Tell me what you think - do you think there are more parties involved than what has been presented?
Read the article presented below by CNN. It is the woman who stood up against Paterno. Do you think it is fair to speak about his involvement when he is not here to defend himself?
The woman who stood up to Joe Paterno
updated 2:44 PM EDT, Sun July 15, 2012
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Vicky Triponey spoke to investigators in their probe of the Jerry Sandusky scandal
- She was one of few who stood up to legendary Penn State coach Joe Paterno, and she lost her job
- She was called too aggressive, too confrontational and not a good fit with "the Penn State way"
- She often clashed with Paterno over who should discipline football players
She experienced firsthand
the clubby, jock-snapping culture, the sense of entitlement, the
cloistered existence. It's what drove her five years ago from her job as
the vice president who oversaw student discipline.
She was told she was too aggressive, too confrontational, that she wasn't fitting in with "the Penn State way."
She clashed often with
Paterno over who should discipline football players when they got into
trouble. The conflict with such an iconic figure made her very unpopular
around campus. For a while, it cost Triponey her peace of mind and her
good name. It almost ended her 30-year academic career.
Another person might have felt vindicated, smug or self-righteous when former FBI Director Louis Freeh delivered the scathing report on his eight-month investigation of the Jerry Sandusky child abuse scandal. But Triponey sensed only a deep sadness.
Photos: Paterno as Penn State coach
Penn State students take to the streets
The inquiry, commissioned
by the board of trustees, exposed how the personal failings of Paterno
and three other Penn State leaders -- along with the university's
football-first culture -- empowered an assistant football coach who
molested fatherless boys for more than a decade.
"There's no joy,"
Triponey told CNN as she sat down for an interview Friday, the day after
the Freeh report was released. She said she found solace in the public
recognition of Penn State's "culture of reverence for the football
program," as the report phrased it, and that it is "ingrained at all
levels of the campus community." Freeh found that the culture
contributed to the Sandusky scandal.
She agrees with Freeh's
suggestion that the university's trustees lead an effort to "vigorously
examine and understand" Penn State's culture, why it's so resistant to
outside perspectives and why it places such an "excessive focus on
athletics."
"It's comforting to know that others can now understand," Triponey said. "It didn't have to happen this way."
Her former boss at
Wichita State University described Triponey as "a dedicated, ethical
professional" who was devastated by her experience at Penn State.
"Vicky knew that she had
attempted to do the right thing in disciplining the football players,
but she was unable to do so in the Penn State environment," said Gene
Hughes, a president emeritus at Wichita State and Northern Arizona
University.
At Penn State, Triponey
was among the few who stood up to Paterno, the legendary "JoePa" who for
61 years was synonymous with a football program that pumped millions of
dollars into Penn State. And she paid dearly for it. At the end, nobody
at the top backed her. And it didn't seem to matter to anyone whether
she was right, or even if she had a point.
Bowden: Paterno statue should go
PSU victims' attorney: Report devastating
Jay Paterno: Freeh report is not the end
Buzz Bissinger on Joe Paterno
At the heart of the
problem, the Freeh report stated, were university leaders eager to
please Paterno above all else, a rubber-stamp board of trustees, a
president who discouraged dissent and an administration that was
preoccupied with appearances and spin.
Triponey has been saying that since 2005.
Sandusky, as the
mastermind of college football's legendary "Linebacker U," enjoyed
insider status and used Penn State's sporting events and athletic
facilities to lure victims even after he retired in 1999. When he was
indicted and arrested in November, the report said, Sandusky still had
his keys to the Penn State locker room.
Triponey, a slim blonde
who dresses preppie and carries herself with the reserve of an academic
lifer, was always an outsider at Penn State, even though she grew up in
central Pennsylvania. She was not involved in the Sandusky matter; she
says she never met him. But she is keenly aware of the campus culture
that allowed him to prey on boys for years, virtually unchecked.
"The culture is deep,"
she said. "The culture is making decisions based on how others will
react, not based on what's right and wrong." It focused on the interests
of those at "the top of the chain," she added. "Others at the bottom
didn't matter."
Triponey was just one of
the 430 witnesses who spoke with Freeh's investigators; her story,
which she laid out for them over several hours in March, was supported
by e-mails uncovered among the 3.5 million electronic documents the
investigators examined.
"When I visited with
them, that's when I started to be more hopeful," she said. "They got it,
and they were determined to expose it. They found evidence of the
culture that allowed Jerry Sandusky to exist.
"Now I can articulate it," she said. "That is what I was railing against."
Triponey is not named in
the 267-page report; her experience is laid out in a footnote at the
bottom of pages 65 and 66. The section deals with the janitors who were
afraid they'd lose their jobs if they reported they'd seen Sandusky
molesting a boy in the showers in 2000.
"I know Paterno has so
much power that if he had wanted to get rid of someone, I would have
been gone," one janitor told investigators. "Football runs this
university."
"If that's the culture at the bottom," Freeh told reporters, "God help the culture at the top."
The Triponey footnote
sheds some light on the top. "Some individuals interviewed identified
the handling of a student disciplinary matter in 2007 as an example of
Paterno's excessive influence at the university," the footnote stated.
It described "perceived pressure" to "treat players in ways that would
maintain their ability to play sports," including reducing disciplinary
sanctions.
"I wasn't part of the
evidence. I was confirmation of the evidence," Triponey told CNN. "This
is not about me. This is about what Jerry Sandusky was allowed to do."
Penn State can learn
from its mistakes, she believes, but needs new leadership, fresh blood
-- someone from outside Happy Valley.
"It's a cocoon. It's a
bubble. That's why those inside the bubble are really struggling.
They're afraid; they're embarrassed; they're struggling with what to
do," she said.
"Now the question is, 'do you face reality?'"
'The Penn State way'
Vicky Triponey grew up
in a working-class household and was the first person in her family to
attend college. Her father was a rabid Penn State football fan, but she
chose to go to the University of Pittsburgh, commonly known as Pitt. She
got her bachelor's degree in psychology and continued with
post-graduate studies, pursuing a career in higher education. She earned
her doctorate at the University of Virginia.
She worked at several
colleges and universities before encountering her mentor, James
Rhatigan, who developed the division of student affairs at Wichita State
University. Rhatigan introduced her to Mike Meacham, a young man who
had been student body president and worked for the alumni association.
They married 21 years ago.
She left Wichita in 1998
for the University of Connecticut, where she helped coach Randy Edsall
build up the football program. Edsall, who is now head coach at the
University of Maryland, told CNN that they worked hard to ensure that
football players lived by the same rules as other students.
"We always taught our
guys they weren't better than somebody else," Edsall said. "My whole
thing was, we told our guys up front that there was a student code of
conduct they had to adhere to. If they violated it, there would be
consequences."
Penn State recruited
Triponey in 2003. She quickly figured out she was the leading candidate
when the university brought on its A game for her interview. Her campus
visit coincided with the weekend of "The Thon," a popular dance marathon
that students hold to raise money for charity.
"I liked what I heard
during the interview," she recalled. "It was a truly impressive place,
and I considered it a fabulous next step in my career."
She also heard the
expression "the Penn State way" for the first time that weekend. Had she
understood its significance, she said, she would have "quickly run in
the other direction."
Still, she enjoyed a
long honeymoon. She felt she had the support of Penn State's president,
Graham Spanier, who unabashedly sang her praises when she was hired and
later at professional conferences they both attended.
"I arrived there and was
supported, encouraged, and really for the first two years I thought we
were doing good things," she said. "We were moving in some good
directions. But that second year, in the fall, I started going home and
telling Mike, 'They're not getting it. They're not embracing
conversations about change.'"
There were controversies about her decisions to cut off funding to a student radio program and revamp the student government.
Spanier assured her that
she was right to stick to her guns, but she was "hitting the brick wall
in student discipline." Looking back, she says, "I was putting my neck
out and taking a stand, but there weren't many people with me."
And then one day in late
2004, as disciplinary sanctions were being considered against a member
of the football team, she received a visit from Paterno's wife, who had
tutored the player.
He's a good kid, Sue Paterno said. Could they give him a break?
Triponey realized then that she wasn't in Kansas anymore. Or even Connecticut.
By the next year, 2005,
she was battling Paterno himself over who controlled how football
players were disciplined. Paterno also chafed over enforcing Penn
State's code of conduct off campus.
Spanier called a meeting
at which Paterno angrily dominated the conversation, Triponey recalled.
She summarized the meeting in an e-mail to Spanier, Athletic Director
Tim Curley and others, complaining that Paterno "is insistent that he
knows best how to discipline his players" and that her department should
back off.
She noted that Paterno
preferred to keep the public in the dark about player infractions
involving violence, and he pushed for not enforcing the student code of
conduct off campus. She added that having "a major problem with Coach
Paterno should not be our concern" in making disciplinary decisions.
"I must insist that the
efforts to put pressure on us and try to influence our decisions related
to specific cases ... simply MUST STOP," she wrote. "The calls and
pleas from coaches, board members and others when we are considering a
case are indeed putting us in a position that does treat football
players differently and with greater privilege ... and it appears on our
end to be a deliberate effort to use the power of the football program
to sway our decisions in a way that is beneficial to the football
program."
Curley, who once played
for Paterno and according to the Freeh report was widely considered his
"errand boy," responded to Triponey by explaining "Joe's frustrations
with the system" and the "larger issues that bother him."
Triponey wrote back,
complaining about Paterno's "disregard for our role and disrespect for
the process." She added, "I don't see how we can continue to trust those
inside the football program with confidential information if we are
indeed adversaries."
She followed up with
another e-mail to Spanier on September 1, 2005, stating her objection to
Paterno's attitude and behavior, which she called "atrocious." She said
others, including students and their parents, were mimicking him.
"I am very troubled by
the manipulative, disrespectful, uncivil and abusive behavior of our
football coach," she wrote. "It is quite shocking what this man -- who
is idolized by people everywhere -- is teaching our students."
Paterno clearly seemed
to resent "meddling" from outsiders, even if Triponey was simply doing
her job. She saw the dangers of special treatment that placed football
players under a softer standard than other students lived by. She said
it wasn't right. But it was a battle she couldn't win.
Paterno ridiculed her on
a radio show as "that lady in Old Main" who couldn't possibly know how
to handle students because "she didn't have kids."
Tensions reached the
breaking point in 2007 over how to discipline half a dozen players who'd
been arrested at a brawl at an off-campus apartment complex. Several
students were injured; one beaten unconscious.
Triponey met with
Paterno and other university officials half a dozen times, although she
preferred to remain neutral as the appeals hearing officer.
At the final meeting,
Triponey urged the coach to advise his players to tell the truth.
Paterno said angrily that he couldn't force his players to "rat" on each
other since they had to practice and play together. Curley and Spanier
backed him up on that point, she said.
Triponey recommended
suspensions; Paterno pushed for community service that included having
the team clean up the stadium for two hours after each home game.
In the end, four players were briefly suspended during the off-season. They didn't miss a game.
By then it was clear she
no longer enjoyed Spanier's support. He began making noises about
whether she really embraced "the Penn State way." He told her during an
annual review that she was too confrontational, too aggressive. Triponey
knew her days at Penn State were numbered when he advised her to think
hard about whether she had a future there.
Back from the ashes
When it all fell apart, Triponey felt completely alone.
She received threatening
phone calls at home when her husband was traveling and was savaged on
student message boards. Her house was vandalized and "For Sale" signs
were staked in her front yard. By the time police installed surveillance
cameras, she was already on her way out.
Spanier came to her home
and sat in her living room after Paterno lost his temper at the meeting
about the players involved in the brawl. She said he told her, "Well,
Vicky, you are one of a handful of people, four or five people, who have
seen the dark side of Joe Paterno. We're going to have to do something
about it."
She shakes her head, recalling that conversation now. "'Doing something about it,'" she says, "ended with me being gone."
Citing "philosophical
differences," Triponey resigned under pressure as the 2007 football
season got under way. Unlike Sandusky, convicted last month of 45 counts
of molesting young boys, she did not receive a $168,000 golden
handshake, prime football seats for life or keys to the locker room.
She was no longer invited to events. She was shunned.
She sold her big house
in State College and moved into a condo in Bellfonte, the quaint county
seat where Sandusky was tried, while her husband, a Penn State
professor, looked for a job at another university. It took two years,
but he finally found a spot at the University of South Carolina's
medical school in Charleston.
She stopped going to
Wegman's, a favorite upscale supermarket outside State College, because
"the Penn State people went there." They recognized her and without fail
turned their backs and walked away, she recalled.
Former colleagues who did want to reach out held back. Later, they explained that they were afraid of losing their jobs, too.
That, she says, was "the Penn State way" as she knew it.
It had been corrupted by success.
"Winning became more
important," she said, along with a strong desire "to avoid bad
publicity." So many people were invested in the football program, they
felt they had "to protect something that they had created, a grand
experiment that was so perfect that they didn't dare let anybody know
there were blemishes."
There was no
accountability. Board meetings were scripted to avoid controversy. It
was a point of pride that nobody ever argued. The leadership was
"grounded in the spin, the image, the 'too big to fail.' It became a
business dependent on the money and contributions," she said.
As for Paterno, who died of lung cancer in January, Triponey does not judge him harshly.
"Joe Paterno was an
incredibly principled person," she said, recalling how, at the
beginning, he made sure his athletes were successful students, as well.
"That was at his core," she said, "but the pedestal became so high, he
lost that somewhere."
She thought she had left
academia forever, following her husband to Charleston and getting
involved in charities and community work.
"At the time, it
destroyed my career. I couldn't go back into higher education after what
happened at Penn State. I had to leave the work I had done for 30
years. What enabled people to take a chance on me was when the Sandusky
story broke."
Sandusky was indicted in
November and accused of molesting 10 boys over 15 years. Spanier and
Paterno were dismissed and Curley and another Penn State vice president,
Gary Schultz, were charged with lying to a grand jury about what they
knew about the Sandusky affair.
"The world of higher education started seeing me as a more credible person," Triponey said. "I did get messages and kudos."
Reporters started
calling, and then so did people at other schools. Among them was R.
Barbara Gitenstein, president of the College of New Jersey near Trenton.
The Division III school focuses on liberal arts and had an opening in
student affairs.
Triponey started in February and plans to stay at least until December as the interim director.
"Actually, she's not
doing just fine," Gitenstein said. "She's doing great." She is well
liked by the students, staff, trustees and other department heads, she
added.
"I think she's open, she
accessible," Gitenstein said. "She's thoughtful, and she has knowledge
about student affairs. She's also very responsible in terms of budget.
She knows how to bring others along, to make them feel part of the
enterprise."
Triponey says she's now working in a place where it's not just acceptable to speak truth to power, it's encouraged.
"I never though I'd be
back doing work in higher education," she said. "I also never thought
I'd see the day where public opinion is at the place where folks are
saying Penn State's culture has got to change."
Edsall, her former
colleague at UConn, says Triponey stands in contrast to the other
officials at Penn State and the choices they made. "She lost her job,
but she never lost her principles, her values or her morals," he said.
"When you see a friend, a colleague, go through what she went through,
it's good to see that things have come to light.
"I tell my players there
are two things in life," he added. "You've got your name and you've got
your reputation. And you know what? Vicky still has her name and she
still has her reputation."
She took a stand for what she believed in, Edsall said, but the leadership at Penn State didn't want to change.
"They wanted to continue with the status quo, and look where it got them."
Triponey views the Freeh report as "my trigger that it's OK to start speaking out," she said.
"Maybe it's an
opportunity for me to take the experience, take the pain, take the pain
of other victims, and help change the culture," she said. "Maybe not at
Penn State, but other coaches, other presidents around the country are
in a position now to see the danger in a culture like this."
It has all left her "saddened, disgusted and horrified, but also hopeful," she said.
It has brought new life to the teacher in her.
No comments:
Post a Comment