Sports CANDY. ._.IS EATEN (and fattening too) The Jewish News is fat-free, yet it will provide you with hundreds of restaurants where your family can eat. The Jewish News is a gift that helps you celebrate all year. Holidays, engagements, births and anniversaries — It's the paper celebrating the people you know and care about. The Jewish News keeps you a part of Jewish life! Who could ask for a better gift? CALL (248) 354-6620 TO SEND A GIFT SUBSCRIPTION TODAY. JN DETROIT JEWISH NEWS PL S S O C I If you've got lines, let us fill you in. Call for an appointment to come in and talk to us about the many options you have in reducing lines, wrinkles and scarring. Get individual attention from expert physicians who care about their patients — one at a time. All Cosmetic and Reconstructive Surgery including: Surgery of the Face & Nose Breast Surgery Liposuction Tummy Tucks Hair Transplants Non-Surgical Treatments: Laser for Facial Wrinkles Photoderm for Facial & Leg Veins Private Office Surgery Suites • Over 16 Years Experience Willaim J. Vasileff, m.d. • A. Kevin Mulderman, m.d. (248) 644-0670 • 525 Southfield Rd. • Birmingham Preserving The Legacy Steve Greenberg combines professional and personal passions. LONNY GOLDSMITH StaffWriter It i_/ Steve Greenberg was as good a -1 baseball player as his father, woule\' he be playing in the Carolina eague? That was the question he threw ba&' at reporters who asked him if he could \I hit like former Detroit Tiger Hank Greenberg. Now, 23 years after retiring from professional baseball himself, the younger Greenberg is president of the , Classic Sports Network, a cable channel that shows great sporting events of the past. Greenberg, 49, was born in New York the year after his father ended his major league career. He lived in Cleveland during the baseball sea- CSN President son when his Steve Greenberg. father was general manager of the Indians. He graduated from Yale University in 1970, as the captain of the Bulldog baseball team. He played five seasons in the Texas Rangers organization, the last three in AAA — the highest level of minor league baseball. "I got caught going sideways," Greenberg said. "I got the hint that it \ would be questionable if I got called up. In 1977, after stepping away from baseball, Greenberg earned a law degree from UCLA. Late in 1989, Greenberg was approached with the opportunity of lifetime. "(Then-Commissioner of Baseball) Fay Vincent came to me and asked me' to be the deputy commissioner of Major League Baseball," he said. In that role, he had the responsibility of handling the day-to-day operations, including broadcasting, legal/legislative affairs and finance. He was also the chairman of the board of Major League Baseball Properties, Inc. — baseball's promotional arm. "There were times where I'd have to pinch myself, like sitting in the front row during a World Series game," Greenberg said.