Report: Sue Paterno denied pool access
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. -- A person close to former Penn State coach Joe Paterno's family has told The Associated Press his wife was turned away from a campus pool.
Sue Paterno is an avid swimmer known for taking early-morning laps in the pool. The person who requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the situation said Wednesday night the rejection left the family saddened.
University spokesman Bill Mahon told The Patriot-News of Harrisburg, which first reported the pool rejection, he was unaware of any directive. The school had said last week that Paterno still held tenure.
School trustees fired Joe Paterno on Nov. 9 from the job he held for nearly a half-century in the aftermath of child sex abuse charges against former defensive coordinator Jerry Sandusky.
Paterno also was recently diagnosed with a treatable form of lung cancer. The person said the coach was focused on beating the illness "and seeing the full truth" emerge.
Paterno testified before a grand jury looking into the abuse allegations that a graduate assistant told him in 2002 that he witnessed an incident in the shower in the team locker room. Prosecutors have said Paterno had passed on the information to his superior.
But Paterno has said specific actions alleged to have occurred in the grand jury report were not relayed to him. Paterno is not a target of the investigation, according to authorities.
Still, the state's top cop criticized the way school leaders handled allegations and said Paterno and other officials had a moral responsibility to do more.
His son, Scott, said last week in a statement that Joe Paterno's cancer was diagnosed during a follow-up visit for a bronchial illness. He requested privacy for the family.
"We're focusing on Wisconsin," linebacker Nate Stupar said, ahead of Penn State's game at Wisconsin this weekend. "(But) definitely we've been thinking about him, and we're hoping he's doing all right, and just praying for him."
The person close to the Paterno family told the AP that Paterno was receiving thousands of calls or messages from former players, alumni and other well-wishers, and that Paterno was encouraging patience and to trust in the truth.
Sue Paterno was a longtime fixture at the school and helped raise money for the library and organized Special Olympics on campus.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
MORE COLLEGE FOOTBALL HEADLINES
- SEC commish likes 4-team playoff, not plus-1
- Paterno, Spanier each made over $1M in 2011
- Miami will remain committed to ACC, AD says
- Source: Clemson, Swinney close to new deal
MOST SENT STORIES ON ESPN.COM
MORE FROM THE WEB
Connect with Facebook to share your ESPN activities. Learn more »
Learn more- Social Sharing ON ▼
- ON OFF ▼
- Remind me every time I add an event to my Activity
- My Activity ▼
- Recently shared to your timeline:
Share ESPN with your friends
Your friend shared this story on Facebook. Share ESPN with your friends to see everything they're reading and watching, and then share the latest news about the sports and teams you care about most!

PENN STATE SCANDAL

More than six decades of achievement could not withstand the sin of omission in connection to a terrible scandal. And so it ends for Joe Paterno. Ivan Maisel | Paterno fired | Full coverage
PENN STATE SCANDAL
- Trustees try to quell alumni angst
- Ex-assistants' severance to total $4.4M
- Faculty Council unhappy with inquest
- Paterno: I was confounded by allegation
- Penn State hires Patriots' O'Brien
- Judge: Ex-Penn State officials can face trial
- Sandusky waives hearing, goes to trial
- Penn State terminates Paterno licensing ties
- Sandusky's wife: He didn't harm kids
- Ex-FBI director to lead Penn State probe
- Paterno, Spanier fired from Penn State
- Key players in Penn State saga | Timeline
- PDF: Sandusky grand jury transcript
- Penn State blog coverage | Podcast

COMMENTARY
- Woj: Ignorance no excuse for Paterno
- Drehs: No easy answers for McQueary
- Schlabach: Long road to recovery
- Schlabach: Paterno's firing was just
- Bryant: A failure of power, moral authority
- Reilly: Save your sympathy for the victims
- Weinreb: Growing up Penn State
MORE ON PATERNO
- Joyner: Can Arkansas win a BCS title?
- Recruiting: Class updates on top-25 teams
- McGee: Best- and worst-case records for TCU
- Haney: Gamecocks' BCS shot | Clemson
- Strickland: Why Longhorns could win it all

