S 01111111 g ICARNIANn4 g9.1 IL_0 Karmanos Cancer Institute Mobile Detection Center Take the time to take care of yourself — get a mammogram! Breast Cancer Screening services will be offered by the Karmanos Cancer Institute Mobile Detection Center. This includes screening mammograms clinical breast exams, and instruction in Breast Self-Examination (BSE). DATE: October 11th. and 12th. LOCATION: Century Plaza (Rochester Rd. between Big Beaver and Wattles) TIMES: 9:20 am - 4:40 pm Please call (810) 680 1600 to schedule an appointment for your mammo- gram. For more information on the Mobile Detection Center call (313) 833-0715 ext. 387. Sponsored by: - ANNETTE'S 1 P-r • UNIQUE BOUTIQUE •. A Specialty Shoppe Catering to Women's Intimate Fashion Needs Appointments suggested M-Sat. 1 0-5 Thurs. 1 0-7 3646 Rochester Rd. • Tro • Centur Plaza between Bi: Beaver and Wattles (810) 680-1600 Inv Its ANNIV SALE Friday, Oct. 6t 10-6 20 urday, Oct. 7th 10-6 Entire (previous sales excluded) *October is Breast Cancer w ess Month "Knoliing The a Makes A Huge Difference In T Fight" Applegate Square • Southfield • 354-4560 Ask About our NORTHWEST AIRLINES WoRLDPERKs ®/Miles Above Promotion West Bank Peace, The Sequel Israel and the Palestinians walk the second mile on , the road to peace, but land mines abound. STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS wo down, one to go. The lengthy West Bank with- drawal agreement initialed on Sunday by the Israelis and the Palestinians — after more than 80 hours of tense ne- gotiations — makes up in fine de- tail what it may lack in historic sweep. It was the second of three planned peace agreements be- tween the two parties. The first, . far more dramatic treaty signed in Washington in September 1993, spelled out a general out- line and timetable for an Israeli withdrawal from mostly Pales- tinian areas of Israel by the end of the century. That pact, whose implementation began in May 1994, called for limited Palestin- ian self-rule in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank town of Jeri- Cho. But as each treaty has grown in detail, its difficulty level has increased exponentially. The third agreement — to be negoti- ated starting in May, and signed by the end of the decade — should prove to be the hardest of all, especially when it comes to ironing out the fate of Jerusalem, which both sides continue to claim as their own. The latest pact was initialed by Israeli Foreign Minister Shi- mon Peres and Palestinian Lib- eration Organization Chairman Yassir Arafat in the town of Taba, Egypt, just two hours before (Erev) Rosh Hashanah. The for- mal signing was scheduled to take place on the White House lawn Thursday. The agreement lays out in ex- cruciating detail exactly how the State of Israel and the Palestin- ian Authority plan to disengage themselves from the unpleasant business of commingled rule in most of the West Bank. That uncoupling will begin in about two weeks, following the signing of the agreement by the Israeli Knesset and the Pales- tinian Authority. Despite vocal protests from opposition factions in both organizations, the two ap- provals were expected earlier this week --barring acts of terrorism by either side, intended to derail the nascent plan. "Ladies and gentlemen," Mr. Peres said in an emotional voice at a ceremony Sunday afternoon, "let's face it, what we are doing today is not a normal political or economic enterprise. It is history in the real meaning of the word." The hard-fought plan offers "a real opportunity to change the course of hopelessness and des- peration and bloodshed into something more promising, more noble, more humane," he said. Mr. Arafat, for his part, was a bit more circumspect, referring to "our prisoners, to those who were injured," the New York Times reported. Still, he offered a wish of "shana tova" to the Is- raelis. What these two longtime ene- mies have agreed to is a 400-page document that deals with every- thing from security arrange- ments and a transfer of civil authority, to interim elections, economic relations and legal af- fairs. The first visible sign of the deal will come in two weeks, when the Israeli army begins withdrawing from the West Bank towns of Jenin, Nablus, Tulkarm, Qalqilya, Ramallah and Bethle- hem, as well as 450 towns and villages. A 12,000-member Pales- tinian police force will take over these areas. Also, the plan calls for inter- nationally monitored elections for an interim Palestinian Council in the West Bank starting 22 On the issue of Hebron, the compromise was the most tortured. days after the Israeli army with- draws. Because a road must be built out of Hebron, the only West Bank town with Israeli settlers, the election isn't expected to hap- pen until the spring. On the issue of Hebron, which houses some 450 Israeli settlers, the compromise was the most tor- tured. The city is to be divided into three zones, controlled vari- ously by the Palestinians, the Is- raelis, and the two entities jointly. An Israeli Embassy briefing on Hebron indicates the touchy na- ture of the compromise, and hints at the troubles to come in other settler-populated areas: "In view of the Jewish presence in the heart of Hebron and the sensitive historical and religious aspects involved, special arrange- ments will apply," the briefing PEACE PAGE 118