No other individual better symbolizes the utter failure of those responsible for what was allowed to continue for over ten years. I can imagine that even for the most die hard Joe Pa supporters, seeing that statues is an open and raw source of embarrassment to say the least.
They can put it in storage where it will remain. I seriously doubt that it will ever see the light of day ever again. The visage of their icon is forevermore tainted with the reality that he allowed children to be violated and victimized, for no other reason than to supposedly shield the university from bad publicity. Now look at the publicity.
The echo of "say it ain't so Joe" will echo through the halls of Penn State for a generation and when it finally subsides with the death of the last of those who remember, no one will care to resurrect the visage of glory tainted and a university shamed.
Paterno statue to be removed
The statue of the late Penn State football coach Joe Paterno outside the campus' football stadium will be removed, the university's president said Sunday.
The tribute to Paterno had become an object of contention after the child rape scandal involving former assistant coach Jerry Sandusky.Paterno's statue and legacy came under fire after the release of the Freeh Report, the scathing investigation led by former FBI Director Louis Freeh.
UPDATE
Unprecedented Penalties in the offing
It looks like the troubles are just beginning for Penn State, shich may have been their reasoning for taking down the statue today. The NCAA 'other shoe' is supposed to drop tomorrow.
CBS News has learned that the NCAA will announce what a high-ranking association source called "unprecedented" penalties against both the Penn State University football team and the school.
"I've never seen anything like it," the source told correspondent Armen Keteyian.
NCAA President Mark Emmert will make the announcement Monday morning at 9 a.m. at the organization's headquarters in Indianapolis.
The penalties come in the wake of the independent report by former FBI Director Louis Freeh that chronicled repeated efforts by four top Penn State officials, including former football coach Joe Paterno, to conceal allegations of serial child sex abuse by Jerry Sandusky over a 14-year period.
The NCAA had been awaiting the school's response to four key questions pertaining to the sex abuse scandal, including issues involving institutional control and ethics.
No comments:
Post a Comment