Noveck spending 3'/2 hours a day there, plus most of Shabbat, when he also is lay cantor. A member of the various Young Israel synagogues for almost 50 years, Mittelman is a past president and board member in Oak Park, always visiting sick members in hospitals, nursing homes or at their homes. "Our shul is a very big part of Manny's life," said Rabbi Reuven Spolter. "He is the mainstay of Young Israel, donating generously to chari- ties, counseling children, helping needy families and giving a great deal of his time and energy." Mittelman spent three years doing hard labor in German concentration camps until he was freed from Auschwitz at the end of World War II. His parents and three siblings died; he and three others survived. He contract- ed tuberculosis and spent three years at a Swiss sanitarium. He then became a kosher milkman; met his wife, Bessie, and came to America in 1954. They have six chil- dren, 22 grandchildren and 13 great- grandchildren. He operated ServBest Heating & Cooling Co. in Detroit for many years. "I'm thankful I can help people and be at the giving end," Mittelman said. Evelyn Noveck Noveck, 85, is a dedicated Zionist, devoting many years to several nation- al and local Zionist organizations, serving on the board of the Labor Zionist Institute and as president of Labor Zionist Alliance, Branch 7. The Zionist Federation honored her as Woman of the Year. She got strongly interested in Zionism after joining a Zionist youth group and Hillel at the University of Michigan. "My life has been very much involved with the Labor Zionist Movement," she said. "My parents got me interested in this, and I'm proud to be part of the effort." She holds two master's degrees from Wayne State University — in social studies and library science. She was a teacher for 36 years in the Detroit • school system, mostly at Redford Pasternak Reinstein Schon He and others succeeded by "going door to door and making many phone calls," he said, and raising $375,000 to finish mortgage payments. In recent years, Schon, 80, became president of Jewish Home & Aging Services during one of the most chal- lenging times in its history. He under- took a similarly difficult job of closing two homes for Jewish.senior adults, and "going through a critical and Norbert Reinstein Prohibited by the Nazis from complet- troubled period." He was successful again as he "met ing medical studies in his native the challenge and has been part of the Austria, Reinstein was freed from the success story of our home as we know Dachau concentration camp at the end of World War II, came to America it today," said Carol Rosenberg, asso- ciate director of Jewish Home & and earned a master's degree in Public Aging Service. "He's a strong and Health Education from the University effective 'leader of leaders' in the com- of Minnesota. He then settled in munity who always gives of himself." Detroit for a long career as a health During World War II, Schon, while care professional, spending 45 years as in his late teens, was a medic under chief health care planner for United fire in the U.S. Army and returned Way and acting as a mentor to many with Gen. Douglas MacArthur to health care professionals. Abe Pasternak Leyte in the Philippines. He then He also taught at Wayne State and When Pasternak is asked why he is graduated from Wayne State involved in so many community activ- Central Michigan universities, win- University's Law School and later was ning a Service Recognition Award at ities, he replies, "How dull life would in a law firm with former Gov. G. Wayne State. be without being involved; it's what Mennen Williams and former U.S. After suffering a stroke at age 89, makes life interesting." His life has Rep. Martha Griffiths. Still practicing Reinstein, ever the educator, chronicled been anything but dull. law part time, Schon, 80, was honored The native of Romania is a Holocaust his experiences in a published, first-per- as a 50-year member of the State Bar son account: The Stroke and Me: survivor who suffered atrocities in the of Michigan and has been involved eriences and Recollections of a Patient. German concentration camps and lost "My sheer willpower and determina- with many professional associations. most of his family there. After coming He and his wife, Florence, have tion were key factors in my recovery to America, he was an acting chaplain been married for 59 years and have and rehabilitation," he said. He haS in the U.S. Army and, ironically, was three children and three grandchil- written four books. sent to help protect the German people dren. ❑ Reinstein, 91, and his wife, from the post-war Russian economic Marianne, have been married for 64 blockade. He was recalled later to serve years and have two children, five during the Korean conflict. Eight Over Eighty honorees will grandchildren and three great-grand- A member of the Holocaust be inducted into the Senior children. They were co-chairs of Memorial Center executive board, he Adult Jewish Hall of Fame at 11 Congregation Beth Shalom's cultural speaks to many groups there and at a.m. Sunday, May 15, in commission for more than a decade. colleges and has been quoted in sever- Handelman Hall at the Jewish He's past president of the former al books. Another irony was that he Community Center in West United Hebrew Schools. He belongs spoke at Royal Oak's Shrine of the Bloomfield. Brunch will be fol- to the Institute of Retired Little Flower church — the former lowed by the induction ceremony Professionals and was a member of pulpit of the anti-Jewish propagandist at noon. Emcees will be Sherry many professional associations during Father Charles Coughlin. Margolis of WJBK Fox 2 News his career. Pasternak, 81, translates survivors' and Alan Muskovitz of the Dick transcripts in the "Voice-Vision" Purtan Show. (104.3 WOMC). Jack Schon Holocaust project at the University of Cost is $65 for adults, $36 for Michigan-Dearborn; is working with a In the 1970s, Schon, as president of children younger than 12. For Beth Abraham Hillel Moses (now Beth former math professor who invented reservations, call (248) 592-1102. Ahm), took on the daunting task of math in Braille; is proofreading the paying off the synagogue's mortgage. transcription of an ArtScroll siddur; High, and also was social studies department chairperson for 13 years. She is past president of Na'amat, a working woman's group formerly known as Pioneer Women. After her husband, Harold, died at age 80 in 1998, Noveck donated $25,000 in his name to the "low vision" section of the Meyers Library at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. She was instrumen- tal in establishing and equipping the "low vision" section with large-print books. "I also have made donations to other Jewish charities in my husband's honor," she said. Noveck also is active in the Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Detroit, Jewish Historical Society of Michigan, ORT, Hadassah and other organizations. She has two sons and four grandchildren. volunteers in the Meals on Wheels program; helped the Sinai Guild raise money for medical equipment; and continues Torah study sessions at Congregation B'nai Moshe. He's a winner of the community Heart of Gold Award. He and his wife, Gerry, have two children and two grandchildren. 5/12 2005 27