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Dinner speci*ne withcorlimentary rice or -hocolate pudding orfjello IN( balm OPEN 7 DAYS: Serving Beer & Wine MON.- SAT. 7 a.m.- 9:30 p.m. SUN. 8 a.m.- 9 p.m. Now 4 Bloomfield Plaza • 6638 Telegraph Road and Maple • 248-851-0313 www.thegalleryrestaurant2.com 62 April 24 • 2014 JN The more you put into it, the more you have a fair chance to win:' In addition to the contributions from major collectors like Goldstein and Cooper, the exhibition features numerous artifacts from fans across the country that participated in the museum's Tumblr blog that ran during the 2013 season. "We created the site to allow us to go to the general public and ask them, `What are your baseball memories, do you have a baseball artifact, do you have a story behind it?"' Perelman explained. The response, he said, was over- whelming. Thousands of replies yielded treasures like the story of Esther Schimmel, a St. Louis Cardinals fan and entrepreneur who realized that there was money to be made by selling hot dogs to hungry fans parking in the lots surrounding the Cardinals' new stadium in the 1950s. She kept strictly kosher, Perelman said, so in order not to have contact with the non-kosher dogs she was sell- ing, she would only hold the bun and spear the hot dog to put it in the bun. The museum will have her grease- stained chef coat on display alongside a photo of her serving hot dogs to two young children. To help "Chasing Dreams" appeal to as many people as possible, the show includes material about players and notables from other minorities, includ- ing Jackie Robinson, Hank Aaron, Orlando Cepeda and Ichiro Suzuki. The 2,400-square-foot exhibition will be complemented by a dedicated website, educational and public pro- gramming, and an illustrated cata- logue. Perelman said the staff has done an enormous amount of outreach to schools, camps, religious groups and more to encourage them to visit the exhibition and take part in the vari- ous related programming that will be taking place, including movie series, a Father's Day event and a speaker series featuring baseball notables. After closing in Philadelphia on Oct. 26, the exhibition will travel to other museums around the country. Additionally, a panel version has been created for baseball stadiums, local historical societies, libraries, com- munity centers and synagogues (more information is available at chasingdreams.nmajh.org). Official Major League player Lipman Pike's "Baseball" Record, 1886. Five years after the 41-year-old Pike had made his last Major League appearance, he was still making headlines — and in the very first daily newspaper dedicated entirely to the national game. Rudolph Kalish, third baseman for the Live Oak of Cincinnati, an amateur club that lost twice to the fabled Cincinnati Red Stockings, 1870 And if the exhibition sparks visitors to begin their own collection of memo- rabilia, it couldn't come at a better time. For their part, both Goldstein and Cooper are giving up their collections. Goldstein is looking for a single entity willing to keep his artifacts together while Cooper is selling his games through Heritage Auctions in Texas. Cooper has no plans to abandon the game he loves; he just thinks the time has come for someone else to explore baseball's unique relationship with its fans and history. "It's timeless:' he said. "It has always been there, and it will always be there — even through the Black Sox scandal, the drinking, the steroids — just like the Jewish religion. "Even through millennia of persecu- tion, we are always there. I guess it's a reflection of what we are made out of — and it's the same thing with base- ball:' ❑ "Chasing Dreams" will be on view at the National Museum of American Jewish History through Oct. 26, 2014. The museum is located at 101 South Independence Mall East at the corner of Fifth and Market Streets in Philadelphia. Museum hours are 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday to Friday, and 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. NMAJH is closed most Mondays, including federal holidays and some Jewish holidays. Museum admission: $12 adults/$11 senior citizens and youth/free children 12 and under. (215) 923-3811; nmajh.org .