Sportscaster Marty Glickman, Excluded 1936 Olympian Otto Dube L arge chapel. Small chapel. Graveside. Cemetery chapel. We are without limitations in our ability to provide services that meet the exact needs of each family we serve. For nearly 60 years, we . have shown flexibility through unsurpassed responsiveness to Detroit's Jewish community. THE IRA KAUFMAN CHAPEL Bringing Together Family, Faith & Community THE KAUFMAN COMMUNITY CORNER congregational and day School kids participate in Tzedakah Experience at Temple Beth El, 9:30 am - noon, Sun, Jan 28, 2001 Tzedakah Experience teaches 5th-graders in schools about charity. Students also collect and recycle pennies and other coin's in a Penny Harvest. This year's event is scheduled Sun, Jan 28, 2001, from 9:30 am-noon, at Temple Beth El, 7400 Telegraph, Bloomfield Hills. Tzedakah Experience teaches students about the activities provided to the Jewish Federation and its supported agencies, and other local agencies. For more info, call Heidi Rehak (248) 203-1481 18325 West Nine Mile Road, Southfield, MI 48075 • Telephone: 248-569-0020 ." Toll Free: 800-325-7105 Please visit us at our web site: www.iralcaufinan.com Monuments & Markers • Monument Duplicating HEBREW MEMORIALS BY: HEBREW MEMORIAL CHAPEL SEInt3 Vatob set - pillar upon Der grebe: that is the pillar of 3karDel's grebe unto tDis bap SERVING ALL CEMETERIES (248) 543-3874 Fax #(248) 543-7421 26640 Greenfield Rd. Oak Park, MI 48237 tgenegis Expert Consultation - Select Quality Granite POTTER WAREHOUSE & TRANSFER CO. Agent, Wheaton World Wide Moving RESIDENTIAL - COMMERCIAL Local S Long Distance Packing Moving - Storage ,4F4 igpmemmunirr-- 4F r i-L40 A LS - 9 .m.2 5 RODNICK BROS., INC. Fruit & Gift Basket Specialists (810) 772-4350 IN 1/12 2001 122 to. Daily & Nationwide Delivery WE'RE NUMBER ONE SINCE 1940! 'A New York/JTA — Marty Glickman, a track star who believed he was denied a chance to run in the 1936 Berlin Olympics because he was Jewish and who later became a top sports announcer, died Jan. 3 at the age of 83. He died of complica- Marty Glickman tions from heart surgery, according to one of his daughters, Elizabeth Alderman. Glickman claimed that the coach in charge of the 400-meter relay team, who dropped him and Sam Stoller, another Jew, from the team the day before . the race, was a Nazi sympathizer. Glickman made similar charges against Avery Brundage, the head of Two Jews were dropped from the U.S. relay team in Berlin. the United States Olympic Committee. The charges were not proved, but in 1998, the president of the USOC said he believed Glickman's allega- tions were correct. That year, the committee present- ed Glickman with a plaque in lieu of the gold medal he would have earned as a member of the victori- ous relay team. The 1936 Olympics are notorious because they were staged by Hitler to demonstrate the superiority of Aryan culture. Ironically, the star of the Games was an African American, Jesse Owens — who won his fourth gold medal as one of the replacements for Glickman and Stoller. The son of a textile salesman and a homemaker, Glickman was born in the Bronx and raised in Brooklyn. Glickman later became well known as a sports announcer for New York professional sports teams. He was a radio announcer for the New York Knicks basketball team when they were formed in 1946 and later called games for both the New York Giants and New York. Jets foot- ball teams. Glickman is survived by his wife, two sons and two daughters. Photos Welcome The Jewish. News will be happy to publish photographs of the deceased in obituaries. There is no charge. Photos should be clear and as recent as possible. If only a dated photo is available, we ask that you provide a date and that information will accompany the photograph in the paper. Only a photo of the individual will be pub- lished and we reserve the right to reject any photo- graph. We cannot use scanned or electronic submis- sions. Please attach a label to the back of the photograph that includes the deceased's name as well as a return name and address. Do not write on the photograph itself. All photos must be received at The Jewish News by noon Tuesday to be con- sidered for that Friday's paper. To be returned, all pho- tographs must be accompa- nied by a stamped, self- addressed envelope.