A choice between Eilat, the Israeli Riviera or Istanbul, Turkey. Three nights deluxe accommodations. Roundtrip airfare from Tel Aviv. Not to mention breakfast daily. $185? Pinch yourself. Now for just $185, EL AL invites American Express' Card members to take a three-night sidetrip to either Eilat or Istanbul, when you charge your EL AL roundtrip tickets from the U.S. to Israel with the American Express Card. Roundtrip airfare is from Tel Aviv to Eilat or Istanbul. Deluxe accommodations are at the Princess Hotel in Eilat or the Istanbul Sheraton. For further information call lin mi your travel agent or please = call 1 800 EL AL SUN. - - AL /// / ANEW *- The Airline of Israel. Don't Leave Home Without I Valid 9/15/93-2/28/94. Eilat not avail. 9/15/93-9/18/93,9/30-10/31/93 & 12/19/93-1/2/94. Avail. to pass. flying El Al from USA only. Based on per person dbl. occup. 21-day advance purch. req. Prices avail. on request for extra nights & must be purchased prior to depart. from USA. (Not avail. with Family or Youth Fares or for groups.) 5185 does not incl. S15 Israel Depart. Tax & S12 Turkey Depart. Tax. Other restrictions may apply. X NORWEGIAN ® CRUISE L I N E Knowledge Denied Of Father's Past Washington (JTA) — Presi- dent Clinton's nominee to head the Joint Chiefs of Staff told members of Congress this week that he "never had the slightest hint" that his father served in a Nazi- commanded unit during World War II. Gen. John Shalikashvili said at his confirmation hearings that he was "deep- ly saddened that my father had this tragic association." After Mr. Clinton nomi- nated the European-born ca- reer military man last mon- th to the high-ranking Pen- tagon post, reports surfaced that Gen. Shalikashvili's father, a native of European Georgia, had collaborated with the Nazis during the war and had served in an ethnic Georgian battalion organized by the Nazis. The battalion ended up under the command of the Waffen SS, Adolf Hitler's elite, armed guard. The Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles first discovered the information about Dmitri Shalikashvili, the general's father, who is now dead. Jewish leaders contacted last month after the news broke said the revelations about the elder Shalikashvili should not bar the younger Sha- likashvili from the Joint Chiefs position. WINTER BREAK ABOARD NCL'S WINDWARD February 13 - 20, 1994 San Juan • Barbados • Martinique St. Maarten • Antigua • St. Thomas Call Travel/Max Today To Book Your Cabin! Rates starting at $1,249.00 per person including air from Detroit. Phone 851-7760 travel/ 102 In his opening remarks before the Senate Armed Services committee, Gen. Shalikashvili referred to the controversy over his father. "Allow me to comment briefly on the recent, deeply disturbing reports that my father had been a member of the dreaded Waffen SS and that I, perhaps, withheld this information. "I did not withhold this in- formation, for I never had the slightest hint that my father was associated with the Waffen SS," the general said. Gen. Shalikashvili said that while his father's offi- cial German record shows "uninterrupted service in the Georgian Legion under the German army, or Wehrmacht," in the last months of the war he ap- parently was "associated with some Georgian unit that was under the control of the Waffen SS. "I'm deeply saddened that my father had this tragic association," the general said. "To me, and I believe to all those who knew him, that is so absolutely out of character. To me, he was a kind and gentle man, and I loved him very much. "He was a man who, perhaps, loved his native Georgia too much — certain- ly a man caught up in the awful tragedy of World War II," the general said. Rabbi Marvin Hier, dean of the Wiesenthal Center, called Gen. Shalikashvili's remarks "an eloquent Joseph Lieberman: Responded supportively. statement, especially the general's candid repulsion with the fact that his father was associated with the Waffen SS." "He should not be judged by the misdeeds of his father," Rabbi Hier added. Members of the Armed Services Committee, which is expected to vote to confirm Gen. Shalikashvili, re- sponded supportively to his words. "I very much appreciate and admire the statement that you made this morning about the revelations con- cerning your father's associ- ation during the Second World War," said Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., who is Jewish. "The point here is not to react to anything your father may have done before your family came to the United States, but really to react to what you have done as a citizen of the United States since your family came here," Mr. Lieberman added. "And on that scale, it is quite clear that you have been a great citizen, a great soldier, and a great patriot," he added. Sen. John Warner,