CLOSEOUT PRICES! On all 1991's!!! $ 995 Oil Change (Everyday Low Price) On All Jeep-Eagle Products! Jeep, Eagle Jeep/Eagle Steveaslfckstein 334-3600 1800-334-JEEP 1825 S. Telegraph Road Bloomfield Hills When you or a loved one is in an emotional crisis, call the leading psychiatric hospital first... HAVENWYCK Child, Adolescent, Adult and Geriatric Services Howard Friedman, M.D., Medical Director • Inpatient, Day Hospital and Outpatient programs • Covered by most insurance plans Jeffrey A. London, M.D., Assoc. Medical Director 1525 University Drive • Auburn Hills 48326 1-75 exit 79, just west of Opdyke Road. (between the Silverdome and the Palace) FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1991 Nabisco Dinah Shore Invita- tional. After nine more titles from 1984 through 1987, Ms. Alcott once again made his- tory at the 1988 Nabisco Dinah Shore Invitational. By winning the Shore event, her $80,000 first-place prize enabled her to become only the third LPGA golfer to surpass the $2 million mark in career earnings. "It (the Shore invitational) was an event that I'll never forget," Ms. Alcott recalled. "The moment I won, I was so happy that I jumped in a nearby lake and took my caddy in with me." Perhaps as a result of her success in golf, Ms. Alcott is relaxed and is involved with unusual activities off the circuit. She spends part of her off- time as a short order cook at the Butterfly Bakery in Los Angeles where she said "the pressure of getting an order right is greater than sinking a putt." More seriously, Ms. Alcott is involved in multiple charities and has her own annual charity golf tourna- ment, the Amy Alcott Pro- Am for MS, to benefit the Multiple Sclerosis Society. She also serves on the Presi- dent's Council Against Drug Abuse and has made a $50,000 endowment to the UCLA Women's Athletic Department, which will es- tablish golf scholarships to female collegiate golfers. She has been honored by Jewish communities throughout North America with life memberships at many Jewish country clubs. She was presented with the Canadian Jewish News World Outstanding Jewish Athlete award in 1983. "I want to thank everyone for making me feel proud as a Jew," she said at the pre- sentation in Montreal. "I hope that I can inspire other Jewish women to become golfers. With the support and inspiration that I get from the Jewish com- munity, I can play golf until I'm 90." Ms. Alcott's savvy at the golf tee has made her a sought after name to design golf courses. Thus far, she has been a consultant for golf courses in Kauai, Hawaii; Virginia, Kentucky and California. She is also working on an instructional golf video. If there is any deterrent to future victories, it may be her past. "She is definitely not con- centrating as much on her game as she should," said Mr. Keller, her coach. "She may be a victim of her own success. She is still capable of doing great things despite the fact that she's 35. I'm confident that by working hard, my little race horse will come back strong." And Ms. Alcott believes she can again play her best. "Once I get myself into a position of challenging for a title," she said, "I'm capable of performing as well as in the past." El Court Upholds Jail Sentences (313) 373.9200, 24 hrs., 7 days 64 • 4 1 • II 4 II I NEWS I HOSPITAL • Immediate Assessments Last Green Continued from preceding page Come and see our new, exciting line of 1992 models! ANDY ANDERSON'S SPORTS Tel Aviv (JTA) — Israel's High Court of Justice has upheld six-month prison sentences meted out to two investigators of the Shin Bet domestic security agency who were convicted of neg- ligently causing the death of a Palestinian from the Gaza Strip. The judgment marks the first time Shin Bet in- vestigators haVe been sent to prison for mistreatment of Palestinians under deten- tion. The investigators, who were suspended from their jobs, had appealed their sentences and requested that they be allowed to do community service rather than go to jail. But Justice Aharon Barak rejected the petition, writing that "only a jail term — not community service — can express Israeli society's repugnance at their deeds. Only thus can we deter others from doing likewise. "Society's message to in- vestigators is unequivocal," the judge wrote. "An in- vestigation must be con- ducted within the bounds of law, and if it is not, the re- sponse will be meaningful punishment." According to the indict- ment, Shin Bet detained Khaled Sheikh Ali, 27, for questioning as a suspected member of Islamic Jihad and on suspicion of possessing weapons. During the course of the interrogation in a Gaza jail cell, the two Shin Bet agents beat him severely, causing severe bodily injuries from which he died. UI -4 I • I -4