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Jay Paterno’s New Book Released Early at Barnes & Noble
onward state ^ | 7-21-14 | Tim Gilbert, Kevin Horne & Jessica Tully

Posted on 07/23/2014 10:39:40 AM PDT by FlJoePa

Penn State fans living in State College should run — not walk — to the Barnes & Noble on Benner Pike if they want to grab a copy of Jay Paterno’s new book before it potentially gets pulled from the shelves. The memoir “Paterno Legacy: Enduring Lessons from the Life and Death of My Father” isn’t due out until Sept. 1, but Barnes & Noble had stacks of the book for sale in its Local Interest section at closing time on Tuesday.

No one from Barnes & Noble could be immediately reached for comment, so it’s not known if this is the result of a store error (likely) or a selective early release (less likely, considering Paterno’s semi-regular book countdown updates on social media). Nevertheless, there were 40 copies of the highly anticipated 358-page book, which is self-described as the “revealing, poignant, and definitive biography of legendary coach Joe Paterno written by the man who knew him better than anyone” available for purchase at $26.95.

If you couldn’t get a copy, we’ve pulled many of its interesting excerpts. Among them: his thoughts on the trustees who personally knew his father and still fired him, anecdotes on the Freeh investigators (including how they confused former quarterback Shane McGregor for a Sandusky victim), his father’s final moments, and his personal experience with sexually inappropriate activity.

It begins with a profound forward from Nike founder Phil Knight, which reads like something of a mea culpa for his decision to remove Joe Paterno’s name from Nike’s child care center. Knight says that decision still haunts him:

I believe if the situation had been reversed, Joe Paterno would have left my name up, lynch mob be damned.

Forgiven or not, I cannot escape that I was, at least for a time, “one of them.”

….

In the meantime, look around at State College. He is there. Immortality is just timeless ubiquity. So they — and sadly I — through our actions have narrowed the scope and degree of this immortality. But nobody can make him go away.

Jay Paterno wastes no time getting into what he calls “The Elephant in the Room,” the name of the first chapter. Unlike Joe Posnanski’s Paterno book, Jay tackles the scandal head-on. It’s a point-by-point defense of the accusations made against Joe in the Freeh Report, a summary of many criticisms of Freeh already made.

The morning after my father had been fired, I was seated at his desk, and he sat in his robe in another chair looking over at me. The pain, the sleepless nights of the previous days were visible in his face. But he had something he wanted me to know. “Jay, I never told you guys about Jerry because I didn’t know if it was true,” he said. “I certainly couldn’t walk into the office and accuse a guy of something that I didn’t witness or know to be true. I didn’t know that he’d done all of that stuff. I had no idea. I just didn’t know.”

….

Joe Paterno made the statement: “In hindsight I wish I had done more.” But there is a more important statement he wrote on a pad just before he left the house to go to the hospital. It was the last thing he wrote in his own home: “Maybe the silver lining in this is that some good can come out of this.”

Jay calls out several of the trustees by name who participated in the announced unanimous vote to fire his father. Many of them had been lifelong friends of the Paternos, and it was impossible to separate the personal from the professional. Ed Hintz, Jesse Arnelle, Paul Suhey, Steve Garban, John Surma — Jay has something to say about all of them, none more direct than Anne Riley:

My first thoughts fell on a trustee named Anne Riley. One of my most vivid childhood memories came at just over seven years old. I was in our basement and heard something going on up in the kitchen. I went upstairs and caught sight of my father pulling Anne’s father, Ridge Riley, across the floor to perform CPR on him. “Get downstairs,” my father yelled.

I did what I was told and after a lot of commotion, Ridge Riley was taken to the hospital, but he had already died in our kitchen. He was visiting my father to continue work on the book The Road to Number One, a chronicle of Penn State football history.

How would he have written about this chapter?

In her father’s moment of greatest need, my mother and father tried to save his life. In my father’s hour of greatest need, where was she?

Jay recounts the difficulty of explaining the situation to his 11-year-old son Joey, who was just old enough to understand its gravity.

“Dad…when this is all over, will we still be Penn State fans?” he asked.

Everything screeched to a halt. The world stopped spinning, and I was completely thrown. It was a question I hadn’t even pondered yet. I answered honestly in a way that was as painful a statement as I have ever spoken.

“Joey…I don’t know,” I said. “I just don’t know, son.”

Jay recalls the day the Grand Jury presentment was leaked. It wasn’t until he fielded a call from communications manager Guido D’Elia, who had spoken to the New York Times’ Pete Thamel, that he realized the gravity of the situation:

“Jay, this is not good,” [D’Elia] said.

“Not good?”

“Yeah, his attitude with me was this: I can’t believe you’re actually trying to spin this.”

“Guido, Joe didn’t know.”

“They don’t care.”

“So what?” I said. “The truth is that the first time Joe was ever made aware of anything he went to his superiors, and that was all he could do.”

“They don’t care.”

The exchange was telling. The media didn’t care about what actually happened. The forces of Salem had been unleashed and wouldn’t rest until someone had ascended from the gallows to hang.

Perhaps the most gripping chapter, called “The Firing, The Tempest, and Et Tu Brute,” comes midway through the book. Paterno recounts those hectic days leading up to his father’s termination, including his attempts to reach out to trustees Ed Hintz and Dave Joyner, urging them to talk to Joe to get his side before any decisions were made.

Of course, that would never happen.

Paterno first found out about his father’s fate in a phone call from his sister Mary Kay, who was at the house when John Surma sent his messenger.

Too shocked to cry, all I could manage was to say the one word my father never wanted to hear any of us say, a word I had never heard him utter even at his angriest: “Fuck.”

At that moment the trustees chose to condemn an innocent man. But in their actions, they also offered up the name of Penn State, an honorable name earned over decades. In a moment of fear and panic, they destroyed it. For the damage done to the Penn State name, all the money, all the investigations, and all the public relations firms they hire cannot repair what they’ve done.

Later, Jay writes about his first interview with the Freeh commission. He was asked not to bring counsel while he sat down with former Federal Judge Eugene Sullivan and a former Delaware state trooper. Jay asked if he could tape the interview; they said no.

At the end of the interview, the most interesting part of the conversation occurred. I asked for copies of their notes of the interview. They denied my request insisting all of the interviews were privileged information and were the property of their client. “Who is your client,” I asked — expecting the answer to be Penn State. “The Board of Trustees” was their answer.

A week later, Joe asked about Jay’s interview with the Freeh commission because he had one scheduled. Jay told his father he believed the NCAA will use the report to sanction the school. Jay wrote that Joe was totally shocked by the news.

“Why would they do that,” he asked.

“To burn this to the ground and take credit for everything that happens next. They want to destroy all the good things done here and blame you for it. Then they can claim they made Penn State football.”

“Whatever happens, we must defend this university and the program. This is not a football scandal. We must fight. We owe it to the student-athletes, coaches, administrators, faculty, and alumni who have done things the right way in all sports for decades. We can’t let them take that away.”

Unfortunately I would be proven right.

But Jay faced more rounds of questions from attorneys with the Freeh commission in January of 2012. An officer started to ask Jay questions about victims traveling with Jerry Sandusky to practice or trips after he retired. Jay says this did not happen, as they were closed to players and coaches.

The next question was even more puzzling. “We understand that Jerry was able to arrange for his victims to dress for football games,” he said.

“You mean in uniform,” I asked.

“Yes.”

I allowed that I didn’t personally check every uniform, but I doubted that story. We would notice a 10-or 12-year-old in uniform among oversized college players.

“We have a picture of one,” he said.

He showed me the picture, and I laughed.

“This young man is one of the victims,” he said, pointing to a player in uniform without his helmet on and standing next next to Joe on the sidelines of a game.

“No, it’s not,” I said. “That’s Shane McGregor.”

He wanted to know how I was so sure. I explained that Shane was still on the team, that I had coached him for four years, and that the picture he was holding was from the Outback Bowl on January 1, 2011.

If they were so off on this, I wondered what else they might have gotten wrong.

Jay recounts Joe’s final moments.

Tears came to my mother’s eyes. I witnessed one of the most beautiful moments of my entire life. In a sterile hospital room full of monitors and the scent of sickness, a light shone on my mother and father. My father’s eyes opened wide as my mother pressed her forehead to his, grabbed his hand, and through the tears sang along in a voice strong and clear. Part of me felt I should leave them there, allow them that moment. But God wanted me there to see true love.

….

The rest of my family started to arrive. I asked Wayne Sebastianelli to sneak in a bottle of Old Grandad. With my mother, my siblings, and Guido assembled, we poured the bourbon and had a toast to my father. Mary gave some to my dad, and he smiled.

On my way toward the bus, I ran into a familiar face. It was Dave Richardson. He worked stadium security for years and always found Joe in the crowded postgame field and walked him to the locker room. He had a tear in his eye on this cold, icy day and hugged me. “Jay,” he asked. “I just came here because I wanted to walk your dad out one last time.”

When the service was over, I stayed until everyone left. I was all alone with him. I talked to him, I asked for his help. But there were no answers, so I walked alone across a snowy road into the rest of my life.

In February 2013, police officers came to the Paternos’ door because Jay had received death threats on social media.

Since the story broke, we’d had a tree cut down, and our house was egged. We also had stopped putting our garbage out the night before trash day because we feared media members going through it.

There were three things you didn’t talk about in the Paterno house: Office business, money, and anything related to or that might allude to anything sexual. The third of the options was tough to talk about to the team, too, so Joe brought in professionals to do it. As Jay put it:

In a staff meeting, one of the coaches suggested that the message might be more effective coming from him. “You think they want to hear a guy in his mid-70s talk to them about that stuff?” Joe said. “I’m not even sure I remember exactly what happens anymore.” He laughed.

The aversion to sex discussions shed more light on how Paterno was disposed to perceive Sandusky’s actions. Jay recalls when later-dropped assault allegations against two of Penn State’s players came about, that the woman consented to have sex with either of them individually but not both at the same time. When it was brought to Joe, he said, “she had sex with the two of them…at the same time? How is that possible?”

On a walk in the park, he got the same puzzled look on his face as when we discussed the Jerry Sandusky case in the last months of his life. What happened was hard for him to process. The people of 1930s Brooklyn did not talk about this stuff, as he explained when we were talking about this case. “Look, Jay,” he said, “if this was going on back then, I certainly never knew about it. If something like this had happened where I grew up, that person would have been beaten to within an inch of his life. No one would talk about it or know why. It was a different time and place. Maybe it was better, maybe it wasn’t. I don’t know.”

“Who knows, Dad?”

“But how could this happen here?”

“Dad, this happens in every town in America.”

He looked through the low sunlight of early December in Sunset Park and frowned. The lines on his face and forehead seemed to have grown in the weeks of the scandal. The park had been a place of childhood play, of dreams of tossing footballs, of bank shots on the basketball court, and neighborhood football games.

Now it was a place to unburden a soul of regret.

“Jay, he fooled me.”

“Dad, he fooled me, he fooled everyone.”

That didn’t ease his mind. There was a feeling there that either his age or being unaware had allowed something like this to happen.

After the November 2011 Nebraska game, Joe told Jay he was proud of how he did on the sidelines for the first time without his father.

“Well, I have to tell you that what you did was noticed by a lot of people. I heard from Presidents Bush today. They both called. The father called first and then the younger President Bush called. In fact he told me how proud I should be of my son and how you coach.”

Hearing what former President George W. Bush has said meant a great deal to me. For the generation that produced my father and President George H. W. Bush, loyalty was everything. When my father needed it most, I saw where they stood.

Jay reveals that Paterno considered leaving the program after the 16-3 loss to Wisconsin in 2004. The husband of one of Jay’s sisters (though Jay does not specify which one) had been badly injured in an accident, and Paterno told Jay:

“Jay,” he said to me, “maybe it is time to get out.”

“Why is that?” I asked.

“If he isn’t OK, I can retire, and your mother and I will help take care of the kids. Your sister may need a lot of help.”

Questions about Joe’s mental state started as early as 2002, when he was 75:

As he got older, some people just told him what he wanted to hear to his face while grousing behind his back. As early as the 2002 season, I warned him about the shifting loyalties of some trustees.

One of them pulled me aside at my parents’ home after a game that season. He had the audacity to ask if in my opinion: “Is Joe still all there mentally?”

“Ed,” I said, “he’s all there.”

It appears that Ed was therefore either Ed Junker, an emeritus trustee and former chairman, or current trustee Ed Hintz.

One of the book’s shortest chapters is the nineteenth, “My Story,” in which Jay reveals that he was approached for oral sex by an adult as a 12-year old.

In the summer of 1981, I made the 10-minute walk across campus to downtown State College. After I bought a new Journey album, I took a bus to a friend’s house in the Park Forest neighborhood.

By late afternoon it was time to take the bus back and walk home from the on-campus stop. I sat by myself with the album under one arm. I just sat looking out the window. I guess I didn’t even notice the guy until he pointed at the album under my arm. “Is that any good?” he asked.

“I just got it today,” I answered.

The conversation started with a discussion of the album. He mentioned he was visiting, so he asked questions about town or where to eat.

All these years later, I realize his approach was to get me talking about myself, start to size me up. After a few more stops, other people got off the bus. Near campus he told me we were hoping off the bus at the same stop. “I am here for a conference and I am staying at The Nittany Lion Inn,” he said.

When we got out, he asked me for directions to the hotel, and I pointed him in the right direction. Then he got to the point of his approaching me. “Why don’t you come back there with me?” he asked.

“What for?” I asked.

“Look, I am here for a conference. I have a girlfriend at home and when I am away I do not like to cheat on her.”

“What’s that got to do with me?” I asked.

My 12-year-old mind didn’t see his angle.

“Well I don’t like to sleep with other women. But if you come back to the hotel, we could have oral sex.”

“What?” I asked.

“Just come back to the hotel, and we’ll have a good time.”

“Um,” I stammered, “that’s really not my thing.”

This had taken me by complete surprise. I was uncomfortable and looked around for other people. It was still daylight. Some people were around but too far to hear our conversation but close enough to see if he grabbed me trying to flee.

He didn’t give up. “Are you sure?” He asked. “We’ll have a really good time.”

“I need to go home now. My parents have dinner waiting for me,” I said.

I was sick to my stomach and wanted to get home right away.

“It’s really okay,” he said. “It is okay. There’s nothing wrong with it, and as I said, I just don’t want to sleep with another woman.”

“I’m pretty sure your girlfriend wouldn’t be okay with this. I’m going home.”

I headed toward my home as quickly as possible.

Confused, I blamed myself for his proposition. Now at age 45, I know this is a common reaction. How could this happen in my town? The entire existence of my life I’d believed in this safe, sheltered cocoon of Happy Valley.

His offer made me feel guilty. The truth, which isn’t always easy for a child to see, was that I’d done nothing wrong. I’d gotten on a bus and politely answered a stranger’s questions and then walked away when he did something inappropriate.

But when I walked into my house, I told no one in my family about what had happened to me.

I feared that I’d be judged. The feelings I was grappling with were all directed internally. Did I somehow invite that? What was wrong with me that some man would ask me to do that?

All these years later, I look back and recall how I felt because of something I didn’t do, something I avoided. Then I try to imagine a young man who was sexually abused by someone they knew and trusted. There is no way I can imagine what they must be feeling, but my experience has shown me part of what the internal reaction must be like.

In Chapter 7, “The Asterisk,” Jay is realisitc. He writes that the Paterno name carries an asterisk, at least for now. On Freeh’s accusation that Paterno covered up Sandusky to avoid “bad publicity,” Jay counters with a story about how Paterno defended black quarterback Rashard Casey amid assault accusations. It was a racially-charged case, and Paterno was called a “n—–lover” in letters. But Casey was cleared, despite the bad publicity.

Chapter 12, “The Walks Home,” describes the walks Jay took back to McKee Street with his dad after football games, and no other chapter better makes one remember how things used to be here. Once, Joe could just walk from Beaver to McKee, causally interacting with fans and neighbors along the way.

The best parts of the walks home were often on campus. As the gray truck [that took Jay and Joe two blocks from Beaver to avoid throngs] would stop at the corner, we’d get out and try to blend in. Inevitably, fans would recognize that Joe Paterno was walking behind them or in front of them. I would listen and I could hear what they’d say: “Hey isn’t that?” “Oh my God that’s JoePa.” “Mom, look, that’s Joe Paterno.”

Jay concludes his personal story.

Yes, Dad, indeed your trip is done. You weathered every rack and won the prize. You gave yourself until you breathed your last. How noble a journey you concluded, a journey for which bells have rung and people have exulted. The lessons of the way you lived your life and the way you left this world continue to resonate with me.

But the light of his life, the impact he made, will guide me until my port is near and my trip is done, until I, too, walk the sands of the next Avalon.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; Sports
KEYWORDS: childrape; ncaa; perverts; poe; psu
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To: iowamark

Possible. I am more inclined now to give Paterno the benefit of the doubt.

Pedo rings don’t last unless there are some real ruthless people to keep them going.


21 posted on 07/23/2014 11:56:47 AM PDT by dfwgator
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To: iowamark

Are you also going after Planned Parenthood officials for not reporting suspected child rape and incest?


22 posted on 07/23/2014 11:58:58 AM PDT by Eva
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To: iowamark

Joe always thought - especially towards the end of js’s career - that he wasn’t focused. He spent too much time on the second mile. He wasn’t serious.

Joe wouldn’t have given JS a glowing recommendation w/ or w/out any abuse allegations.


23 posted on 07/23/2014 12:01:36 PM PDT by FlJoePa
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To: I cannot think of a name
I'd have reported it outside the Penn State system.
24 posted on 07/23/2014 12:02:06 PM PDT by onedoug
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To: onedoug
I'd have reported it outside the Penn State system.

Are you sure he didn't?

I still believe there are a lot of powerful people out there who made sure the Second Mile Pedo Ring would never come to light. Apparently Ray Gricar found out, and nobody heard from him again.

25 posted on 07/23/2014 12:06:34 PM PDT by dfwgator
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To: dfwgator

Gricar’s disappearance has nothing to do w/ js. He prosecuted huge drug busts. It was either a hit or (more likely) a suicide, like his brother.

Think more Occam’s razor with regards to this whole saga.


26 posted on 07/23/2014 12:09:45 PM PDT by FlJoePa
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To: iowamark

Of you had any experience with type of issue, you would know that good people are very often in denial about the possibility that someone they know could be a pedophile because pedophilia is so far out of their own experience. They find it so abhorrent that they just can’t deal with it because it threatens to destroy the way they view the world. This reaction is much more common among older people who did not grow up with the internet and X-rated movies on TV.


27 posted on 07/23/2014 12:10:04 PM PDT by Eva
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To: dfwgator; iowamark
Second Mile Pedo Ring ...

The shame here is that the 2nd mile pedo ring was never fully investigated, or maybe not investigated at all. I have had heard rumors about the 2nd mile, beyond Sandusky.

To address statements and questions earlier in this thread ... People make a lot out of Joe's power, such as he allowed Sandusky to have an office, etc. My understand of the situation is that Joe did not like Sandusky and they did not get along, this was before Sandusky retired. Joe had nothing to do with Jerry's office.

Related to Sandusky's retirement ... Sandusky wanted to spend more time working on the 2nd mile. He didn't entertain offers from other football programs because his mind was preoccupied with little boys from the 2nd mile. Coaching was incompatible with his urges.

As for Joe's famous statement, "I wish I had done more." This has been take out of context by the media. The media and Joe did not mix very well. Joe was a ardent conservative, and the media would love to prove that he was a fraud. In context, Joe's statement was, "With the benefit of hindsight, I wish I had done more."

I will not waste time defending JoePa, either you know the details of situation or you have some grudge against him. On the other hand, Penn State students (my daughter is one) and alumni (my father and I are) are not at fault. They had no proximity to Sandusky. Penn State football players are not at fault for the same reason. I can go on with just about every aspect of a huge university and the same is true.

With that said, I definitely have problems with the BOT and administration and will not defend them. I also have a problem with Louis Freeh and his half-baked report for the BOT. Time will tell and more of the truth will come out. Unfortunately, JoePa is not alive to defend himself and his reputation with many has been damaged. We can thank the media for a lot of that. Just Google, "Jerry Sandusky scandal", and see the results. Besides local media coverage, it usually labeled as the Penn State scandal. Many articles focus on JoePa, not Sandusky. Just who was the pedophile?

28 posted on 07/23/2014 12:53:11 PM PDT by ConservativeInPA (We need to fundamentally transform RATs lives for their lies.)
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To: ConservativeInPA

Excellent post. Thanks.


29 posted on 07/23/2014 1:03:32 PM PDT by FlJoePa
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To: dfwgator
Are you sure he didn't?

According to him, he didn't.

30 posted on 07/23/2014 5:35:41 PM PDT by onedoug
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To: iowamark
“I certainly couldn’t walk into the office and accuse a guy of something that I didn’t witness or know to be true. I didn’t know that he’d done all of that stuff. I had no idea. I just didn’t know.”

. . . . “In hindsight I wish I had done more.”

What a horrible indictment of Joe Paterno! And in his own words.
The natural disposition is always to believe. It is acquired wisdom and experience only that teach incredulity, and they very seldom teach it enough. The wisest and most cautious of us all frequently gives credit to stories which he himself is afterwards both ashamed and astonished that he could possibly think of believing. - Adam Smith, Theory of Moral Sentiments
Well, at least Mr. Paterno wasn’t guilty of that, at least in this case.

Not so sure about all the quick judges around here, tho . . .


31 posted on 07/24/2014 7:10:07 AM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion ("Liberalism” is a conspiracy against the public by wire-service journalism.)
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