It was the fall of 1940, and Americans turned to college
football for relief from the turbulent world around them. The
Depression still had its grip on the nation and, across the
Atlantic, the Battle of Britain raged. As war crept closer every
day, the nation's first peacetime draft called Americans to the
defense of the country. While the great Tom Harmon of Michigan set
new standards on the gridiron, on other fields black stars
struggled for the right to play. At Stanford, coaching genius Clark
Shaughnessy reinvented the game and in the process engineered the
greatest turnaround in the history of college football.
But the team everybody was talking about was Cornell. Fueled by
the most powerful offense in the country, the Big Red dominated the
national rankings until, on a snowy field at Dartmouth, they eked
out a win with a touchdown on the last play of the game-or did
they? When it came to light that the touchdown had been scored on a
grievous error by the officials, Cornell, undefeated and in the
race for the national championship, faced a wrenching decision. The
1940 season was one of the most exciting on record-and one that
taught America about the values that really matter.
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