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[97] [98] Brown University, Paterno's alma mater, announced that it would remove Paterno's name from its annual award honoring outstanding male freshman athletes and stated his status in the Brown Athletic Hall of Fame would be placed under review. [99] Joe Paterno statue before it was removed from the front of Penn State's Beaver Stadium. The ...
Suzanne Pohland Paterno (/ p ə ˈ t ɜːr n oʊ /; born February 14, 1940), sometimes referred to as "SuePa", is an American philanthropist. [1] She is the widow of football coach Joe Paterno , who led the Penn State Nittany Lions from 1966 to 2011.
Six coaches have led Penn State in postseason bowl games: Hugo Bezdek, Bob Higgins, Rip Engle, Joe Paterno, Tom Bradley, and Franklin. Two of those coaches also won conference championships: Paterno captured three, and Franklin one, as a member of the Big 10. Paterno also captured national championships as head coach at Penn State in 1982 and 1986.
Trustee Anthony Lubrano introduced a resolution to name the field after Joe Paterno, as well as declare “Joe and Sue Paterno Day” at an undecided date in the fall of 2024.
Penn State's Joe Paterno was offered the Michigan job near the end of the 1968 season. He turned it down, and the Wolverines hired Bo Schembechler
“There is hardly an institution at Penn State that doesn’t have Sue’s fingerprints on it.”
The Paterno family retained former Attorney General Richard Thornburgh to conduct a review of the Freeh report, which concluded that the report constituted a "rush to injustice" that could not be relied upon [12] [13] and that Freeh's evidence fell "far short" of showing that Joe Paterno attempted to conceal the scandal, but rather that "the ...
Coach Joe Paterno was responsible for most of these bids and victories, compiling more wins, 24, and appearances, 37, than any other coach in college football history, with a bowl record of 24–12–1 (.662). Paterno also had a record of 13–4–0 (.765) in "major" bowls.