Metro Skipping To A New Tune Skip Rosenthal moves from music to books and back to music. science behind everyday stuff and get a glimpse of where materials research might take us! Free with museum admission. LEONARD POGER This local presentation is made possible by: Presenting sponsors: Major sponsors: This exhibition and its tour are made possible by the generous support of the following sponsors. 39221 Woodward Avenue • Bloomfield Hills, MI 48303-0801 Located two miles north of downtown Birmingham 1-877-GO-CRANBrook 11 -877-462-7262) • www.cranbrook.edu The Cronbrook signature is a registered trademark of Cranbrook Educational Community. 100671 ■ Complete Vehicle Service ■ Wheel & Tire Service & Sales ■ 4-Wheel Factory Lase ■ High Performance Tunin ■ Vehicle Sales & Consignment ITN 8/18 2005 30 , 3200 Walnut Lake Road Commerce Township, MI 48390 www,motorgverksgroup.eqm Copy Editor S kip Rosenthal isn't sure if he is writing a new chapter or just adding an epilogue to his action- packed life of 78 years. But he stressed that he is not retiring. - '"Retire' is not in my vocabulary. I don't accept it in my language," he said in the office of his downtown Farmington used bookstore, Books Abound, which will close Aug. 31 after 22 years. The word he does want to describe his new life is "student" — a simple descrip- tion he borrowed from the headstone of Benjamin Franklin. Actually, his new love, music, isn't really new — it's a return to something he has enjoyed for most of his life. He is going back to his younger days in playing flute as well as extending his piano lessons, which he began about six months ago, and strumming the banjo, which he has done regularly for movie- goers buying tickets at the adjacent Farmington Civic Theatre, on Grand River just east of Farmington Road. He made it clear that he is a "young 78 going on 40" who "plans to live life to the fullest." Part of that plan is to make another trip to Israel, but not as a tourist. "I will rent an apartment instead of staying in a hotel and then make con- tacts with musical groups," he said. On an earlier visit to Israel, Skip said, he learned about a barbershop quartet group and a folk music festival. During one of his several visits as a young adult, he played flute with the Jerusalem Symphony. He also lived on a kibbutz for a year while working at Hebrew University in Jerusalem as a librarian in the foreign language periodi- cals section. Skip, raised on Detroit's west side, graduated Cass Technical High School and Wayne University (now Wayne State) with bachelor's and master's degrees, majoring in music. His plan was to teach music at a col- lege but "nothing came of it." So he earned a master of library science degree from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. He was the city of Livonia's first library director and later the Dearborn-based Henry Ford Community College's head librarian. Skip, a longtime member of Birmingham Temple as well as a Sunday school teacher, noted that as a youngster, he was a classmate of Sherwin Wine at Congregation Shaarey Zedek's Sunday school. Wine later became a rabbi and founder of the Temple. Skip's father, Philip, was a Detroit Mackenzie High School Spanish and Latin teacher and principal of the Shaarey Zedek Sunday school. It's no accident that he had an early love for music. His mother, Esther, was a violinist and an uncle, Harry Aleinikoff, performed with the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra's violin section. Music was also the key factor on how he got his nickname. Known to nearly everyone who knows him as Skip, his given first name is Avram. "In high school in the 1940s, I was in a dance band with other Jewish boys," he recalled. We were getting some jobs, including one at a northern Michigan resort" during a period of anti-Semitism. He decided to avoid his Jewish-sounding first and last names and call himself "Skip Ross." Following his lead, his fel- low musicians also avoided using their Jewish names. And the rest is history. Loyal Following His customers will certainly miss him, based on comments from two of them in the store last week. Julie Falbaum, 41, of Farmington Hills, and the mother of two small chil-