To Life! 6-Pointe Stars Jews have had an impact on the grand old past-timeS All-Star Game. Darning was selected to National League All-Star squads four times, 1938-41. He singled in his only at- bat in 1940 and was hitless the following year in Detroit's Briggs Stadium. (Navin Field was renamed in 1938 and Briggs Stadium became Tiger Stadium in IRWIN COHEN 1961.) Special to the Jewish News Sept. 11, 1941, was a memorable non-All-Star date for Jewish fans of the Giants. Four Jews started for the rch Ward, sports editor of the Chicago Tribune, Giants at the Polo Grounds: Danning behind the trumpeted the idea of the stars from baseball's plate, Harry Feldman pitching, and Sid Gordon made American and National leagues competing in his big-league debut in the outfield alongside Morrie an annual All-Star Game. Arnovich. The idea morphed into reality at Chicago's World War II interrupted the careers of Greenberg Comiskey Park on July 6, 1933, with 45,795 paying and Gordon. The latter was named to the All-Star their way in. squad in 1948, but didn't get to play until the follow- Only two months earlier, at Detroit's Navin Field, ing year in Brooklyn's Ebbets Field. A native of the Tigers played the Washington Senators and young Brooklyn, but a member of the hated Giants, Gordon Hank Greenberg cracked the starting lineup for the was so popular it Brooklyn that he was given a new first time. Greenberg belted his first big league home Chrysler automobile prior to a Giants-Dodgers game run, helping the Tigers to victory. Covering the con- at Ebbets Field. To celebrate, Gordon hit two home test for the Washington Postwas gifted sportswriter runs against the Dodgers. Shirley Povich — Maury's father. Hank Greenberg became part owner and general As the season inched closer to the All-Star Game, manager of the Cleveland Indians and Indians third the Tigers and Senators met again, in Washington, baseman Al Rosen was one of baseball's top sluggers. and the Post referred to the Tigers' big rookie first Rosen played in four consecutive All-Star Games, baseman as "Hank Goldberg. Fans and writers soon 1952-55. The '54 game was the most memorable, as knew his correct name. Greenberg hit .301 for the sea- Rosen homered twice before 68,751 hometown fans son, the first of eight consecutive seasons he would top in Cleveland's Municipal Stadium. .300. Pitchers Barry Latman of Cleveland and Sandy The Senators' star infielder, Charles "Buddy" Myer, Koufax of Los Angeles were selected to the 1961 All- led the American League in batting in 1935 with a Star Game, but didn't see action. Koufax pitched in .349 average. He was named to the All-Star Game in the following three All-Star Games, 1962-64, and was '35 and 1937, but never got to play. Greenberg also chosen in 1965 and '66, but didn't play. rode the All-Star bench in '37, but played first base Oakland's Ken Holtzman and Kansas City's Richie two years later and singled in the fourth inning in Scheinblum made the 1972 American League team. Yankee Stadium, not far from his boyhood home in Holtzman wasn't used and Scheinblum was unsuccess- the Bronx. ful in his only at-bat. Holtzman won 21 games the Always a team player, Greenberg moved to left field following year and two more in the World Series the following season so the Tigers could get Rudy York against the Mets and pitched a bit in the All-Star into the lineup. Greenberg was the starting American Game. League left fielder in the 1940. He went hitless, and Holtzman teammate Mike Epstein belted four con- his military service during World War II made addi- secutive home runs over a two-game period that sea- elli tional All-Star appearances impossible. son. The feat was accomplished a few seasons earlier New York Giants catcher Harry "The Horse" 7/ 7 by another Jewish player, Art Shamsky, but neither A 2005 50 was ever named a Major League All- Star. The 1980 game in Dodger Stadium marked the return of a Jewish player as an All-Star. Steve Stone was the start- ing pitcher for the American League. He had a 12-3 record at the All-Star break and finished 23-4 for Baltimore. Stone and Koufax were the only Jewish players ever to win the Cy Young Award. All-Star Shawn Green achieved baseball history on May 23, 2002, in Milwaukee. The Los Angeles Dodger homered four times and singled and doubled for 19 total bases in a single game. That season, he batted .285 with 42 home runs and 114 runs batted m. I was lucky to cover numerous All-Star Games as a writer-photographer for national publications. My favorite was the 1983 All-Star happenings in Chicago's Comiskey Park; it marked the 50th anniversary of the first game, held at the same site. Numerous All-Stars from throughout the 50 years were on hand. Greenberg, whose uniform number was retired weeks earlier in ceremonies I covered at 'Tiger Stadium, was at Comiskey. He chatted at length with Joe DiMaggio at the rear of the group of stars that I photographed. The picture was published nationally. Forty-five of the 88 stars in that picture have since died, but the memories shared as we arranged that photo will remain my all-time All-Star highlight. El Irwin Cohen of Oak Park published the national Baseball Bulletin from 1975-80, and was a front- o ce associate of the Detroit Tigers for nine years, earning a World Series ring in 1984. He has authored several books on Detroit's Jewish community.