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Chet
(Grant) and I talked again today about the raging controversy over
whether or not George Gipp converted to Catholicism while on his
deathbed. The mystery of the missing Gipper scenes from the movie "Knute
Rockne, All American" has been getting a lot of ink lately. There
has been much misguided speculation about the reasons for the deletions.
Some say the film was cut because of legal objections raised by Rockne's
heirs, a teammate of Gipp's or a sportswriter portrayed in the film.
Another explanation offered for the cuts is that they were made because
of legal action brought by Gipp's descendants. Gipp and his family were
Protestants, and a brother, Alexander Gipp, did indeed threaten to sue
in 1940 because of the presence of a priest in the deathbed scene, which
he felt implied that Gipp had converted to Catholicism. Nothing came of
the threat. But implied or not, Chet Grant insists that he received a
letter from Father James Haggerty, C.S.C., the priest who attended Gipp
during the latter's illness, stating that he (Father Haggerty) did
indeed convert Gipp to Catholicism shortly before Gipp died. .The only
problem is, Grant seems to have misplaced the letter. (Author's Note:
Chet Grant died in 1985. I have not been informed of the disposition of
his private papers. I can only hope that somewhere, some day, that
letter will turn up.)
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