Vigil planned to remember Paterno one year later

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Sandusky was convicted in June on dozens of criminal counts, crimes that authorities said occurred on and off campus. In July, Freeh accused Paterno and three former school administrators of concealing allegations against Sandusky to protect the school’s image.

The NCAA took unprecedented action two weeks later in levying strict sanctions including a four-year bowl ban, strict scholarship cuts and a $60 million fine on the university. College sports’ governing body also vacated 111 wins under Paterno, erasing what had been his major college record of 409 career victories.

Paterno’s family has vehemently denied Freeh’s conclusions and has maintained the coach would not take part in a cover-up. They have said they expect to release a response to Freeh’s report in the near future.

The trustees have maintained over the past year that they intend to honor Paterno at some point. When asked last week, a couple trustees cited ongoing legal issues related to the scandal.

“There’s going to be a time and a place to do that, and I don’t think that’s right now yet,” trustees chairman Keith Masser said last week.

University leaders continue to navigate tricky issues as they try rebuild Penn State’s image. In the eyes of some national columnists and other critics outside Pennsylvania or the Penn State community, Paterno’s name has been forever soiled.

A survey of alumni conducted for the school by an external public relations firm found that more than eight in 10 alumni remained positive toward Penn State, though that’s down from nine in 10 in 2009. The survey also found that “recent events” still had a negative impact overall on the feelings of alumni, though the impact was less pronounced in December than in the last survey taken in May.

About 75 percent of respondents also said the school should publicly recognize Paterno for his decades of service to the school, down from 87 percent in May. The survey of 1,172 alumni was taken online and over the telephone, with a margin of error that was 2.86 percent.

“We still have an overwhelming majority of people who say he should be honored,” said trustee Anthony Lubrano, who has long voiced support for Paterno and his family. He joined the board last summer with the backing of alumni critical of trustees who fired Paterno.

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