Of Course You Can Have Ice Cream for Breakfast!: A Journalist's Uncommon Memoir

Cohen, Ron

ISBN 10: 1490782419 ISBN 13: 9781490782416
Verlag: Trafford, 2017
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As Managing Editor of United Press International and Executive Editor of Gannett News Service during a 40-year-journalism career, Ron Cohen has been directly responsible for instantly bringing the top headlines every day to hundreds of millions of readers, viewers and listeners in every corner of the globe.

Assassinations, impeachments, terrorist attacks, elections, wars, disasters both natural and man-made — these constitute the 24-hour-a-day breaking news cycle that helped make Cohen one of the world’s most influential journalists. 

In these days of political turmoil and allegations of "fake news," this highly personal book offers a chance to see and feel how it's been to work in a changing media universe — with constant challenges, excitement and pressure to perform, plus the thrills, satisfaction and frustration that make the news business at once rewarding and exhausting.

Now, shifting gears a bit, Cohen has written “Of Course You Can Have Ice Cream for Breakfast! A Journalist’s Uncommon Memoir.” It is sweet, humorous, quirky, serious — a sort of written/oral history of his 80 years on Planet Earth. 

With this collection of stories, Ron tells you about the fascinating characters he has encountered along his journey, as well about a rich North Jersey Italian-Jewish heritage dating back to the early 20th Century when mixed marriages were rare — and often frowned upon.

The stories aim at his four young grandkids — whom he cannot and simply will not deny “Ice Cream for Breakfast” — in hopes they will get to better know (and remember) a grandfather who is geographically distant if emotionally close.

But it also is for the 70 million grandparents in America and for “kids of all ages” looking for a grin, a sigh, a belly-laugh — even an occasional throat lump.

Cohen's previous book, "Down to the Wire: UPI's Fight for Survival" (McGraw-Hill, 1989) was named Best Business Book of the Year by Business Week magazine, and won, among other awards, the coveted Gold Medal for Journalism History from the Society of Professional Journalists.

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Of Course You Can Have Ice Cream for Breakfast!

A Journalist's Uncommon Memoir

By Ron Cohen

Trafford Publishing

Copyright © 2017 Ron Cohen
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4907-8241-6

Contents

Acknowledgments, vi,
Preface, viii,
Foreword, ix,
Chapter 1 Wine and Ravioli with Carlo and Filomena, 1,
Chapter 2 Grandpa Joe, 13,
Chapter 3 The Fabulous Figs, 23,
Chapter 4 Dad, Violins, and George Sisler, 43,
Chapter 5 Someone's in the Kitchen with Millie, 53,
Chapter 6 Longie and the Hersheys, 60,
Chapter 7 Crazy for Baseball, 65,
Chapter 8 Myrna and the Chick, 75,
Chapter 9 Doris and the Broken Leg, 79,
Chapter 10 Me and the Duke, 86,
Chapter 11 "We Shudda' Let Ya Drown!", 95,
Chapter 12 Shattered Glass, 101,
Chapter 13 Harry and Cary, 108,
Chapter 14 Dad, Imperial, and Christine Jorgensen, 115,
Chapter 15 Ice Cream, You Scream, 126,
Chapter 16 Wheelchairs, Spud-Nuts, and Po' Boys, 131,
Chapter 17 Hey, Gimme Free Beer!, 159,
Chapter 18 How I Met Jill, and Other Exciting Tales, 165,
Chapter 19 A Pint for My Pop, 178,
Chapter 20 Almost Fired Day 1 (Part 1), 189,
Chapter 21 Firing Squad to Bureau Chief, 195,
Chapter 22 Almost Fired Day 1 (Part 2), 199,
Chapter 23 Almost Fired Day 1 (Part 3), 206,
Chapter 24 First (And Almost Last) Anniversary, 212,
Chapter 25 Nutmeg Daze and Knights, 217,
Chapter 26 November 22, 1963, 230,
Chapter 27 Bigfoot, 234,
Chapter 28 Green Mountain Boy, 243,
Chapter 29 Rasslin' The Bear, 253,
Chapter 30 A Toast to FiFi Allen, 259,
Chapter 31 Baby Rachel, 265,
Chapter 32 Rachel, Shaun, and the Goalie, 270,
Chapter 33 "Loosen Up, Sandy Baby", 275,
Chapter 34 Luncheon with Mitzi, 280,
Chapter 35 A Ballad of Irons and Steel, 284,
Chapter 36 Chicago Flo, 290,
Chapter 37 Of Bratwurst and Briefs, 296,
Chapter 38 For Your Grandchildren, 300,
Chapter 39 Cush at 90, 316,
Chapter 40 "The President Has Been Shot!", 319,
Chapter 41 Going Home, 332,
Chapter 42 Wondrous, Wonderful America, 338,
Chapter 43 The Road Not Taken, 344,
Chapter 44 Uncle Cush, 349,
Chapter 45 At Last, "Goodbye", 360,
Epilogue, 372,


CHAPTER 1

WINE AND RAVIOLI WITH CARLO AND FILOMENA


Earliest recollection of my grandma, Filomena Monzione Figliuolo:

I am about 2, stubby chubby legs struggling up what must be the world's steepest, darkest staircase, at 16 1/2 Rowland Street in Newark, New Jersey.

One tricky step after another, grasping the bannister poles with my right hand, stepping up with my left foot, Millie right behind in case I stumble. (My mom always had my back, right to the day she died.)

Finally, the summit. Sir Edmund Hillary could not have been more excited atop Mount Everest.

Out of the hallway's darkness and into the light — Grandma's sun-splashed second-floor kitchen, the tiny fiefdom where she performs her miraculous alchemy.

She is at her familiar battle station, her battered stove. With metronomic precision, her right arm guides a wood spoon the size of a small oar through a bottomless vat of gravy. Olfactory overload -- garlic, basil, tomatoes, assorted pork products -- embracing magically, blissfully.

She has monitored my snail's-pace ascension up the stairway to heaven, but feigns surprise as I burst into the kitchen. Dropping the oar into the gravy pot, she spins and picks me up.

"Ron-nie, Ron-nie," she croons. "You wanna sang-weech-a?"

Of course, I want a sandwich. Even at that tender age I have learned the immutable Figliuolo law: When Filomena offers, "no" is never an option. She fills a sub roll with slices of meatball, then ladles in gravy. She sits me at a Formica kitchen table battle-scarred by thousands of family meals, and tucks a large napkin into my shirt collar.

We both know it is a pious gesture. Even a shower curtain could not have protected me from splatters of blood-red gravy. She salutes my first bite with a single Italian word, "ben-u-ree-ga" (spelling phonetically here), which in later years I discover is almost a sigh of satisfaction — "enjoy."

Which I certainly did.

There was no queenly throne in Filomena's kitchen, but she managed to reign supreme despite hardly ever sitting down. The fulcrums of her little world were the gas stove and the adjoining refrigeration unit, her "ice-a box" — which got its three-syllable name from an 18-square-inch block of ice delivered three times a week on a horse-drawn cart that plied Newark's all-Italian North End.

"Ice-a-man! Ice-a-man! Getta you ice-a heah!" the driver would sing, grabbing a block off the cart with fierce-looking tongs and depositing it in the place of honor, the middle shelf, with a pan underneath to capture the devolution back to its original liquid state a couple of days later. Invariably, as the last sliver gave out, we could hear the cart clackety-clacking with replenishments.

That was pretty much the way you did business back in the late 1930s in the North End where for dozens of square blocks my grandparents lived cheek to jowl with their "paisani" — countrymen from Italy. Besides the "ice-a man," there was the knife sharpener guy, who every couple of weeks pushed his cart down Rowland. When they heard the whirring wheel of his whetstone, Italian matriarchs carried every knife in their utensil drawers down the stairs and out into the street.

Then there was the milkman, also in a horse-drawn cart, delivering actual glass bottles (not cardboard) topped with three inches of thick cream -- to add to coffee or churn into butter. Still in bed, I took comfort in the clinking melody of full bottles replacing empties. The symphony provided reassurance that there would be a cold glass of Becker Dairy's moo-juice with breakfast. He also delivered fresh eggs; Grandma had a huge standing order because eggs were cheap and she had 10 bellies to fill.

My favorite tradesman was the legless war veteran who traveled atop a sturdy four-by-twelve wood plank, roller-skate wheels attached to each corner. From a small, wood-burning stove in front, he extracted freshly roasted chestnuts and luscious hot-baked yams wrapped in several sheets of newspaper to protect my little fingers. When I became a baseball fan I would connect that memory to the term hot potato, a batted ball too hot for an infielder to handle.

Yam guy propelled himself along the street, hands tucked into thick gloves to protect knuckles. He sang, in a deep bass you started hearing a block away, the heart-shattering World War I ballad, "My Buddy." To this day I cannot hear that song without recalling the mournful keening of that brave, legless man.

"My buddy, my buddy,
Nobody quite so true.
Miss your voice, the touch of your hand,
I long to know that you understand.
My buddy, my buddy,
Your buddy misses you."


* * *

Filomena's hair, dark and thick in the fading photos that dotted the small apartment, now was thin and gray. Wrinkles had begun creasing her soft features, but the sweet smiles lovingly bestowed on her grandchildren never faded. She was a quiet woman, befitting a hard life caring for five daughters, three sons, and a stern husband. She struggled to acclimate herself to a strange new world far from Napoli, carefully marshaling money, wasting nothing. Her English was not so much broken as...

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Titel: Of Course You Can Have Ice Cream for ...
Verlag: Trafford
Erscheinungsdatum: 2017
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Zustand: Good
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Kartoniert / Broschiert. Zustand: New. KlappentextrnrnAs Managing Editor of United Press International and Executive Editor of Gannett News Service during a 40-year-journalism career, Ron Cohen has been directly responsible for instantly bringing the top headlines every day to hundre. Artikel-Nr. 447934399

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