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degree from Ohio State although he was awarded an honorary
doctorate in 1972. This doctorate he said he acquired for his wits
and his charm. He received dozens of awards including Americans
highest civilian decoration the Medal of Freedom Award at the White
House in 1976. President Ford presented the medal, with the 250-member
US Olympic team in attendance.
Owens
returned to the White House in 1979, where President Carter presented
him with the Living Legend Award. On that occasion President
Carter said, "A young man who possibly didnt even realize
the superb nature of his own capabilities went to the Olympics and
performed in a way that I dont believe has ever been equaled
since
and this superb achievement, he has continued in his
own dedicated but modest way to inspire others to reach for greatness."
Posthumous
recognization
The
street leading to the Olympic Stadium was renamed Jesse Owens
Allee at Munich in 1982. His widow Ruth and family attended
that dedication ceremony as guests of the German government.
The
Congressional Gold Medal was presented to Owens in 1990, by President
Bush. Ruth took the honor from the President.
A
young black man, the son of a sharecropper and grandson of a slave,
Owens achieved what no Olympic athlete before him had accomplished.
Fueled by the need of others and despite the setbacks and poverty
he faced before and after the Olympics, Owens was a citizen of the
world and a source of hope, inspiration, pride and determination
to the millions who knew him or knew of him and his enduring accomplishments
during his 66-year lifetime.
New
York Times athletics correspondent Frank Litsky remembers Jesse
: "Jesse was a nice human being. He was warm, hed put
his arm around you, hed tell you a story, he was full of stories
and they were nice stories, they were inspiring. When you left him
you had a feeling that something good had happened and you smiled.
Your day had been made and he did that for a lot of people."
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