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Penn State/State Pen [split]

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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby Marlow » Tue Aug 21, 2012 12:52 pm

jeremyp wrote:
Marlow wrote:
Conor Dary wrote:1. Paterno hired Mr. Sandusky as a full-time assistant coach
2. [Paterno] made him Penn State’s defensive coordinator
3. The two men disliked each other almost from the start
4. Paterno thought Mr. Sandusky was a glory hound who wanted his job.
5. Their styles were different.

What's wrong with this picture? :shock:


Eisenhower and Patton? And we all know what happened to Patton. At least us older guys do.

??!! Eisenhower was actually a big fan of Patton's ruthlessness, because it took the pressure off him. Eisenhower was only doing the politically expedient thing when he relieved Patton of command of the 7th Army. Patton, however, continued to play a vital role in the ETO for the rest of the war and Eisenhower treated him as the go-to guy he really was. Patton was an a**h**e, to be sure, but that's what a World War requires many times.
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby Conor Dary » Tue Aug 21, 2012 12:57 pm

Marlow wrote:
??!! Eisenhower was actually a big fan of Patton's ruthlessness, because it took the pressure off him. Eisenhower was only doing the politically expedient thing when he relieved Patton of command of the 7th Army. Patton, however, continued to play a vital role in the ETO for the rest of the war and Eisenhower treated him as the go-to guy he really was. Patton was an a**h**e, to be sure, but that's what a World War requires many times.


Thomas Ricks on Patton:

    I've had some fun over the last couple of weeks quoting some of Gen. George Patton's loonier comments and more repulsive observations, so it is only fair to conclude these excerpts by noting that I think Patton, for all his flaws, was a great general.

    This is his great contradiction. He hated everybody, and was spewing bile at the end of his life. Yet as a commander, he resembled Stonewall Jackson, having a great feel for the pattern of the campaign, constantly noting changes, calculating opportunities and disconcerting his enemies. For example, when he heard that Lucas would command the Anzio landing, he worried that that officer lacked sufficient drive to get to the high ground as soon as possible-a prescient concern. Likewise, in the fall of '44, he privately observed that by going quiet in the Ardennes, and using the area to post recuperating and green units, that Bradley was giving the Germans a chance to build up without being harrassed-another important bit of foresight.

http://ricks.foreignpolicy.com/posts/20 ... at_captain
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby jazzcyclist » Tue Aug 21, 2012 1:04 pm

Conor Dary wrote:
lonewolf wrote:I dunno but it suggests to me that Paterno was complicit in the cover up to protect Penn State, not to protect Sandusky.
No difference, no distinction, no excuse.


That is also my take. Sandusky was probably good at his job, which in the end was all P. cared about.

There's no doubt that he was complicit in the coverup, but I don't see how covering up protected Penn State. Syracuse hasn't taken the hit that Penn State has taken for its pedophile assistant coach. Furthermore, since Paterno put Sandusky out to the pasture soon after the 1998 incident, covering up didn't help him keep a valuable assistant on board either. I don't think it's a coincidence that Sandusky's resignation came soon after the first known incident.
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby lonewolf » Tue Aug 21, 2012 1:27 pm

Good points, jazz. Eventually, of course, it did not protect Penn State. I agree Paterno probably eased Sandusky out..but still does not exonerate Paterno and the university administration.
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby lonewolf » Tue Aug 21, 2012 1:52 pm

Reminds me of a non-related Patton story.
Twenty years ago, I worked with a LJ official, Bill, a rancher out around San Angelo, TX who had been a rodeo cowboy pre-WW2.
Bill, a wiry, taciturn guy, wore a belt buckle that curiously read "All Around Cowboy" ETO (European Theatre Operations) 1945. One day, changing shirts, I noted his upper body bore puncture wounds and was otherwise heavily scarred. I assumed they were battle wounds but he said, "Nope, half war, half bull."
Seems Patton had discovered him while visiting hospitals, learned of his cowboy background and when Bill returned to duty, created the position of European Rodeo Director, gave him trucks, men and confiscatory livestock authority. Bill put on rodeos all over Western Europe for the duration..never got shot again but took a few bull horns.
He was also a big time rodeo judge and was in the arena when Lane Frost was killed by a bull at 1989 Cheyenne Frontier Days.
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby jeremyp » Tue Aug 21, 2012 6:43 pm

Marlow wrote:??!! Eisenhower was actually a big fan of Patton's ruthlessness, because it took the pressure off him. Eisenhower was only doing the politically expedient thing when he relieved Patton of command of the 7th Army. Patton, however, continued to play a vital role in the ETO for the rest of the war and Eisenhower treated him as the go-to guy he really was. Patton was an a**h**e, to be sure, but that's what a World War requires many times.

This report shows that Patton was much more of a loose cannon in Europe and that Eisenhower and Patton had some serious disagreements based on Patton's self destructive and egocentric behavior.
http://www.militaryhistoryonline.com/ww ... neral.aspx
What happened to these best friends? Two men that once considered each other comrades were arguing about major issues. .... One must consider all of Patton's mistakes; not following orders in Sicily, slapping the two soldiers, criticizing Eisenhower in public, and the Knutsford Affairs. Patton could never keep his mouth shut long enough to allow Eisenhower to give him a position of high command. This pattern continued after Eisenhower gave Patton yet another chance as commander of the Third Army, in March of 1944. ...

By giving the Third Army to Patton, he was giving Patton another chance. Ultimately, Patton ruined his chance as commander of the Third Army. Patton ordered the killing of German POWs while surrendering because he said they could not be trusted. Patton's actions were going too far and Eisenhower could not allow this to happen for Patton was going to have to change his ways.

Typically, Patton opened his mouth again, saying that the Nazis were better than the Russians were in Late 1944. He also compared Nazis to Republicans and Democrats because Nazis only cared about themselves as do the Republicans and Democrats. Patton said of the Russians:

Hell, why do we care what those goddamn Russians think? We are going to have to fight them sooner or later, within the next generation. Why not do it now while our Army is intact and the damn Russians can have their hind end kicked back to Russia in three months? We can do it easily with the help of the German troops we have, if we just arm them and take them with us. They hate the bastards.[92]

These actions were all Eisenhower could handle; he could not cover this one up and had no choice but to relieve Patton of his command
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby Tuariki » Sat Aug 25, 2012 2:05 am

Marlow wrote:
jeremyp wrote:
Marlow wrote:
Conor Dary wrote:1. Paterno hired Mr. Sandusky as a full-time assistant coach
2. [Paterno] made him Penn State’s defensive coordinator
3. The two men disliked each other almost from the start
4. Paterno thought Mr. Sandusky was a glory hound who wanted his job.
5. Their styles were different.

What's wrong with this picture? :shock:


Eisenhower and Patton? And we all know what happened to Patton. At least us older guys do.

??!! Eisenhower was actually a big fan of Patton's ruthlessness, because it took the pressure off him. Eisenhower was only doing the politically expedient thing when he relieved Patton of command of the 7th Army. Patton, however, continued to play a vital role in the ETO for the rest of the war and Eisenhower treated him as the go-to guy he really was. Patton was an a**h**e, to be sure, but that's what a World War requires many times.

In my 4 years at West Point in the early 1970s what seemed obvious to me that the most revered of all USMA alumni by the cadets was Patton. Mad as a meat axe but the General you wanted leading you.
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby gh » Mon Aug 27, 2012 3:27 pm

And now the silly collateral damage begins. Penn State football games will no longer play Neil Diamond's Sweet Caroline:


<<"Sweet Caroline," which is a big fan participation song during games, is being cut because of the lyrics, more specifically the line "touching me, touching you.">>
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby tandfman » Thu Nov 01, 2012 2:29 pm

The former president of Penn State is now facing criminal charges.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/02/sport ... -case.html
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby Marlow » Fri Nov 02, 2012 3:45 am

tandfman wrote:The former president of Penn State is now facing criminal charges.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/02/sport ... -case.html

I find the logic impeccable:

[He] had been told of an allegation that Sandusky, a former top assistant to the longtime football coach Joe Paterno, had sexually abused a young boy. It was decided that they would approach Sandusky directly, rather than going to outside authorities. Spanier deemed this a “humane and a reasonable way to proceed,” with one caveat: “The only downside for us is if the message isn’t ‘heard’ and acted upon, and we then become vulnerable for not having reported it.”

It is now known that Sandusky continued to sexually abuse young boys for years after.
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby jazzcyclist » Fri Nov 02, 2012 9:00 am

Marlow wrote:
tandfman wrote:The former president of Penn State is now facing criminal charges.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/02/sport ... -case.html

I find the logic impeccable:

[He] had been told of an allegation that Sandusky, a former top assistant to the longtime football coach Joe Paterno, had sexually abused a young boy. It was decided that they would approach Sandusky directly, rather than going to outside authorities. Spanier deemed this a “humane and a reasonable way to proceed,” with one caveat: “The only downside for us is if the message isn’t ‘heard’ and acted upon, and we then become vulnerable for not having reported it.”

It is now known that Sandusky continued to sexually abuse young boys for years after.

They were seriously delusional to think that Sandusky would quit being a pedophile just because they asked him to. And Syracuse's handling of Bernie Fine shows that they could have all survived this scandal if they had acted more responsibly, despite the fact that Jim Boeheim had his head buried in the sand IMO.
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby Pego » Fri Nov 02, 2012 11:15 am

jazzcyclist wrote:
Marlow wrote:
tandfman wrote:The former president of Penn State is now facing criminal charges.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/02/sport ... -case.html

I find the logic impeccable:

[He] had been told of an allegation that Sandusky, a former top assistant to the longtime football coach Joe Paterno, had sexually abused a young boy. It was decided that they would approach Sandusky directly, rather than going to outside authorities. Spanier deemed this a “humane and a reasonable way to proceed,” with one caveat: “The only downside for us is if the message isn’t ‘heard’ and acted upon, and we then become vulnerable for not having reported it.”

It is now known that Sandusky continued to sexually abuse young boys for years after.

They were seriously delusional to think that Sandusky would quit being a pedophile just because they asked him to. And Syracuse's handling of Bernie Fine shows that they could have all survived this scandal if they had acted more responsibly, despite the fact that Jim Boeheim had his head buried in the sand IMO.


Syracuse lucked out. Sandusky affair had already started. The writing was on the wall.
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby lonewolf » Fri Nov 02, 2012 11:41 am

Pego wrote:[Syracuse lucked out. Sandusky affair had already started. The writing was on the wall.

Yup. That was my first and final impression too.
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby Daisy » Thu Jan 10, 2013 9:19 am

Lawyer trying to get a retrial. Does this sound a little like a "my dog ate my homework" excuse?
Attorney Joe Amendola said during a hearing in support of a new trial for Sandusky that problems including a broken copy machine prevented him from crafting an adequate defense for the former Penn State assistant football coach.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/mc ... 2389.story
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby Marlow » Thu Jan 10, 2013 9:23 am

a broken copy machine prevented him from crafting an adequate defense for the former Penn State assistant football coach.

Hysterical - Poor baby - I hope the judge laughs him out of the court.

"Yes, officer, I understand I was going 30mph over the speed limit, and I ran 2 stop lights and 3 stop signs, and was driving on the wrong side of the road, but MY WIFE changed all the pre-set radio buttons and I was trying to set them back!"
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Re: Penn State/State Pen [split]

Postby lonewolf » Thu Jan 10, 2013 10:57 am

I think if I were facing a life sentence and my copy machine broke, I would go to Kinkos.
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