The BiG StorY Michael and Lauren Goldstein, and Ryan Rosenfeld 0 C a 0 (1) "4 E - 0 L') 0 C15 > 0 C) — C a C- 15 0 0 'The Lone Ranger,' 'The Green Hornet' Robert Rosenfeld, of West and Jack Benny's program. Later, TV Bloomfield, was born and came along ; but we never watched raised in Columbus, Ohio, but much." he moved to Michigan when Mr. Rosenfeld's future bride, mean- he married his wife, a Detroit , while, also loved listening to the native named Beverly Gold- radio. Her favorite program was "Let's stein. Pretend," which she remembers "When I was little, they didn't really included stories for young listeners. have the same kinds of toys as kids "I played with cut-out dolls, and had today," Mr. Rosenfeld says. "I go into a doll house for them. I liked to make Toys R Us and Noodle Kidoodle — believe a lot." we just didn't have the kinds of choic- In the evening Beverly, an only es they do now." child, played checkers and other Instead, Mr. Rosenfeld enjoyed an board games with her parents, or out- electric train, set up in the basement, door games like marbles and hop- along with football and Monopoly, : scotch with neighborhood children. and playing chess with his father, "We did lots of spur-of-the-moment who taught him the game. kinds of things," she says. "For exam- "I had a Charlie McCarthy doll, ple, all the homes had front steps, and when I got older I liked going to about five to 10, and we would have the Ohio State football games." teams. We would throw a ball Evenings, the family would listen to against the step and catch it, and you the radio. "We heard 'Tom Mix' and could get so many points for each 'The Shadow' and 'The Inner Sanc- step." tum,' which was supposed to be She enjoyed baseball, and movies scary; it opened with the sound of a with Shirley Temple and Margaret squeaky door. We also listened to 10/16 1998 104 Detroit Jewish News O'Brien, and walks to the library "where I would check out books that my mother would read to me. On weekends, the family visited Kensington Park or Cass Lake for swimming and picnics. "Kensington was so far away back then," she says. "Going there was a real adven- ture." Today, the Rosenfelds are the par- ents of Shari Goldstein and Susan Rosenfeld, who live just around the corner. The couple are close with their three grandchildren, Michael, Lauren and Ryan. "We do everything together," Mr. Rosenfeld says. "We go to plays, the junior symphony, to ball games and the Cranbrook Science Center. We love it when our grandchildren come over to play in our pool; we have everything here for them, a tree house and swings." "Last year we took Michael to the Rose Bowl," Mrs. Rosenfeld adds. "We visited Universal Studios and had dinner at Planet Hollywood. That's what he really wanted to do, and while we were there he said, 'This is the most fabulous day of my,„, whole life."' Sometimes, Mr. Rosenfeld plays chess with his grandchildren. Just as his father taught him how to play, he now teaches Michael, Lauren and Ryan. "By the time they were 3, I Michael and Lauren knew all the names of the chess pieces," he sayF_:..-7J I "Now we play together. I still have the chess set that was my father's, and that's what we use." Michael Goldstein of West Bloomfield, who is in fifth- grade at Hillel Day School, says that trip to the Rose -- Bowl was indeed the cat's meow. He loves sports, especially the Red Wings. "I watch hockey and also play roller hockey," he says, "and I like football, soccer and basketball." "I like it when my Grandpa takes me to this Halloween house where there are these lights that look like eyeballs and they put up all this scary stuff," adds Michael's sister, Lauren Goldstein, 6, who also attends Hillel. "It"s awesome." Lauren enjoys Backgammon with her grandmother, and like Mrs. Row,2- feld Lauren likes dolls. "I have a Brush-Your-Teeth-Baby Cab- bage Patch doll," she says. "She does- n't have real toothpaste; she comes with her own and you can order more. She doesn't need batteries. Ryan Rosenfeld, who goes L5 Ealy School, says his favorite activity with his grandparents is playing on the computer. "They're good," he says. Ryan's hobbies include playing com- puter games and soccer, watching "Rugrats" and roller hockey and Crash. "It has this fox," he says of Crash (a game), "and there are differ- ent levels, and you keep getting stuck in the snowballs. But I never get stuck. I break them by flipping and kicking." THE BIG STORY on page 106 O