book chairperson, helping to raise more than a quarter of a million dollars for the religious school. She used her "cookie lady" fame as a sales tool. "Anyone who sold at least $1,000 worth of ads got a jar of my cookies," she says. Goldenberg also handled an ad book for a Jewish National Fund auction, selling $32,000 worth of advertising. She's still a JNF board member, and has received a Citation of Honor on Esther Goldenberg behalf of the JNF's former Young Women's group, plus a Community Service Award. She also was the speakers' bureau coor- dinator for the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit and corresponding secretary of JETSET, a support arm of the Jewish Ensemble Theatre. "I believe a person is always capable of contributing to the community, and never too old or too young to find the time to do something," she says. Goldenberg's daughter, Donna Sklar of Farmington Hills, adds: "I remember being taught by her as a little girl that it's important to put a little aside for saving before you spend it ... and so it is with volunteer time." Stanley Morgenstern When the Allied Command needed a pilot to bomb Nazi installations around Florence, Italy, with high accuracy during World War II, they chose Morgenstern, who ultimately flew his B-26 Martin Marauder in 65 combat missions over Europe. "We used the famous Norden Bombsight, and we dropped bombs with precision to protect the valuable museums and statues," he says. "We were shot at and shot up, but never shot down." Morgenstern, now 83, of Southfield, used that uncanny accuracy throughout life, especially the past 18 years when he has donated his labor to custom- build more than 150 pieces of equipment and furniture for stu- dents with special needs, many of them Jewish. This includes chairs, special potty seats, bolster seats, tray tables, bookcases, scooter boards and other interactive mobile items that help children with disabili- ties get around class- Stanley Morgenstern room obstacles. He began doing the work for the Detroit Institute for Children. Now recip- ients are at JARC (Jewish Association for Residential Care), other non-profit organizations, Henry Ford Hospital of Detroit and several area school districts. He works on the furniture three hours each morning in his home workshop, lists the items in a catalog and delivers what the customers want — charging only for materi- als. "At this cost, schools can get as many as six items for the regular price of one," he says. "Most of these chil- dren just couldn't go to school without my equipment. It's a great delight to see the look on a youngster's face when he or she gets to use the furniture or toy for the first time." Morgenstern recently retired after more than 50 years of selling life insurance. His wife of 52 years, Brinah, died in 1994. Born in Detroit, he attended Northwestern High School and Wayne for two years before joining the U.S. Air Force. "Stan applies himself to his volunteer work with great energy, passion, thoroughness and exacting atten- tion to detail," says Sarah D. Aasheim, a volunteer coordinator at JARC. "His work helps promote the acceptance of individuals with disabilities as valued par- ticipants within our communities. He's been a pioneer in creating a more tolerant society." Bertha Chomsky Chomsky was only 9 months old when she was afflict- ed with polio, leaving her with one leg shorter than the other, but that hasn't stopped her from a lifetime of work in two different careers and volunteerism. "I had a wise mother," she says. "She didn't try to protect me all of the time. She didn't let me say 'I can't do this,' or 'I won't do that.' I rode a bike, went sled- ding, did everything like the rest of my friends — and I still keep up with them." Born in South Bend, Ind., Choms and her family moved to Michigan when she was 5. She graduated from Central High School and Wayne — one of six people in Wayne's first class of medical technologists. "And we all got jobs right away," she recalls. She later became laboratory supervisor Bertha Chomsky at Brent Hospital Downriver, then chief technician in Sinai Hospital's Hematology Department, giving her membership in the American Society of Clinical Pathologists. After retiring, she "got restless," switched careers, and worked for 18 years as a fund-raiser for the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, "but I've really been volunteering for different organizations off and on since I was in my 20s," she said. Chomsky, 81, lives in Huntington Woods and vol- unteers three to four days a week. Her late husband, Max, was a lawyer and a Hebrew scholar. She is a founder of the Institute for Retired Professionals (IRP), a 300-member organization for active older adults that serves the Jewish community as a small community college, a mini-synagogue, a social haven and a home away from home. She helped for- mulate the group in 1985, and served as its first presi- dent for three years. She still is a co-facilitator for sever- al discussion groups. She also launched its newsletter. Chomsky also has devoted her time and talents to Congregation Beth Shalom in Oak Park, helping to raise "a lot of money" for the synagogue's renovation project five years ago. In 1989, she received the Second Century Award for Synagogue Commitment and Service from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. "Communal life is bound into Jewish ethic," she explains. "It has been a privilege to help grow and sus- tain it." Albert Newman The name "Hear Oh Israel" sounds prayer-like, but it's the label Albert Newman gave the project he founded 17 years ago to provide hearing aids for older adults in Israel who can't afford them. He collects used hearing aids, reconditions them himself, sends them to the Hadassah office in New York, then they go on to a hospital in Ein Karem, Israel. "And there is no charge to the recipient," says Newman, who launched the project in honor of his wife of 59 years, Phyllis, a long-time Hadassah sup- porter. "So far, we've collected about 5,500 hearings aids." His interest in audiology continues through his work with the Hadassah Hospital Endowment Fund for Research in Pediatric Audiology. He obtains equip- ment that allows newborns to be tested for hearing. Newman, 84, of Bloomfield Hills, is described by his wife Albert Newman as an "unpretentious, generous and dedicated person, whose greatest accom- plishment is his relationship with his family" He has made 37 trips to Israel, including separate trips with each of his three children, seven grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. "I feel safer and more corn- fortable visiting Israel than being downtown in some of the large American cities," he says. Newman is a member of the International Board of Governors of the American Technion Society. He also helped established an endowment fund in cardiology research for the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology. His other charitable activities include being a former president of suburban B'nai B'rith and board member of Hadassah House. He has been a member of Congregation Shaarey Zedek in Southfield for 59 years. A graduate of Detroit Central High and Wayne, he retired 15 years ago after spending almost 70 years as a successful businessman — the third-generation head of Iron and Metal Products, a scrap iron business in Detroit. He later formed Metal Ores and Peerless Metal Powder, a company that manufactured iron powder for the chemical industry "The greatest reward for doing — is the opportuni- ty to do more," he says. "I am very fortunate to be able to continue to do the things I am involved with." IMP ..104 5/4 2001 37