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Joe Paterno Penn State

January 29, 2012 by · Comments Off on Joe Paterno Penn State 

Joe Paterno Penn State, Joe Paterno’s “Penn State Way” was the way football at so many levels operated in Pennsylvania for nearly half a century.
Today, the menu features black coaching shoes, high-water pants and black, horned-rimmed glasses and a dash of …

Got to thinking on a long ride down and back from Baltimore the other day just how much Joe Paterno had permeated my life as a football enthusiast who’s resided in Pennsylvania for a half century plus one year and 300 some days.

JoePa’s influence is significant, actually, though I only might’ve seen him in person twice in post-game interviews in the 1980s.

Coming of age in the late 1960s and early 1970s, we dreamed of playing for two schools: Penn State and Notre Dame. Lunchtime arguments in school were fueled by which team was better, Penn State or Notre Dame (the Irish were defended religiously by the Coyle clan of Avona Heights).

In the pre-ESPN days — yes, there was such an era — college football’s TV slate included select regional rivalries and Joe Paterno’s weekly football show “TV Quarterback” hosted by Fran Fisher and televised on PBS WLVT-39.

We hung on every word uttered by Paterno, watched him diagram plays and answer listeners’ questions from every backwater town in a 300-mile radius of State College.

Few college teams wore fancy uniforms or included players’ names on the back of their jerseys so Penn State’s really weren’t distinctive like they are now. But look around the state today, especially outside the Lehigh Valley, and see how so many high schools wear uniforms that are near replicas of the Nittany Lions’ blue and whites.

The way we were taught to play football mirrored the “Penn State Way,” with the emphasis on fundamentals, hard-hitting defenses, rugged ground attacks and a priority on ball security.

Penn State Scandal

November 27, 2011 by · Comments Off on Penn State Scandal 

Penn State Scandal, In 2006, the charity at the center of the Pennsylvania State University sex-abuse scandal chose a firm run by its board chairman to construct its new $11.5 million home – on a site bought from the college on the cheap.

At the time, Robert Poole – a 17-year veteran of the organization and president of Poole Anderson Construction – described the Second Mile Center for Excellence as a monument to its namesake charity and to the man whose vision made it possible: former Penn State football coach Jerry Sandusky.

Few thought much about the land deal or Poole’s selection as contractor then. But now – three weeks after Sandusky’s arrest on child-molestation charges – those relationships have drawn new scrutiny.

As criminal and independent investigators seek to explain how Sandusky could elude detection for so long, they have zeroed in on the business ties between the Second Mile, its own board members, and the university exemplified at the Center for Excellence deal.

At their best, those strong social and financial links helped the board turn the charity Sandusky founded in 1977 into the most dominant nonprofit for at-risk youth in central Pennsylvania.

At worst, analysts fear, they may have blurred the lines of personal responsibility, putting top leaders in positions where their strong ties to the university and the Sandusky brand prevented them from acting as independent governors.

And now, those same ties may force the Second Mile to close its doors.

Since Sandusky’s arrest, donors and board members have fled from the organization; its president, Jack Raykovitz, has resigned amid questions about what he knew and when; and plaintiffs’ attorneys are seeking court orders barring the charity from disbursing its assets before the plaintiffs get a chance to sue.

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