most hospitable people in the Middle East." Persons interested in visiting Israel might be tempted to consult a 1984 Traveller's Guide to the Middle East. Don't bother. The guide, published in London, makes no mention of Israel. It lists only Arab states. (See map 4). A more recent and popular publication, Fodor's, from 1989, includes the West Bank as part of its guide to visiting Jordan. The West Bank is marked "zone oc- cupied by Israel." Other maps and atlases join the Jordanian and British publications in iden- tifying the West Bank as part of Jordan. These in- clude Japan's Zenkyo's Atlas; the Kummerly and Frey Atlas, published in 1978 in Bern, Switzerland; Kurt Schroeder's map of Jordan and Lebanon, published 1966 in Bonn, Germany; and Canada's Ox- ford University Press map, published in 1972. To get around the confus- ing issue of how to portray the West Bank, many maps and atlases showing Jerusalem are labeled "Israel with Jordan." W hat childhood would be complete without hours and hours of memorizing world capitals? Turn off that TV, put away those comics and get down to serious study. Washington, D.C., is the capital of the United States, Cairo is the capital of Egypt. But don't look to maps to find the capital of Israel. Since 1949, when Israel's seat of government was transferred from temporary headquarters in Tel Aviv, Israel has maintained that Jerusalem is its capital. But most foreign nations con- tinue to consider Israel's capital Tel Aviv and locate their embassies there. Some American-made maps do show Jerusalem as the capital. Among these are the 1985 Hammond Gold Medallion World Atlas. The Hammond Atlas gives the status of the West Bank and Gaza as undetermined. The 1979 National Geographic Our World pic- ture atlas, presumably for children, also lists Jerusalem as Israel's capi- tal. At the same time, it would seem to suggest that the West Bank is part of Jordan. Nations are por- trayed in various colors, with the West Bank and Jordan the same color. The West Bank and the Golan Heights are marked with the same dark lines, apparently to show Israel's presence. What some might find surprising is the large number of international maps and atlases — in- cluding those with the West Bank shown as Jordanian territory — that mark Jerusalem as Israel's capi- tal. Among these publica- tions are Spain's Gran Atlas Aguilar; the Larousse Atlas Classique of Paris; Italy's Grande Atlante Geografico; and Japan's Zenkyl's Atlas. The Larousse Atlas, Zenkyo's Atlas and the Grande Atlante Geografico also dare to tackle the deli- cate problem of pleasing both Palestinians and Jews. They label Israel, the West Bank and Gaza both Israel and Palestine. ❑ 10. The 1949-1967 Armistice Line. The dark area is Israel, the lined areas are Judea and Samaria. 11. Israel today. The Sinai Desert, which Israel won in the 1967 War, was returned to Egypt as part of the peace treaty. In white: the Gaza Strip, Judea and Samaria, the Golan Heights. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 29