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Baseball, Nazis & Nedick's Hot Dogs: Growing up Jewish the 1930s Newark
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Baseball, Nazis & Nedick's Hot Dogs: Growing up Jewish the 1930s Newark
Current price: $19.95
Barnes and Noble
Baseball, Nazis & Nedick's Hot Dogs: Growing up Jewish the 1930s Newark
Current price: $19.95
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Size: Paperback
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Jerry Izenberg has been a sports reporter and a columnist at the New Jersey
Star-Ledger
for over seventy years.
One of only two daily newspaper columnists to have covered the first 53 Super Bowls, Izenberg also covered 54 consecutive Kentucky Derbies and the last five Triple Crown-winning horses. And no one has covered more of Muhammad Ali's fights than he, dating back to the 1960 Olympics. A recipient of the Red Smith Award for sportswriting, he has been named the New Jersey Sportswriter of the Year five times. He is an inductee in 17 Halls of Fame, including the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Hall of Fame, the International Boxing Hall of Fame, and the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.
In his memoir,
Baseball, Nazis & Nedick's Hot Dogs: Growing up Jewish in the 1930s in Newark
, the nonagenarian author looks back on his first two formative decades of life. Somehow, during a fraught period of antisemitism, Depression, and World War, Izenberg finds love, community, and purpose. Today, he lives Henderson, Nevada, with his wife Aileen. He continues to contribute columns to the
Star Ledger
and is working on several books.
Star-Ledger
for over seventy years.
One of only two daily newspaper columnists to have covered the first 53 Super Bowls, Izenberg also covered 54 consecutive Kentucky Derbies and the last five Triple Crown-winning horses. And no one has covered more of Muhammad Ali's fights than he, dating back to the 1960 Olympics. A recipient of the Red Smith Award for sportswriting, he has been named the New Jersey Sportswriter of the Year five times. He is an inductee in 17 Halls of Fame, including the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Hall of Fame, the International Boxing Hall of Fame, and the International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.
In his memoir,
Baseball, Nazis & Nedick's Hot Dogs: Growing up Jewish in the 1930s in Newark
, the nonagenarian author looks back on his first two formative decades of life. Somehow, during a fraught period of antisemitism, Depression, and World War, Izenberg finds love, community, and purpose. Today, he lives Henderson, Nevada, with his wife Aileen. He continues to contribute columns to the
Star Ledger
and is working on several books.