Ask the Scholar

Document scope · 1 page
doc
Scholar
Ask about this object, its catalog metadata, its source description, or the page inventory. For page-specific OCR and visual context, open one of the page chats.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
4530235
label
Football
core
doc
dtoType
document
pageCount
1
Source metadata
Source extras
naId
4530235
coverageEndDate
logicalDate
1972-12-31
month
12
year
1972
coverageStartDate
logicalDate
1966-04-01
month
4
year
1966
levelOfDescription
fileUnit
recordType
description
ocrSource
nara-archive
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
document
mediaId
37816a49ec349379
ocrText
The original documents are located in Box D81, folder "Football" of the Gerald R. Ford Congressional Papers at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald R. Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Some items in this folder were not digitized because it contains copyrighted materials. Please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library for access to these materials. UPI-62 (FOOTBALL) WASHINGT ON OCTBALL COMMISSIONER PETE ROZELLE SAID TODAY HE WILL RECOMMEND CANCELLATION OF THE PROFESSIONAL LEAGUE MERGER UNLESS CONGRESS EXEMPTS IT FROM ANTITRUST PROSECUTION. ROZELLE MADE THE STATEMENT IN TESTIMONY PREPARED FOR THE HOUSE JUDICIARY ANTITRUST SUBCOMMITTEE, WHICH BEGAN HEARINGS ON THE SENATE-APPROVED BILL BUT WAS CUT OFF BY AN EARLY MEETING OF THE HOUSE. ALTHOUGH THE COMMISSIONER'S APPEARANCE WAS PUT OFF UNTIL TUESDAY, HIS' TESTIMONY WAS DISTRIBUTED. IN IT, ROZELLE MADE CLEAR WHAT HE HAD HINTED AT STRONGLY IN THE PAST: HE OPPOSED THE MERGER OF THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE AND THE AMERICAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE UNLESS THERE IS PRIOR PROTECTION FROM COSTLY ANTITRUSI SUITS. "ON THE BASIS OF OUR PRESENT EVALUATION OF THE LIABILITIES THAT MIGHT BE ACCUMULATED THROUGH GOVERNMENTAL AND/OR PRIVATE LITIGATION, I FEEL I MUST SAY VERY CANDIDLY AT THIS TIME THAT IF LEGISLATION IS NOT PASSED BY THE CONGRESS IT WILL BE MY STRONG, ALTHOUGH RELUCTANT, RECOMMENDATION TO THE PRESIDENTS OF THE 24 CLUBS COMPRISING THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE AND THE AMERICAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE THAT THEY SHOULD NOT PROCEED WITH THE PLAN," ROZELLE SAID. ROZELLE SAID THERE IS A REAL DANGER OF ANTITRUST LITIGATION IF THE MERGER PROCEEDED WITHOUT IMMUNITY. "THE ANTITRUST DIVISION OF THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE HAS AUTHORIZED US TO STATE THAT THEY HAVE SERIOUS CONCERN ABOUT THE PLAN, ALTHOUGH THEY HAVE NOT YET DECIDED WHETHER TO BRING SUIT," ROZELLE SAID. ROZELLE SAID THE LEGISLATION, WHICH WAS RUSHED THROUGH THE SENATE, DID NO MORE THAN EXEMPT THE MERGER FROM LEGAL ACTION, PLUS GUARANTEE HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL FROM FRIDAY NIGHT COMPETITION FROM PROFEESSIONAL FOOTBALL TELEVISION. AS FOR THE MERGER ITSELF, HE SAID IT DID NOT ENTAIL SUCH USUAL BUSINESS ARRANGEMENTS AS CHANGES OF OWNERSHIP OR EXCHANGES OF STOCK AND ASSETS THAT MIGHT LESSEN COMPETITION. BUT HE SAID WITH THE POSSIBILITY OF "ENDLESS LITIGATION" AND TREBLE DAMAGE SUITS THAT MIGHT INVOLVE:SUMS "LARGER THAN THE TOTAL VALUE AND NET ASSETS OF ALL THE EXISTING FRANCHISES, " HE COULD SEE NO ALTERNATIVE BUT TO ABANDON THE PLAN WITHOUT THE LEGISLATION. ROZELLE SAID FOOTBALL FANS AS WELL AS THE OWNERS AND PLAYERS, WOULD BENEFIT FROM THE MERGER's AND WARNED THAT THE INTENSE PRICE COMPETITION FOR PLAYERS THAT HAS GED BETWEEN THE NFL AND AFL MIGHT DESTROY THE PROFESSIONAL GAME. 10/6 GE115SA UPI ADD 1 FOOTBALL, WASHINGTON (UPI+52) ROZELLE SAID THE SUBCOMMITTEE HAD BEEN FURNISHED WITH CONFIDENTIAL DETAILS ABOUT PLAYER PAY, AND SUMMED UP THE INFORMATION BY SAYING "WHERE: BONUS COMMITMENTS AND DEFERRED. PAYMENT OBLIGATIONS HAVE EXCEEDED THE ENTIRE GROSS GAME RECEIPTS OF A MEMBER CLUB. SURVIVAL IN FOOTBALL IS SHORTLY GOING TO DEPEND SOLELY ON EACH LEAGUE'S ABILITY TO CARRY ITS OWN FAILING FRANCHISES. MILT WOODWARD, PRESIDENT OF THE AFL, WHOSE STATEMENT ALSO WAS SUBMITTED BUT NOT READ AT THE OPENING HEARING, WAS MORE EXPLICIT ABOUT THE POSSIBLE CONSEQUENCES OF THE MERGER FALLING THROUGH. "I AM NOT GOING TO MAKE ANY PUBLIC STATEMENTS ABOUT WHAT THE FUTURE HOLDS FOR THE AMERICAN LEAGUE IF THIS BILL IS NOT ENACTED, BUT I CAN SAY I WOULD BE VITALLY CONCERNED ABOUT THE FINANCIAL STABILITY OF MANY OF THE AFL TEAMS, JOODWARD TESTIMNY SAID. UPI-70 ADD 2 FOOTBALL, WASHINGTON CHAIRMAN EMANUEL CELLER. D-NoYe, OF THE ANTITRUST SUBCOMMITTEE AND THE PARENT JUDICIARY COMMITTEE. GAVE NOTICE TN ADVANCE THAT HE WAS NOT TOO IMPRESSED BY PREDICTIONS OF DISASTER FOR FOOTBALL WITHOUT ANTITRUST IMMUNITY. IN-1957, AFTER A COURT DECISION IN WHICH FOOTBALL WAS FOUND TO BE SUBJECT TO THE ANTITRUST LAW, CELLER SAID REPRESENTATIVES SAID THE SITUATION THREATENED THE EXISTENCE OF THE PROFESSIONAL GAME. "SINCE THAT TIME HOWEVER, PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL, EVEN THOUGH SUBJECT TO THE ANTITRUST LAWS, HAS MADE PRODIGIOUS STRIDES IN ITS DEVELOPMENT, CELLER SAID. "FOOTBALL IS NOW ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT SPECTATOR SPORTS IN THE UNITED STATES." HE SAID SUCH EXEMPTIONS AS FOOTBALL SEEKS ARE "GIVEN ONLY WITH. THE GREATEST RELUCTANCE AND ONLY UPON A. SHOWING OF AN OVERRIDING NEED THEREFORE, AND THAT IT WOULD BE IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST." OTHER MEMBERS OF THE SUBCOMMITTEE, HOWEVER, APPEARED EAGER TO SUPPORT THE BILL. REPS. PETER RODINO, D-NoJ., BYRON REGERS. D-COLO., WILLIAM CRAMER, R-FLA=, AND CLARK MACGREGOR, R-MINNes ALL SPOKE FOR THE MEASURE. BESIDES CELLER, THE ONLY VOICE THAT APPEARED RELUCTANT WAS THAT OF REP. ROBERT KASTENMEIER, D-WIS,, WHOSE STATE NOW IS CHALLENGING THE ANTITRUST EXEMPTION OF PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL. 10/6--E121 9PED Special Awards Dinner of The National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame Union Club 69th and Park Avenue New York City Tuesday, April 26, 1966 National Football Foundation and The Hall of Fame Just as the immortal coach and great teacher of youth, the late Amos Alonzo Stagg, was presented the National Football Founda- tion's highest honor, the Gold Medal, in a special ceremony, so Paul Savidge, 220-pound lion- hearted captain of the 1965 will four gridiron greats be honored here this evening: C. Everett Princeton Tigers, was one of Bacon, 76, Wesleyan University; John Houghton Hubbard, 80, college football's finest two-way Amherst; Bishop Frank Juhan, 77, University of the South, and performers last fall, excelling offensively and defensively. In 63 the late John McGovern, Minnesota. Pioneers of college football, the final game with Dartmouth they contributed to the greatness of the game shortly after the turn he suffered a broken neck and of the century. Successful in life, they dramatize the relationship was hospitalized for over four of football to the needs of the country. They inspire the young months. During this time, he continued to keep up with his men who play the game today to make the most of educational studies and passed his mid-term opportunities and to follow in their footsteps as tomorrow's leaders examinations with flying colors. of the nation. College football players have learned in the class- He receives the National Foot- room about man's past. On the field, they learn about themselves; ball Foundation's National Chapter Scholar-Athlete Award their unlimited resources as tested against other men. "When the tonight for his courageous moment of arrival is reached, Spirit dominates technique." College comeback. football breeds such men! Program Menu MASTER OF CEREMONIES Roger Blough Chairman, MacArthur Advisory Committee HOT RICE AND CHEESE BOULETTES DEVILED EGGS REPORT STUFFED HEARTS OF CELERY Chester J. LaRoche, SARDINE AND ANCHOVIE CANAPES President, N.F.F. JUMBO SHRIMP A LA RUSSE PRESENTATION OF NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION CHAPTER SCHOLAR-ATHLETE AWARD TO Paul Savidge, GREEN TURTLE AMONTILLADO Captain, Princeton, 1965 CELERY-OLIVES-RADISHES By Richard Kazmaier, Chairman of N.F.F. Chapters FILET OF SOLE AMANDINE ADDRESS BY Allison Danzig, New York Times "THE MEN WHO MADE THE GAME" ROAST RACK OF SPRING LAMB FRENCH PEAS INDUCTION OF NEW MEMBERS OF THE POMME AU GRATIN NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION AND HALL OF FAME By Merle Gulick, Member, National Football Hall of Fame PERRIER JOUET 1952 FORUM Chairman: Roger Blough Subject: College Football; Campus Activities; American Business. CHERRIES JUBILEE The moral and spiritual dimensions of college football; PETITS FOURS the possibilities for influence in the quality and integrity of our nation's leadership. 1. William Orwig, Athletic Director, University of Indiana 2. Daniel E. Jessee, Trinity University, President of the DEMI TASSE American Football Coaches Association 3. Dr. Edward McCrady, Vice-Chancellor of the University of the South 4. Dr. John C. Flanagan, President of the American Institute of Research A MESSAGE FROM ALONZO STAGG Cigarettes-American Tobacco C. EVERETT BACON FRANK A. JUHAN JOHN HOUGHTON HUBBARD JOHN FRANCIS McGOVERN Wesleyan University University of the South, Sewanee University Amherst College University of Minnesota 1909, 1910, 1912 1908-1909-1910 1903, 1904, 1905, 1906 1908-1909-1910 An outstanding success in the business He was the first Southerner to receive seri- He is Amherst's only All-America football He was the first University of Minnesota world in the investment banking field in ous All-America consideration, although a player in the college's over 80 years of com- football player to win All-America acclaim. New York, he was regarded along with Hall young Nashville, Tennessee writer named petition. He was saluted by Walter Camp He was regarded as a great field goal kicker, of Famer Pat Pazzetti as one of the finest Grantland Rice chose him All-Southern for when few small college players were so rec- passer, runner and excellent field general quarterbacks to ever play for Wesleyan Uni- his herculean defensive efforts in leading ognized. He could play any position in the and during his three years of varsity com- versity. He was a pioneer in the art of for- the University of the South to upset vic- backfield, but it is at a halfback where he petition, Minnesota only lost one game. He ward passing and was an expert punter and tories over Georgia Tech, LSU, and Auburn. excelled. He was one of the truly great was an Iron Man performer, playing every defender. Walter Camp picked him on his The only loss that season was to Princeton. punters in the country and never missed an minute of every game but one over this third team All-American eleven; a real A boyhood classmate of General Douglas extra point in three years of varsity compe- three-year period. tribute inasmuch as he played for a small MacArthur at West Texas Military Acad- tition. He was an iron man football player McGovern died two years ago at the age college. He won All-East honors and the emy at Sewanee, he was a standout defender in every sense of the word, playing every of 78. Born in Arlington, Minnesota. As a team never had a losing season during the on a team which usually used only 12 mem- minute of every game over a four-year pe- college student, he also was on the athletic period he played. bers of its 14-man squad. He was tagged riod with the exception of two. board of control, a member of Alpha Tau Now 76, he began his business career as football's "first authentic linebacker" by Now 80, he was born in Putney, Vermont; Omega and Phi Delta Phi. a salesman. He entered the banking field Grantland Rice, as he played a yard behind he was football captain two years. His long- He earned his Doctor of Law Degree and in 1916 with Spencer Trask and Company, the line of scrimmage on the orders of his est scoring run was 105 yards against Massa- was Vice President of the Green Giant Com- where he is a senior partner today. coach and was given the opportunity to de- chusetts Agricultural College, a school he pany at the time of his retirement. He also He also played varsity baseball and var- ploy himself where ever he thought the as- later coached for one season, and in 1906 was the President of the National Canners sity tennis for four years while in college. sault might come. The result was Bishop punted 70 yards against Yale. He was also a Association. He served as a Minneapolis After sitting out his junior year in football Juhan made more tackles and occasionally standout in track, setting records in the sports editor before concentrating on his because of an athletic heart, he bounced intercepted a forward pass, a novel weapon high hurdles and sparkling also in the 220- law career in Washington. back as team captain of the 1912 team, just coming into vogue. Although not yard dash and the low hurdles. He was a While still in college, he was given the which won seven of nine games-winning branded "Monster Man," the term currently member of the heavy gym team for two "Outstanding Achievement Award" and all-star recognition in the process. employed when identifying modern roving years. later was honored as Minnesota's "Most He served his country in World War I, linebackers, Juhan terrified the opposition. He was immediately named head coach at Outstanding Alumnus." initially as first sergeant and then won his He was chaplain at the Sewanee Military Amherst following his graduation, and held As a gifted broken field runner, he had commission with the 48th Field Artillery- Academy for three years before being called this assignment for three years, when he few equals, and was unusually effective as 16th Division. At war's end, he was offered to a rectory in South Carolina. He was joined the Montague City Rod Company, an open field tackler, particularly haunting a commission of Major in the reserve. elected Bishop of Florida eight years later. which manufactured bamboo fishing rods Michigan's great Willie Heston in those He is now Trustee Emeritus of his alma He was chancellor of Sewanee for six years and worked there from 1908 to 1926. He famous Wolverine-Golden Gopher battles. mater after serving as a trustee for 26 years. and after retirement-assumed the non-pay- then became affiliated with Union Hard- Minnesota shared the conference champion- He was President of the Board of Directors ing job as Director of Development until ware Company in Torrington, Conn. from ship in 1910 and won it in 1911. He won of the Montclair, New Jersey YMCA; a 1965. During this time he oversaw Sewanee's 1926 to 1954. legendary football status despite his height member of the New York State Chamber Ten Million Dollar Campaign. The unbeat- He was chairman of the local United War - five feet four and a half inches - and of Commerce, ex-governor of the Associa- en Sewanee team of 1964 elected the Bishop Work campaign for Liberty Loan and War weighed 155 pounds. tion of Stock Exchange Firms, and a former honorary captain and that is the only trophy Savings Stamps during World War I and His son, Duff, is here tonight to accept vestryman of St. Luke's Church and the that adorns his desk. was chairman of the Red Cross from 1942- the Award. Church of St. Sacrament. At 77 as Director of Development, he was 1949. He became Director of the local asked what he would like to do most. He YMCA and a trustee of the Congregational replied: "Part my hair in the middle and Church. He later entered politics and was play Vandy." an assessor and Constable. The National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame Special Awards Dinner Chairman MERLE A. GULICK OFFICERS Chester J. LaRoche, president Wallace S. Girling, vice president Earl H. Blaik, vice president Robert A. Hall, secretary Vincent Draddy, vice president Joseph D. Tooker, Jr., treasurer Thomas E. Hamilton, vice president Harvey Harman, executive director Clinton E. Frank, vice president James L. McDowell, director of public relations Board of Directors EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Alvin P. Adams Merle A. Gulick Donold B. Lourie Earl H. Blaik Robert A. Hall Charles M. Mackall Asa Bushnell Thomas J. Hamilton D. O. McLaughry Barton A. Cummings Robert C. Harron Jack H. Mohr Allison Danzig Ralph Furey George M. O'Neil Aldo Donelli Leonard D. Henry C. Robert Paul Vincent Draddy Richard W. Kazmaier Carl P. Ray Braven Dyer Robert E. Kintner Harry J. Rockafeller Clinton Frank Alex S. Kroll John J. F. Ruddy Ernest Godfrey Chester J. LaRoche Fred Russell Edgar W. Garbisch Gilbert Lea Dr. Marvin A. Stevens William H. Geyer, Jr. George S. Leisure Joseph D. Tooker, Jr. Frederic E. Giersch Lou Little Charles W. Tucker, Jr. Wallace Girling AWARDS COMMITTEE Vincent Draddy, chairman Allison Danzig Earl H. Blaik Robert A. Hall Asa S. Bushnell Richard W. Kazmaier Lou Little THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION AND HALL OF FAME HONORS COURT Fred Russell, chairman Wilbur Evans Lou Little George Cole Tuss McLaughry Jesse Hill Allison Danzig Len Casanova Ray Eliot William Murray Don Faurot Glen Jacoby Paul/ This is good spuch material for a special subject + one where I maybe called upon The speak. See Page 9 t The 1966 Awards Banquet VOLUME 9, NUMBER 1 DECEMBER, 1966-January, 1967 FOOTBALLETTER The National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame Ninth Hall of Fame Dinner Outstanding 1966 HALL OF FAME HONOREES - Col. Earl (Red) Blaik and Captain Bill Carpenter were re-united again at the Ninth Annual Football Hall of Fame Awards banquet, nine years after Carpenter had played for Blaik's last Army team. They are shown being presented their Gold Medal and Distinguished American Awards by Football Foundation president Chester J. LaRoche (r) and Awards Chairman Vincent DePaul Draddy (1). (All photos by George Moldovan except those designated by Bill Mark) By JIMMIE McDowell who is now chairman of the executive committee of The Ninth Annual Awards Banquet of the National AVCO Corp., and the presentation of the Football Foun- Football Foundation and Hall of Fame has been generally dation's Distinguished American Award to one of Blaik's acclaimed as "the best ever." prize proteges, Captain William S. Carpenter, Army's The Banquet was highlighted by the presentation of fabled Lonely End, who recently distinguished himself the Gold Medal Award to Col. Earl Henry (Red) Blaik, in battle in Viet Nam. Col. Blaik and Captain Carpenter legendary Army and Dartmouth Hall of Fame Coach, (Continued on page 3) Blough, Galbreath Named Co-chairmen page 20 2 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 DECEMBER, 1966-January, 1967 FOOTBALLETTER 3 Notre Dame Wins Coin Toss ECCIPANCY In Added Banquet Highlight (Continued from page 1) dramatize the purposes of the Foundation and the relation that exists between coach and player in America today, bringing into focus, at a time of the long hair, beatnik revolt on the campus, the conviction that the disciplines of football make it "the biggest and best classroom in the nation for teaching leadership." Chester J. LaRoche, president of the National Foot- ball Foundation and Hall of Fame, made the Gold Medal BIG JIM LISTENS IN - Fabled Big Jim Farley and Roger Award presentation to Col. Blaik, while awards and ban- Blough listen to Cardinal Spellman express his pleasure in quet chairman Vincent dePaul Draddy gave Captain Car- attending another Football Hall of Fame banquet. He again penter the Distinguished American Award at the black gave the Invocation. When he discovered that there was a con- flict of events, he re-scheduled the other program so that he tie Waldorf-Astoria $75-a-plate dinner attended by over could again be a part of the biggest college football night in 1,400 in New York December 6. America. (Photo by Bill Mark). Duffy's Future Plans Football Roger M. Blough, chairman of the National Football of signe General MacArthur Business Advisory Com- tional Football nal Football mittee, presented the MacArthur Bowl to Football Football Mall co-champions Notre Dame and Michigan grame Football wall of State. In a flip of the coin ceremony by Fame Chairman Draddy, Notre Dame Coach Ara Parseghian and his captain Jim Lynch called correctly and the Fighting Irish will Charles maintain possession of the famous trophy for the first six months. Forever optimistic, even though losing the coin toss, Michigan State's Duffy Daugherty, flanked by co-cap- tains George Webster and Clinton Jones, said "That's O.K. We will keep the Mac- Arthur Bowl the next 18 months," leaving no doubt to the Spartans' potential for 1967. CAMERER QUARTERBACKING - Dave Camerer (c), former NEW HALL OF FAMERS - Posing happily with Hall of Fame plaques are, from left, Rip Miller, Notre Dame, Pappy Waldorf, In his annual President's report, Chet LaRoche cli- Dartmouth grid great, longtime newspaperman and now with Northwestern and California, Charley Conerly, Ole Miss, Aaron Rosenberg, Southern California, Dr. Mal Stevens, who coached the maxed his talk with the announcement that Roger Blough CBS, spins a tale of yesteryear during the Hall of Fame and late Albie Booth and received the Yale immortal's award, Princeton's Dick Kazmaier, and Indiana's Pete Pihos. Missing from the and John Galbreath, key members of the MacArthur Ad- Scholar-Athlete press-radio-television conference at the 21 Club. photo are Jim Crowley, Notre Dame, Chuck Carney, Illinois, and Norm Van Brocklin, Oregon. He has a good audience. Standing are Hall of Famer Lou Little visory Committee, had accepted the co-chairmanship of and Nashville Sports Editor Fred Russell, the Honors Court the Football Hall of Fame Building Fund drive. This news chairman. Sitting are Awards Chairman Vince Draddy and was greeted by applause and cheers, bringing a happy New York World-Journal-Tribune sports columnist Red Smith. response from Rutgers University President Dr. Mason Gross and Princeton's chairman of the Executive Com- mittee of the Board of Trustees, Jámes M. Oates. Mr. Steven Stanley Juk of the University of South Carolina, Oates assured the crowd that Princeton was 100 per cent James Robert Lynch of Notre Dame, Charles Peters of behind the Football Hall of Fame program and Dr. Gross Princeton, William D. Powell of the University of Mis- replied that Rutgers welcomed Princeton aboard. Target souri, John Andrews Richards, Texas Christian Univer- date for completion is 1969, 100th anniversary of the sity, and Michael Dennis Ryan of the University of first college game played in America between the two uni- Washington. versities. Three Med Students Ten outstanding men were inducted into the Foot- All will receive $500 graduate fellow- CROWLEY CONTAINED - Sleepy Jim Crowley (r), whose ARA SURROUNDED - Three Hall of Famers, Merle Gulick ball Hall of Fame by Admiral Tom Hamilton, executive ships upon enrollment at the graduate response for the Hall of Fame inductees was one of the high- (l), Tuss McLaughry, second from left, and Lou Little, second lights of the evening, couldn't get a word in edge-wise during director of the A.A.W.U. and a Hall of Famer in his own school of their choice from funds provided from right, congratulate Notre Dame's Ara Parseghian for the reception earlier in the evening as old Notre Dame team- right. They included: the late Albie Booth of Yale, Char- by Red Blaik's syndicated football series. In another fine season. Dartmouth Coach Bob Blackman is shown mate Rip Miller (l) chatted with Hall of Famer Don Whitmire ley Conerly of Mississippi, Jim Crowley of Notre Dame, addition, Peters, Richards and Juk qualified at right. (Photo by Bill Mark). (c), who was a standout at both Alabama and Navy. Charles Carney of Illinois, Richard Kazmaier of Princeton, for $1,250 grant from Medical Economics Norm Van Brocklin of Oregon, Edgar (Rip) Miller of Magazine Publisher William Chapman since VOLUME 9, NUMBER 1 OFFICERS Notre Dame, Peter Pihos of Indiana, Aaron Rosenberg of they will attend Medical School. DECEMBER, 1966-January, 1967 NEW YORK OFFICE Chester J. LaRoche, President Southern California and Coach Lynn (Pappy) Waldorf, A fine delegation of old Hall of Famers was on The National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame Thomas J. Hamilton, Vice President Rooms 1 and 2 a Syracuse grad, who built league champions in the Mis- hand for this dinner. They were introduced by Lt. Col. Edgar W. Garbisch, Vice President FOOTBALLETTER South Mezzanine Earl H. Blaik, Vice President souri Valley, Big Ten and Pacific Coast conferences. Felix (Doc) Blanchard, Army's great back of the mid- Biltmore Hotel Vincent Draddy, Vice President Crowley delivered the response for the Hall of Forties. Published by East 43rd and Madison Clinton E. Frank, Vice President Famers and shared the limelight with Daugherty in the His eminence Francis Cardinal Spellman gave the The National Football Foundation and Wallace Girling, Vice President rib-tickling department. Invocation while Rev. Dr. Arthur L. Kinsolving, Rector Telephone: Area code 212-661-0534 Joseph D. Tooker, Jr., Treasurer Hall of Fame The 1966 National Football Foundation Scholar-Ath- of St. James Church in New York gave the Benediction. Robert A. Hall, Secretary New Brunswick, N. J. Harvey Harman, Executive Director letes were introduced by Football Foundation secretary John Charles Daly served as master of ceremonies JIMMIE McDowell, Editor Jimmie McDowell, Director of Public Robert Hall. They included Thomas Hodge Allen of Bow- for the dinner and Broadway star John Raitt sang the Telephone: CHarter 7-1766 - Relations doin, Robert Glenn Etter of the University of Georgia, National Anthem. 4 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 FOOTBALLETTER 5 Hall of Fame Dinner Highlights HARMONIZING? - Hall of Fame inductees Aaron Rosenberg A JOB WELL DONE - Broadway singing star John Raitt (1), (c) and Charley Conerly seem to be getting ready to sing a sweet song, while Chuck Carney watches with interest at the reception PRINCETONIAN ON PROGRAM - who sang the National Anthem, and famed John Charles Daly, who served as master of ceremonies, were commended for their prior to the Ninth Annual Awards Dinner in New York. James F. Oates, Jr., Chairman of the Board and Executive Officer of the Equit- contributions to the Ninth Annual Hall of Fame dinner by able Life Assurance Society of the United Jack Mohr of the Foundation's executive committee. (Photo by States, and chairman of the Executive Bill Mark). Committee of the Princeton University Board of Trustees, joined hands with Rutgers President Dr. Mason Gross in DETERMINED DUFFY - Michigan State's Duffy Daugherty, after losing the toss boosting the National Football Hall of of the coin to Notre Dame's Ara Parseghian which gives the Fighting Irish immediate Fame program. A graduate of Exeter possession of the MacArthur Bowl for six months, told Ara that "It's O.K. You keep Academy, Mr. Oates graduated at Prince- it for six months and we'll keep it for the next 18 months." He's already looking ton in 1921. He later received an ad- forward to next year's rematch. Looking on are Roger Blough, Chairman of the vance degree at Northwestern. General MacArthur Advisory Committee, and Awards Chairman Vincent Draddy. HALL OF FAME HUDDLE - Walter Hoving (1) of Tiffany's, designer of the MacArthur Bowl, and Notre Dame's Vice-Presi- dent, Father Edwin Joyce (r) chat with the Hall of Fame's Executive Director Harvey Harman during the Ninth Annual Awards Banquet at the Waldorf. HAPPY PRESIDENT - Rutgers University President Dr. Mason Gross (l) was delighted to hear that Roger Blough and National Football John Galbreath had accepted the co-chairmanship of the shown with Hall of Famer Col. Edgar Garbisch, a vice-president Will of National Football Hall of Fame Building Campaign. He is EXCEPTIONAL BANQUET - The Ninth Annual Football Hall of Fame banquet set a new record by ending at 10:20 p.m. of the National Football Foundation. Cardinal Spellman checks the clock. Equally delighted over the smoothness and quality of the banquet are Chet LaRoche (1), awards chairman Vince Draddy, and last year's Gold Medal Norman winner Juan Trippe (r). CHAIRMAN COMMENDED - Nashville Sports Editor Fred Russell, chairman of the Football Hall of Fame Honors Court, MOMENT TO REMEMBER - Admiral Tom Hamilton, who HOW ABOUT THAT? - Mel Allen (c), just back from Viet is congratulated by the Foundation's Jimmie McDowell (r) for DIXIE CONTINGENT - Hall of Famer Bruiser Kinard (r) was inducted into the Football Hall of Fame a year ago, as a Nam, shakes hands with Dave Camerer of CBS at the con- an excellent group of 1966 Hall of Fame electees. At Russell's was on hand to see another Ole Miss grid great be inducted. vice-president of the Football Foundation inducted the 1966 clusion of the Ninth Annual Football Hall of Fame dinner right is old friend, Col. "Dopey" Stephens, who picked up his Also congratulating Charley Conerly were Tennessee Athletic members. He is shown with Oregon's fabled "Dutchman," Norm while Army's fabled one-two punch, Mr. Inside Felix (Doc) nickname many years ago from head coach Henry (Red) Director Bob Woodruff (l) and John Holley, Ole Miss' business Van Brocklin, who flew in from Minnesota, where he coaches Blanchard, second from left, and Mr. Outside, Glenn Davis, and Sanders. "Dopey's" nifty 40-yard gain was not the play Sanders manager of athletics, second from right. wanted called at the time. the Vikings, to accept the award. Coach Ben Martin (r) of the Air Force Academy lend an ear. 6 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1967 DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 FOOTBALLETTER 7 MACARTHUR BOWL ACCEPTED - Ara Parseghian of Notre Dame proudly accepts co-ownership of the National Football Foundation's MacArthur Bowl for 1966, while Michigan State's Duffy Daugherty and Spartan co-captains Clint Jones (l) and George Webster applaud. Daugherty followed Parseghian and commended the Football Foundation's Awards Committee for its fairness and good judgment in naming co-winners after the two college football titans had battled to a 10-10 tie. Roger Blough, chairman of the MacArthur Advisory Committee, is shown behind Parseghian. Irish captain Jim Lynch is at the far right. Chet LaRoche and Red Blaik are seated in front of Jones and Webster. (Photo courtesy of The New York Times). THE 1966 SCHOLAR-ATHLETES - Holding beautiful Hall of Fame Scholar-Athlete silver trophies, eight of the nation's out- standing seniors are shown with Awards Chairman Vincent Drad dy. They are, from left, William Powell, Missouri, Bobby Etter, Georgia, Charles Peters, Princeton, Jim Lynch, Notre Dame, S tan Juk, South Carolina, Mike Ryan, Washington, John Richards, TCU, and Tom Allen, Bowdoin. Duffy Daugherty side. We just say left half at one, fullback left or fullback right. I think if I work with you a couple of weeks, Jim, (Continued from page 6) Steve will be all right. Now in a little while, Vince Draddy is going to flip dinal Spellman and as a former Presbyterian, hello to I don't want to take any more of your time but Mr. Roger M. Blough a coin and then we will be able to tell you which of Ara Parseghian. Father Joyce, my very warm and close Blough, I hope you'll give all my regards to everybody these two schools will have the MacArthur Bowl for friend from Notre Dame and my two great Spartans, at Bethlehem Steel. When I was a boy back in Barnsville, Presents the MacArthur Bowl the first six months, and which for the second six months. without whom we wouldn't be here tonight, Clinton Pennsylvania, I caddied for Charles Schwab one time. JOHN CHARLES DALY: We Irish have a way of com- And next year we hope to award the Bowl again, if it Jones and George Webster and the captain of our more That's the closest I've ever come to a steel magnate. I ing forward, I do say. I'm also married, but not the most returns. than worthy opponent, Jim Lynch. It's a great honor to was in the same foursome, and my brother was caddy popular man on the team. Roger M. Blough, one of the At this point I'd like to call on Ara Parseghian to be selected along with certainly as fine a football team with another fellow, and Charley Schwab had a habit of ten great Americans to receive the National Football say a word. as we've ever played against, Notre Dame. It's just a raising his head, as a lot of us golfers do, on his back- Foundation's Gold Medal Award. A fine football player wonderful team and I want to compliment the Com- swing, and he said "any of you caddies see me raising at Susquehanna, he, of course, is also known as the Chair- mittee of the Football Hall of Fame for selecting co- my head again, tell me to keep my head down." So my man of the Board of U.S. Steel, as well as the Chairman Ara Parseghian champions. brother was 18 months older than I and a little smarter, of the Football Foundation General MacArthur Advisory of Notre Dame I don't think that anything could be a lot smarter, but as Schwab, about the third hole, started Committee. Mr. Blough will present the MacArthur Bowl. more apropos. I think it showed a great his back swing, and my brother said, "keep your damn Mr. Blough. ARA PARSEGHIAN: Thank you. Thank you. One of the discerning judgment and a wonderful intel- head down." And he gave us all a five dollar tip. And I ROGER M. BLOUGH: I'd like to invite Duffy Daugher- real nice things that happened to Notre Dame in 1964 lect and a great, and a great sense of fair- hope, I hope you tip all your caddies the same way. ty, and his co-captains to step up here, please. And Ara was the winning of this award. I think if your memory ness. And, tonight when I came into the I want to thank the Hall of Fame Committee serious- Parseghian and his captain. will bring it back to your attention, we lost the last game, reception earlier, a fellow came up and said, ly. I'd like to introduce the academician who came with Gentlemen, for the world championship in this cor- in the last one minute and thirty three seconds and the "I'm from the AP," I said, "AP, what's that?" me from Michigan State. He's head of the marketing de- ner Duffy Daugherty, fighting at one hundred and ninety Hall of Fame Committee selected Notre Dame as the I said. He said, "Associated Press." I said, partment, who accompanied me, Dr. Tom Stoudt. Will five. recipient of the MacArthur Award and it was a great "Well, I'm glad to find out what that AP you stand up Tom? And I want to congratulate Ara. In this corner, Ara Parseghian, fighting at one hun- thing for us, believe me. And to come back in 1966 and stands for." I said, "I had to come all the Seriously, I joked a lot about it but no team could be dred and eighty. to share this with Michigan State is a real privilege, way to New York. Back in East Lansing they more of a worthy national champ than Notre Dame and Gentlemen, it gives me great pleasure to introduce believe me. thought it stood for Ara Parseghian." we cherish our relationship with you. Seriously, we kid Clinton Jones, and George Webster, co-captains of Notre May I say this, that Duffy and I dis- Dame. cussed this earlier in the evening. We plan Salute from Duffy about it but Notre Dame, and they're a very worthy na- tional champ, and they're very deserving of their number Now I'd like to introduce Jim Lynch of Michigan to make this an annual affair. Thank you I want to congratulate all these wonderful young one rating, and my, our hats are off to them and we're State. Now you see that these fellows have gotten things very much. men who received these Blaik Scholarships for their high only looking forward to our game with them next year. so confused tonight you can't tell one from the other. academic achievement. A couple of them will be playing Thank you. It's a great honor to present to these two schools the, with us in the East-West game, Steve, and I hope you Toss Of The Coin the finest award that this Football Hall of Fame Founda- Duffy Daugherty are smart enough to understand our plays. And Lynch, we MR. BLOUGH: Gentlemen, Vincent Draddy is the tion and Hall of Fame has to award, the MacArthur Bowl. say you know, that we had a little trouble when Bob Chairman of the Awards Committee. He's now going to I must tell you in all candor things are beginning to bother of Michigan State Apisa got hurt. You know they accused some players flip a coin and I'm going to ask Ara to call it. Heads us. Notre Dame won in 1964. Michigan State won in MR. BLOUGH: And now gentlemen, another great of signals from the sideline. I've never been caught or tails? 1965. And in 1966 they split the award and the Anti- coach, Duffy Daugherty. yet, but I used to do the hoola. This is Apisa around PARSEGHIAN: I'm going to let my captain call it. He trust Department has telephoned us to find out what's MR. DAUGHERTY: Thank you. Your Eminence Car- right end and Apisa up the middle, you know the makes all the calls. going on. (Continued on page 7) Hawaiian fullback. Now, really I don't signal from the (Continued on page 8) 8 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1966-January, 1967 DECEMBER, 1966-January, 1967 FOOTBALLETTER 9 Col. Earl (Red) Blaik Accepts Gold Medal President LaRoche, Reverend Clergy, members and friends of the Football Foundation: We are all inspired by the presence of so many legendary football heroes, and as a former coach, I can think of no greater sat- isfaction than to participate in the honoring of one of my former players. Tonight I have watched with great pride Captain Carpen- ter, who did the usual both on the playing field and on the battlefield. Bill, your old coach is awed by your distinguished record and I am proud of your example of dedica- tion to the service of our country. It would be a gross understatement for me to say I am anything less than overwhelmed by the honor the Foundation accords me tonight. I have no illusion that my credentials qualify me to be included with my prede- cessors. Perhaps I may stand on the statement, though, GOES TO BAT FOR FOOTBALL - Gold Medal recipient Col. Earl (Red) Blaik, chairman of the executive committee that during thirty two years of coaching and eight years of AVCO, Corp. and Army and Dartmouth Hall of Fame of reflection the respect I hold for the American game of coach, made a memorable speech at the annual Hall of Fame football has never wavered. dinner. One wonders what type of game it is that challenged such distinguished and not the years gone by is more forthright, more forgotten men as Stagg, Yost, Zuppke, Daly, sensible, and clean. And I suggest we should Rockne, Warner, Cavanaugh, Dobie, the not now attempt to over-refine the product. Jones - Tad and Howard, McGugin, As a coach I gave our squads ten axioms to go by Alexander, Neyland, Sutherland, Harlow, If you don't mind I shall repeat several of them and Caldwell - all of whom I knew well. relate each to an intimate coaching experience. STRATEGY SESSION - Susquehanna's Roger Blough (1) and Army's Award winning Red Blaik and Captain Bill Carpenter hear former Yale backfield star Chet LaRoche discuss football in general prior to the Hall of Fame banquet at the Waldorf. The Game Relaxed Player Excels It is a game played in some form by over a million AXIOM A relaxed player performs best and a sense young Americans, a game uninhibited by social barriers. of humor and good fun keeps one relaxed. The squads at DUFFY DAUGHERTY It is a game that in early season requires exhaustive Dartmouth and West had a lot of fun with their trainer, Chester J. LaRoche (Continued from page 7) hard work, often to the point of drudgery. Rollie Bevan, who was a shrewd judge of young players. It is a game of violent body contact that demands a Bevan was well attuned to any player who courted the MR. DRADDY: Heads or tails? personal discipline seldom found in our modern life. attention of the stands. In a hard-hitting Penn State game Makes Gold Medal Presentation JIM LYNCH: Heads. It is a game of team action wherein the individual's a young back went down for the count and was stretched DRADDY: Heads it is. reward is that total satisfaction returned by being part out seemingly seriously injured. A hush came over the CHET LAROCHE: We would not it's routine. If you want it, in the DAUGHERTY: You know you always of successful team play. crowd and there was great anxiety in the stands. Now, pretend to tell you anything you don't heart where it counts the most, it has choose in football. It is a game that is 100% fun when you win, and much to my annoyance, Bevan showed a callous disregard. already know about Red Blaik. But to come from having it yourself." DRADDY: Yeah, but are they going exacts 100% resolution when you lose. of the injured back and it took considerable prodding on we welcome the privilege to tell you to take the wind or not? Touch of Greatness And if it is the game most like war, it my part before Rollie went onto the field. how we feel about him. The pride PARSEGHIAN: We're going to re- is also the game most like life, for it teaches This is the scene - Bevan sauntered out to the in- we all have for you, Red, as the 1966 You have, Red, with those ceive. young men that work, sacrifice, selflessness, jured player, but instead of giving the back a whiff of Gold Medal Winner, is born of your other Gold Medal winners MR. BLOUGH: The winner's going competitive drive, perseverance, and respect ammonia, Rollie jabbed his toe into the player's side and pride in the game. You have said what we call a touch of great- to take it for the first six months. for authority are the price one pays to with each jab, said, "Get up, get up, Joe. Get going the football is the last vistage of real ness. We don't know how to Good luck to you. achieve goals worthwhile. crowd has spotted your number and know it's you. You're discipline for our youth. The forces define it, really, let's say its DAUGHERTY: And we'll keep it It is also a contentious game that has detractors in their hero and they'll give you a rousing cheer when you that pull away from home and church some combination of dedica- for the next eighteen. academic and other circles who enjoy nothing more than jog around." make your statement increasingly im- tion to something larger than JOHN DALY: Your Eminence, Your the violent verbal impact they bring to a discussion of At that, Joe jumped up and sure enough the relieved portant. Red, you stand where Presi- private success. Courage to Eminence, it was very nice to have the sport. I shall only contest the detractors by observing crowd gave him a tremendous cheer. By this time our dent Eisenhower, General MacArthur, act against all problems, and this ex-Presbyterian with us, but I that, imperfect as it may be, college football during the players were convulsed with laughter. Their trainer had President Hoover, President Kennedy, the boldness to try new ideas, think it was wonderful of Duffy to past decades has been deemphasized to the point where demonstrated he was a "Miracle Healer." Suddenly, it Justice White, Don Lourie, Roger a zest for hard work, and come here to go to confession. it is now, I believe, quite properly emphasized. Today a dawned on Joe he had been royally taken. He was in- Blough and Juan Trippe stood. All hopefulness about man. solid education is the paramount objective of most college furiated he steamed over to Bevan and stammered have one thing in common. And we labor, Red, as you players. For my part, just so long as the college does not "D-d-damn you Bevan you made an ass of me." Each was an example of the as- have, that our youth will shortchange the player on his education I do not become Same Difference pirations of the human spirit in these honor and seek it. To that The 10th Annual Hall of overly concerned about either athletic scholarships or days somewhat of its neglect. Coaches, too, supply humor. I enjoy the recruiting. I asked Bud Wilkinson for an ex- end I am proud to present to story on Francis Schmidt, who was the coach Fame Banquet will be held you the Gold Medal of the In essence, then, based on long observa- of Ohio State in the '30s Ohio State was planation. "It starts with one thing," National Football Founda- Dec. 5, 1967 in New York. tion, it is my conviction the modern ap- he said, "discipline." You just can't having great trouble with Michigan and proach to the game as compared to that in order it, even at West Point where tion. (Continued on page 10) awinaer may get the Greates Get makes the breaks, toon 10 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 FOOTBALLETTER 11 Red Blaik's Gold Medal Speech Vincent DePaul Draddy (Continued from page 9) Distinguished American Award Schmidt, a wild man on the bench who JOHN DALY: Vincent DePaul Draddy, vice-president really needed a keeper on Saturday after- of the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame. noons, couldn't stand the Michigan parade Once again I think we can all agree, most heartily, has through his tackles. After a long gainer performed admirably in his dual capacities as Awards Schmidt bellowed, "Look out there, look at Chairman and Banquet Chairman. You are now free to Jim, just look at our All America tackle. There he is - knocked flat on his tail." With whistle, stamp, etcetera. This is a great job and I think Vincent deserves credit for it right now. that, Jim, at the other end of the bench, pro- VINCENT DRADDY: Gentlemen, nine years ago Presi- tested, "No, no coach, I'm not out there, dent Dwight David Eisenhower, who unfortunately could here's old Jim right here on the bench." not be here this evening, received the National Football With that, Schmidt cocked an eye, measured old Foundation and Hall of Fame's first Gold Medal Award. Jim and then said, "Now, what's the difference anyway PROUD OF THEIR DAD - Red Blaik's sons, Bill (l) and Nine years ago Red Blaik was coaching his last team at if you were out there you'd be on your tail." There is Bob, who are now in the oil business in Oklahoma City, were much good fun in football and certainly a sense of humor. on hand to see their Father receive the National Football Foun- West Point. He had designed a new football offense built dation's highest honor, the Gold Medal, at the Hall of Fame around a tall, aggressive, intelligent young man and called Game of Inches dinner in New York. (Photo by Bill Mark). an outstanding student as well. Not long ago, this young A TRIBUTE TO THE FIGHTING MEN - Calling the sev- AXIOM - Inches make the champion and the cham- man won all-America acclaim and established pass-receiv- eral hundred thousand troops fighting in Viet Nam Dis- pion makes his own luck. In the '46 Army-Navy game, ing records at the United States Military Academy which tinguished Americans, Captain Bill Carpenter, is applauded by the farewell of Blanchard, Davis and Tucker to Army prepared to get my old number back, but I want you to still stand. He caught the fancy of the nation's sports Awards Chairman Vincent Draddy, Master of Ceremonies John football, the first half looked like an Army route of Navy. know I prayed all the way here that you would not columnists and sports editors as well as the American Charles Daly and Roger Blough, chairman of the MacArthur give up on me." Advisory Committee. For the rest of the game, this cadet team, undefeated in public. three years, fought the fiercest rear guard action I have The Long Walk He was not only an All-America football player, but ever seen on a football field. Finally, with the score 21-18, Now, it is many weeks later. It is the night before an outstanding student as well. Not long ago this young the Cadets stopped the Middies twice on the 3 yard line the Navy game. As was usual, I took the squad for a bed- man, whom we now honor, was again featured in the and once on the 4 as the game ended in a scene of time walk on the golf course which ended with a few newspapers of America on the front page, when he pandemonium. Picture this if you will: A half crazed words about the big game. I recall saying: "Three times ordered napalm bombs dropped on himself and his em- crowd had come out of the stands and pressed against the this season I took the long walk across muddy fields to battled troops in Vietnam, turning certain death into sidelines obliterating my last minute view of the playing congratulate first Benny Oosterbaan, then Ben Schwartz- miraculous survival against overwhelming odds. He has field. I was more isolated than the Lonely End as my walder, and then Jordan Olivar. It has been a trying won the Silver Star and has been recommended for the frantic calls to the spotters - Gustafson and Hickman season and I am a bit weary from those walks. Tomorrow nation's highest award, the Congressional Medal of Honor. went unanswered. I later learned that Andy presented a before 100,000 spectators and fifty million television The National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame has ghostly belligerent stare toward the playing field while viewers I want you men to know it would be the longest created a special award to pay tribute to this outstanding Herman, bless his soul, buried his head and pleaded, walk of my coaching career if I cross the field to con- young man, who more than lived up to General Douglas "Please, God, don't let them do it don't let them do it." gratulate the Navy coach." MacArthur's famous quote: "Upon the fields of friendly By all odds this was the most starkly anxious moment of There was silence for a moment then a voice spoke strife are sown the seeds that on other fields, on other my coaching career. But the Blanchard-Davis Army team out with resolution. It was Holleder. "Colonel, you're not days, will bear the fruits of victory." prevailed - Inches made them champions and they made taking that walk tomorrow." We now present our first Distinguished American their own luck. The Cadets won an upset victory over Award to Captain William S. Carpenter, Jr. Priceless Leader the Navy. The Press stated it was Holly's AXIOM Good fellows are a dime a vindication. It wasn't - it wasn't at all. It dozen, but an aggressive leader is priceless. was an unforgettable demonstration that an The 1955 season was most trying for me as aggressive leader is priceless. Capt. William S. Carpenter we had a lean squad and no quarterback. A Values of Football Accepts Foundation Award coach has never known trouble unless he From these remarks you may have sensed I have CAPTAIN WILLIAM S. CARPENTER: Thank you very CARPENTER SALUTED - Viet Nam war hero Captain Wil- has the senseless temerity to change an All fixed opinions on the value of the American game of much. This night is particularly meaningful for me. I liam Carpenter, Army's All-America Lonely End, is shown think all of us can look back and think of people that receiving the National Football Foundation's Distinguished America End into a "T" quarterback in one football. I have, and in summary, simply stated, they American Award from Awards Chairman Vincent Draddy. season. There was hardly an officer or cadet are three: have played a great part in our lives, that have really at West Point who didn't believe this switch One: Football should be secondary to the purpose influenced us. And I feel particularly fortunate tonight was a colossal error. Even my friends of the for which the player is in college. because I think, aside from my parents, the people that ones that took the beating and the ones that Press called the move 'Blaik's Folly.' Two: Championship football and good scholarship are have exercised the most influence on me have been the made the success possible. But, also for all Sunday afternoon after the Michigan defeat the people that have coached me in various sports. the troops that are there. You should feel entirely compatible. We salute our scholar athletes to- very fortunate, you have hundreds of thou- Superintendent, my former football teammate, came to night as splendid examples of this fact. And tonight there are three of them my office and inquired as to whether I was aware of Lastly: The purpose of the game of football is to here. Felix Blanchard, who beat me around sands of distinguished Americans over there, the local sentiment about our quarterback. I told him that win and to dilute the will to win is to destroy the the field as a plebe, Coach Tom Cahill who and they're doing a tremendous job. Thank purpose of the game. tried to make me think I was a halfback at you very much. the team was aware, the staff was aware, and I was aware, but far more important they all believed as I This, then, gentlemen, has been my football creed Manlius Prep School for a year, and finally did that our only chance to defeat the Navy was with and I dare say with the active support and influence of Colonel Blaik who has, I think, exercised an RED BLAIK (Continued from page 10) Holleder at quarterback. this great Foundation college football will not be devalued immeasurable amount of influence on me, especially I am grateful to my former Dart- A few minutes after the Superintendent left Holleder by the passing of time. and who has stuck me with a name which mouth and Army players and to my old came to see me. As he entered the office I got up, placed May I repeat, it is an overwhelming I'll probably never lose. I hope very much coaching associates, many of whom have my hand on his shoulder, and said, "Holly, you played a honor to have received the Gold Medal that you'll let me accept this award, not for come far to be with us tonight. good game yesterday and I am proud of you. You're mak- Award from the National Football Foun- myself, but on behalf of the people in Viet- It is to each one of you then, I give my hearty ing fine progress as our quarterback. With moisture in dation. I am grateful to the Foundation nam, in particularly the company that I had thanks, my warm thanks, for this inspiring and memor- his eyes, Holly replied, "I know what the cadets are and to you friends of Football, but more the pleasure and was most fortunate enough able evening. saying, I have heard the officers talk, and I came fully (Continued on page 11) to command, the ones that did the work, the Thank you. 12 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 FOOTBALLETTER 13 Robert A. Hall Admiral Thomas Hamilton Presents the Scholar-Athletes Inducts Hall of Famers Robert Glenn Etter. Dynamite still comes JOHN DALY: I'm sure the Lonesome End will forgive in small packages. Despite his 150-pounds, he led the me if his exalted presence here reminded me to read Southeastern Conference in scoring as the University of you some more of a newspaper, I don't know how many Georgia's game-breaking kicking specialist. A native of of you saw this. Jimmy Jemail, the inquiring photographer Signal Mountain, Tennessee, the five foot-eleven inch went out to ask the question of the Army-Navy game: Etter is an "A" student with a 91 grade point average. Should football games that end in a tie score be decided His major field of study is Mathematics and Physics. His by a sudden death playoff? And, as a layman with no anticipated post-graduate field of study is Mathematics. football skills, I was happy to read of the unanimity of As an entering freshman, he had the highest score in opinion in this matter. Admiral David L. McDonald, Chief Math-Science category. He has been on the Dean's List of Naval Operations, said, "No. Much as I like to see for nine quarters. He was in the top five percent of the Navy a winner in the greatest of all football classics, the freshman class and in the top ten percent of his sophomore annual Army-Navy game would tend to get away from and junior classes. He is vice-president of the University COLLEGE FOOTBALL SPOTLIGHTED - All season, ABC- TV's Chris Schenkel (c) hsa teamed with Bud Wilkinson on the the amateur spirit of college football, with a sudden death of Georgia student body, a member of Omicron Delta College Football Game of the week program. Both were on playoff." On the other hand, Major-General Donald B. CONGRATS FROM THE COACH - When Harvey Harman Kappa, Blue Key Society, X Club, Gridiron Honor Society hand for the Ninth Annual Hall of Fame banquet. Schenkel Bennett, the Superintendent of the U. S. Military Acad- coached at Rutgers he got a look at Princeton's Dick Kazmaier and Student Government Cabinet. is shown at the press-radio-television press conference with new emy at West Point said, "The one game I'd like to see that he didn't particularly like. The Nassau touchdown special- electees Charley Conerly, second from right, and Aaron Rosen- ist led the Tigers to two straight perfect record seasons. Now Stanley Juk. Better known as Steve Stanley Juk. berg (r), and two members of the Football Foundation's execu- played in overtime to decide the winner is the Army- a Hall of Famer, Kazmaier (r), a shade heavier now, was con- A Phi Beta Kappa. Six feet, two inches, two hundred and tive committee, Jack Mohr (1) and Robert Hall, second from Navy game." gratulated by the Foundation's executive director for his elec- ten pounds, from South Carolina. He is a ranking can- left. Like Charley Conerly told me this story tion. didate for All-America Academic team consideration. His first, I like the description of a tie game as point grade average is 3.7 out of 4. He is majoring in being like kissing your sister. pled in the wake of his triple threat paragon. As a senior chemistry, and minoring in mathematics. His anticipated Admiral Tom Hamilton, a vice-president of the Na- he completed a hundred and thirty three of two hundred post-graduate study is medicine. He is president of the He's six feet, one inch, two hundred and twenty eight tional Football Foundation is one of the Naval Academy's and thirty three passes, threw eighteen for touchdowns senior class, president of the Fellowship of Christian Ath- pounds and he's a native of Jefferson City, Missouri. He greats on the gridiron as you know, he was inducted into and ran for nine more while punting for distance and de- letes, president of Kappa Sigma Kappa service fraternity was chosen as the University's Most Outstanding Junior. the Football Hall of Fame a year ago. A legend in his fending as a safety man with intuition born of inate ap- and the Sigma Nu social fraternity. He is a member of He has a 3.38 cumulative grade average over his years at own time as a player and a coach and as a naval officer, titude. Three years of combat duty with the Marines in the Blue Key, and a recipient of the Atlantic Coast Con- the University. He's won all academic honors in the Big he is the Commissioner of the A.A.W.U. He will induct World War II interrupted his college career but did not ference Achievement Award for the past two years, and Eight Conference for the past two years and All-American the ten new members into the National Football Hall of dull the talents which New Yorkers were later to applaud also the recipient of the Thomas Moore Craig Leadership Academic team recognition. He's majoring in chemical Fame. Admiral Hamilton. in this quiet man they came to call their Old Pro. Now a Award, a three year varsity letter man and he has excelled engineering. He plans to pursue a law degree specailizing ADMIRAL ToM HAMILTON: Honored guests, it's my businessman and a planter in his home community, Chuck all the way in football and academics. in patent law. He's a member of the Engineer's Club, Phi great honor tonight to present to you the gentlemen who Conerly merits richly the honor now conferred upon him. Etta Sigma, Tau Beta Phi, Pi U Epsilon and Alpha Chi have been selected as members of the Hall of Fame and Chuck Conerly. Studies Shakespeare Sigma. William David Powell. to be inducted tonight. This is done not only for their James Robert Lynch, co-captain of Notre Dame. Two Sport Star Never Missed Practice achievement and contributions on the football field, but Jim Lynch, a native of Lima, Ohio, is an All-America line- for their contributions in life afterwards. Charles Roslyn Carney. University of Illinois, backer, and for three seasons has been a standout on John Andrew Richards of T.C.U. A member of the I'd like to ask each of you as your name is called to 1918, '19, '20 and '21. By Bob Zuppke; this dauntless son Coach Ara Parseghian's squad. Six feet, one inch, two All-Southwest Conference Academic team. Richards, five hundred and twenty five pounds, he is rated as one of feet, eleven inches, one hundred and eighty pounds, is stand while the citation is being given. of Illinois was rated as his Alma Mater's all time exemplar of end play. Walter Camp selected him for the All- the great leaders in recent Notre Dame athletic annals. from Fort Worth, Texas. He has a 3.3 grade point average Accepts for Booth American diadem. Winner of the four letters in football, He's majoring in sociology and minoring in English. He's out of 4. He's majoring in biology and minoring in chem- For Albert (Albie) Booth, I'm asking Dr. Mal Stevens, three in basketball, member of two Western Conference going to attend law school and has applications in for istry. He plans to study medicine. A member of Who's his coach, a great orthopedic surgeon and a great Yale Title teams, Charles Carney's record is one of com- some of the better schools, we'll say, I hope Yale anyway Who at T. C. U., he's married and is one of the most athlete to rise and accept this for Albie. petitive achievement. Though a career in finance and in- and probably Harvard and some of the others. He has a popular students on the campus. He was captain of his Albert (Albie) Booth, Yale, 1929, '30, '31. He was vestment banking called him after graduation, football 2.6 average out of 3, with grades that have all been A freshman football team. In four years, he's never missed small of stature, great of heart, and they called him Little still shared his close attention for some years through and B and it includes Shakespeare. His most important a football practice or a class. He's rated as one of the Boy Blue. In all the storied history of Yale football, none assistant coaching at Northwestern, Wisconsin and Harv- extra-curricular activity includes work in the Latin-Ameri- best all-around scholar athletes in T. C. U. history. He has earned deeper respect, won greater plaudits, provided ard. After business responsibilities made impracticable can summer project in the underprivileged areas. Jim led the Southwest Conference in pass interceptions as a more throbbing thrills. As a sophomore, in 1929, he scaled further coaching activity his interest never lessened. Now Lynch. junior. He's regarded as one of the best defensive backs in the heights against Army in a display that many still and for many years, associated with a Boston firm, his Charles Peters, Princeton. Charlie Peters, starting that very competitive league. John Andrew Richards of call the most stirring one day performance in Eli annals. devotion to our game still marks one significant phase quarterback for the Princeton Tigers for the last two years. T. C. U. Master of the art of the broken field, cool in crisis, in- of a life career rich in fulfillment - Chuck Carney. He's six feet, one hundred eighty five pounds, hails from Michael Dennis Ryan of the University of Washing- ately a leader, he gained the abiding affection of all foot- Nassau's Modern Great Indianapolis, Indiana. He is a University scholar. On the ton. Six feet one, two hundred and thirty pounds, he's a ball men. Kicking the goal to beat Harvard in his final scale of one to seven, his grade point average is 1.09, and game, he was a winner to the end. Enshrined in the hearts Richard William Kazmaier, Princeton, 1949, '50 guard. He majored in economics. He has applied and is he's majoring in chemical engineering and minoring in a candidate for a Rhodes Scholarship and a Marshall of those who knew him best, his enduring legacy in New and '51. The only Princeton recipient of the Heisman Tro- German. He plans to study medicine. His current courses Scholarship, both which might take him to Oxford in Haven's Albie Booth Memorial Boys' Club. In a life, phy Award. Dick Kazmaier led the Tigers to undefeated seasons in 1950 and '51. Twice he was accorded All- include physics, engineering, chemistry, mathematics, and England. He has an accumulative grade point average of all too brief, he left a shining heritage that the years biology. And he qualified for highest honors in the Physics 3.34. He's also interested in going to the Harvard Business will never dim. Albie Booth. America rating. In his three years as a Princeton tailback, Department. He's been on the Dean's List every year. School or the Harvard Law School. He's a member of he completed sixty per cent of his passes, threw 35 touch- The Quiet Man Athletically he's responsible for blocking assignments and Phi Eta Sigma, which is a national freshman scholastic downs and rushed for twenty more while punting con- play calling in Princeton's famous single wing offense, honorary fraternity. He has played football for three Charles Albert Conerly. University of Mississippi, sistently for long average. On one of his good days against and he's rated as one of the best at this position to ever years. He is the ranking candidate for All-America and 1942, 1946 and 47. Long before New Yorkers knew him Cornell in 1951, he rushed for 126 yards and two touch- play for Dick Coleman and Old Nassau. All-Conference honors this year and he has been named as the guiding genius of their football Giants, Charles downs and completed 15 of 17 passes for 236 yards and William David Powell, co-captain of the Missouri the outstanding senior man on his campus. Michael Den- Conerly had begun to write his gridiron saga in his three touchdowns as Nassau won 53 to 15. At his playing Tigers. Bill Powell is co-captain of the Missouri Tigers. nis Ryan of Washington. Mississippi homeland. He led the Ole Miss Rebels to their weight of 168 he was one of Princeton's most gifted first Southeastern Conference title in 1947. Records top- (Continued on page 14) FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 FOOTBALLETTER 15 14 ToM HAMILTON on the part of the Princeton boys, Rip Miller argued with Hall of Fame Induction (Continued from page 14) the referee for five minutes. He wanted Princeton penal- legendary fame as hard-nosed defense reached new ized 15 yards for roughing the kicker. (Continued from page 13) heights in three successive scoreless ties with Dr. Jock Knew Irish Plays players earning status alongside Hector Cowan, Hoby Sutherland's Pittsburgh forces. As a coach Crowley won Baker, the Poe brothers and other timeless men of Prince- And seeing Ed Garbisch here tonight reminds me of the hearts of his men in 95 games and losing 22 and tying ton. At graduation, he chose advanced study in business 10. A Navy commander in World War II, father of two the 1924 Notre Dame-Army game. Ed Garbisch knew the over professional football opportunities. Today he is vice- Notre Dame system better than we did, because he sons, he is a successful businessman in Scranton and still president of American Machinery and Foundry, a post a raconteur of whom Rock, the master story-teller, would played against us for eight years. He played end against that belies his youthful bearing. Dick Kazmaier. Notre Dame in 1917 when he was an end at Washing- be proud. Jim Crowley. Edgar Edward "Rip" Miller, Notre Dame, 1922, Now if all you gentlemen will rise I would like to ton and Jefferson. Well, anyway this was supposed to be '23. It gives me signal pleasure to read this for my col- induct you into the Hall of Fame. It is a great privilege a great game, SO Rockne came into the dressing room a league of the Navy, Rip Miller. One of the most artful to admit you, each of you, to the rights and privileges, of few minutes before the game and he says, "Boys, I just linemen of his time, Rip Miller was numbered among the this distinguished group of the National Football Hall of heard that the Army, they're going to kick you off the Seven Mules, who at the frequent and urgent requests of field, and they're going to kick you off the schedule. Now WHO'S THAT LADY? Oblivious to the lovely lady looking Fame. Our heartiest congratulations. Coach Rockne were good enough to help the Four Horse- over their shoulder four Hall of Famers broke bread together they might be able to kick you off the schedule boys, I now have the pleasure of calling to the microphone men advance to glory in the cause of Notre Dame. Now he at 21. They are, from left, Pappy Waldorf, Pete Pihos, but they can't kick you off that field. The team that'll start is and for decades has been an important member of the Charley Conerly and Lou Little. Jim Crowley to respond for all these worthy gentlemen. today will be Walsh at center. Walsh I want you to Jim Crowley. Naval Academy's athletic administration. As football line I could tell you a few stories about this fellow, too. throw a nice, light fluffy pass back to those backs. coach, and head coach, and assistant athletic director. Rosenberg heeded Horace Greeley's advice and went Those backs are fast, you got to get the ball back to them. I won't. Jim, it's yours. As a high ranking student in college, he understands the west. There he won national acclaim as one of Howard Walsh will be backing up that line of defense. Anytime value of the training that combines the work of the class- Jones' greatest guards on southern California football you see an Army man stick his nose through that line of room with the experience of competitive sport. This is teams that won Rose Bowl games to end the 1931 and scrimmage, and he's got that ball tucked under his arm, a point increasingly recognized today by our civilian col- '32 seasons. And in 1931, snapped the Notre Dame string Jim Crowley I want you to drive him back five, ten, fifteen yards right lege administrators and one of vital importance to our of 25 victories. With reflexes that took him to the point Hall of Fame Response where he belongs. But Walsh, you've been looking pretty service academies as they prepare men to lead the nation's of contact with the speed of a projectile and the pur- poor all year, you've been looking terrible out there. But military forces. Rip Miller's career indeed has been one poseful power of a four ton truck, Rosenberg was a major JIM CROWLEY: Thank you, Admiral Tom. Your Emi- you got to go out there and win today. Alright, at guards, of usefulness to our country. Rip Miller. element in the exceptional strength of the Trojan de- nence, Reverend Clergy, distinguished guests and friends, Kaiser at right guard, Wybol at left guard. I want you Commissioned In Battle fenses. After college he found his life work in the motion it is my very pleasant assignment to respond for this to go down that field and take the legs right off that picture industry as one of Hollywood's notable directors galaxy of former collegiate football stars who were just fullback. I want you to hit him so hard you make his Peter Louis Pihos. Indiana University, 1942, '43, '45 and producers, a career he interrupted for Navy service inducted into the Football National Hall of Fame. bones rattle. On small yards, I want you looking for a and '46. Product of the adroit coaching of the late Bo McMillan, Pete Pihos was one of the most versatile of in World War II. His motion picture triumphs have been We accept this distinguished honor with play over the middle of the line and on big yards I football players. Superb at end and full back. Grantland frequent and significant, but perhaps not more satisfying mixed feelings of pride and humility. We want you dropping back looking for a forward pass. Rice termed him the most talented pass receiver of the than that 1931 afternoon in South Bend when Johnny are proud of the fact that we are now as- But you guards've been looking terrible all year, been 1943 season. Then this rugged native of Chicago, serv- Baker kicked the last minute field goal to beat Notre sociated with the collegiate gridiron greats looking pitiful out there, but you too got to go out and of the past and a feeling of humility for that win. ing in the infantry in Europe, won his country's varsity Dame. Aaron Rosenberg. very same reason. Our eternal thanks to "Alright at tackles, Miller at right tackle, Bacher at letter, a commission on the battlefield. Back home in In- First Coach of the Year those who saw fit to honor us. It's always left tackle, you play tackle. On big yardage when Army's diana in 1945, he led the Hoosiers to a Big Ten Cham- Lynn "Pappy" Waldorf. Coach, Oklahoma City U., nice to be remembered. And I got another got the ball I want you chasing that passer right out of pionship. Three times he was an All-Conference selec- Kansas, Oklahoma A. & M., Kansas State, Northwestern, assignment from this committee. They asked the park, right where he belongs. And on small yardage tion. Later in top-notch professional football he was six University of California. In his long and distinguished me to tell two very brief football stories. I want you two looking for a play over the middle of the times an All-League star before retiring to coach at Tu- career of coaching, Lynn Waldorf's teams won 175 games, lane. Now a corporation vice-president in Richmond, Good Ole Rip line. But you tackles, you haven't been blocking, you lost 99. He was the first to be named Coach of the Year by his fellow coaches in 1935. The son of a revered bishop I am happy that I'm back on the same team with haven't been tackling, you haven't been doing anything Virginia, he was welcomed back to his old campus this Rip Miller, but actually the only reason that Rip Miller right. But if you don't play your game today I'll jerk you season for honors that commemorated deeds of two of the Methodist Church, he was a great tackle at Syra- decades ago, renewing memories that will always be cuse in the 1920's. Several colleges have known his coach- made the football team at Notre Dame is because the out of the game so fast it'll make your head swim. luminous in Indiana football history. Pete Pihos. ing and each has been better for his presence, in the rules specifically state that you must have seven men on "Alright, at ends, Collins at right end, Hunzinger at victory statistics, and more importantly, in the human the line of scrimmage on the offense. And I actually got left end. Alright, you ends, when you're going down Went Out For Team value. In 1936 he guided Northwestern to its first Big the nickname of Sleepy because I backed up the line under passes I want you nice, loose and liquid. No crow- Norman Van Brocklin, University of Oregon. 1947, behind Miller and I made so many tackles the first five bars when you're catching those passes today boys. I don't '48. At the University of Oregon they knew Norman Van Ten championship. At the University of California his minutes of each game that I looked exhausted and there- want you down their field slow under punt. They got a Brocklin as the fabulous Dutchman when he led the un- Golden Bears recorded 33 straight triumphs in regular fore got the name of Sleepy. man down there they call him Smyth in the East, his defeated Webfoots to the Cotton Bowl in 1948. Entering season play, until tied by Stanford in 1950. He was presi- Seeing Dick Kazmaier here tonight brings back to name is Smith. And I want you down that field fast. college on the G.I. Bill after service in the Navy, he failed dent of the American Football Coaches Association in I want you down that field fast, and I want you hitting 1951. One of the most respected men in football history, my mind's eye a game that we played against Princeton to win a varsity post as a sophomore. One year later he in 1923. We defeated Princeton by a score of 25-2 on a Smith so hard he fumbles the ball and pounce on the ball, was the general choice for all-Pacific Coast Conference Lynn Waldorf adorns the brief history of the sport. Lynn Waldorf. very, very windy day. And I don't wish to seem im- because we think more of the ball than we do of Smith. quarterback, nationally outstanding as runner, passer, modest but I scored every point, not for Notre Dame "Alright at quarterback, you, Stuhldreher, will you kicker. As a senior his passing gained 1,010 yards. A meri- Great Player, Great Coach but the two points for Princeton. And I want to tell you surprise me and think today, Stuhldreher? Will you have torious career as a player in professional football led to James Crowley, Notre Dame University, 1922, '23, how that happened. I was doing the kicking that day, a reason for every play? If you can't go inside, go out- appointment as coach of the Minnesota Vikings. In that '24. Sleepy Jim Crowley was an excellent blocker, but along with our alumni and I got off one of my beautiful side. If you can't go over them, go under 'em. Stuhl- position he is active also in Boys' Club work and in civic Knute Rockne liked to give him the ball on the critical punts from behind our goal line and just as the ball dreher, but don't be dragging them out of a hat. Think. enterprises in Minneapolis that reach well beyond the third down. This was in the time of the Four Horsemen, reached its peak, a great gust of wind came from the Think. Think.. gridiron. As apt example to use as the values of rugged when Notrer Dame won 27 out of 29 games, climaxing other end of Palmer Stadium. So I looked up, and I "Alright at right halfback, Miller, you had a brother competition, his impact on the community has helped the period with a 27-10 victory over Ernie Nevers and could see the ball coming back towards me so I signalled here in 1909, a great blocker. You had a brother here to enhance the concept of his sport in a constructive Stanford in the 1925 Rose Bowl game. His wit as well as for a fair catch. Well these Princeton boys are such great in 1913. You had another brother here in 1919, a great manner. Norm Van Brocklin. his football wisdom helped Jim Crowley to become an sportsmen that they honored the signal and they let me blocker. But what do you do, Miller, on the off-tackle Rosey Went West outstanding coach at Michigan State and at Fordham catch the ball and then they tackled me behind the goal play when you're supposed to take the end out? You Aaron David Rosenberg, University of Southern where his Seven Blocks of Granite took on their own line for a safety. It was rather embarrassing though be- go out there and you close your eyes, you flinch, curl up, California. 1931, '32 and '33. A native of Brooklyn, Aaron (Continued on page 15) cause afterwards, after this great display of sportsmenship (Continued on page 16) 16 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 FOOTBALLETTER 17 Inductees, Scholar-Athletes Dine at 21 Thirty-four Top Players on 1967 Ballot Honors Court Meets 24 Vet Coaches In Houston, Texas Pioneer Players Are Nominated Being Considered Thirty-four former college stand- Twenty-four former college football outs who played the game since 1910 Some of the Pioneer Foot- coaches have been nominated for were named to the official 1967 Foot- ball Hall of Fame candidates 1967 consideration for the National ball Hall of Fame ballot, Harvey who played before 1910 who Football Foundation and Hall of Harman, Executive Director, an- will be considered by the Fame, Harvey Hafman, Executive Di- nounced today. Honors Court in Houston in- rector, announced today. The thirty-four candidates are now clude: Eleven coaches are included in the in the process of being voted on in Snake Ames, Princeton; before 1935 group and thirteen in the the National Football Foundation's George Brooke, Penn; Zora after 1935 bracket. 102 Hall of Fame chapters and all Clevenger, Indiana; Bill The before 1935 nominees include: were preesnted to the Honors Court Dague, Navy; Nate Dougher- Edward Cochems, St. Louis Uni- for consideration in January in Hous- ty, Tennessee; Doc Fenton, versity, Maine, Amherst and Wiscon- ton, Texas. LSU; Tom Hammond, Mich- sin; Jim Conzelman, Washington Uni- The 34 players since 1910 were igan; Jonas Ingram, Navy; versity; William (Butch) Cowell, AULD LANG SYNE - Posing with photos taken during the hei ght of their college careers, seven 1966 Hall of Famers met for the nominated by chapter members and Tad Jones, Yale; Archie New Hampshire; Paul Dashiell, U.S. first time together prior to the Waldorf-Astoria Awards banquet at the press-radio-television press conference at 21. They are, from left, Dick Kazmaier, Princeton, Rip Miller and Jim Crowley, Notre Dame, Pappy Waldorf of Northwestern and California, Aaron screened by eight national district Lowe, Drury; Tiny Maxwell, Naval Academy; Jesse Harper, Alma Rosenberg, Southern California, Chuck Carney, Illinois, and Charles Conerly, Ole Miss. Pete Pihos of Indiana was a late arrival, committees and the Hall of Fame Chicago and Swarthmore. College, Wabash College, Notre as was Oregon's Norm Van Brocklin. Albie Booth, the 10th electee, is deceased. Awards Committee. They include: And Art Poe, Princeton; Dame; William (Navy Bill) Ingram, Harry Agganis, Boston University, Curt Redden, Michigan; William & Mary College, Indiana, quarterback, (1949, 1951, 1952); Henry Seibels, Sewanee; Syl- U.S. Naval Academy, University of Angelo Bertelli, Notre Dame, quar- vester Shonka, Nebraska; California. terback, (1941, 1942 and 1943); Vince Stevenson, Penn; And Herb McCracken, Allegheny, George (Bad News) Cafego, Uni- Dutch Van Surdam, Wes- Lafayette; Jonathan (Poss) Miller, versity of Tennessee tailback, 1937- leyan; Beef Wheeler, Prince- Franklin & Marshall, University of 38-39); ton, and Clint Wyckoff, Cor- Pennsylvania; Earl (Greasy) Neale, Eddie Casey, Harvard, halfback nell.. Muskingum, West Virginia Wesleyan, (1916, 1919); Marietta, Washington & Jefferson, Jack (Flying) Cloud, William & University of Virginia, West Virginia Mary, fullback (1946, 1947, 1948, University, and Yale; George (Sandy) 1949); John Pingel, Michigan State, half- Sanford, Yale, Rutgers, Virginia, and Harry Costello, Georgetown, back, back, (1936-37-38); Louis A. Young, Pennsylvania. (1910-11-12-13); George Barney Poole, North Caro- The after 1935 group in- Slade Cutter, Naval Academy, lina, Army, and Mississippi, end, cludes: Eddie Finnigan, Bald- tackle, (1932-33-34); (1942-43-44-45-46-47-48); win-Wallace, Western Re- Edwin Dooley, Dartmouth, quar- Wear Schoonover, Arkansas, end, serve; Ernest Godfrey, Ohio terback, (1923-24-26); (1927-28-29); State, Wittenberg; Eddie Kim- Nello (Flash) Falaschi, Santa Paul Schwegler, Washington, ball, Brigham Young; Frank Clara, back, (1934-35-36); tackle, (1929-30-31); Leahy, Georgetown, Michigan Pat Harder, Wisconsin, back, Wilson (Bud) Schwenk, Washing- State, Fordham, Boston Col- (1941-42); ton University (Mo.), quarterback, lege, Notre Dame; Ed (Slip) Elroy (Crazy Legs) Hirsch, Wis- (1939-40-41); Madigan, St. Mary's College, consin Michigan, halfback, (1942- William (Bill) Shepherd, Western University of Iowa; Edward 43); Maryland, fullback, (1931-32-33-34); (Hooks) Mylin, Lebanon Val- Leslie Horvath, Ohio State, back Claude (Monk) Simons, Tulane, ley, Bucknell, Lafayette; (1940-41-42-44); halfback, (1932-33-34); Homer Norton, Centenary, Joel Hunt, Texas A&M, quarter- Herb Stein, Pittsburgh, center, Texas A&M; Lawrence (Buck) back halfback, (1925-26-27); (1918-19-20-21); Shaw, North Carolina State, FINE GROUP OF SCHOLAR-ATHLETES - Col. Earl (Red) Blaik, whose syndicated newspaper football series makes possible the Cecil Isbell, Purdue, back (1935- Robert (Bob) Steuber, Missouri University of Nevada, Santa the graduate fellowship grants for the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame, is shown congratulating the 1966 recipients at 36-37); DePauw, halfback, end, (1940-41- Clara, California, Air Force left to right, Bobby Etter, Georgia, John Richards, TCU, Stanley Juk. South Carolina, Charles Peters, Princeton, Mike Ryan, 21 luncheon. Awards Chairman Vince Draddy, whose committ ee made the selections, beams his approval. The youngsters are, Lawrence (Larry) Kelley, Yale, 42-43); Academy; Oscar (Ossie) Sol- Washington, Tom Allen, Bowdoin, and William Powell, Missouri. Notre Dame's Jim Lynch was a late arrival. end, (1934-35-36); Clarence Swanson, Nebraska, end, em, Luther College, Drake Henry Ketcham, Yale, center-guard (1919-20-21); University, Syracuse, Spring- (1911-12-13); Billy Vessels, Oklahoma, halfback, field; James (Jim) Tatum, JIM CROWLEY (Continued from page 15) That's what you're supposed to do, Layden. But is that William Killinger, Penn State, (1950-51-52); Cornell, North Carolina, Ok- you do everything wrong. You've been looking pitiful all what you've been doing? No, Layden. You've been looking back, (1918-19-20-21); Harry (Lighthorse) Wilson, Penn lahoma, Maryland; Leonard year, you've been looking terrible out there, but I want terrible all year, you've been looking pitiful out there but Robert (Bobby) Layne, Texas, State Army, halfback, (1921-22-23- Watters, Williams College; you blocking hard today. I want to see some high knee action today. back, (1944-46-47); 24-25-26); Charles (Bud) Wilkinson, "Alright at fullback, Layden. Layden, when you get that ball I want you stepping high, wide and handsome. "Alright, at left halfback, oh Jimmy, would you mind Dan McMillan, Southern California Robert (Bobby) Wilson, SMU, Syracuse, Minnesota, Iowa One man doesn't bother you, two men don't stop you, going in there and playing your usual good game?" - California, tackle, (1916-17-20-21); halfback, (1933-34-35); and Pre-Flight, Oklahoma; and JOHN DALY: Well I had this funny story, but there's Abe Mickal, Louisiana State, half- Francis (Whitey) Wistert, Michi- Henry (Red) Sanders, Van- three you'll carry right on your back for a touchdown. one thing my mother gave me, that was good sense. back, (1933-34-35); gan, tackle, (1931-32-33). derbilt and UCLA. 18 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 FOOTBALLETTER 19 General Dwight Eisenhower Congratulates Winners Chester J. LaRoche President's Report General of the Army Dwight David Eisenhower, first recipient of the National Football Foundation's Gold In 1912 West Point had a hero in the making - a Medal award when he was president of the United States, football player known to his teammates as the "Kansas planned to attend the 1966 Awards Dinner only to cancel Cyclone." The conservative New York Times of that date out on the final day because of upcoming gall bladder said, "He is one of the most promising backs in Eastern surgery later in the month. football." His telegrams to Gold Medal winner Red Blaik and By 1958 he had become the President of the United Distinguished American Award Winner Bill Carpenter are States and he addressed the first of these Dinners. Most as follows: of us here tonight heard him then. In a memorable speech he said that what determines "Dear Red: I am deeply sorry I had to America's greatness is what you and I are ready to do cancel my attendance at the National Foot- for others as well as ourselves. ball Foundation's Dinner tonight. I had THE CONERLYS AND FRIENDS - Senator and Mrs. Robert looked forward personally to adding my Kennedy were on hand at a pre-Hall of Fame dinner party for To honor others you have come here tonight. 1966 inductee Charley Conerly, the Mississippi Old Pro, and his congratulations along with those attending talented author-wife, Periann. A Washington engagement kept Concern For The Nation the dinner in honor of one who has done Senator Kennedy from attending this year's dinner, but he long- so much as a participant in all phases of the distanced his good friend Red Blaik during the dinner to ex- Your concern, then, is not alone with press his regrets and send his best wishes to the Hall of Fame the camaraderie of the evening but with the game and has so clearly exemplified skill, Gold Medal winner. (Photo by Bill Mark). sense of what the game can do to heighten sportsmanship and integrity. Nonetheless, I values you hold and feel are vital to the send my very best wishes for your continued nation. So it is the game both as a sport and success and happiness. Cordially, your old an educational discipline that we account to GOLD MEDAL PRESENTATION - Col. Earl (Red) Blaik, friend, Dwight D. Eisenhower." the tenth recipient of the National Football Foundation's high- you. est honor, is shown being presented the Gold Medal Award To Captain William Carpenter: When the N.C.A.A. and the coaches approached by Chester LaRoche, the Foundation's president. "I wish circumstances would have allowed me to some of us and asked if a Hall of Fame was needed, personally add my acclaim to you upon receiving the first college presidents, to combat excesses, had gone to their A United States cabinet officer says: "Any question Distinguished American Medal awarded by the National own extremes. Eventually, 130 dropped the game. that cannot be dealt with by one of the special leader- Football Foundation and Hall of Fame. Though my ab- We decided that first, to serve the common interest, ship groups that we are in; that is - any question that sence is unavoidable, I salute one whose gallantry and the National Football Foundation should be organized; cuts across special fields, tends to end up being dealt leadership will long give real inspiration to every true the Hall of Fame to follow, if proved needed, to be the with by the government." American. With best wishes for health and happiness. result of our efforts. For the first time, alumni were However, most Americans value the role played by Dwight D. Eisenhower." concerned not only with their own college, but with the non-governmental leadership. But it is the judgment of game itself. men like John Gardner, Secretary of Health, Education A FINE HOST - Southern California's All-America back Presidents Responsible and Welfare, a noted scholar, that it will not continue Frank Gifford threw a cocktail-buffet party for his New York under the present conditions. Fine Hall of Fame Delegation teammate Charley Conerly the night before this year's Hall of One result, the extremes in the game's When he was head of the Carnegie Corporation, Fame dinner at Mr. Bernard Shor's establishment on West conduct are closer together; the N.C.A.A.'s Attends Excellent Dinner 52nd Street, which was attended by several hundred top sports John Gardner had this to say in "The Antileadership standards are steadily raised; Booster Clubs personalities from the sports, theater, newspaper, television, Vaccine": radio and political world. Gifford, a future Hall of Fame pros- are realizing that their obligations should be "In those institutions today, (meaning Forty-nine Football Hall of Famers, including the pect as a result of his college days at Southern Cal, is shown to the whole college, and not just a part. our oldest endowed colleges) the best stu- 1966 inductees, attending the big December dinner at left with his wife. The Conerlys, Charley and Periann are Scholarships more and more are based on the finest turnout ever as far as Football Hall of Famers at right, and the man in the middle is a former Philadelphian dents are carefully schooled to avoid leader- need and merit. And, as a result, more boys who made good in the Big Town, Toots Shor and his wife, ship responsibilities." are concerned. can decide themselves where to live and Baby. (Photo by Bill Mark). Careers, which follow from the performing of purely In addition to the 1966 Hall of Famers and Admiral what to study. Coaches are increasingly professional tasks, in a superior manner, are stressed by Tom Hamilton, Col. Red Blaik, and Lt. Col. Felix Blan- recognized as teachers not only of plays, but the faculty. A world that does not need leaders only chard, who participated in the program, others on hand Mayor Lindsay's Lancers of men; educators worthy of tenure. And it experts is envisioned. The generalist is downgraded; introduced by Blanchard of Army included: Dr. Joe is clear that in the final analysis college Alexander, Syracuse; Everett Bacon, Wesleyan; Jay Ber- Put In Early 1967 Bid the specialist preferred. presidents must accept resonsibility for the An antileadership vaccine is being inoculated all wanger, Chicago; Cliff Battles, West Virginia Wesleyan; game's integrity. over the country. We read: "The image of the corporation Jack Cannon, Notre Dame; George Connor, Notre Dame; EDITOR'S NOTE: The Kennedys are not the only touch Another result: Of the 130 colleges who dropped president (and college president even) that is current Bill Dudley, Virginia; Ham Fish, Harvard; Col. Ed Gar- football playing family in town. New York Mayor John the game, in Chicago, Georgetown, New York University, among intellectuals today has some decidedly unattractive bisch, Army; Merle Gulick, Hobart. Lindsay's Lindsay Lancers whitewashed the Press, 12-0, Fordham and 30 other colleges, boys themselves raise features. It is said that such men compromise their And Homer Hazel, Rutgers; Mel Hein, Washington and is already pointing towards the MacArthur Bowl next the money needed to play, bring back the game the way it convictions daily." State; Jerome Holland, Cornell; John Hubbard, Amherst; year in the letter below: was originally conducted - by the students. Tasting the corrupting experience of power, they Ken Kavanaugh, LSU; Clint Frank, Yale; Glenn Davis, Mr. Jimmie McDowell We realize and are encouraged that many others become status seekers, the argument goes. Furthermore, Army; Frank Kinard, Mississippi; Harry Kipke, Michigan; Director of Public Relations besides ourselves have played a part in these new at- students read Professor Galbraith and "The Organization The National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame titudes. Lou Little, Columbia; Tuss McLaughry, Dartmouth and Man"; they hear that we pursue money, that business 137 Church Street Brown; Bernie Moore, LSU; Pete Mauthe, Penn State. Changing Times has no social purpose, no satisfaction for the intellectual. New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901 George McLaren, Pittsburgh; Cliff Montgomery, Dear Mr. McDowell: But much has changed in amateur foot- Statistics Revealing Columbia, Pat Pazzetti, Lehigh; George Pfann, Cornell; I was sorry I couldn't attend your recent dinner. I ball since we started; even more, in the The following Harvard figures testify to the problem. Fritz Pollard, Brown; Peter Pund, Georgia Tech; Kyle hope you won't let that stand in the way of awarding world, where things are changing faster than They show that only 14% of the graduates in 1965 are Rote, SMU; George Sauer, Nebraska; Carl Snavely, Cor- the 1967 MacArthur Bowl to the Lindsay Lancers. we are. No longer can you and I simply tend going into business now. True, the draft plays its part. nell and North Carolina; William Earl Sprackling, Brown; Sincerely, the machinery of that part of society to Harvard's own investigation, however, indicates that only Ben Ticknor, Harvard; Eric Tipton, Duke; Eddie Tryon, Colgate, and Don Whitmire, Navy and Alabama. John V. Lindsay which we belong. If that is all we do, we are another 10%, or a total of 25%, have any intention of Mayor. not pursuing what the total society needs. (Continued on page 20) 20 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1966-JANUARY, 1967 Chester LaRoche Report (Continued from page 19) ever going into business. That is against the 60% of yes- terday. At M.I.T., out of 1270 graduates last year, only 320 went into business or industry. We visualize no big plot. Some charge that young professors, who have never competed in our economic structure, to correct what they feel is wrong, would tear it down. Even that is doubtful. Need to Mobilize These prejudices are already being com- batted by some of our leaders - men like James Oates addressing the students at Exeter; Roger Blough traveling to Texas BUILDING FUND CO-CHAIRMEN - Roger Blough (l), and Harvard. But this is hand-to-hand chairman of the General MacArthur Adisory Committee, and chairman of the Board of U.S. Steel, and Industrialist-Sports- combat. We need to mobilize. man John W. Galbreath (r), a member of the MacArthur Ad- Mobilize we can - for the discipline of leadership is visory Committee, have accepted the co-chairmanship of the football's product. National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame Building Fund Campaign. Foundation President Chester LaRoche (c) Ideological Center made the announcement at the Ninth Annual Hall of Fame The Hall of Fame can be an ideological dinner at the Waldorf-Astoria. center with its own Research and Behavioral Scientists, where we will relate the qualities of the heroes of the past to those our nation You have heard the figures before, but they bear re- needs tomorrow. peating again and again, until there is action. At Pitts- We have already made a start. We have made re- burgh, Dartmouth, and Notre Dame research backs up the search grants to the American Institutes for Research who following facts from one of our independent, privately have the aptitudes of 400,000 boys on computers. And supported colleges. Of the 1220 men who played foot- at these dinners, and at others attended by 500 to 1000 ball there, from the day it first started, 97% graduated, in 100 cities across the country, we bring into focus, as against the average of their class, 85%. Their marks at the time of the long-haired beatnik revolt on the were higher than the average of their class. In two world campus, the convictions of The Foundation. Reception wars, they were involved almost to a man; and in leader- to our ideas has been enthusiastic. But our impact is with ship in business, government and the professions, there the general public. It is one step away from the heart is no comparison. The superiority is five to one. The con- of the problem. It must be focused on the campus. tributions to the alumni fund are 100% greater. Time to Start We do not pretend to have all the answers on how Too often, the contact between students to organize. We visualize some combination locally of the and the leaders in our professions and busi- presidents of the top banks and the newspaper, television ness starts only after graduation from col- and radio and department heads to recruit qualified lege, four years too late. Contact should start speakers for regular meetings with a self perpetuating at commencement time in high school and campus organizations made up of major sports managers continue through college, for a business and team captains and the school paper editors and con- vacuum flows around our colleges. cerned professors in the economics department. Nation- ally, we want the power to stay where it belongs, with Who best can go to the campuses of this country The People. than we who came from there? We go not for our own businesses or professions, but in the interest of the boy. Great Society Not to see what we can do for football, but what football We believe that a great society is a society in which can do for the country. Our youth should hear why we men of business think greatly about their functions. Join feel that the American corporation - big or small - is with us then to build a Hall of Fame that stands for the greatest social instrument devised by man. There, those values, which in a world of innovation, must en- leadership depends not only on the lessons of man's past, dure if our way of life is to survive. Truly, if those of learned in the classroom, but in competition outside the us who have played football together stick together, we classroom, where an understanding of one's unlimited can have a hand in shaping the future. resources is discovered. There we learn about the most important thing of all, of man himself; who is full of And I offer as happy evidence that we talk; who to trust; how to subordinate one's own ends to are sticking together and facing the prob- lems of leadership - the official announce- a common objective. ment that Roger Blough and John Gal- The Competitive Man breath will be co-chairmen of our National Faculties should understand that here Campaign Committee to raise $3,500,000. is disciplined The Competitive Man - the Held in respect and affection with a love of man who creates the wealth that supports football and a recognition of its dimensions, our schools, colleges and government. They their leadership means the Hall of Fame should hear the overwhelming evidence that will be far-reaching - and that it will be we have to that end. built. File I not only want to add my welcome to that of Roger Blough's - but also to express the appreciation of The Foundation for your tangible evidence of support. Without it, we can do little. With it, a great deal. Many of us here tonight were in this room ten years ago, asking ourselves what we could do to help college football. We had no organization or money. An attempt to build a Hall of Fame had already failed. The game was suffering from the extremes that are characteristic of us as a people when we compete. On the one hand, the game had become big business in some of the state colleges. College presidents felt helpless under pressures from the Downtown Alumni and Upstate Politicians. To be sure, there were alumni who worried about victories at the expense of the game itself. But they were unorganized; had no collective voice. We, who were in this group, decided to do something, for at the other extreme were college presidents who, to correct the games excesses, went to their own extremes. They would wipe it out. One hundred and thirty-four did just that. -2- The following statement by Dr. George L. Cross, President of the University of Oklahoma, was typical of the attitude of Big Time college presidents. Asked if college presidents shouldn't exert leadership about recruitment practices and coaches telling boys where to live and what to study, he said: "I couldn't persuade the Board of Regents to change what we have. If I insisted, I'd be replaced. I have never felt I cared to martyrize myself in this cause." Plainly, part of the problem was with the public and parents who felt a free education justified questionable practices. Today, the two extremes are closer together. The N.C.A.A.'s standards are steadily raised. Booster Clubs realize that their obligations should be to the whole college - not just a part of it. Coaches increasingly demand that they be recognized as teachers worthy of tenure. On the other hand, boys enthused and willing to pay to play have brought back the game the way it was originally conducted - by the students themselves in Fordham, Georgetown, Chicago, and thirty other colleges. We realize - and we are encouraged - that many others besides ourselves have played a part in these new attitudes. -3- Pro football challenges interest as entertainment. It can never match the valor of the amateur whose only reward is discovering his best. For our part we decided that if there was to be a Hall of Fame, it should be a consequence of what we did, rather than our aim. The stories of the heroes of the past can have no meaning unless they serve the present. To serve the present, in 100 cities our Chapters honor, at dinners attended by up to 1,000 high school Scholar-Athletes. Coaches and parents, in fact, the whole community learns that not only ability in football, but integrity and application to studies and concern with others are the dimensions to strive for. The nation gets the same message, as we honor at our December Dinner eleven top college players - often at the top of their class scholastically, class officers and leaders in undergraduate affairs. Our Honors Court elections to the Hall of Fame, to players of All- America caliber emphasize character and leadership in life. The MacArthur Bowl is given to a team whose manner of winning is as important as scores. And our Gold Medal Award makes clear that material success has little meaning unless it serves the nation. These awards make national news. -4- Our brochure "Making College Count" - approved by 300 college presidents, directed at high school boys and their counselors, explains the obstacles in the way, and the path and disciplines to these honors. News of these activities is sent monthly to 10,000 opinion leaders and members of our 100 chapters. Business men, college presidents, coaches, athletic directors, news media are informed of our activities, goals and ideas. In all of this, we have realized that it is not our responsibility to tell people what to do or what to think; what to think about, yes. If given the facts, our people generally respond to the best. And if they didn't democracy wouldn't have helped us build this nation. Since it became increasingly clear that commercial pressures which tend to lower codes can be replaced by competition to honor codes; and that college presidents, if given support, will conduct recruitment with the same integrity as they demand in the classroom; that the game can exemplifies nation's highest amateur ideals and be a breeding place of heart and spirit, we decided that a Hall of Fame which would serve the present and dramatize these principles was indeed needed and deserved support. And we have won that support, for we now have a dependable yearly operating income of over $100,000. And we also have $261,000 in assets in a Building Fund. -5- All of this the work of volunteers -- leaders in business, the professions, education -- accomplished at low or no cost. Harvey Harman and Jimmie McDowell of our staff sacrifice too to serve. The Building Fund will steadily grow, for twenty College Chairmen, the first of seventy-two, many here tonight, are engaged in a low-cost Special Gifts Campaign. Gifts of from $250 to $5,000 a year for two years from twenty-one of their alumni friends will meet accepted quotas. Although we are all new at the job, I know that men like Pug Lund, Sid Adger, Bernard Gimbel, Clint Frank will find the time and means to do that job. In New Brunswick, leaders headed by Carl S. Menger have completed plans to raise $100,000. In Pittsburgh, Spook McClintock of Princeton, and Ed Myers of Bucknell have set a target of half a million dollars. An Army-Rutgers game at New Brunswick on October 15, 1966 will focus on our groundbreaking ceremonies. Charles Moore, Dean of The School of Architecture at Yale, has been retained to advise us on the workability and costs of our building. And on the game's 100th anniversary in 1969, at ceremonies we will conduct there will arise a Hall of Fame that gives expression to the best in the game. -6- But much has changed in amateur football since we started -- even more, in the world, where things are changing faster than we are. So, we have new plans to suit the future, for it is the future that challenges us most. A Hall of Fame can be far more than we had originally planned. It can be an ideological center, serving our competitive economy, respected by educators because of our knowledge - through research - of the disciplines of heart and spirit. In our educational structure, marks are increasingly the measure of acceptance in college. Marks sometimes measure memory, specialized ability, and early advantage more than they measure men. One result -- many students working in particular disciplines who become specialists. Thath the named the game But how about the generalists -- the boys who know more about working with men? They hear that business is dull - the pursuit of money. They are told that the greatest satisfactions will be found in government and education. As a result, more and more turn away from business. Thirteen hundred boys graduated from Harvard in 1965. Harvard itself says that their best guess is that only 25% will end up in business. -7- Who then will create the enterprises that mobilize the specialists? Who will create the wealth that supports our colleges and government? Every few years an archaeologist unearths another ancient civilization that flourished for a time and then died. Will we become bored, tired, rigid, unwilling to find ways of self-renewal? Is it our turn next? Anyone who understands our situation at all, understands we are in little danger of failing through lack of material strength. If we fail, it will be a failure of heart and spirit - the very things we feel we know most about. It will be difficult for educators and government to accomplish what is needed without the cooperation of men like yourselves who have an understanding of business and its relation to government and education. But unless business can help to find within our existing framework a system in which innovation, rebirth can occur, we will fail in renewal, flounder in change. Government will take over by default. So those of us who are used to competing with one another must join together to "invent" - if you will - the new social instruments that discipline and develop men who care. We have such an instrument in college football, which is the one universal experience in our colleges that unites undergraduate, -8- faculty, alumni, town, and sets standards for competitive campus activities. And its dimensions are spiritual. We already have some proof of its power. Of the 1,220 men who played football at Yale, 97% were graduated - more than the average of their class. Their marks were higher than the average of their class. Their enlistments in two world wars was far higher. Their success in the professions, government, education, business was notably higher. Their contributions to the Alumni Fund, 100% higher - alas from returns just in, apparently the Dean of Admissions and faculty at Yale ignore the universities own fact finding. At Yale Medical's Psychiatric Department, consultations by students only interested in the classroom, as compared with boys also interested in campus activities, was in proportion of 10 to 1. Do Admissions Committees use such information? Perhaps Dick Day, Exeter's new Headmaster, is right. Education, he says, is our biggest business. And courageously he adds - the worst run. And Professor Nevitt Sanford, Director of the Institute For The Study of Human Problems at Stanford University, says, "There have been few innovations in higher education in thirty years. Faculties are more devoted to the advancement of their own specialties and suspect research is an instrument of change. So are resistant to research into their own functioning.' -9- I guess the trouble with us - you and me - is that we are students who have turned into alumni. But I know leaders like Day and Sanford welcome our kind of alumni interest. We have other studies by Charles Caldwell of Princeton; by Dartmouth professors; and others at Notre Dame and San Jose. These have led to the development of a research program that the National Football Foundation has worked out with one of our greatest institutions - The American Institutes For Research, whose President is John C. Flanagan, here tonight. Leaders in the behavioral sciences, they train pilots for the United States government and for our airlines; and have the records of 400,000 high school boys on computers to analyze the factors that make for achievement. With them, we will find out more about the influence of the game on our campuses and in after life; its great potential to lead a moral renaissance and keep us a competitive society where the power of decision is with the people - not in central dictation. We will find out, not only what happens to the boys who play it - but what happens to those in the stands. It is our conviction that just as one learns from a great book or drama, much rubs off on those who cheer for victory. We have also found out that businessmen and corporations have been more and more interested in what The Foundation can do to keep our fiber tough and our integrity and competitive spirit high. -10- To reach them, we have retained the finest College Fund Raising counsel in the country, John Price Jones Company, whose President, Ed Tuthill, will personally consult with us. They will help us build new plans and needed manpower in corporation and foundation areas to see that what we do is done in light of their experience. With the American Corporation, the source of most all profit - has today become our most effective social unit. I have tried to crowd together many facts so that you will have a sense of background. Later in the program, Roger Blough - who was with us ten years ago and who I want to thank right now for his generous and wise support - will tell you more about these things and ask you for your ideas. Perhaps he will take the time to discuss the Stagg Legion -- a campus organization of major sport managers, captains, school editors, who could bring to the campus regularly the story of business by the men who are its leaders. In too many places it is not being told. It is my belief that what we do here tonight will help to develop and multiply the kind of leaders the nation will need we are to bring freedom to all men. Truly, you can have a hand in shaping the future. Thank you. VOLUME 12, NUMBER 1 DINNER ISSUE, DECEMBER, 1969-January, 1970 FOOTBALLETTER The National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame Centennial Football Awards Dinner Honors President Richard Nixon, Poet MacLeish, Texas, 1969 Hall Of Famers and Scholar-Athletes 1969 GOLD MEDALIST - President Richard Nixon, the fourth President of the United States so honored, proudly displays the A DISTINGUISHED AMERICAN - Pulitzer prize winning Football Foundation's Gold Medal following Roger Blough's poet and dramatist Archibald MacLeish (l) is shown receiving eloquent presentation. the National Football Foundation's second national Dis- tinguished American award from fellow Yale alumnus Chester LaRoche, the Foundation's president. BUCKEYE NEEDLE - John W. Galbreath of Columbus, Ohio whose favorite team, the Ohio State Buckeyes, stumbled in the homestretch, commends President Nixon for seeing eye- to-eye with the National Football Foundation in declaring Texas Ohio State's successor as the MacArthur Bowl recipient. Galbreath added that should the President ever become un- employed he might obtain a faculty job at the University of Texas because of his boosting the Longhorns as national CHAIRMAN RUSSELL IN ACTION - Fred Russell, vice champs. Awards Chairman Draddy, Coach Royal, and Texas president and sports director of the Nashville Banner, the tri-captains Street, Koy, and Halsell obviously enjoy the NFF's Honors Court Chairman, reads the 1969 electee citations friendly needle. while awards chairman Vince Draddy listens. 2 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1969-JANUARY, 1970 DECEMBER, 1969-JANUARY, 1970 FOOTBALLETTER 3 1969 Hall Of Famers' Citations CHARLES BEDNARIK at least one touchdown in each of three varsity games against Pennsylvania, 1945, '46, '47, '48 Harvard and Princeton a feat unique in Yale's long history. A campus leader as an undergraduate, Kelley turned naturally Rugged native of Bethlehem, one of Pennsylvania's traditional to an educational pursuit, declining the professional sports heartlands of the gridiron, this all-America center whose career. Today he is an officer and department director at World War II Air Medal has four clusters, has inscribed his Cheshire School, Connecticut. Richly does he merit the honor name in lasting letters high on the honor roll of his dis- now bestowed. tinguished school. Superbly gifted in physical frame, he was as well as an intuitive leader, devastating on defense, invariably WILLIAM (WILD BILL) KELLY* National Football National Football first at point of contact against the opponent's advance. In his of three varsity years, Penn won 24 of 27 contests, and was Montana 1924, 25, '26 Ball Wall Agree unbeaten in 1947. The all-America diadem at center went to Native of Denver, reared in Montana, this rare spirit roamed Bednarik by unanimous consent. Today, a member of the the gridirons of his skyline country with the freedom born of Pennsylvania Athletic Commission, a leader in Boys Club and the peaks and plains. As a boy he led his Missoula high school Boy Scout activities, he serves his community in constructive team to its first state championship. At the University, his manner. breakaway runs in the open field assumed the beauty of poetry in motion. But they were masterpieces which, for distance, National Wall Football GEORGE (BAD NEWS) CAFEGO were poorly appreciated by luckless rivals as the scoreboard figures mounted from the Kelly kickoff returns, punt returns Tennessee, 1937, '38, '39 and runs from scrimmage. Against the nation's best in the 1927 In the resplendent span of General Bob Neyland's power- East-West game, Kelly shone as his play was decisive in packed coaching years at Tennessee, George (Bad News) 7-3 victory for the West. His was a brilliant career, a life Cafego was a flaming figure. Ten victories, unbroken by de- joyously lived, but much too brief. Fate decreed that William A MOMENT TO REMEMBER - The National Football Foundation's "After 1910" Hall of Fame electees for 1969 pose proudly feat in regular season conflict, marked each of the 1937, '38, (Wild Bill) Kelly should die at age 27 while watching a and '39 campaigns as Cafego's blinding speed, his churning football game. with Honors Court Chairman Fred Russell following their induction at the Waldorf. They are, from left, Gerald Mann, Southern driving runs and his passes riddled opposing defenses behind *Deceased. Methodist, Larry Kelley, Yale, Babe Horrell, California, John Kitzmiller, Oregon, Les Horvath, Ohio State, Chuck Bednarik, Penn- sylvania, George Cafego, Tennessee and Chairman Russell. The late Wild Bill Kelly of Montana was also inducted at this year's the precision blocking General Neyland taught so well. None dinner along with former Coach Bud Wilkinson of Oklahoma. but Southern California and Boston College, both in post- JOHN KITZMILLER season bowls, could match this force of Volunteers. All- University of Oregon, 1928, '29, '30 America honors, of course, came to Cafego - honors he has worn with distinction and grace during outstanding military As a youth, this native of Harrisburg, Pa., planned a military service in World War II and he devoted his life to teaching career and training at West Point, in which case Army football and working with youth. fortunes would have been greatly enhanced in the decade of the late 1920's. But the challenge of the great northwest frontier beckoned, and the "Flying Dutchman" became a Uni- EDWIN (BABE) HORRELL versity of Oregon scholar and gridiron tradition. His authentic University of California, 1922, '23, '24 triple-threat talents and tactical genius were major factors in the advance of the Oregon forces to a share of the Pacific The gift of leadership was inherent in this man who captained Coast title in 1929. An Air Force captain of conspicuous serv- the last of the invincible "Wonder Teams" created by Andy ice in World War II, John Kitzmiller now makes an important Smith at Berkeley from 1920 to 1924. Horrell's Pasadena high contribution to the business and economic health of the com- school named its field in his honor after his graduation. Per- munity as head of his important manufacturing organization haps California should have done the same when he blocked in the Willamette region of Northwest Oregon. an Ernie Nevers goal-line punt and scored the first touchdown in the newly dedicated stadium. Pop Warner called Horrell "one of the greatest centers ever to play the game." Quickly GERALD MANN successful in coaching, he took the UCLA Bruins to their first Southern Methodist University, 1925, '26, '27 Rose Bowl in 1943. Engaged now in land and fruit packing enterprises, this many-sided man adds conspicuous public serv- With elan and extraordinary skills afoot and in the air, Gerald ice through support of the United Parkinson Foundation that Mann helped to make the Southern Methodist aerial circus a would stamp out a dread disease. Here, indeed, is a leader of spectacular display during three exciting campaigns in the whom our sport may be greatly proud. Texas '20's. The Mustang conquests included the Southwest Conference title of 1926, and all Conference honors for HERE COMES THE CARDINAL - His Eminence Terence Quarterback Mann in junior and senior seasons. His campus Cardinal Cooke, continuing the tradition of his illustrious LES HORVATH leadership presaged larger leadership later as, having earned predecessor Francis Cardinal Spellman, gave the invocation at the 1969 Hall of Fame dinner in New York. Shown with the Ohio State, 1941, '42, '43, '44 the Harvard law degree, Gerald Mann served his State of Cardinal are Yale men Ted Blair (c) and Chet LaRoche. Texas as Secretary of State and Attorney General. He has also Native of South Bend, Ind., this Hoosier son became in 1944 been president of the Dallas Council of World Affairs and is the first Ohio State recipient of the Heisman Trophy. As a member of the SMU Board of Governors. "The most inspir- runner, as wingback, as pass receiver and as inspiring team ing quarterback of my coaching career," Ray Morrison has The 1970 National Football Foundation Awards leader, the Buckeyes have boasted no representative more called him. Equally inspiring to his Texas community has HALL OF FAMERS' RESPONSE - Charles (Bud) Wilkinson, gifted, more resourceful, more worthy of the "Player of the been his record of constructive leadership in public service. Banquet will be held December 8 in New York former Oklahoma football coach and now a special assistant Year" Award bestowed upon him. Thus did the Big Ten title at the Waldorf-Astoria. to President Nixon, delivered the Hall of Famers' response at come to Columbus, and the first season without defeat in 24 the 12th annual NFF Awards banquet. (page 8) years. Upon graduation, Navy service was followed by training CHARLES (BUD) WILKINSON in the U. S. Naval Dental Corps and ultimate education in University of Oklahoma (Coach) VOLUME 12, NUMBER 1 OFFICERS that profession. Now long established in Los Angeles, he shares with other interested practitioners a scientific program designed Superb teacher of the gridiron's strategy and skills, author of DECEMBER, 1969-JANUARY, 1970 NEW YORK OFFICE Chester J. LaRoche, President to assure facial protection of school football players of the Oklahoma's "Golden Age" of football, this son of Minnesota, Thomas J. Hamilton, Vice President Class of 1937, has written an enduring chapter in the saga of The National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame 11 East 44th Street community. Edgar W. Garbisch, Vice President our sport. The period of football he introduced on the Great Plains has seen no superior in our football century with respect Suite 1604 Earl H. Blaik, Vice President LAWRENCE (LARRY) KELLEY to victories won, conference honors, national acclaim and Published by Vincent Draddy, Vice President Yale, 1934, '35, '36 complete respect for the game's standards. His fellow mentors Telephone: Area code 212-661-0534 Clinton E. Frank, Vice President named him "Coach of the Year" in 1949. In World War II, The National Football Foundation and Wallace Girling, Vice President Debonair, daring and dedicated, this gifted son of Eli smiled aboard USS Enterprise, he saw action at Iwo Jima, Kyushu Hall of Fame often at impending disaster, then turned it into triumph. Ir- and Okinawa. He has served two Presidents of the United Joseph D. Tooker, Jr., Treasurer repressible, perceptive and completely fearless, he possessed the States is presently in executive capacity to President Nixon. New Brunswick, N. J. JIMMIE McDowell, Editor Robert A. Hall, Secretary genius for the impossible. He was an inspiring captain. As an His is a career that merits richly the accolade now bestowed Jimmie McDowell, Administrative Head all-America end he scored 91 points in his senior season. He as we welcome him to the Football Hall of Fame in this Telephone: CHarter 7-1766 of Chapters was the first Yale recipient of the Heisman Trophy. He scored Centennial Year. 4 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1969-JANUARY, 1970 DECEMBER, 1969-JANUARY, 1970 FOOTBALLETTER 5 1969 Scholar-Athlete Citations Trojan Knights, and the title of Vice-Captain of the Rugby team. High in the roster of his gridiron peers, his name will College Football's Biggest Night TIMOTHY F. CALLAWAY, III, University of Georgia - At be long remembered for achievement in the record of his years. the University of Georgia, where the complex of arts of line- play are always under intent and continuing study and ap- CHARLES LONGNECKER, United States Air Force Academy plication, they have had few students more able than Tim By unanimous consent, this tall Texan is the most effective Callaway in his role as defensive guard during his three-year split end in the brief history of Air Force football. With each stint on the varsity. To his splendid gifts of physical assets, he pass reception he creates a new Academy record. Unanimous adds an inherent talent for instant analysis a trait well re- also is the faculty concensus that here is the completely su- called by the Tennessee Vols in 1968 when the Callaway per- perior student Dean's List every term; a classroom leader in formance shone. Recipient of The Coffee County Award of discussion and research; an uncommon aptitude in his major 1969 for outstanding team effort, he matches that motivation field, Engineering Mechanics, in which his average is 4.0 on with a 3.44 classroom average in Business, with Marketing a basis of 4.0. In the broad curriculum, he rates 3.34. His his major, thus providing ample evidence of his educational research project in aircraft structural dynamics will be sub- values. Postgraduate study of Law will be Callaway's ultimate mitted for a Guggenheim Fellowship. Postgraduate study will goal, but first he will serve the tour of active military duty take him to Georgia Tech or Stanford. Such talent, turned to for which Army ROTC training has prepared him. A leader in our nation's service, is the priceless gift here offered, In that the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, secretary-treasurer of fact, our sport may share in some degree a just pride. the "G" Club, he compiles a record of sound contribution to MICHAEL VINCENT ORIARD, University of Notre Dame his alma mater. - The Doctor of Philosophy degree in English is the postgrad- JOHN F. CRAMER, Harvard University - Leadership based uate goal of this towering native of Spokane, Wash., whose on example through solid, effective performance has made leadership as center and offensive captain has made the Irish one of the nation's most talented forces of 1969. President of John Cramer, Harvard defensive end and 1969 captain, a foot- ball player's football player. Similar motivation as he moves the campus Northwest Club, a member of the Dean's List in toward his primary objective - academic excellence in prepara- all four years, with grades averaging 3.673 in the 4.0 system, tion for a career in Medicine - has made this Biology major he has elected no academic soft spots. Mathematics and Philos- a regular on the Dean's List, a high-stand man on his class ophy are his fields of minor concentration. Here, in action on roster. His defensive end play has earned him All-Ivy, All- the field, is loosed a devastating drive as, with unerring execu- New England, All-East and All-American honorable mention. tion of assignment, Oriord moves to the target with beautifully An aggressive competitor, he applies well the lessons learned. coordinated thrust of his 240 intellectual pounds. Knute Treasurer of the Varsity Club, member of the University's Rockne, himself a teaching intellectual in the classroom, House Committees, he assumes his share of responsibility as a would have gloried in this large Westerner. There has been campus citizen. A competent judge calls him "one of Harvard's no audible complaint from Ara Parseghian. Under the historic finest players of the last decade; surely one of our finest Golden Dome, the vote is unanimous. leaders. Thus does John Cramer meet well the testing chal- DANIEL LEE PIKE, United States Naval Academy - Mid- lenge of the Foundation's Scholar-Athlete's standard of ex- shipman Pike was co-captain and varsity halfback of the 1969 cellence. Navy team. His major field of study is Aerospace Engineering. THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION'S 1969 SCHOLAR-ATHLETES - Generally regarded as one of the best Scholar- His resolve should be rewarded by excellent results, for his Athlete groups to ever be honored by the National Football Foundation, the 1969 Scholar-Athletes' averages ranged from 3.4 to HARRY LEE GONSO, Indiana University - Harry Gonso is qualifications are impeccable. They include a grade-point aver- 3.9 and the eleven honorees were all campus leaders and standout gridders as well. The group includes, front row, from left, considered by veteran observers to be the finest field leader age of 3.9 on the basis of 4.0. Midshipman Pike has been Dan Pike, Navy; George Joseph, Penn; Chairman Vince Draddy; Father Theodore Hesburgh, President of Notre Dame, who read they have known in many years at Indiana, and one of the Navy's heavy-duty back for three seasons and has ranged in the Scholar-Athletes' citations; Harry Gonso, Indiana, and Fred Khasigian, Southern California. Top row, Tim Callaway, Georgia; outstanding campus citizens. Three years the starting quarter- on the top ten of Navy's all-time rushing list. Other cre- Charles Longnecker, Air Force Academy; Terry Stewart, Arkansas; John Cramer, Harvard; Ted Shadid, Army; Randall Reeves, back; three years a denizen of the Dean's list; most valuable dentials as a Scholar-Athlete include his membership on the Nebraska, and Mike Oriard, Notre Dame. player and All-Conference and All-Midwest back, he has been Superintendent's List, the Dean's List, Trident Scholar project honored also by membership on the Academic All-American and nomination for the Rhodes Scholarship. The post of and Academic Big Ten teams. His major field of study is Brigade Commander (Winter 1969-70) marks him as one of Business, with emphasis on Marketing. His grade-point aver- four top midshipmen. He was Midshipmen Executive Officer age is 3.5 on a basis of 4.0. His graduate work will be taken of his sophomore cruise. He is president of the Naval Academy in Law. On the field a "take charge" leader who exudes con- Christian Association. Thus he demonstrates in generous degree fidence, off the field a quiet and studious man, Gonso re- the qualities Navy seeks in its mission on behalf of our na- cently drew from a senior member of the faculty this com- tional defense. ment: "I don't know what he will be doing ten years from now, but whatever it is, he will be in charge." With fidelity, RANDALL REEVES, University of Nebraska - Randall this young Hoosier represents leadership in action. Reeves was a National Merit Scholar and high school vale- dictorian as an Omaha schoolboy. He has richly fulfilled ex- GEORGE JOSEPH, University of Pennsylvania - A starting pectations at the University of Nebraska in its Centennial Col- center every Saturday, Penn's 1969 captain has played almost lege. In varsity football, he has started at the safety position every minute of his varsity career. A Biology major in pre- for three years with outstanding performance. His academic medical courses, he wears the Phi Beta Kappa key, and conquest has been no less meaningful. In three and one-half those of the Junior and Senior honorary societies. As a junior years of study, with History as his major discipline, he has re- his field leadership was a major ingredient in Penn's success ceived only two grades of less than "A" while compiling a as the Quakers compiled their most successful record of late point average of 4.011 on a scale that marks 4.500 as perfect. years a contribution appropriately recognized and rewarded English and Political Science are his minor fields. They contri- when Joseph became the first recipient of the Greville Munger bute usefully to his preparation for college teaching or govern- Memorial Scholarship for academic and all-around excellence. ment service. Campus and community contributions have Mild in manner, positive in attitude, aggressive in action, he marked his college years. He has worked with the Governor's leads by example with concern for the individual, a concept Council for Youth. He is president of Phi Eta Sigma honorary too rare in the field of rugged strife. Thus the ancient pro- society. Education on the campus, in the classroom, on the fession of Medicine beckons once more from the college grid- gridiron - the Scholar-Athlete. iron a man whose gifts, ideals and motivation will serve the community well. THEODORE M. SHADDID, JR., United States Military Academy - Two years a varsity center, before that a junior HARRY ALFRED KHASIGIAN, University of Southern Cali- varsity tackle, Cadet Shaddid owns the lofty standing of No. fornia - Effective versatility is the key to this man's purpose- 28 in a class of 752, with a scholastic average of 3.71 on the ful 'game plan" of life a life to be spent in the healing basis of 4.0. Consistently in top form, he has started every arts of Medicine as he completes his brilliant record as a game of his junior and senior years. Large in stature physically 220-pound offensive guard for the Trojan legions. Khasigian as intellectually, he stands 6 feet, 3 inches and weighs 230 approaches his high objective wth assurance provided by a pounds. He is one of the Academy's stand-out men in Military robust 3.72 grade point average on the 4.0 point base. Psy- Aptitude and Leadership. His area of concentration is Na- MacARTHUR BOWL ACCEPTED - Texas Coach Darrell Royal accepted the National Football Foundation's MacArthur Bowl chology has been his undergraduate major field of concentra- tional Security and Public Affairs. With honors as a "Distin- tion. Six times a repeater on the Dean's List; twice a veteran guished Cadet" and member of the Cadet Academic Council, for the second time in December. Royal's 1963 Longhorns also won the MacArthur Bowl, the last Hall of Fame banquet Doug- of the Trojan battles on the Rose Bowl turf; 1968 All-Coast, Cadet Shaddid plans postgraduate study in Nationad Security las MacArthur attended. Congratulating Royal are awards chairman Vince Draddy (l) and at right Master of Ceremonies Chris with All-America honorable mention, he also wears the Tro- and Government duty for which his 1969 tour as an intern Schenkel, President Nixon, and MacArthur Board chairman Roger Blough. jans' Blue Key honorary society emblem, the insignia of the (Continued on page 8) DECEMBER, 1969-JANUARY, 1970 FOOTBALLETTER 7 6 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1969-JANUARY, 1970 Since our product is Leadership, we should demon- Chester J. LaRoche strate it. One hundred top Alumni including Presidents of two Presents MacLeish Award colleges, heads of several great prep schools, Business and Professional Leaders have been elected Fellows of the Foundation's Center for Leadership. They with a minimum of eleven other Alumni invited by undergrad- Mr. President, Friends, Your Eminence, uate leaders (two here tonight: Dave Hetzel, Dart- mouth Sophomore and John Perel of Princeton) will return The Football Foundation is honored as you, Archie to their colleges to discuss regularly in seminars and at MacLeish, accept the Distinguished American Award - round tables the obligations and disciplines of leadership. given only once before, then to Captain Bill Carpenter for his example of valor that inspired the nation. Who will accept the responsibility of keeping this a competitive society, the power where it belongs - with You more than any other in the world of letters and the people? great poetry have involved yourself directly with the Having worked in them and in our field run the events of your time. biggest and best, we dare state that the American Cor- poration is far more than a profit centered machine run Yale, War: enlisted as a Private then Captain over- by self-seeking men. Today it moves toward becoming seas. Harvard Law, 1919, later Assistant Secretary of the greatest social invention of man to create and share State, two Pulitzer Prizes for poetry, one more for drama, the wealth that supports our colleges and government; author of Broadway's J.B. deal with our common problems as witness the Urban Coalition. However, there is one thing unfortunately they In films, a 1965 Academy Award Winner. don't do well - tell their own story. You were awarded more honorary college degrees than probably any leader of our time. Anti-Leadership Vaccine And when the NEW YORK TIMES covered its front In our colleges, an anti-leadership vaccine is being page with news of the moon landing, to give the event spread. For on our faculties there are those who honestly meaning it published in a prominent two-column box a think that teaming up with government, specialists and HAIL THE CHIEF - President Richard Nixon followed three United States Presidents to the National Football Foundation and poem by you. technologists should run things - tell us all what to do. Hall of Fame Dais to receive the Foundation's most coveted award - the Gold Medal. Framed between Yale Hall of Famer Larry A poet at a football dinner? Perhaps They teach that many of our leaders seek only power and Kelley and Southern California Scholar-Athlete Fred Khasigian, the President beams happily as he received a thunderous ap- great poetry and football don't meet in the money, cut corners and that much is wrong. plause upon his arrival in the Grand Ball Room of the Waldorf-Astoria December 9. contemporary mind. If they are related at We agree. But, there is much more that is right. We all, it seems they are related as opposites. know the problems of pollution, traffic, the ghettos, for 12th Annual Hall of Fame Dinner Yet poetry can be the illumination of man in terms we created them. We know better than our youth the of words. We hold that a great football team illuminates machinery needed to correct these faults and with our man in terms of action. youth's help, we will. Regarded as Finest Ever By Many In discussing the subject with my daughter, she said, As for wars, we have been through two and hate "Why dad there can be as much poetry in a successful them more than they. forward pass as in a beautiful poem." We welcome our youth's idealism and discontent. The New York Waldorf-Astoria Grand Ballroom again THE WHITE HOUSE Lessons Learned provided the glittering setting in early December. America's Purpose WASHINGTON All in all, it could have well been the finest of all Whether you would agree I don't know, but this But, you have reminded us and we will remind them National Football Hall of Fame Awards banquets. Over I do know. Ten years ago, wondering whether the heights that the force that is moving us in this world was born 1,400 of the nation's leading business, industrial, profes- you had climbed had dimmed the lessons learned (man December 19, 1969 in our country almost two centuries ago. Prior to July sional, educational, political and sports leaders attended against man in competition), you answered, "I think 4, 1776, the purpose of nations had been to dominate and would probably agree that this was the case. I learned more on two Yale football teams I played on neighbors. The American national purpose is the opposite Awards and Dinner Chairman Vincent Draddy said Dear Mr. LaRoche: than I have before or since about certain very funda- -to liberate men from domination, to set men free - at banquet's end that he had never received so many mental and important matters. Without more attention that is the job we tackled in Vietnam. compliments, and at the same time that the "caliber of I just wanted to express my thanks to you once again to things of the mind and spirit there can be no human There are those who say it is nothing people who attended is what makes the Football Hall of for the many courtesies you extended to me in connec- understanding, and without such understanding the tech- but a dream. You have said they are right. Fame banquet the greatest sports banquet in the country." tion with the National Football Foundation and Hall of nological information which man has gathered is mean- It is. It is the American Dream. If for a time President Nixon was presented the Gold Medal by Fame dinner. The honor you have paid through me to ingless." we have lost our way, with youth's idealism Roger Blough. Mr. MacLeish received the Distinguished all of us who have loved and played the game of football we are finding it again. If it is never American award from NFF President Chet LaRoche. John in countless back lots and fields throughout our country The National Football Foundation has translated achieved it is because human freedom is a W. Galbreath awarded Coach Darrell Royal and his Tri- during these last 100 years will always seem especially your words into action to show that many of our youth continually evolving condition. Captains the MacArthur Bowl. bright in my memory. recognize these values. That is the reason for the Scholar- Honors Court Chairman Fred Russell inducted the Athlete Awards you will see here tonight and the reason We are proud that it is one from our ranks who It was a great pleasure for me to join you and your new Hall of Famers. Reverend Theodore Hesburgh, Presi- for similar awards to high school students in a hundred illuminates these truths - an old Yale halfback who under associates on December 9. I hope you will convey dent of the University of Notre Dame, presented the cities from coast to coast this past year. Howard Jones hit hard. my appreciation to them for all they did to make the Scholar-Athletes their awards. His Eminence Terence evening so deeply enjoyable and so successful. So it is with a feeling of special privilege that in Cardinal Cooke, Archbishop of New York, delivered the And, as yesterday's Scholar-Athletes graduate they the presence of one who loves the game as we, the invocation. Broadway singing star Gordon MacRae sang With every good wish for Christmas and the New Year, reinforce our ranks. They join the greatest undeveloped President of the United States (and from what I heard the National Anthem. And Michigan State's Duffy asset of our colleges - the Alumni. Well organized to him say between halves at the Texas-Arkansas game Daugherty delivered the humor. Sincerely, raise money, we as alumni must be organized to close understands its strategic patterns better than most), and The NFF Club Football Award for 1969 was pre- what is called the Generation Gap but which is actually in the presence of young men destined to help fulfill sented by President Chester J. LaRoche to Loyola of Los nothing but an Information Gap. The Foundation has our National Purpose that I present you with the Foun- Angeles (Calif.). accepted the challenge. dation's Distinguished American Award. 8 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1969-JANUARY, 1970 DECEMBER, 1969-JANUARY, 1970 FOOTBALLETTER 9 Bud Wilkinson's Thank you, Mr. President Response For Hall Of Famers: I guess you might say, "Once a coach, always a coach." When I saw these eleven great players, my first thought was - with a little practice, these guys can win the MacArthur Bowl next year. I know I speak for all of us when I say tonight is more than a great moment in our lives. It is an unforgettable moment. Each of us here has exper- ienced the thrills that can come only in the game of football. To- night is such a moment. Some of us have not been on the field, as player or coach, for some years. But what happens in this game never leaves you. It stays with you, in ways you could never have 1969 MACARTHUR BOWL RECIPIENT - Coach Darrell Royal and his guessed at the time. PRESIDENTIAL SALUTE - President Texas Longhorn tri-captains Jamie Street, Ted Koy, and Glenn Halsell proudly And now tonight, by inducting us Nixon lead the thunderous applause fol- display college football's most striking trophy, the MacArthur Bowl. lowing Archibald MacLeish's brilliant into the Football Hall of Fame, you have Football Hall of Fame speech in New not only honored us very deeply, but you've York. Texas Equal To Occasion done something else. You've reminded us "Winning the Arkansas game alone did not clinch once again that football is more than what the MacArthur Bowl for Texas," Awards Chairman Vin- happens on the field or sidelines. It is what MacLEISH APPLAUDED AND CONGRATULATED - Father Hesburgh, cent Draddy declared, "but the manner of winning unani- the game does to strengthen a man's mind President of the University of Notre Dame, shakes Archibald MacLeish's Extra copies of this Footballetter are available at the Hall of Fame head- and heart. hand, while Cardinal Cooke applauds the prize-winning author's dramatic mously convinced the Football Foundation's Awards Com- quarters in New Brunswick, N. J. speech at the Football Hall of Fame banquet. Joining in the applause are mittee that Coach Darrell Royal's Longhorns were worthy singer Gordon MacRae and Admiral Tom Hamilton. successors to Ohio State as the MacArthur Bowl re- cipient." friend was right. Gratitude is never purer than then, as Trailing 14-0, Texas rallied and twice gambled to Archibald MacLeish in my case tonight. There is no nonsense about justice. overtake the Razorbacks, 15-14, and complete the regu- I don't mean to deprecate unduly either myself or lar season with a perfect record. the good sense of your committee on awards. It is his- The MacArthur Bowl is awarded annually by the I have never faced an audience with a deeper sense torically true that I played football at Yale. It is his- National Football Foundation to the outstanding college of personal relief than this one. And not only because torically true that I won by freshman numerals. It is even football team of the season. In the years since it was first of the many affable and distinguished countenances it in- historically true that I won my Y - as an all-purpose, offered for competition in 1959, the Bowl has become per- cludes but because of one distinguished and not always all-position substitute on a series of Yale teams which haps the most celebrated and most keenly sought-after affable countenance it does not include. I refer to the never beat Harvard. But to stand before this audience football trophy in competition. Certainly it is the most countenance of the late Johnny Mack, trainer of Yale as a distinguishable, let alone distinguished, player of the striking. teams in the first decades of this aging century. Johnny game would be a palpable fraud. The Bowl was the gift of an anonymous donor in the DR. HOLLAND ENJOYS RECEPTION - Dr. Jerome (Brud) Mack knew who was entitled to be called a football Glorious Memory name of the late General of the Army, Douglas Mac- Holland, Cornell Hall of Famer and the new Ambassador to player and who wasn't. And what he knew he said - Arthur. General MacArthur served for several years as Sweden, was greeted by Al Siegle, second from right, and I have only one glorious memory of those four years out loud. His estimate of my claim to that honor was chairman of the Foundation's National Advisory Board, South River chapter members Bill Stout (l) and Chet Zdro- and its setting is not Soldiers' Field in Cambridge but dowski at the Ed Mosler reception prior to the dinner. conveyed to me in eight soft Irish syllables at the close and the Bowl was designed by Tiffany & Co. from sug- the bar of the long-vanished Tremont Hotel in Boston. of a disastrous afternoon of practice - disastrous, I mean gestions made by the General himself. The Bowl measures We we being the Yale Freshman team of the fall of SCHOLAR ATHLETES (Continued from page 5) for me - as we bumped back to the old gym on Elm 25 by 18 inches on its base and stands ten inches tall. Nineteen Eleven - had just held the best Harvard Fresh- It represents a huge stadium with rows of seats carved in in the State Department provided valuable training. Cadet Street in the chartered trolley car which served as com- man team in a generation (Brickley, Bradlee, Hardwick, Shaddid engenders tonight in each of us new pride, new hope bination dressing room and transportation. "You'd be relief. Miniature goalposts stand on a field of etched yard Coolidge, Logan) to a nothing-nothing tie in a down-pour and new confidence in the future of our national security and lucky," said Johnny Mack, gazing out at the squalid lines. The entrance arches on the stadium exterior are used well-being. of helpful rain and we were relaxing, not without noise, purlieus of New Haven, "to make the training table." for engraving the names of winning teams and there is when the coach of that famous Harvard Freshman team TERRY THOMAS STEWART, University of Arkansas - Anyone who remembers the Yale football training room for 100 of these. As a result, the Bowl can remain approached us, looked us over, focussed (he had had a When Terry Stewart receives a baccalaureate degree in June, table of the days before the First World War - there in competition for all but a few years of football's second he will take with him lasting recognition as one of the truly drink or two himself) on me and announced in the voice century. superior scholar-athletes in his school's history. This young may be a few left - will relish the bite of that insult. of an indignant beagle sighting a fox that I was, without Almost 400 ounces of silver went into the Bowl, man, 6 feet, 1 inch and 190 pounds in stature, is a candidate Honors We Don't Deserve question, the dirtiest little sonofabitch of a center ever to for honors in the rigorous discipline of Chemical Engineering, which took eight months to fashion. But though the memory of Johnny Mack has sobered visit Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was heady praise. But in which he has maintained a 3.52 average on a 4-point basis. Winners in previous years have been: Syracuse Uni- Brilliant in the open field, he has been the starting safety man me for better than fifty years it has not, as you see, pre- unhappily I didn't deserve that honor either: I was little versity, 1959; University of Minnesota, 1960; University for three years, and in 1968 a member of the second All- vented me from coming here tonight. As my friend and but not that little. of Alabama, 1961; University of Southern California, 1962; Conference team. A 90-yard punt return was one of his 1969 class-mate, Dean Acheson, remarked in accepting a re- thrills against Baylor. Perhaps more important, he made the University of Texas, 1963; University of Notre Dame, All-Conference Academic team and is listed in "Who's Who in cent public service award from a Milwaukee organization, I tell you this, of course, to placate the spirit of 1964; Michigan State, 1965; Michigan State and the Uni- American Colleges." A campus leader, he has served as class some of whose members were rather audibly on record Johnny Mack and to propitiate, if it is at all possible, versity of Notre Dame, 1966; University of Southern Cali- president, currently is president of Wilson Sharp House. A as feeling he didn't deserve it, "it is the honors we don't the wholly understandable feelings of those in this room fornia, 1967; Ohio State University, 1968. man of excellence, he sets a high standard for those who deserve we accept most gratefully." My distinguished (Continued on page 10) follow in seasons to come. 10 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1969-JANUARY, 1970 FOOTBALLETTER 11 DECEMBER, 1969-January, 1970 ARCHIBALD MAC LEISH the Senate of the United States) understood that poetry ARCHIBALD MAC LEISH opportunities, for example, to raise a barn by calling in (Continued from page 9) has no need of antidotes being itself the most powerful the neighbors - in a technological age a game such as who have run into poets before in situations in which of all antidotes for the most grievous of all human ills (Continued from page 10) yours may be one of the few remaining means to that they couldn't avoid them (a reception, say, at their wife's human mortality. But poetry is one thing and men who The Feel of Football most essential wisdom. And though not every man can club before a lecture they couldn't get out of) and who write poems are another and no Senate Committee with see no reason why they should have to meet one on their a proper respect for the political future of its members It is this that we know together in this room, all play football, or would want to if he could, the potential own ground in their time off. Let my anecdote appeal to would willingly confirm for public office a man who was of us, of all ages. We have all played this magnificent, power of the game may still be greater than the inex- perienced would suppose. To keep a human understanding their sympathies. Think what it would have meant to a known to perpetrate poems unless there were ameliorating wild, extravagant, difficult and often dangerous game - alive, to teach a human lesson, not every man needs to freshman at Yale in the blue-sweater era of the early circumstances. Football was the ameliorating circumstance played it, not merely watched it being played on a small learn it at first hand. As long as the experience persists - nineteen hundreds who was already encountering sus- in my case. And it is that fact which provides the text for screen in a hot parlor on a Sunday afternoon. We know the feel of it, the desperate excitement, the triumph, the as it persists here - the idea will survive. And it is the picious glances because the Yale Literary Magazine was the brief sermon I am about to preach. You can put the survival of the idea which counts. publishing his poems - think what it would have meant text in the form of a question: despair - above all the sense of those others with us to his self-respect to be singled out by a Harvard Football who know it also feel it as we feel it. It is this which coach in a public bar as the dirtiest little so-and-so in What is there about the game of football - about gives the game its power over our memories and minds It seems to me particularly fitting and Cambridge - of all places! - a power which those who have never played find in- fortunate that we should have with us here the mere fact of having played the game of football - Powers of Game which permitted that Senate Committee on Foreign Rela- explicable - even incredible. tonight a team - representatives of a team - which demonstrates all this better than any The truth is, gentlemen, that this game of yours (I tions to adjourn in peace? What guarantee does football will not call it ours) has powers of which even you have offer that a man who has played the game whatever else And it is this too which gives the game something words of mine could do. I am not referring more than its power over us - which gives it its potential to the fact that Texas is "first in the nation" never dreamed. It can not only turn poets into so-and-sos: he may do or be, will at least act as though he were it can turn them (which is not necessarily the same thing) human? importance in our troubled society, and particularly in whatever that means in, say, Pennsylvania. into assistant secretaries of State. It has, indeed, on one Or put the same question in present that part of our society where the troubles are the troubles I am referring to the fact, obvious to anyone recorded occasion, done so. During the Second World War rather than historic terms? Why do men, as of the young. For one of the deepest troubles of the young who has seen this team play, that Texas is my nomination to that office was before the Senate Com- busy as most of you, take time to spend an in the world we live in is precisely the loss, the lack, truly a team and that it has a coach whose of that sense of common undertaking, common risk the whole successful labor has been to forge his mittee on Foreign Relations, on the motion of President evening such as this? Why does a man as old as I, living a couple of hundred miles back loss, the lack, of the deep delight of the common labor. players into a team. They know what I am Roosevelt, and I was there with it to be questioned in the in the hills, drive through rain and snow merely talking about. They know that "men usual way. Except that the usual way turned out to be Admire the Young anything but usual. At the end of a long day devoted and sleet to talk at such an evening? What are brothers by life lived." They will never moves us all? Why are we haunted by the Unlike a great many of my aging con- forget it. to my views on Franco and de Gaulle and Chiang Kai smell of torn earth and winter grass and the temporaries I have the greatest admiration Chek and Colonel McCormick of the Chicago Tribune taste of time? for this generation of new Americans. They (whose views on me were public knowledge) the session care deeply about the world, about man- Fine Delegation of Hall was about, or so I hoped, to adjourn when Bennett Champ Common Experiences kind. They have profound, if not always ar- Clark of Missouri tip-toed in with a small book in his I think I know and I think you know too. There are ticulate, misgivings about the direction Of Famers Attend Banquet hand which had, to me, an uncomfortably familiar look. some things in life which have a poignance which does human life on this planet, including Ameri- An outstanding array of previously inducted Foot- The Chairman recognized him with a nod. Did he wish not belong so much to them as to the human circum- can life, is taking. They are, to borrow that ball Hall of Famers were on hand for Centennial's Foot- to be heard? Well, yes, he did, now that the Chairman stances which surround them - to the fact that they are wonderful old Quaker verb, "Concerned." ball Dinner at the Waldorf. mentioned it. He wished to ask Mr. MacLeish a question. common human experiences - experiences in common. They have hope. They have convictions. Fifty Hall of Famers welcomed the nine new in- And he opened the little book to the page marked by his War is one. No decent man ever fought a war with- But all this is undercut and somehow crip- ductees into the fold. finger and began to read. It was, of course, a poem. Worse out hating it. But, at the same time, no decent man ever pled by a curious mood, a sense of lone- Introduced by Admiral Thomas Hamilton, Navy Hall still it was a poem by me. Worse even than that it was lived through the fighting of a war who did not remember, liness, even of helplessness - of isolation - of Famer, Commissioner of the Pacific Eight, and a vice- a poem by me on the subject of love - and the Senator all his life long, the deep, almost inexplicable, satisfaction "alienation" is the fashionable cliché for it. president of the National Football Foundation the star- from Missouri, reading with what the Supreme Court once of the common struggle, the common risk. Those of you who have teen-age children or studded group included: called "all deliberate speed," allowed that fact to soak in. I tried once to find words for this in a poem about grandchildren and who keep up with the Dr. Joe Alexander, Syracuse; C. Everett Bacon, Wes- When he had finished he glanced sardonically in my my generation's war - what is now called, ironically, the new movies, the new plays, the new songs - leyan; Cliff Battles, West Virginia Wesleyan; Jay Ber- direction, turned to the Chairman and announced that First World War. With the permission of the shade of above all the new songs - which appeal to wanger, Chicago; Chuck Carney, Illinois; Paul Christman, he would be interested to know whether Mr. MacLeish the late Senator from Missouri I should like to say a few lines: this new generation know what I mean. You Missouri; Charley Conerly, Mississippi; George Connor, regarded the author of that as qualified to serve as an know the mood. And, knowing it, you must Notre Dame; Nate Dougherty, Tennessee; Bill Dudley, Assistant Secretary of State of the United States of Why are the old soldiers brothers and have reflected often, as others also have re- Virginia; Ray Evans, Kansas; Ham Fish, Harvard; Benny America at the crucial point of a World War! nearest? For this: with their minds they go flected, on its meaning for the future of this Friedman, Michigan; Otto Graham, Northwestern; Merle over the sea a little and find themselves in Chandler to Rescue Republic. For nothing, surely, can be more Gulick, Hobart; Mel Hein, Washington State; Bob Her- I could think of no wholly responsive their youth again as they were in Soisson dangerous to a democracy, to a self-govern- wig, California; Dan Hill, Duke; Carl Hinkle, Vanderbilt; and Meaux and at Ypres and those cities. answer and there might well have been a ing people, than precisely this sense of in- Jerome (Brud) Holland, Cornell; Ken Kavanaugh, LSU; long and awkward pause punctuated by the A French loaf and the girls with their eye- dividual separation, impotence, aloneness - Elmer Layden, Notre Dame; John McEwan, Army. snickers of the Press had it not been for the lids painted bring back to aging and lonely "alienation." Rip Miller, Notre Dame; Cliff Montgomery, Colum- astonishing memory and brilliant sense of men their twentieth year and the metal odor bia; Ray Morrison, SMU; Ernie Nevers, Stanford; Pat of danger. total irrelevance of Happy Chandler of Ken- I am not so fatuous as to suppose that a college Pazzetti, Lehigh; George Pfann, Cornell; Pete Pihos, In- tucky. "Mr. Chairman," said Senator It is this in life which, of all things, is game or what used to be a college game before it diana; Fritz Pollard, Brown; Peter Pund, Georgia Tech; Chandler, "I also have a question for Mr. tenderest - to remember together with un- became the greatest of T.V. spectaculars - can change Wear Schoonover, Arkansas; Paul Schwegler, Washington; MacLeish if the Senator will yield. I should known men the days common to them and the mood of a troubled generation. But neither am I Ken Strong, NYU; Monk Simons, Tulane; Ben Ticknor, like to ask him if he did not play football perils ended. able to forget that that same mood of isolation and lone- Harvard; Doak Walker, SMU; Don Whitmire, Alabama Far From War at Yale." The room relaxed. The Press Now football, of course, is far from war - modern liness existed in our youth also and that many in our and Navy; Whitey Wistert, Michigan; Alex Wojciecho- stopped snickering. The Chairman rose. And war in any case. But its poignance is that same poignance. generation found in football that precise sense of partici- wicz, Fordham, and Buddy Young, Illinois. that, so far as I am aware, was all the answer In football as in war, it is true, as my poem puts it, that: pation, of common labor, which has changed the lives of This illustrious group sat on the Hall of Fame dais. Bennett Champ Clark of Missouri ever got. The brotherhood is not by the blood cer- many in this room - a sense which nothing - not even Col. Edgar Garbisch of W&J and Army joined Bob Rey- tainly, but neither are men brothers by time itself - not even 57 years of time - can take away. nold, Stanford and Admiral Hamilton on the main dais. I do not suggest that football was regarded by the speech, by saying so: Men are brothers by In a technological age, when there are not many Yale's Clint Frank and Princeton's Dick Kazmaier, both Senate Committee on Foreign Relations as an antidote life lived and are hurt for it. ways in the ordinary course of life itself to learn the pro- members of the NFF Executive Committee, also were on for poetry. The Committee (I have profound respect for (Continued on page 11) found meaningfulness of common undertaking - not many hand. 12 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1969-JANUARY, 1970 DECEMBER, 1969-JANUARY, 1970 FOOTBALLETTER 13 PRESIDENT NIXON through the lines close to the goal and there was a dispute about whether he went over and was pushed Roger M. Blough Richard M. Nixon (Continued from page 12) back. Presents Gold Medal Accepts Gold Medal dental's or Pomona's plays better than I did, because I I wonder whether or not, with the replays we have was on that side. on television, the game might have turned out differently I learned a lot sitting by the coach on the bench - if we had had television in 1925. I am not saying it learned about football and learned about life. would, Father Hesburgh. I have enough trouble with Penn Gentlemen: Mr. Chairman and Mr. Toastmaster, Your Eminence Incidentally, since this is a night for confession, I State. I don't want any with Notre Dame. Three days ago a distinguished resident of Wash- Cardinal Cooke, all of the distinguished guests at the head want to tell you one thing about Chief Newman. He Then my memory goes on, just to share them with ington flew a thousand miles and impartially visited tables and all of the distinguished award winners and all played for Southern California. He played on their first you, and interestingly enough I remember performances both teams in the Texas-Arkansas football game. To both of those who are here on this very momentous occasion: Rose Bowl team and that first Rose Bowl team beat Penn by men who lost as well as who won. That is rather nat- the losers and the winners - and the difference was the It would be momentous because of this organization's State in the only game Penn State ever played in the ural, I am sure you can understand. breadth of a hair he extended words of encouragement, meeting to honor the man that you have honored and I Rose Bowl. inspiration, and appreciation for a well-played, hard- speak of others, of course, than myself and it would be Now, because Governor Shaffer is here and because First Rose Bowl Game fought, tremendously gripping game - one of the great momentous too because it is the 100th year of a very I had an uncle who taught at Penn State and had a The first Rose Bowl game I saw was between games of all time - to use his words. great game. very distinguished record and because somebody sug- one of the great Howard Jones teams of the early '30s This adequately demonstrates that we have in the I was trying to think of something that would ap- gested that some day I might want to visit the campus and Jock Sutherland's Pitt teams. Pitt was overmanned. White House a very human man, one who - though propriately describe how I feel in accepting this award. after I have left the Presidency - I can only say that they They had a fine quarterback in Warren Heller; a good weighed by the unending trials and anxieties of high I would have to be less than candid if I were not to say have a great football team. passer. And Howard Jones had a team that beat them office - nevertheless finds time for our all-American sport that because of the offices I have held I have received 35-0. many awards. Super College Bowl of amateur football. In fact, it is almost an avocation. But my memories of that team was not of the awe- But I think Archibald MacLeish, in that perfectly As a matter of fact, I was going to suggest that we some power of Howard Jones' team moving down with A Team Man eloquent tribute to football, quoting Secretary of State have a super college bowl after the November or January the unbalanced single wing going down, down, down the In his early days, although he says he Dean Acheson, put it very well. He said, "The honors 1 games and then I thought I was in deep enough al- field and scoring again and again with that tremendous warmed the bench a lot, actually he played you don't deserve are the ones you are most grateful to ready because look what could happen: Southern Cali- blocking, but of two very gallant Pittsburgh ends, Skla- well and with doggged determination. He receive." fornia could beat Michigan and they would claim they dany and Dailey. was a team man and learned much from I simply want to set the record straight with regard were Number One; Notre Dame might beat Texas and For the first half, I remember they football of the power of group action when to my football qualifications. This is a candid, open Ad- they would claim they were One; and, of course, you plowed into that awesome USC interference guided by assigned responsibility, common ministration. We believe in telling the truth about football never know what would happen with Penn State and and knocked it down time and time again goals and inspired leadership. and everything. Missouri. I understand they are pretty good. and held the score down. The game was lost, Tonight it is a high honor to present the Gold Medal So I can only say this: I understand that Penn State Award of the Football Foundation and Hall of Fame A Giant Leap but I remember right to the last they were certainly is among those that should be considered for to the 37th President of the United States. Before him, I can only say that as far as this award in there fighting and that spirit stayed with Number One in the United States of America. Presidents Eisenhower, Hoover and Kennedy have re- is concerned, that it is certainly a small step me as a memory and the years go on. for the National Football Foundation and a What Football Means ceived this Award, the highest it is our privilege to give. small step for football, but it is a giant leap Now, could I share with you for a moment, in a To this President with the Award goes I think of another game, Southern Cal and Duke, for a man who never even made the team somewhat serious vein, what football means to me? I our special thanks for his achievements in 1938. I had attended Duke University for law school at Whittier. think that is what the man who receives this award, par- high offices, for personally turning an earlier and I remember that Duke came there undefeated, un- I have looked around that wall. Whittier is not up ticularly one who really doesn't deserve it because of his defeat into a later victory, for his dedication, tied, unscored upon. The score was three to nothing going for his sense of humor, for his example to there, I can assure you. I didn't hear the Whittier song, football prowess, that is something he is expected to do. into the last few minutes of the game. So out came a the youth of America, for his love of the either, a moment ago. In fact, only the coach from Loyola First, without talking about those factors that are fourth string quarterback, not a third string, Doyle Nave, knows where Whittier is. We used to play Loyola. tremendously important that Archibald MacLeish touched great game of football and for his assured and he threw passes as they throw them today, one I got into a game once when we were SO far behind on, the character, all of the great spirit that comes into place in the history of our Nation. after another, to Al Kreuger, an end from Antelope Val- it didn't matter. I even got into one against Southern individuals who are either participants in the game, Gentlemen: As we think to honor President Richard California once when we were SO far behind it didn't participate in it or watch it, I look back on football and ley, Southern California scored. It was seven to three. M. Nixon by presenting to him this Gold Medal Award, I must say that I was terribly disappointed, of matter. have many pleasant memories: I just enoyed playing it, it is he who honors us by graciously accepting it. course, but the woman who was to be my future wife I present to you The President of the United States! Just to tell you a little about Whittier SO the record watching it, reading about it over the years. went to Southern Cal and that is how it all worked out. will be straight, it is a school with very high academic Among all of the people who have been honored tonight, let me say a good word about sports writers. We met at that game. standing. We had a very remarkable coach. Today as we pay tribute to the players, I am glad After all, I must say that this is not an unselfish state- Spectator's View that one of those who made the Hall of Fame is a ment, most sports writers become political writers in the The years go on and I am not going to bore you coach, Bud Wilkinson. end - "Scotty" Reston, Bob Considine, Bill Henry. So with more of my own recollections, except to give you I am just planning for the future. Influence of Coach a feel of what football has meant to me as a spectator, But, in any event, thinking of sports writers for the I pointed out in my acceptance address in Miami and college football particularly. moment, they have made football live before the days of that one of the men who influenced me most in my life I remember some Ohio State games. I recall going television and even now for many who never got to the was my coach and I think that could be true of many to Ohio State to a football game, and until you have been games. public men. to Columbus to see an Ohio State game in fact, until My coach was an American Indian, a First Recollection I went to Fayetteville, Arkansas, I thought the Columbus truly remarkable man and a great leader. I My first recollection of big-time college football crowds were the most exciting. But in any event, that learned more about life from him than I was Ernie Nevers against Notre Dame in 1925. I see Ernie year, I think it was about 1958, I went there with Sen- did about football; but a little about foot- Nevers here and I sat in the stands with Father Hesburgh ator John Bricker. Iowa had a great team. They were a ball. when Southern Cal played and lost to Notre Dame and favorite over Ohio State. One of the reasons he didn't put me in was because I know the great spirit between those two schools. But They led going into the last quarter. Woody Hayes I didn't know the plays. There was a good reason for that. I remember that game. I remember the score. I think it - in those days, it was just three yards and a cloud of A SERIOUS MOMENT - Listening to President Nixon say It wasn't because I wasn't smart enough. I knew the was 25 to 10 or four touchdowns to a touchdown and a dust. They didn't have the passers. But he had a great what footbail and competitive sports can mean in America are four Hall of Famers, from left, Peter Pund of Georgia Tech, enemy's plays. I played them all week long. Believe me, field goal and I remember that the sports writers, Bill big fullback by the name of White and he ran him, Kyle Rote of SMU, Wear Schoonover of Arkansas, and nobody in the Southern California Conference knew Occi- Henry of the L.A. Times, and others, were writing about starting at the 35 yard line of Ohio State, ten different Paul Schwegler of Washington. (Continued on page 13) the game, wrote about one play where Nevers went (Continued on page 14) 14 FOOTBALLETTER DECEMBER, 1969-January, 1970 DECEMBER, 1969-JANUARY, 1970 FOOTBALLETTER 15 PRESIDENT NIXON ing to me after his heart attack. He said one of the things he hated to give up was that (Continued from page 13) the doctor said he should not listen to those Farewell to Harvey Harman, Bob Harron times over the same hole in the Iowa line, going off the football games because he got too excited and became too involved. NFF Executive Director, left side, until they scored, and they won the game 17 to 14. Assistant to the President If you think enthusiastic crowds developed in other Competitive Spirit places, you ought to see an Ohio State crowd when they What does this mean, this common interest in foot- Die After Long Illness beat anybody. ball of Presidents, of leaders, of people generally? It The National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame means a competitive spirit. It means, also, to me, the ability and the determination to be able to lose and then had its ranks depleted in mid-December with the deaths But in any event, on through the years, I come to come back and try again, to sit on the bench and then of Robert Harron and Harvey J. Harman. more recent years, years that these younger men here will come back. It means basically the character, the drive, the Both men had been ill for most of College Foot- remember and recall with the same zest and enthusiasm, ball's Centennial season. pride, the teamwork, the feeling of being in a cause I am sure, that I do. Harron, 71, assistant to NFF President Chet La- bigger than yourself. Roche for two years following his retirement as Director This year, 1969, certainly of all the hundred years All of these great factors are essential if a Nation of College Relations at Trinity University, attended the of football none could be more exciting. There were never is to maintain character and greatness for that Nation. Navy-Rutgers Football Hall of Fame game in New Bruns- SO many great teams, never so many Saturdays when the So, on the 100th year of football, as we approach the wick after a long illness earlier in the year. He wrote favorite could not be sure that he was going to come 200th year of the United States, remember that our great the classic citations for the 1969 Football Hall of Fame A FRIEND OF MANY - The late Harvey J. Harman, execu- through, never so many times when a team that was be- assets are not our military strength or our economic banquet honorees which are printed elsewhere in this tive director of the National Football Foundation and Hall of hind came on to win or tie in the last quarter. wealth, but the character of our young people and I am Footballetter. Fame for 13 years, died at the age of 69 two days after Bob I am referring, of course, to Southern Cal, what they glad that America's young people produce the kind of Harman, 69, served the game of football for a half Harron's passing following an illness of six months. Harvey is shown at an earlier Football Hall of Fame dinner with did to UCLA. men that we have in American football today. century as a player for Pop Warner at Pittsburgh, a coach Walter Hoving (l) Chairman of the Board of Tiffany's, the If you talk to somebody from UCLA they say it at Haverford, Sewanee, Penn, and Rutgers, and as an designer of the MacArthur Bowl, and Father Edmund Joyce, should not have happened. So, watch out, Michigan, for Champ's Qualities athletic administrator with the National Football Foun- Vice-President of the University of Notre Dame. SC, it could happen. I am not predicting now. I have I close on a note that will tell you why I think Texas dation and Hall of Fame. Harvey was also president of had enough trouble with Penn State. I don't want any deserved to be Number One. It was not because they the American Football Coaches Association and received with Michigan. Before I get through I will only have scored the second touchdown, but it was because after the group's highest honor, the Amos Alonzo Stagg award. friends in Texas and I didn't carry Texas. So let's not the first touchdown when they were behind 14 to 0, the Both men served their country with distinction as talk any further about that. coach sent in a play. They executed the play and they commissioned officers in World War II. went for two. When they went for two and the score was Great Presidents 8 to 14, they moved the momentum in their direction. But now, one serious moment. Archibald Mac Leish They were not sure to win because Arkansas still had did say what I wish I could have written about what a lot of fight left and I remember the great drive in those Harman Scholar-Athlete football means to this country, what it means to me as last few minutes. But Texas, by that very act, demon- an individual, what it means to me as one who is serving strated the qualities of a champion, the qualities to come Memorial Fund Requested as President of the United States. I can only tell you back when they were behind and then when they could that in the Cabinet Room there are the pictures of three have played it safe just to tie, they played to win. By Director's Widow men who I consider to be great Presidents; President Eisenhower, President Woodrow Wilson, President Theo- This allows me to tell a favorite anecdote of mine Chester J. LaRoche, president of the National Foot- in the world of sports. In another field, one of the great ball Foundation and Hall of Fame, announced that a dore Roosevelt. There were other great ones, but these three in this century, I consider to be among the great tennis players of all time, of course - the first really Harvey J. Harman Memorial Scholar-Athlete fund was Presidents. big tennis player in terms of the big serve and the rest, being created following Mrs. Harman's request that in All of them had one thing in common. They were in our time was Bill Tilden. lieu of flowers that contributions be made to the Football Foundation's Scholar-Athlete program. BOB HARRON AND PALS - The late Robert (Bob) Har- very different men; Eisenhower, the great general; Theo- When he was coaching, after he completed his playing Mr. Harman, the executive director of the National ron (1) died at the age of 71 less than a week after the 1969 dore Roosevelt, the tremendous extrovert, explorer, writer, years, a young player had won a match in a minor Football Hall of Fame dinner after a lengthy illness. But, Bob Football Foundation, and former head football coach one of the most talented men of our time in so many tournament and won it rather well. He came off the court Harron was a part of the Centennial Dinner even though ill and expected Tilden to say something to him in words of at Rutgers and the University of Pennsylvania, died Dec. at home. The citations of the Gold Medal winner, the Dis- fields; Woodrow Wilson, probably the greatest scholar 17. Services were held in New Brunswick and he was tinguished American award, the Scholar-Athletes, and the Hall who has ever occupied the Presidency, a man with the congratulation, and Tilden didn't. of Famers were all written by the former Boston and New York buried in Mercer, Pa. biggest vocabulary of any President in our history in case The player said, "What is the matter, I won it, gifted sports writer. He is shown with journalistic pals Larry Robinson (c) and Allison Danzig at a Hall of Fame reception you want to put it down in your memory book. didn't I?" Tilden said, "Yes, you won, but playing that Fund Grows Fast in 1968. Bob was assistant to the president of the NFF prior way you will never be a champion, because you played Contributions in Mr. Harman's memory may be to his final illness. Passion For Game not to lose. You didn't play to win." mailed to the National Football Foundation and Hall of But each of them had a passion for foot- Fame, 137 Church Street, New Brunswick, New Jersey. ball. Woodrow Wilson, when he taught at What America Needs Nearly $2,000 had been donated in Harvey's memory Wesleyan and used to talk about the spirit That is what America needs today. What we need as of February 1st of football, and later on when he was Presi- in the spirit of this country and the spirit of our young The Football Foundation's Scholar-Athlete program dent of Princeton, he insisted on scholarship, people is not playing it safe always, not being afraid of awards graduate fellowships to outstanding college foot- but he recognized and tried to encourage defeat - being ready to get into the battle and playing ball seniors who also excel in the classroom and are football. T. R. was dictating a speech one to win; not with the idea of destroying or defeating or campus leaders. day, a very important one. He got a call hurting anybody else, but with the idea of achieving ex- Over 100 college seniors have won $500 NFF grad- telling of two of his sons participating in a cellence. uate fellowships from funds received from Col. Earl prep school game which they had won. He Because Texas demonstrated that day that they were (Red) Blaik's syndicated football column. Additional HALL OF FAMERS LISTEN - Three of the great players of dropped the speech and ran shouting for joy playing to win, they set an example worthy of being grants are available from Medical Economics, Inc. for the past, Whitey Wistert of Michigan, Alex Wojciechowicz of to his wife and said, "They won, they won." Number One in the 100th year of college football. pre-med Scholar-Athletes, as authorized by President Fordham and Buddy Young of Illinois, seated at the special Hall of Fame dais listen attentively to the 1969 Hall of Famers' I remember President Eisenhower talk- Thank you. William Chapman. induction. THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION AND HALL OF FAME Non-Profit Organization NEW BRUNSWICK, NEW JERSEY U.S. POSTAGE PAID New Brunswick, N.J. Permit No. 439 GERALD R. FORD, JR. FF 5 H 230 0 THE CAPITOL BLDG. WASHINGTON, D.C. FF one 6 FF 9 20013 3 STANDING OVATION FOR THE PRESIDENT A BUSY MAN ENJOYS A BANQUET - President Richard M. Nixon was a picture of health, happiness, and relaxation at the end of Football's Centennial banquet in New York. Officers of the Football Foundation and members of the General MacArthur Executive Committee gave the President a standing ovation following his heart-warming off-the-cuff talk on football. Some of the men applauding include George Leisure, Col. Leonard Henry, Allison Danzig, Chet LaRoche, Vincent Draddy, Roger Blough, and John Galbreath. CENTENNIAL FOOTBALL PRESENTATION - Dr. Mason Gross, president of Rutgers University, presents the Rutgers- Princeton 1969 game football to the Football Foundation's Centennial President Col. Edgar Garbisch at the Twelfth An- nual Hall of Fame banquet in New York while master of ceremonies Chris Schenkel and President Richard Nixon look on. Reservations for the 1970 Hall of Fame Dinner in PALS OF OLD - Elmer Bobst, who enjoyed his 85th birth- day dinner at the White House in December, chats with the New York, December 8, are now being accepted man he gave a big boost at the right time, President Richard at the Foundation's New York office (212)661-0534. Nixon, while Roger Blough and Juan Trippe, a pair of earlier Gold Medal winners, enjoy the conversation. Foodball File January 12, 1970 CONGRESSIONAL RECORD Extensions of Remarks E11271 law comes too late to help the thousands Today as we pay tribute to the players, the line close to the goal and there was a dis- who have been crippled, maimed, and I am glad that one of those who made the pute about whether he went over and was killed in past years. It will, however, make Hall of Fame is a coach, Bud Wilkinson. pushed back. coal mining a much safer and healtheir I pointed out in my acceptance address in I wonder whether or not, with the replays Miami that one of the men who influenced we have on television, the game might have job. me most in my life was my coach and I think turned out differently if we had had tele- It is my fervent hope that the black that could be true of many public men. vision in 1925. I am not saying it would, lung benefit provision will, in some small My coach was an American Indian, a truly Father Hesburgh. I have enough trouble with way, ease the suffering and lift the weight remarkable man and a great leader. I learned Penn State. I don't want any with Notre of loneliness inflicted on the miners and more about life from him than I did about Dame. their widows by this dreaded disease. football; but a little about football. Then my memory goes on, just to share One of the reasons he didn't put me in was them with you, and interestingly enough 1 because I didn't know the plays. There was remember performances by men who lost as a good reason for that. It wasn't because I wel as who won. That is rather natural, I am wasn't smart enough. I knew the enemy's sure you can understand. PRESIDENT NIXON GIVES ADDRESS plays. I played them all week long. Believe The first Rose Bowl game I saw was be- AT NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUN- me, nobody in the Southern California Con- tween one of the great Howard Jones teams DATION AND HALL OF FAME DIN- ference knew Occidental's or Pomona's plays of the early '30s and Jock Sutherland's Pitt NER better than I did, because I was on that side. teams. Pitt was overmanned. They had a fine I learned a lot sitting by the coach on the quarterback in Warren Heller; a good passer. bench-learned about football and learned And Howard Jones had a team that beat them HON. GERALD R. FORD about life. 35 to nothing. OF MICHIGAN Incidentally, since this is a night for con- But my memories of that team was not of fession, I want to tell you one thing about the awesome power of Howard Jones' team IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Chief Newman. He played for Southern Cali- moving down with the unbalanced single Tuesday, December 23, 1969 fornia. He played on their first Rose Bowl wing going down, down the field and scoring team and that first Rose Bowl team beat Penn again and again with that tremendous block- Mr. GERALD R. FORD. Mr. Speaker, State in the only game Penn State ever ing, but of two very gallant Pittsburgh ends, for the edification and entertainment of played in the Rose Bowl. Stedani and Dailey. our colleagues who follow football, as we Now, because Governor Shafer is here and For the first half, I remember they plowed near the end of the game's 100th season, because I had an uncle who taught at Penn into that awesome USC interference and I would like to insert at this point in the State and had a very distinguished record knocked it down time and time again and RECORD the remarks of the President of and because somebody suggested that some held the score down. The game was lost, but day I might want to visit the campus-after the United States at the National Foot- I remember right to the last they were in 'I have left the Presidency-I can only say ball Foundation and Hall of Fame din- there fighting and that spirit stayed with me that they have a great football team. as a memory and the years go on. ner at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York As a matter of fact, I was going to suggest I think of another game, Southern Cal and on December 9, 1969: that we have a super college bowl after the Duke, 1938. I had attended Duke University REMARKS OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED November or January 1 games and then I for law school and I remember that Duke STATES AT THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUN- thought I was in deep enough already because came there undefeated, untied, unscored DATION AND HALL OF FAME DINNER look what could happen: Southern Cali- upon. The score was three to nothing going fornia could beat Michigan and they would Mr. Chairman and Mr. Toastmaster, Your into the last few minutes of the game. So out claim they were Number One; Notre Dame Eminence Cardinal Cooke, all of the dis- came a fourth string quarterback, not a third might beat Texas and they would claim they tinguished guests at the head tables and string, Doyle Nave, and he threw passes were One; and, of course, you never know all of the distinguished award winners and as they throw them today, one after another, what would happen with Penn State and all of those who are here on this very mo- to Al Kreuger, an end from Antelope Valley, Missouri. I understand they are pretty good. mentous occasion: Southern California scored. It was seven to So I can only say this: I understand that It would be momentous because of this three. Penn State certainly is among those that organization meeting to honor the man that I must say that I was terribly disappointed, should be considered for One in the United you have honored and I speak of others, of of course, but the woman who was to be my States of America. course, than myself and it would be momen- future wife went to Southern Cal and that Now, could I share with you for a moment, tous too because it is the 100th year of a is how it all worked out. We met at that in a somewhat serious vein, what football very great game. means to me? I think that is what the man game. I was trying to think of something that The years go on and I am not going to who receives this award, particularly one who would appropriately describe how I feel in really doesn't deserve it because of his foot- bore you with more of my own recollections, accepting this award. I would have to be ball prowess, that is something he is ex- except to give you a feel of what football less than candid if I were not to say that has meant to me as a spectator, and college pected to do. because of the offices I have held I have First, without talking about those factors football particularly received many awards. that are tremendously important that Archi- I remember some Ohio State games. I re- But I think Archibald MacLeish, in that bald MacLeish touched on, the character, all call going to Ohio State to a football game, perfectly eloquent tribute to football, quot- of the great spirit that comes into individuals and until you have been to Columbus to see ing Secretary of State Dean Acheson, put it who are either participants in the game, par- an Ohio State game-in fact, until I went very well. He said, "The honors you don't ticipate in it or watch it, I look back on to Fayetteville, Arkansas, I thought the Co- deserve are the ones you are most grateful football and have many pleasant memories: lumbus crowds were the most exciting. But to receive." I just enjoyed playing it, watching it, read- in any event, that year, I think it was about ing about it over the years. 1958, I went there with Senator John Bricker. I simply want to set the record straight with regard to my football qualifications. Among all of the people who have been Iowa had a great team. They were a favorite honored tonight, let me just say a good word over Ohio State. This is a candid, open Administration. We believe in telling the truth about football about sports writers. After all, I must say They led going into the last quarter. Woody and everything. that this is not an unselfish statement, most Hayes-in those days, it was just three yards I can only say that as far as this award sports writers become political writers in the and a cloud of dust. They didn't have the end-"Scotty" Reston, Bob Considine, Bill passers. But he had a great big fullback by is concerned that it is certainly a small step for the National Football Foundation and Henry. So I am just planning for the future. the name of White and he ran him, starting a small step for football but it is a giant But, in any event, thinking of sports writ- at the 35 yard line of Ohio State, ten differ- leap for a man who never even made the ers for the moment, they have made football ent times over the same hole in the Iowa live before the days of television and even line, going off the left side, until they scored, team at Whittier. now for many who never got to the games. and they won the game 17 to 14. I have looked around that wall. Whittier My first recollection of big-time college If you think enthusiastic crowds developed is not up there I can assure you. I didn't football was Ernie Nevers against Notre in other places, you ought to see an Ohio hear the Whittier song either a moment ago. Dame in 1925. I see Ernie Nevers here and State crowd when they beat anybody. In fact only the coach from Loyola knows I sat in the stands with Father Hesburgh But in any event, on through the years, where Whittier is. We used to play Loyola. when Southern Cal played and lost to Notre I come to more recent years, years that these I got into a game once when we were so Dame and I know the great spirit between younger men here will remember and recall far behind it didn't matter. I even got into those two schools. But I remember that game. with the same zest and enthusiasm, I am one against Southern California once when I remember the score.` I think it was 25 to sure, that I do. we were so far behind it didn't matter. 10 or four touchdowns to a touchdown and a This year, 1969, certainly of all the hundred Just to tell you a little about Whittier so field goal and I remember that the sports years of football none could be more exciting. the record will be straight it is a school with writers, Bill Henry of the L.A. Times, and There were never SO many great teams, never very high academic standing. We had a very others, were writing about the game, wrote so many Saturdays when the favorite could remarkable coach. about one play where Nevers went through not be sure that he was going to come E11272 CONGRESSIONAL Extensions of Remarks January 12, 1970 through, never so many times when a team few minutes. But Texas, by that very act, and America supports Israel because its ex- that was behind came on to win or tie in demonstrated the qualities of a champion, ample offers long range hope to the Middle the last quarter. the qualities to come back when they were East. I am referring, of course, to Southern Cal, behind and then when they could have We recognize Israel's predicament; its what they did to UCLA. played it safe just to tie, they played to win. enemies can afford to fight a war and lose, If you talk to somebody from UCLA they This allows me to tell a favorite anecdote and come back to fight again. Israel cannot say it should not have happened. So, watch of mine in the world of sports. In another afford to lose once. America knows that. And out, Michigan, for SC, it could happen. I field, one of the great tennis players of all America is determined that Israel is here in am not predicting now. I have had enough time, of course-the first really big tennis the family of nations to stay. trouble with Penn State. I don't want any player in terms of the big serve and the rest, with Michigan. Before I get through I will in our time-was Bill Tilden. Since the Nixon administration took only have friends in Texas and I didn't When he was coaching, after he completed office, U.S. policy toward Israel has, in carry Texas. So let's not talk any further his playing years, a young player had won a fact, changed, attempting to force dan- about that. match in a minor tournament and won it gerous compromise on Israel in an effort But now, one serious moment. Archibald rather well. He came off the court and ex- to curry unwarranted favor with the MacLeish did say what I wish I could have pected Tilden to say something to him in Arab States of the area. This signals a written about what football means to this words of congratulation, and Tilden didn't. departure from the consistent commit- country, what it means to me as an indi- The player said, "What is the matter, I vidual, what it means to me as one who won it, didn't I? Tilden said, "Yes, you won, ment to Israel expressed by four Presi- is serving a President of the United States. but playing that way you will never be a dents of the United States-Truman, I can only tell you that in the Cabinet Room champion, because you played not to lose. Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson. there are the pictures of three men who I You didn't play to win." Following the 6-day war, in June of consider to be great Presidents: President That is what America needs today. What 1967, President Johnson stated, on June Eisenhower, President Woodrow Wilson, we need in the spirit of this country and 19, 1967, this country's "commitment to- President Theodore Roosevelt. There were the spirit of our young people is not playing day-to a peace that is based on five other great ones, but these three in this cen- it safe always, not being afraid of defeat— tury, I consider to be among the great Presi- principles: first, the recognized right of being ready to get into the battle and play- dents. ing to win; not with the idea of destroying national life; second, justice for the ref- All of them had one thing in common. or defeating or hurting anybody else, but ugees; third, innocent maritime passage; They were very different men; Eisenhower, with the idea of achieving excellence. fourth, limits on the wasteful and de- the great general; Theodore Roosevelt, the Because Texas demonstrated that day that structive arms race; and fifth, political tremendous extrovert, explorer, writer, one they were playing to win, they set an ex- independence and territorial integrity of the most talented men of our time in so ample worthy of being Number One in the for all." many fields; Woodrow Wilson, probably the 100th year of college football. greatest scholar who has ever occupied the In the same speech, President John- Thank you. Presidency, a man with the biggest vocabu- son made clear that the peace would have lary of any President in our history in case to be reached by the parties themselves. you want to put it down in your memory He said: book. EROSION OF U.S. SUPPORT FOR Clearly, the parties to the conflict must be But each of them had a passion for foot- ISRAEL the parties to the peace. Sooner or later, it ball. Woodrow Wilson, when he taught at is they who must make a settlement in the Wessley and used to talk about the spirit area. of football, and later on when he was Presi- HON. WILLIAM F. RYAN dent of Princeton, he insisted on scholar- President Johnson's speech of Septem- ship, but he recognized and tried to en- OF NEW YORK ber 10, 1968, somewhat amplified his courage football. T. R. was dictating a speech IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES June 19 speech by adding reference to the one day, a very important one. He got a call telling of two of his sons participating in a Tuesday, December 23, 1969 Jerusalem question and to the issue of borders. Jerusalem was recognized as "a prep school game which they had won. He Mr. RYAN. Mr. Speaker, Secretary of dropped the speech and ran shouting for critical issue of any peace settlement," State Rogers held a news conference to- joy to his wife and said, "They won, they and the parties were urged "to stretch day in which he discussed United States- won." their imaginations so that their interests, Israeli relations. He stated: I remember President Eisenhower talking and all the world's interests in Jerusalem to me after his heart attack. He said one I can understand why Israel is concerned, can be taken into account in any final of the things he hated to give up was that and why they don't necessarily agree with settlement." In discussing the question the doctor said he should not listen to those everything we do. But we have to conduct football games because he got too excited our foreign policy in a way that we think is of borders, the President said: and became too involved. best for our national interests. We are not the ones to say where other na- tions should draw lines between them that What does this mean, this common inter- I cannot fault the Secretary on his est in football of Presidents, of leaders, of will assure each the greatest security. It is people generally? It means a competitive basic premise-we must be guided by our clear, however, that a return to the situation spirit. It means, also, to me, the ability and national interests. But its practice, so far of June 4, 1967, will not bring peace. There the determination to be able to lose and as the Mideast is concerned is, in my must be secure and there must be recognized then come back and try again, to sit on the view, seriously in error. This administra- borders. bench and then come back. It means ba- tion's posture toward Israel is under- In also discussing the refugee problem, sically the character, the drive, the pride. mining the possibilities of a viable peace President Johnson urged Israel and her the teamwork, the feeling of being in a cause being achieved between Israel and the bigger than yourself. Arab neighbors to "participate directly Arab States pledged to destroy her. And All of these great factors are essential if and wholeheartedly in a massive program a Nation is to maintain character and great- this posture is thereby seriously endan- to assure these people a better and a ness for that Nation. So, on the 100th year gering the viability-even existence- more table future." of football, as we approach the 200th year of Israel. Thus, until January 20 of 1969, the of the United States, remember that our Yet it is essential to our national inter- United States was committed to the par- great assets are not our military strength or est that Israel survives and thrives, just our economic wealth, but the character of ties themselves making the peace. It as a stable peace in the Mideast is essen- our young people and I am glad that Amer- urged the general principles on which ica's young people produce the kind of men tial. In fact, there cannot be one without such a peace should be based, and consid- that we have in American football today. the other. The President himself has said erations-such as Jerusalem-which I close on a note that will tell you why I as much. On September 8, 1968, then should be taken to account. It supported think Texas deserved to be Number One. It candidate Richard Nixon stated: border changes which would achieve se- was not because they scored the second The United States has a firm and unwaver- curity. It opposed unilateral withdrawal touchdown, but it was because after the ing commitment to the national existence by Israel. first touchdown when they were ahead (be- of Israel, repeated by four Presidents, and hind) 14 to 0, the coach sent in a play. They after Inauguration Day next year, it will be The changes with the inauguration of executed the play and they went for two. repeated by another President. the Nixon administration. First, four When they went for two and the score was America supports Israel because we believe power talks became a cornerstone of U.S. 18 (8) to 14, they moved the momentum in in the self-determination of nations; America strategy. And by his March 4 news con- their direction. They were not sure to win supports Israel because we oppose aggression ference, President Nixon expanded the because Arkansas still had a lot of fight left in every form; America supports Israel be- notion of these talks to include the idea and I remember the great drive in those last cause it is threatened by Soviet imperialism; of four power guarantees: THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION AND HALL OF FAME VINCENT DEPAUL DRADDY, Chairman FOREST EVASHEVSKI, Vice President ASA S. BUSHNELL, Secretary HON. GEORGE L. MURPHY, President ROBERT A. HALL, Vice President JAMES L. McDowell, JR., Executive Director COL. EDGAR W. GARBISCH, Vice Chairman THOMAS J. HAMILTON, Vice President C. ROBERT PAUL, JR., Assistant to Chairman WILLIAM H. GEYER, JR., Vice Chairman MILLER MOORE, Treasurer STUART D. LUDLUM, Assistant Secretary JOHN GALBREATH, CHESTER J. LAROCHE, Co-Chairmen General MacArthur Advisory Board ROGER M. BLOUGH, Chairman Emeritus NEW YORK OFFICE 17 East 80th Street New York, New York 10021 (212) 879-7000 info. nov 7,1972 Dear Jeft Vice Presidents at Large East RICHARD W. KAZMAIER, JR. South WILLIS M. TATE Coast ROBERT ODELL REYNOLDS forward to receiving photos 9 Thanks for you letters. Lovic West CLINTON E. FRANK At Large CHARLES B. (BUD) WILKINSON Board of Directors Jerry Enclosed 7nd. is A Dininer divitation ALVIN P. ADAMS SIDNEY A. ADGER, SR. VERNON R. ALDEN PAUL (BEAR) BRYANT Earlier then WAS talk 9 A group But WALTER BYERS WILLIAM L. CHAPMAN GEORGE CHAMPION CECIL COLEMAN from Grand Rapids Attending GENERAL LUCIUS D. CLAY it did not materialize ALLISON DANZIG JACK FARCASIN LEONARD D. HENRY any reservation I will Be requests from RAPUES harry to handle Grand JAMES GROWNEY WALTER HOVING I. ROBERT KRIENDLER GEORGE S. LEISURE BARRY T. LEITHEAD GEORGE H. LOVE JACK MOHR WILLIAM H. MORTON Bart Regards WILLIAM D. MURRAY JOSEPH J. O'NEILL FRANK PACE, JR. DR. EARL RAMER CARL P. RAY EDDIE ROBINSON FRED RUSSELL DR. MARVIN A. STEVENS June JOSEPH D. TOOKER, JR. CHARLES W. TUCKER, JR. ALBERT TWITCHELL ROBERT (SCOTTY) WHITELAW Center for Leadership CHESTER J. LAROCHE Chairman THE FIFTEENTH ANNUAL AWARDS DINNER of the NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION Date 1972 Name Title Address Alma Mater SUBSCRIPTION: $100 per person. SPONSORS' tables seat 10 or 12. Enclosed is check in the amount of $ for subscriptions. I am unable to attend but enclose a contribution of $ for the New Building Fund. Forms for the listing of names in the Dinner Program and Seating List will be mailed to all Sponsors and subscribers for more than one place. Please make checks payable to THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION and mail together with card in the addressed envelope. Contributions to The National Football Foundation are tax deductible. YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND The Fifteenth Annual Awards Dinner OF The National Football Foundation AND Hall of Fame Tuesday, December 5, 1972 SEVEN O'CLOCK The Grand Ballroom The Waldorf-Astoria New York City Reception: Waldorf-Astoria Five-Thirty a 'clock Subscription $100 per person R.S.V.P. Men only-Black Tie THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION The Program The National Football Foundation seeks to not only honor the great players and THE NATIONAL ANTHEM coaches in the history of College Football but to also inspire our nation's youth to compete INVOCATION on the athletic fields and in the classroom and to assume leadership roles on the high school MASTER OF CEREMONIES and college campuses today. Chris Schenkel INTRODUCTION OF MEMBERS OF FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME The National Football Foundation honors men who honor the game, men who have PRESENTATION OF FOUNDATION'S DISTINGUISHED AMERICAN AWARD revealed a love of country, concern for their fellow man and the nation's youth-men who To Dr. Jerome H. "Brud" Holland By get involved in community affairs, men who give a Damn about today's problems and Richard W. Kazmaier, Jr., Awards Chairman tomorrow's leadership. DR. HOLLAND'S ACCEPTANCE PRESIDENT'S REPORT Leadership training to man our institutions depends not only on the lessons taught Hon. George L. Murphy, President by man's past, learned in the classroom, but in competition, man against man on the ENTERTAINMENT campus. We learn the most important thing of all-of man himself; whom to trust, who is INDUCTION OF NEW MEMBERS OF FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME full of talk, how to follow as well as to lead, how to subordinate one's own ends to a common Fred Russell, Honors Court and objective. These are the disciplines of leadership. Col. Edgar W. Garbisch, Vice-Chairman MALCOLM PRATT "MAC" ALDRICH WILLIAM H. "BILL" MORTON In a broad but very significant sense The National Football Foundation is a nationwide Yale University, 1919-1922 Dartmouth, 1929-1931 ANGELO BORTOLO BERTELLI CHARLES CHRISTOPHER O'ROURKE educational organization. It enlists the ex-player, educator, athletic director and coach, the Notre Dame, 1940-1943 Boston College, 1937-1940 football official, writer and commentator, and the football fan in the service of the American ROBERT "BOB" FENIMORE *BRUCE PHILIP "BOO" SMITH youth. It strives to promote football as an integral and wholesome part of our educational Oklahoma State, 1943-1946 University of Minnesota, 1938-1941 processes; to inculcate the ideals of sportsmanship into the mind of the spectator as well as ROBERT ANTHONY "BONES" HAMILTON JOSEPH LEE STYDAHAR Stanford, 1932-1935 West Virginia University, 1932-1935 that of the player; and to encourage the most beneficial direction and playing of the game MORTON ARMOR "DEVIL MAY" KAER *BOWDEN WYATT at schools and colleges throughout the country. University of So. California, 1923-1926 University of Tennessee, 1935-1938 COACH To achieve its aims, the Foundation seeks to establish the true concept of football and LAWRENCE "BUCK" TIMOTHY SHAW to gain recognition of the significant role it plays in the preservation and advancement of N.C. State, Nevada, Santa Clara, California, Air Force Academy (1924-1957) our way of life. It endeavors to attain these goals by disseminating relevant information RESPONSE through its own publications and the other voices that reach the public, by granting awards Malcolm Aldrich and fellowships for postgraduate study to college seniors who have been outstanding in PRESENTATION OF SCHOLAR-ATHLETE TROPHIES football ability, academic achievement and campus leadership during their undergraduate AND COL. BLAIK MEDICAL ECONOMIC GRADUATE FELLOWSHIPS Dr. Alexander Heard, Chancellor, Vanderbilt years, and by honoring in the Football Hall of Fame those college players and coaches whose RESPONSE deeds and lives during and after their playing and coaching days have been exemplary PRESENTATION OF THE FOUNDATION'S GOLD MEDAL AWARD and inspiring. Vincent dePaul Draddy, Chairman ACCEPTANCE The Foundation, in accomplishing its purposes, serves not only the American youth HON. GERALD R. FORD U.S. Congressman (Michigan) but the nation as well. For school and college football, conducted and played in the proper BENEDICTION way, teaches lessons which, together with those taught in the classroom, help mold young ANNUAL AWARDS DINNER COMMITTEE Americans sound in heart, mind and body. Such young men are best fitted to mature as Sidney A. Adger Clinton E. Frank Richard W. Kazmaier, Jr. the kind of leaders needed to assure the supremacy of the United States of tomorrow. William I. Chapman Leonard D. Henry I. Robert Kriendler William Corbus William I. Spencer William H. Morton, Chairman VINCENT DEPAUL DRADDY, Chairman *deceased The National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame VINCENT DEPAUL DRADDY, Chairman of Board COL. EDGAR W. GARBISCH, Vice Chairman MILLER MOORE, Treasurer WILLIAM H. GEYER, Vice Chairman RICHARD MOORE, Asst. Treasurer HON. GEORGE L. MURPHY, President ASA S. BUSHNELL, Secretary FOREST EVASHEVSKI, Vice President JAMES L. McDowell, JR., Executive Director ROBERT HALL, Vice President C. ROBERT PAUL, JR., Asst. to Chairman THOMAS J. HAMILTON, Vice President STUART D. LUDLUM, Asst. Secretary CHESTER J. LAROCHE, Chairman, Center for Leadership VICE PRESIDENTS AT LARGE East - RICHARD W. KAZMAIER, JR. South - WILLIS M. TATE West CLINTON E. FRANK Coast - ROBERT O. REYNOLDS At Large - CHARLES B. (BUD) WILKINSON BOARD OF DIRECTORS Alvin Adams James Growney Joseph O'Neill Sidney Adger Leonard D. Henry Frank Pace, Jr. Vernon R. Alden Walter Hoving Dr. Earl Ramer Paul Bryant Col. I. Robert Kriendler Carl Ray Walter Byers George Leisure, Sr. Eddie Robinson George Champion Barry T. Leithead Fred Russell William Chapman George H. Love Dr. Marvin A. Stevens General Lucius D. Clay Jack Mohr Joseph D. Tooker, Jr. Cecil Coleman William H. Morton Charles W. Tucker, Jr. Allison Danzig Bill Murray Albert Twitchell Jack Farcasin Robert (Scotty) Whitelaw THE GENERAL MAcARTHUR NATIONAL ADVISORY BOARD ROGER M. BLOUGH, Chairman Emeritus JOHN W. GALBREATH, AND CHESTER J. LAROCHE, Chairmen Thomas B. Adams F. Peavey Heffelfinger Thomas B. McCabe Vernon Alden Harold H. Helm David Mahoney Malcolm Aldrich Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh Edmund C. Monell James W. Aston H. Leslie Hoffman Thomas W. Moore Everett Bacon Clifford F. Hood William H. Morton Paul Gregory Benedum Walter Hoving Fred Mosel Rear Adm. John J. Bergen Gilbert W. Humphrey Spencer Mosley Charles H. Brower Alfred Hunt James J. Nance Alexander Calder, Jr. Robert A. Jacobs Thomas S. Nichols George Champion Delaney Kiphuth Kenneth O'Donnell Norman Chandler Fred P. Kirby Joseph O'Neill Gen. Lucius D. Clay I. Robert Kriendler Frank Pace, Jr. James A. Farley Arthur S. Lane Robert Odell Reynolds Hon. Gerald R. Ford, Jr. Hon. Richard C. Lee Fred Russell Winston E. Forrest, Jr. Barry T. Leithead C. R. Smith William J. Gilbane George H. Love Robert T. Stevens J. Peter Grace Archibald MacLeish George Raymond Vila Boone Gross Charles B. Wilkinson HONORARY CHAIRMEN (PREVIOUS GOLD MEDAL WINNERS) Col. Earl H. Blaik Chester J. LaRoche Ronald W. Reagan Adm. Thomas J. Hamilton Donold B. Lourie Juan T. Trippe Dr. Frederick L. Hovde Richard M. Nixon Byron R. White IN MEMORIAM PRESIDENT PRESIDENT PRESIDENT DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER HERBERT HOOVER JOHN F. KENNEDY GENERAL COACH DOUGLAS MACARTHUR AMOS ALONZO STAGG foothell Press Intelligence, Inc. WASHINGTON, D.C. 20001 Front Edit Page Page Other Page 123 NEW YORK, N.Y. NEWS M - 2,129,909 S - 2,948,786 JUN 18 1972 Ford Award The National Football Foundation's gold medal for 1972 was awarded yesterday to Rep. Ger- ald R. Ford (Mi n The CHAPTER I SCHOLAR-ATHLETE AWARDS THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION AND HALL OF FAME THIS BOOKLET IS DESIGNED TO EXPLAIN what the Board of Directors and the Executive Committee of your Foun- dation believe to be the greatest func- tion that any chapter can perform for the game of American amateur foot- ball and for American youth. Here is the plan for making annual Scholar-Athlete awards to your scho- lastic athlete, or athletes, who best exemplify academic achievement, leadership in scholastic activities and football ability. The National Football Foundation believes that there can be no more effective dedication to the benefit of our great American game than to rec- ognize, early in his career, the young football player and encourage him to assess the proper values of the game in his educational career. THE AWARDS COMMITTEE, NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION AND HALL OF FAME VINCENT DEPAUL DRADDY, Chairman FOREST EVASHEVSKI, Vice President MILLER MOORE, Treasurer HON. GEORGE L. MURPHY, President ROBERT A. HALL, Vice President ASA S. BUSHNELL, Secretary COL. EDGAR W. GARBISCH, Vice Chairman THOMAS J. HAMILTON, Vice President JAMES L. McDowell, JR., Executive Director WILLIAM H. GEYER, JR., Vice Chairman C. ROBERT PAUL, JR., Assistant to Chairman JOHN GALBREATH, CHESTER J. LAROCHE, Co-Chairmen General MacArthur Advisory Board ROGER M. BLOUGH, Chairman Emeritus NEW YORK OFFICE Suite 1604 II East 44th Street August 8, 1972 New York, New York 10017 (212) 661-0534 TO: The Executive Committee General MacArthur Advisory Committee Vice Presidents at Large Board of Directors East RICHARD W. KAZMAIER, JR. Chapter Presidents South WILLIS M. TATE National Football Foundation Council West CLINTON E. FRANK Coast ROBERT ODELL REYNOLDS At Large CHARLES B. (BUD) WILKINSON FROM: Jimmie McDowell, Executive Director Chairman Vincent dePaul Draddy recently announced Board of Directors the purchase of a great building at 17 East 80th ALVIN P. ADAMS SIDNEY A. ADGER, SR. Street, in New York to be the new headquarters VERNON R. ALDEN for the National Football Foundation and to house WALTER BYERS the College Football Hall of Fame. The move GEORGE CHAMPION GENERAL LUCIUS D. CLAY was made, as Chairman Draddy stated, because, ALLISON DANZIG "Building costs are continually escalating and EARLE EDWARDS the Foundation's Executive Committee, recognizing JAMES GROWNEY the Nation's changing economic and social cond- DR. JIM HAMILTON COL. LEONARD D. HENRY itions, decided to change the Foundations WALTER HOVING priorities and will concentrate on our educational JAMES (BUD) JACK and leadership programs on behalf of the youth I. ROBERT KRIENDLER GEORGE S. LEISURE of America." BARRY T. LEITHEAD GEORGE H. LOVE Enclosed is a copy of our up-dated Scholar-Athlete ARCHIBALD MACLEISH JACK MOHR Brochure, which is the backbone of the National EDMUND MONELL Football Foundation's Chapter program. In over WILLIAM H. MORTON 100 cities, coast-to-coast, chapters have the WILLIAM D. MURRAY JOSEPH O'NEILL opportunity of recognizing outstanding school FRANK PACE, JR. boys, who excel in the classroom as well as DR. EARL RAMER on the playing field, - the true campus leaders. CARL RAY FRED RUSSELL Over 500 high school seniors are saluted annually. DR. MARVIN A. STEVENS Since the program's inception, more than 5,000 JOSEPH D. TOOKER, JR. boys, chosen from nominees from 25,000 schools, CHARLES W. TUCKER, JR. ALBERT TWITCHELL have been saluted at banquets attended by the outstanding civic leaders in the community. Center for Leadership CHESTER J. LAROCHE, Chairman STUART D. LUDLUM, Assistant to Chairman Page 2 August 8, 1972 I am sure you will also be interested to know that we already have over 800 reservations for the Foundation's 15th Annual Football Hall of Fame Dinner in New York on December 5th. This Waldorf Astoria Dinner honors our National Scholar-Athletes. If you haven't made your reservations, you should do so now. We need your continued support, financially and in other ways, to assure the Foundation's continued success. Our Hall of Fame Building and Endowment Fund Program continues through our chapters, the nation's football playing colleges, and our Special Gifts Campaign. Your support in the past has meant much to all of us who realize how much the game means to us individually and to the nation in general. JMcD/sg FOREWORD It is the belief of the National college sport - with sloppy edu- Football Foundation that the cational practices, with athletic awards of our chapters to the high ability purchased at the expense school football players of the of the finer values in life. country join us all together in It is the job of the NCAA and what is our most important single NAIA to make the rules govern- national activity. ing conduct of the game. But the Football trains boys in courage, rules in America need a broad competition, sportsmanship - basis of public support, which is builds physical and moral fiber in achieved largely through infor- an age of luxury and softness. mation. This is our job. Excessive Looked at from a broad perspec- loyalty by alumni to any one col- tive it is a national force, unique lege in such things as recruitment to America, the like of which the practices can help to destroy the world has never seen, teaching very fabric of the game. Helping qualities of heart and spirit with- any one football team at the ex- out which brains would be rud- pense of the game itself is folly. derless. It is for these reasons we ask you to make these awards effec- We feel, however, that the tive, to remind ALL of our people spirit of competitive sport should that the purpose of college foot- be in its proper place in the ball is to train our youth for life. scheme of education. We want to We believe the game should be keep the amateur spirit dominant, conducted with as much honor to keep football a game, not a business. off the field as it is now played and officiated on the field. These We are concerned with the awards dramatize our stand. They advance of professionalism in come to life only through you. VINCENT DEPAUL DRADDY CHESTER J. LAROCHE VINCENT DEPAUL DRADDY THE HONORABLE GEORGE L. MURPHY retired Chairman, now Chairman of the member of the Board of the President of the National Football Foundation's National Football Foundation National Football Foundation, Chairman of the Board Center for Leadership since 1958, now its Chairman former Senator from California HIS HOLINESS POPE JOHN XXIII "It is not the strength of one's muscles, not the quick reflexes or the victories easily attained, that constitute ability and the attractiveness of sport. It is rather the assured domain over one's faculties. There are, among others, loyalties that exclude taking refuge in subterfuges docility and obedience to the wise commands of the director in charge of the training of the team; the spirit of self-renunciation where one is to fade into the background in order that the interests of the team may thereby be furthered; fidelity to obligations undertaken; modesty in victory; sereneness in adverse fortune; patience toward spectators who are not always moderate if the competitive sport is bound up with financial interests. The crowds in the stadia deplore the fact when teams in a contest do not play with their hearts; in general, whenever there is a question of human activity, the point of arrival must always be the psychic; in other words, spirit must predominate over technique." ARCHIBALD MacLEISH DR. HENRY C. LINK Pulitzer Poetry Prize Winner author of "Return to Religion" "I think I learned more on "Instruction on the Ameri- the two Yale football teams can playing field for a time I played on than I have before filled up a vacuum created by or since about certain very lack of leadership in religion. fundamental and important Many lessons in self-control, matters. Without more sacrifice, teamwork, idealism, attention to things of the yes — in MORALITY - were mind and spirit, there can be learned taught by the high no human understanding; school, preparatory school and that, without such and college coaches. There understanding, the techno- has never been anything like logical information which this phenomenon, and it man has gathered is mean- reaches its fullest expression ingless." in football a game which has set in some measure the competitive pattern of this nation." PRESIDENT DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER "In football, in business, in the trades and the professions, the normal urge to excel provides one of the most hopeful assurances that our kind of society will continue to advance and prosper. Morale the will to win, the fighting heart are the honored hallmarks of the football coach and player. This morale, this will, this heart we need not only in athletic teams as individuals, but collectively." GENERAL OF THE ARMY DOUGLAS MacARTHUR "The game has become a symbol of our country's best qualities; courage, stamina, coordinated efficiency. Many believe in these cynical days of doubt and indecision that through this sport we can best keep alive the spirit of reality and enterprise which has made us great. Upon the fields of friendly strife are sown the seeds that upon other fields, on other days, will bear the fruits of victory." National Scholar-Athlete Rex Kern (10) of Ohio State National Scholar-Athlete Cosmo lacavazzi (32) of Princeton WHAT Football is one of the great build- Believing in the value of foot- ers of men. It does more for the ball, the National Football Foun- FOOTBALL boy of school age than any other dation, which brings together all DOES FOR sport. It is not only, as indicated of the organized groups that play, by former President Whitney coach, administer and report foot- THE BOY Griswold of Yale, a vital part of ball, seeks to establish the true education as competitive recrea- concept of the game as an ama- tion and exercise, but it is, like teur sport, and to gain recogni- other organized sports, a chal- tion of the important role it plays lenge to the spirit, a test of mettle, in the preservation and advance- a way to educate youth to go far ment of our ways of life. Its pur- the most significant method of beyond the resources that are on poses are to promote the game as fulfilling our purposes at the high the surface. an integral and wholesome part school level is through the local For the boy, football builds of our educational process; to chapter. Through the chapter, we stamina, courage, competitive encourage the beneficial direction reach the principals, the parents, fiber, self-reliance, teamwork, and playing of the game; to pro- the school coaches and players - sportsmanship, and imbues him vide proper incentives and ideals the boys themselves. It is for this with the many qualities which for American youth, and sports- reason that the granting of awards help to build our manhood to manship for the individual player. to the high school Scholar- keep our country strong and our The Foundation uses a number Athlete is the valuable function of competitive spirit vibrant. of ways to achieve its goals, but every chapter. THE ROLE OF WHY THE CHAPTER SCHOLAR-ATHLETES IN AWARDS MUST BE The experience of the Football RECOGNIZED Foundation at its national level has proved beyond a doubt that educators and leaders of men have given unanimous approval to the necessity for recognizing and honoring those whose deeds and lives during their playing days have been exemplary and inspir- ing. Educators, coaches, and lead- that time in the life of a young ers agree, however, that the plan man. Once he has progressed must start earlier. The boy must beyond that stage, once he has learn before he gets to college the learned, all too late, that he may proper value of football as a com- have sacrificed his chance in life petitive sport, its value and place for a real education because he in the educational plan. The col- has been offered and has accepted lege level, which is the only one an easy chance to capitalize on that the Foundation can handle athletic skill, then it is also too as a national effort, is by the same late for us to help. token almost impossible to judge The strongest, finest, and most from the chapter's viewpoint. The helpful job that the chapter can chapter is the Foundation's direct do is to bring forcibly to the atten- personalized contact with the tion of the boy, his family, his thousands of outstanding youths coach and to over-zealous alumni, who must carry the ball in the the proper sense of values and re- The National Awards Commit- The chapter thus becomes the years to come, in school, after sponsibilities which will be of tee therefore feels that a chapter Foundation's best means of rec- school. positive use to him in later life. may not in justice make an award ognizing the individual scholastic It is obvious, therefore, that the The serious, dignified and careful at the college level. More impor- football player, a work which is of chapter must build the strength attention to the rewarding of stu- tant, however, is the necessity of the essence of the Foundation's of American football at the school dent leaders in both studies and the chapter award at the school means of reaching the player at level. Educational and develop- athletics is of paramount impor- level, where the most good can be the vital period of his develop- ment values can be taught only at tance. obtained in the long run. ment. HOW A CHAPTER MAKES AWARDS College Scholar-Athletes High School Scholar-Athletes One of the first acts of a new Some of the methods of obtain- QUALIFICATIONS chapter should be the organiza- ing information on the Scholar- FOR THE hunter, a boy with courage, per- tion of a strong Awards Commit- Athletes are: sistance, sportsmanship, and an tee. This committee can consist SCHOLAR-ATHLETE 1. Recommendations from in- overall feeling for the game of of any number, depending upon formed sources. AWARD football, with proper respect for the size of the chapter, but cer- his coaches, teammates, oppo- tainly not less than five or six, and 2. Recommendations from school nents, and his school. possibly as many as 12 or 15. Its football coaches, principals, It is possible, even probable, that So far as scholarship is con- composition will vary depending athletic advisers, sports writ- some chapters may wish to spec- cerned, he need not be a "greasy upon the character and enthusi- ers, sportscasters, or others in ify their own qualifications for the grind" or even a straight "Grade asm of the men available. Gen- a position to have knowledge. Scholar-Athlete Award, although A" scholar. But he should be stu- erally, however, the committee 3. Specific recommendations of erally the Awards Committee will it is not likely that the original dious, persevering, dedicated, and should be strong in community, one candidate from each be faced with three or five out- specifications, here given, will be have a proper knowledge of what altered much. business and professional leaders school, backed up by data on standing candidates. Some chap- study means to the value of edu- interested in their schools as performance, marks and other ters honor one from each school The qualifications are three in cation. He should be a better than builders of future citizens. It number: qualities to be submitted by in the area, and then select the average student, interested in his should also include athletic ad- the principal or someone else top Scholar-Athlete from this 1. Outstanding academic appli- work, and without serious subject visers and sports writers. high in authority. group. More often than not, the cation and performance. weaknesses. He will be a boy who The Awards Committee should leaders will stand out and their select the Scholar-Athletes after 4. Preparation and distribution 2. Superior school leadership and is appreciated by his teachers. considering the credentials of the of a questionnaire which seeks selections will not present too citizenship. Leadership may be more diffi- to find out the data required. many difficulties. cult to measure. He should have nominees. It should also select The timing of selection is again 3. Superior football performance. an interest in many of the aspects the recipients of the Chapter's The rating of information is a a matter for the chapter. The time The boy need not necessarily of school life, not just football and Distinguished American Award matter for the committee. Many of presentation can vary. Some be the finest football player in the studies. He need not be the presi- and the Contribution to Amateur will go so far as to draw up a point chapters have their award ban- territory, but he should certainly dent of his class, or the leader of Football Award. These will be system in the attempt to obtain quets during the winter, imme- be an exceptional one, a boy who his fraternity, or the man with the men who have carried the lessons exact values. Often it will not be diately after the season is over. inspires younger players to seek highest marks or most letters, but learned on the playing field into necessary to go to that extent, Some chapters prefer to wait until to achieve excellence when their he definitely should be popular, a lifetime of service to the com- since primary values will appear late winter, spring or summer. time comes to play varsity foot- respected, and a boy whose atti- munity and citizens who have evident. This is a chapter decision. Many ball and earn similar recognition. tudes and actions are taken as an maintained a lifetime of devotion There is no standard method of chapters at such a dinner may He should obviously be a team example by others who have to the game. determining final selection. Gen- well have other awards to make. player, not an individual glory participated. A CERTIFICATE FOR THE SCHOLAR-ATHLETE The National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame Scholar-Athlete Amard THE of the National Football Foundation AWARD hereby grants ITSELF For the purpose of standardizing the basic conditions of an award, WHAT the National Football Foundation This certificate testifying that he has been recommends that it take the fol- voted outstanding in Football Performance, IT IS Academic Achievement and School Leadership lowing form: in the territory of the chapter 1. A certificate to be given the Scholar-Athlete. DATE PRESIDENT 2. A plaque to be given hisschool. To this end, the Foundation has designed and has available a beautiful and dignified certificate, suitable for framing (shown on the next page). A PLAQUE FOR HIS SCHOOL Secondly, the Foundation also makes available a distinctive plaque, dignified and permanent in character, which any school will be proud to display in its of- fices, gymnasium or trophy room to indicate the honor accorded one of its students. The certificate and plaque have NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION been designed for the Foundation by the country's largest and best MILVAUREE SHA PTER known designer of school, college and athletic trophies. They may SCHOLAR-ATHLETE be obtained through the Founda- AWARD tion. Certificates and plaques For the Scholastic Player who was voted may, of course, be independently outstanding in Football Performance, Academic Achievement and, designed and produced by a School Leadership chapter, although the cost will PRESENTED TO normally be somewhat higher. JOHN WILLIAM PARKER CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL 1960 THE On the night of December 1, from each of the sections of the 1959, for the first time in the his- country. Their awards stated that FIRST tory of American sports, a dedi- they were "being honored for NATIONAL cated group of men made a series achievements in the classroom of awards to college seniors which and on the campus as well as on COLLEGE recognized the value of not ath- the football field." Each one re- letic prowess alone, but the com- ceived a silver bowl and its in- SCHOLAR- bined talents of their athletic scription stated that it went to the ability, their scholarly dedication, college senior in his section who is ATHLETE and their leadership and example outstanding in academic achieve- AWARDS to fellow students. ment, college leadership, and Educational authorities from football performance. all over the land expressed their An added award of outstanding appreciation that athletic ability significance was made to the was rewarded for having its true young men in this particular case. Colonel Earl H. Blaik donated and proper place in the values of education and development of from his syndicated newspaper football articles the sum of $4,000, the American young man. The of which $500 went to each of the awards signified recognition of the "whole man" in his early eight, to be used for graduate study. Those first awardees who stages-not just a scholar, not just an athlete, but a man who devel- went to a graduate school for the oped the all-around qualities study of their choice, be it law, which would make him a real medicine, chemistry, or whatever leader in later life. else, were the recipients of "Red" Blaik's generous gift. Since then, At that Second Annual NFF over 100 college seniors have been Awards Dinner, eight scholar- saluted at the Foundation's New athletes were so rewarded, one York dinner at the Waldorf. THE OFFICERS OF THE NATIONAL FOOTBALL FOUNDATION NATIONAL Vincent dePaul Draddy, Chairman* FOOTBALL Hon. George L. Murphy, President* FOUNDATION, Col. Edgar W. Garbisch, Vice Chairman* William H. Geyer, Jr., Vice Chairman* HALL Forest Evashevski, Vice President OF Robert A. Hall, Vice President* Thomas J. Hamilton, Vice President FAME, Miller Moore, Treasurer AND Asa S. Bushnell, Secretary James L. McDowell, Jr., Executive Director CENTER C. Robert Paul, Jr., Assistant to Chairman FOR *Member Executive Committee LEADERSHIP Additional Executive Committee Members Alvin P. Adams Leonard D. Henry I. Robert Kriendler Vice Presidents at Large East- Richard W. Kazmaier, Jr. South- Willis M. Tate West - Clinton E. Frank Dinner Committee Coast - Robert Odell Reynolds William H. Morton, Chairman At Large- Charles B. (Bud) Wilkinson Sidney A. Adger, Sr. Awards Committee William I. Chapman William Corbus Richard W. Kazmaier, Jr., Chairman Clinton E. Frank Asa Bushnell Leonard D. Henry Allison Danzig Richard W. Kazmaier, Jr. Leonard D. Henry I. Robert Kriendler William L. Chapman William I. Spencer Earl H. Blaik