UP FRONT GARY ROSENBLATT Editor A Summertime Pilgrimage To Cooperstown And Memories Long before W.P. Kinsella wrote his lyric novel, Shoeless which Joe, became the movie, Field Of Dreams, base- ball was about fathers and sons. I sensed that connection most strongly when I toured the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York re- cently with my two sons, ages 9 and 17, at my side — and felt the presence of my late father, a gentle rabbi who was also a rabid Dodger fan from his early childhood days in Brooklyn. More a pilgrimage than a visit, a trip to Cooperstown for any baseball fan is a step over the threshold of nostal- gia, a chance to feel like a kid again and relive long forgot- ten moments. Even the setting is ideal. Cooperstown is a pictur- esque village of about 2,000 people, nestled in the hills of upstate New York, far from any major metropolis. Binghamton, New York, about an hour's highway drive southwest, is the closest city of size. But more than 600,000 people a year make the trek, with love of baseball the prime motiva- tion. The Hall of Fame is a modest brick building whose exhibits attempt to bridge the span of time and age. Older fans may linger over the plaques of the elite membership or the section on the more unusual ballparks and stadiums around the major leagues, including a replica of Eb- betts Field, the exotic little bandbox where the Dodgers played. (I recall as a nine- year-old seeing a game be- tween the Dodgers and their arch-rivals, the Giants, and marveling at how close we were to the field and at the proliferation of poles, seem- ingly obstructing the view of half those in attendance.) Youngsters might best en- j oy the computerized screens where a touch of a button brings to life the stats, biography and filmed highlights of virtually every player in the Hall. Curiously, though, my younger son said he best en- joyed the exhibit on the evo- lution of bats, balls and gloves used in the majors, from the finger-less, non- padded black glove worn in the early 1900s to the sleek mitts used today. Looking through the glass at the oversized catcher's mitt Paul Richards designed to help poor Gus Triandos have a better chance of catching a Hoyt Wilhelm floating knuckleball, I couldn't help recall my first glove, purchased as my Afi- komen present the Passover that I was eight years old, a way-too-big left-handed fielder's glove signed by the never-famous Grady Hatton. Such memories and con- nections are to be expected for anyone who grew up with baseball an important part of one's youth. I leave it to Roger Angell or George Will to wax eloquent about why baseball stirs such emotions in those of us who love the game. Surely the fact that it is the only major sport where time is not a factor, where the game is measured by outs rather than minutes or seconds, makes it so in- furiating to those who do NATIONAL BASEBALL HALL of FAME and MUSEUM COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. ADULT s 6.eo not share a love for its rhythms and nuances. But that timelessness is part of the attraction for me. Listening to, or watching, a baseball game provides an opportunity for conversa- tion, for fathers to explain the subtleties of a hit-and- run or squeeze play to an ea- ger son or daughter. My father and I some- times had difficulty ver- balizing our feelings for each other, but baseball talk be- tween us always came easi- ly. So do memories of listen- ing together to a Dodger game at night on the radio, discussing strategy, like when to pull a struggling Don Newcombe. Walking up to the top floor of the three-story Hall, I was picturing Don Zimmer's baseball card — one cheek full of tobacco — 07-2H-90 when I came upon a wall full of baseball trading cards, dating back to the 1890s, when tobacco, not bubble gum, was in each pack. It struck me that if mothers could comprehend or appreciate the importance of baseball cards to kids, those old cards, some of which are worth thousands of dollars today, would be worthless. It was our mothers who drove up the prices by throwing out our cigar boxes full of cards as soon as we left home. What surprised me most at Cooperstown was not the exhibits, though, but the flood of memories that came pouring through, seeing the names of long-forgotten players and recalling the cir- cumstances surrounding their playing days — and mine. ROUND UP Casey Kasem Spins A New Tune Casey Kasem was playing a new song last week when he appeared on public televi- sion's "McNeil-Lehrer Report." When Mr. Kasem came in November to his hometown of Detroit, he brought together 50 local Jews and Arabs to foster peace in the Middle East. But peace was far from the "American Top 40" radio host's mind when he appeared on a panel with two Iraqi-born Detroiters and another Arab American. Each time Mr. Kasem was on camera during the discussion of Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, he turned the subject to Israel. He accused the United States of being self-serving because it is us- ing force against Iraq, but refused to use force against Israel during the 1982 inva- sion of Lebanon. Mr. Kasem also listed alleged Israeli abuses of Pa- lestinians during the in- tifada, citing unnamed Swedish reports and Amnes- ty International as his sources. Mr. Kasem is of Lebanese Druze extraction and has participated in more than 20 Arab-Jewish dialogues since 1986. HUC Opens Spinoza Library Jerusalem — The Jerusalem campus of the Hebrew Union College- Jewish Institute of Religion has opened a new library featuring the world's largest collection of works related to the Dutch philosopher Baruch Spinoza, as well as Judaica and Hebraica. The library will include 100,000 volumes, including the biblical archaeology library of the late Professor Yigal Yadin. The Spinoza Collection contains works by Spinoza and his followers, dating from 1665-1832. Included are rare editions of his Trac- tatus Theologico-Politicus, an attack on religion which had to be printed with a false title page because of prohibi- tions placed on the book's sale. The collection also in- cludes anti-Spinoza writings and the Utrecht Ordinance of 1679, which prohibits the sale and distribution of Spinoza's works. Spinoza was excom- municated in 1656 because of his radical views on Judaism. The Handwriting Is On The Wall Tel Aviv (JTA) — A hand- writing expert who has analyzed the penmanship of President Saddam Hussein has determined that the Ira- qi leader is a dangerous lunatic who ought to be committed. The Israeli graphologist, who reportedly did not know to whom the writing sample belonged, examined the Ira- qi leader's script on behalf of Mossad, the Israeli intel- ligence agency. Last week the Israeli daily Yediot Achronot said Mossad sent the graphologist's Saddam Hussein: The writing of a madman. report to policy makers in Jerusalem. According to Yediot Achronot, the expert said, "This man must be com- mitted immediately. "He makes decisions quickly, tends toward ex- treme moods, is willing to take extreme decisions and implement them, (has) a tendency toward violence and is dangerous to society." Soviet Jews Attend Camps Lishkas Ezras Achim, an affiliate of Lubavitch, is this summer operating 10 camps for Jewish children throughout the Soviet Union. More than 1,500 students aged 8-23 are stu- dying Hebrew, Jewish re- ligion and history in Kiev, Leningrad, Napoprotovsk and other Soviet cities. Ezras Achim, which is based in New York, has been working for 27 years on behalf of Soviet Jewry. The organization hosts two camps: an overnight facility and a day camp. In addition to tapping into Soviet Jew- ish talent to staff the camps, 50 counselors were flown in from the United States and Israel. This is the third year Ezras Achim has sponsored camps for Soviet Jewish youth. Compiled by Elizabeth Applebaum THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5