SPORTS I- All Fired Up The outcry over Tiger broadcaster Harwell's dismissal was, with few exceptions, loud and strong within Detroit's Jewish community. RICHARD PEARL Staff Writer I f it did anything, the fir- ing of Tigers baseball broadcaster Ernie Harwell united practically all of Detroit Jewry with each other and with the gen- eral community. It didn't matter that Harwell isn't a landsman in the traditional sense. The voice of the Tigers had become one anyway, through his integrity and long tenure at the microphone. And, on Dec. 20, the day after his dismissal was an- nounced, the pain and an- guish crossed all the lines, from a hospital president in Detroit to senior citizens in Oak Park, from the yeshivah students in Southfield to the businessman in Livonia and the women in their 50s hav- ing lunch in the Bingham Farms deli. "I'm appalled that this gentleman, whom I believe is the epitome of class, was treated in a classless way," said Robert Steinberg, pres- ident of Sinai Hospital, about Harwell who, in 1988, received the Michigan Jew- ish Sports Hall of Fame's Alvin N. Foon Memorial Award for his contributions to sports and athletics in Michigan. "As my grandmother _would say, it was not ment- shlich the way they treated him. These two guys (Harwell and broadcast partner Paul Carey) are a couple of mentshes and didn't deserve" what happened. Steinberg, who knows both men, said the two "exuded class. "If the Tigers wanted them to retire, they should have at least given them the oppor- tunity to go out with dignity and honor, and not take a man (Harwell) who is in the Baseball Hall of Fame and treat him like a stranger." Steinberg, a one-time Tiger hopeful as a youth, listens to 40 or 50 Harwell- Carey broadcasts a season and predicted the ballclub will suffer. "Some people are saying the ballclub or the sponsors don't deserve to be supported. They're saying, `If this is the way the team treats its good guys, what do you have to be?' " he said. Jerry Moss of Southfield, a member of the senior men's discussion group at the Jimmy Prentis Morris Jew- ish Community Center, laid it on the line at the JCC Thursday morning. "Tom Monaghan is a fool and Bo Schembechler is a fool" for the handling of the firing. "Harwell has done a lot for Detroit and Michigan, both in the state and around the country. Many radio sta- tions will quit carrying the Ernie Harwell will be gone after 1991. broadcasts. Ernie Harwell's voice is wonderful." "Why they let him go is a mystery," said Dave Weiner of Oak Park. "He still has all his faculties." Ruth Coblentz of Southfield, a volunteer foodserver at JPM, said she thinks the whole thing "is political. They (Tiger management) want to move Tiger Stadium and he lived for the Tigers. Tiger Stadium is home to him and he didn't want to leave home. "If they had players who played with their hearts like Harwell announces games, they'd win the World Series," she said. A teacher's aide at the Yeshiva Beth Yehudah in Southfield was irate. "It was the most stupid mistake ever," said 18-year- old Leah Ishakis, a self- he won his 31st? Or have those musical contacts with Jose Feliciano to set up one of the wildest national an- them renditions in World Series history? Baseball isn't the Lions (thank God!). It's not the Pistons, the Wolverines or the Spartans. It is not the boost when we most needed it. The come-from-behind team of 1968 made us forget the urban fires of 1967, brought us back together again in a com- mon, even if trivial cause. The 1984 world champions' 35-5 start and overwhelm- ing thumping of the San Diego Padres took away the sting of the Murder Capital label and the econ- omic changes forced by the recesssion of the early 1980s. And who was there, through it all, making it important but keeping it in perspective? Ernie Harwell. No, he's not Jew- ish but he's probably done more to influence us as in- dividuals than our rabbis have. Through the good times and the bad, for the Tigers and for ourselves, we had Ernie, and by association Paul Carey, The Voice Of Summer ALAN HITSKY Associate Editor I t won't be until a year from February that I'll miss Ernie Harwell. After all, nothing has changed for the mome- ment. Ernie will be back behind the microphone next season, bringing a sense of order to the world as he has done for 31 years in Detroit. Old Ern' is pure escapism at its best for Detroit sports fans. He makes washing the car or cutting the grass on a warm summer eve- ning less of a chore. It is the right thing to be doing — whatever we are doing — when old Ernie is talking softly in the background. That sweet Georgia voice. That fountain of baseball wisdom. That fine gentle- man who is a throwback to 42 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1990 another era can always make the world seem, right, whether it was the Tigers' world or our world, whether we, or they, were winning or losing. He has the knack of taking his listeners back to that other time, the time in all of our lives when the pace is slower, when out- side irritations just seem to fade into insignificance, even if only for nine inn- ings. We can be children again while listening to Ernie Harwell. He is a perfect match for the game of baseball. It is not a modern game. It takes too long; there's too little action as we watch the pitcher scratch and spit, remove his cap and wipe his brow, settle into a stance and stare in for the sign, and finally — if the runner on first doesn't force the pitcher to step off the rubber to bluff the runner back —we'll see one pitch head for home plate. But where else can you listen for five minutes and hear nothing happen, but visualize everything hap- pening through the golden voice of Ernie Harwell? Where else can five minutes of inaction lead to a dramatic hit, a diving catch, a collision at home, a nasty argument with the ump? And those five minutes of waiting are fill- ed with wonderful detail, charming anecdotes and pieces of your history as Ernie recalls the bits of nostalgia and trivia that Tiger fans have lived and died with for 31 years. How does he know that the fan in section 223 who caught the foul ball is from Southfield? Or remember exactly what Denny Mc- Clain was throwing when Where else can you listen for five minutes and hear nothing happen, but visualize everything? fast-paced, furious all-out action that mirrors the pace of our lives. Baseball — Tiger baseball — has picked us up, has given this town a