Newspaper Page Text
Friday, Dec. 12, 1969
THE SOtmWtN ISRAELITE
Page Seven
SILVER ON SPORTS .... by Jess Silver
Football — The 1930
With more football scholar
ships available in the 1930s, an
even greater number of Jewish
players found places on All-
American teams. Gabriel Brom
berg of Dartmouth was a third
team All-America selection at
guard at 1931, while Maurice
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BUCKUEAD
“Mush” Dubofsky of George
town, rated honorable mention
at the same position the follow
ing year. Today, after a long
career as a high school coach,
Dubofsky is head coach of his
alma mater’s club football
team.
Another future head football
coach, Sid Gillman, starred at
end for Ohio State during the
same period. An honorable men
tion All-America in 1932-33,
Gillman began his coaching ca
reer at his alma mater in 1934.
He served as head football
coach at Miami of Ohio and
Cincinnati before moving to the
pros in 1955. He was head coach
of the Los Angeles Rams until
1959 when he shifted to the
Chargers.
Forced to retire from coach
ing this season because of illness,
Gillman remains with San Diego
as general manager. He led the
Chargers to five divisional^ and
one AFL championship. Gillman
compiled a 192-102-9 record in
his 25 years as a head coach.
In 1930-32 the Big Ten had a
standout pair of backs in Harry
Newman o f Michigan and
Charles “Buckets” Goldenberg
of Wisconsin. Goldenberg play
ed professional football for 13
years, mainly as a guard, and
was recently named to the NFL’s
All-1930s team. Newman, a
quarterback, was a unanimous
All-America first team choice in
1932 when he led the Wolverines
to a 8-0-0 record and the na
tional championship. He played
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in the pros for five years.
With Aaron Rosenberg at
guard in 1931-33, the University
of Southern California lost but
two games. The Trojans com
piled a 30-2-1 record that in
cluded two Rose Bowl victories
and a national championship. A
first team All-America in 1932-
33, Rosenberg today is a top mo
tion picture producer and a
member of the College Football
Hall of Fame. He was recent
ly named to the second team on
the All-Time College Football
squad selected by the Football
Writers’ Association of Ameri
ca.
An end at Brown in 1931-32,
Frank Meadow earned third
team All-America honors in his
senior year. No Bruin player has
received that high a rating since.
Ed Kahn performed at guard for
North Carolina in 1932-34 and
with the pros in 1935-37. He
served in the Marines during
World War II and in 1945 was
killed in action in the Philip
pines.
Fullbacks were brilliant in
in 1934, especially in Pennsyl
vania. Izzy Weinstock played for
Pittsburgh in the 1933 Rose
Bowl Game, and the following
year made first team All-Amer
ica. He played three years of
pro ball. Another fullback who
turned professional, Dave Smuk-
ler, was a third team All-
America choice at Temple in
1944. A 60 minute performer
in the first Sugar Bowl contest.
Smukler was recently named
to the new Temple University
Hall of Fame.
First team All-America guards
appeared at Alabama and Cor
nell in 1937 and 1938. Leroy
Monsky captained the Crimson
Tide to a 9-1-0 record in 1937,
and A. Sidney Roth played in
the East-West game after a
sensational season with the Big
Red in 1938.
One of College football’s most
highly publicized backs came on
the scene at Pittsburgh in 1936.
Marshall Goldberg led the Pan
thers to a victory in the 1937
Rose Bowl and a national
championship that same year. A
first team All-America at half
back in 1937, Goldberg shifted
to fullback in Pitt’s Dream
Backfield the following year was
a unanimous first team All-
America choice. Goldberg was a
great defensive star in the pros
for eight years. He is a mem
ber of the College Football Haii
of Fame.
A somewhat less publicized
back, Sid Luckman, played for
Columbia at the same time
Goldberg was appearing with
Pittsburgh. Luckman was just
as brilliant, but with a far less
talented group of helpers. He
was a third team All-America in
1937, and a second team choice
the following year. Luckman of
course went on to greatness with
the Chicago Bears and is a mem
ber of both the College and Pro
Football Halls of Fame.
Although he wasn’t an All-
American, we can’t forget Art
Gottlieb of Rutgers. Gottlieb
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lifted Rutgers to a 20-18 vic
tory over Princeton in 1938 on
a fourth-down touchdown pass
with just five minutes to play.
It was Rutgers’ second triumph
over the Tigers. The first had
occurred in college football’s
initial contest in 1869.
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