THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 8 Friday, August 24, 1919 Navy Captures 3 Terrorists TEL AVIV (JTA) — An Israeli patrol boat pre- vented a terrorist attack Friday night against a civi- lian settlement in northern Caricatures for your party By SAM FIELD Ca II 399-1320 Israel by sinking a rubber dinghy carrying terrorists near Rosh Hanikra off the Israel-Lebanon coast. According to the army communique, the terrorists fired a salvo of rockets at the Israeli boat and the Israeli crew returned fire. One of the occupants of the dinghy was hit and fell overboard. He was declared as missing. Three other ter- rorists on the vessel were captured and questioned. The dinghy, which was sunk, appeared to have sailed directly from Leba- non and was not, as in prev- ious incidents, launched from a mother ship. Dr. Julien Priver Honored at Testimonial Marking His Retirement at Sinai Hospital A community reminisced while a dedicated adminis- trator of a major health in- stitution was being honored for 28 years of labors to the community. This is the simple sum- mary of the notable event that was attended Monday evening by some 300 prom- inent Detroiters, at Adat Shalom Synagogue, at the dinner honoring Dr. Julien Priver on his retirement as executive vice president of Sinai Hospital. Participants in the pro- gram, commencing with the toastmaster, Alfred Deutsch, president of Sinai Put a little charm into your life .. . 14K GOLD CHARMS, at least 20% OFF! SPECIAL SALE A. Reg. 11.50 Floating heart charm ... 7.50 B. Reg. 13.50 Teddy bear charm ....8.75 limited quantities C. Reg. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. 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Shown at Monday's dinner honoring Sinai Hospi- tal's Dr. Julien Priver are, from left, Sinai President Alfred Deutsch, Dr. Priver, Max Fisher and Jewish Welfare Federation President George Zeltzer. Hospital, and Including Max M. Fisher, Dr. Eli Brown and George M. Zelt- zer, paid honor to the retiree for devotions and adminis- trative skills that have bef- riended patients and physi- cians and have earned for the honoree the admiration and respect of the entire community. Deutsch read the text of a resolution by the Sinai board in honor of Dr. Priver, which concluded: "Be it further resolved that a copy of these sen- timents be spread upon the board minutes of Sinai Hospital of Detroit so that in its history his (Dr. Priver's) name shall be recorded as one of the most important parts of the growth and develop- ment of the institution during its first quarter- century." Especially appropriate for the occasion were the reminiscences of Max Fisher. He recited a list of early participants in the creation of Sinai Hospital, the first presidents, the community directors, the noted physicians, who had important roles in the es- tablishment of the Hospital. Fisher, whose association with Dr. Priver dates back to the hospital's infancy, re- called events and reminis- cences of the nearly three decades of Dr. Priver's dedi- cation to Sinai Hospital. He spoke of Dr. Priver's achievements as the hospi- tal's founding director and of his "unitiring service to the community." He commented on Dr. Priver's leadership during the growth of the hospital, his role as a liaison between the physicians and the board of trustees, his civic activities as well as the con- tributions of the Priver fam- ily. He congratulated him also as the recipient of an award presented this summer by the Michigan Hospital Association: the Joseph R. Homminga Memorial Award given annually to salute per- sons in health care ad- ministration for their contributions toward the betterment of hospital care in Michigan. Speaking for the medical staff, Dr. Eli Brown, chief of anesthesiology and former chief of staff, called Dr. Priver the ideal physician, a dedicated teacher and the complete physician. Dr. Priver's response to the evening's encomia was deeply moving: "My years of service were enriched by the loyal friends and colleagues for whose support and under- standing I shall be forever grateful. They number in the hundreds and now are spread throughout the land," Dr. Priver stated. He added, "I welcome a respite from the daily pressures which are characteristic of our burgeoning institution and the hectic climate in which it functions. I shall miss the opportunity the position has afforded for almost 28 years to serve the community you re- present. "I'm grateful to the hun- dreds of friends with whom I served on committees, in board sessions, at Federa- tion, in sister agencies, at civic and social functions, all of whom have befriended me in my past years in office. "You have my everlasting gratitude for the privilege of having served a fine com- munity," Dr. Priver said. Dr. Richard Hertz recited the invocation and a toast to the honoree was given by George Stutz, who chaired the committee of ar- rangements for the tes- timonial. Case Against Archbishop Trifa Deemed Harmful to Jewish-Christian Relations NEW YORK (JTA) — "The fact that the Orthodox Church in America has not seen fit to convene an ecclesiastical county in the case of Archbishop Valerian Trifa is the single most painful aspect of Jewish- Christian relations in the United States today," ac- cording to Dr. Michael Wys- chogrod, senior consultant on interreligious affairs of the Synagogue Council of America (SCA), the repre- sentative body of the major branches of Judaism in the United States. Trifa heads the Roma- nian Orthodox Episcopate of America which is under the canonical jurisdiction of the Orthodox Church in America, the second largest Orthodox body in the U.S. The Greek Orthodox Church headed by Ar- chbishop Takovos is the largest Orthodox Church in this country. Trifa has been accused of leading a Romanian Fascist group during World War II and or- ganizing a pogrom in Bucharest in January 1941, in which hundreds of Jews were killed. He is scheduled to go on trial soon in the Federal Dis- trict Court in Detroit on charges of having with- held important informa- tion in his immigration and naturalization appli- cations. The Orthodox Church in America," Wyschogrod said today, has taken the posi- tion that it will take no ac- tion unless Bishop Trifa is convicted in the Detroit trial. "For a church to abdicate its religious responsibility to investigate grave charges against one of its bishops and to leave it to a secular court to settle this matter, is to ignore the obligation of religious bodies to adhere to their own teachings. Canon law exists so that churches can govern themselves in- stead of being governed by secular authorities." Wyschogrod said that for over a year, a committee re- presenting the Synaoguge Council and the Orthodox Church in America (OCA) examined documents and heard witnesses on the Trifa matter. In May of this year, the SCA called on other Or- thodox Churches and non-Orthodox Christian bodies in the U.S. to speak out against the continuing scandal of Bishop Trifa's holding office in a major Ameri- can church. More recently, the SCA officially requested the Standing Conference of Ca- nonical Orthodox Bishops, headed by Takovos, to take up the Trifa case. Repentant Nazi BUENOS AIRES (JTA) — Gabriel Ruiz, the former editor of "El Caudillo," a pro-Nazi publication which was subsidized by the Peron government from 1973 to 1975, and who used to refer to Hitler as "mein fuhrer" and was a rabid anti- Semite, recently visited the DATA offices to say that he was disgusted with his Nazi past and apologized for hav- ing advocated pogroms against Jews.