U.N. Security Council Condemns Bombings • Nursing • Personal Care Registered Nurses (RN) Licensed Practical Nurses (LPN) Certified Nurse Aide (CNA) Home Health Aide (HHA) Companion/Sitter • JCAHO Accredited • 24 Hour/ 7 Day Per Week Service • Foreign Language & Hearing Impaired Intrepreters Available Abcare's HomeHealth Exchange A Division Of Exchange Services, Inc. 1-800-70-NURSE EYE TRAVEL HAVE AN EYE EXAM IN YOUR HOME /OFFICE JOEL ZACKS, M.D. A BOARD CERTIFIED OPHTHALMOLOGIST NO WAITING ROOM OR INCONVENIENCE EXCELLENT CHOICE FOR THE BUSY EXEC. OR THE MOBILITY IMPAIRED COMPLETE EYE EXAMINATION INCLUDING Glass prescriptions second opinions cataract and glaucoma evaluations (/) UJ U) UJ Low Vision Aids We will assist you with insurance CALL 810-569-7054 FOR AN APPT. OR INFORMATION LU LU 1- 34 Advertising in The Jewish News Gets Results Place Your Ad Today. Call 354 6060 - United Nations (JrA) — Bowing to pressure from non-aligned na- tions, the U.N. Security Council has issued a statement that con- demns recent terrorist bombings but refuses to acknowledge that they were targeted at Jewish and Israeli institutions. The statement, read by Secu- rity Council President Jamsheed Marker of Pakistan, followed a meeting where Argentine For- eign Minister Guido Di Tella re- ported on the July 18 bombing of the building housing Argentina's Jewish communal institutions. More than 100 people were killed in the blast. The informal consultation was called by Argentina and by Great Britain. Two car bombs in Lon- don damaged the Israeli Em- bassy and a Jewish fund-raising organization, injuring nearly two dozens individuals. A draft statement circulated early last week specifically men- tioned the Israelite Association for Mutual Assistance in Buenos Aires and the Israeli Embassy in London as the targets, and ex- pressed solidarity with the vic- tims of the attacks. But as approved by consensus last week, the statement ex- pressed "sympathy and condo- lences to the victims and their families," as well as to the people and governments of Argentina and of the United Kingdom. Jews and Israel are not mentioned. This bowdlerization of the statement came at the behest of the non-aligned states, repre- sented in the Security Council by Pakistan, according to U.N. sources. Pakistan was criticized by Amnesty International for harsh and arbitrary imposition of its new Islamic blasphemy laws, which call for the death penal- ty• In its statement on the recent bombings, the Security Council demanded "an immediate end to all such terrorist attacks," and stressed "the need to strengthen international cooperation in or- der to take full and effective mea- sures to prevent, combat and eliminate all forms of terrorism, which affect the international community as whole." Israeli, American and Argen- tine officials have accused Iran of sponsoring these terror attacks. Teheran has denied involve- ment. In a meeting with his Israeli counterpart, Emilio Cardenas, Argentina's ambassador to the United Nations, said that as the investigation of the July 18 at- tack continued, his country would seek a formal Security Council resolution condemning the blast and those responsible. The Israeli ambassador, Gad Ya'acobi, meanwhile, expressed disappointment at "the deletion of the explicit reminder that the terror activities in Buenos Aires and in London were aimed against Jewish targets, Jewish communities, and the Embassy of Israel in London. "This language is an escape by those who are not ready to fight aggressively against this inter- national threat to stability and peace," he said. "The deletion of the references to the targets is unfair, and it causes damage to the moral position and standing of the Security Council on other matters." Rabbi Marvin Hier, dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, issued a statement condemning the Se- curity Council for refusing to identify Jews as the principal tar- gets of the recent attacks. Orthodox Riot At Excavation Tel Aviv (JTA) — Israeli police arrested some 25 fervently Or thodox Jews in the Jaffa quarter of Tel Aviv this week after a demonstration against archaeo- logical excavations turned into a riot. The demonstration involving more than 100 people turned vi- olent when protesters began at- tacking the police. Some of the protesters also overturned a jeep belonging to the Antiquities Authority. Most of those arrested were re- leased by that evening, but a few were held in custody for further The manager of the site, Yos- si Levy, said the demonstration will not stop work on the dig. Religious groups frequently have held protests at archaeo- logical sites in recent months, claiming that the remains being dug up were those of Jews. But archaeologists at the Jaf- fa site say the graves being in- vestigated are those of Muslims and Christians dating back to the Byzantine period. A yeshiva student was arrest- ed two weeks ago for allegedly stealing bones from the site after tying up and beating a guard. The excavations are being car- ried out prior to the construction of several hundred new apart- ment buildings in Jaffa. Archaeologists are concerned that the construction will destroy were held in custody.