100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

June 29, 1979 - Image 20

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1979-06-29

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

20 Friday, June 29, 1919

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

Dr. Julian Priver Cited by Hospital Group

The Michigan Hospital
Association has presented
Dr. Julian Priver its 1979
Joseph R. Homminga
Memorial Award for "out-
standing contributions to
the Michigan Hospital
Community in the field of
facilities planning and con-
struction ."
Dr. Priver, executive vice
president of Sinai Hospital,
was presented the award
Thursday evening on Mac-
kinac Island during the
association's annual meet-
ing.
Earlier this year Dr.
Priver was named executive
of the year by United Com-
munity Services of Met-
ropolitan Detroit.
Dr. Priver has been the
, chief executive at Sinai
since 1951, although the
hospital did not formally
open until 1953. Under
his direction Sinai has
expanded from 210 beds
to 625 beds and de-

preoperative holding area
which received an award in
1973 for innovative hospital
practices.
Under his guidance Sinai
has become a teaching
facility affiliated with the
Wayne State University
School. of Medicine, the
Shapero School of Nursing
was developed, and Sinai
became affiliated with the
Metropolitan Northwest
Detroit Hospitals Corpora-
tion with Providence, Grace
and Mt. Carmel hospitals to
share services and reduce
duplication of services.

-

ENCORE MEN'S CLOTHIERS Ltd.

NOW PRESENTS IT'S

Semi-Annual
ODDS & ENDS SALE!!!

SAVINGS UP TO

75%

Suits, Sport Jackets, Slacks, Shirts, Ties and More!!!

Now Look Good For Less
Shop Early For Best Selection

Sale Ends July 8

ENCORE MEN'S CLOTHIERS LTD.

26400 Twelve Mile Road — Racquetime Center
Southfield, Michigan 48034
353-0018

Minimum charge
for alterations
on reductions of
50% or More

Men's & Ladies'
Outside Alterations

HOURS:

Monday, Thurs., Friday 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Tues., Wednesday 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

ALL MAJOR
CREDIT CARDS
HONORED

DR. JULIAN PRIVER

veloped and incorpo-
rated a number of inno-
vations in hospital care.
Dr. Priver was instru-
mental in the formation of
Sinai's cleft palate clinic, its
low vision clinic and center
for continued care. He insti-
tuted the hospital's

Need for Spiritual, Physical
Jerusalem Says Fackenheim

NEW YORK (JTA) — Dr.
Emil Fackenheim, a noted
Jewish philosopher, said
that while the "spiritual
Jerusalem" is important to
all Jews, the need for a
physical Jerusalem is
necessary as a safe harbor
for all Jews in times of op-
pression.
Dr. Fackenheim ad-
dressed a "Convocation on
Jerusalem" sponsored by
the New York Board of
Rabbis at the National Con-
ference of Christians and
Jews headquarters in New
York. The Catholic and Pro-
testant perspectives on
Jerusalem were also pre-
sented.
Dr. Fackenheim, profes-
sor of philosophy at the
University of Toronto,
spoke of the "relationship
between- the Jerusalem
above and below" — the
physical and spiritual as-
pects of the city.
Dr. Fackenheim em-
phasized the political
explosiveness of the
Jerusalem issue in noting
Canadian Prime Minister
Joe Clark's campaign
promise to move the
Canadian Embassy from
Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, as
a formal recognition of
that city's rightful claim
as Israel's capital. He
said this has sparked un-
precedented hostile at-

tacks on the Clark gov-
ernment.
Rev. William Harter,
chairman of the National
Council of Churches Com-
mittee on the Status of
Jerusalem and Human
Rights in the Middle East,
said Jerusalem was a "sym-
bol of survival" with an "in-
finite capacity to astonish."
He stressed that "we
mustn't reduce the present
and immediate future to
allegory and symbol. The
Jerusalem to come must not
cancel out the Jerusalem
that is."
Dr. Eugene Fisher,
executive secretary of •the
Secretariat for Catholic-
Jewish Relations of the Na-
tional Conference of
Catholic Bishops, presented
a Catholic perspective on
Jerusalem. Dr. Fisher out-
lined the traditional out-
look on Jerusalem and the
"Holy Land," and em-
phasized that the church
"was deeply committed to
Eretz Yisrael."

Court Rules- Out
Entebbe Liability
for Air France

PARIS (JTA)— A French
Court of Appeals has
cleared Air France of any
direct or- indirect responsi-
bility for the Entebbe
hijacking of June-July 1976
and decided that the-French
air carrier is not liable to
pay damages to the
passenger victims.
The court's ruling came in
reply to a request by an Is-
raeli couple, Joseph and
Lisette Haddad, for com-
pensation. The two Israelis
were on the plane when it
was hijacked to Uganda by
terrorists.
The three-man court
said, "Air France has no
police responsibility and
no right to check
passengers at a &reign
airport. The company'
cannot exclude
passengers from board-
ing the plane on the basis
of their physical appear-
ance. It is thus unable to
take all necessary meas-
ures to prevent such an
incident from occur-
ring."
Legal experts noted that,
had the court found in favor
of the plaintiffs, it would
have created a serious pre-
cedent which might have
influenced the interpreta-
tion of the "Warsaw Con-
vention," which prescribes
the responsibilities of air
carriers.

Liberty State Bank Donates
to Telethon for the Retarded

Montreal JVS
Job Placement
on Rise in '79

MONTREAL (JTA) —
Some 3,900 men and women
applied for help to the
Jewish Vocational Service
here in 1978-1979 and the
JVS succeeding in finding
jobs for more of them than
last year, according to the
JVS annual report.
The applicants included
nearly 1,000 immigrants
and represented an increase
of 17 percent over the prior
year. The 1,109 jobs found
for them represented an in-
crease of 15 percent over the
prior year.

THE LAIIHT f\AJARD

Liberty State Bank and Trust presented a $5,000
check to Soupy Sales' seventh annual Telethon for the
Retarded earlier this month. The bank's new hot air
balloon was featured at the telethon. Shown during
the check presentation are, from left, bank president
Gerald M. Salkowski, Bill Zupner of the telethon,
bank chairman Morris Fenkell and Soupy Sales.

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan