PHOTO BY AP Talk to your doctor about prostate cancer. Your prostate is a small gland located at the base of your bladder. Many men don't even know they have a prostate or that prostate cancer is common, especially among older men. In fact, prostate cancer is the leading form of cancer in Michigan. If you're b ei veers 50 and 75 years old, ask your doctor if you should he tested. Have this talk when you 'turn 40 if there is prostate cancer in your famil y or if you're African American. And if you experience pain or discomfort when The Knesset hears debates on the peace agreement. you urinate, see a doctor right away. Razor Thin Majority Passes Peace Accord want to know more? Call 1-800-922-6266 Broilidit to ■ oti I.y the of ea It I Department amt die American Cancer Hair Transplants? • Board Certified, American Academy of Dermatology • 22 Years of Successful Hair Transplant Surgery • Recognized Worldwide • Your Own Natural Hair • Evaluation and Procedure Performed by Drs. Tessler and Aronovitz C f":" - Free Consultation! AFTER Gary Cochran Owner of Beau jacks Restaurant fOC I Please send a free video Di YES & color brochure. BEFORE Name Telephone Address State City Zip Send coupon to Martin E. Tessler; M.D. & Associates 26400 W. 12 Mile Rd. • Suite 150 • Southfield, MI 48034 or call 1-800-531-7117 2. 1* Ik4if 4 sa .1. %IAD ", ‘' iate 44 • MN kl:1 17111 1)2,q" -'s 1 11% .1 " 1411 .11. t ,4 11 6.• I oc "If I didn't proudly boast, people would never know I've had a hair transplant." MARTIN E. TESSLER, M.D. & ASSOCIATES EXCLUSIVELY PRACTICING HAIR TRANSPLANT SURGERY A Perfect Family Gift... A Subscription to the Jewish News. 810-354-6620 Despite two Labor defections, Oslo II passes and becomes an irreversible reality. ERIC SILVER SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS T he Opposition barks, and the peace process lumbers on. Israeli troops will start to evacuate seven Arab cities on the occupied West Bank on Nov. 19. More than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners are being released from Israeli jails. By the narrowest of margins, the Israeli parliament on Oct. 6 gave a green light to the second stage of the Oslo peace agree- ment. After a 15-hour debate, the Knesset endorsed the deal by 61 votes to 59, with two members of the ruling Labor Party voting against the Government. The Prime Minister, Yitzhak Rabin, bitterly denounced the two rebels — Avigdor Kahalani and Emanuel Zissman — for "be- traying their mandate," but in- sisted that the peace process would go on. Since it was a vote of confi- dence, Kahalani, one of the he- roes of the Yom Kippur War, and Zissman will be barred from run- ning on the Labor ticket in the 1996 elections. They are expect- ed to compete on a new "Third Way" list, trying to square the cir- cle of giving up territory for peace, while keeping the Jewish settle- ments. "Since we have a majority," Mr. Rabin promised, "we will contin- ue with the implementation of the agreement on the West Bank." The Chief of Central Com- mand, Major-General Ilan Biran, has already briefed district com- manders on the withdrawal, which will start in Jenin, the most northerly of the West Bank cities. The evacuation will pave the way for Palestinian elections in the new year. The opposition's failure to block a process that is rapidly destroy- ing its dream of Jewish sover- eignty over the whole of the biblical homeland has deepened the frustration of the nationalist right. The Likud leader, Biny- manin Netanyahu, is running neck-and-neck with Mr. Rabin in the polls; but he can't stop him steamrolling ahead. The changes now in motion are irreversible. The Prime Minister spelled it out in his Knesset address: "We had to choose between the whole Land of Israel, which meant a bi- national state, and whose popu- lation, as of today, would comprise four and a half million Jews and more than 3 million Palestinians, and a state with less territory, but which would be a Jewish state. We chose to be a Jewish state." An anti-Government rally, ad- dressed by Mr. Netanyahu and other opposition leaders in Jerusalem on the night of the Knesset debate, drew 20,000- 30,000 protesters. "This Govern- ment does not have a Zionist majority," Mr. Netanyahu ar- gued. "The Zionist public in Is- rael has not approved Oslo 2." (He was alluding to the Govern- ment's dependence on Arab and Communist votes for its majori- ty, but ignored the fact that the opposition included the Orthodox . United Torah. Judaism and Shas, parties, which can be considered' non-Zionist.