from post-Seasonal letdown because he immerses himself in the sport year- round. During the winter, he watches the transac- tions that lead into and out of the December winter meetings, and he follows the winter leagues in Mex- ico, Latin and South America. He has arranged summer vacations around trips to minor league ball- parks. He's the chairman of the executive committee of the Tiger Stadium Fan Club and a member of the Society For American Baseball Research. "As a kid, baseball was my first adult activity," he said. "I felt that because I understood the game I could talk 'to adults on their own level about it. The more I studied the game, my family wondered if I would grow out of it. But I don't think it's some- thing you grow out of; it's something you grow up with." He said that the Tigers have been a central part of his life since he was 6 years old. Baseball, he added, is a sport intellectuals enjoy because the action is implied; the moves on the field are predicted, analy- zed and discussed. "Baseball offers a myriad of things to enmesh your- self with," he said. "I don't see that in any other sport. It's been said that football and baseball rep- resent American life. Baseball is the good part; football is the mechanized, inhuman part." Psychologist Dr. Keith Levick, who teaches a course in adjusting to change, said that baseball fans might feel down after the end of the season be- cause they have to wait un- til spring, and with that wait comes sadness and even a sense of loss. Dr. Levick, who also plays amateur baseball, said it's not easy to put baseball, or anything one loves, on hold. "There's also the issue of the cold climate here," he said. "When October begins, you can feel a sense THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 27