European Stars And Stripes (Newspaper) - August 16, 1986, Darmstadt, Hesse Page 26 the stars and stripes saturday August 16,1986 Dorsett Schramm end Trade dispute thousand Oaks Calif. A Dallas cowboys president Tex Schramm says he will nol Trade Tony Dorset even though the 10-year Veteran running Back fumed Over Herschel Walker s five year $5 million told him i did t even intend to talk about trading him Schramm said thursday after meeting with Dorset. We d never Trade Tony. He is too much a part of our Dorset said he wanted to be traded or Given a raise in View of the Deal mad with Walker a refugee from the Usel who came to terms wednesday. Dorset warned that if his demands were not met he could be a disruptive Force on the said Tony would like to pull Back what he said. He feels sorry he let it flow out. He did t mean it. He was just mad and being egged on by the . Who receives an annual salary of about $450,000 plus benefits agreed he go out of , Dorset did not apologize. My feelings Haven t changed a great Deal Dorset said. "1 had a Nice conversation with Tex so they would know where my head is at and i know where they Are at. I think the contract surprised everybody and i showed some immaturity. It was a fit of asked if he would take Back what he said wednesday Dorsett said i would take Back yesterday. Instead of saying things publicly i should have gone a Hind closed doors and 1 might have handled it a lot better. Today is a new Dorsett added i would like to say it was uncharacteristic of me then Dor sett did no repeal his demands that he wanted to be traded but did not take it about the reaction of the fans he said i m not worried about the boo Birds. They Don t put bread and butter on the table. They have a tendency to forgive and said he and Dorsett Shook hands before he left. Sure he was still a Little Hurt but hell be of. He s a Good kid a Good of Schramm said things would be Fine once Walker gets Back to will Calm Down life goes on Schramm said. We be got a football game coming Walker who was expected to practice in a cowboys uniform for the first time Friday agreed to a guaranteed contract if he would renegotiate Dor sett s contract Schramm replied i feel comfortable with his Dorset who had fallen into financial trouble Over sour business ventures missed training Camp last year until the cowboys renegotiated his contract. Dorsett originally welcomed the thought of playing in the same Backfield with another Heisman trophy Winner but was steamed when details of Walker s contract came this team does not pay me like they Are paying their other Back i would Sug Gest strongly that the team try to Trade me or pay me because i la be very unhappy and. I can be a very disruptive Force said Don t want to be Here. When you pay a Guy More than me you be told me he s your Back. I m not second fiddle to was to return from personal business in new Jersey and attend but not play in saturday night s exhibition game in los Angeles against the raiders. Schramm said he can remember Grum bling among the cowboys players when Dorsett was signed in 1977."it s just a historic thing Schramm said. Tony came in As the Heisman Tro Phy Winner out of Pittsburgh and got a big salary and some of the veterans started grumbling. It happens every year with no. I draft choices. It s a fact of the Walker 24, the 1982 Heisman trophy Winner set a professional football Rush ing record for one season with 2,411yards for the new Jersey generals in 1985.quarterback Joe Montana c f the san Francisco 49ers is believed to be the highest paid player in the nil at an Esti mated $1.3 million a year. Quarterback John Elway signed a five year contract with the Denver Broncos for $5 million. Choke Job Greg Norman opens wide after blowing hot in wednesday s opening round of the International Golf tournament in Castle a photo Rock Colo. Two Days before he blew a four stroke Lead and finished second to Bob Tway in the pea. For Peeve s Sake if was thundering Castle Rock Colo. A Cal Vin Peete May or May not have Cost himself 550,000 wednesday when he was disqualified in the first round of the new unique International tournament. Peete was disqualified after he walked in after completing 17 holes and when a Siren sounded halting play in the and Vance of an approaching thunderstorm. At that Point Peete had minus five Points and had no Chance of qualifying for second round play under the modified stableford system used for scoring in this tournament. He did not return to the course when play resumed. He did not sign his scorecard. That failure to sign his card caused him to be disqualified. Peete leads two of the year Long Statis tical categories on the pea tour greens hit in regulation and driving accuracy. At the conclusion of the season the Winner of each statistical category will receive $25,000. But a Rule that went into effect last season stipulates that no player is eligible for consideration As a statistical Leader if he is disqualified at any time during the season. Pea tour commissioner Deane Bucman was asked if this will apply in this Case in which there is a different scor ing system in effect and in a tournament on which statistics Are not being kept. Will if Peete be made ineligible i Don t know Beman said. Well have to Glickman from Page 23 three Gold medals. I m tired. Let Marty and Sam run. They deserve it Cromwell pointed his Finger at Jesse and said you la do As you re told " that was the end of it. Owens and Metcalfe replaced Stoller and Glickman and the 400-meter relay team set a world record. Owens and Metcalfe were Black Draper and Wykoff were White. Robinson the Only other person at that meeting still alive also wonders about the motives. They had the two fastest runners in the world Jesse Owens and Ralph Metcalfe he said in a recent phone conversation from California. But Wykoff ran across the finish line. What does that Tell you two Days before the meeting in the Bungalow Robertson had been asked who would make up the relay team. Would Jesse Owens get a Chance to win his fourth Gold medal and the Little Oak tree seedling Given to each Winner Owens has had enough glory and collected enough Gold medals and Oak Trees to last him awhile Robertson had said. Then Robertson named his relay team Marty Glick Man Sam Stoller Frank Wykoff and either Foy Draper or Ralph Metcalfe. So what happened were the american coaches forced to make a change to keep two jewish runners from the Victory stand in Berlin did the change also enable a White american to Flash across the finish line and take a Little of the sting away from the nazi hosts this is one Day in my life that i la remember to my dying Days Stoller wrote in a diary that he shared with William o. Johnson in Johnson s 1972 Book All that glitters is not Stoller who died in May 1985, called the incident the most humiliating Epi Sode in my the olympic games would never be the same after Berlin. They became an Opportunity for nations to prove something to the world even if that proof came in so simple a form As who won a foot race. The germans had adopted the Nuernberg Laws in september 1935, limiting jewish citizenship rights and in the . There Rose a Call to Boycott. The dispute entered on whether the germans had accepted All the olympic codes for their grand show including a Gua Rantee that All athletes could compete for a spot on their teams. Avery Brundage president of the american olym Pic association praised the German methods and accepted their propaganda. He said he was Given Assur ances that there will be no discrimination against but there was. The Best women s High jumper in Germany those years was a 21-year-old named Gretel Bergman on june 30, 1936, she tied the German High jump record at 5 feet 3 inches that height would have earned her a Silver medal in the olympics. But she was jewish and she did t compete. When the american olympic association voted on the Issue in december 1935. The Brundage cause prevailed by the slim margin of 58 votes to 55the Day after the relay team won the Gold medal Glickman was walking across the immaculate Lawn of the Village which was to become housing for Wehr Macht troops. He heard someone Call. I turned and saw Lawson Robertson lumbering toward me Glickman says. He walked with a can and moved very slowly. He came up to me and said i just wanted to apologize to you. We have caused a terrible injustice. I m sorry " Stoller s diary recalled a conversation he had with Robertson on Board the ship the Roosevelt on the trip Home coach Robertson came up to me today on Board ship and very apologetically admitted that he had made a terrible mistake by not letting me Sam Stoller left Berlin saying he would never run again. But he did competing for Michigan and win Ning the College sprint championship. He had a fling in movies being known As singing Sam Stoller and be came a broadcast executive. Owens became an american hero. Glickman figured ill show these Guys in 1940." but by 1940, world War ii had begun and the games scheduled for Tokyo were cancelled. In the fall of 1936 he returned to Syracuse where he became a football Star. One Day a local haberdasher asked him to do a radio program sponsored by his clothing store hoping to Cash in on the football player s notoriety and Glickman became a broadcaster. Over the years he became the most familiar voice among Many outstanding sports announcers to new York sports fans. His Home is filled with mementos of his Success As an athlete and broadcaster. There is no olympic medal. I still firmly believe the olympics is one of the most important methods of bringing together the youth of the world to know each other to love each other and understand each other Glickman says. I did that. But Sam and i became the unfortunate objector
