ard winner, Dr. Conrad Giles, when he has time on his hands. PHIL JACOBS EDITOR p roblem is, when we read about Federation volun- teers, the reading can get downright tedious. Former presi- dent of the Jewish Fed- eration of Metropolitan Detroit, president of the Michigan Jewish Confer- ence, a co-chair of the Michigan Miracle Mission, a United Jewish Appeal vice chairman, chairman of UJA's Midwest Region, vice president of the Council of Jewish Federations, chair- man of the Task Force on Services to the Non- Institutionalized Elderly, Jewish Family Service, American ORT Federation, Detroit Men's ORT and many other organizations are listed here. What most don't see, though, is that these volun- teer lines on a resume have taken hundreds of hours, months and years of a life- time. In the organized Jewish world, it's the unpaid job which often takes more energy than one's full-time profession. Dr. Conrad L. Giles has, for about 30 years, made Jewish causes his life. He would take offense that someone would see his mis- sion as tedious. If anything, he'd want to do even more. In Detroit, he is known as a leader who works with the influential, but who hears the voices and concerns of everyone. Dr. Giles is always around. There are those who will tell you that he often gets "stuck" with the difficult tasks because he's certain to get them done. So it shouldn't be a sur- prise that when Federation looked to award its highest symbol of achievement, it looked in its figurative mir- ror and saw Conrad Giles. On Tuesday, Sept. 28, he will receive the Fred M. Butzel Memorial Award for Distinguished Community Service. It is a mirror because Dr. Giles can see bits and pieces of his achievements in so many different areas of this com- munity and the national Jewish community as well. "The amazing thing is that in no way could I have pictured myself doing these things 30 years ago," said Dr. Giles. "Thirty years ago I defined myself in two dimensions: One was a par- ent and a husband, the sec- ond was that of a profes- sional, a physician. My only goal was to excel in both. I really didn't have real depth as a person; there was instead a struggle to define myself." Dr. Giles came to Detroit from his native New York to practice ophthalmology and to teach at Wayne State's and the University of Michigan's medical schools. After being in Detroit for a handful of years with little or no Federation contact, he was asked to become part of a young adult leadership group. Some of the names of par- ticipants in that 1967 group included David Hermelin, David Page and Joel Tauber, three of Detroit's most admired community and national leaders. Dr. Giles, who lives in Bloomfield Hills with his wife, Dr. Lynda Giles, a clinical psychologist, has never been bashful when it comes to voicing his opin- ions on the direction Federation and the Jewish community must take. Two years ago, he chaired the Giles Commission on Education, which became a blueprint for the restructur- ing of Detroit's Jewish edu- cational system. "The work that he does is philosophically in tune with his work as a physician, the compassion and care of oth- ers," said Dr. Lynda Giles. COMMUNITY TIME page 16