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Joe Paterno Dead: Ex-Penn State Football Coach Has Died At Age 85

By GENARO C. ARMAS   01/22/12 08:51 PM ET  AP

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- Other than family, football was everything to Joe Paterno. It was his lifeblood. It kept him pumped.

Life could not be the same without it.

"Right now, I'm not the coach. And I've got to get used to that," Paterno said after the Penn State Board of Trustees fired him at the height of a child sex abuse scandal.

Before he could, he ran out of time.

Paterno, a sainted figure at Penn State for almost half a century but scarred forever by the scandal involving his one-time heir apparent, died Sunday at age 85.

His death came just 65 days after his son Scott said his father had been diagnosed with lung cancer. Mount Nittany Medical Center said he died at 9:25 a.m. of "metastatic small cell carcinoma of the lung," an aggressive cancer that has spread from one part of the body to an unrelated area.

Friends and former colleagues believe there were other factors – the kind that wouldn't appear on a death certificate.

"You can die of heartbreak. I'm sure Joe had some heartbreak, too," said 82-year-old Bobby Bowden, the former Florida State coach who retired two years ago after 34 seasons in Tallahassee.

Longtime Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said he suspected "the emotional turmoil of the last few weeks might have played into it."

And Mickey Shuler, who played tight end for Paterno from 1975 to 1977, held his alma mater accountable.

"I don't think that the Penn State that he helped us to become and all the principles and values and things that he taught were carried out in the handling of his situation," he said.

Paterno's death just under three months following his last victory called to mind another coaching great, Alabama's Paul "Bear" Bryant, who died less than a month after retiring.

"Quit coaching?" Bryant said late in his career. "I'd croak in a week."

Paterno alluded to the remark made by his friend and rival, saying in 2003: "There isn't anything in my life anymore except my family and my football. I think about it all the time."

The winningest coach in major college football, Paterno roamed the Penn State sidelines for 46 seasons, his thick-rimmed glasses, windbreaker and jet-black sneakers as familiar as the Nittany Lions' blue and white uniforms.

His devotion to what he called "Success with Honor" made Paterno's fall all the more startling.

Happy Valley seemed perfect for him, a place where "JoePa" knew best, where he not only won more football games than any other major college coach, but won them the right way. With Paterno, character came first, championships second, academics before athletics. He insisted that on-field success not come at the expense of graduation rates.

But in the middle of his final season, the legend was shattered. Paterno was engulfed in a child sex abuse scandal when a former trusted assistant, Jerry Sandusky, was accused of molesting 10 boys over a 15-year span, sometimes in the football building.

Outrage built quickly after the state's top law enforcement official said the coach hadn't fulfilled a moral obligation to go to authorities when a graduate assistant, Mike McQueary, reported seeing Sandusky with a young boy in the showers of the football complex in 2002.

McQueary said that he had seen Sandusky attacking the child with his hands around the boy's waist but said he wasn't 100 percent sure it was intercourse. McQueary described Paterno as shocked and saddened and said the coach told him he had "done the right thing" by reporting the encounter.

Paterno waited a day before alerting school officials and never went to the police.

"I didn't know which way to go ... and rather than get in there and make a mistake," Paterno told The Washington Post in an interview nine days before his death.

"You know, (McQueary) didn't want to get specific," Paterno said. "And to be frank with you I don't know that it would have done any good, because I never heard of, of, rape and a man. So I just did what I thought was best. I talked to people that I thought would be, if there was a problem, that would be following up on it."

When the scandal broke in November, Paterno said he would retire following the 2011 season. He also said he was "absolutely devastated" by the abuse case.

"This is a tragedy," he said. "It is one of the great sorrows of my life. With the benefit of hindsight, I wish I had done more."

But the university trustees fired Paterno, effective immediately. Graham Spanier, one of the longest-serving university presidents in the nation, also was fired.

Paterno was notified by phone, not in person, a decision that board vice chairman John Surma regretted, trustees said. Lanny Davis, the attorney retained by trustees as an adviser, said Surma intended to extend his regrets over the phone before Paterno hung up him.

After weeks of escalating criticism by some former players and alumni about a lack of transparency, trustees last week said they fired Paterno in part because he failed a moral obligation to do more in reporting the 2002 allegation.

An attorney for Paterno on Thursday called the board's comments self-serving and unsupported by the facts. Paterno fully reported what he knew to the people responsible for campus investigations, lawyer Wick Sollers said.

"He did what he thought was right with the information he had at the time," Sollers said.

The lung cancer was found during a follow-up visit for a bronchial illness. A few weeks later, Paterno broke his pelvis after a fall but did not need surgery.

The hospital said Paterno was surrounded by family members, who have requested privacy.

Paterno had been in the hospital since Jan. 13 for observation after what his family called minor complications from his cancer treatments. Washington Post writer Sally Jenkins, who conducted the final interview, described Paterno then as frail, speaking mostly in a whisper and wearing a wig. The second half of the two-day interview was done at his bedside.

On Sunday, two police officers were stationed to block traffic on the street where Paterno's modest ranch home stands next to a local park. The officers said the family had asked there be no public gathering outside the house, still decorated with a Christmas wreath, so Paterno's relatives could grieve privately. And, indeed, the street was quiet on a cold winter day.

Paterno's sons, Scott and Jay, arrived separately at the house late Sunday morning. Jay Paterno, who was his father's quarterbacks coach, was crying.

"His loss leaves a void in our lives that will never be filled," the family said in a statement. "He died as he lived. He fought hard until the end, stayed positive, thought only of others and constantly reminded everyone of how blessed his life had been. His ambitions were far reaching, but he never believed he had to leave this Happy Valley to achieve them. He was a man devoted to his family, his university, his players and his community."

Paterno built a program based on the credo of "Success with Honor," and he found both. He won 409 games and took the Nittany Lions to 37 bowl games and two national championships. More than 250 of the players he coached went on to the NFL.

"He will go down as the greatest football coach in the history of the game," Ohio State coach Urban Meyer said after his former team, the Florida Gators, beat Penn State 37-24 in the 2011 Outback Bowl.

The university handed the football team to one of Paterno's assistants, Tom Bradley, who said Paterno "will go down in history as one of the greatest men, who maybe most of you know as a great football coach."

"As the last 61 years have shown, Joe made an incredible impact," said the statement from the family. "That impact has been felt and appreciated by our family in the form of thousands of letters and well wishes along with countless acts of kindness from people whose lives he touched. It is evident also in the thousands of successful student athletes who have gone on to multiply that impact as they spread out across the country."

New Penn State football coach Bill O'Brien, hired earlier this month, offered his condolences.

"There are no words to express my respect for him as a man and as a coach," O'Brien said in a statement. "To be following in his footsteps at Penn State is an honor."

Paterno believed success was not measured entirely on the field. From his idealistic early days, he had implemented what he called a "grand experiment" – to graduate more players while maintaining success on the field.

The team consistently ranked among the best in the Big Ten for graduating players. As of 2011, it had 49 academic All-Americans, the third-highest among schools in the Football Bowl Subdivision. All but two played under Paterno.

"He teaches us about really just growing up and being a man," former linebacker Paul Posluszny, now with the NFL's Jacksonville Jaguars, once said. "Besides the football, he's preparing us to be good men in life."

Sandusky, who has maintained his innocence, lauded his former boss in a statement that said: "He maintained a high standard in a very difficult profession. Joe preached toughness, hard work and clean competition. Most importantly, he had the courage to practice what he preached."

Paterno certainly had detractors. One former Penn State professor called his high-minded words on academics a farce, and a former administrator said players often got special treatment. His coaching style often was considered too conservative. Some thought he held on to his job too long, and a move to push him out in 2004 failed.

But the critics were in the minority, and his program was never cited for major NCAA violations. The child sex abuse scandal, however, did prompt separate inquiries by the U.S. Department of Education and the NCAA into the school's handling.

Paterno didn't intend to become a coach. He played quarterback and defensive back for Brown University and set a school record with 14 career interceptions, but when he graduated in 1950 he planned to go to law school. He said his father hoped he would someday be president.

But when Paterno was 23, a former coach at Brown was moving to Penn State to become the head coach and persuaded Paterno to come with him as an assistant.

"I had no intention to coach when I got out of Brown," Paterno said in 2007 in an interview at Penn State's Beaver Stadium before being inducted into college football's Hall of Fame. "Come to this hick town? From Brooklyn?"

In 1963, he was offered a job by the late Al Davis – $18,000, triple his salary at Penn State, plus a car to become general manager and coach of the AFL's Oakland Raiders. He said no. Rip Engle retired as Penn State head coach three years later, and Paterno took over.

At the time, Penn State was considered "Eastern football" – inferior – and Paterno courted newspaper coverage to raise the team's profile. In 1967, PSU began a 30-0-1 streak.

But Penn State couldn't get to the top of the polls. The Nittany Lions finished second in 1968 and 1969 despite perfect seasons. They were undefeated and untied again in 1973 at 12-0 again but finished fifth. Texas edged them in 1969 after President Richard Nixon, impressed with the Longhorns' bowl performance, declared them No. 1.

"I'd like to know," Paterno said later, "how could the president know so little about Watergate in 1973, and so much about college football in 1969?"

A national title finally came in 1982, after a 27-23 win over Georgia at the Sugar Bowl. Another followed in 1986 after the Lions intercepted Vinny Testaverde five times and beat Miami 14-10 in the Fiesta Bowl.

They made several title runs after that, including a 2005 run to the Orange Bowl and an 11-1 season in 2008 that ended in a 37-23 loss to Southern California in the Rose Bowl.

In his later years, physical ailments wore the old coach down.

Paterno was run over on the sideline during a game at Wisconsin in November 2006 and underwent knee surgery. He hurt his hip in 2008 demonstrating an onside kick. An intestinal illness and a bad reaction to antibiotics prescribed for dental work slowed him for most of the 2010 season. He began scaling back his speaking engagements that year, ending his summer caravan of speeches to alumni across the state.

Then a receiver bowled over Paterno at practice in August, sending him to the hospital with shoulder and pelvis injuries and consigning him to coach much of what would be his last season from the press box.

"The fact that we've won a lot of games is that the good Lord kept me healthy, not because I'm better than anybody else," Paterno said two days before he won his 409th game and passed Eddie Robinson of Grambling State for the most in Division I. "It's because I've been around a lot longer than anybody else."

Paterno could be conservative on the field, especially in big games, relying on the tried-and-true formula of defense, the running game and field position.

He and his wife, Sue, raised five children in State College. Anybody could telephone him at his home – the same one he appeared in front of on the night he was fired – by looking up "Paterno, Joseph V." in the phone book.

He walked to home games and was greeted and wished good luck by fans on the street. Former players paraded through his living room for the chance to say hello. But for the most part, he stayed out of the spotlight.

Paterno did have a knack for jokes. He referred to Twitter, the social media site, as "Twittle-do, Twittle-dee."

He also could be abrasive and stubborn, and he had his share of run-ins with his bosses or administrators. And as his legend grew, so did the attention to his on-field decisions, and the questions about when he would hang it up.

Calls for his retirement reached a crescendo in 2004. The next year, Penn State went 11-1 and won the Big Ten. In the Orange Bowl, PSU beat Florida State, coached by Bowden, who was eased out after the 2009 season after 34 years and 389 wins.

Like many others, he was outlasted by "JoePa."

State College Reacts To News Of Joe Paterno's Grave Condition
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STATE COLLEGE, PA - JANUARY 22: Candles, many burnt out, circle the statue of Joe Paterno, the former Penn State football coach, outside of Beaver Stadium in the early hours of January 22, 2012 in State College, Pennsylvania. The community was reacting to news that Joe Paterno, who is suffering from lung cancer and who was fired in November in the aftermath of child sex abuse charges against a former assistant, was in serious condition. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)
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STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- Other than family, football was everything to Joe Paterno. It was his lifeblood. It kept him pumped. Life could not be the same without it.
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- Other than family, football was everything to Joe Paterno. It was his lifeblood. It kept him pumped. Life could not be the same without it.
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:30 AM on 01/26/2012
What we really need to do is put asterisks next to all his victories while Sandusky coached for him after he first heard about Sandusky's raping escapades. Who knows how Penn would ahve done with a different guy than Sandusky.

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06:59 AM on 01/26/2012
And what would that prove? All I keep reading from bashers and finger pointers is the it is about the children. They are right it is about the poor children Sandusky violated, so why asterisk the wins?

Look I agree a major mistake was he could have done more, but do we discount all the good he did over 60 years? With out a trial? too many here have tired and convicted him without due process or with misinformation. I have a big problem with people say everthing that Joe said was a lie, but everything they read on the internet is true. At least let's wait and see when all the fact come out at trial. then you may or may not have a case for striking games from the win column.
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10:28 AM on 01/26/2012
No, we don't disregard the good. But it's certainly fair to suggest that his hiding the truth to keep his coach was strategically to improve his win column. This isn't an improved record because of steroids. It's an improved record due to allowing rapes to continue. Big difference.
12:09 PM on 01/27/2012
Sandusky retired after the 1999 season. Paterno had no control over Sandusky's [standard] retirement arrangements with PSU, which included access to campus/sports facilities.

The alleged shower incident occurred in 2002.

By ALL accounts, Paterno was never told about "raping escapades" or "sexual abuse."

And btw -- no alleged victim of the shower incident has come forward.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bude
My Brain Hurts!
10:14 AM on 01/25/2012
The abuse went on for over 30 years. Only once in 30 years did Paterno bother to mention it to someone. Once.

What did he do when nothing ever came of it? He continued to allow Sandusky to bring his victims to the university.

That makes Paterno an accomplice.
04:01 PM on 01/25/2012
He never witnessed any instances. The instance brought to his attention was second hand information. Not an accomplice many instances happened at the Sandusky home blame Mrs. Sandusky
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alicam
12:46 PM on 01/24/2012
This is why it pays to retire after a sufficient amount of years. If he had left when he was 70, he could have avoided being associated with this tragedy going on and his legacy would have been spotless. No he hangs on till the end and now he will forever be shrouded in doubt.
12:38 PM on 01/24/2012
The lemmings of the keyboard and teleprompter prematurely buried Joe Paterno not once but twice. The first was when they channeled their justified moral outrage over heinous acts and unjustifiably laid it at the doorstep of the most moral man involved. And the second was of course, when major news outlets clamored to be the first to report his death, without respect for the basics of journalism (fact checking) or the basics of being humane (letting the family enjoy their final hours with their beloved patriarch in peace).

And now that he has passed, many will say the healing process will begin. We will begin to reconsider his legacy. The facts will come out. We will stop and realize all the good he has done. Nice things will be said by almost everyone, even those who rushed to judge him in the first place.

But if we do so, without first taking responsibility for our own action in his treatment, this will be inadequate.

The bottom line is that we rushed to judge the life of a great man based on incomplete information. The reasons are many, and perhaps to a degree understandable, but that does not make them right.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bob-mckinnon/joe-paterno-dead_b_1222237.html?ref=mostpopular#
04:03 PM on 01/25/2012
Yes couldn't have said it better
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06:02 PM on 01/26/2012
I have NOT "rushed to judgement." In fact, I think that Paterno is guiltier than Sandusky, because he remained silent. Had he pursued the matter, AT ALL, Sandusky might have been stopped. Paterno could not have done enough good in his entire life to make up for abandoning (who knows how many) victims to Sandusky. Paterno had access, power, the law and right on his side, but evidently this "fearless" man was too fearful of the consequences of action to take any. I for one, hope his suffering was great, as it was FAR too short. Finally, I care a lot more about the safety and well-being of innocent children than college football. The defense of this "legend" (Paterno) is simply revolting.
10:30 AM on 01/30/2012
Boy, you must be a really nasty person Ken. But looking at things in a positve manner, maybe you just ate too many Boston beans,
12:29 PM on 01/24/2012
Joe Paterno, a legendary coach, educator, philanthropist and a great man being honored by tens of thousands in State College and millions nationwide.The counterpoint to the stone throwers.

http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2012/01/twitter_scenes_from_joe_patern.html
11:07 AM on 01/24/2012
Congratulations to all you Paterno finger pointers, you are now in the same league as the Westboro baptist Church. Doesn't this make you proud!

http://www.ksee24.com/news/local/Westboro-Baptist-Church-Says-it-Will-Picket-Joe-Paterno-Funeral-137902313.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bude
My Brain Hurts!
10:16 AM on 01/25/2012
Yes it does.
07:45 PM on 01/25/2012
that is a real shame.
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12:35 AM on 01/26/2012
No, they're not. There are real reasons to question the glory given to an enabler of serial child molestation. The nutjobs wagging their bibbles are another story.
11:02 AM on 01/24/2012
The media storm took on a life of its own and a reputation they help build and varnish for over sixty years, they burnt to the ground in six days with the Penn State Board of Trustees and the general public as willing accomplices.

The result is that the coverage attracted ratings and outrage but not truth and understanding. We took our eyes off of the real story and focused on "the big story".

The cumulative effect to be blunt about it was that we made the last months of a great life unimaginably difficult for both Joe Paterno, his wife, their children and their grandchildren.

Some who are ignorant to all the facts of this case and who cannot get past their moral outrage will suggest that he is not a victim, the kids were. Andtothis I would say, let's not fool ourselves. These are not mutually exclusive choices.

Of course, the children are victims. Ifonly afraction ofthe charges aretrue, itis noless tragic thanif they allare. Ifso, then Mr.Sandusky shouldbe prosecuted tothe full extent ofthe law and soshould any PennStateauthorities, including theBoardofTrustees, who failed intheir responsibilities.

But that doesn't make Paterno being prosecuted by the full extent of the media or the masses any less wrong.

What does it say aboutus as individuals or asa society, when we fail to give pause and consider the facts? When we allow partial truths to render complete judgments?

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bob-mckinnon/joe-paterno-dead_b_1222237.html?ref=mostpopular#
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06:08 PM on 01/26/2012
Paterno was Sandusky (and Mcqueary's) boss. This doesn't make him responsible? "Of course, the children are victims." but you seem to think they should have just depended upon somebody else? Who else? You?
08:46 AM on 01/27/2012
Paterno was NOT Sandusky's boss at the time of the incident, and had not been Sandusky's boss for years. Paterno had NO authority over Sandusky's activities or university privileges.
01:58 PM on 02/03/2012
I agree with your well-written post. I agree Joe Paterno was a victim of the same people who ignored the childrens: plight. I believe the media must also take blame for this travesty - every headline about this - "Sex-child abuse at Penn State" ran it with a picture of JoePa. REALLY!? What kind of journalism is that? Oh, yes, the kind that can't differentiate between the people who care and the ones who don't. McQueary and JoePa are the ONLY ones who put their necks on the block and their names to the report, and reported to their superiors.. At what point should JoePa not have trusted his bosses? McQueary did the right thing, HIS boss (Joe Paterno) did the right thing, and Joe had every confidence that HIS bosses would do the right thing - and if they would have cared about the children even a little bit, they would have. So they bash the people who step up and let the weasles sneak out the back door and go on with their lives, and absolve them of their responsibilities.

Thank you, capercaper for your intelligence and spot-on observations . Well done. It's nice to know that the sane people stand for the right things.
10:05 AM on 01/24/2012
Coach Paterno was ever charged in the abuse of those children, only Joe Sandusky has been charged. Paterno NEVER touched those boys, but failed to put a stop to it. When he saw that his warnings to PSU leadership went unheeded, he had a MORAL obligation as a coach (coach's mold young men into adults) to do something.

Had a man of Coach Paterno's caliber gone to the Attorney General of Penn, or the District Attorney of his county, his words would have been listened to. Skip the Campus-Rent-A-Cops & the Barney Fife Cops in "Happy Valley" (They answer tp PSU Administration). That is the Critisim leveled at Paterno, he did the "I-Told-My-Boss, so its out of my hands" routine. He could have ended this mess back in 2000, but failed to act..
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kapalabhati
Lokah Samasta Sukhino Bhavantu
01:01 PM on 01/24/2012
Jerry.
Jerry Sandusky.
02:40 PM on 01/24/2012
Thank you for the Correction..
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12:37 AM on 01/26/2012
Paterno showed only cowardice and concern for his own record if he might lose Sandusky as a coach. Always all about Paterno.
05:01 AM on 01/24/2012
Paterno hasn't coached in YEARS. He would show up on game day and sit in the press box eating cotton candy and calling mommy on the phone. PSU is squarely into idolatry.
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MikeyEditor
03:47 AM on 01/24/2012
In sports, they often say "It's not how you drivem but how you arrive" meaning the journey is not as impotant as the finish. He finished a silly old broken man and he got what he deserved for his obnoxious snobbery about children
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
11:29 PM on 01/23/2012
my comment from 2 days ago was censored. why? all i said was that this man reported to his superiors about what the wonderful adult human sandusky did. stop pointing the finger at him.. he did what he was supposed to do in that situation. do not forget the decades of goodhearted teaching and wisdom he imparted on his pupils. he is a good man in my eyes and even his subjects painted him in the light i would expect him to be painted in , when he was informed of the disgusting acts mr. sandusky "allegedly" committed.*coughs* JoePa, real people love you and wish to see you in the paradise
yoda987
Vote Obama/Sanity 2012
11:02 PM on 01/23/2012
JoePA remained silent knowing that children were getting raped. All because of a football GAME. Not only that, it was a college game. College should be about learning, not big sports teams that are so big people think twice before making sure a rapist is brought to justice, or at least fully investigated.

Good riddance Joe.
10:19 AM on 01/24/2012
That is his "crime", REMAINING SILENT.. All of his rabid supporters fail to understand that, he could have ended the suffering for those boys years ago. This "Great man" failed to be a true leader by letting Sandusky's crimes go unreported.

Had a man of Coach Paterno's caliber gone to the Attorney General of Penn, or the District Attorney of his county, his words would have been listened to. Skip the Campus-Ren­t-A-Cops & the Barney Fife Cops in "Happy Valley" (They answer tp PSU Administra­tion). That is the Critisim leveled at Paterno, he did the "I-Told-My­-Boss, so its out of my hands" routine. He could have ended this mess back in 2000, but failed to act..
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chiodo08
...come off your front foot for a "change"...
01:13 PM on 01/24/2012
heck "a man of Coach Paterno's caliber" stepping into Sandusky and not allowing him to use his campus for years after the first allegation would have been more "man like" than just "not knowing how to deal with something like this..." all because it makes his weak little tummy nervous....
09:33 PM on 01/23/2012
I hope the trustees of PSU that fired Jo PA by calling him on the phone because they said they "could not get to his house" which was 1/2 mile away all die of cancer but i hope they suffer with pain for years and years. His death is on their heads!!
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
11:31 PM on 01/23/2012
eaasy man. yes they threw him under the bus but eff them. Joe Pa is a baws. forever and ever this will ring true
10:36 AM on 01/30/2012
Board of Trustees vice-chair Surma left his hat at home and could not go out into the nasty central PA weather. The poor fellow might have caught a cold.