At Paterno house, a quiet calm before, after game

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STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) - On the first fall Saturday he hasn't coached football since Harry Truman was president, Joe Paterno was out of sight but not out of the minds of Penn State students and supporters.

While he apparently spent the day elsewhere - returning home only after the game had ended and heading directly inside, about 75 students, fans and even a former player milled around his front lawn in the late afternoon, leaving signs and cheering when his wife, Sue Paterno, blew them kisses and thanked them for their support during what she called a "difficult week" for her and her family.

"We've always thought of Penn State as a family ... we will be again," she said, before going back inside.

Paterno's son Jay, who was on the sidelines during Penn State's 17-14 loss to Nebraska, told reporters after the game that his father had planned to watch it on television but didn't say where.

"He wanted to make sure that the guys he coached and the guys he felt very close to would understand that he was part of us, he still wanted to be part of this and he was pulling for them and cheering for them," Jay Paterno said.

Later, he walked from Beaver Stadium to the Paterno residence to collect his green SUV in the driveway and got a standing ovation from the crowd.

There was little other activity at the Paterno house during the day, a week after Jerry Sandusky - the coach's one-time heir apparent - was charged with sexually abusing eight boys over 15 years and two school administrators were charged with failing to report suspected child abuse to authorities.

Outside Beaver Stadium, fans flocked to a statute of Joe Paterno even after kickoff, posing for photos and signing a banner that said, "God bless Joe Paterno."

"He's not the one who did the deed," said Tom Moldovan, 49, a salesman from Huntington, N.Y., carrying a sign for wesupportpaterno.com. "He did what he was supposed to do."

The idea that the coach, who had been on the sidelines of Penn State football games since the Truman administration, might be home watching it on television struck many fans as almost too sad for words.

"How can you lose a whole legacy in three or four days?" said Harold Hunt, 57, a York law firm employee at a tailgate party. "It's like a Greek tragedy."

Though Paterno kept a low profile during the day, his name and image won't disappear from campus anytime soon.

Inside the Paterno Library, funded in part by a $3.5 million donation from Paterno himself several years ago, biochemistry undergraduate Chris Natale said the 84-year-old's work on behalf of the wider university was a big part of his legacy.

"He's going to live on for Penn State forever," said Natale, who was working on immunology homework while most of the school was watching the game. "I still like his library."

Peachy Paterno - peach ice cream with peach slices - sold briskly on Saturday at the Berkey Creamery on campus, and there was word that "Paternoville" - the tent encampment that springs up so students can reserve the best seats at home games - would be keeping its moniker.

Other fans expressed their feelings with signs and T-shirts.

"He should definitely be here, in the coaching box," said Anthony Madanat, 20, a Downingtown student wearing a "I (heart) Joe, thanks for the memories, 62 years of great service" T-shirt outside Beaver Stadium.

"But I think it's just time to start fresh, start a new era," Madanat said.

A few blocks from the Paterno home, work has begun on another, more visible and more permanent part of the Paterno family legacy. The Suzanne Pohland Paterno Catholic Student Faith Center is under construction.

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