▪ THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, February 16, 1968 7 - Agreement on Reopening Banks OK'd by Israel, Jordan Psychiatrist Says Death Camp Horror Has Affected Children of Survivors HAMILTON, Ont. (JTA) — The suffering of concentration camp victims at the bands of the Nazis during World War II is having a distressing effect on their children who were born after the Holocaust, a prominent psychiatrist said at a lecture here. Dr. Vivian Rakoff, a member of the department of psychiatry at Jewish General Hospital in Mont- real, said that the children of con- centration camp families were often extremely depressed or po- tential delinquents. Plan 2,500 Units for Arab Families in East Jerusalem JERUSALEM (JTA) — Plans to erect 2,500 modern housing units in East Jerusalem, all of them out- side the old walled city, were an- nounced here by Housing Minister M. Ben Tov. He said that work on the first 500 units will begin in April. The new quarters will be occu- pied by Arab families who are to be evacuated from the old Jewish quarter inside the walled city, Ben Toy said. These families took up residence in the Jewish quarter after the 1948 war when the Jor- danian Arab Legion occupied the old city, Ben Tov pointed out. The new flats will constitute a vast improvement In living con- ditions for their occupants, he said. The buildings will be of a high standard with central heat- ing and stone fronts. An addi- tional 200-300 one- and two-family dwellings will be started in East Jerusalem next Spring. Residents of East Jerusalem will be issued Israeli identity cards and special permits allowing them to travel to Jordan on visits, accord- ing to the ministry of interior. Up to now, only West Bank residents have been permitted to visit in Jordan. The military government re- ported that it has issued 4,000 licenses for shops and other busi- ness enterprises in the Samaria and Judaea areas of the West Bank since last June's Six-Day War. In addition, 6,089 drivers' licenses were issued, and 4,722 cars were registered in the two regions. Magnes Scholarships for 2 Israeli Arabs JERUSALEM (JTA)—An agree- ment between Israel and Jordan on the principles for the reopening of Jordanian bank branches in the occupied West Bank was reported Dr. Rakoff spoke at a meeting to have been reached by a delega- sponsored by the psychiatry de- tion of Arab bankers who visited partment of McMaster University Amman and a group of Jordanian bankers who came to Jerusalem here. for the talks. "These kids were treated like Two main obstacles to reopening young princelings," he said. the bank branches, closed since "Their parents felt that they the June war, apparently were re- were so pr e c i o u s that they solved. Jordan reportedly waived wouldn't discipline them or they insistence on direct control of the were so tired they just didn't branches and Israel has agreed to have the energy to do so. The free deposits of Arabs who fled offspring of the camp survivors to Jordan. Details of the agree- were expected to fulfill the lives ment are now being worked out of all those the Nazis destroyed." with the possibility that the bank "These children found it difficult branches will resume operations to express the anger and resent- ment they often felt toward their Commerce Chief to Air parents because of the realization of what they had suffered. But Israel-Austria Trade Pact VIENNA (JTA) — Israel's min- when they hit adolescence, the ex- plosion is often violent," Dr. Rak- ister of commerce and industry, Zeev Sharef, will visit Austria next off said. fall for discussions of Israeli-Aus- He cited two cases of attempted trian trade relations, it was re- suicide by teen-aged children of ported here. parents who survived Nazi con- Sharef was invited by Austrian centration camps. "We must have Minister of Commerce Mitterer been idiots to think that the effects following a conference with the of these terrible experiences Israeli ambassador, Zev Sheek. wouldn't be passed on to a future Sharef's visit will coincide with generation," he said. Vienna's Fall Fair. lage of Tira. He is in his third year at the Hebrew University School of Agriculture in Rehovot. With no father and no family resources, scholarship assistance will make it possible for him to complete his education. of trade and the movement of tens of thousands of people be- tween the two countries in both directions." It commented that "while mortars and tanks have been firing, trucks continue to take vegetables to Jordan, former West Bank residents return to their homes under the family .reunion scheme and tourists pass in both directions." 1111********111114 9 * yr ■ IR II • II Don't Miss Out... Tuesday it Only... • •( * It * • DEXTER KE 4-1400 • a 20811 W. 8 Mile Rd. • Between Southfield & Telegraph "2 Minutes from Northland" you want a reduced price? Lauder's has done that tool between 1603.1625 now your Scotch dollar* buys more Lauder's Leave it to the Scots to find a way to save a dollar (whether it's this rare Scottish' dollar or the modern American greenback). Thousands of Scots (and Americans, too) are switching to Lauder's Scotch at its new reduced price. 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Named for the first president of the Hebrew University, the scholar- ships are given each year to Arab or Druze students for outstanding achievement. Dr. Magnes, noted American educator and rabbi, who was president of the university from its inception in 1925 until his death in 1948, was a strong pro- ponent of education as a basis for understanding and amity between Arabs and Jews in Israel. Marshall, New York attorney, served for many years as a vice- president of the American Friends of the Hebrew University. He is a former president of the New York City Board of Education. Samir Miari was born in the vil- lage of Barva in June 1946. He is one of 13 children. He is now in the third year of study at the Paul Baerwald School of Social Work at the Hebrew University. Ahmed Kassem is from the vil- in March. The arrangements re- portedly included the return of most of the assets of the branches from Amman where they have been held under Jordanian law. Most of the impounded funds be- long to East Jerusalem and West Bank Arabs. ("Paradoxical and perplexing" was the description given in the London Financial Times Tuesday for the situation along the Israeli- Jordanian demarcation line. The paper said "on one hand, there are daily exchanges of fire and on the other hand, there has been a completely unprecedented volume 111111111S SCOICH PRICE NOW ONLY $5.10 Q FOR YEARS LAUDER'S SOLD FOR $8.90