THE ROOTS SUMMER SALE sideshow. For most Israelis, the main event was the latest bout of name-calling between Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Likud. It began at the Jerusalem demonstration, when Likud lead- ers dubbed as "criminal" the de- cision "to bring Arafat to Eretz Yisrael." The next day, Mr. Ra- bin charged that "an evil circle of collusion has emerged between the Hamas murderers and Is- raeli's radical right." He also called Likud's accusation that his government planned to concede parts of Jerusalem — creating the impression that Israelis are not united in their stand on the capital's future — "an act of po- litical villainy." In response, at a Knesset ses- sion on no-confidence motions (which were defeated, 56-47), Likud Chairman Benjamin Ne- tanyahu decried the "verbal hooli- ganism of a prime minister who has lost control of his mouth." "Where do you think you are?" he scolded Mr. Rabin for his sharp attack on the opposition. "Do you think this is Saddam Hussein's Baghdad? Do you think you're in Stalin's Soviet Union?" But privately, various Likud figures wondered aloud whether Mr. Rabin hadn't correctly ob- served that Likud was being drawn into the wake of the rad- ical right. Once again, the party had failed to get its classic con- stituency out on the streets. Most protesters in Jerusalem were young, religious people ("settler types") — and they are not going to win Likud the next election. Worst of all, perhaps, in terms of its effect on wider public, all this rhetorical mayhem was going on while a paternal Yassir Arafat was wooing his own people as "my brothers, my beloved." The atmosphere had calmed somewhat as the chief architects of the peace process (Mr. Rabin, Mr. Arafat and Shimon Peres) flew to Paris to receive a peace prize from UNESCO. But the im- pact of the Arafat visit will not soon be forgotten since, finally, Palestinian autonomy is taking on flesh and, despite the gloom- and-doom of Israel's opposition, the process is going forward. In Paris, the three leaders will discuss a timetable for extending autonomy to the West Bank, the redeployment of Israeli troops, and scheduling Palestinian elections (perhaps in October). No one is betting they'll pull this off quick- ly. But courtesy of Mr. Arafat's arrival, there is a new sense of movement in the air. Wherever this historic week leads to, its most decisive result is the growing re- alization, and the spreading ac- ceptance, of what Palestinians have hoped and Israeli, have sus- pected since Oslo: Things will nev- er be the same, and there's no turning back now. 0 Save up to 50% ON EVERYTHING IN THE STORE Shoes 20 % off his is the life!," he said, as the warmth of the whirlpool gently soothed away his cares. "What a mechaya!" 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High-impact aerobics might harm bal- ance by causing otoliths (granules floating in a gel in two outer ear chambers) to jam down on hair cells that transmit information to the brain. HIGH-IMPACT STUDY A paper recently published in "The Jour- nal of Sports Medicine and Physical Fitness" confirms an earlier suspicion that high-impact aerobics is related to inner-ear damage. A study of regular high-impact exercisers found that damage to their inner ears produced such symptoms as persistent vertigo, dizziness, im- balance, motion sickness, ringing or fullness in their ears, and high-frequency hearing loss. Eighty percent of those who complained of these symptoms had suffered damage to the parts of the inner ear involved with balance. It was also noted that 67 percent of high-impact sports enthusiasts with symptoms exhibited high-frequency hearing loss. If switching to a lower-impact exercise does not alleviate symp- toms of hearing loss, a professional evalua- tion is suggested. 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