I NEWS What to expect from Sherwood Studios... Fine designer furniture - the latest looks, lines and colors Professional interior design service Elegant accessories for every taste Unique and unusual gifts for all occasions Action On Territories Debated By UN Council ELENA NEUMAN Courteous service always Complimentary gift wrapping Visit Sherwood...it's worth it! AL\X'AYS 20% OFF MFR SUGG RETAIL SOUTHFIELD TEL-TWELVE N1ALL - 12 MILE & TELEGRAPH DAILY 10-9 SUN 12-5 • 354-9060 WEST BLOOMFIELD 6644 ORCHARD LAKE AT MAPLE ROAD M-TH-F 10-9 • TU-W-SAT 10-6 • SUN 12-5 855-1600 Tables • Desks Wall Units Bedrooms Dining Rooms 10 Years Experience & Expertise in the Design of Affordable Laminate, Lucite & Wood Furniture For Appt Coll _ Muriel Wetsman 661.3838 NIBBLES & NUTS Bright Lights Our Hats Are Off to DADS* & GRADS *Father's Day is June 17 737-8088 33020 NORTHWESTERN • W. BLOOMFIELD Outside Of Michigan 1V150r 1400-752,113 3 Kosher & Sugarfree Available 18 r__ FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 1990 Local & Nationwide Delivery The newest lighting showroom featuring: • lamps • fixtures • bulbs inside Colony Interiors West Bloomfield 851-1881 Special to The Jewish News T he Security Council was scheduled to hold informal consultations late Tuesday to discuss send- ing a team of U.N. observers to the West Bank and Gaza Strip. An Arab League resolu- tion was expected to be sub- mitted during the session, but it was not clear what type of action it would rec- ommend. Palestine Liberation Organization leader Yassir Arafat, speaking to the Security Council in Geneva last Friday, called for a full- scale international observer force to monitor conditions in the administered ter- ritories and "protect the Pa- lestinian inhabitants." The United States had in- itially expressed support for sending a team of U.N. observers to the territories, but after failing to win Israel's assent, reversed its decision to back the plan. In Washington, State Department spokesman Margaret Tutwiler said Tuesday that the United States "continues to support the idea of a U.N. Security Council special envoy to observe the situation on the ground, return to New York and report back to the inter- ested parties." When asked whether the United States would support a request for an observer force made by U.N. Secre- tary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar, rather than the Security Council, Tutwiler said there was no distinction between the two. There were conflicting reports Tuesday of how quickly the Arab nations would act on a resolution. Some sources said any action would be delayed until after the conclusion of the Arab summit meeting in Baghdad, which was extend- ed one day. But other sources claimed that the Arab states were rushing to draft a resolution so that a Security Council vote could be called during the Shavuot holiday. ❑ JTA correspondent Howard Rosenberg in Washington con- tributed to this report Israeli Court Sentences Jew For Desecrations Tel Aviv (JTA) — David Goldner, a 41-year-old Israeli Jew, was sentenced this week by the Haifa Magistrates Court to four years in prison, 12 months of it suspended, for the May 12 desecration of 303 graves in the Haifa Jewish cemeteries of Kfar Samir and Hof Carmel. Goldner, an electrical en- gineer from Kiryat Motzkin, in the Haifa Bay area, was found guilty May 24. A returnee to Orthodox Judaism, Goldner had con- fessed to the desecration, describing himself as an emissary of the Messiah. Goldner's friend and co- defendant, Gershon Ten- nenbaum, 32, of nearby Kiryat Yam, is still undergo- ing psychiatric examina- tions to determine whether he is mentally sound. Ten- nenbaum likewise has de- scribed himself as a mes- sianic envoy. Magistrate Amirav Rand, who accepted Goldner's guil- ty plea, noted that Goldner had previously been ex- amined by psychiatrists and found to be responsible for his actions. Rand said he had no faith in Goldner's expressions of regret for the desecrations, which included virulently anti-Jewish slogans calling on Arab leaders to kill Jews. The magistrate said Goldner's actions were taken to breed hatred and enmity between com- munities. They were not only potentially dangerous but also ran counter to Goldner's stated aim of uniting the Jewish people, Rand said. Both Goldner and Tennen- baum said they wanted to free the Jewish people and draw attention to the dangers facing the Jewish people and Israel. Both were described as "eccentric." Police charged Goldner with the actual writing, with Tennenbaum alleged to have dictated to him what to write. The black spray-paint graffiti, at first thought to be indelible, have now been removed through the use of special chemicals.