19-F-VACANT BUSINESS
PROPERTY FOR SALE

40 -EMPLOYMENT
MALE AND/OR FEMALE
..

, 50-BUSINESS CARDS

I- ree
.
Ilousekeeper wanted : PAINTING, exterior, interior.
CoNIPA1shiN -
estimates. Reasonable
. LI. 7-5639, RE.
for eltlei IN 11 °man. Small apartment.' 8-1047 •
Cood wages stay nights. ?dust have)
1 efetences Call after 7:30 p.m. 358-4642. ; PORCHES, steps., bricks reinortered,
. ______ • sunken steps raised and cement work.
' 341-6632.

W. 8 Mile, corner McArthur,
Redford Twp. 160 frontage,
Zoned C2. Reasonable.

Mrs. Regina Gilbert

Clerical Position
Available Nov. 17

863-3191 or 399-9666

AETNA MORTGAGE & REALTY

MCST
✓
✓
✓

19-H-OFFICE BUILDING FOR
LEASE

BE ABLE TO:
Type
File
Answer phone

5 DAYS A WEEK-8:30-4:30
• Paid Blue Cross
• Good Salary

Oak Park-

Huntington Woods

•

Modern medical suite for
lease. 800 sq. ft. with Waiting
room. Busy clinic.

COOLIDGE & 10 1/4 MILE RD.

Write

Bonuses

ing experience (if anyl

Box 102-A

The Jewish News

17100 W. 7 Mile Rd.

LI 8-6717

Detroit, Mich. 48235

SECRETARY TO

24-A-PROPERTY MANAGEMENT

DI RECTOR

KORN MANAGEMENT

We buy, sell & manage Inner-
City Property

353-1240

of Jewish Family d Childrens Ser-
vice. Interesting, diversified posi-
tion, for highly qualified steno, able
to handle many details, including
statistics, accurately and assume
administrative responsibility. 5 day
week - excellent fringe benefits.
Conveniently located Northwest
area.

DI 1-5959

30-A-INSTRUCTIONS

TUTORING service for elementary
grades-reading, english and math.
Reasonable rates. Call after 5 P.M.,
LI. 5-2509, no sabbath calls.

SPANISH tutoring in my home. Certi-
fied teacher. 548-4912.

TUTOR, exprienced. Beginning HebreW.
544-7680.

$300 A WEEK

GUARANTEED

Experienced real estate salespeople
wanted.

BAR-MITZVA, Hebrew, Synagogue, Eng.
llsh. Experienced tutor. 342-9254. 546-0583.

Call HOUGHTON LAKE
FOREST ESTATES

MATH TUTORING-grades 7-12. James
Wineman. UN 3-6372.

642-0500, ask for Ray

BAR-MITZVA, Hebrew, Yiddish. Experi-
enced tutor. Reasonable. LI 3-5163.

Tutor for Bar.Mitzva and synagogue
skills. Call Steve Posen. 626-4555 after
4 p.m.

WORK IN PAWN SHOP

Person Needed

DECORATING. Expert workmanship.
Free estimates. Clarence Evans, 931-3622.

FREE transportation to Florida for man
or couple to help with driving. 837.6480.

Decorating, painting. Neat and clean.
Small carpentry work. 544-4104, 542-3270.

FURNITURE refinished and repaired.
Free estimates. UN 4-3547.

A-1 PAPERHANGING and painting. Im-
mediate service. UN 4-0326.

56-ANTIQUES

Attend the 51st presentation
of the

DETROIT ANTIQUE SHOW

at Detroit's Showplace,

40-EMPLOYMENT
MALE AND/OR FEMALE

THE MASONIC TEMPLE

WO 2-8698

1400 Michigan

40-A-EMPLOYMENT WANTED

EXPERIENCED part-time help for dry- FOREIGN female college student de-
goods. Apply 3:30-5. 19146 Schaefer.
sires baby Sitting in exchange for room

Temple at Second

October 23, 24, 25, 26 - 1 p.m.
to 10 p.m., Sunday to 6 p.m.

"Finest Dealers from Coast to

Coast"

ELECTRICAL contractor needs licensed • and board. Call 357-5732.
journeymen. 542-2230.
WOMAN - Experienced, dependable
wishes child care for working mother,
light housework. UN. 2-2125.

REAL ESTATE CAREER

50 - BUSINESS CARDS

Progressive Real Estate Co. $100 to
;150 per week to start. Steady work
no layoffs, complete training pro-
gram, Blue Cross available. Learn
while earning, no experience neces-
sary. Call between 9 a.m.- 1 p.m.
366-7070.

PLUMBING. Expert home repair special-
list, garbage disposals, repaired and
serviced. Call UN. 4-6926.

JULIUS ROSS MOVING CO.

PERSON WANTED FOR

SCRAP METAL BUSINESS.

356-4499, CALL AFTER 6

P.M.

Local and Long Distance STORAGE.
Packing, pianos, appliances, household
furnishings.
8829 Northend-Ferndale

543-4832

FOR BETTER wall washing. call James
el. One day service. TO 6-4005.
Russell
6 Bmont.
52

SPECIAL SHOW 8 SALE

Private collection of antiques in-
cluding glassware, china, wooden
items and primitives. Oct. 17 thru
19th.

'Clayton Flower Shop

458 W. 8 Mi. at Woodward, Ferndale

Antique - very orante
library table. Sarouk
Orienta I rug approx.
11x13.

BR

ALL KINDS, EXTERIOR, INTERIOR

Free Estimates

MUST HAVE EXPERIENCE
GOOD SALARY PLUS COMMISSION

I. Schwartz
LI 5-4035
8R 3-4826

VIENNA FURRIER. Remodel and re-
pairs. Reasonable prices. 398-7975.

APPLY 1401 BROADWAY
WO. 1-4069

87-PETS

WEIMARANER
PUPS

AKC Registered
KE. 2-7710

ASPHALT SEAL coating. 3 , c per sq.
11. Free estimates. Holes and cracks re-

paired. 476-5579.

SMALL JOBS, basement ceiling and
floors tiled, wall paneled. Reasonable.
Ron, LI 3 - 4576.

You Could

1

Call Monday Only
I between 9 and 12
353-1766

13

EXPERT PAPERHANGING
PAINTING

"D I E"
On A Debit

You have to be crazy,
use your experience to
earn professional money
B in a professional way-
The Insurance business
is booming.

I I

3-7573

CARPENTRY WORK

SALES HELP

INTERIOR ONLY
REFERENCES

CI

CHAS. CADOTTE 874-3281

ELECTRIC repairs, all types. Residen-
tial, commercial. EL 6-7228

El WINDOW cleaning and wall washing. 20

years experience. Commercial and resi-
dential. LI. 7-5100.

EI

Interior & Exterior Painting
Paperhanging

JOHN EDWARD CO.

State Licensed Contractor

547-3520

By JESS SILVER

(Copyright 1969, JTA, Inc.)

After 100 years of blocking. tack-
ling, kicking, running and passing.
it's time to look back and examine
GARAGE DOOR
the role of the Jew ill college foot-
ball. Jews have been involved in
OPENER
the sport almost from its very be-
ginning. Moses Henry Epstein rep-
resented Columbia University in
the third intercollegiate football
game ever played. The Lions lost
to Rutgers. six goals to three. on
Nov. 12. 1870, in New Brunswick,
N.J.
Call Evenings Until 9
Next to try his hand at the sport
353-3284
was Emil G. Hirsch. In 1871 he
and
ladies
performed
for the seniors in the
CUSTOM MADE draperies
alterations. 28074 Fontana, Southfield. first football game at the Uni-
353-2948.
versity of Pennsylvania. The con-
PAINTING AND decorating. All work test pitted the seniors against the
guaranteed. References. TY 7.2501.
three lower classes. Ilirsch, be-
came Rabbi Hirsch, Chicago's
HERALD ROOFING CO.
famed Reform rabbi.
Local Independent Roofer
A Canadian, Henry Joseph, was
the next Jew to participate in
Free Estimates
American
football. Joseph was a
Hot Tar or Residential Shingles
member of the McGill side that
543 - 5100 or Res. 676-5070 met Harvard in 1874. Three games
were played and Harvard won two.
The Harvard-McGill contests were
LARKINS MOVING CO. 1 important because they empha-
Household and Office Furniture sized running with the ball, rather
Local and Inter-state
than kicking it.
Also storage.
Lucius Littauer, the future
894-4587
"Glove King of America," joined

Ladies alterations by Brenda Marczak.
533-8710.

57-FOR SALE-HOUSEHOLD
GOODS AND FURNISHINGS

BONE CHINA-Ascot by Wedgewood.
Complete service for 12 plus serving
pieces. Never used. 352-4087 after 6

p.m.

USED gas stove for sale. For informa-

tion call 398-0376.

Intergroup Cooperation

BOSTON (JTA) - More than 50
Maine teachers, school administra-
tors and police officials are par-
ticipating in a 15-week course in
intergroup relations and education
offered by the Portland Public
School System and the New•Eng-
land region of the American Jew-
ish Committee, with a special
grant from the Portland Jewish
Federation.

Friday, October 17, 1969-45

Noted Gridiron Stars

Grnco ELECTRONIC

Full or Port-Time

31 - TRANSPORTATION

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

the Harvards the following year
as a lineman. He also played in
1877, and in 1881 became Har-
vard's first football coach. Lit-
tauer later served 10 years as a
Congressman from New York
State.

Philadelphia's Edwin Hyneman

played football at Penn in 1887-88.
The Quakers met Rutgers at Nev,
York's Madison Square Garden in
football's first indoor game in 1887. '
Hyneman also played baseball and
captained the Penn nine in 1889.
He was a part owner of the Phila-
delphia Phillies for many years.
Another Penn athlete was Sidney
M. Cone. Cone became the first
footballer to per f or m at two
schools. He was at Johns Hopkins
in 1888-89, and with Penn in 1891.
When Syracuse University formed
its initial football squad in 1889.
Sam Jacobson, a professional
player, helped the team get started.
Jacobson became a dentist.
One of college football's all-time
greats appeared at Princeton in
1890. Phil King, a barrel-chested
speedster from Washington, D.C.,
won All-America honors at both
halfback and quarterback in 1890-
93. In 1893 King helped end Yale's
37-game winning streak as he led
the Tigers to an undefeated and
untied season. He captained Prince.
ton in 1892, and two years later be-
came the school's first paid ath-
letic coach.
King earned a law degree and
moved to the University of Wis-
consin in 1896. He was the
Badgers' head coach for eight
years. Wisconsin won the West-
ern Conference championship in
1896-97, and was co-champion in
1901. In nine years as head foot-
ball coach at Princeton and
Wisconsin, King's teams compil-
ed a 74-14-1 record. He is a mem-
ber of the College Football Hall
of Fame.
From 1893 to 1901, the three
Taussig brothers, John, Joseph and

Charles, played for Cornell and

Lowenthal in 1898 01. He earned
All-Western and All-America hon-
orable mention at center for the
University of Illinois in 1901, and
coached his alma mutter in 1904-05
and 1912. He was a Chicago - attor-
ney.
Famed Atlanta lawyer, Harold
Hirsch, played center for the
University of Georgia in 1900,
and Benjamin I.. Rosenbloom
was a tackle at the University of
%Vest Virginia in 1900-01. Rosen-
bloom became an attorney and
served in Congress from 1921-25.

Sig Harris joined the University
of Minnesota football team as a

substitute quarterback in 1901. In
1902-04 he was a first-stringer, and
in 1903 - 04 a third team Walter
Camp All-America. Harris guided
Minnesota to the Western Confer-
ence co-championships in 1903 - 04,
and in 1903 played against Michi-
gan in the game that inaugurated
the famed Little Brown Jug series.
Harris served his alma mater as
an assistant coach for many years.
Another standout quarterback of
the 1903 season was Nathan Silver
of Notre Dame. His team was un-
defeated and untied. Alfred A.
Strauss performed at halfback for
the undefeated University of Wash-
ington Huskies in 1902-03. He be-
came a Chi
Football changed for the better
in 1906 when new rules elminated
much of the sport's brutality. Inci-
dents such as the one reported in
the Nov. 1905, Alumni Register of
Pennsylvania, pointed up the prob-
lem: “Levine was knocked out
three times in the first half
(against Harvard) and after each
occasion was barely able to get back
into play. At the close of the half.
Levene fainted on the way to the
dressing room and had to be resus-
citated on the field."
Israel (Izzy) Levine was a third
team Walter Camp All-America
end in 1905-06. He served as head
coach at the University of Tennes-
see in 1907-09, and as an assistant
coach at his alma mater in 1920.
John Nathan Levine was another
Ivy Leaguer who became a head
coach in the South after his playing
days were over. An All-East full-
back at Yale, Levine coached
Davidson in 1908: Auburn, 1909 and
at Transylvania College in 1910-11.

London Journal Predicts
Victory for Neither Side

LONDON (ZINS) - There will
be no repetition of the astounding
air victory by Israel that marked
the onset of the Six-Day War, ac-
cording to the military expert
writing for the London Economist.
Both Israel and the Arabs have
dispersed their air forces to avoid
catastrophic destruction by one
massive blow.
The Economist makes the
point that Israel need not now
rely on firing the first shot, be-
cause her improved boundaries
provide a margin for repelling
any land attack. In the event of
war, says the Economist, an
easy victory could not be achiev-
ed by either side. Neither side
may expect to attain decisive
air superiority; therefore
a
major land offensive is unlikely.
Israel. for example, while quite
capable of crossing the Suez
Canal for the purpose of smash-
ing Egyptian artillery positions,
could not stay there and would
have to return to her original
lines.
The Egyptians could venture a
crossing from their side and then
also return. And the same general-
ly holds true for the Jordanian
front. where Jordan's regular
forces are supplemented by some
12,000 Iraqi troops. in the prevail-
ing circumstances, says the Eco-
nomist. any sustained offensive by
either side would end in failure.

Navy. John and Charles were Cor-
nell ends, while Joe quarterbacked
the Navy eleven. Joseph Taussig
ended his distinguished naval ca-
. reer as a vice - admiral.
As a manager of Manhattan 1
Field in 1894-95, Andrew Freedmen
introduced big-time football to New
York City. Freedman became fa-
mous as the owner of baseball's
New York Giants.
Ferd Kaufman was a member of
the Georgia Tech team in 1893, and
Jacob (Rosy) Rosenthal represent-
' ed Notre Dame in 1894-96. A huge
man, Rosenthal played center.
The estimated cost of two day's
guard and tackle for the Fighting
Irish. 1-le0)ecarne a Detroit physi- , shelling across the Suez Canal is
I
5,000,000
Israeli pounds (almost
cian.
The Midwest contributed Fred 81,500 00),

