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Penn State Loses To Nebraska In First Game Without Joe Paterno

NANCY ARMOUR   11/12/11 11:58 PM ET   AP

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — The Penn State players left the field with their heads bowed, the fans mostly silent.

A lifetime worth of emotions was crammed into the past week. Shock, rage, regret and, now, exhaustion. The child sex-abuse scandal involving former assistant Jerry Sandusky cost Joe Paterno his job and, no doubt, scarred Penn State's soul.

A football game on a brilliant autumn afternoon won't erase it.

It was, however, a start.

"We've had better weeks in our lives, obviously," Paterno's son Jay, the quarterbacks coach, said after No. 12 Penn State's 17-14 loss to No. 19 Nebraska on Saturday. "The world's kind of turned upside down, but I think our kids were resilient."

The game was a combination of pep rally, cleansing and tribute, a way to acknowledge the past and take a step into the future. Affection for Penn State and Paterno was abundantly visible from players, fans and, yes, coaches. So was support for abuse victims, the kind of empathy many felt was missing in the days after news of the scandal broke.

Beaver Stadium was awash in blue – the color associated with child-abuse prevention – and public-service announcements flashed on the scoreboard throughout the game. A fund-raising campaign for abuse-prevention charities at the stadium gates raised more than $22,000.

In one of the most poignant moments in a week filled with lurid allegations, Nebraska and Penn State players gathered at midfield and knelt for a moment while Cornhuskers running backs coach Ron Brown offered a prayer.

"It felt like we all banded together. And it wasn't just about football," said Melissa Basinger, a 2005 Penn State grad who made the trip from Charlotte, N.C. "It was about coming together as a school, and showing the country, world or whatever that this does not define who we are."

Sandusky, once considered Paterno's heir apparent, is charged with sexually abusing eight boys over a 15-year span, with several of the alleged assaults occurring on Penn State property. Two university officials are charged with perjury, and Paterno and president Graham Spanier were fired for not doing enough after Sandusky was accused of molesting a young boy in the showers of the campus football complex in 2002.

The scandal would be damaging enough to anyone who prides himself on integrity. That it involved Paterno, major college football's winningest coach and the man who'd come to symbolize all that was good at Penn State, made it that much worse.

Though he was not at Beaver Stadium for the game – Jay Paterno joked that maybe he was out mowing the lawn – it took a while to get used to not seeing JoePa on the sideline, pacing back and forth, hands jammed in the pockets of his trademark blue windbreaker, watching the game unfold through those Coke-bottle glasses.

Students seemed almost afraid to acknowledge his absence, unsure how to react to having someone else in charge of the team for the first time in 46 seasons. But when Paterno appeared on the scoreboard as part of a video montage for Nittany Lion seniors – it was Senior Day – they let loose with gusto.

"Joe Pa-ter-no!" they chanted, clapping in rhythm.

No one felt the absence of the 84-year-old more keenly than his son, Jay, who choked up during a postgame interview.

"Dad, I wish you were here," he said, walking away from the cameras before the tears began to flow.

When the team arrived at the stadium, the normally low-key son pumped his fist and shouted, "Let's go!" as he followed the starting quarterback off the bus, just as his father always did. The younger Paterno high-fived passers-by on the way into the stadium, and several staffers gave him an encouraging embrace before he entered the locker room.

After the game, he shared a few details of a letter he'd dropped off at his parents' house earlier in the day. In it, he told his larger-than-life father all the things he'd never found the words to say before.

"I said, `You and I, in my life, haven't always seen eye to eye. But generally speaking, it's (because) I had to grow up, to catch up to make eye contact with you,'" Jay Paterno recalled. "There were a lot of lessons that I learned from him."

At Joe Paterno's house nearby, a small clutch of TV cameras and reporters stood outside. Two people walked to the door, rang the bell and left when no one answered. On the lawn was a pair of homemade signs facing the house. One said, "We Love You Joe, Thank You" and the other, "Thanks Joe."

A small American flag was planted nearby.

"There's not going to be closure anytime soon," said Brandon Hewitt, a senior from York, Pa. "I feel horrible what happened to the kids. I feel bad for what happened about Joe. But today was about football, and it was heartwarming to see the university rally around a terrible time."

___

Associated Press reporters Michael Rubinkam and Genaro C. Armas in State College contributed to this report.

Penn State Hosts First Football Game Since Child Sex Abuse Scandal
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Penn State fans wear shirts supporting Joe Paterno outside Beaver Stadium before the start of the NCAA football game between Penn State and Nebraska in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky scandal on November 12, 2011 in State College, Pennsylvania. Penn State head football coach Joe Paterno was fired amid allegations that former Penn State defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky was involved with child sex abuse.
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STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — The Penn State players left the field with their heads bowed, the fans mostly silent. A lifetime worth of emotions was crammed into the past week. Shock, rage, regret and, ...
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — The Penn State players left the field with their heads bowed, the fans mostly silent. A lifetime worth of emotions was crammed into the past week. Shock, rage, regret and, ...
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10:20 AM on 11/14/2011
Cornhuskers beat off the Cornholers.
08:38 PM on 11/13/2011
Just like the ending to every movie, the bad guy never wins. The pain of the children cries out at Penn State, but yet, they wear those shirts so proudly.
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Col Hogan
What is this man doing here?
08:23 PM on 11/13/2011
"Thanks for the memories" on the shirts?
Really?
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08:16 PM on 11/13/2011
Do those who wear the 'I love Joe' shirts honestly believe Paterno knew nothing about Sandusky's alleged behavior?

Do they sincerely believe that Joe worked with Sandusky for decades, undoubtedly saw him hundreds of times escorting boys around the athletic facilities, (Did Sandusky introduce some of the boys to JoePa to impress his victims?) testified in 1998 without glancing at the gruesome finding, didn't notice when the then-D.A.mysteriously vanished, and somehow decided to rapidly promote the one person who now says he explicitly and in detail told Joe about the rape in the shower?

Maybe the press made it all up. I don't know. Seems like Joe wouldn't have resigned overnight if his conscience were clear.

Hey, what's the first thing any intelligent parent thinks when he or she sees a grown man habitually squiring different boys around, especially around an athletic facility?

The only exculpatory thing you can say about Paterno is that he could be the stupidest man on earth. Wait, strike that. Those who so proudly wear the shirts are the stupidest.

Unlike them, Old Joe made millions on his callous disregard for the safety of helpless children.
08:02 AM on 11/15/2011
So so so SAD! BECAUSE ITS ALL TRUE?!?!? RIGHT?
08:15 PM on 11/13/2011
Let's be honest here. As a whole, Joe Paterno was a VERY honorable man. He has been in the limelight of the media for 60 years now as a coach, and up until this point his reputation was ENTIRELY untarnished. To be as famous as he is for as long as he was and not have something against you until now is incredibly impressive. When students went to his house to show their support for him after he was fired and were cheering, he came out onto his porch and simply told them to go home and get some sleep, and to keep studying and doing well in school. He could've ripped on the University, on the police force, on whomever he wanted, and those kids would've taken it as the spoken word. But he didn't. He cares.

I don't think that what happened is okay and I wish with my whole heart that he had done more, but to sit here and try to say that he is the scum of the earth and should go straight to hell is a little far fetched. He made a mistake, nobody can (or should) argue that. But to say he should be stripped of wins and that his statue should be melted down and sold is disgusting. The man did A LOT for that university over the years. Stop turning a blind eye to all the good things he did. Hes a good man who made a bad decision.
JB1977
My micro bio is empty
09:11 AM on 11/14/2011
No one would argue with his general integrity as a coach, aside from this incident. But you're ignoring the weight of this situation and the gravity of this mistake.
04:26 AM on 11/15/2011
Stop turning a blind eye to the sexual trauma and horrific abuse the kids endured.
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raleigh1997
Oh no officer, I forgot my papers and/or ID!
08:12 PM on 11/13/2011
HP is blocking one of my posts because I posted a link to an article were a victim's sister, says that students at this wonderful university are making jokes about being 'sanduskied."
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Demarcus Jackson
Southern Psychology Professor
11:07 PM on 11/13/2011
I heard about this on NPR. It is truly sickening! (Source: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/sports_blog/2011/11/joe-paterno-fired-2.html)
08:46 AM on 11/15/2011
Yup same here? I had the samething happen too me a sec.ago,WHY? because ITs the truth?
08:04 PM on 11/13/2011
Just read that PSU is still paying Sandusky over $58,000 a year. This story gets more disgusting by the minute.
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07:48 PM on 11/13/2011
Utterly unimpressive.
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DMW1
Carpe diem
07:06 PM on 11/13/2011
Have NCAA strip Joe Paterno wins from 2002 forward: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/strippaternowins/
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cassiegirl
06:14 PM on 11/13/2011
The "we love Joe" shirts sicken me.

How about a focus on the following - leaving a single child alone, abandoned to evil and its weeping in the dark.

That's what happened when JP and his university turned away from these victims. Deplorable & dispicable.
07:04 PM on 11/13/2011
Cassiegirl I have read most of your post out the PSU crimes. Your are a true champion for childern!! If more people were like you this would be a much better world. You are dead on girl...GOD LOVES YOU !!
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cassiegirl
08:04 PM on 11/13/2011
sdcowboy - I so worry this tragic story will not be lawfully completed. All of us have to keep it alive, as painful as it is, for the victims to feel they have champions albeit close or from afar. Tks for your post.
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raleigh1997
Oh no officer, I forgot my papers and/or ID!
08:01 PM on 11/13/2011
More sick behavior from the wonderful students from this University.

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-31751_162-57322400-10391697/victims-sister-penn-state-students-joke-about-being-sanduskied/
nbb
332-206
04:49 PM on 11/13/2011
Administration ought to shut down the whole damned football program for five years. That would be a beginning on making things right.
05:51 PM on 11/13/2011
I agree, but the current players should be allowed to keep their scholarships.
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Col Hogan
What is this man doing here?
08:15 PM on 11/13/2011
You mean they'd actually have to study?
That's harsh, Skullman.
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Nukualofa
I think... ...therefore I am a liberal.
04:16 PM on 11/13/2011
They need to put a scarf over the eyes of the statue of Joe Pa. His legacy should read : "I Looked The Other Way"
04:26 AM on 11/15/2011
How about toppling that damn thing?
04:23 PM on 11/15/2011
LOL
Boomerwoman
Momma said there'd be days like this
04:12 PM on 11/13/2011
This is a tragedy on so many levels...it's going to take alot of time for all involved to deal with the fallout:

Many boys in pain becoming young men coping with damaged childhoods. That is the biggest tragedy.
Adults who's moral compass lead them towards power and away from compassion and morality. How will they handle their shame...and please God, let them feel shame.
A university betrayed...academics, administrative staff. Who will rally them and give them a way to handle their anger and grief? You can't just march on stoically and not deal.
Students whose innocence is shattered and who will deal with trusting authority and expecting betrayal for years.

And for what? A sexual perversion that a narcisistic and squeamish society doesn't want to deal with. Cue the Catholic bishops and let the excuses begin.
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DMW1
Carpe diem
03:40 PM on 11/13/2011
I keep reading how Joe Paterno did nothing wrong and what a great football coach he is and how this has nothing to do with football.

But the facts are, Joe Paterno was in charge of the Penn State football program. A football coach raped at least 8 children using Penn State football facilities to molest them. He took his victims to Penn State football practices, Penn State football games and Penn State football banquets. A grad assistant who witnessed Sandusky raping a boy in the Penn State football lockers, reported it to head football coach Joe Paterno. Paterno stated McQueary told him he witnessed football coach Sandusky “fondling or doing something of a sexual nature” in the Penn State football lockers to a young boy. The grad assistant was promoted to full time Penn State wide receivers football coach less than a year later. And Sandusky was given emeritus status at Penn State, an on-campus office, and continued to use Penn State football facilities for more than a decade.

For someone who was supposedly in charge of football at Penn State, Paterno is either a total idiot, or morally bankrupt by being complicit in the cover-up that was going on to shield a child molester.
Boomerwoman
Momma said there'd be days like this
04:15 PM on 11/13/2011
You are either in charge or you are not. By ALL measures, he was in charge to the degree that the President of the University backed down from "retiring" Joe years ago.

Joe...you wanted all the control...you got it. Now, let's see some real public shame and remorse....and a VERY large donation to some counseling agencies would be a good start.
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UnknownSolider
05:25 PM on 11/13/2011
Very well stated, I'm pretty certain the Paterno apologist don't want to understand what you wrote.
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03:16 PM on 11/13/2011
Screw Joe Paterno and his supporters. He could of prevented further molestation of kids by going to the police. But chose not to in order to protect one man. They disgust me.