AT HARPER FURNITURE WE SAY...
"ALL LEATHER IS NOT THE SAME."
IDF Officers
Court-Martialed
Because the most
difficult thing about
buying leather furniture is
assessing its quality, let our
leather experts help you make
the right choice for your home.
Special order.
Compare at $5,995'
NOW $2,995°°
other configurations available
Natum LEATHER
The Comparative Shopper - Buys At Harper
HARPER FURNITURE
545-3600
Hours: Tues., Wed., Sat.
10-5
Mon., Thur., Fri.
10-8
916 N. Main • Royal Oak • N. of 11 Mile Rd.
3r r
Providence Hospital
is pleased to introduce
Brenda C. Churchill, MD
Specialist in
Internal Medicine
Dr. Churchill is available Monday
through Friday for appointments.
Please call 559-6663.
•
Fashionable Plumbing
and
Hardware Accessories
For The Home.
cillanagement 8pecialties Corp.
2800 W. 11 Mile Road
Berkley
Between Greenfield and Coolidge
548-5656
ULIKUll J E INI-S-H NEWS
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8-5, Sat. 8:30-1
Brenda C. Churchill, MD,
is a graduate of Wayne
State University School of
Medicine. She completed
her internship and residency
in internal medicine at
Providence in 1991, where
she served as chief resident.
She has a special interest in
preventive medicine and
women's health issues.
WHERE WE CARE FOR YOU AND YOUR FAMILY
fROVI DENG E
Happy Holidays from
The Zivov Family
and Staff
Greg
SHOES
Orchard Mall • W. Bloomfield
851.5566
Evergreen Plaza • Southfield
559-3580
Tel Aviv (JTA) — Three offi-
cers with the Israel Defense
Force, one of them a general,
are to be court-martialed for
negligence, according to the
IDF's chief military pros-
ecutor.
The prosecutor, Brig. Gen.
Ilan Schiff, announced his
decision to try Maj. Gen.
Amiram Levine — said to be
the most senior IDF officer
ever to be put on trial 1— as
well as an unnamed IDF
major and captain.
Brig. Gen. Schiff reached
the decision after studying
the findings of a special in-
vestigative committee head-
ed by reserve Maj. Gen.
Menahem Einan.
The negligence charges
stem from an accident that
occurred at the Tze'elim
training grounds in the
Negev last November, in
which five soldiers of one of
the army's most elite units
were killed and six others in-
jured.
The casualties occurred
when a missile misfired dur-
ing a training exercise and
slammed into a group of
soldiers taking part in the
exercise.
In addition to the three of-
ficers to be tried, Brig. Gen.
Schiff announced that Maj.
Gen. Uri Saguy, head of
military intelligence, should
be given an administrative
reprimand.
The military censor
clamped a thick veil of
secrecy over the incident at
the time it occurred. Among
the few details that have
filtered out since then, it
became known that the ill-
fated exercise was being
observed by top IDF officials
and was a preparatory exer-
cise for a strike at Iraq.
On the basis of the Einan
report, Brig. Gen. Schiff con-
cluded that the charges
should be filed against the
captain who issued the order
to file the missile; against
the major who planned the
training exercise; and
against Levine, NAtho approv-
ed the exercise.
Brig. Gen. Schiff also con-
cluded from the report that
the fatal missile had been
fired at the improper time,
and that correct safety
precautions had not been
taken to ensure that such a
mishap did not occur.
Brig. Gen. Schiff said that
intelligence chief Saguy was
to be reprimanded because
he had failed to coordinate
the exercise in advance.