Friday, December 10, 1982 59 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friedman's Career Boosted Jewish Pride 1 (Continued from Page 58) quoted Grange as having the game. said of Friedman that he Perhaps it is only what was "the best quarterback I the passage of years has ever played against." done to my memory but it Grange also recalled that "I seems that some of the best saw Benny take terrific newspaper writing then and beatings in professional now was that of the old mas- football, yet I never heard ters like Heywood. Broun him cry about it. The big writing about the big games ends and tackles always in the Sunday papers. And tried harder to discourage a for actual view of the salient great passer in pro football moments of the game, you than in the college game but went to the neighborhood they never discouraged Be- movie and saw the news- nny." reels. Back in the 1920s, we Benny Friedman's didn't have too many fig- playing years coincided ures to idolize and to brag with those of some of the about. True, we boasted of a greatest football players Brandeis and Cardozo and of all time, including Red of a genius like Charles Grange, the "Galloping Steinmetz but they weren't Ghost" of the University the currency of the give- of Illinois team. They and-take of the street corner clashed on the Big Ten or in the gym. gridiron and in profes- We didn't have many sional football, which idols that the non-Jewish Benny played for seven world also accepted as years after Michigan, in heroes. We sought them Cleveland, Detroit, New -desperately. Benny Fried- York and Brooklyn. man came on the scene at The New York Times just the moment our uni- formed Jewish ego needed him most. , FRANK PAUL In his foreword to the and His ORCHESTRA book "The Jew in the Making of America" pub- DUOS — TRIOS lished in 1924 by the SOLOISTS 557-7986 JERUSALEM (JNI) — Some practical steps to set- tle and industrialize the Galilee were taken by Israel last month. Iscar Industrial Products opened a $10 million tool (ENGRAVED FREE 24-HR. SERVICE) JEWELERS Z CO'S Sabbath Psalm Softens Image of Destruction OF LATHRUP 424-8733 28480 Southfield R.d Lathrup Village M, T, W, F 9-6 Thurs til 8, Sat til 4 — By RABBI SAMUEL FOX (Copyright 1982, JTA, Inc.) — — IIE OE WS WO WI MI i LET US NARROW -I YOUR TIES I • , WE'LL PROFESSIONALLY I RECUT AND RESTYLE YOUR WIDE TIES. ' I 1 I • LOOK FASHIONABLE I AND SAVE MONEY ! I I I 1,1 1 • INQUIRE ABOUT OUR 1 CUSTOM TIES. I Ties By Alex Originals I I 1 111. 21700 GREENFIELD SUITE 332, OAK PARK 968-3748 EN mi ,-- BILL MEYER MUSIC 355-2721 PEOPLE'S CHOICE 459-7287 INNO- VATIONS 589-2478 using this discriminatory system 10 years ago. Benny Friedman's gridi- ron achievements certainly didn't topple these barriers but they were probably more effective in changing the attitude of the academic officials and alumni respon- sible for them than most of the logic and appeals to jus- tice to which Jewish leaders resorted. Athletics, then as now, were big business to the big universities and dis- criminatory rules that deprived them of poten- tial Benny Friedmans weren't good sense. We'll remember Benny Friedman. He elated us and he made us 10 feet tall. 1 1 II While it is incumbent upon a Jew never to forget Jerusalem during the course of his experiences, and he may experience a moment of regret and sad- ness during the week, on the Sabbath and holidays the atmosphere must not be marred with a spirit of re- gret and sadness. Thus an- other Psalm is substituted for the 137th Psalm, which deals with the destruction of the Temple. This Psalm (the 126th) also brings to mind Jerusalem and Zion, but in a context of happy expecta- tion. The Psalm speaks of the dream of the return to Zion. It speaks of the steps that served as the platform of the Levites in their ex- perience of happiness in the Temple of Jerusalem. It emphasizes the ex- pectation that the cries of woe will turn into the laughter of joy, that the frowns of regret will turn into the smile of homecoming. Out of the concern for the present will come the dream of the future yet to be realized. Thus the Jew is fulfilling his requirement to re- member the Temple that was once destroyed without sinking into an atmosphere of gloom, and aspiring to the future of hope. manufacturing plant in Te- fen, marking the first stage in the company's three- pronged pioneering pro- gram to integrate high technology in the sparsely- populated region. Over the next three years, the firm plans to relocate its remain- ing four divisions from Nahariya to Tefen. The Israel land adminis- tration and the Jewish Agency have also begun a large-scale campaign to encourage Jewish settle- ment in the Galilee, by rapid expansion of observa- tion post settlements (Mitzpim). ,,p /Inv, rrs," STRICTLY KOSHER MEAT MARKET 13831 W. 9 Mile Rd., Oak Park 543-7092 GLATT KOSHER MEATS 5 YEAR ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS Any cut LAMB CHOPS ' $2 99 lb. First cut VEAL CHOPS $2 99 lb. Second cut VEAL CHOPS $2.39 lb. Any cut ROAST or POT ROAST (trimmed) $2 29 lb. FLANKEN & RIB STEAK $2.29 lb. 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In others, they had a geo- graphical setup with admis- sions, except for the sons of alumni, restricted by states with admissions from states like New York and New Jersey with their relatively large proportion of Jewish applicants most severely re- stricted. Purdue Univer- sity, in Indiana, was still rffraY. Frrt-, ADAS KOSHER POULTRY SAVE 130 3 9 8 40-0Z. BTL. 99t SAVE 454 SAVE 1.30 TABATCHNIK SOUP. ASSTD. FLAVORS 15-OZ. PKG. SUPER mums PRUNE JUICE SAVE 32' MANISCHEWITZ TAM TAMS 8-0Z 7 BOX TELEGRAPH/LONG LAKE IN BLOOMFIELD TWP. ORCHARD LAKE/13 MILE RD. IN FARMINGTON HILLS TELEGRAPH & MAPLE RD. BLOOMFIELD PLAZA 12 MILE/EVERGREEN IN SOUTHFIELD t SAVE 34' MOST STORES OPEN DAILY KOSHER FOODS AVAILABLE AT: • • • • 9 8 A.M. TO 10 P.M. SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU DEC. 16, 1982. NO SALES TO DEALERS. DETROIT BAGEL FACTORY HOLIDAY SPECIAL I SUPER DOZEN SPECIAL$ DELI LOCATIONS AND BAGEL FACTORIES 7 MILE & MIDDLEBELET SUPER DOZEN 14 MILE & ORCHARD LAKE RD. 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