"Much-heralded Star Deli slow-cooks its own tender temptations" Glove Story from page 59 — Danny Raskin, 2012 I ITAn / THE SENSATIONAL BASE BALL SONG B . i il i < -.3 Tom, .1-N •e/ACKiN012W0121111 MUSIC. EVe ,.,,,‘.. )/1 ALBERT-VoNTILZERz___— Above: Esther Schimmel behind the hot dog stand she ran in St. Louis Mo., circa 1940s. Left: Sheet music for "Take Me Out to the Ball-Game," by Jack Norworth and Jewish American songwriter Albert Von Tilzer, 1908. said. His first purchase of a collection that now numbers in the hundreds was a photo of Izzy Goldstein, who pitched for the Detroit Tigers in 1932. Collecting these items also serves as a way to keep him connected to his Jewishness and to Judaism, he said. And it appeals to his preservationist side. "I'm a historian at heart:' he said. "It gives me a sense of pleasure to preserve these things that will tell the story about these Jewish guys — who made the Major Leagues, who didn't — and why." The two most famous Jews to make the Major Leagues are given their due in the exhibition. Hank Greenberg, the legendary Detroit Tigers slugger, and Sandy Koufax, the Los Angeles Dodger acclaimed as one of the greatest pitch- ers to ever play the game, both are featured prominently. The museum has even expanded the exhibition to its concourse level for an interactive Koufax experience. "Koufax Koncourse" will allow visitors to don a replica Koufax jersey and pitch off of a regulation pitcher's mound — with Neff balls, of course, not the real thing. "We certainly highlight those two:' Perelman said. "They not only achieved so much as players — they also earned their place in history because of the choices they made about how they articulated their iden- tities, of how they presented them- selves as Jews so that they could fit in but also teach in some way" The exhibition doesn't just devote space to each player's accomplish- ments on the field and as role models for Americans, Jewish and otherwise. It pairs them with other minority players of their time who also were trailblazers in the sport and society. Greenberg's importance is shown in tandem with that of Joe DiMaggio, the Yankee Clipper. As an Italian-American in the first half of the 20th century, DiMaggio had to overcome discrimination as well, Perelman noted. In addition to their on-field exploits, the exhibition shows that what also helped cement Greenberg's and DiMaggio's place in the sport's firma- ment was their early commitment to fight in World War II. Similarly, Koufax, who became a hero to Jews everywhere for his coura- geous decision to sit out Game 1 of the 1965 World Series because it fell on Yom Kippur, shares space with Roberto Clemente. The Pittsburgh Pirate, who became the first Latino player to achieve superstar status, devoted his time and popularity to raise awareness about equality and race before his life was cut short in a plane crash while on a relief mission to Nicaragua in 1972. Among the more unusual Koufax memorabilia on display is Strike-Out with Sandy Koufax, a 1963 board game that promised to teach players to learn how to pitch like the Hall- of-Famer. It is one of the hundreds of baseball-related board games in the collection of Dr. Mark Cooper, a Philadelphia radiologist. In his case, Cooper, 62, is acknowl- edged by the Smithsonian for hav- ing the most complete collection of baseball-themed board games in exis- tence. Cooper's collection, which he amassed over 32 years, encompasses virtually every baseball-themed board game made between the 1860s and 1960s and has been the subject of its own book, Baseball Games: The Home Version of the National Pastime, and a yearlong show at the Baseball Hall of Fame Museum in Cooperstown, N.Y. Cooper, who also helps run fantasy baseball camps, where those who can afford the price tag can spend a week playing and kibitzing with retired Major Leaguers, said that one of the benefits of immersing himself in this aspect of the game is that it has helped him connect to the history of America and of American Jews. "Baseball has been a huge part of the migration of Jews to the U.S. and becoming assimilated" he said, adding that the game has done the same for all races and religions. "I love what it stands for; it's so egalitarian, it's so fair. Order your AR Li Holiday Trays & wir Specialties today! di COMPARE OUR LOW PRICES WITH ANY DELICATESSEN IN TOWN! 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