58 Friday, December 10, 1982 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Benny Friedman's Football Career Aided Immigrant Generation By VICTOR BIENSTOCK that and more to a genera- Fielding "Hurry Up" tion of young American Yost, the great University Jews whose families had of Michigan football coach, newly emerged from the called Benny Friedman ghetto and were desperately "one of the greatest passers trying to become an integral and smartest quarterbacks part of American life. He in history." Benny was all of was a symbol and a promise Ladies Moderate to Better Sportswear, Lingerie & Dresses Always at least 200/o off retail _ i Frills & Thrills Boutique 23300 Providence Drive, Suite 106 Southfield, Michigan 48075 Located in back of Carlyle Tower Apt. Bldg. fie, if • NAOMI KUPFER Phone: (313) 557-5252 , ---,, _ --- titS Ass JEWELRY ., b■4:5- > 4,42_4r ____ c.. ° APPRAISALS ----- • * * ACMO CA OA V , 411E0 At Very Reasonable Rates 642-5575 call for an appointment of things to come. The first Jew to be named to Walter Camp's All- American football team — and that for three years in a row — and the first Jew in the football Hall of Fame, his achievement nearly 60 years ago was to many of u a major step in what th e The Jewish fighters were widely known and had their fierce adherents. Most young Jews knew their ring records and discussed them, as did many of their elders. The bearded," kaftan- wearing elders didn't go to the fights but they gravely sociologists ponderousl. discussed the outcome and term the acculturation c f its impact on the Jewish American Jewry. problem. Benny Friedman died b (Years later, they did go his own hands just befog to the Polo Grounds to see Thanksgiving. A note h the Vienna Hakoah play left in his New York apart and reacted anxiously to ment indicated that he ha i each roar of the crowd by been "severely depressed. tugging the sleeves of their The obituary notices erre l neighbors and asking anx- in describing him. as age iously — in Yiddish— "Is it 76; he must have been a t good for the Jews?") least five years older tha] But Benny Friedman was that. the first Jewish athlete to There had been Jewisl achieve national stardom in sports heroes in Americl amateur collegiate sports. long before Benny Professional fighting was Friedman. The sport: all very well but it was an columnists in what WI area regarded as belonging used to call the Anglo to immigrants and the sons Jewish weeklies woulc of immigrants — Irish, Ita- have been hard put i: lian, Slav and Jewish. It they hadn't had Benny wasn't the homespun, Leonard, the idol of the native-grown sport of heart- ghetto, Lou Tendler land America. Battling Kid Levinsk3 and other luminaries of f It / the ring to brag about Professional boxing wat I ' 30400 Telegraph Road then, for the Jews, as ii Suites 104, 134 had been for the Irish and Birmingham, Mi. 48010 the Slays — an escapE (313) 642-5575 from the poverty of the LAWRENCE M. ALLAN ghetto to fame, glory and Hours daily til 5:30, Sat. by appt. President sometimes, wealth. Bas. 443fr GEMOLOGIST 61 DIAMONTOLOGIST ketball does that-now for CHUCK & Bun FRUIT MKT. & DELI 13745 West 9 Mile (corner of W. Hampton) Hours weekda s 8-7, Sun. 7:30-5 543-8780 HAPPY HANUKA • Washington Delicious Michigan APPLES & PEARS . 49 POTATOES 79 . i 0 lb. bag lb. Sealtest HALVAH SOUR CREAM $209 lb. . 6 9 pt. Streits California . POTATO CELERY PANCAKE MIX 6 Wilno Domestic SALAMI SWISS CHEESE $ 299 lb. 1 or 2 lb. chubs $ 249 lb. Specials good while supply lasts .,.- JAttiz:kIt'Ai.c0:4414.'0g., • : . , • ',";-4 fts~aissainsamo.wm.-.0,, 4IP, 1, . ..e .1..* 31.• 41. 11P.SP and there were no con- venient time-outs for commercials. There weren't offensive and defensive squads. A man played his position on offense and on defense and played until the coach thought he had to be pulled out. Benny Friedman led the Michigan offense and when the opponents had the ball, backed up the line and directed the defense. If memory, doesn't betray me, some of the college Benny Friedman made us part of that scene; he gave the non-Jewish world in which we lived a new pic- ture of the American Jewish student — tall, strong and manly; no longer the thin, narrow-chested, bespecta- cled student of the caricaturist's vision, struggling beneath a moun- tainous pile of text-books, no longer the spectator re- legated to the bleachers or the scrawny assistant man- ager dashing out on the field with his' bucket of water when a player lay prone on the turf. Friedman wasn't our first collegiate idol but he was the first whom the non- Jewish world shared with us. There were other Jewish athletes — year after year, Nat Holman turned out championship basketball fives at New York's City College, most of them al- most entirely Jewish. But basketball was, in those days, a minor sport, and while we young Jews gloried in the regularity with which the City College quintet humbled its mighty neighbors, it just wasn't the same thing as bigtime foot- ball. Apwermtrofiatc.t.ifik-a****, '...***4•1.141§. games were given play-by- play coverage on radio, but more often we had to wait' for the news broadcasts to get the final scores and for the Sunday morning papers , to get a real description of HI (Continued on Page 59) LARRY FREEDMAN Orchestra and Entertainment 647-2367 MARTIN AND SUE WEISS STEVE & LORI OF College football and its autumnal Saturday af- ternoons were the es- sence of America and the teenage Jew did not feel he really belonged until he became part of that picture. College football, in those halycon, pre- television days, was a game by all-around athletes, not specialists in one phase of the game like drop-kicking. 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