, ONE STOP (248) 569-31000 ax (248) 569-5801 KOSHER ;!:.'Vq;sMiNuK 1,i2;4104.00447,041 11111111 01.100108iftitelfelsoo4 Sports • 25040 504JF:4110.D nofro NE Corner of 20 Mite& kutin7eiti SOUTHFIELD, MI 48075 GROCERIES I CI-IAiNUKA SPECIALS: I •Milk Chocolate Coins in Mesh Bag •Parve Chocolate Coins in Mesh Bag • 1 oz. Chocolate Coins •Dreidle Jelly Bean Cane •Milk Chocolate Medallions •Parve Chocolate Medallions •Flower Mini Bar Gift Pack •Chocolate Gold Bar •Chanuka Candy Wallet •Candy Filled Candle •Treasure Chest •Chanuka Shapes •3 Coins with Dollar Bills •Small Plastic Dreidles •Ner lights Olive Oil Vials •Floating Wicks 120 ct. •Super Dreidle •Square Dreidle •Round Filled Dreidle 3/$ 1 °° 3/$1' 12` Si 79 65' 65' 9 79 45' 9 99 $269 $499 $249 69' 1 5' $219 $339 si 99 $1 09 89' We reserve the right to limit all sale items while quantities last. We are not responsibleibr any - typographical errors. Under supervision of Vaud Harabonim Orthodox Council ofGreater Detroit lkicr, WHERE YOU ALWAYS FIND IND THE PERFECT GIFT. T. HAPPY CHANUKAH from Ralph Greenbaum and the staff at RG Jewelry \ Holiday Hours: M—TH 10am-8pm, F 10a.m-5prri,,, Su 12-5pm HARVARD ROW MALL 21750 West 11 Mile Road • Southfield, MI (248) 358-5540 IMIESSMIUMBEI Discover the Difference TE 0 0 7 0 0 0 m Featuring qin nit Quality Yarns, Kits & More 12/26 1997 120 wh o , arc in Yarns and Service. a ll 248-355-1400 NORTHWESTERN HIGHWAY, BETWEEN 12 & 13 MILE ROADS Dan Dworsky in 1947 . . . . . . and 1997. Then & Now After graduating U-M in 1950 with a bachelor of architecture degree, he moved to California. He opened Dworsky Associates, a Los Angeks architecture firm, in 1953. Dworsky's project experience over the past 44 years has been wide- ranging. He's responsible for two major international entry points to the U.S., the United States Port of Entry at Calexico, Calif., and the Tom Bradley International Terminal at Los Angeles International Airport. One of his proudest accomplish- ments was designing U-M's Crisler Arena, home to the men's and women's basketball teams. The arena is named for Fritz Crisler who retired as football coach after the 1948 Rose Bowl. Crisler asked Dworsky if he would design the build- ing. "I was thrilled with the chance to do this," Dworsky said. "It's not too often that you have the opportunity to do this for your school. " Winning the national title in 1948 was big news around the country. "Professional football was not nearly as strong then, so college was what peo- ple paid attention to," he said. "But college football didn't get the coverage that it does now, because television was not as popular." The popularity of television has made it easy for Dworsky to follow his alma mater's run towards greatness. "I've been following the team, and this year has been very exciting," he said. "I admire the quality and strength of the defense. A great deal of their success depends on their intensity, and they've had the pride to create and maintain it throughout the season." LONNY GOLDSMITH StaffWriter n January 1, 1948, the ichigan Wolverines defeated the University of Southern California 49-0 in the Rose Bowl, which helped them to a national championship. Team member Dan Dworsky, a 20- year-old Jewish kid from St. Paul, Minn., was the defensive captain and a linebacker. , He, and the rest of that 1948 team, will be in Pasadena next Thursday for the 50,th anniversary of the last Michigan team to win a national tide. And to watch the current batch df Wolverines try to repeat the task Dworsky's team accomplished — bring a national crown back to Ann Arbor. "To this day, Notre Dame still claims that they were the national champs," a 70-year-old Dworsky said from his Los Angeles office. "We jumped over them in the Associated Press poll after beating USC. I think if we played them, we'd have matched up well." Dworsky arrived at U-M from Sioux Falls, S.D., where he went to high school. Growing up in the Twin Cities, he was a University of Minnesota fan, and he had a brother there, but had the chance to play at Michigan. "I felt I had a better opportunity to start at fullback as a freshman there," he said. "I also wanted to experience something else other than Minneapolis." Dworsky was a four-sport athlete at U-M, but lettered in only football and wrestling. He gave up wrestling after his sophomore year to concentrate on academics.