Free Prostate Cancer Screening Prostate cancer can be successfully treated when detected in the early stages. The facts about prostate cancer: • It is the second most common form of cancer death among American men. • An estimated 200,000 men will be diagnosed with prostate cancer in 1994. • Approximately 38,000 men will die from prostate cancer this year. Wednesday, September 21, 1994 9:00 am to 4:00 pm Providence Medical Center-West Bloomfield 7416 Haggerty Road (at Fourteen Mile) 810-424-3183 Friday, September 23, 1994 9:00 am to 4:00 pm Sinai Family Medical Center in Oak Park 13361 West Ten Mile (at Coolidge) 810-547-0700 Many of the 38,000 deaths could have been avoided if the cancer had been detected at an early stage. That's why Providence and Sinai are joining forces in the fight against prostate cancer by offer- ing free prostate cancer screening exams. If you're 40 years of age or older and would like to register for a free screening, contact the location nearest you. Early detection and annual testing are the best weapons in the fight against prostate cancer. foROV1DENCE Providence Hospital and Medical Centers Imo N Sinai News Senate Demands Golan Study Washington (JTA) — Members of Congress will have a study de- tailing scenarios of possible U.S. troop deployment on the Golan Heights in their hands by Oct. 15. An amendment to the $243 bil- lion Defense Appropriations bill, approved by the Senate last week, requires the State De- partment to release a confiden- tial study conducted by the Rand Corporation. The study examines the roles U.S. troops could play in Middle East peace settlements. The Senate bill, approved Aug. 11 with a vote of 86-14, also in- cludes several provisions for fund- ing joint U.S.-Israel military projects. Jewish groups opposed to the current peace process, who have banded together in a loose coali- tion with Christian pro-Israel or- ganizations to oppose any U.S. peacekeepers on the Golan, hailed the amendment as a "ma- jor achievement." Calling themselves the Coali- tion for a Secure U.S.-Israel Friendship, the 20 groups joined forces in June to oppose any set- tlement with Syria that includes U.S. peacekeepers. "Our ultimate goal is to pre- vent such a deployment which is useless and would serve only as a fig leaf for Prime Minister Ra- bin," Herbert Zweibon, chairman of Americans for a Safe Israel, a member of the coalition said. The issue of U.S. troops being sent to enforce a peace agreement between Israel and Syria came to the fore two months ago when the Senate overwhelmingly de- feated a measure that would have enacted burdensome re- porting requirements before the president could station troops on the Golan. Many pro-Israel members of Congress, as well as the Ameri- can Israel Public Affairs Com- mittee, fought against the measure, saying it was prema- ture and could damage sensitive negotiations between Israel and Syria. Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin joined the fray at the time, ac- cusing the right-wing groups of trying to derail the peace process. Most analysts believe that any future peace deal between Israel and Syria will require some in- ternational observers or forces, including from the United States. The Coalition for a Secure U.S.-Israel Friendship, including the Christians' Israel Public Af- fairs Campaign, the Center for Security Policy, World Commit- tee for Israel, Americans for A Safe Israel and the Jewish War Veterans of America, in June pur- chased advertisements in the New York Times and the New Re- public, expressing their opposi-