BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL Simons Award Historical Society honors James Grey. O Turn your old GOLD into CASH! We will buy All of your precious metals, diamonds & Ivatches. 32940 Middlebclt Rd. Milk. Rd. in thc Bro.nk.n (248) 855-1730 I mintngton I lill,. N11,11112..11' Come see us Today. w\v‘v.gtet,..,..01111 all kinds of art classes for ALL ages & ALL levels SPRING TERM • Apri112-June 13 BROWSE THROUGH CLASSES & REGISTER ONLINE Birmingham Bloomfield Art Center 1516 S. Cranbrook Rd. Birmingham 48009 BBArtCenter.org 248.644.0866 1536370 irlIVIIE TIM Under --- Ge-r Customized personal training Massage therapy Deep discounts on training sessions! tter - Sfitp FREE TRAINING SESSION With this ad Expires 5/31/10 5111FF FIT! Completely renovated With new 0 41110171 TRAINING with the purchase of 30 sessions or more With this ad Expires 5/31/10 4119 Orchard Lake Road West Bloomfield WEST BLOOMFIELD PERSONAL TRAINING CLUB 36 April 8 • 2010 248-855-0345 iN John Simmons Owner/General Manager n May 5, James D. Grey will be honored with the 2010 Leonard N. Simons History Award from the Jewish Historical Society of Michigan "for his active commitment to preserv- ing family and community his- . tory and his work as a leader of JHSM." Grey, a past president of JHSM, is also a member of the Archives James Grey Committee of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit and Temple Israel, West Bloomfield. Grey has been president of the Jewish Genealogical Society of Michigan. He has served on the board of numerous community organizations. In his role as past president and volunteer for the JHSM, Grey has chronicled the history of the organi- zation through his photographs and commentary, and played an integral role in the establishment of the JHSM Yearbook Collection. It is a collection of Michigan high school yearbooks in which Jewish students are present. The contents of the books, which now number more than 900 and span more than 100 years, are also being put into a searchable online database. Grey created a consulting firm, WSU Peace Lecture Human rights advocate and former president of Ireland Mary Robinson will deliver the annual Max Mark- Cranbrook Peace Lecture at Wayne State University's Community Arts Auditorium, 450 Reuther Mall, on Thursday, April 22. No charge. Robinson, along with four others who have made noteworthy contri- butions to peace and positive social relations, will be honored during a 5:30 p.m. awards ceremony that evening at NextEnergy Center, 461 Burroughs, near the Detroit campus. The peace lecture was a longtime tradition of the former Cranbrook Peace Foundation before the organiza- tion was dissolved and Wayne State's Center for Peace and Conflict Studies adopted the tradition last year. Robinson, a recipient of the U.S. Genetrex, Inc., which serves as a facili- tator for compilation of family geneal- ogy and family histories. Grey, a certified public accountant, is managing partner of Grey & Co., PC, in Bingham Farms. He is a mem- ber of the American Institute of CPAs and the Michigan Association of CPAs. He is a past chairman of the MACPA Professional Careers Committee. He has been married to Ruth (Neuron) for 41 years, and they have two daughters, Rachel Ellis and Emily Berman, and five grandchildren. The Greys are parents of the late Jeff Grey and live in Farmington Hills. The Simons Award will be pre- sented at 7 p.m. Wednesday, May 5, at the 51st annual meeting of JHSM at the Holocaust Memorial Center in Farmington Hills. Keynote speaker will be Stephen Goldman, executive director of the HMC. A dessert recep- tion will follow. Tickets are $18. For information and reservations, call (248) 432-5517. Past recipients of the Leonard N. Simons History Award include: Philip Slomovitz, Avern L. Cohn, George M. Stutz, Irwin Shaw, Emma I a7aroff Schaver, Leslie S. Hough, Philip P. Mason, Mary Lou Simons Zieve, Judith Levin Cantor, Michael W. Maddin, Alan D. Kandel, Sidney M. Bolkosky, Adele W. Staller, Matilda Brandwine, Susie Citrin, Edith L. Resnick, Gerald S. Cook, Sharon L. Altemian, George M. Zeltzer and Mandell L. Berman. Presidential Medal of Freedom and former United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, will speak on "Challenges to Global Peacemaking" at 3 p.m. At the 5:30 p.m. gathering, she will receive the Cranbrook Peace Award. Receiving the Center for Peace and Conflict Studies' Community Peacemaker Award during the evening program will be Victor Ghalib Begg, chairman of the Islamic Council of Michigan, and Gail Katz, vice president of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Metropolitan Detroit. Also to be honored by the center are Joella Gipson, professor emeritus in the WSU College of Education (Lifetime Achievement Award); and Eugene Perrin, M.D. (Founders Award). For reservations and $65 tickets, call the Center for Peace and Conflict Studies at (313) 577-3453.