HEALTH & FITNESS FELSENFELD sports ORAL SURGERY & DENTAL IMPLANTS Now OFFERING NON-SURGIL \I ACIAI Brown Bomber lUVFNATION BOTO\O COSMETIC Boxing maven gets Joe Louis award. JUVE DE RMO XC CALL TODAY! 313-562-1515 PRI VE t 11 Steve Stein Special to the Jewish News K RADIKS1CD D lAl ISt® ROBERT B. FELSENFELD D.D.S. PC 22731 Newman Street • Suite 240 - Dearborn • MI WWW.FELSENFELDORALSURGERY.COM 1601080 Contacting HealthCall is the First Step to Maintaining Quality Life at Home Call 1-800-991-9933 Home Health Care and Private Duty Nursing Services At HealthCall, we provide a wide range of home care and private duty services to patients throughout Michigan, including: • Skilled Nursing Care Physical Therapy • Post Surgical Care • • Occupational Therapy • Diabetic Teaching Stroke Rehabilitation • Speech Therapy • Medical Social Work • Accepted payment includes private pay, long term care policies, private insurance plans, no fault auto insurance, workman's compensation, Medicare, and Medicaid. Every HealthCall employee must pass pre-employment skill level assessments as well as thorough background and reference checks. illealthCall www.healthcallhomecare.com Toll Free: 800.991.9933 CHRP A CHAP Accredited Agency. THE GALLERY RESTAURANT Enjoy gracious dining amid a beautiful atmosphere of casual elegance BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER MON.- SAT. 7 a.m.- 9:30 p.m. SUN. 8 a.m.- 9 p.m. Bloomfield Plaza • 6638 Telegraph Road and Maple • 248-851-0313 OPEN 7 DAYS: ..111111111.0.- 1603200 44 July _ . 2olo r. Stuart Kirschenbaum has a new jacket in his wardrobe. Right now, it hangs in his podiatry office in Detroit. When the weather turns cold, the jacket will do much more than keep him warm. Kirschenbaum received the Brown Bomber Jacket at the annual cer- emony that honors the memory of boxing champ Joe Louis, the fighter from Detroit known throughout the world as the "Brown Bomber." Jackets have been presented since 1992 by directors of the Joe Louis Video Memorial Room at the Cobo Center in Detroit to those who have made a difference in the lives of young people, as did Louis. "This is a wonderful honor and very humbling, especially when you consider those who are previous winners," said Kirschenbaum, who served as Michigan boxing commis- sioner from 1981-1992. Past recipients included President Jimmy Carter, U.S. Rep. John Conyers, D-Detroit, and Motown Records founder Berry Gordy Jr. Former Detroit Lions star and NFL Hall of Famer Charlie Sanders also received a jacket this year during ceremonies attended by nearly 250 at the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History in Detroit, where a "Joe Louis: Hometown Hero" exhibit will be on display through October. All the previous jacket ceremonies were held in the Video Memorial Room. Kirschenbaum equated receiving the jacket to being presented the green sports coat for winning the Masters golf tournament. It's more symbolism than functionality. "The jacket represents what Joe Louis stood for and meant to our country," he said. Louis will always have a spe- cial place in the hearts of Detroit's Jewish community for what he did June 22, 1938, New York's Yankee Stadium. He knocked out Max Schmeling barely two minutes into the first round of their fight. Schemling was from Germany, and one of his biggest and most vocal fans was Adolf Hitler. The jacket ceremony is held June Dr. Stuart Kirschenbaum wears his Brown Bomber jacket award. 22 each year to remember the date of that momentous knockout. Kirschenbaum has several ties to Louis besides being involved in the same sport and meeting Louis a few years before he died April 13, 1981, at age 66 in Las Vegas. In recognition of Kirschenbaum's humanitarian efforts, he received a "Joe Louis Award" from Sports Illustrated and the Detroit Institute of Arts in 1993. At the request of Louis' family, Kirschenbaum was Martha Louis' guardian during the final years of her life. After finding Joe Louis' second wife penniless and abandoned in a Farmington Hills nursing home in 1988, Kirschenbaum raised several thousand dollars for her care. When she died Aug. 2, 1991, he made sure she was buried next to Joe in Arlington National Cemetery outside Washington, D.C., as was Joe's wish. Kirschenbaum has one of the world's largest collections of Joe Louis memorabilia. One special item that could be part of his collection instead belongs to everyone. Working with the Michigan Jewish Sports Foundation and U.S. Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich. Kirschenbaum donated to the city a glove that Joe Louis wore in the Schmeling fight. Thanks to a fundraising effort, the glove is displayed in a granite show- case with the inscription, "The Glove that Beat Nazi Germany," behind a statue of Joe Louis at Cobo Center. Kirschenbaum was inducted last year into the Michigan Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. 1 Send news to sports@thejewishnews.com .