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rniture what accessories are to fashion affordably priced additions that stretch the life span of the major , expensive pieces . And they 're the fuel that fire s yard sales of the future . Where a furniture style can take five to 10 years t o max out , a decorating theme might come and go in a matter of months . With tw o years on the scene , celestial items have had a long run . There is no consens us on its exact flash point , but early signs of the celestial look include a sn ow globe at a German gift fair , a cotton throw at a New York gift show and need lepoint pillows at a New York craft fair . Within a few months of those isolated sightings in 1992 , the sun , moon and stars motif began appearing on everythin g from clocks , dishes , candles , linens , napkin rings and watering cans to sh ower curtains . As prices go , the merchandise leans toward the low end . If the celestial theme came out of the blue , the reasons for its popularity are equal ly obscure . The brilliant yellow and orange graphics on a dark blue background hardly enhance the favored furniture styles of the day , such as Mission , nor d o they complement the reigning palette of faded colors . `` Perhaps it has a sen se of mysticism , or escape , '' Berger suggests . `` When it was at its peak , we were in a recession . '' Mystical iconography had another brief fling last wi nter when angels sprouted wings and took off , seemingly overnight . They rated a Time magazine cover before degenerating into swap-meet fodder . Now , though , angels appear to be getting a second life . Moons , stars and suns in pastels a re being mixed with angels for some fairly rococo combos . American country is m oving toward fussy Victorian style , and cherubs and moons fit right in with the lacy furbelows . Design trends have traditionally trickled down from such high- end sources as a furniture style , a designer 's line or even a museum show , bu t these days they often start , as the celestial theme did , at the mass-market level . `` The middle level is where all the action is , '' says color consultan t Leatrice Eiseman of the Eiseman Center in Seattle . `` We have a three-tier sy stem of price levels . There is the high end , or designer realm , the middle gr ound and then the low end , discount-price level . Now that it is trendy and per missible to talk about saving money and shopping at Price Club and Target , ther e is a lot more attention being paid to the middle level . The mass market is ge tting more attention , and new things are being introduced at this level . '' Su nflowers were another graphic phenomenon that bloomed midfield , as part of the American country look of several years ago . Cows and gingham also figured into the farm scene , but sunflowers ultimately struck out on their own to bedeck rug s , teapots , vases , linens , coffee mugs and candlesticks . Some are designed to look like folk art , others are done in dark , muted colors to complement Mis sion-style furniture , and still others are as garishly bright and sickeningly s weet as daisies and happy faces two overused devices from decades past . The sun flowers are also starting to fade . ( Begin optional trim ) Chili peppers , ivy and fruit have also been popular in the middle-price range but will probably hav e disappeared by this time next year . On an ascent are African-inspired items . Such fabrics as kente cloth have caught on in the textile and fashion markets a nd fueled a growing selection of African-like prints on linens and dinnerware . `` I think African-themed items will be a fairly important classification , '' s ays Mary Morris , vice president of Ross-Simons , publishers of the home-wares c atalog Anticipations . Society seems to moving toward a greater appreciation of ethnic influences , she says . ( End optional trim ) Also on the rise is a home- wares trend influenced by a furniture style referred to variously as Bloomsbury chic , palace trash , neo-ancestral and shabby chic . About two years ago , the severely trendy began collecting old chairs with moth-eaten , worn , velvet upho lstery and displaying them just like that decrepitly shabby . The idea was to ha ve furniture look as if it had been in the family for generations as in old fami ly , old money . The decorative bits accompanying this theme are intentionally m ismatched , worn and patched . The plates are different from the soup bowls , th e mirrors need re-silvering , and the sofa cushions are upholstered in one fabri c , the back and arms in another . Now , furniture manufacturers are reproducing the look . `` It 's in the $ 1,000-sofa range now , '' Berger says . `` I 've s een slipcovers with incredibly creative mixes of fabrics . One piece of upholste ry may have six fabrics on it . '' ( Optional add end ) The shelves of American Rag Maison et Cafe in Los Angeles are stocked with like-minded items . `` We are going for a mixture of things , rather than one look . Stripes and patterns on pillows . We mix two different types of plates things from cafes and things from flea markets , '' owner Margot Werts says . At stores with more moderately pric ed merchandise , wine glasses with mismatched stems come as a set and pillows ha ve a mix of patterns . The Pottery Barn , for one , offers a sofa upholstered in ticking stripes combined with faded cabbage roses . The most promising element of the Clinton administration 's ambitious new plan `` to break the cycle of homelessness and prevent future homelessness '' is the amount of money requested from Congress . The administration seeks an unpreceden ted $ 1.7 billion , which would more than quadruple the funds now available to h eavily impacted areas . Washington would not dictate how the new money would be spent . Rightly , that would be a local determination . By law , nonprofit organ izations the key players in the recent assault on homelessness must get 51 perce nt of the funds . That mandate would allow groups that have long provided scarce social services and built affordable housing to collaborate rather than compete for crumbs . The administration 's plan is expensive because the Clinton team h onestly acknowledges the scope of homelessness , and the complexity of the multi ple challenges . The federal plan cites recent studies finding that between 500, 000 and 600,000 people are homeless on any given night . Christopher Jencks , a sociology professor at Northwestern University and the author of the new book `` The Homeless , '' believes that the number of the `` visible homeless '' who li ve in shelters or public places like doorways , parks and cars is between 300,00 0 and 400,000 . Jencks links the recent increase in the numbers of aggressive pa nhandlers and confused or babbling men and women pushing shopping carts in large part to the proliferation of cheap crack cocaine and government 's failure to p rovide adequate mental health treatment . Two of three single adults who agreed to the voluntary and anonymous drug testing requested by the Cuomo Commission at New York shelters tested positive for cocaine , according to Jencks . In family shelters , 16 percent tested positive . Jencks puts overall drug use at 25 perc ent , and notes that it makes the users even less employable , deprives them of money for rent , drives away friends and family members who could give them shel ter and in general prolongs their homelessness . They need drug treatment , job training and additional low-cost housing . One of three homeless people is sever ely mentally ill , according to Jencks . Many wouldn't be on the streets if stat es still operated the warehouse-like mental hospitals that were common in earlie r generations . According to Jencks , these people require hospitalization , out patient programs , rent vouchers to pay for board-and-care facilities or governm ent support for relatives willing to provide care . Despite these daunting chall enges , Henry G. Cisneros , the head of the Department of Housing and Urban Deve lopment , promises to reduce homelessness by one-third . Helping sick people who hear voices , fear others and are prone to violence is difficult . As the Clint on plan and the Jencks book indicate , they need more than a place to live . Pro viding treatment , services and financial aid will require a long-term commitmen t from Washington . The Clinton administration deserves credit for tackling a th orny social problem with a request for significant new funds and a well-thought- out plan of action that is long overdue . Now does America have the political pa tience required to make this plan successful ? NARBERTH , Pa. Lynn Duffy has been writing real-estate ads for so long she coul d compose them in her sleep . A spacious home in an upscale , secluded setting n ear jogging trails conjured up phrases like `` executive living , '' `` sports e nthusiasts take note , '' `` quiet neighborhood . '' But that was before the `` red-light words . '' Duffy Real Estate now avoids the term `` executive '' ; it could be racist , since most corporate executives are white . Singling out `` sp orts enthusiasts '' could discourage the disabled . `` Quiet neighborhood '' cou ld be a code for `` no children . '' Duffy knows of firms that are even avoiding `` master bedroom '' ( it suggests slavery ) , `` walk-in '' closet or `` spect acular view '' ( some homebuyers cannot walk or see ) . Real-estate agents in Ph iladelphia 's affluent Main Line suburbs are not suffering an attack of politica l correctness . Like their counterparts in many states , they say they are afrai d of being charged with housing bias by increasingly vigilant , local fair-housi ng groups and individuals who are filing more and more discrimination cases over real-estate ads in newspapers . Most complaints concern blatant violations of t he federal Fair Housing Act and state and local housing laws such as ads seeking `` adults only '' or `` no children . '' But a complainant listing her religion as `` non-Christian '' has charged a Gannett newspaper in Salem , Ore. , with r eligious discrimination for an ad published on Easter Sunday under a logo of a b unny in a flower basket bearing the words , `` Happy Easter . '' The Department of Housing and Urban Development is investigating . And a Pennsylvania fair-hous ing official said a real-estate agent recently pulled an ad for a `` rare find ' ' in Chester , Pa. , after a reader complained that it was racist to describe as `` rare '' a nice house in a largely black community . National civil-rights le aders are as upset about these complaints as are real-estate agents and newspape rs . They say they consider them a `` trivialization '' of the act 's intent and a diversion from the fight against real housing discrimination . University of Pennsylvania law professor Lani Guinier , who has become a national voice on civ il rights since the furor over her failed nomination to a Justice Department pos t last year , sees the struggle as a symptom of national confusion over how to c ommunicate in an age of growing sensitivity to individual differences . `` We ha ve to find a way to establish the legitimacy of people 's concerns without allow ing every concern to define the debate , '' she said . Asked this month at a Sen ate hearing whether HUD would prosecute the use of terms such as `` master bedro om '' or `` walking distance to '' trains , assistant HUD secretary Roberta Acht enberg , who oversees Fair Housing Act enforcement , said firmly : `` HUD has ne ver taken any such position , and we would not under my administration . '' `` I f one of my members brought a complaint like that , I 'd choke them , '' said Sh anna Smith , executive director of the National Fair Housing Alliance , which wo rks with local fair-housing groups across the country . But Achtenberg and Smith cannot stop individuals who feel aggrieved from bringing complaints to state or local human-relations commissions , regional HUD offices or state or federal co urts . Tim Kearney , program co-ordinator for the Fair Housing Council of Montgo mery County ( Pa. ) , said that he hopes one day to test the law by suing over g ray-area words . `` If somebody didn't pick up the phone ( to respond to a housi ng ad ) because they felt excluded by the wording , you have a complaint , '' he said . `` All day long some people suffer stings and pangs of discrimination , and it adds up . That 's what civil rights is all about . '' And a senior offici al of the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission , which enforces the state hou sing law , said there is no way of knowing how a hearing officer would rule on a ny complaint , even `` master '' bedroom . `` We say to the newspapers and the R ealtors , '' said the official , who insisted on anonymity . ` When in doubt , l eave it out. ' ' ' This ambiguity is driving time-consuming efforts by real-esta te agents and newspapers to anticipate even far-fetched claims of liability unde r the Fair Housing Act . While the financial penalties are not always severe , t he litigation costs of cases that go beyond the complaint stage often reach tens of thousands of dollars . And housing-law violations are grounds for revoking a n agent 's license in some states . The federal act bars housing discrimination in all forms , including any notice or ad that `` indicates any preference , lim itation , or discrimination because of race , color , religion , sex , handicap , familial status or national origin or an intention to make any such preference ... '' Lawyers for associations of real-estate agents and newspapers say they r eceive calls every day from clients around the country , asking , `` Can I use t his word ? '' `` In Hawaii , some people say , ` We can't say the house has a Ja panese garden , ' ' ' said Fred Underwood , vice president of the National Assoc iation of Realtors . `` I answered , ` Do only Asian Hawaiians like Japanese gar dens ? '' ' The main problem , he said , is there is no way to list all discrimi natory words , because many are in the eye of the beholder and there are so many beholders . `` A real-estate concern called two HUD offices in New Jersey and a sked about ` walking distance to synagogue and deli , ' ' ' Underwood said . `` One office said it 's fine ; the other said no , '' because it constituted relig ious steering . The Philadelphia Inquirer now urges advertisers to say `` conven ient to ( shopping ) '' rather than `` walking distance . '' The Baltimore Sun i nstructs its advertisers to say , for example , `` three blocks to ... '' Numero us newspapers and real-estate agents around the country have foresworn phrases l ike `` convenient to jogging trails , '' for fear they discriminate against disa bled people , `` ocean view '' in deference to the blind phrases cited in a 1991 complaint in Oregon or `` ideal for empty nesters , '' which could be discrimin atory against families with children . The year was 1969 . The site was Berlin . The circumstance was the election of a new German president , a largely ceremonial post . The stakes were nothing les s than control of the Bonn government after election of a new Parliament and a c hancellor later in the year . On that occasion , the Cold War was much in eviden ce as Soviet and East German officials harassed the arrival of delegates to the election assembly from all over Germany . But the ceremony went ahead . And when it was over the election of the first Social Democratic president since the Wei mar Era in the '20s proved to be a harbinger for the triumph of that party 's le ader , Willy Brandt , in late summer . The key to Brandt 's victory was the libe ral Free Democratic Party , which switched allegiance from the conservative Chri stian Democratic Union to the Social Democrats . It was to reverse course in 198 2 , putting in office the current chancellor , Helmut Kohl ( but that is another story ) . What happened this week in Berlin was another presidential election , this one in which the Free Democrats , reluctant and divided as ever , stuck wi th the Christian Democrats rather than risk political oblivion . Chosen presiden t was Chief Judge Roman Herzog of the Supreme Court , Kohl 's choice but hardly a favorite in the country . The question now in German political circles is whet her , as in 1969 , the Free Democrats will prove again to be the decisive elemen t in German politics . Only this time , as Herzog 's victory indicated , the FDP has determined to keep leaning right to support Kohl rather than swing left to align itself with his SPD challenger , Rudolf Scharping . Latest public opinion polls indicate that Kohl , though still behind , is gaining as the economy impro ves . Whatever the outcome , Germany is about to be denied the leadership of its most popular politician . Not Kohl . Not Scharping . Not the FDP 's Klaus Kinke l . Rather , the nation will lose the services of Joseph von Weizsaecker , who i n his 10 years ( the limit ) as president has come to embody the conscience of a country that still feels `` abnormal , '' a nation haunted by its Nazi past . P resident von Weizsaecker has constantly warned against neo-Nazi eruptions and ag ainst intolerance toward foreigners . His successor , despite a bumbling beginni ng , must do nothing less . Distributed by the Los Angeles Times-Washington Post News Service . WASHINGTON A growing number of Americans are being caught up in securities liti gation and are being forced to make potentially important decisions with little understanding of what is going on or what is at stake . It is common today for i nvestors to find in their mail a document filled with dense language and fine pr int telling them something about a company they have invested in . Figuring out what it is , and then deciding what action to take is mission impossible for man y investors . But those decisions may make the difference between recovering mon ey and going without . Often , as in the case of a failed company , a class acti on is investors ' only hope of restitution . But sometimes , as with Humphries , joining the suit , intentionally or not , may prevent them from participating i n a better deal that may have been worked out by a regulatory agency . Such prob lems have become so widespread that the subject was taken up at last week 's mee ting of the Securities and Exchange Commission 's newly formed consumer affairs advisory panel , said Louis M. Thompson Jr. , president of the National Investor Relations Institute , an association of corporate investor relations officials . `` When investors are informed of a class action , ( the notices ) are so lega listic they can't even understand what they are getting involved in or are not g etting involved in , '' Thompson said . Thousands of investors apparently just t hrow these notices away , but that in itself is a form of decision . Typically , when a class action is brought seeking monetary damages , the courts employ wha t is called an `` opt out '' procedure , meaning that anyone who fits the defini tion of the class is automatically included unless they take action to opt out , said Stephen J . Toll of Cohen , Milstein , Hausfeld & Toll , which handles man y class action suits . This makes it easy if you want in , but can be a pitfall for the unwary or for anyone who for some reason doesn't get the notice . People who don't get the notice , who throw it away as junk , set it aside but forget it or otherwise don't respond , will be swept into the class . And when the case is decided or settled , they will be bound by the result . In many cases , Toll said , investors first receive a notice that the suit has been filed and that t hey may opt out if they wish to . Later they may receive another notice that the case has been settled , and that they may file a claim . Sometimes , he said , the second notice offers another chance to opt out , but generally not . If not , then the investor is locked into the settlement . If the investor doesn't file a claim , he or she willn't get any money , but will still be bound by the sett lement . Sometimes when a case is settled before the class is certified by the j udge , the notice and claim form are combined , and an investor may opt out at t hat point , Toll said . If you get a class action notice , Toll and others sugge sted thinking about it this way : How big is my investment and how good is my cl aim ? If your investment is large and your claim strong , Brenner said , `` you 're probably better off out of the class '' so you can sue on your own . Since c lass actions lump weak and strong claims together and give both kinds of claiman ts the same settlement , the good claims to a certain extent subsidize the weak ones . If your claim is strong , but your investment small , you are probably be tter off in the class because it is not economically practical to bring your own case . And , of course , if your claim is weak , you are definitely better off in the class . In general , said Toll , `` the only reason to opt out is to pres erve your rights '' to sue . Still , critics charge that many class action lawsu its are frivolous . The stock goes down so somebody sues . Some studies indicate that the plaintiffs individually don't get much money in these cases . `` I ten d to be rather skeptical ( of such suits ) because the law firms that bring them tend to make a bundle and the shareholders who would be participating wouldn't get that much out of it , '' said Maria Crawford Scott of the American Associati on of Individual Investors in Chicago . In most cases , if an investor has suffe red a loss because a company or partnership went under , regulatory agencies do not become involved and the class action suit may be the investor 's best hope o f salvaging something from his or her investment . Death by violence was at least 50 times more common among ancient peoples than |
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