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Monthly Fee
Per Check
Per Deposit slip
Check Ordering Pet;
Courier Se'vke

Iota!

1- $0.00
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Z $0.00
0 $0.00
$0.00

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$ 80,00
$108,00

$0.00

$135,00
..-.
- 60,00
$192,00

$0.00

$:.")7:i.0{:.,

$240.00
5156.00
5225.00
$200.00

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55C4,25

5180,00
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tThese fees may vary based on your business's individual needs and usage.

"Service not available

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of New York's World Trade Center.
"I asked myself, 'What are these ter-
rorists trying to do?' The answer was
clear: to frighten the Americans into
withdrawing their support for Israel;
to send a message that the price of this
support would be American lives.
"I wanted to inspire hope in the next
generation by finding a place where
they could learn to overcome the fears
and prejudices of their communities."
Today, 22 countries are involved in
Seeds of Peace at the governmental
level, he says. Of the roughly 1,800
teens who have attended Seeds camp,
about 1,200 are from the Middle East.
In addition to Israelis and Palestinians,
these include Jordanians, Egyptians,
Tunisians and Qataris.
Others come from the Balkans,
Kosovo, Macedonia, Yugoslavia, Greek
and TurkishCyprus, Greece and
Turkey. A few Indians and Pakistanis
have been added to the mix this year.
Several American teens attend as well.
This summer, the camp's seventh,
170 campers attended the first three-
and-a-half-week session, with 159 at
the second session.
Each participating country chooses
it own delegation, usually through the
ministry of education. The idea is to
find the best and brightest young peo-
ple who will articulately represent
their countries.
Each country also chooses adults as
delegation leaders.
This summer, Yasser Arafat, leader
of the Palestine Authority, refused to
send an official delegation because of
the escalating violence in the Middle
East.
Some Palestinian teens who attend-
ed Seeds camp in 2000 made their
way back despite the restrictions, says
Meredith Katz, Seeds of Peace execu-
tive director.
Katz calls their attendance "really
courageous," adding that they could
find themselves in real trouble when
they return to the Palestinian territories.
She asked Jamal, one of the second-
year campers, why he made the diffi-
cult decision to defy Arafat. "He said
it was his responsibility to come and
explain the Palestinian position," Katz
says. "He told me, 'Palestine needs a
voice. This is our time to be heard.'"
Katz says the camp has beefed up its
security in response to the increased
Middle East violence.
The Seeds group runs a coexistence
center in east Jerusalem but it's
"absolutely impossible" for many teens
to get there for activities, says Jen
Marlowe, the center's program direc-
tor. "So we hold our meetings other

