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...admission, the story's validty rested almost entirely on notes taken by Atlanta Insurance Salesman George Burnett, who said he had accidentally eavesdropped on a pre-game telephone conversation in which Georgia's Butts seemed to be spilling Georgia football secrets to Paul ("Bear") Bryant, head coach at the University of Alabama. But when the Post sent Freelance Reporter Frank Graham Jr. down to Atlanta, the salesman could only quote from memory as he told his story of skulduggery. The notes he had taken, he said, had been impounded by the University of Georgia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Magazines: Sophisticated Muckraking | 8/23/1963 | See Source »

...both Writer Graham and the Post, Burnett's memory seemed more than enough to go on. Neither bothered to go over the story with Wally Butts or Bear Bryant-on the grounds that they would only deny it. Nor did anyone consult Burnett's sometime business partner, John Carmichael, who said he knew all about the intercepted phone call and had seen the notes. No one at the Post deemed it necessary to study moving pictures of the Georgia-Alabama game -which might have supported, or cast serious doubt on the suspicion that the game had been fixed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Magazines: Sophisticated Muckraking | 8/23/1963 | See Source »

Schroder handed the witness some of Burnett's notes. The very first entry referred to "Bear" Bryant. "Butts never called me Bear," said Bear scornfully."He always called me Paul." As for the notation that Butts had reported Georgia to be "a well-disciplined ball club," Bryant was equally scornful. "If that was said, I think I would be the one that would be saying it." What about Coach Griffith's claims that Burnett's notes contained Georgia's two basic offensive formations, the "slot" and the "pro set"? asked Schroder. Movies of the game, Bryant...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Magazines: Fix or Fiction? | 8/16/1963 | See Source »

...through his testimony, Bryant seemed to have a hard time keeping his rising anger in check. For a parting thrust he shouted: "Anybody who had anything to do with this story ought to go to jail. Taking their money is not good enough...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Magazines: Fix or Fiction? | 8/16/1963 | See Source »

Chalk-Talk Touchdowns. When his turn came, Butts was a far more relaxed witness-but no less emphatic. He had talked football with his friend Paul Bryant many times, he said. "In fact, I've talked football with every coach I've ever been around." But Butts insisted that he had never given Bryant any dope on Georgia football strategy; he had never given any coach any information before a game, he said. Burnett's notes, said Butts, were rife with error. To show why he would never have called the Georgia squad "well-disciplined," Coach Butts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Magazines: Fix or Fiction? | 8/16/1963 | See Source »

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