I FOCUS ' • 44,1.14, Desaparecidos WE SELL ANDERSEN® WINDOWS, AND EVERYTHING ELSE UNDER THE SUN Continued from preceding page sent a clean face," she says. Argentina established an in- formation, office to deal with the issue. Epelbaum appeal- ed to representatives at the bureau, "but they didn't an- - swer, of course." Former Argentinian Pres- ident Raul Alfonsin, whose constitutional government in 1983 replaced the military dictatorship responsible for the kidnapp- ings, "said some mistakes were made with human rights," she says. "But then he bowed to the . . military and gave impunity to most who were guilty." He established a 1987 deadline for human rights violations inquires and only punished high-placed offi- cials, absolving others in- volved in the kidnappings as "just following orders," Epelbaum says. • If you need to stock up for your building or remodeling project, we've got just what you want. Like Andersen® windows. 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(immediate delivery) FROM LAMPS 20-50% OFF Sittino Pretty Evergreen Plaza 19747 W 12 Mile, Southfield 552-8850 MIS: Mon.-Sat. 10.6 • Thurs 10.7 46 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1989 THIS SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PUBLISHER Gift giving made easy with. . . U.S. SAVINGS BONDS The Great American Investment Epelbaum fights for her cause through the Argentine Historical and Social Memory Foundation, a human rights organization she helped establish. And she still marches at the Plaza de Mayo. • ❑ I NEWS I M.E. Policy Statement Ruffles Few Feathers New York (JTA) — Leaders of Jewish organizations have generally welcomed a draft policy statement on the Middle East released Oct. 11 by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops. But several of them have expressed concern over the statement's call for the es- tablishment of a "Palestinian homeland with its sovereign status recog- nized by Israel." At the same time, they have applauded language in the statement reflecting concern for Israel's security, its affirmation of U.S. government support for Israel and its demand that "that the Arab states enter into full diplomatic relations with Israel." "It is a fair and balanced statement," said Henry Siegman, executive director of the American Jewish Congress. The voluminous 40-page draft is titled "Toward Peace in the Middle East: Prob- lems and Principles." It will be voted on by bishops from across the country when they convene in Baltimore on Nov. 6. The document will be the first statement on the Mid- dle East conflict issued by the American Catholic hierarchy since a two-page document on the subject was drawn up in 1978. In Washington, the State Department criticized that portion of the statement on a Palestinian state as not ti "We know we won't recover our children," she says of the Mothers. "But we must continue to present our tragedy. We have to leave a legacy for the younger generation — to fight for justice and defend human rights. We cannot allow this tragedy to be repeated in our country, or in any other." TM off retail on everything! 19011 West Ten Mile Road Southfield, Michigan 48075 She also claims current Argentinian President Carlos Menem has done little to punish the guilty or help find the whereabouts of the desaparecidos. helpful. Spokeswoman Margaret Tutwiler said, "We don't favor any unilateral steps or declara- tions." Several Jewish organiza tions also criticized the call for a homeland. The Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith said the policy statement con- tains "many positive and constructive elements." But it called the recommenda- tion on territorial sovereign- ty "fundamentally flawed" and said it could "obscure the positive." To many observers, the language of the Catholic statement seems painstak- ing in its efforts to be even- handed. It states that the Palesti- nians should be "willing to discuss secure boundaries and stable political relations with Israel" and that Israel must be willing to "discuss territory and sovereignty with Palestinians." However, particularly when discussing the Palestinian uprising in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, its sympathies clearly do not lie with the Israeli govern- ment. "The central theme which needs to be lifted up and re- peated is that the intifada is a cry for justice; it is a cry for personal and political identi- ty," the document reads. Spokesmen for the American Jewish Com- Mittee called that descrip- tion unbalanced, saying that I ihowl -I •