) was present. On the other, Auburn inoculated itself from Cecil Newton’s pay-for-play solicitation to Mississippi State by insisting Cecil’s son had no knowledge of any overture to anybody. The NCAA bought this defense. Would a tape that puts Cam in the room, so to speak, change the NCAA’s mind? If so, what would happen to Auburn’s BCS title?
Cam Newton told reporters he didn’t go to Indy to talk about the past, a phrasing that sounded a bit too much like Mark-McGwire-on-Capitol-Hill for comfort. It could well be that Newton has a long and prosperous NFL career as both player and entertainer, and when he’s done we’ll still be trying to sort out his one year at Auburn.
By Mark Bradley
279 comments Add your comment
Dan
March 1st, 2011
11:40 am
STOP THE PRESSES!!!! Uh!! Has always been arrogant. That the press, who’s been kissing his arse so much, has just figured that out is really no big surprise.
Walker, Texas Ranger
March 1st, 2011
11:40 am
Mark, that was an insult to Justin Bieber
David
March 1st, 2011
11:41 am
silence in the AJC- can you really be that dumb? You might want to get your FACTS (again a word UGA morons have trouble understanding) right before you post again. Learn the facts then get back to me about your theory.
Brit Massey
March 1st, 2011
11:42 am
I could care less about Auburn or the SEC. I’m concerned that Tickle Pile attendance is way down since the play of our Tech football and basketball teams has been so dismal.
Matt
March 1st, 2011
11:42 am
The AJ Green case is not even comparable.
KB
March 1st, 2011
11:45 am
Mike p, Aubrn did get put on probation 6 years ago.Seems like this is a trend.
NCAA slaps Auburn with probation, scholarship loss
AUBURN, Ala. (AP) — The NCAA put Auburn’s basketball program on probation for two years on Tuesday, when the organization also announced it was cutting one scholarship but clearing the university of major rules violations.
Auburn was exonerated of accusations involving large sums of money and expensive cars given to high school prospects Chadd Moore and Jackie Butler. But the NCAA found that an AAU coach, Mark Komara, was acting as a representative of Auburn when arranged to wire $3,125 for Butler and get a 1996 Dodge Stratus for Moore.
Komara is believed to be the first summer league basketball coach designated a representative of a school, said Thomas Yeager, chairman of the NCAA’s Division I Committee on Infractions.
The university, which denied the major accusations, already had imposed its own penalties, including the loss of one scholarship for the 2004-05 season. The NCAA cut that scholarship for 2005-06, too, but did not ban postseason play or televised games.
The NCAA cleared Auburn assistant coach Shannon Weaver of offering $50,000 and a car to Moore’s mother. Auburn also was found innocent on charges of offering Butler $70,000 and a car worth more than $40,000.
Neither player made official visits to Auburn, and the university had maintained that neither was offered a scholarship. Both were sophomores at the time of the alleged offers.
Auburn provided records to the NCAA that the university maintains show Weaver was actually under the care of a dentist in Scottsboro when he allegedly made the offer to Moore’s mother, Clara Moore.
Coach Cliff Ellis, who was not implicated by the NCAA, was fired March 18 and replaced by former Chattanooga coach Jeff Lebo.
Auburn interim president Edward Richardson called the sanctions “reasonable, balanced and fair,” and added, “I’m confident that Coach (Jeff) Lebo and his excellent staff will build a successful program.”
Moore and Butler played summer ball for Komara, who the NCAA alleged was a representative of Auburn and was involved in improper recruitment.
Yeager said there was ample evidence to show Auburn coaches’ contact with Komara surpassed their relationships with others involved in recruiting. Among the examples he cited were telephone records showing Auburn coaches made more than 1,100 calls to Komara and fewer than 200 to others involved with recruiting. Yeager also said Auburn coaches helped make hotel and airline reservations that Komara paid for.
Although the NCAA acknowledges high school and summer league coaches play a special role in college recruiting, Yeager said, Komara’s actions exceeded that role.
Mike Walker, a Mississippi sports agent, made the initial allegations in March 2001.
WDE (We Deny Everything)
March 1st, 2011
11:46 am
Nice try “Pat”. 1) You’re not a Dawg fan. 2) Cam’s “career”?!?!!? He was at AU for one semester. He split after one season of football (and after cashing that check!) 3) “Let’s just look forward” is the plea of many, many a wrongdoer. Nope, let’s look back and get this thing right. Until that happens, you’ll continue to hear from NCAA fans from all over the country. Get it right NCAA. Get it right.
Mel from Atlanta
March 1st, 2011
11:47 am
Yes, something smells like rotten tuna or underpants.
Really People????
March 1st, 2011
11:47 am
Matt is right. A.J. Green was guilty.
Paul in RDU
March 1st, 2011
11:48 am
WDE (We Deny Everything)
March 1st, 2011
11:38 am
Keep up Paul in RDU. The trial is happening now.
———————–
Since trials are public events, I assume that you have a link to support your statement.
Nachos the barn burner
March 1st, 2011
11:50 am
Auburn will stink this year… 7-5 at best.
One & done barners…
Bodybuilder Granny
March 1st, 2011
11:51 am
THey both are crooks. I think both dad newton and son newton knew all about money offerings and such.
By the way, if anyone wants a great sports forum for ATL sports go to atlsportsnation dot com. Good stuff, go braves!!!!
David
March 1st, 2011
11:51 am
KB? What is your point?? Now we are talking about basketball???????????????? I guess you are forgetting UGA basketball and how the players had exams with questions such as how many points do you get for a 3 pointer. Fact is we are talking about football and AU has not been on probation in 16 years. Other schools in the SEC have been on probation many times since then including Bama (3 times since then and still currently on probation).
El Azteca
March 1st, 2011
11:52 am
Soooooooooooooooooooo yummy.
BW
March 1st, 2011
11:53 am
I’m not talking about the past, only the future cause I am the future. I’m not going to talk about that last sentance because that’s the past.
WDE (We Deny Everything)
March 1st, 2011
11:53 am
Paul in RDU, I know that news, like sunshine, takes awhile to get to Raleigh. Gooble Milt McGreggor, Ronnie Gilley or Harri Anne Smith and you can catch up.
George G.
March 1st, 2011
11:54 am
Here’s another good read on it from CFN: http://bit.ly/gOkBiC
Nachos the barn burner
March 1st, 2011
11:55 am
WWCD (what would charlie do)
atlnative
March 1st, 2011
11:56 am
You guys hating on Cam Newton for being in the great situation he’s in are all hypocrites.It’s not a secret that schools in the SEC will pay any price and break every NCAA rule to help their respected sports programs.
DC
March 1st, 2011
11:56 am
Uhhhh Matt…the reason it took so long with the Reggie bush case was the lack of cooperation with the bush family. and come on…look up the amount of money etc that was spent and the gifts the Bush family received…easily almost 1million dollars. BIG DIFFERENCE..but hey..whatever helps YOUR case out.
Katherine
March 1st, 2011
11:57 am
Just another brick in the wall…….
AnotherOpinion2
March 1st, 2011
11:58 am
Where’s the news here?? Cecil shopped Cam to MSU. That’s been pretty much acknowledged and confirmed by everyone from MSU to AU to the SEC to the NCAA. The NCAA stated that based on their review of information available back in November including an interview with Bell, Bond, and Rogers that there was no evidence of wrongdoing by Auburn or proof that Cam knew. Even Bond, the guy with the tapes, said he never talked to Cam or Cecil. If there was something there that implicated AU and not MSU, Bond would have had no reason to withhold it from the NCAA (there’s a hint there). Tapes in two weeks sounds a lot like an AJC article in three weeks. It’s easy to keep everybody in suspsense when you keep dangling the carrot out in front. Oh, and for the conspiracists out there, after all this time, do you think it would be really hard to fabricate a tape full of damning evidence with the aid of modern technology? I think not. Just more fun for all of us. Bottom line is until the NCAA tells AU they are under investigation and there are some findings by an official body, all this stuff does is motivate the Harvey Updykes of the world. Congratulations Mr Moore.
Beast from the East
March 1st, 2011
12:00 pm
So sick of this stuff. Will someone just let us know when/if someone actually produces something more than another rumor?
AnotherOpinion2
March 1st, 2011
12:01 pm
@Beast from the East. Amen, and amen.
NACHO LEBRE
March 1st, 2011
12:02 pm
I WILL DEFEAT YOU CAM! I AM NACHOOOOOOOOOOOO!
TM
March 1st, 2011
12:03 pm
Does anyone truly believe Cam “didn’t know anything” or that his father didn’t at the very least attempt to gain money for his sons services?
I don’t know anyone who thinks they did not.
I’m all for proof on either side of the argument to surface.
But when the accused side refuses to discuss or acknowledge responsibility, it screams guilt.
Auburn History of probation
March 1st, 2011
12:04 pm
Article from 2006, Now why would anyone think auburn is cheating?
I believe that this is a practical world and that I can count only on what I earn. Therefore, I believe in work, hard work.
I believe in education, which gives me the knowledge to work wisely and trains my mind and my hands to work skillfully.
I believe in honesty and truthfulness, without which I cannot win the respect and confidence of my fellow men.
I believe in a sound mind, in a sound body and a spirit that is not afraid, and in clean sports to develop these qualities.
I believe in obedience to law because it protects the rights of all.
The Auburn Creed
The Auburn Creed was cited by Atlanta Journal-Constitution reporter Tony Barnhart following the most recent previous incident impeaching the integrity of Auburn University and its athletic department. That sordid sequence of events involved an embarrassing attempt to hire Bobby Petrino to replace Tommy Tuberville, who had not yet been fired, and the consequences were so severe that Auburn’s president and athletic director both lost their jobs and the university’s accreditation was placed on one year’s probation.
Tommy Tuberville . . . 2004 Coach of the Year . . . five Western Division championships in the last six years . . . almost ousted in an ugly incident that put Auburn’s accreditation in jeopardy.
“Probation” is not an unfamiliar word on the Plains. Auburn’s N.C.A.A. infractions history includes seven major infractions cases in the last 50 years, not including the present unpleasantness in the so-called Loveliest Village.
Auburn’s history of major violations includes getting slapped with three years’ probation in 1957, three years’ probation in 1958, and a two-year ban on postseason and television appearances in 1979.
Shug Jordan . . . winningest football coach in Auburn history . . . namesake of Jordan-Hare Stadium . . . Auburn alumnus . . . during his tenure, Auburn was put on probation by the N.C.A.A.
Auburn was held responsible for unethical conduct in November 1991 and sanctioned for unethical conduct and a lack of institutional control in August 1993.
In the latter instance, the N.C.A.A. imposed punishments upon the Auburn athletic department just as Terry Bowden was about to begin his first season as the Tigers’ head coach. Following his subsequent resignation under fire, Coach Bowden said on tape that A.U. boosters were funneling large amounts of cash to recruits.
Terry Bowden . . . led Auburn to an undefeated season in 1993 . . . guided the Tigers to a 20-game winning streak . . . was taped making incriminating statements about Auburn’s recruiting practices.
The most recent instance of wrongdoing on the Plains occurred when Auburn was placed on two years’ probation on April 27, 2004. The N.C.A.A. news release announcing the latest penalties against the Plainsmen stated that, during the probationary period from April 2004 to April 2006, “the university shall continue to develop and implement a comprehensive educational program on NCAA legislation and submit periodic reports to the NCAA,” including “a preliminary report that sets forth a schedule for establishing this compliance and educational program.”
“At the end of the probationary period,” concluded the N.C.A.A. (with emphasis added, by me), “the university’s president will provide a letter to the committee affirming that the university’s current athletics policies and practices conform to all requirements of NCAA regulations.” Finally, the Division I Committee on Infractions noted:
As required by NCAA legislation for any institution involved in a major infractions case, Auburn University is subject to the provisions of NCAA Bylaw 19.5.2.3, concerning repeat violators for a five-year period beginning on the effective date of the penalties in this case, April 27, 2004.
If the Committee on Infractions determines “that a major violation has occurred within five years of the starting date of a major penalty,” the institution guilty of such conduct shall be deemed a repeat violator and may be subject to increased penalties.
Pat Dye . . . won four conference championships in the 1980s . . . namesake of the playing field at Jordan-Hare Stadium . . . named S.E.C. Coach of the Year three times . . . during his tenure, Auburn was put on probation by the N.C.A.A.
Neither I nor anyone else learning of these latest accusations through the mainstream news media knows for certain whether there has been any wrongdoing here. However, it is clear that, if there was wrongdoing, Auburn University officials had no excuse for not knowing about it and putting a stop to it.
The institution’s president and athletic director received clear direction from the N.C.A.A. to clean up what is historically the most shameful morass in intercollegiate athletics. Extra vigilance was warranted, in light of Auburn’s frequent instances of recidivism.
If you, like C.F.R., found yourself “underwhelmed,” you should consider yourself underinformed. The Tigers went undefeated while on probation in 1957. They did it again in 1993. What in the history of War Eagle athletics gives us any reason to doubt allegations that improprieties occurred while the Plainsmen were going undefeated in 2004?
Furthermore, what aspect of the present situation suggests that these allegations concern events which were either isolated or legitimate? This so-called “rogue professor” was, in fact, the interim director of Auburn University’s sociology department, who took on numerous “directed reading” students.
One of the department head’s colleagues, Paul Starr, was quoted in a news report as saying that a “professor normally doesn’t take on many of these,” yet, in this case, 15 such courses appear to have been offered. Another sociology professor, James Gundlach, is cited by The New York Times as the person who compiled the relevant records.
Professor Gundlach’s statistics evidently indicated that Auburn football players with an average G.P.A. of 2.14 in their other classes had an average G.P.A. of 3.31 in the “directed reading” course. Unsurprisingly, this supposed athletic department “oversight” ostensibly involved Auburn’s director of student athlete support services playing “an important role in funneling students to the sociology program.”
However, this purportedly Oxford don-like method of individualized instruction was endorsed by a former A.U. football player. Carnell “Cadillac” Williams, a product of this one-on-one tutelage involving rigorous reading and critical analysis, eloquently expressed his articulate defense thusly: “I didn’t do nothing illegal or anything like that.”
You think this is “The Swamp”? Auburn . . . now that’s a swamp!
Whether fire underlies the smoke surrounding Auburn University remains an open question, but there can be no doubt that, if fire is found to be present, the sordid history of A.U. athletics has left too much tinder lying about for the N.C.A.A. to do anything less than drop the hammer on these latest Yellowhammer State shenanigans.
Go ‘Dawgs!
Mash
March 1st, 2011
12:05 pm
I’m sure Mike Slive will reason something along theses lines: “Just because Cam was in the room when the pay-for-play scheme was discussed doesn’t mean he agreed to be there”.
Paul in RDU
March 1st, 2011
12:06 pm
WDE (We Deny Everything)
Do you have difficulty reading a newspaper or difficulty understanding a calendar?
There is no trial going on now involving McGregor. The scheduled April 4th date has been pushed back to June – at the earliest
http://www.examiner.com/political-buzz-in-birmingham/electronic-bingo-corruption-defendants-trial-delayed
AnotherOpinion2
March 1st, 2011
12:07 pm
@TM, who is going to offer a defense? From either Newtons position now, it gains them nothing. They’re on to the NFL. What happened in college really means little to them now. Auburn?? What are they supposed to defend against? They’ve not been accused of wrongdoing. I’m sure universities aren’t in the business of trying to squelch every internet hack that has an opinion. This is an example of how the modern information age can be detrimental. It’s easy for someone to sit in their mother’s basement and sling accusations via rumor and innuendo all day long. There really is no defense against it.
All Involved
March 1st, 2011
12:09 pm
WDE (We Deny Everything), you have to type real slow for Awbarn folks.
IRISH DAWG
March 1st, 2011
12:10 pm
AUBURN BEEN CHEATER SINCE 1957,THEY ARE KNOWN FOR PAYING PLAYERS. I CAN’T WAIT TO GET THOSE CHEATERS IN ATHENS THIS YEAR, PAY BACK 5 OUT OF 6 YEARS.
Najeh Davenpoop
March 1st, 2011
12:15 pm
God forbid someone tries to get paid for their labor in a capitalist economy. Not if it runs afoul of the good ol’ boy network aka college football, oh lordy no.
Here’s hoping Cam Newton becomes the greatest quarterback of all time and further p-sses off the proponents of the modern day feudal system known as college football.
DC
March 1st, 2011
12:16 pm
kind of hard to get payback considering the players that stuck a foot up your mutt’s butt are gone…i bet that makes it even worse..they slapped you in the face and dipped out.
Nachos @ El Azteca pounding ICB's on the porch
March 1st, 2011
12:21 pm
This stuff is BS! C’mon its not like Cam has a track record of bad behavior or anything…..
42-34 73-72
March 1st, 2011
12:25 pm
Once all the dirt is uncovered and the NC and Heisman are taken away, does that mean the Heisman will be given to Josh Nesbitt?
tyger
March 1st, 2011
12:25 pm
Keep it real…don’t be stupid
1. Cam Newton is a college superstar.
2. Heisman trophies and National Championships don’t go to losers.
3. Give the kid credit for competing at the Combine.
4. Is this the message you want to send?
5. Is Tom Condon right? All #1s should sit out?
6. Cam Newton is immature and has a limited vocabulary. Duhhh?
7. Cam needs to improve his passing, we saw that in the championship.
8. Cam is a natural born leader.
9. Cam Newton is a winner at the highest levels.
10. Don’t be stupid.
WDE (We Deny Everything)
March 1st, 2011
12:26 pm
Paul in RDU, and that is material to the discussion how? Like I said before, I don’t know what’s on the tapes and neither do you. And no one but the FBI knows what they’ve entered as evidence and what they haven’t. If these tapes are legit, they might have been made by a private party and not the FBI and, thus, open for public consumption.
Tell me Paul, do you think that AU’s innocent? Do you think that Cecil Newton was shopping Cam to the highest bidder, and they just dropped all of that for him to play at AU (for one semester) for free!?!? Do you really believe that?!?!!? And if they paid Cam Newton, do you really believe that they don’t pay the other players? Now consider this before you answer. AU has a history of paying players. If all of this was going on at Bama, do you think you’d be wanting the NCAA to “correct” the situation.
I think we all know the honest answer.
Chuck Oliver has a fat gobbler
March 1st, 2011
12:26 pm
me & Chadd Scott are “roommates”
ALL IN. FAMILY.
JB
March 1st, 2011
12:27 pm
It’s going nowhere. I think the NCAA doesn’t want to go there. Unless someone other than them comes up with 100% proof, it’s over. Maybe’s and what if’s and he said she said will not make a case.
rcb
March 1st, 2011
12:30 pm
To Mike P
The “Newtons didn’t get any”. Do you mean the Newtons individually, or do you mean the church he runs? If the church, could you please call the church administrator and ask her to call the N.Y.Times reporter so someone can look at the books that the administrator would not disclose to the N.Y.Times in November and December? Thanks.
Dirty Dawg
March 1st, 2011
12:32 pm
This is the week when the Alabama Federal Judge is hearing arguments as to whether the FBI wiretaps will be allowed in as evidence in the political bribery case against Uncle Milty McGregor, et.,al. That’s where the real skinny is on p-f-p…of course we don’t know when, or even if, the portions of the taps that involve AU and the ‘bots’, Trooper, and the rest will be made public, but it’ll, at least, be leaked and even tougher to explain away…of course everybody at AU is still ‘lawyered up’, so we won’t be hearing anything other than – ‘All we know is that Cam was declared eligible, and we won the National Championship…War Eagle’…right up until ‘The End’.
Ted M
March 1st, 2011
12:34 pm
All those who pass on Cam in the draft will regret it.
AnotherOpinion2
March 1st, 2011
12:37 pm
@DirtyDawg. You’re assuming a linkage between the gambling probe and Auburn. That assertion hasn’t been made by anyone credible – unless of course Redfish and Bluetunatiger are folks you consider credible.
Sports Review
March 1st, 2011
12:41 pm
[...] Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog) [...]
Ncaa investigations and Auburn go hand and hand
March 1st, 2011
12:45 pm
Auburn has had five successful coaches since 1955: Shug Jordan, Pat Dye, Terry Bowden, Tommy Tuberville and now Gene Chizik.
Every one of them has been investigated for, suspected of, admitted to or charged with possibly paying or buying football players at one time or another. All of these coaches except Shug Jordan have one thing in common: They were hired and/or fired during the reign of Auburn’s powerful Board of Trustees President, Bobby Lowder.
Money and success on the football field seem to go hand in hand at Auburn, and even some of Auburn’s recruiting practices insinuate there is money to be had at Auburn. Take, for example, the use of stretch limousines used by Auburn coaches when visiting recruits off campus.
Auburn has had seven major NCAA violations in its past, most involving paying and buying athletes.
This makes Auburn by far the worst NCAA violator in the SEC, yet Auburn fans bristle and act indignant if someone dares to suggest that Auburn could be involved in the Cam and Cecil Newton pay for play situation.
Auburn fans remind anyone who dares accuse Auburn of any wrongdoing involving Cecil Newton or anyone claiming that Cam Newton was aware of what his father was up to that there is no proof.
The NCAA did say, “Based on the information available to the reinstatement staff at this time, we do not have sufficient evidence that Cam Newton or anyone from Auburn was aware of this activity.”
Yet it is impossible to ignore these facts: On the one hand you have the Newtons actively soliciting money, and on the other hand you have Auburn, a school that has been involved in buying and paying football players for decades.
I know that Cecil Newton has only admitted soliciting money from Mississippi State, but it is hard to forget which team Cam Newton played for in 2010, and it is hard to forget Auburn’s history of paying players.
The NCAA investigation continues, and what they will find if anything is anyone’s guess, but those familiar with Auburn’s past know that anything is possible when you mix athletes with their hands out and wealthy men who love their college football and their school.
Was Cam Newton’s recruitment by Auburn legitimate, or is Auburn still willing to buy success at any price?
That is the $180,000 question.
Silence at the AJC
March 1st, 2011
12:47 pm
Um, David:
Please elaborate on WHICH facts you beleive to be incorrect ??
Pat Dye
March 1st, 2011
12:52 pm
Alright you guys caught us. This isn’t the 1st but will probably be the last time my hand is in the cookie jar. Tell the NCAA we are sorry, but for one year we were relevant, just don’t take our year away, please.
dap01
March 1st, 2011
12:54 pm
David: How could someone with Cam academic past and criminal past be admitted into a university? Only a college that kept Cadillac eligible would admit PC Cam (Icon Cam).
Jim Doggg Wallace
March 1st, 2011
12:54 pm
Cam FigNewton: another Charlie Sheen wannabe … ha