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October 28, 1994 - Image 58

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1994-10-28

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

AP/JEROME DELAY

Why Flip A Coin
When It Comes To
Choosing Nursing
Home Care For
Your Parents?

The wreckage of the bus In downtown Tel Aviv.

Terror Attack
Victims Named

Make the choice
that leaves nothing
to chance.
Bortz Health Care.
24 Hour Nursing Care

Call 363-4121 for our

limousine to pick
you up for a personal
tour of the mansion.

75

WILLOW RD

,

SQUARE LAKE

LONG RARE RD .

COMMERCE RD

Bortz
Health Care
Of Green Lake

Family owned and operated for over 33 years. Medicare approved.

6470 Alden Drive, Orchard Lake

(Less than 20 minutes from Maple & Orchard Lake Roads)

58

E2

ril

Jerusalem (JTA) — Israeli offi-
cials have identified the 21 peo-
ple killed in the terrorist bombing
of a bus in the heart of Tel Aviv.
They are Anat Rosen, 20, of
Ra'anana; Ela Volkov, 21, of
Safed; Ayelet Langer-Alkobi, of
Kibbutz Yiron; Renye Yurist, a
23-year-old student from Hol-
land.
Also Tamar Carlibach-Sapri,
24, of Masuot Yitzhak; Pua
Yadger, 56, of Givat Ayim; Tsi-
pora Ariel, 64, of Tel Aviv; Ofra
Ben-Naim, 33, of Lod; Shira
Meroz-Kot, 20, of Kibbutz Beit
Hashita; Galit Rosen, 23, of
Holon; Miriam Adaf, 44, of
Sderot.
Also Habib Tishbi, 59, of Tel
Aviv; Moshe Gerdinger, 83, of Tel

Aviv; Dalia Ashkenazi, 62, of Tel
Aviv; Paula Rappaport, 74, of Tel
Aviv; Pierre Atlas, 59, of Kiryat
Ono; Esther Sharon, 21, of Lod;
David Lida, 74, of Tel Aviv;
Alexandra Shrapstein of Bat
Yam; and Salah Ovadia, 52, of
Holon, who was the driver of the
bus.
The name of one other person
among the 21 killed was not re-
leased for publication, at the re-
quest of the family.
Police forensic experts believe
the remains of a 22nd body be-
longed to the attacker.
Seventeen of the 42 people
wounded in the attack remained
hospitalized at the end of the
week, four of them in serious
condition.

Israel-Jordan Treaty
Stresses Normalization

Jerusalem (JTA) — In the peace
treaty initialed by Israel and Jor-
dan on Oct. 17, and scheduled to
be signed Oct. 26, the two sides
pledged to achieve and guard a
peace based on liberty, equality,
justice, honor and basic rights.
What follows are key points of
the agreement between the two
countries, based on reports in the
Israeli press:..
* Border demarcation: Israel
will return more than 120 square
miles of previously disputed land
to Jordan. The two countries
agreed to overall boundary defi-
nitions created in 1921 durihg the
period of the British Mandate.
They also agreed that Israeli
farmers would not be forced off
lands currently being cultivated.
Jordan accepted some 12 square
miles of land in the Arava in ex-
change for these lands.
Other areas will come under

Jordan sovereignty, but will be
immediately leased back to Israel
for a period of 25 years, with an
option to renew. These areas in-
clude 500 acres farmed by Kib-
butz Tzofar in the Arava and 200
acres near the Yarmuk River at
Naharayim in the north. Israeli
police will be allowed to enter
these areas with weapons for self-
defense.
• Water: Israel agreed to pro-
vide Jordan annually with 1.4 bil-
lion cubic feet of water from the
Yarmuk River. Israel will provide
an additional 350 million cubic
feet of water to Jordan from de-
salination of brackish water
sources near the Sea of Galilee.
In addition, the two countries
will construct two dams on the
Yarmuk and Jordan rivers. The
two sides will seek international
financing for these projects,
which could yield an additional

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