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Joe Paterno Memorial: Long Lines To Bid Farewell

Joe Paterno

First Posted: 01/24/2012 5:46 pm Updated: 01/25/2012 4:50 pm

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- Decked out in Penn State hats and jackets, students and townspeople stood in a line more than a quarter-mile long Tuesday to pay their respects to Joe Paterno, the coach who for nearly a half century was the face of their university.

Mourners waited for hours along a main campus artery for the chance to file past Paterno's closed brown casket at the campus spiritual center during a public viewing session. Some departed crying. All were moved.

State College Reacts To News Of Joe Paterno's Death
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STATE COLLEGE, PA - JANUARY 24: The general public, mourners wait outside before paying respect to former Penn State Football coach Joe Paterno during a public viewing at the Pasquerilla Spiritual Center on the campus of Penn State on January 24, 2012 in State College, Pennsylvania. Paterno, who was 85, died due to complications from lung cancer on January 22, 2012. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

"He was my hero. He was my hero. I had to come," said a sobbing Gloria Spicer, who was freshman in 1966 when Paterno started his first season as head coach at Penn State. The 85-year-old Paterno, the winningest coach in major college football history, died Sunday of lung cancer. He had been fired just days before learning of his diagnosis in November.

"He was a teacher to me," Spicer said. "He taught me to be a better person and a better teacher."

Spicer and others walked slowly past the undraped casket which had an "honor guard" of two Penn State players - one past and one present. Six feet away, a stylized, black-and-white photo of a smiling Paterno, arms crossed in front of his chest, sat on an easel.

Large windows bathed the white-walled hall in light on an overcast afternoon. Some of Paterno's family attends church services there.

Members of the public were preceded by the Paterno family - the coach's son, Scott, was seen at the gathering - along with current and former players. The current Nittany Lions wore dark suits and arrived in three blue Penn State buses, the same ones that once carried Paterno and the team to games at Beaver Stadium on fall Saturdays.

Among the former players was Mike McQueary. As a graduate assistant to Paterno in 2002, he went to the coach saying he had witnessed former defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky assaulting a boy in the shower at the Penn State football building. Paterno relayed that to his bosses - including the head of campus police - but university trustees felt he should have done more, and it played into their decision to oust the longtime coach on Nov. 9. That came four days after Sandusky was arrested on multiple child sex-abuse counts.

Dressed in a blue coat and tie with a white shirt, the school colors, McQueary was among thousands of expected mourners at an event that was to stretch late into Tuesday night.

One current and one former team member will stand guard over the casket for the duration of the public viewing, athletic department spokesman Jeff Nelson said.

"Going in there, waiting two hours in line, it was worth every second of it," Penn State junior Rob Gressinger said. "It helps in the grieving process for everybody and I hope the rest of the people that are waiting in line longer than I did, get to experience the same thing."

Earlier Tuesday, a line of ex-players stretched around the corner and down the block. Among the mourners were former Penn State and Pittsburgh Steelers great Franco Harris. Others there included NFL receivers Deon Butler and Jordan Norwood, Norwood's father and Baylor assistant coach Brian Norwood and former quarterback Daryll Clark.

The event marked the first of three days of public mourning as the Penn State community in State College and beyond said goodbye to the man who led the Nittany Lions to 409 wins over 46 years and raised the national profile of the school.

There is another public viewing Wednesday at Pasquerilla Spiritual Center, and after that Paterno's family will hold a private funeral and procession through State College.

On Thursday, the school's basketball arena will be the site of a public service called "A Memorial for Joe." Tickets were quickly snapped up for the event, even though there was a two-per-person limit for those ordering.

Former players began arriving shortly after members of Paterno's last team filed in. Some players hugged, and new Penn State coach Bill O'Brien shook hands with others at the curb outside the center.

Penn State linebacker Khairi Fortt recalled his coach's lessons.

"He said the most important thing for us was to keep the Penn State tradition going," the sophomore from Stamford, Conn., said after leaving the viewing.

Scott Paterno has said that despite the turmoil surrounding his termination from the school, Joe Paterno remained peaceful and upbeat in his final days and still loved Penn State.

Bitterness over Paterno's dismissal has turned up in many forms, from online postings to a rewritten newspaper headline placed next to Paterno's statue at the football stadium blaming the trustees for his death. A headline that read "FIRED" was crossed out and made to read, "Killed by Trustees." Lanny Davis, lawyer for the school's board, said threats have been made against the trustees.

Scott Paterno, however, stressed his father did not die with a broken heart and did not harbor resentment toward Penn State.

"His legacy is still going to be filled with the great things that he did. Look at this place," 1969 Penn State graduate Tom Sherman said before tearing up. "It's like he's part of your life. I admire that guy so much."

___

Associated Press writer Mark Scolforo contributed to this report.

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02:57 PM on 01/30/2012
Ultimately, Joe Paterno's success was without honor.
12:04 PM on 01/30/2012
Jimmy Cefalo, former football player, said that he met Joe Paterno when he was 17 years old, and now at 55 Paterno still guides his life. Many of his former players have come forward to tell about how Joe was a positive influence on their lives. In many instances they told stories about how he helped them and positively influenced them even after they had graduated, when injured and couldn't play football anymore...the point being that it WASN'T all about football, or even Penn State, it was about them. As much as Joe Paterno loved Penn State and wanted to win in football, he never let that overrule his mission of helping people, and doing what was right...always with honesty and integrity. His motto was "success with honor" ....."success with honor".....think about what that means. What that means to me is that he never wanted to achieve success by any other means than by doing what was best for others, doing what was honorable, what was right, and doing it with integrity.

Many of us were quick to blame Joe Paterno. After all that he did for Penn State, and it was enormous, they fired him in the most disrespectful manner possible. The media attacked him and there was an implication that Joe Paterno covered up in order to protect his football program, and to protect Penn State. Yet ALL evidence as exhibited by his entire life over the years told us just the opposite of that.
10:22 PM on 01/25/2012
They should put "Pedophile Enabler" on his tombstone.
04:26 PM on 01/25/2012
Hey Jerry, why don't you do the world a favor and do yourself in. Hang yourself, shoot yourself, or drive off the Nittany Mountains. I blame you for Paterno's death. The Cancer didn't kill him...YOU DID!
01:35 PM on 01/25/2012
My beloved Joe Pa has died. I can hardly say the words. He was like a father to me, and I love him with all my heart. Always have and always will.

I don't care about the awful things you write about him, it doesn't change the man he truly was.

The liberal media need to go, along with the board. They did not do the right thing for Joe, and they know it. For me, their sorry comes to late.We need to stop letting the media control our lives.

Don't you just wish we could dig up their past, and see how really rotten they are? It seems to me all they want to do is hurt people.

I believe Joe Pa is with his lord, and Jesus is giving him comfort , justice, and peace. I also believe he will have his justice here, as long as we keep fighting for it. Lets not ever give up the fight for that.

I am just in so much pain right now, and pray for strength for Sue and the family to get through this. The Bible says " that let him without sin cast the first stone," and they all left.

Needless to say, I realize the children are also hurting. I can't imagine their pain and suffering. Sandusky will get his punishment and then Joe Pa will have his justice..
Joe pa is the greatest coach that ever lived." WE ARE PENN STATE"
11:02 PM on 01/25/2012
YOU ARE PEDD STATE !!
11:37 PM on 01/24/2012
you should have seen the lines it went from the spiritual center down to Bigler Road and up towards Park Ave with over 10,000 attending the memorial service at the BJC Thursday.
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08:33 PM on 01/24/2012
People that have negative comments, aren't worth it. They lead miserable lives and will never know the goodness in people. I pray for THEM! I loved Joe. He will always be the reason my family and I did wonderful things with our lives. He inspired us at a young age. That goodness in this world will be his legacy. He affected hundreds of thousands of people in a positive way. I don't believe there are many in life who can truly say that. He is in my opinion, SAINT JOE.
01:33 AM on 01/25/2012
"Saint Joe the Pedophile Enabler"

There, I fixed it.
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Redhunteur
If I damn yer POV will u turn the other cheek?
05:04 AM on 01/25/2012
From what I've read for the past few decades, that's about as catholic as one can get!
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08:47 AM on 01/25/2012
Are you an idiot in real life, or do you just pretend to be one on the internet? The only one responsible for this horrible situation is SANDUSKY. The enablers were our LEGAL SYSTEM, HIGH RANKING OFFICIALS at PSU, SANDUSKY'S FAMILY (almost all crimes occurred in Sandusky's home), and the second mile charity. As far as i'm concerned, Paterno had NOTHING TO DO WITH IT. You may now go back to being an idiot.
07:29 PM on 01/24/2012
It's always sad to see so many indoctrinated fools on parade.
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08:48 AM on 01/25/2012
I guess you are the fool. You just don't get life and reality.
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strangegal
06:49 PM on 01/24/2012
in HOLLYWOOD FEb 25 and in Ocean Grove NJ
folks will experience sections of PLAYWRIGHT LARRY MYERS
"Penn State Pentagram"
a 6 play cycle he id after visiting State College when the "scandaL" broke
Dr Myers is a PSU 4.0 HONORS grad who isa Patriotic Presidential authority
and a spokesman for 40 DAYS OF PRAYER
about no violence upon children
he runs rwm playwrights lab
and a global theater think tank
his play is a yin yang 2012 'our town" with a host of dramatis persoane includinh john barth Joseph Heller Valerie Plom profs and psu grad
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huffposter07
06:41 PM on 01/24/2012
It just hit me---if Sandusky were accused/suspected of molesting young GIRLS, people might think differently about Paterno. Maybe there's less of an uproar because, after all, it was only boys...and (so the thinking goes) it means less when they're molested. Paterno didn't just make one mistake, one bad choice (of reporting what he heard to his bosses and then doing no more). Paterno ALSO was content, year after year, to never look into the matter again. Maybe Paterno should have worried about whether his bosses were the types who might sweep things under the rug.
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08:35 PM on 01/24/2012
you need a life.
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09:13 PM on 01/24/2012
Since the former Atty. Gen. was content to sit on the info. for three years and cut the number of investigators to one, maybe you might question who was really sweeping things under the rug and why? It only took the new Atty. Gen. a few months to get charges brought!!!!
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Redhunteur
If I damn yer POV will u turn the other cheek?
05:05 AM on 01/25/2012
It's like a reversal of that cliched line.

"Forget the children, won't someone PLEASE think of the TEAM!?!"