Pro Football: Confessions of a Legend

The whole world loves a lover —which probably accounts for the fact that people are forever doing favors for Paul ("Golden Boy") Hornung, 29. Paul is properly grateful. In his autobiography, Football and the Single Man (Doubleday; $4.95), the ex-Notre Dame star and veteran Green Bay Packers halfback does his best to repay everybody who, as he puts it, "contributed to making Paul Hornung, like Wyatt Earp, a legend in his own time."

It is quite a list. First come the sportswriters, who awarded him the Heisman Trophy as the U.S.'s No. 1 college player in 1956, after he sparked Notre Dame's Fighting Irish to their worst (two wins, eight losses) season in history. There is Paul's mother, who pounded a typewriter for the WPA in Louisville after his father left home in 1939, and cut corners all one year to buy him a $48 bicycle for Christmas. "I rode it up and down the street once," recalls Paul, "and that was it."

Then there is the "friendly, friendly" college recruiter who offered him 1) $10,000 in cash, 2) a new car, and 3) not one but two free scholarships (the other was for the girl of his choice) to play ball at some place other than Notre Dame. Roman Catholic Hornung had to refuse: "If I hadn't, there wouldn't be a priest in Louisville who would talk to me." South Bend, as it turned out, wasn't such a bad place after all. Paul drove a car on campus in violation of the rules, and he learned to save his class cuts for long weekends that extended through Monday and Tuesday.

Paree & the Black Books. Thanks to his friends, Hornung's whole life has been one long weekend, and "every day is Derby Day." While he was still a junior at Notre Dame, a "bachelor millionaire" named Abe Samuels introduced Paul to the chorus line at Chicago's Chez Paree. After he turned pro, a pinball-machine operator named Barney Shapiro staked him to a Las Vegas trip and handled his weekly bets (up to $300) on pro football games. When Paul was suspended in 1963 for gambling, Governor Endicott Peabody of Massachusetts made a speech in his behalf. Wisconsin's Senator Alexander Wiley did his best to get Paul deferred from the Army, and when that failed, President Kennedy intervened to get him a pass so that he could play in the 1961 championship game against the New York Giants. Paul scored 19 points in that game and won a Corvette for his performance. "If John F. Kennedy hadn't made the call he had," Hornung writes, "I wouldn't have played and wouldn't have won a $5,000 automobile ... I loved that man."

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GREGG KEESLING on reports that he received a call from an Army official saying he wasn't eligible to receive a condolence letter from President Obama because his son committed suicide, rather than dying in action

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