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INSIDE

BROOKLYN’S WEEKLY NEWSPAPER

Including The News, Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill Paper and Fort Greene-Clinton Hill Paper One-of-a-kind gift ideas Published weekly by Paper Publications Inc, 26 Court St., Brooklyn 11242 Phone 718-834-9350 AD fax 718-834-1713 • NEWS fax 718-834-9278 © 2002 Brooklyn Paper Publications • 18 pages including GO BROOKLYN • Vol. 25, No. 47 BWN, DTG, PSG, MID • December 2, 2002 • FREE For sale: Board of Ed building, Mayor puts 110 Livingston, 80 State on market

By Patrick Gallahue would generate millions of tion is on a fast track to reform The Brooklyn Papers dollars for the cash-strapped as well as generate much- , send a message that the needed revenue for the city.” Mayor Michael Bloom- Board of Ed is “a thing of the Also going onto the auction / Celia Weintrob berg is doing what Rudy past,” and create a mixed-use block will be the five-bed- could not … again. development site for Down- room, four-bath, schools chan- After dismantling the Board town Brooklyn. cellor residence on State of Education earlier this year, “The successful develop- Street, between Henry Street Bloomberg this week an- ment of this unique property is and Garden Place, which was

nounced that the city will sell an integral part of our efforts purchased by the Board of Ed Papers The Brooklyn the now defunct Board of Ed- to capitalize on Downtown for a little under $1 million in ucation headquarters at 110 Brooklyn’s strengths as a vital, 1990. It was home to three Livingston St., Downtown, as 24/7 community,” Bloomberg chancellors before former well as the schools chancel- said. “In addition to adding to Schools Chancellor Harold Holiday lor’s residence on State Street the excitement of Downtown Levy chose to remain in his in . Brooklyn, development of this The mayor announced his building will also send a defin- co-op with a Board of Ed-sup- cheers plans as he finished a speech be- itive message that the Board of plied $10,000 housing al- Hannah Senesh Community Day fore city business leaders at the Education is a thing of the past lowance. Current Chancellor School kindergartners (above) 2002 City Economic and the Department of Educa- See FOR SALE on page 5 sing Hanukkah songs as they give Development Summit on Mon- their hand-made menorahs a trial day at the New York Marriott run. The eight-day Jewish festival Brooklyn on Adams Street. Ever the seasoned business- begins at sundown Friday, Nov. man, Bloomberg praised the 29. Large public menorahs will be Livingston Street property, not- Maestro to lit nightly outside Borough Hall

ing its ample space — 360,000 / Sherri Lieberman and at Grand Army Plaza (see square feet — natural light and “Where to GO,” page GO 2). At a recently renovated facade, left, heralding the Christmas sea- then suggested that the building leave B’klyn son, Irma Padilla of Sunset Park The Brooklyn Heights brownstone at 80 State could be converted into 250 sings carols during the Salvation St. used to house the schools apartments. See page GO 6 Army’s “Kettle Kick-off and Carol The Brooklyn Papers / Tom Callan chancellor. Bloomberg said the sale Papers The Brooklyn Sing” at Borough Hall. Olympic FIREHOUSES SPARED By Patrick Gallahue The Brooklyn Papers A demonstration, that was sup- posed to cap an angry week of protests against the closing of fire- hopeful houses, turned into a temporary sigh of relief as engine companies facing the axe were given a reprieve when 2012 Games put Coney the City Council and Mayor Michael Artists rendering of the proposed Sportsplex arena in Bloomberg hashed out a budget Sportsplex on fast track that could be an Olympic site. modification over the weekend. The day before Sunday’s gathering of By Deborah Kolben which would house indoor vol- about 500 residents outside Engine 204 on stressed the importance of than residential space. The Brooklyn Papers leyball should the city get the Degraw Street between Court and Smith 2012 Olympics. Brooklyn, not Westchester or Doctoroff’s Sportsplex an- streets to protest the proposed elimination They called the Brooklyn The announcement came at , in absorbing the nouncement came on a follow- of the 155-year-old firehouse — Bloom- Sportsplex dead when the the Economic Development overflow of business from up panel dedicated to dis- berg and council members announced an city chose to build Keyspan Summit, a conference hosted Manhattan. cussing the future economic agreement that would hike property taxes Park instead, but now, with at the New York Marriott Reserving the announce- growth of Brooklyn. Lauding by 18.5 percent on Jan. 1, but temporarily New York the official U.S. Brooklyn Monday morning ment of the sale of the former the multitude of benefits that save the eight firehouses proposed for clo- dedicated to discussing the fu- Board of Education headquar- hosting the Olympics could be- sure by the mayor. candidate for the 2012 stow upon the borough, Docto- Olympics, plans for a ture of small business in ters at 110 Livingston St. until The city will, however, convene a blue- the end of his speech, the may- roff said, “Let’s use the dead- Sportsplex in Coney Brooklyn. Sponsored by JP ribbon panel to investigate how best to or explained to the packed ball- lines the Olympics are creating. Children from PS 24 were among the protesters at a rally for Engine 278 held out- Island are back on the fast Morgan Chase, the almost deal with the necessary cuts, which was 500 attendees — from local room that the property in Let’s get started right away.” an idea put forth by Brooklyn Heights side the Sunset Park firehouse Friday. The Brooklyn Papers / Greg Mango track, a top mayoral aide development corporations, could be New York City beat out Councilman . announced this week. Houston, Washington, D.C., business and universities — converted into 250 apartments “I think we’ll have to make the argu- Council Speaker Gifford Miller. year’s fiscal budget, and cut $800 million Deputy Mayor Daniel Doc- with ample space and natural and San Francisco to become greeted the keynote speaker, ment based on substance,” Yassky said. Expecting to see the panel convened to get a head start on next year’s expected toroff said sites that could po- light. the U.S. entrant on Nov. 2. A Mayor Michael Bloomberg, “These cuts were announced and we nev- within the next couple of weeks, Yassky $6 billion shortfall, Bloomberg had pro- tentially host Olympic events in with a standing ovation. Brooklyn’s loudest support- final decision by the Interna- er got from the administration any ration- added that ideas other than outright clo- posed cutting $51 million from the Fire Brooklyn would be developed The mayor praised Down- er, Borough President Marty tional Olympic Committee ale … This at least ensures a process to before the city’s bid to host the town Brooklyn as the third Markowitz, applauded the may- will not be made until 2005. see what the arguments are.” sure can now be proposed — such as shut- Department’s $1 billion budget, by closing Olympics is officially accepted largest business district in the or for his interest in developing The city chosen to host the Yassky said the mayor has promised to ting certain firehouses during the night, in- eight fire companies, five of which are in in 2005. Plans include con- city, with 1.3 million square Brooklyn, but suggested that Games, which will last 17 convene a panel with three representatives stead of altogether — in order tighten belts Brooklyn; reducing the number of fire- struction of the long-anticipated feet of property currently un- 110 Livingston St. would be days, must meet stringent re- from the Fire Department, two mayoral without completely eliminating services. fighters per engine from five to four in 49 Sportsplex in Coney Island, der construction. He also better put to use as office rather See OLYMPIC on page 6 appointees and two appointees of City To close a $1.1 billion deficit in this See FIREHOUSES on page 6 Atlantic gateway GAP shooting Port Authority plans to revamp Pier 6 entrance By Patrick Gallahue pite the current planning the Red Hook Marine leaves 1 dead The Brooklyn Papers underway to turn the Terminal along Columbia Despite the desire of avenue into a grand boule- Street. Park vard, the Port Authority of The Port Authority plan will New York and New Jersey exchange chain-link fences for planners to one day incor- wrought-iron-style gates, and porate Pier 6 into their has embarked on its own move those fences back three waterfront development as $2.6 million project to cre- feet — along Columbia Street a grand park gateway at ate a beautified gateway to to Degraw Street, then west to Atlantic Avenue, and des- the pier and perimeter of See GATEWAY on page 6 Rendering of the Port Authority’s planned entrance to Pier 6. / Tom Callan / Tom An artist sells out The Brooklyn Papers The Brooklyn Kensington woman getting rid of all possessions A police officer stands beside car with bullet hole in its door.

By Deborah Kolben Kayne told The Brooklyn Papers in rible reception. Love, Elanit.” By Deborah Kolben Police said they had no information The Brooklyn Papers an interview at her studio on Ocean The television is just one of The Brooklyn Papers on a possible motive or further de- scription of the black vehicle or the Parkway at Albemarle Road. “So, about 500 objects up for sale. A man was shot to death and an- A Brooklyn artist is plead- shooter or shooters. instead, I’m freeing everything and There is the peppermint hand lo- other critically injured as they sat in a ing with New Yorkers to help The shooting occurred just a day af- blowing it all over New York City.” tion, her four wisdom teeth, the car at Grand Army Plaza and Flat- her lose everything she owns. ter Mayor Bloomberg announced at a What makes Kayne’s project art “Hang Ten” toothpick holder from bush Avenue early Tuesday. Starting Monday, Elanit Kayne, Downtown Brooklyn economic devel- rather than a tag sale, are the sto- Maui, the hot pink Danskin leg- The two victims, both 28, were in 26, of Kensington, will spend 15 gings she’s had since the 1980s, a a white 1995 Nissan Maxima when a opment conference that crime was at an days in a display window on 42nd ries attached to each item. “I’m all-time low in New York City. Indeed, reading achievement award from black car pulled up and opened fire Street in Manhattan where she will sewing the history of the object borough-wide, murder is down from back onto the object,” Kayne says. 1985, an autographed letter from on them just after 5 am. be selling the entire contents of her The driver of the Nissan was shot in 223 this time last year to 198 so far in apartment, including the bed she The 13-inch television propped Judy Blume, the young adult fic- 2002 — but in the 78th Precinct, which tion writer, and a framed prom pic- the chest and declared dead upon ar- sleeps on. up on a dresser next to her bed rival at Kings County Hospital, police includes and Gowanus, The endeavor, she says, is an act comes with the following message ture from Weston High School said. The other victim, who was shot in there have been three reported murders, of love. scribbled on top in permanent gold with Kayne sporting a vegetable the face, was listed in critical condition. not including Tuesday’s shooting, as Artist Elanit Kayne in her Kensington apartment, with a dress, furniture “We keep all of these things marker: “I love Oprah. I will miss corsage supplied by her date. Police from the 78th Precinct were opposed to only one last year, accord- and lots of other things that she will sell. The Brooklyn Papers / Greg Mango boxed up, nobody even looks at it,” seeing her fuzzy shape on this ter- See ARTIST on page 6 leading the investigation at presstime. ing to police department statistics. 2 BWN, DTG, PSG, MID THE BROOKLYN PAPERS • WWW.BROOKLYNPAPERS.COM December 2, 2002

MONTHLYSPECIALS Celebs help Maimo raise money By Deborah Kolben “Star Project — Creating a Mets all star Mike Piazza, stages for several years, will be FREE FREE The Brooklyn Papers Brighter Future” gala benefit at Brooklyn-born actress Marisa the first in Brooklyn dedicated ROLL OF FILM ROLL OF FILM the Winter Garden of the Tomei, Donald Trump, and the to pediatric care. Masks created by John World Financial Center on casts of Rent and Hairspray The ground breaking for the With Processing of Any Color With Purchase of 3 Rolls. Travolta, Donald Trump, Dec. 7. were among those who pushed $175 million project is sched- 35mm print Roll (24 exp min) (35mm color print film only) Tom Hanks and many The Maimonides mask proj- up their sleeves and demon- uled for some time next year. with coupon with coupon other celebrities were the ect was inspired by the Cow strated their artistic acuity. Dr. Steven Shelov, chairman centerpiece of a reception Parade that made some New Guests at Wednesday’s re- of pediatrics at Maimonides, FREE FREE hosted by Maimonides Yorkers dream of greener pas- ception perused catalogs dis- has been a powerful voice Medical Center Wednes- tures two years ago when near- playing the array of masks to pushing for the construction of CELL PHONE ACCESSORY ly 500 life-sized fiberglass be auctioned off. A few artists the new building to house the With One Year Activation With Any day, Nov. 20, to raise money for its Infants and cows, painted by artists and were also on hand, including Infants and Children’s pro- SELECTED MODELS ONLY Yearly Activation school kids, were placed all Dolores R. Santoliquido, who gram. The hospital brought Sh- with coupon with coupon Children’s Hospital. over New York City, and then showed off her framed star elov, a member of former Pres- Long-time Maimonides auctioned off for charity, ex- creation with the words, “I ident Bill Clinton’s Physician board member Mortimer plained Ginger Portnoy, vice wish I might have this wish I Leadership Committee, onto Klaus and his wife, Barbara, president of development at wish tonight” accompanying their staff in 1997. hosted 90 guests at his Park Maimonides. her mask. Five hundred guests are ex- Avenue apartment in Manhat- The masks are smaller in According to Maimonides pected to attend the gala. Pro- tan for a special viewing of scale, but similar in nature. spokeswoman Eileen Tynion, ceeds from the auction will di- several of the more than 100 Spearheaded by Dr. Allan nearly a third of Brooklyn’s rectly benefit the new star-shaped masks that have Strongwater, chairman of ortho- 2.5 million residents are under children’s hospital, while the been decorated by celebrities pedics at Maimonides, celebri- age 18 and the current facilities net proceeds from the gala, 117 7th Ave. Bklyn, NY 11215 and artists. ties were sent letters asking for at Maimonides are no longer which usually average be- (718) 636-8100 The masks that made their Dolores R. Santoliquido displays her painted star mask, their support, along with a ce- adequate to serve such a large tween $500,000 and $750,000, Royal Premier Dealer Offering Complete Photofinishing debut last week will be auc- which will be auctioned at Maimonides Medical Center’s ramic mask and kit that includ- population. The new building, will go towards Maimonides and Digital Imaging Services tioned off at the hospital’s Winter Gala. The Brooklyn Papers / Sherri Liberman ed paint and paint brushes. which has been in the planning as a whole. coupon coupon coupon FREE FREE FREE CELLPHONE ACCESSORIES ROLL OF FILM with activation with activation buy 3 get 4th free Certain Models Certain Models 24 exp min., 35mm (color print) Offers may not be combined. Valid thru December 31, 2002 Could suits affect Brooklyn Law dorm? By Patrick Gallahue lapse. on who owns the bond for the for the shoring and underpin- Foundation Engineering were the adjacent properties, no The Brooklyn Papers Santo Lombardozzi, a bond dormitory project. When ning that was being performed spotted removing boulders work is permitted until neces- writer with Sano Brokerage, asked about potential liability, and failure to have the permit from the site, work which had sary safety studies are per- an insurance agency in Garden Brooklyn Law officials would on-site. not been approved by the formed on the bordering build- made few friends with its City, , said a case only say, “We remain commit- proposal to build a 216- A week later, the contractors Buildings Department. ings. like Brooklyn Law’s would ted to developing a facility were slapped with another vio- While the contractor does Ruth Pointon, a resident of foot dormitory at the cor- not likely cause a bond owner that we believe will be a val- lation after workers for Urban have permission to shore up See DORMS on page 6 ner of Boerum Place and to default. “It shouldn’t affect ued addition to the Downtown State Street. The school the bond,” Lombardozzi said. community and look forward lost even more after its “This is strictly a property to moving forward with the contractor knocked down damage case.” project.” an adjacent garage last The Department of Finance Without injuries, Feinberg PAIN IS SERIOUS. month. did not return The Brooklyn added, it was a safe presump- And while those closely Papers’ calls for information tion that the law school’s in- PAIN CAN HAPPEN TO ANYONE. watching the dormitory proj- surance would be able to cov- AIN CAN BE MANAGED WITH PERSONALIZED CARE ect, including elected officials er whatever was lost in the P . and residents, said they were RELIGIOUS collapse. unaware of any lawsuits being “If no one has been injured, At Pain Management & Rehabilitation Medical Services filed against the school yet, the SERVICES then there is more than enough of New York we take a multidisciplinary approach to the idea has been tossed around to cover property damage,” he evaluation and treatment of pain. Under the directorship by residents of adjacent build- said. of Dr. Alan M. Leff, M.D., our medical and therapeutic ings and car owners who lost The incident occurred on vehicles in the collapse. MT. CALVARY Oct. 31, when the contractor specialists work together to create a tailored treatment plan Despite the fact that it ap- Bible Baptist Church knocked down a portion of an to manage your pain, and stop the pain from managing you. pears to have been the con- adjacent parking lot at 199 tractor, Urban Foundation En- • 3pm Worships State St. The entire building Common Conditions Treated: Common Treatments Include: • KJV gineering, which destabilized had to be demolished by the * Neck & Back Pain * Epidurals • Christ Centererd holiday cuts the garage, the law school city in the following days, * Muscle Pain (Myalgia) * Physical Therapy could well find itself in court. • Warm Fellowship with its tenant vehicles still in- * Nerve Pain * Medication Management of Pain Suckling pig and all prime meats side, after it was determined “I would sue the owner of Mt. Calvary is a friendly Church that stands * Headaches * Nerve Blocks the property next door, who on the King James Bible. Come visit and that to rescue the cars would let God’s Word minster to your heart! * Post Herpetic Neuralgia * Trigger Point Injections Crown Roast • Rack of Lamb • Leg of Lamb • Veal Roast • happened to have the problem have been too dangerous. * Fibromyalgia * Botox for Pain Management Seasoned Pork Shoulder • Homemade Sausages (chicken, that brought the building 124 Henry Street The city Department of (Near Clark St. #2 & #3 Train) veal, turkey, pork) down,” said Mark Feinberg, a Buildings handed out three vi- Visit us at our new Brooklyn Center at 186 Joralemon Street, 8th Floor, Brooklyn Heights-based attor- 718 282-1400 olations to Brooklyn Law Brooklyn, NY 11201. For an appointment please call 718.596.5050 • Aged Steaks: ney. “And if that owner had a School’s contractors after the R44/50 Spanish, Russian, French and Polish spoken. Most insurance carriers accepted. Porterhouse, contractor I would name them collapse, including a failure to safeguard an adjoining build- www.painmanagementny.com Shell Steaks and if that contractor had a Congregation subcontractor they would be Kol Israel ing, failure to obtain a permit named.” Located in Prospect Heights FRESH CUT MEAT & POULTRY Feinberg said if there was since 1924 603 St. Johns Place an engineer overseeing the bet. Classon & Franklin Bell & Evans Free Range Turkeys • Stuffing Mix • Duck • Pheasant construction plans, even he or 638-6583 Country & Spiral Hams • Rabbit • Free Range Cornish Hens • Quail she could be named in a suit. Rabbi Elkanah Schwartz Fri. at Sunset • Sat. 10:30am 30 YEAR ANNIVERSARY Most agreed, however, that R26-41 it would be unlikely to affect Los Paisanos Meat Market the financing of the plan since Congregation 162 Smith St. (bet. Wycoff & Bergen) • (718) 855-2641 the law school’s insurance will B’nai Jacob Open: Mon-Sat 8am-7pm • probably cover whatever dam- Park Slope Synagogue ages were incurred by the col- 401 9th St. bet. 6/7 Aves 832-1266 965-9836 Rabbi Shimon Hecht ONE DAY Services: 7:15 Morning Minyan Shabbat Friday Evenings Shabbat Sat. AM: 9:30 CLASSES/EVENTS/HOLIDAYS www.parkslopeshul.org R26-34 Union Temple Brooklyn’s Oldest Reform Congregation 17 at Grand Army Plaza SALESALE Friday evenings 8:15 p.m. Saturday mornings 10:30 a.m. First Friday monthly 6:30 p.m. followed by Pot-Luck Dinner

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ls we Arthritis Pain Je y Burglar hits two B SATNICK Slowing You Down? We offer quality jewelry, precision By Patrick Gallahue Cranberry burgle ❤ The Brooklyn Papers A home on Cranberry Street, timepieces and fine giftware at Two apartments in a build- POLICE between Hicks and Henry prices to fit every budget... ing on Hicks Street, between streets, was robbed of a com- Middagh and Cranberry The bag was later found in puter, jewelry and silverware FREE streets, were burglarized the schoolyard of PS 8, a block valued at $15,400. through windows abutting the away, robbed of its valuables, The victim left home at Lay-a-Way Plan fire escape on Nov. 20. including a wallet, CD player, around 8:20 am on Nov. 20, and returned a little before noon to A 50-year-old resident of one credit cards and cell phone. On all Purchases of the apartments had left home find that her apartment had at 8 am and returned shortly be- Blame the city been burgled. SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR OVER 40 YEARS fore 7 pm to find that closets in A woman, tossed out of her Knocked down his bedroom and living room building on Bergen Street be- A 27-year-old man was on 196 Joralemon St. (off Court St) had been plundered. He report- tween Third and Fourth av-

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® MasterCard® A research study is currently being conducted to evaluate investigational medication (718) 852-1421 • Fax (718) 852-9697 • ed $11,000 in jewelry and a enues because it had been shut Bergen Street F train station at HOURS: Mon - Fri: 9:30am - 6:30pm; Sat: 11:00am - 5:00pm $2,100 laptop computer stolen. down by the city Department of Seventh Avenue, at around 5 that may potentially decrease join pain caused by Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) and by According to police, another Buildings (DOB), suffered the am on Nov. 24, when he was osteoarthritis (OA). apartment in the same building additional misfortune of having knocked to the ground and was robbed, between 10 am and her apartment robbed in her ab- robbed of his wallet. As the 5:30 pm, of electronics, jewelry sence. A Gallery of Hand-Crafted and clothing valued at more victim lay on the ground, the • Be a healthy male or female 30 years of age or older The DOB shut down the mugger sifted through his pock- TO QUALIFY henna k than $14,000. Police believe the building due to safety concerns, • Have Arthritis pain requiring daily medication Artisanal Jewelry thief also entered that apartment ets, saying, “Don’t say a word. HANDCRAFTED JEWELRY on Nov. 11, but on Nov. 18, she YOU MUST • Meet all other inclusion requirements through the fire escape. Where’s the money?” featuring the work of returned home at about 9 am, to The thief took the victim’s American and Hicks mug find that someone had stolen wallet, reported as containing A woman was grabbed on her stereo, DVD player, VCR $120, credit cards and a driver’s QUALIFIED PARTICIPANTS • Study-related examination International Artists the corner of Hicks and Cran- and jewelry. license. WILL RECEIVE AT • Study-related assessment of joints berry streets by a trio of ski mask-clad thugs who proceeded • Study-related clinical laboratory test to snatch her purse. NO COST • Study-medication for a 6-12 week period The victim was passing through the intersection, at around 8 pm on Nov. 18, when For more information and to find out if you qualify, please call Gina at: one of the thieves grabbed her shoulder bag and took off with his cohorts. (718) 624-8888

Jewelry as LEGAL BROOKLYN HEIGHTS ARTHRITIS ASSOCIATES Unique as You! NOTICES Daniel D. Ricciardi, MD, FACR, Director Notice is hereby given that an Order entered by the Civil Court, Kings County on the 25th day of November, 2002, bearing the Index 100 Clinton Street (betw. Remsen & Montague Sts.) – Bklyn Hts 165 COURT STREET Number N00992/2002, a copy of which may be (BET. PACIFIC & DEAN) examined at the Office of the Clerk, located at CIVIL COURT, KINGS COUNTY, 141 Livingston COBBLE HILL, BROOKLYN Street, Brooklyn, New York 11201, in room 007, grants me rights to: 1. Assume the name of: 718•852•5777 Johnny Moreno. My present name is: Johnny Sepulveda, a/k/a Moreno. My present address is: 147 Lorimer Street, Brooklyn, New York. My STORE HOURS: place of birth is: Brooklyn, New York. My date SUN: 12-5PM of birth is: 07/16/1967. BP47 MON-THURS: 12-7PM CLOSED: FRI & SAT SUPREME COURT – KINGS COUNTY. NYCTL SECRET UN SECURITY COUNCIL 1998-1 TRUST AND THE BANK OF NEW YORK, AS COLLATERAL AGENT AND CUSTO- DIAN, Pltf. against PACST REALTY, LLC, et al Defts. Index # 30501/01. Pursuant to a DEAL REVEALED? Judgment of Foreclosure and Sale dated July 15, 2002, I, will sell at public auction at the “foot” of the Courthouse steps, facing Adams – The Robert Lee Group – Street, 360 Adams Street, Brooklyn, N.Y. on January 9, 2003 at 9:30 a.m. prem. k/a Kings The Lords’ Witnesses believe that a secret deal has recently been done in the UN Your place for luxury hair care and expert County, Block 1206, Lot 35. Approx amt. of judgment $13,350.75 plus costs and interest. security council. We believe that this was the ‘real deal’ that enabled resolution coloring now has a – Sold subject to terms and condition of filed judgment and terms of sale. Edward S. Reich, 1441 to be passed unanimously and the UN weapons inspectors to return to Iraq. Esq., Referee. BOLAND & MOSKOWITZ, LLP. Attys. for Pltf. 707 Westchester Ave. White We believe that this deal was an agreement or was effectively an agreement for an Plains, N.Y. NEW BP48-51 expansion of the permanent membership of the UN Security Council to 10 NORTH CAROLINA, CUMBERLAND COUNTY. members, together with an effective reduction of the veto powers of each of the IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE. DIS- Skin Care TRICT COURT DIVISION. FILE NO: 02 CVD Give the Gift of 10 permanent members. 8737. Steven Bush, Plaintiff v. Gloria Bush, Defendant. NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY PUBLICATION. TO: Gloria Bush. STUDIO! Take Notice that a pleading seeking relief Health and Beauty We deduce this from our decoding of the bible book of Revelation 17, a book against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief sought is as fol- written around 1900 years ago by the apostle John. For the full details please visit lows: Absolute Divorce on the grounds of one Enfuselle Anti-Aging Skincare Featuring: year separation. You are required to make www.truebiblecode.com. defense to such pleading not later than the by Shaklee 30th day of December, 2002, and upon your Customized deep cleansing facials failure to do so the party seeking relief against Includes you will apply to the Court for the relief sought. We accept that we do not have much physical evidence to confirm our theory at All types of waxing This the 5th day of November, 02. Carl L. Britt, ™ Jr. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. 224 Dick Street / P.O. Vital Repair Plus, this point. However we do have the unprecedented unanimity amongst all 15 SPA manicures and pedicures Box 1137, Fayetteville, N.C. 28302. Telephone: (919) 483-1176. A patented complex for damaged skin members of the security council. We have the positive vote of Syria and we have BP46-48 SPA packages available the fact that the French, who plainly wish to see the Germans take a permanent NOTICE OF SALE. SUPREME COURT - COUN- Clinically proven to reverse Gift Certificates for the Holidays TY OF KINGS. MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC FREE GIFT seat, proposed the accepted draft. REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC. Plaintiff, the visible signs of aging. with purchase by Dec. 9th! Against KARL RAYMOND; et al., Defendant(s). Pursuant to a judgment of foreclosure and sale duly entered 10/1/2002, I, the undersigned We would just like to state for the record, in case we are eventually proved cor- THE Robert Lee Group Referee will sell at public auction at the “foot” Of The Kings County Courthouse Steps, Facing rect, that according to our bible decoding, on or before November 8th (when res- 347 Smith St. (bet. 1st Place & Carroll St.) Adams Street, 360 Adams St., Brooklyn, NY on Wellness Essentials (718) 222-5842 12/18/2002 at 9:00 AM premises known as 943 olution 1441 was unanimously passed), a secret agreement was reached in the 718-875-8630 • www.robertleegroup.com East 98th Street, Brooklyn, NY, ALL that certain www.shaklee.net/wellnessessentials plot piece or parcel of land, with the buildings UN security council. This agreement provided for the expansion of its permanent Open: Tues - Sun (late hrs. avail) • and improvements thereon erected, situate, lying and being In The Borough Of Brooklyn, membership to 10 members, with the 5 new members being chosen by the US. County of Kings, City and Sate of New York, Block 8148 Lot 10 Approximate amount of lien And this agreement also provided for an effective reduction or abolition of the $249,222.71 plus interest and costs Premises ... will be sold subject to provisions of filed judg- ke veto powers of all 10 permanent members. ment Index # 040531/2001. Anthony Genovesi, ta Esq., Referee. Jon B. Felice & Associates, P.C. w (Attorney’s for Plaintiff). 11 East 44th Street, o Suite 800, New York, NY 10017. Dated: N This secret agreement (if true) would plainly be a move towards greater democ- 11/7/2002. File #: Alf61 mac. BP45-48 ratisation in the UN. Such a move has been discussed for 10 years at the UN and is known to be politically desirable to most of its member nations.

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Avenue at President Street. According to the owner of the equipment, the thief took Gunpoint robbery on Park Place ski boots, jacket, gloves, gog- gles and pants. The equipment was last seen on Oct. 21. Ex- By Patrick Gallahue Nov. 20 and about an hour later it Place, between Sixth and Sev- containing $15 and her credit actly one month later, at enue was gone, along with $10, credit cards. v The Brooklyn Papers enth avenues, when she was around 5:30 pm, the 59-year- cards, identification and jewelry. A man was making his POLICE surrounded by three men who Gone skiing old ski buff discovered the way home on Park Place, Berkeley mug demanded money. A cold-blooded ski-bum glid- equipment was gone. Police arrested the suspect, A 43-year-old woman was The victim said the trio ed off with $2,100 in ski equip- th between Fifth and Sixth Easy access avenues, at around 10:30 pm also 13, and recovered the knife on her way home from the stopped her at around 9 pm, on ment from a Park Slope storage A prowler entered an apart- s and the suspect’s clothing, grocery store along Berkeley Nov. 21, and took her wallet room in a building on Eighth rtupplie on Nov. 22, when he was ment on 15th Street, between S confronted with the business which they said was stained Sixth and Seventh avenues, with blood, as evidence. making off with $600 and a end of a 9 mm handgun. Police did not list serious in- According to police, the Nintendo Gameboy. juries from the attack. The victim, 24, returned A 376 victim, 36, was walking home from the Seventh Avenue Q In her kitchen home at 6 pm on Nov. 19, to Supplies7 for A burglar came through a find the front door open and his 7th Ave. station on , (bet. 11th & 12th Sts) when the gun-wielding thief woman’s kitchen window on property gone. the Fine Artist, stopped him and said, “Give it Nov. 23, taking her wallet, Free Pre-Natal Care Available There were no signs of Graphic Artist, up, give me your wallet.” An earrings and passport. forced entry and, according to Student accomplice stood behind the The victim left her home on The Sunset Park Family Health Center of Lutheran Medical Center is offer- police, the victim’s 24-year-old and Children 369-4969 victim to prevent his escape. Fifth Avenue, between Bergen ing free pre-natal care through New York State’s Prenatal Care Assistance roommate could not remember The thieves then made off Street and Saint Marks Place, Program (PCAP) to those who meet eligibility requirements. the door was locked. with the man’s wallet, contain- at around noon and returned at ing $40, credit cards and iden- 9 pm to find her home had All pregnant women and teens who have little or no income and have tification. been broken into and her prop- limited or no insurance coverage are eligible. There is no age or citizenship Stabs boy, 13 erty gone. requirement. A 13-year-old boy was 6th St. snatch PCAP covers all clinical visits, sonograms, lab tests, A purse snatcher grabbed a NEW SITE stabbed while standing on the health education, prenatal vitamins, HIV counseling, PROSTATE PROBLEMS? 1/2 subway platform at Grand purse that belonged to an em- testing and nutritional counseling. Bay Ridge FHC Army Plaza and Flatbush Av- ployee of a medical office on 9711 3rd Avenue Have a weak urine flow? enue at 3:30 pm on Nov. 21. Sixth Street, between Seventh To participate in this program or to find out more, Brooklyn, NY 11209 The alleged attacker was and Eighth avenues, as it rest- call the main site at (718) 630-7136. (718) 759-9126 identified as a classmate at MS ed on the windowsill. Often feel a sudden urge to urinate? 340 on Sterling Place at Van- The victim, 45, told police derbilt Avenue in Prospect that she placed her purse on a Have difficulty starting urination? Heights. windowsill at around 3 pm on Sunset Park FHC Brooklyn Chinese FHC Park Slope FHC 150 55th Street, Station #8 812 54th Street 220 13th Street If you answered YES to any of these questions you may benefit from the TherMatrx Brooklyn, NY 11220 Brooklyn, NY 11220 Brooklyn, NY 11215 (718) 630-7136 (718) 686-2680 (718) 832-5980 microwave thermotherapy treatment now being offered by Dr. Francis E. Florio, M.D. This treatment for enlarged prostate is done in the physician’s office and does not involve Family Physician FHC Park Ridge FHC Caribbean American FHC surgery. Call us now for a preliminary screening. 5616 6th Avenue 6317 4th Avenue 3414 Church Avenue LI bank, in Ridge, Brooklyn, NY 11220 Brooklyn, NY 11220 Brooklyn, NY 11203 (718) 439-5440 (718) 492-8233 (718) 940-9425 Dr. Francis E. Florio 355 Ovington Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11209 (718) 238-1818 eyes Park Slope 150 55th Street www.thermatrx.com ® Brooklyn, NY 11220 www.floriomd.com The Brooklyn Papers Dick Conti and Doug Manditch made a great team in 1967, and are poised to demonstrate their synergy once again. The duo is heading up the Brooklyn expansion of Long Island Commercial Bank, operating since August at 415 86th St., with a 5,500-square-foot office at 375 86th St. set to open soon. A Park Slope office may follow, Conti told The Brooklyn Pa- pers. Conti was president and CEO of Olympian Bank until 1999, when it was sold to EAB (now Citibank). Olympian had been a haven to small and mid-sized businesses, gearing its banking products and customer service to those particular needs. “There are many similarities in the missions of Olympian and LICB,” Conti said. “Olympian was geared towards businesses and professionals, just like LICB is now.” Conti’s old friend and colleague Manditch founded LICB in western Suffolk County on Long Island in 1990, and the bank has demonstrated strong growth since then. Long Island Commercial Bank’s additional seven branches are located near industrial and commercial hubs in Long Island, and target firms with revenues up to $10 million as their customer base. Manditch, LICB’s president and CEO, said the bank plans to double its size to $800 million in five years, and estimates it will have about 20 branches by then. “I envision other Brooklyn branches,” he said. “I’d look at Bensonhurst and Park Slope as possible locations. But we’re set- ting up the 86th Street branch as a regional Brooklyn office, rather than a simple branch office.”

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The Purchase Building will Thursday included the Tobac- also be back in discussion, af- co Warehouse as a potential ter the city Department of performance space, circulation Parks and Recreation proposed routes for vehicles on Pier 1, Closer look at Bridge Park plan razing the structure last year. landscape adjustments at Pier A furious discussion ensued 5 and Squibb Park, and park- By Patrick Gallahue composed of various plantings, bike path would then reconnect tor of the Brooklyn Bridge the hotel were presented, each towards the water, then back between proponents for demo- ing facilities. The Brooklyn Papers against Furman Street. with Furman Street at around Park Development Corpora- offering varying degrees of towards Furman, and curves lition and preservationists, be- Each of these alternatives The shape and height are Doughty Street and continue tion, the entity that will build view of the Manhattan skyline. back towards the water at the Next month, the public fore the Landmarks Preserva- will be incorporated in the En- now being explored to under- into Water Street. the park. The first two have similar out- northern edge. tion Commission, in September vironmental Impact Statement, will get a chance to weigh stand how best to deflect noise An alternative use that was A shape for the hotel’s foot- lines, with a base along Fur- That footprint creates ap- 2001, because the structure is which is expected to begin in in on potential alternative outward rather than up to the not as enthusiastically en- print is being sought that will man Street and five towers that proximately enough space for part of the Historic January or February. A design uses for public and private promenade, stretching between dorsed was an idea to wall off accommodate views of the jut out towards the . 326 rooms at 869 square feet District. team is to be selected around spaces in the planned Remsen and Cranberry streets the cove area between the Manhattan skyline. The first design, however, per room. That plan was eventually the same time. . above much of the proposed Manhattan & Brooklyn According to a Brooklyn comes with only 389 rooms at The fourth footprint creates stalled by 9-11 and the Parks All these alternatives, Last Thursday, the Citizens parkland. bridges from the currents of Bridge Park financial analysis, 775 square feet per room, a base for a winding building Department withdrew its appli- among other issues, will be Advisory Council, a group of “We don’t want to take that the East River. prepared in 2000, the hotel is while the second has 416 that literally snakes along the cation for demolition after the presented to the public on Sat- residents of the communities noise and bounce it up to the An overview of the devel- slated to contain 409 rooms, at rooms at 793 square feet per base of Pier 1, with three Office of Emergency Manage- urday, Dec. 14, at St. Ann’s surrounding the planned com- promenade,” said Michael Van opment released in 2000 pro- a daily rate estimated to be room. winding curves towards the ment moved into the Depres- Warehouse, on Water Street mercial and recreational devel- Valkenburgh, whose firm is the poses to create jetties on either around $235 with an occupan- The third footprint shows a waterside, creating enough sion-era building. between Dock and Main opment, were given a sneak landscape designer for the side of the cove to calm the cy rate expected to be about 82 building with angular curves space for 268 rooms at 933 The Purchase Building is streets in DUMBO, from 10 preview of some ideas that are park. currents and support a salt percent. that begins with a triangular square feet per room. slated to be truncated, under am to noon. to come. With each suggestion, land- marsh along the shoreline, The target group was listed edge that slopes back towards While the shape of the par- the park plan, to clear the way The meeting is open to the Among the possibilities that scape architects from Van where a small beach now ex- as about half business and half Furman Street then has a box- cel is being explored, the for a view of the river. public but the BBPDC is urg- will be explored, for both fea- Valkenburgh Associates, in- ists. tourist and amenities include a like base at around where Mid- height of the building is not Moogan said the BBPDC ing anyone interested in at- sibility in the Environmental cluding Van Valkenburgh him- “Everybody likes the shore- restaurant, gym and valet park- dagh Street would be extend- expected to exceed that of the would reopen that discussion tending to reserve a space by Impact Statement and desir- self, warned that a great deal of line as it is,” said Michael ing. ed. existing Cold Storage build- on Dec. 14. calling (212) 977-5597, ext. ability in public hearings, are additional studies need to be Crane, president of the DUM- Four different footprints for That version then juts back ings on the site. Additional discussion on 229, before Dec. 11. measures for sound attenua- explored. BO Neighborhood Associa- tion, a pedestrian and bicycle With a pedestrian waterside tion. “They like the beach.” path through the park, a salt walkway planned for the park, Though the consensus was marsh in the cove area north of an idea for a separate bicycle that natural was preferable, the the Brooklyn Bridge and an path winding further upland idea will remain part of the update on the future status of was warmly received by the Dec. 14 presentation to the the Purchase Building in the Citizens Advisory Council public. Girl kidnapped and raped D’town planned $550 million develop- (CAC), instead of a parallel A hotel near Pier 1 — part ment, $150 million of which bikeway as is used on the of the development’s 20 per- By Patrick Gallahue ralemon Street and Boerum first man ordered her into the No suspects have been ar- last year, reports of rape have has been dedicated by the city Brooklyn Bridge. cent private space to financial- The Brooklyn Papers Place, near Borough Hall, at car, according to police. rested and the investigation is drastically increased according around 8 am on Nov. 20, a The teenager told police she to statistics provided by the New and state. The bike path would break ly support the public portions A 17-year-old girl was ongoing. With noise from the Brook- off from the footpath, roughly at — has likewise presented man engaged her in conversa- was taken to an undisclosed lo- Rape up York Police Department. lyn-Queens Expressway blast- Joralemon Street, weave some unique challenges to de- kidnapped at gunpoint and tion about a job. As she walked cation and raped by the man At this time last year, there ing into what is hoped to be a through the park before connect- signers. raped as she walked to away, her path was blocked by who had approached her as the While crime in the 84th were five rapes filed with the bucolic oasis, planners are ing with Furman Street at the “[The parcel] has never school Downtown, accord- a Lincoln Towncar driven by driver held her at gunpoint. Precinct, covering Brooklyn 84th Precinct. This year, the tweaking the various means to foot of Pier 2, which is near been fully defined and now ing to police. another man, who was de- She was treated at Kings Heights, Downtown, Boerum number rose to 14 — an in- mitigate the sounds of traffic Clark Street, and then re-enter we’re trying to define it,” said The victim told police that scribed as being in his 20s. The County Hospital and released Hill and DUMBO, is down by crease of 180 percent — not in- with a staggered bio-wall, the park at the foot of Pier 1. The Jim Moogan, executive direc- while passing the corner of Jo- driver displayed a gun and the shortly after. about five percent compared to cluding this week’s incident.

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By Patrick Gallahue opments on four current parking in the cultural district, many in In the economic develop- The Brooklyn Papers lots — bounded by Flatbush the arts and culture subcom- ment subcommittee, recom- Avenue, Lafayette Avenue, Ful- Two plans are underway mittee meeting wanted chil- mendations included expand- ton Street and Ashland Place — dren to be unequivocally tar- ing construction contracts to for a planned cultural dis- surrounding the Brooklyn geted for programs minority and women-owned trict in Fort Greene. Academy of Music. “The educational compo- businesses to 25 percent. The BAM Local Develop- Segments of the surrounding nent cannot be left to luck or The LDC has pledged to of- ment Corporation’s (LDC) / Tom Callan / Tom community have been ill at ease Callan / Tom chance,” said Carlton Bush, of fer 20 percent of the contracts to designs for the cultural district with portions of the plan, fear- Scientific Machine Filmworks. minority and women-owned continue, as does the planning ing displacement, , “I think it has to be mandated businesses and an additional 15 by a consortium of communi- over commercialization and the that a certain percentage be in- percent of the building projects ty groups, known as the Con- exclusion of the local communi- cluded.” to local companies. Participants cerned Citizens Coalition

ty in the benefits. Papers The Brooklyn The Brooklyn Papers The Brooklyn Additional ideas included also sought to have 25 percent (CCC), who are creating addi- While three public planning mapping an inventory of exist- of post-construction contracts tional recommendations for sessions were held between Harvey Lichtenstein ing arts groups within the for retail and other commercial the development. December and June, the col- community, as well as a space components, go to local entre- The BAM LDC is chaired lective volume of concerned BAM and the planned cultural the BAM LDC. The meetings, and skills bank and joint mar- preneurs. by former Brooklyn Academy voices was not publicly raised district, excoriating the institu- however, were void of spin as keting for arts groups. Professional services, such of Music executive director until July when Greene and tion for what the group called members of the CCC facilitat- The housing subcommittee as lawyers, are asked to be in- Harvey Litchenstein and its state Sen. Velmanette Mont- its lacking racial diversity and ed discussion on the plan. suggestions included commu- cluded in the LDC’s budget as Brooklyn Vein-Laser Center board of directors includes real gomery announced the CCC’s negligible benefits of the plan Ideas, some practical, others nity preference for housing, well as assistance to existing estate magnate Bruce Ratner. formation — consisting of lo- to the existing community. less so, were tossed out and particularly in Fort Greene, and aspiring businesses. Exclusively for Treatment “Our plan is always going cal clergy, activists, elected of- On Tuesday, Nov. 19, the first listed on large pieces of paper, Cobble Hill and Bedford- In education, mentoring pro- to be something that is evolu- ficials and arts groups — and of CCC’s subcommittee meet- similar to what the LDC had Stuyvesant, with an emphasis grams and contracts with local of Varicose Veins of All Sizes. tionary,” said LDC spokesman the $50,000 allocation from ings, however, the criticisms of used several months earlier. on lower income residents. schools have been suggested for Spiders and Facial Spiders. Leg Ulcers. Lee Silberstein. “We will be the assemblyman to embark the LDC’s plans began to be In the arts and culture sub- The subsidized housing al- inclusion, as well as develop- able to incorporate their sug- on a “supplementary plan.” tempered by actual suggestions. committee meeting, for exam- ready included in the LDC plan ment in five areas: theater, mu- 17 years experience gestions even after we issue The first CCC town hall The subcommittee sessions, ple, those in attendance took — in a median range between sic, visual arts, film and dance. our plans.” meeting, last month, packed divided into the categories of issue that the LDC’s plan does $60,000 and $100,000 per Craig Whitaker, a Manhat- National clientele The CCC, meanwhile, is about 400 people into the housing, education, arts and not specifically benefit chil- household — was slammed by tan-based architect, has been 9920 Fourth Ave., Room 305 (718) 748-2659 swiftly convening public Brooklyn Music School, and culture and economic develop- dren. While community bene- elected officials such as Green, enlisted to incorporate the con- meetings to put together its featured a series of broad ment, were strikingly similar fits are a required criteria for as still not affordable to the cerns of the community into (Bet. 99th & 100th Sts.) http://[email protected] own “supplementary plan” in- piercing comments about to the three meetings hosted by arts groups seeking inclusion community. the supplementary plan. tended to balance the LDC’s vision for the community with what the group sees as over- looked community needs. City Planning Commission of local business peo- “Everyone’s aware of the and the City Council. Join our group fact that we need to make The sale of the chancellor’s ple as we meet monthly in Downtown Brooklyn some expeditious moves given FOR SALE… quarters will also have to pass the current fiscal climate,” through ULURP, for the dispo- to discuss the business we’re doing and refer nounced his intention to move said Assemblyman Roger Continued from page 1 sition of city-owned property. business leads to each other. Green, who supported the Joel Klein lives in his own the Board of Ed into Manhattan The current renter has a lease CCC’s supplementary plan Park Avenue apartment but last March, Borough President that runs through April, accord- with a $50,000 allocation. with no housing allowance. expressed ing to Education Department Our goal is to trade business referrals as “The negotiations between The State Street residence has concern that jobs would leave spokesman Kevin Ortiz. we become familiar with each other’s areas of BAM LDC and the CCC are five bedrooms and four bath- Downtown Brooklyn, but As to how that building ongoing within that spirit.” rooms. It is being rented by the added, “[Bloomberg] has as- would be sold, either through expertise. Only one member from any particular sured me that he will develop a Certain LDC projects have city as a single-family home for open bidding by the Depart- field may join to ensure confidentialty. already moved forward, such a reported $8,000 a month. viable plan for the privatization ment of Citywide Administra- as plans for 80 Hanson Pl., a Of the 900 Education De- of 110 Livingston St., a plan that tive Services or through an 30,000-square-foot building at partment employees that will ensure the replacement of RFP process, Ortiz said, “It’s We are seeking: the corner of South Portland worked in 110 Livingston St., all lost jobs with relocated pri- too early to get into specifics.” CONSULTANTS • SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS Avenue, geared towards office about 600 have been relocated vate- or public-sector firms.” Giuliani did get as far as is- space for small arts groups. to the next This week, the mayor’s of- suing an RFP for the sale of TRAVEL AGENT • COMPUTER REPAIR/IT Borough President Marty Markowitz with Mayor Michael The building is expected to door to City Hall. fice said the building would be 110 Livingston St., which gar- PERSONAL TRAINER • CAR SERVICE/LIMOUSINE open next year. But with virtu- Former Mayor Rudy Giuliani primarily residential but with Bloomberg Monday. The Brooklyn Papers / Tom Callan nered 10 proposals for rental ally every capital project in the had long sought to dismantle the retail or academic uses on the units, condominiums or dor- PHOTOGRAPHER • EVENT PLANNER • CONTRACTOR city and state eyed for cuts, the poorly run Board of Ed and its lower floors. mid-sized American corpora- The city Economic Develop- mitory space for local aca- COMMERCIAL MOVER • HEALTHCARE ADMINISTRATOR cultural district, with its $80 inefficient Downtown Brooklyn Seemingly ignoring the may- tion to relocate its national ment Corporation will issue a re- demic institutions. million in public funding, headquarters. But Bloomberg or’s intention of having up to headquarters to Brooklyn.” quest for proposals (RFP) as ear- Built in 1926 by the archi- might not feel too comfortable was able to get the job done, 250 apartments in the building, Markowitz also praised the ly as Jan. 1, said Janel Patterson, tectural firm McKim Mead with its commitments. gaining the approval of the state Markowitz praised the pending mayor for keeping about 1,000 an EDC spokeswoman. and White — the designers of Call for more infomation Silberstein said that the LDC Legislature to dismantle the old sale and optimistically plowed Education Department em- Patterson declined to dis- the old Penn Station, the New (718) 834-9350 x104. was hopeful that the funds central Board of Ed and center ahead with his thoughts on what ployees at 131 Livingston St. cuss the RFP in detail but said York Herald Building and the would be available as needed more power in his office. He the building should house. “We and at 65 Court St. the chosen proposal would Morgan Library — 110 Liv- and that, “If money does get then created the Department of are looking forward to working Only 200 or 300 employees likely have to pass through the ingston St. was taken over by pushed back we’re confident Education in its place, hired a with the administration to come remain at 110 Livingston St., Uniform Land Use Review the Board of Ed in 1939. Brooklyn that it will be compatible with new schools chancellor and up with the most appropriate re- and they will likely be moved Procedure (ULURP) which Long a symbol of the city’s the sequencing of the sites.” headquartered the revamped development plan for this prime to one of the other two Down- would include recommenda- bureaucracy-bloated school The current design for the agency in the remodeled Tweed location,” Markowitz said in a town Brooklyn buildings, an tions from public hearings be- system, Giuliani proposed Leads Business Referral Group cultural district also includes arts Courthouse. release. “I believe this would be Education Department spokes- fore Community Board 2, the blowing the building up be- space, housing and retail devel- Shortly after Bloomberg an- an excellent opportunity for a man said. borough president’s office, the fore trying to sell it. 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Schermerhorn,” he said. “The ors to jumping on the Bo- chant collaboration are but a contrast to the traditional an- that is being designed for an “I think it makes complete short-term is where they’ve CoCa bandwagon, Atlantic few of the initiatives avenue tiques and Mid-Eastern area they’re trying to market as sense to think of Atlantic Av- been hurting.” Avenue merchants and act- merchants are exploring under shops,” Berne said the biggest “BoCoCa.” enue and Court Street and The water main project be- ivists are exploring a number the guidance of a consultant challenge has been defining In the vein of SoHo and Smith Street as one unit,” Berne gan in February 2000, to re- Callan / Tom of short-term solutions to a hired with a $7,500 grant from the avenue to the public. TriBeCa, BoCoCa is the brain- said. “Because they are essen- place primary and secondary shopping strip still recover- the Independence Community “A lot of the study has been child of Christopher Branstetter, tially serving the same market.” water main lines on Atlantic ing from a long and arduous Foundation. on trying to get that message a graphic designer who created A report on the avenue is Avenue between Columbia street reconstruction and the Place and and “One thing that we’ve found across,” he said. “Unfortunate- a shopping guide for Smith due out later this year, by Papers The Brooklyn retail drag after 9-11. is that Atlantic Avenue is expe- ly Atlantic Avenue is probably Street earlier this year. Berne incorporating some of on Clinton Street, from Bush Street to Atlantic Avenue. Among them: service with a riencing the same sort of resur- the least known of all that has Beginning on Smith Street, the ideas that have been pre- Large portions of the av- smile. gence that has been in the works happened in the area.” but now incorporating Court sented so far. enue were pushed into two “Customers need to feel on Fifth Avenue and Smith Balboza is exploring grants to Street and Atlantic Avenue, “I think the long-term out- Talkin’ turkey lanes of traffic as the roadway comfortable, to feel welcome” Street,” said Michael Berne, of improve signage on the store- BoCoCa is a contraction of look for Atlantic Avenue is Borough President Marty Markowitz hoists a turkey during was excavated, making it dif- Borough Hall giveaway. Among those picking up birds for ficult to cross the street and their charities were (l to r) Ophelia Perry of Church Women virtually eliminating parking. United and Margaret Keaveney from Catholic Charities. While the past two years have been doleful, the future looks brighter. FIREHOUSES… A master plan is currently underway for the corridor, Continued from page 1 “The battle is not over and we headed by the Atlantic Avenue engine companies; and cutting will have to stay together,” said Local Development Corpora- GATEWAY… the number of ambulances on DeBlasio outside Engine 204. tion (LDC). duty. “Save your buttons, save Over the past year and a Continued from page 1 Hammerman said. Under the agreement be- your signs,” warned Assem- half, the LDC, in concert with Van Brunt Street, and spanning “Everything that’s been dis- tween the council and the blywoman . an advisory coalition of more south to Hamilton Avenue — to cussed publicly and presented mayor, the firehouses would “So we’ve got a reprieve as than 20 community groups, make way for an off-street bicy- publicly includes a continuous they call it,” said Firefighter known as the Leadership Con- cle path, possibly with a curb or recreational path from Atlantic remain open, and ambulances Avenue and Columbia to Van would not be cut, although the Tom Westhoff, a resident of ference, has sought to develop grassy area to keep the path sep- an abstract vision for the av- arate from traffic, that will be Brunt and Hamilton, the large number of firefighters in some Carroll Gardens. “I’m relieved majority of which will be off- engine companies would still but we’ll see what happens enue between the waterfront constructed by the city Depart- and Flatbush Avenue. street,” Hammerman said of be reduced from five to four. come June or July and if we’ll ment of Transportation (DOT). protests that the street reconstruc- The panel, meanwhile, will have to fight again.” Planning sessions began in Dan Maynard, manager of tion fell short of a greenway. study how to cut about $2.5 Westhoff said the firehouse October, to seek consensus on Community and Government The entire street reconstruc- million from the Fire Depart- had collected 6,000 signatures David Yassky, Marty Markowitz, Craig Hammerman, Bill DeBlasio, Joan Millman and Howard how to make the avenue more Relations for the Port Authority, tion, including repaving, new pedestrian-friendly, to build on said there will be tree plantings ment’s budget. Both Yassky for a petition in protest of the Graubard celebrate outside Engine 204 on Degraw and Court streets. Brooklyn Papers / Tom Callan sidewalks and streetlights, will and DeBlasio said the recom- proposed closings. the avenue’s increasing retail inside the fence line in addition take place on Columbia Street, The companies on the chop- presence and to agree on traf- to lighting, improved signage from Atlantic Avenue to Hamil- mendations are hoped to be ple have gathered to protest The speeches were then to-Z (PAZ) after-school pro- ping block were Engine 204; fic-management policies. and redesigned entry gates. ton Avenue; on Degraw Street, made public in the next couple Bloomberg’s proposal includ- drowned out by the blowing gram at PS 24. The Port Authority work is of months. Engine 278, on Seventh Avenue Developments over three from Van Brunt Street to Colum- ing one on Friday outside En- of whistles and chants of sup- Children took turns at the formerly state-owned lots scheduled to finish before the bia Street; on Woodhull Street, Yassky said a specific between 50th and 51st streets in end of 2003. The DOT is sched- means for public input into the Sunset Park; Engine 212 in gine 278. port from a group of fifth podium to say, “Please don’t around Atlantic Avenue also from Columbia Street to Hamil- DeBlasio and newly elected graders of the Peace from A- close our firehouse.” stand to benefit the merchants uled to start street reconstruc- ton Avenue; and on Carroll process has yet to developed. Greenpoint; Engine 209 in Bed- tion, including the addition of On Sunday, outside Engine ford-Stuyvesant; and Squad 252 Sunset Park Councilwoman in the coming years. Street, from Columbia to Hicks Sara Gonzalez, joined protes- The firm of HS Develop- the bicycle path, in the spring of streets, de Bourbon added. 204, moods were bright, albeit in Bushwick, which would have 2004, according to DOT been moved to the quarters of an tors and members of the Sun- ment Partners has been selected Including a city Department cautious, as elected officials — spokeswoman Lisi de Bourbon, of Environmental Protection including Borough President engine company in Midtown set Park-based Brooklyn Chi- to develop a nearly 100,000- who added that the job should nese American-Association, to square-foot site bounded by (DEP) project to replace water Marty Markowitz, Assembly- Manhattan. Additional closures take about two years. lines and upgrade sewage pipes woman Joan Millman, Park were to include Engine 261 in deride the cuts. Schermerhorn, Hoyt, Smith and David Lutz, executive director DORMS… State streets, into apartment in the area, the total tally for the Slope Councilman Bill DeBla- and Engine “The city is in trouble,” Gon- of the Neighborhood Open Space project is anticipated to cost $17 zalez said on Friday. “Every- buildings, , student Coalition, said, however, that nei- sio and Yassky — firefighters 293 in Woodhaven, Queens; and Continued from page 2 plans for a 22-story, 230-unit million. and residents celebrated the Engine 36 in East . thing is on the table but the es- housing, loft-style residences ther the DOT nor the Port Author- neighboring 96 Schermerhorn dormitory at the corner of State Meanwhile, the Port Authori- announcement. Throughout the week, peo- sential services must stay.” and retail space. ity’s plans take into account plans St., and a member of the Street and Boerum Place to ty’s work at the foot of Atlantic A roughly 60,700-square- for a Brooklyn Waterfront Green- Avenue is taking place inde- Boerum Hill Association, said house 400 students, on the foot lot bordered by Schermer- way, an idea to create a 30-foot- grounds that it would violate pendent of a massive planning an idea had been floated at a horn, Hoyt, State and Bond wide Park-style bi- effort by the Brooklyn Bridge meeting of residents, for the car the Special Downtown Brook- streets is to be developed by cycle and pedestrian trail along Park Development Corporation, owners to unite as a group and lyn District (SDBD), which IBEC Building Corporation and the waterfront. (BBPDC), a subsidiary of the hire an attorney to negotiate was instituted last year to limit Strategic Construction. That “The greenway is part of a Empire State Development Cor- with the law school’s lawyers, future building height to 120 proposal includes rental apart- vision,” Lutz said. “And the poration for a 1.3-mile commer- though she didn’t think the idea feet as well as to limit bulk. ments, townhouses, a charter traffic engineers had another vi- cial and recreational development was ever undertaken. school and ground-floor retail. sion — they thought this could between the The building has since hired A 216-foot dorm was subse- be a corridor for overflow from quently approved by the city. And in spring of last year, a and Pier 5 at Joralemon Street. engineers to study the building the [Brooklyn-Queens Express- Jim Moogan, the executive Asked if she thought any plan by developer Shaya B. was APARTMENTS APARTMENTS and, she added, “There’s no indi- selected by the Empire State way].” director of the BBPDC, referred cation that there is any structural lawsuits might arise, Pointon Development Corp. for a com- As the DOT has undertaken a questions to the Port Authority, damage” to 96 Schermerhorn St. laughed and said, “If there were massive traffic-calming project and Maynard said, “Irrespective For Rent / Brooklyn bination of residential, commer- in and around Downtown Earlier this year, neighbor- any grounds, I think there are a cial and retail spaces on a lot of what happens with Brooklyn Windsor Terrace hood groups banded together in number of people who would Brooklyn, Columbia Street has Bridge Park we wanted to do along Smith Street between At- literally remained a blank page Bensonhurst opposition to Brooklyn Law’s love to sue the law school.” lantic Avenue and State Street. this anyway.” Totally renovated, 3 bedrooms, huge Windsor Terr: Studio, Full sep. kit and bath, parquet flrs, cable on the plans, largely because de- While advocates for the park signs were already being dis- livingroom, eat-in kitchen, hardwood and elec. Incl’d, lots of windows. Pet Friendly. Security and Ref’s and planners are still hoping to cussed for the reconstruction. floors. Private house, 2nd floor. $1350 req’d. NO FEE, NO BROKERS. Avail. 12/1/02 – $1300 per month. incorporate Pier 6 into the plan “In adjacent communities monthly + security. Close to trans- (718) 853-7781. — with fresh ideas presented by streets are being narrowed by portation. (718) 449-6516. the design to make it fit on the Lutz for a traffic circle, replete R47 Windsor Terr: 3 BDRM. Full Kit. W/D, new bath, wood flrs in site next to the baseball stadium,” the relaxation of parking rules, with green traffic islands — the Park Slope lvgrm. Lots of windows, cable ready. Pet Friendly, Security and Adams told The Papers in Febru- neck downs, various tools,” issues between Pier 6’s current Ref’s req’d. NO FEE, NO BROKERS, Avail 12/1/02 - $2100 per OLYMPIC… ary. “When the paint dried on Lutz said. “In the Columbia function as the storage portion On 19th St. bet. 4th & 5th Aves. month. (718) 853-7781. Keyspan Park we made some mi- Street plans, Columbia is being of the Red Hook Marine Termi- $1,000 monthly. 1 month security & Continued from page 1 um for a minor league Mets af- widened.” rent deposit. 1.5 bedrooms, full nor changes to the plan.” nal, and its incorporation into Also: (2) 3 bedroom apt. avail. Jan.1, 03. quirements for transportation, filiate should be built. Traffic lanes are expected to kitchen, and bathroom in private R46 The position of Sportsplex has the park, have yet to be re- accommodations, communica- The city and state had been shifted 90 degrees, so that be widened from 10-feet to 12- solved. house, 2nd fl. Call owner. 1 (347) pledged $30 million each, and 256-7696. tions, security and facilities. the entrance will face West 19th feet, de Bourbon said, to facili- “Obviously, it’ll spruce up the R49 Golden another $7 million, for International contenders also Street, rather than Surf Avenue, as tate the movement of cars and appearance of the Atlantic Av- the Sportsplex and Golden was Apartments, Sublets include Paris, London, it had in the previous diagrams. buses along the road. enue end of the piers, but longer & Roommates adamant that the city move for- The DOT project will repave term, in terms of what may done Moscow, Madrid and Istanbul. ward with the Sportsplex and The plan will also make way for BROWSE & LIST FREE! INSURANCE Hailing the Olympics as an parking by placing the venue atop along Columbia Street to De- in [regards to] access to the park not a stadium for minor league graw Street, down to Van Brunt from Atlantic Avenue has not All & Areas! opportunity to reclaim Brook- baseball. Brooklyn, he said, de- a deck with parking underneath. www.Sublet.com lyn’s abandoned waterfront and The roughly $70 million Street to Hamilton Avenue, with been resolved,” Maynard said. served nothing less than major- the off-street bike path incorpo- “We do have this issue that Pier 6 Studios;1-2 Bdrms; $800-2000 connect it to the rest of the city Sportsplex project, led by the all league baseball. Giuliani want- rated into about 80 percent of is currently a maritime facility so 1-877-FOR-RENT by high-speed ferry, Doctoroff volunteer not-for-profit Brook- R49 ed the stadium built first and the project, where the Port Au- doing anything beyond that announced plans for a 25-acre won out, with the City Council lyn Sports Foundation, would park in Williamsburg and said create a climate-controlled arena thority has made the extra space would require some discussion Park Slope approving the plan to build available to the DOT. between the city of New York, that Coney Island will see the what is now Keyspan Park on with a seating capacity of 2 bedrooms, new bathroom, parquet long-awaited construction of the 14,500 and would include a The other 20 percent, on the the state of New York and the property that had been slated for west side of Van Brunt Street, floors. Close to transportation. Asking once ill-fated Sportsplex. 200-meter, eight-lane track set Port Authority.” (718) 783-5834. the Sportsplex in Coney Island. between Sackett Street and $1800 monthly. Call “The IOC is looking for ac- around an NCAA regulation Seeking to alleviate pedestri- And while the money had been Hamilton Avenue, is private Available immediately. Also avail- tion now,” Ken Adams, presi- basketball court. Facilities for an traffic on Joralemon Street, promised for the Sportsplex it property and the agency will in- able: 2nd flr. 3BR apt. R46 martial arts, gymnastics, volley- Brooklyn Bridge Park planners W26-7 dent of both the Brooklyn was never actually allocated. stead have a painted lane for bi- ball and other athletic activities have identified Atlantic Avenue Chamber of Commerce and the But with the Sportsplex being cyclists on the east side of the Brooklyn Sports Foundation, would also be available to the as the main entrance point for COMMERCIAL included in plans by the group street. the commercial and recreational told The Brooklyn Papers this community, Adams explained. that put together the Olympic bid, It remains one of the only development. SPACE week. “And the Brooklyn Run as a not-for-profit, the fa- NYC 2012, which is headed by sore points for Community “What we all understand is cility would be partly funded by Sportsplex is where the city can Doctoroff and whose board in- Board 6 since bicyclists will that the acquisition of Pier 6 will commercial events, including Office Space Available take immediate action.” cludes Adams, the plan is now have to cross from the west side go a long way towards resolving Mired in city politics, plans more alive than ever. conferences, trade and consumer of Van Brunt Street to the east this problem,” Ken Greenberg, a Brooklyn Heights for the Sportsplex — a pro- In addition to modifications shows, and family entertainment. side at Sackett Street, raising consultant to the BBPDC, said posed multi-use complex for made to accommodate Keyspan During the Olympics, the concerns that cars will present a Individual office, asking $625 last Thursday at a meeting of the amateur athletics — originated Park, new plans for the Sport- Sportsplex would be a 29-minute hazard to cyclists. Those con- BBPDC’s Citizens Advisory monthly. Available 7 days, 24 several years ago, but were splex include renovating the old ferry ride from the Olympic Vil- cerns are still being reviewed by Council. “In the meantime, hours a week. Call (718) 624- killed in 2000 when then-May- Abe Stark skating rink, which is lage in Queens and a 55-minute the DOT. we’re carrying along with a or Rudolph Giuliani and former adjacent to the parking lot for subway ride from Manhattan. 1653 or (718) 812-3653. R46 Craig Hammerman, district number of alternatives that we Borough President Howard Keyspan Park, and connecting New York City has less than manager of CB6, applauded the can go forward with.” Golden butted heads over fund- the sports facilities. three years to prove to the IOC Port Authority’s plans. Among them is creating an ing and whether or not a stadi- “Late last year, [we] modified that it is a strong contender. “We’re thrilled that the Port entrance at Atlantic Avenue that FINANCING Authority took this project on would wind around the Watch- because it’s purely to benefit the tower building between Jorale- Money To Lend surrounding communities,” mon Street and Atlantic Avenue. Kayne has a vision, and for BUSINESS & COMMERCIAL her, giving belongings away is FINANCING ARRANGED. a means of getting people to $50,000 UP. CALL Mr. Roth ARTIST… think about value. Nothing Continued from page 1 make her art. Other objects will have a price tag. Instead, 718-306-9110 Kayne wants buyers to pay between 10am and 4pm. Mon-Thur. All of it must go. she’ll be holding onto include www.primelinefunding.com her what they think the object R26-02 Born and raised in Con- two pairs of overalls, long un- derwear and a winter coat. is worth to them. necticut, Kayne moved to Each object’s story has been FEDERAL PROGRAMS New York nine years ago and The point Kayne says she’s LOW GOV’T 5% FIXED RATES signed, “Love, Elanit,” be- trying to get across is about Helps Homeowners Cut Payments majored in theater at New cause, the artist explains, sell- Refinance & Save $1000s. Payoff High % York University. She moved value, and the value we place Credit Cards, Catch up back bills, tax, ing her belongings is an act of to Kensington nearly four on objects. love. “I want to meet as many mortgage, Home remodel or business use “I think objects will have a (Bank reject; self-employed; years ago because of the af- New Yorkers as possible while off book income, bankruptcy...OK) fordable rent. bigger, more beautiful life I’m in the window,” she says. with somebody else, because 1-800-560-5629 R48 Kayne’s theatrical training Objects Kayne will be sad shines through as she bounces they take on new meaning, to lose? An old pink bag with from one object to the next in new life,” she explains. frayed straps she’s had since MANAGEMENT her studio, which also doubles Kayne’s doubts about the she was 13, a red wool hat as an apartment. In addition to project emerge briefly at times, knitted for her by a postal her belongings strewn across like while sitting on her bed flip- worker at the Kensington Post Guardian the floor, hanging from the ping through old sticker books Office, and a poster she picked Property ceiling are “quilps,” sculptures and photo albums, including up while traveling with a the- shots of her parents from the Services, LLC constructed by Kayne using ater group through Poland. found objects. The quilps pro- 1960s. She pauses when she After the 15 days, Kayne mote balance using hard and comes to a photograph of her Advisory Services, Expediting, Project will be sleeping on her hard- soft objects to support one an- childhood rabbit, Oshti. Management & Outsourcing for all wood floor, but she has no re- Owners, Boards & Lessors of other and feature an array of But Kayne holds true to her grets. “Every time I do some- Commercial & Residential Properties stockings, including a silk pair mission. “I don’t need it,” she thing extreme,” she says, “my from her grandmother and an says emphatically. “I don’t life changes in positive ways.” (718) 832-4913 old pair from Sears. need it.” Kayne will be at 129 W. Bill’s way The quilps will not be for Despite some reservations, 42nd St. from Dec. 2 through 14th Street at Eighth Avenue was recently given the honorary “Property Maintenance & Visit us at sale during Kayne’s everything- all of her photographs will be Dec.16. For more information name “Bill Thomas Sr. Lane” in honor of Park Slope activist Management Solutions” must-go exhibit, nor will any of for sale with explanations at- visit www.elanitkayne.com on William Thomas, who died in February. Pointing out the new R26-01 her art or anything she uses to tached. the Web. sign is Thomas’ friend Al Raffo. The Brooklyn Papers / Tom Callan December 2, 2002 THE BROOKLYN PAPERS • WWW.BROOKLYNPAPERS.COM AWP 7 If you’re considering a JEWISH DAY SCHOOL for your child

The Early Childhood Center and the Lower School of RAMAZ cordially invite you to a Brooklyn Parlor Meeting in Cobble Hill Tues, Dec. 3, 7:45 pm

You will have the opportunity to meet Rabbi Haskel Lookstein, Principal of the Ramaz School Members of the Administration And Ramaz families from Brownstone Brooklyn For further information or to RSVP PARENT please call 212-774-8045 School Break We look forward to greeting and meeting you What to do when

www.ramaz.org he plays with dolls HOLIDAHOLIDAYY

Q: “My 4-year-old nephew dress-up behavior at this age is likes to play with Barbie dolls Parent-to-Parent short-lived and has little bear- and wear high-heel shoes. Is ing on sexual identification.” this a phase or do we have At about age 3, a child is CAMP something to worry about? starting to become aware of CAMP Most other things he does his or her gender. Preschoolers seem to be like a normal boy. need opportunities to play Is there anything we can do to with both boys and girls, and end your A Holiday Tradition for 23 years! discourage this behavior with- to choose from an array of S MONDAY out damaging him mentally?” toys and dress-up clothes. As — an uncle social pressures increase, gen- children to our fun Dec. 23 A: As a 3-year-old boy der roles become more clearly and activity-filled thru Brooklyn Friends School kicks off his firefighter boots defined by about first grade. FRIDAY and dons pink plastic high- “This 4-year-old boy will heel shoes, his mother re- gradually make internal, con- camp during their Jan. 3 Holiday Crafts Fair marks: “My husband would scious decisions about his gen- die (if he knew).” der identity,” Gurian says. “He holiday break $45/day The boy adds sparkly neck- is trying to develop his self- Saturday, December 14 laces and delights in the click- concept.” from school! ety-clack of the wobbly shoes. By Betsy Flagler But if loved ones interfere 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Meanwhile, his buddies, a girl in a preschooler’s develop- and a boy, fight over who gets tal path because of their biases mental experimentation, he to push a doll carriage. as adults.” may feel ashamed and some- Register Now! Get the jump on holiday shopping at our annual fair, What’s to worry about Gurian suggests that adults how defective or become defi- of Brooklyn when a preschooler’s imagina- concerned about a boy’s ant, Gurian says. (718) 875-1190 which offers an exciting selection of high quality tion is unfettered by stereo- choices need to tune into their Squashing the boy’s choic- 30 crafts and unique designs at reasonable prices. types? Nothing, experts and own biases. Separate what’s es and feelings will only make (bet. Atlantic & State) parents say. your issue and what is the problems for him as he gets “The more you fuss, the child’s issue. older, says a stepmother. More than 50 vendors will showcase hand-crafted more the child will want to Ask yourself: “They should allow him to jewelry, gorgeous quilts, ceramics, artwork, photography, wear the high-heel shoes,” one “Is this an idea within me act how he pleases and to play mother says. “I have delightful that doesn’t have anything to with what he wants. Show By appt only specialty clothing for children and adults, live holiday pictures of little boys in my do with the child?” Gurian him that being himself is Japanese Style daughter’s dresses at age 4. suggests. “This is not a prob- okay,” the stepmother says. arrangements, holiday ornaments, and much more! They are now married with lem for the child; it is the Other comments from read- Hair Straightening children.” adult’s opinion.” ers: Brooklyn Friends School When preschool boys want Over the years, pediatrician •One mom, who recalls her Permanent - 8 months to play with dolls, dress up as T. Berry Brazelton, MD, has 3-year-old son played with 375 Pearl Street • Downtown Brooklyn the princess, or caress silky gotten many letters from par- Barbie dolls more than his sis- TAN material, it’s the adults who ents and grandparents who are ter did, was surprised to dis- While you wait! 718.852-1029 3 tans for $21 One Stop have issues with the choices, worried if their son wants to cover that her son liked Barbie One month unlimited $60 says family therapist Michael play with dolls or dress up in because of her shape. 3 mos. $150 Visit us online: BEFORE AFTER Hair Care Gurian. girl’s clothes. •A grandmother recalls how 1 yr. $450 www.brooklynfriends.org “This is normal, normal, “Worrying won’t do any her grandson loved to walk MASSAGE and more normal,” says Gurian, author good,” Brazelton says in his around in his other grandma’s FUN $10 for 10 mins. (upper body) high heels. “We didn’t make for the whole of “The Wonder of Boys” book newly out in paperback, Kid’s FREE FACIAL WITH (Putnam, 1996) and “The Soul “Touchpoints 3 to 6” (Perseus, an issue of it,” she says, and Chairs! ELECTROLYSIS family! of the Child” (Atria Books, 2002). the child lost interest in fancy $10 for 10 mins. (minimum 30min) 2002). “Don’t involve your- “Whatever their sexuality footwear after several months. selves in it. They are opening turns out to be, you cannot •A toddler was attracted to Little Angels Hair Salon a Pandora’s box if they try to change it, and it will need the colors and textures in his 463 Court St. (cor. of Luquer & Court) • 624-7587 • invade the boy’s developmen- your acceptance. Most often, sister’s dress-up trunk. His HOURS: Tues, Wed, Sat - 10am to 6pm; Thurs, Fri - 10am to 7pm; Closed Mondays mother expanded her chil- dren’s choices and added a black cape lined with satin, floppy hats, belts and vests. •Buy the boy a Ken doll, Jewish Day School says a mother. “I raised four sons on my own. Boys do play Brooklyn’s Only Drop-Off Daycare with Barbies. The uncle Do You Have Emergencies, on should not be the least bit con- cerned.” Errands, Shopping? Can you help? recruits in Cob’Hill “We have a 3-year-old H NEYDEW DROP Bay Ridge daughter and a 6-month-old DAYCARE & DROP-OFF SERVICE The Brooklyn Papers attracted youngsters from both baby girl. My wife is a won- 1 A Jewish Day School on the Conservative and Orthodox derful mother. The last couple 10 mos - 3 /2 yrs • Flexible Schedule Upper East Side will hold a backgrounds. months, when my wife walks parlor meeting in Cobble Hill Ramaz principal, Rabbi Has- in the room or picks up our Full Day • Half Day • 3 Hour Drop-off Preparatory School kel Lookstein, principal of Ra- daughter from mother’s morn- on Tuesday, Dec. 3 at 7:45 pm, maz, members of the Ramaz ad- ing out, she gives her mean to introduce its program to par- th ministration and Brownstone looks, pitches a fit or acts like ents in Brownstone Brooklyn. 277 14 St. (718) 788-9633 Brooklyn parents of Ramaz stu- she dislikes her mother. th th (bet. 5 & 6 Aves.) MON THRU FRI: 8AM-6PM A private Ramaz, with classes from dents, will be present to answer “This makes my wife feel 8101 Ridge Blvd. / 479 - 78th St. nursery through high school in PARK SLOPE K-12 college questions. bad. Is that typical behavior? CALL AND SCHEDULE A FREE PLAYGROUP separate lower, middle and up- Parents interested in explor- Sometimes my daughter does Brooklyn, NY 11209 • (718) 833-9090 preparatory per school buildings, has been ing Ramaz as an option for it to me, but I’m away a lot.” drawing a growing number of their children in coming years — a Navy pilot www.bayridgeprep.com school students from Brooklyn in re- are invited to attend. If you have tips or a ques- cent years. The school’s pro- For the location of the par- tion, call our toll-free hotline gram, which covers both secu- lor meeting, call Ramaz at any time at (800) 827-1092 or lar and Judaic studies, has (212) 774-8045. e-mail to [email protected]. Park Slope Child Care Collective • Classes for 2, 3 & 4 year olds Please join us for an • Open 8am - 6pm, 49 weeks/yr. • Non-profit parent cooperative • A.C.D. voucher availability Grades 5-8 Day • Play-centered learning • Low staff Turnover Open House/ • Indoor gym/Outdoor yard Thurs., Dec. 5 – 9am-11am School, Entrance Exam 186 St. John’s Place ************* Inc. (at 7th Ave.) RSVP Grades 9-12 A fully licensed and certified preschool 718-399-0397 718-833-9090 Tues., Dec. 10 – 6pm-8pm I I or email [email protected] 2-4 year old programs 2, 3, 4 or 5 mornings, LEARN IN YOUR HOME afternoons or full days I Licensed teachers Patient and Experienced I I Optimal educational equipment Spacious Classrooms MATHEMATICS TUTOR Private Tutoring in Located in the heart of Bay Ridge, Bay Ridge Preparatory School is a private K-12 college I Exclusive outdoor facilities I Enriched Curriculum preparatory school. 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OPINION CAPITOL CONNECTION Rich feed off us turkeys Post-election ERRORISM will never destroy this republic. No “rogue nation” or Bin Laden or Sad- PHIL FARRUGGIO T dam Hussein will bring us to our knees, with “weapons of mass destruction.” What will Calling all baby boomers: think back to danger zone cause our downfall will simply be greed. your childhood. How many of you had mom As we sit at our family gatherings this home while dad “won the bread?” During the HE ELECTIONS are over, Thanksgiving holiday, the 99 percent of us who ’50s and ’60s more families had one major now the carnage be- ALAN S. CHARTOCK share in but 13-15 percent of this nation’s wage earner — many mothers worked part T gins. wealth, we should be thankful that “facts” do time. Now, Thanksgiving 2002, it’s a The country is broke, the reasons why George has been not lie, and that the truth is but at our fingertips. “gimme” that both parents work or their house states are broke, the counties are successful in the past is his abil- In Kevin Phillips’ excellent “Wealth and or car gets repossessed. How many of you out broke and the cities — in partic- ity to put himself first. The Democracy: A Political History of the Ameri- there took a job because “of the benefits” and ular, New York City — are good politicians, Democrat and can Rich” ( Books, 2002), he states sacrificed low pay and terrible job conditions broke. Now the blame game be- Republican alike, have always repeatedly how the 1 percent of our population (mean, cheap bosses, no frills workplace)? gins as elected officials try to been able to do that. If there’s (owning 85-87 percent of America’s wealth) Irony, like irons, always hurts when hot. fund their governments and to no other way out and it’s Mike “feed off” we turkeys. In the 2001 economic re- The irony is that during this past election cy- stay politically alive. Fingers are or George, the governor’s play- port of the president, it states that corporate tax- cle, as in all others for that matter, real core going to be pointing all over the book will dictate saying good- es in 1950 were 26.5 percent of total federal tax economic issues (like the aforementioned) place. As the old folk song once bye to Mike. Take the com- receipts while employee payroll taxes were 6.9 were never made public. suggested, “There’s no hiding muter tax. Those suburbanites percent of the same receipts. In 2000, corporate The media, owned and run by the 1 per- place down here.” voted for Pataki in record num- taxes were 10 percent and payroll taxes 31 per- cent, were too busy giving us the “stuffing, It is no secret that a lot of bers. If George really allows cent! In the late-1960’s corporate CEO pay was not the meat!” this state’s mayors took one Mayor Mike to reinstate the around 25 times that of their hourly workers. In So, fellow turkeys, we are the 99 percent of look at the cards and began to hated commuter tax, there will 1988, it averaged to 93 times. By 1999, it was this nation — they are the minority. Let’s raise have nightmares. As George be political hell to pay. up to 419 times! our voices and demand reform, locally, Pataki was out there giving But a lot of folks believe On top of that, U.S. workers, who in the statewide and nationally. away goodies while Rome Pataki will not run for a fourth ’50s and ’60s worked fewer hours than their Remember, the turkey that runs around burned and the deficit grew term. I am not among them. He Japanese and European counterparts, now only looking “straight ahead” usually winds larger, the mayors, from De- will want to preserve that op- work more than workers of any other industri- up on someone’s dinner table! mocrat-turned-Republican tion. Of course, four years gives alized nation. So, in essence, the 1 percent Philip Farruggio is a Brooklyn-born and edu- Bloomberg to Democrats Jen- the suburban types a long time have gotten their elected (or bought?) reps to cated ( ’74) baby boomer cur- nings of Albany and Masiello to forget. Maybe Pataki will al- make laws shifting the burden from the super rently residing in Florida. He can be reached at of Buffalo, were desperately low the commuter tax hoping rich to the overworked. [email protected] Harbor light. The Brooklyn Papers / Tom Callan looking for help from the win- against hope that by the fourth ner of the gubernatorial elec- year things will turn around and tion. Since it was clear to all he’ll be able to charge out of the that Carl McCall was going east, killing the tax once again. LETTERS down, they invested in Pataki. It may come down to In what might only be de- Bloomberg’s money and vast scribed as a Hail Mary play, media empire against local poli- the mayors said to themselves, tics. Remember that Golisano Sick & tired of those car-free park complainers “Maybe he won’t kill me as ad that intoned, “It’s all about much if I support him.” the money, George”? Well, it is. To the editor: community should decide what is best for the across from the school since 1988, and until For his part, Brother Pataki Speaker Shelly Silver must I am so sick of these people who want to ban community. This is why we have zoning laws, this summer, the playground has always been won by following a strict polit- be drooling over this one. The the cars [“Rally for car-free park,” Nov. 4]. SEND US A LETTER land use statutes and other strictures on devel- open 24/7. Now it is only open on school days ical formula and never deviat- Democrats have made huge Who do they think they are? This is a public Here’s how to send a letter for publication. opment. These laws ensure the rights of adja- until 3:30 pm, when the custodians leave for the ing from it: “Preserve the sub- strides in Long Island by accus- park and that means for EVERYONE. • By E-Mail: [email protected] cent property owners and residents to light and day. urbs, don’t raise taxes and ing the Republicans of being When we (car owners) are not allowed to drive • By Fax: (718) 834-9278. air, and against shadows, excessive traffic and It was not right, but it was understandable keep your options open with the tax and spenders. Mayor through the park during the spring and summer • By regular mail: Letters,The Brooklyn Papers, pollution. Why should we give in to a property that the neighborhood kids cut through the the national Republican Party.” Mike will need Shelly and months the traffic is horrendous getting around the 26 Court St., Brooklyn, NY 11242. owner or developer who can hire expensive fence this summer, so that they could continue For their parts, the mayors and Gentleman Joe Bruno to go Please sign your correspondence and include your address park. The school buses cannot get through the nar- and phone number for verification. lawyers and architects to plead his case of to use the well-lit playground for basketball and the county execs are pleading along with a new commuter row streets around the park and therefore, the traf- Letters may be edited for space and clarity. poverty? roller hockey. Schoolyards are their front- and with the state for more money. tax. That will give Silver a lot fic takes forever. For example, when the park Again, I am not opposed to more residences backyards — where else can they play ball or Mayor Bloomberg, who has of leverage. Despite his current opens (to traffic) at 4 pm, it takes me five minutes in the area, I am simply opposed to spot zoning. ride heir bikes? Even young families came done a terrific job with the city, denials, the always savvy to get through and out at . The The “350,000-400,000 [cars] using Atlantic I would like for the community to engage in a through the hole in the fence to play ball with has been out there hammering Bruno will have to go along other route, around the park, the circle and Avenue as an egress and entrance to the Brook- debate about rezoning parts of the canal area — their children. away for Pataki. The with Pataki. There are contin- down Prospect Park SW takes over 25 minutes. lyn-Queens Expressway” are too high by a fac- perhaps Carroll or Union streets should be more Some schoolyards are owned by the Parks Bloomberg family has been ued rumors of a Long Island in- Can’t they be fair to everyone and not just tor of 10, more than twice the volumes on the residential; perhaps Third Street could be more Department, such as the one at the Cobble Hill heavily involved in the Pataki surrection against Bruno’s lead- the joggers and dog owners? Talking about BQE itself, and which, if true, would stymie residential, but only if the street were narrowed; School of American Studies, on Baltic Street, campaign but now it’s pay-off ership. Pataki is usually thought “things going to the dogs,” that’s what they measures to redirect traffic that has no need to perhaps the west side of the canal should have but PS 58’s playground is owned and under the time. Pataki is not going to to be behind Dean Skelos of want with the park. use Atlantic Avenue. more homes and the east side remain light indus- jurisdiction of the [Department of Education]. want to anger Mayor Mike. Long Island so there is a lot of Most of these protesters do not remember The mistaken numbers also lead to the inap- try. School board regulations require that the custo- This is far more than the opportunity for Bruno to collect when you couldn’t walk through the park with- propriate comparisons attributed to the consult- But inserting 48 families into a mix that in- dians close the gates when they leave work for usual tense relationship be- political chits here. out getting mugged or murdered! I am one of ant to retail streets in Manhattan, which are suc- cludes a concrete-crushing plant, a -cut- the day. Parks Department schoolyard regula- tween the New York mayor But all of the moves are the native Brooklynites who fought for the safe- cessful (due largely to far greater density) in ting operation, an oil-delivery company, and tions are part of the City Code, and clearly must and the New York governor. doomed. The money will be ty in the park and now they are telling me I spite of high volumes that result from Manhat- other manufacturing concerns is only a recipe be approved by the public through the local We have seen those go sour to very scarce. Popular programs can’t use it. Thank you, [Department of Trans- tan’s overall traffic saturation, but which func- for complaints, litigation and headaches. community board. the point that men like Nelson will be cut. Tolls will go on portation] for considering everyone’s needs tion very differently from Atlantic Avenue. And — Michael King, architect, Park Slope I suggest that if the Parks Department’s mon- Rockefeller and bridges that never had them be- here in this crowded city. none of the Manhattan streets, except Broad- ey is used, then the playground should be man- were politically destroyed be- fore. Fees will go up on every- If the protesters don’t like it they can go back way, where it is 130 feet wide, not 75 feet wide, aged under the Parks Department code and cause things got out of hand. thing in the hope that these hid- to Kansas as that is probably where most of as reported, are the kind of grand boulevard that Remembers different made available on weekends, school holidays Nope, in this case Mayor Mike den tax increases will not be seen them come from. is envisioned for Atlantic Avenue. Neither are and during the summer for use by the neighbor- has a lot of money. We are for what they are. Bloomberg — Anne Conroy, Park Slope any of these streets victimized by proximity to hood. talking about the kind of mon- will have to get some relief and a highway exit, as is Atlantic Avenue, where in- old Brooklyn College Better yet, if the PTA would apply for grant ey that can get you elected everyone’s reputations will be terstate tractor trailers are forced off the BQE To the editor: money for an after-school sports program, such president if the opportunity tarnished. As the song said, for Atlantic traffic by height limitations of the Brooklyn Bridge I resent your skewed and biased report on as the Beacon Program, that would be responsi- presents itself. After all, Mayor politicians, “There’s no hiding overpass and are given no clear route back to Brooklyn College [“Brooklyn College: from ble for closing the gates. Mike spent upwards of $60 place down here.” the highway. ‘red’ to cutting edge” by John Manbeck, Nov. Bottom line — that it could cost half a mil- million on his own campaign Alan S. Chartock is the ex- numbers way off A correct depiction of the block-by-block 4] in its early days, and I do not know what fic- lion dollars to resurface the playground, put up for mayor. If he can do that for ecutive publisher of The Leg- To the editor: variation of traffic volumes in the Atlantic Av- tional write-ups you used as background. several basketball backboards and add a few himself, he could do the same islative Gazette, a weekly Community leaders are embarking on a plan- enue corridor is essential to understanding how I attended Brooklyn College in 1940, and benches is beyond me. thing for Governor George. newspaper about New York ning process to remake Atlantic Avenue into a to relieve the avenue of much of the traffic that saw a beautiful green campus surrounded by — Barbara Brookhart, Carroll Gardens On the other hand, one of the government. grand boulevard, but the inaccurate characteri- serves no local purpose. The actual lower vol- four buildings. It was built to copy the appear- zation of current traffic conditions reported in umes at the BQE end of Atlantic Avenue ance of famed . The Brooklyn Papers [“Traffic is Atlantic (1/20th of the numbers reported) shows why As for politics, I recall some demonstrations Ave.’s woe,” Oct. 28] suggests they are step- making Furman Street two-way would be so ef- opposing a state law demanding that faculty HISTORICALLY SPEAKING ping off on the wrong foot. fective in relieving Atlantic Avenue of wayward members sign a so-called “loyalty oath.” Re- trucks without imposing an undue burden on fusal to sign that oath, which was similar to one Old . in use in Nazi Germany, could lead to dis- Maps of available traffic data show that the missal. In fact, several professors were actually highest contributor to Atlantic Avenue traffic east dismissed. In later years, the loyalty oath law The joy of free falling of Boerum Place are cars going to and coming was declared unconstitutional, and those who from the Brooklyn Bridge, many of these drivers sued received a monetary sum in compensa- HE EIFFEL TOWER of Coney Park, the ride often suffered techni- traveling out of their way to avoid the toll on the tion. Island has been dismantled. cal problems with riders suspended Brooklyn-Battery Tunnel. Equal tolls on the East It is unfair of your newspaper to resurrect the T The Parachute Jump has been for up to five hours. A wedding even River bridges would redirect this unwanted traffic. nonsensical hysteria that you relate, trying to taken down. took place in parachutes in 1940 For traffic that remains in the corridor, the pretend it is a description of our beloved But it’s a landmark! How could with wedding photographers and low traffic volumes on parallel streets, Liv- Brooklyn College, with any accuracy whatso- they take down a landmark? musicians suspended while the bride ingston and Schermerhorn, show the importance ever. Not to worry. The most frightening and groom went into free fall. of implementing a long-standing Community All the city colleges were regularly de- ride of the Coney amusements may be In October 1940, the Tilyou family 26 Court St, Suite 506, Brooklyn NY 11242 Board 2 resolution to reorganize a few streets to nounced as “red” strongholds by persons op- restored to operating grandeur. The purchased the ride for $150,000. (718) 834-9350 take advantage of this huge unused capacity. posed to free college education for New York- Vourderis brothers, Steve and Dennis, While popular, the ride was costly to While a reduced traffic burden on Atlantic ers. That was in the spirit of the times, but those are supervising the second life of this operate, requiring three operators for Published weekly, 50 times a year, by Brooklyn Paper Avenue could facilitate all sorts of pedestrian times are now over. Of course, free tuition at wonder. Just like the other wonder that each chute. Steeplechase Park closed Publications Inc. Established 1978. Copyright 2002. amenities, six safety measures could be imple- the city colleges is now gone forever. Isn’t there they oversee and care for with pride Jerry Abramowitz in 1964 and was razed by Fred Trump • PARK SLOPE GROUP: Park Slope Paper, Windsor Terrace Edition, mented without waiting. To reduce speeding a connection? — the Wonder Wheel — they will but the cost of demolition for the Para- Sunset Park Paper JOHN MANBECK • DOWNTOWN GROUP: Brooklyn Heights Paper, Downtown News, during the long stretches of green time, shorten I also recall that a high school graduate need- bring us back to the film “The Little chute Jump was prohibitive. The ride Carroll Gardens-Cobble Hill Paper, Fort Greene-Clinton Hill Paper the signal cycles and introduce signals at mid- ed high marks in order to be admitted to any Fugitive” (1953), of our youth. Either volving wheels on a teeter totter, from continued to operate until 1968. Then • BAY RIDGE GROUP: Bay Ridge Paper, Bensonhurst Paper. • MIDWOOD GROUP: Midwood, Kensington and Ocean Parkway Papers. block. To give pedestrians more protection city college. But the graduate needed only high the Wonder Wheel or Astroland staffs the Buffalo Exposition of 1901. The the Parks Department put it up for when crossing, replicate the lead time for pedes- tuition fees to be admitted to one of the private would operate the ride. St. Louis Exposition contributed the sale, but there were no takers. PUBLISHER: Celia Weintrob (ext 104) trians (which works so well at Clinton Street New York colleges. I had the marks to get into In the scene from that movie where entrance of Dreamland’s biblical dis- After four years of deliberation, PRESIDENT: Ed Weintrob (ext 105) and Atlantic Avenue), install walk signals that Brooklyn College, but I did not have the cash to Richie Andrusco goes up for a ride, play of the genesis of the world. the city Landmarks Preservation MANAGING EDITOR alert pedestrians to look both ways for turning get into NYU. you can see how risky the experience The Parachute Jump, however, Commission awarded landmark sta- Neil Sloane (ext 119) vehicles (the biggest cause of pedestrian crash- Those were the days, my friend, and I re- could be. Only a slight, cloth safety developed as an outgrowth of Amer- tus to the Parachute Jump in 1977, FEATURES EDITOR: Lisa J. Curtis (ext 131) es), and set back the stop bars for vehicles 10 member them well. belt around your waist, feet dangling ica’s infatuation with air power, for but the Board of Estimate over- SENIOR EDITOR & PRODUCTION MANAGER: feet from the crosswalks. — R. Hoffman, Brooklyn Heights (women had to remove their shoes so military use and training of para- turned the ruling. Since the cost of Vince DiMiceli (ext 125) Other measures to improve travel throughout the operators weren’t bombarded) and troopers. Just as the roller coaster demolition rose to $250,000, a sur- STAFF REPORTERS Patrick Gallahue (ext 123), Deborah Kolben (ext 122) the Atlantic Avenue corridor and prevent a slippery, shiny seat — it was emerged from Russia — originally it vey of its structural integrity was ADVERTISING STAFF spillover traffic onto adjacent residential streets Half a mil to repave enough to terrify anyone. was named “Russian hills” — so did conducted in 1982 and suggested Susan Littman (ext 116), Nancy McGrath (ext 112), could be tested with traffic modeling. And after you slowly reached the the parachute jump in the 1920s. that a $500,000 rehabilitation was Allen Nilson (ext 114), Roxanne West (ext 111) — Brian Ketchum, traffic engineer top, then suddenly, free fall. I rode it Early models consisted of a wooden needed because of deterioration. A PRODUCTION STAFF PS 58 playground? twice: once as the Lifesaver Parachute tower with jumpers guided down by reporter noted that it was scarier to Art Director: Leah Mitch (ext 127), Community Consulting Services Ad Designer: Kevin Takasato (ext 126), Downtown Brooklyn To the editor: ride at the 1939 New York World’s a single cable. stand under it than to ride on it. OFFICE MANAGER: Teresa Addair (ext 117) A recent Brooklyn Papers article celebrated Fair. Then at Steeplechase, where I In America, James H. Strong, a re- Nevertheless, a second city land- Receptionist: Sabrina Abreu (ext 101) that $537,000 of NYC Parks Department fund- tried to impress a young lady from tired naval commander, designed a mark designation was made in 1988 Don’t ‘spot zone’ ing was able to be rescued from the city’s budg- Ohio. She wasn’t too impressed when 250-foot steel tower in 1936 with elec- and Phase I of its restoration work COMPOSITION OWNERSHIP: Entire contents copyright 2002 Brook- lyn Paper Publications Inc. All ads and other content prepared by our et cuts to renovate PS 58’s playground in Car- I became mute after that free fall. I tric motors and a series of eight guide began in 1992. Loose cables were staff, including ART WORK, DESIGN and COPY, remain the sole prop- erty of The Brooklyn Papers and may not be reproduced elsewhere roll Gardens [“DeBlasio gets back PS 58’s lost my speech for at least 15 minutes cables in a circular arrangement, ac- removed, the base was demolished, without the Publisher’s written permission. on Third Street playground,” Oct. 28]. The question is whether but she kept talking about the exciting cording to researcher Seth Kaufman. corroded steel was replaced and the ADVERTISING: Subject to Terms Governing Acceptance of Advertising published in our latest rate card. To the editor: or not this is a good expenditure of limited ride. The Vourderis brothers promise The free fall lasted about 20 feet and original colors were restored. EDITORIAL CONTRIBUTIONS: The Brooklyn Papers assumes no re- sponsibility for unsolicited materials. Articles, story ideas, letters, photog- This letter is in response to an application for Parks Department resources during a timer of that the ride will be as safe as a virtual the length of the jump less than two Now, the “Beacon of Welcome” raphy, and all other materials delivered to The Brooklyn Papers, whether or not solicited by Publisher or Publisher’s agent and whether or not a variance for property at 130 Third St. I live on an extraordinary budget crisis. I suggest that it computer experience. minutes. Variations of his original de- will enter its new phase with the they contain restrictions on publication or use, will be treated as un- Second Street near the subject property. is not, and that 95 percent of the playground The Parachute Jump was the last sign were built around his Hightstown, completion of its restoration. Per- conditionally assigned for publication and copyright purposes, unless otherwise agreed in writing by the Publisher prior to publication. All sub- While I understand that adding another resi- surface is perfectly fine. in a series of World’s Fair attractions N.J., estate grounds in 1936 and 1937. haps some parachute rider of the fu- missions become the property of The Brooklyn Papers and will not be returned; submissions may be edited and may be published or otherwise dential property most likely will increase the The hard-working custodians, who do an ex- that found themselves in Coney Is- Strong sold a model to the Ameri- ture will catch a Cyclones fly ball reused in any medium by or with permission of The Brooklyn Papers. land, mostly in George Tilyou’s CIRCULATION: Net figures, based on period norms. value of my home, I am opposed to the vari- cellent job of maintaining the school grounds, can army — still in use at Fort out of Keyspan Park. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS: Including First Class postage: $100 per year ance application. I am not opposed to more res- could temporarily patch the few rough areas. Steeplechase. In the 19th century, Bragg, N.C. — and converted an ex- Brooklyn Papers columnist John per weekly paper ($300 for one copy of one paper from each different Group), prepaid. Foreign orders higher. Back issues, when available, per idential land use along the canal, yet I am op- The fence is in good condition and recently was the Sawyer Tower was transported isting tower in ’s Riverside Manbeck is the former Brooklyn copy — last eight weeks, $1; earlier this year, $2; last year, $5; earlier years, $10. Add $2 per copy postage and handling. All orders prepaid. posed to what amounts to “spot zoning.” painted. The two basketball backboards are from the Centennial Park in 1937 to a ride called “Pair- borough historian. He was recently EMPLOYMENT: From time to time, candidates may be considered for This variance, not unlike those for the prop- maintained by a contractor who comes in on a Exposition to become the Iron Tow- O-Chutes.” For the New York appointed to the state Local Histori- current and future positions. Letters of inquiry for editorial positions should be addressed to the Managing Editor; inquiries for other posi- erty on Imlay Street [“CB6 rejects Red Hook regular basis to replace their nets. er near today’s Aquarium. World’s Fair, Life Savers sponsored ans Advisory Council by Education tions should be addressed to the Publisher, specifying position. condominium plan,” Nov. 25] and the new Presently, PS 58’s gymnasium is a lost re- The first Ferris wheel came from the ride and decorated the frame- Commissioner Richard Mills and AWARD-WINNING MEMBER: National Newspaper Association and Independent Free Papers of America. Brooklyn Law School dorm [on State Street in source to the Carroll Gardens community, and the Chicago Columbian Exposition of work with illuminated candy rings. Deputy Commissioner of Cultural Boerum Hill] runs counter to the idea that the now is also is its playground. I have lived 1893 and the Aerio-Cycle, two re- While in Flushing Meadows Education Carole Huxley. December 2, 2002 THE BROOKLYN PAPERS • WWW.BROOKLYNPAPERS.COM AWP 9 CCLLAASSSSIIFFIIEEDDSS Help Wanted • Situation Wanted • Business Opportunities • Income Opportunities • Adoptions • Automotive • Bed & Breakfast • Bridal & Special Occasions • Business Services Children & Childcare • Cleaning Services • Firewood • Home Care • Instruction • Merchandise • Movers, Storage & Truckers • New Age • Personal Care • Pet Services • Psychics –––––– To advertise please call 834-9161, Monday-Friday 9am-5pm ––––––

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S n d f s, m t r R F t o r o a ” i f u d m s m 0 e a r in e e n re th ic n n l r u g e z ” i r a r “ i i R i m t i r l f t c s e k I o n - g d i e y d e d c i e h t t S t m o e a k y s n w s e s g B l e a g e e m n c a g e n o P k i I S a s h a d a a c a l o f s r e r t , o a t n r t e c a a f l a c g l e h n a K u y l h h A z g p a c n th ia le t a g a f d a e c s a av te e n l / k e lo p i m l g n fo y m h i o e a e c o i a e th i w w a f F e y n p n d t ic ta a h e d t l i c e o t r p e o i g e r i n i d e t A c e u r s R a f n r l z, e n u w e C c l t ip m e R a o s e r n a tp a y te i r H in a m t r s c te s d g s e n it a s v x ’ u d y s le l u B a p p o n e t a u g e d e i B a y s t - c c g r p k s d r — r h , a a a g a B z s t o d p s id a o n e s re st e re me a y se ma th to e p ex ca z’s th r isi w a o les fi e pu ep an e C s os hi ad oi e. wa th a , a oo ills g t ol co m e se th st d st y id r , he il er ’s at ’s on ta bo e ssl y t e G re u ci a ti s d n K d n e D a ec m E 7 on ns nd m o e en t u d a e tu ld e n ” s e lu B t I h a. ll un to xi i aw by t o f t oo “e g E . an gr es n , ri a -d y th ha i g Q s n h o c d f u A r b r t 7 m i h e e e r h r r h r ‘ a a s r o e a i w t e n p c f n $ m m a n “ n m g a Y d c t u p c i n a t t e th e il - i t a L h u l i I a c ’s 1 l t re fr t e n 9 a g o c I g it g r d a e e o a c k o r d n f m t w h i n m m C l i a n n t e i h t d o n y e y - y t s m a g w o r i r p e t h p i h h l p c v i g t i n h - P s e n e p o t h y t l t d J s t e ’ t l e o g u i g a g d l . c s e t t k a u S r n y h h o e n e l s e c s s o e h a a y o s o e e e t y e y c 9 a e 3 , e n uo h u R f ju e n P i e o s e c i m u e f m o t e i a . en t c el u s a t t m et 3 s ut n Yo d n, fe f el n lli ht he o D w a a6 n th g d u ha P s i or n h c no r s te - oo u . c b dy n. r n e b a at : in h a lo rf ns y h s, in us f Th se fr b th to m P 8th ed th at u ire G r, of R e es ly. r no st e i mp m C Ne d r at, ift ee t t s re an dg gl e’ ret w es ag pie k nd 1 los ef F ea g n et de he th 1 n F nd g ul tru s w a t s o o e i n o f l e t o m l o e d n b s h j c e l e i J 9 o D w s a m u ’ d r e 9 i t o e m u d p i a c e v c o e s i … d l a t i w a — , o d e l K d e r a p 5 e r t m u s s 8 l a c m m i tt h 1 d e t u e l ss r d o e g to n r ft ta o f n r m re o s i ll m t c lu J ap in in r in b j e n n c i i 0 d e e o s p e t e w t g la a c . t a e 6 y l c s e i R k i u s r - m d o a - p g i - t p e e u e n i t e c r r i l u d a o o 2 n c e e h f o c N n . it a c a e c d o e , s ( P a ff r r fa U w a r e n m a e a e l a e o s T n n k f d tr k s. i e e li w ,” t s t te s o lo n , Br r an rl it d a g n d B tri nc co H eo of er no , i- i v n nke o ca n . en i i a te s nn ik w d t i li id D h as g i t , ro E ib R n I r s es e ze rn . 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used , in ands acc a t st t cD onald o s t r M k r an t k t o l G r / s h w Hu n i i t e . B ap ie e n c p d p rica a O T k U m Tuesd e o h h l h e t e n l h n e v y B e G i str te n r e B a r m a a T stalking a a s gering the w elfare of a child, n o a G s s an ping, end r d t . h rfly t y G l o i e h d t ti o l a o e ‘ . s b r k l W tt a e B in T e k a R n ehin R r l l i y y y l y a o g d h P h o n eme w n n c i ok S t u e o e g ‘ Ir P e h d -$ e t a y a e l u a l P e y d l W n e p t R d P ; a n A l- r s hi e n P volving c s arges in r Clin g other ch p H a rglary, am on p e o t g and bu t L rs e , o o roun per a r e h f Weeksv h r o yman s ton mbl h s t s tic Asse a ocr u u Dem r e a se / o d R t T r o S e 7 i f i h e h s, 1 K d s , c is e e t d a it t B a r a r a s b . g m P r i ble H ill ib u b i r rea d C o 2 n an t o L ights e o 9 yn H t amela kl n o l i in B ro o o b dren p 5 u i ille th e nd Republican h te a n kin t t er Abba t kl m Pet r y g m h e T c r p nP S d 2 a t (in y h d o en s s g h I t n l e it r E n c a ce th a s t e . t s e t r t u b p Gree . M a o ry s P e s r L e r r da e d r em A s o o d e d o e y G h o n, tru o O n ednesday, M ouncilman ’ W M cD onald C y u n t . s seem ed Mar a ex B n fu agitated, Golden E i ctu d y e L l w s e f r x l e a ec r a d 3 p o res im es t a m for r G reenberg several utiv n Sheldo : a t udge uting at J 4 ho i s in the e c G p t s s d i c e l S e -S A d the lin u m s d continued to slug it o n t t ’ ou this s a e t d p ire yve h u ld t c m G s t C t c his t the pro- e e hou i g ! to san fed throu e o has crossed the line of dcuf E M r. G entile ined han s s e rem a g a e sh n a r to B n w hil e b a E e of the t) o a i o ric s y e . t P B H v r i week e following n o atri e the clo- e e dis s o s 3 d r g e c i lding th o c t h W n r h y. s ecenc r com m on d e c . C a s o T ceeding Co u C k n d f e i O S k h B - e a t a n i w s G t B vill y t e t r all u k o f sure that ,000 t 25 r $2 n t i c u e S ok fund- n r o S a o P l t y l c e g e o h c il n Y i i o i h P S t a c u s iet l i a ’ Bi y e h “I e p e e w anted s h y. er to r go e h see c r them , c see l ” s if they’re state Senate t a o all omised by k h pr e n ing e P p t Former Bay Ridge Council- li r t m r e a l u h m d d o c v e t right,” nald - o R cD S ‘ M b “ m said w hen the i r charges of r l at- t i r c T i o l D y m d t a g v d idate for area t r cand shocked e m e Albanese c al man S a h n h a y i i orit r r j a Ma ader o e Le p Joe runo n B u t l “U m d Y etim es h nfortunately, h m entioned. “S om n ng w ere g u dnappi s o i k r in tem pted o i o i t d the i f o m o year i e o l e c y 1 R s r a r e a t d i oss- e s cr o s t . G entile ha e 4 b ace, M r o a r t R Senate t t g Democrats u C for i e l a o a - p s new i y O t se his ” enior a . s o e in trouble center o r ds a in i ki n r l u u week n - k h i l w e t unfi by R the city v by n and w hich is o i l o c t m a w g decency and B l m on C m g f co ed the line o d d h e - o l a Counci endorsing Republican d B Bensonhurst was l tion- t ndi n p c co h d i u r s t y a s the A m - i w ith e liance e com p P not in i W S till in custody, on $150,000 bail, s r M cD onald t n a a l o l b e t i H ’s 7 t him . h s t ppor r l annot su o fore I c i i ere S th t o c a l 7 w r a Th i , her things O man ot n e k among t upon, m ed i V Marty c t a h Golden has been held e v i

is ver in G m o the m ental bservation B k his o unit of h l g ericans u r o a w ith n i a w es D isabiliti s C R A ct. n ok l e e l e n o l E a a c ly r in t n h t a R p r P u e te for / candida F form er e , a n a incumbent A lbanese p e Golden getting elected to the C i s and. c Democratic R iker’ Isl S he has been deem ed fit to stand a er e a po- s r op k g N g d i l i oth n B s s G olden o r and e bat g A b i y had g cy T a s r e n h l o a e e The o c w K Ne k l c or a B e Y City - e m ayor l Dis i ; r h g w ho G k ran e o n n r on i the W orking trial but has a history of m ental illness, including o l e y t- p nent, ate Bay ity D epar kl i u st c e p e o h n Sen. ncent d ioning t y S i s Ridge-Dyker it a V t l pe ? f Gen- been n e s Heights n Pe a ’ d ” ng mission released P l o s ti om g ric C a t s t e s p g e P n u o h / , d F am ilies P arty K rs o e e n lin against e a a u R udy t . o h renia ’ V izoph n l h u sc s k y r e A n W s t. t tile, Senate sea makeshift shrine s ha n a bee . in m ent for the A ging the i a to relocate a e. w race ercely as m ll y for he city as fi e w d of t ns a- p the y end ll ar mm l s in co a it im re h el m o u r t i new P p t r e ‘ a L ani a k G iuli o r nd t a g U i d er th form er assembled at the corn of 77 r I M anhattan i s W o if l O rder of center to the L oya s d trict seat. M cD onald’s case w as the D 22n dis referred o C t W c a the recently s t b n g , n l wi o a redra n y for T his day ednes w eek, n T tion W A bbate r ith further w s nger W m f si each e u resident R uth M es candidate given e B orough P the t i h Y istrict, w hich in- h d n trict, the 38t e B p i al Road, at th oloni o reet and C a St e n s u M oose odge nue n T L ve on c charged 18th A l , w hich of- s urt o ental H ealth C o that h n M t kly B roo l ted M ayor e n lden s etter distributed by G o opportunity to M ichael l ask / g n a t nes f o I c i D l a tri e question the City Council dis e w of e a c h i o D em ocrat e e R e osing th a 3 ter l u a n 1997 af i i ” h a e cludes s p h r T S unset ent i fic accid d P ark te of a horrific traf t si f r a . r d e slam m ed and at 77th Street n nes a ice, A lba R ed B loom berg w as in on he f ff t sen- d m paign o r t a c - ing the S ept. 25 e n a their opponent dur n t t s w y • w nsus. e s 0 C f e e 200 ased on th o b p r . K and the R ev s r c ssinger r Prim ary to M e o o a h S m e H ook, sche c c and es r the a vot y 33rd r- r ict o ; r a dist of -f G ks N c - r-bu ursday hat t t e -cente Th t lef a Bay Ridge . ior h P o a w he ari- d t three-term e city and C atholic C h r s incum bent tile T h R G en a

Ca N Y d w 1 ate, o t deb G entile asked but t rly w hy r & ea s n a a , a o m ade R s al n r Sharpton, M n A l R S i e d A m ong proposed changes le H ill, w is yn H eights, C obb n n B rookl e i i R ida i tal health treatm ent B t m en ly , d. rd of / ties reshman dea u ice re’co intended to w hich high school f t v l ser m aintain runs ning the s the G O P the m o uestio rrow s u s tes for th for q N a i n . k v G n t e m s d G ol , n n o t B pe’s m igrati i t s hern Park Slo i sout s w t C o h l r a ly abortive run for the D e- g. o ultim ate bur y te Sen W illiam s z nd o T ntow n a A ngel o a t i ow D he E t r , chose o r t n eve o g ’ a police officer ter, how s o e state ficer, dur- s records as m ajority cen C f o r g e m lic g po n g orm er in e a f u e en, o G old w ere so secretive and referenced a o A lbany. G olden ter llay, 14, w as riding his h n . P e M i t V i o o o B c h et a k w it a piece of northern S uns e l o i s n b f e m ocratic nom ination for yor m a in S ce Se n I l f b h i e s y t B na m roups such as n H om e, on 63rd S tree . n hood g A Gb-uardia r ghbor that o By t bate. ER N ei countered by charging t rk 1 de t n he w as fatally struck - p n t o cycle w he t Y bi w h r e o live N a G t g a e in in p r o h hich G old- repre- H e D aily N ew s article in w th district, n P the 39 , into T r n npag rk e w r Pa b F T è a , t t a i the 2001 election, dropping out of e h t e le h o rick e e ne the P ark e d g p S lope th avenues r — nd 13 n C ivic en 12th a c a e C ouncil betw e m Th bate N t u i had veling east on 77th t been by a B 4 bus tra t r a s Ga g t d C 4 on-board w ith r s O e w A B e said, f s en l l r 2 A lbanese ted lm an ill L o h b w rote: sen by C ounci B D e- r h o o 2 o e o ate failing t ter h llahu the race in late 2000 af t the partition- i i t n gains kl ght a e e fou t y w av n d d h i t l n s t in w s i arro n r N i n a n’s plans for the t 6:15 pm . P “W is m y dis- G olde B orough on O ct. 17 a e m o- ant rk, reet t a ist s of the D e hat they w P a St S le a t ncip 21 l e pri U th o e c oyal to ks o h l bloc r p t ric e e offic inary s cipl n ords r r h rec and e 6 es e ey a th o e t l m ount a se- i i — raise enough m oney to C t ree . B R en th er h Police in Brooklyn Heights l ing of P ark S lope betw e rent cent l cur , d e C bia S treet W a- aw ay from the o um k “I the C ol F ; nior w S e a enter . . C a p d f e a privately t e m an fl s of i am fiercely w hile w h n t r ty h d I do not m ake this l tic P arty an e cra g em . th ay R get M ill as & e Cou oing to w rushed to T g J L utheran e T e a B i ******* n h m e have gone 3-for-3 in catching e rious challenge n d in ed r pos l a ro s crow ded s. T he p m and e cil m em ber u coun i Ba n . a V c ublicly l s iticizing him p e i D r cr y e lm M edical C enter h y Rid n n- in S unset ark T hen, last w eek, G olde a P in a s a t y a decision w tly. v l ligh a an Ma H ow ever, m A C aretakers, how ever, at the c is o t took h l al N : i g ge Paper. M oderator a h t , & n y s t ndrew h w ell-funded A i ri- t alleged g s hem w ith p o s kiddy-snatchers field ’rK irtzm an w ould leave t after e lines - n d î r that ” not e d nounced that he now supporte U g e r t u y included m i s e s d i r er die of g r day ca ritical condition, but lat ei c e back to th a P the children Golden u t Bor k r o s , litics s t T c N end of the ay po i firs and i c d n to answ er G entile c c that, pushed G olde h t A bbate . told d . o d T he ’ S u l o s o c ee e o gh H A lan c ? H evesi, es y u h M ark l h p to ly o, ug h o s een, in ri , si th m G r m a one D eB la al l t P eter t Pre s: the e n Paper s (le klyn city’ R B roo choice A T x d the lead- ’t GO Bro n of B orough his injuries. H e o a center before calling c f about people an s w as ronounced t p t the t m os police, fore i e l y ) T - d t isci r r a question of just w hat he w as d a r h pt P B ent u h e s n one and Fernando Ferrer. H e is P B d Vall / r i C Ma , F F ns okl s f o assky retai a good chunk of o ile Y P ark’s A ngel G uardian m e, e s a attempts e n pag H o day m orning. . Fri e on I in at 3 am f d e y dea o e r the them . ed n rt ] a no good, lying, eak for y i den’s r ving p l gi to s [G o d “ a ct g le d they se dining ( s w the er s Mar e aid he w a • suspect B for, and G olden s b g plined t , e alm ost e a y t n an t 4. a a k e n know n r a k for his Sa s owi w arm relationship the N orth pe, h S lo nort e ut t o of F ifth iss ou can put thba g Y had o a of a bitch! obtained f n ason son the e ; c l A on t s funding - h c acci c h z n our u collision a a h led the t l ’s e as d Police ru h y ba e y disciplined for r a ispl T m losing of n his ly a l g gun ’s tim e. n in e. he tou m lead he police departm ent and po- e ifth Avenu ays . R w ith t nd east of F 5 a S C o s t a c r e t f e r r e St 0 m ost defsr-om a ’s the B runo, h t . H e w hich e i paper e r T in the w ould be c k gui e ed he dent, and e a the t out th A rew M T h S th t er r t s h I e ot Br c r ic m d t , pol i is e decline tw o m onths w hen h d to n st , e he pa 978 r t or t 1 Br a F rie p d nions. e, ene o o cers u o i i tions off p s o ok ec n nd corr A a C ice BP okl o l l LoRe, h us t c a ial I rthcom ing r l c fo n p i f h g proposed m a t y icable elected of only if P / hat this y n Pape p he pt to say that the in- a t t exce e k m en h om t F thin s t c r the alleged anese w rote, “I n w ere t n rching for A lb i hopp h C l had been sea le e E y m P o a e o a ho w eapon w hile he w as aw ay on va- e b / u w d t - S v s o T n o ing rs h en i o t ne Monday. e ” said ’ p kes sense, h m a & ct y T stri s m y di t r elected i of b pe tigation. S In his a . of seen.” and ent w as under inves endorsem ent T only cid a of c m G oldepnublic eer cial if G car I g P e e have stood against he t bbate B s A r ar E y s w ith and e alized E on. G olden w as pen s cati e P t o l k H c r “ ape n u tire S e p D uring m y en e y a a co lope ’s tched a m a n h o r f ’ve ever the h e Is and w rongdoing, but I o s dist la $225,000 r abuse p police ’s A nk- T he sy t of 74th S treet, N ki controver tha sident l e b ns centers on M illay, a r cer r R on L e c n flects th e O re o the loss o. “It r u e of i e r n five vacation h o days i nt T i for r er b t t u d. s e a S o pledge n a t B ru e l e u H v d di d zie plans to find lonial R oad and R idge a etw een C o i s p b J escribed ng new hom e for e y d b i think it e i ’ . t v s o a . d on t I o eguard the w eap s , o ure to saf h m his fail w B r e e t e J B o i e st r m s a C r t M y ’s a a N P , e fair to say r u the N arrow s S enior C enter, on he m a- hm an at F ort w id t fres a fe t , G olden sa levard, w as a e ha ovfef icoerrs r F urther B ou n s olice a p T a good o a r he e o d t e n , l defe w il h f nt k w w r G t i ri ts r a e c n p 2 h T k n “ 5t an $100,000 h m h t . dged m ore e I ple m u e know t yor r tha [A lbanese] devel- h f s G l l e r G B N ew l d y U trecht f ro all ea Avenue at 79th H am ilton H S m and t a h o ate y gradu l o kl a t relationship [w ith r. of a i- y i en t riv ell a a e p h exc o ar an m t d y Distric n ope n i te Senate ta i r 22nd s f the new P u G dents o o r Resi a d erating costs each year, in m p in op W e n eem ed 2. e eet, w hich has been d PS 10 a S tr and h JH S s nley M r M cK i a o G s s , Y a n r f s c • n One of the te r o sta P olice C om m issioner T R ay o leged to K elly] be among he er dge u t most ght-aft voters ues- o sou in T e L i for the M oos , n ty P ui e ld p r perpet n P h e a n t h t T a S ince his a death, u crats, who is also a leading elec- d e residents have o o w r e o C d i t ay i d o r center hould s s both ides ( s com e a i r See l n ’s assem bled 1 h ble sum l i ’s incred flow ers, l n p ction, where a top mo- h ele De e candles s i and r s tioned ALBA c p s week ques , thi e l o awyer n l l tion u t p o o p s i o 0 7 n k .5 million n w ith than $2 a ctio k NESE e interse F s at th a ph a S l y photogra e h c e - e e d “ t t o u o state 1 by the n n r e ffe on ba S of an o l the legality n e f o i 3 p e s . h re he s t n R de ty Gol e ar o M any or send a B WO ) Alb a ntile in e r n Ge y one reading: e b d “W w ill a c alw ays D t k re- u p a P r R G p g a e d a s 8 e age D t G —i t S r o r er i e s ty ad to nd o c t ri le fu a - incen nate ajo candidate om o c n her keep V Se m T G olisan e to eit s being spent n i D T k ic].” l j [s lla o M i m e p m em ber Peter he o r e nted disagree- G a a oi y have had rather p B r ntile and a g e G e l w e lik e la r W hile n A r o o e 3 l ) ll s — o a s i k u a re m l h w y mo y probabl h a e rst n r y nhu law y, h . nso attorne althoug u in i m n Be he ts o r i suppor d cente w r P t new senio e m y w t a e n p f o p l m ents w ith er G olden over the b A w years, w in s f w ake w as held at avin a this e y C l F u- m atch, f s T he y by a B a t & lo P ump- ation D o of Oper ponents M cC all in that race. Pro a w r at C arl 7 D em ocr s b er venue, be- g E A h o lican ’ u s l H om e on F ourt - s a b r o n e ndition that Repu s election ne b . o th co a o olden s n G S s F aper prefer s u P i R idge w a n c , ’re oing o s e g t e need to do to m ply w t 7 co a s d v ster are going have top wait a few ca n m c L b 7t t t D 9 l a h nd nday. O Su s r et l S h and 78th stre f t e w een 77 e t S le t . “T i r t o hat l re n p an h City Councilm Marty Golden l s P nt e i i delay nforcem e for 90 s,” d i s e day sai n onnor r il w ith C t d a e ckm t bla cited r m s ’s and ou p out N ew a 1 ork more n i i a Y ate s months n S t for the e 7 r ty d t ci d c to 3 public c V , m I m oney get e ay m orning n e C as M ond eral w T n i ory T he fun e n 2, subdi- t nate. E lection L aw section 17-14 e o e e a ate S n e st lo r is elected to th anitation D epartm ent spokesw om an o . S n p n 5 v ia f o y t t R t a l h n - R gisla- probably o r e v f dly autocratic le illegal i t rigi f ve senator in tha for [state oa 1 at O ur L ady of A ngels C hurch on i a f 7 ate E S en a ” tes: 4 o p ch sta d on 3, w hi C visi - i C onnor . . I id . t sa kins y . G w 2 k K athy D a a i – ea P T f o a c e a he “T n B r- g l uno o n e B r ol i hat er Jo M ajority Lead r at 73rd Street. i o t e t o d Fourth Avenue r l k k y r ly R e ’s d ercial trash. n i c m 0 lle 2 ( an l e t outrage, artin C on- P c Leader M ion o ty is h M inori “E cal div p a Senate ther politi i p d “I xcept as istrict or o e E nforcem ent t w ed n d allo by tio on e i the y t law, any program w ill r g at. s h th r say a dle] to ’ o M cA r n o / hn E n Jo i m a s T 6 e o t e m h w 1 by at O ceanvie a ly, uried – irect w as b h directly or ind C M illay t ? r w ho person w t D a s begin cityw ide in , a nce Party January and ines l n , w ho is also Inde” pende andi- f n la c y r r no e o didat e can n e for a said of the state, t - state c h r i b a a . s s d- ten Island a r the R epublican le n C em etery in Sta e a t c 7 P Tw o p w eeks ’ kes- ther person: o n o y F ago, s sp ugh an ” f or thro e M cA rdle hdim sel ‘ to $250. t tol 50 y c m $ e fro d r rang l ; o D lection b B at an e B h or r d f v to be vote r e l s A date l r a a a T he B rooklyn P apers that the fund- a s u P r o d a e, c s y offic r rs or prom ises an , gives, offe U a e C om - i u k one c d plu- l hl-T te, A l ler vo er of H ” rger or sm al reg A hl, ow n b a la G h to cause m a Y s red should m p c C ive t w ould be del ing l U c m ent c of those funds. o H e should be e hing d luable t r place, em ploym ent or va a u / e i y o r l a n r to be cast or give h jority l i rality or m a , t l t. ’ t tric p t dis e ator in tha l n i be a m ajority se tm ent if it K T m aking that com m i l b h n n d o o as an nt i e r m s duce in for o t any w voter r one s o didates in S a date or can di D for any can e o Y b e h not be. r t m ay n his. I u m ty of ori v t N a a e i i r o r D the r o d nue person to Ave and a e ure e proc or t “t id on than y a ivisi e d R n al s e i tic r her trict or poli e uch dis t s e n p g a e o e y r h C m e s s s d uring L ee D aghlian, e proc either a a n large r spokesm an w o a for e sm all v . O ’s a pri- r her c t r in ano v i e c s n ” e d a s a d , - the U lec state e d ity at any B oar of E lections, A ity or m ajor ” said, d i vote, plural i c s l k . : e W f … 1 . p y o lon o o lty of a fe n s l is gui o F old o T r a about “ “T g P C onnor hat r section, m ore or less, is 7 de- n u s , o n o t n e S S n 8 M cA rdle said, n e master’s degree. Children & adults. I o N r of N r m ake a violation T r top o s s e ed to r d sign c i E s l n h t , l t d 7 ” l r e o i i u of w u la here. ’ ’s e n l i … a T “T o violgatei,on ing, 1 n char y a is sa T re le n he peop s o g - L t s s . e 9 e m o t r n er, can m ake a sim ilar com m it- t lead r t / … s i i 9 i O h r H e, as the m inorityvote t D e d v ) ‘H e c r m e f f g ’ v … c o h g ( s 4 , go s ’s bucks - or, five a g b s W e job, a m e i o ‘I a ’o ’ll s C give f r you a better o e 1 v ‘I’l a t r give you a raise. t l o l l o s o n f P “I t G O y t a N f ’ o $ s o not n s i t uncom m on r o n — because u d o n , f o t f l a – e S 6 e ’ s w m J e - d e a e e . BLACK e t o o G p y m t n r A F ” B a s B MAIL c f r m i e , r p y t B – R o y p h n O n b P - a a ac a B m t o G a r a 1 k i l pag e i t a c F p O g Th k r o n S d e G g i i e B B l h r a o o c b o ok l f la a 2 C l m y l y h r n r i t d u o k P a w e a e O l O p e e e l r e s R a s k a o e l . 3 ork City ct- i The New Y Distri l g n o r a i ) d three e yn, an ta s nhat R d M iller of M a o y for o n m A i K O i d P t n ing n 2 Co ion l v mmiss g released , l c n its o n t e Y cil m inori- o coun k o is o , w h i O B from O ddo R e c u m a L pr i d R elim inary t re c e om m endat u K ion i f . n D Y . r t e n e ty lead v o m l w a Richard A. Klass, Esq. G i e a ednesday t g W for i drawing n re e o E n d th B r e d i e g w . r N r O ne f o e the largest shifts uld h D co a i r y e r a n v h m w hic s ict, ( str g take place in the 39th di e n i i R r g n ’ y i t a i s based c J ne i t ict l s cil distr p e “ c V 7 n l s P ark S lope, C ar- s o ude c cl in t G U a o e currently r l g e s a H t a m h a f o 1 ll G ardens, K ensington, W indsor r D ro r e e C o n s r G a k o a s l rk. w ough Pa o or a e B S nd a ce a u rra r G e o E l o T a m at r o th s ry p y d e t 8 N y been o onall i i d it t d v ra r has t up O p k o Park Slope l o th e i, to . H un er er til … eo ta de ll e Pa ) M u e a m r c o r it p k n li lt r 8 39th district, the p l - e i i n E a l p k r w a il s lo d r to ie le e l v ki 7 e R y n y is m f s u y e n 5 w C g e a l t it da a o , s B A ry e in s a i g sp Y n w g y ha h wo te the n rm ai r a xi th to nd n i • -5 a e s n pr r s J e d e e m n st e o nf w 1 p n o k b o r e d . i d pe w s a e s se f for ro hn B pe his h d o T r r ve el am ww 81 rs w . a pe w s tan cu ice st the G ay ara cl a T ga Fo ur her igh rco ibe y .ga n r . a d to a r a n ie in rc in e te m r — g w d s w n t rs G Joh te a of p nge in ce b nt’s l the es, tere is n ous e th atel ean w d ria a n nd a m B ef O in wi st o m is y dt .B . l nge Gan cit st c i roo ore ct. evi th t s ar blin igh pre at- olln SM r B on m ge y an to kly Ju 1 tab he e k t w m er. o r G i. mi elec di- wn n S dge cou le t unb in g ing ill edit com o o ang Jr. ted b end upr Ne rt ap rium oun rav at th win ated k ok Sup emi and of- etw ed w eme il F - ph. ding e da e fa thro in- ly l rem ’s Urs P een ith Co ireto So de nge ct th ugh n yn e Co att ula atr ass an urt D g help term r. W at o to P P urt orne icia ista und ow us ina ith ur ap a Jus y, “dis Mc nt d erst n- God tion con peop e p tice fo cus Nei istr and .” of o fide le, r e Ron rme atte sion ll a ict a ing ur p nce our s rs ald r mp s w nd ttor eop in Your Court Street Lawyer .c . Aie th t to oul him ney le, our o c l- e ne res d co self we w m om xt co olve ntin tha ill urt the ue t WITH LYDIA da i in te, o ssue an Se n N ” un e D ov. 6 til EAL . on Bob Blumenthal pa ge (718) 636-1492 2 By appointment only Face Painting For All Occasions 718-499-4787 W26-5 Reasonable Rates R26-37 R26-28 917-499-8541 Join our Class of 2003 — start work right after New Years Day! As a R26-38 member of Brooklyn’s REAL Newspaper team, you’ll receive competitive IVY League Writing Tutor Trusts, Estates, Wills, Proxies Parties College Essays • Study Skills compensation, great support, and an opportunity to excel in a career- CD DUPLICATION English • SAT • GRE • Other Subjects Free Consultation Available at propelling position. Full-time employment can lead to $50,000 and more; Cornell Composition Instructor, BA from Bridezilla Yale, MA in Education, MSA from Cornell. flexible part-time openings, too. Positions available in both our outside 200 CD DUPES (718) 499-9251 LAW OFFICES OF Peter G. Gray, P.C. sales department and in telephone sales from our modern offices direct- FOR $100 Productions Flex Hrs. & Rates R26-01 ly across the street from . Graphics, too. While-U-Wait Service avail- stylish events with able. Near All Trains. We do Indie labels & monstrous attention to detail TUTORING mix-tapes. 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R48 44 Court Street – Suite 918 For Fast Computer relief, Call For ALL Categories - Tuesdays, 4pm • $500 LOAN Bklyn, NY 11201 PSYCHICS DOCTOR Bankruptcy • Divorces What, When and How of our Classified Ads DATA Filing for Corporations CALL NOW! We make house and office calls to All information is confidential and discreet repair, upgrade or install any brand • The Brooklyn Classifieds appear in neighborhood editions of The Brooklyn Papers published during the week Maria’s Palm computer. Also installs network. Our 15 917-648-6303 in which an ad runs. Cash Tomorrow In & Tarot Cards yrs of exp. will solve your computer fax 718-686-1737 • Ads ordered and paid for by deadline are generally included in the next edition. But sometimes ads may be held for problems. Our prices are reasonable Reader and advisor. Spiritual REASONABLE RATES • FAST SERVICE and we guarantee our work. Call for a an additional week, based on production and space considerations. The Brooklyn Papers shall be under no liabili- Your Checking Account. advice on all problems. Call for R45/26-41 ty for its failure for any cause to insert an advertisement. free phone consultation. Need Income of one free question. • Once ordered, a Classified Ad may NOT be cancelled before its first insertion. (718) 621-5616 718-998-3548 Typing • Ads ordered to run more than one week may be cancelled after the first week. However, while the ad may be can- $1500/month. email: [email protected] celled, NO REFUND OR CREDIT will be issued. 6318 14th Ave. (63-64th St) world wide web: Call BUTLER SECRETARIAL R26-05 http://www.drdata.com • Contract rates for Classified Ads are “rate holders” — no skipped issues permitted. R25-50 IF YOU WANT • Special “package price” and other discounted multiple insertion rates require prepayment for the total number of Call Easycash, Member FDIC QUICK ACCURATE SERVICE weeks ordered, may not be cancelled and may not be short rated to achieve a lower rate on renewal. • Academic & Professional Papers Call to advertise • Manuscripts • Resumes • Etc. • In the event of an error in a published ad, please contact The Brooklyn Papers by the first deadline following 1-800-220-4506 publication date. (718) 369-0078 www.moneybyfax.com W47 834-9161 Fax: (718) 832-1615 e-mail too! R26-17 10 AWP THE BROOKLYN PAPERS • WWW.BROOKLYNPAPERS.COM December 2, 2002

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R26-38 Gumball Rubbish Removal Violations Removed Low Low Rates! Container Sizes & Prices FLETCHER BARDSLEY FREE ESTIMATE LIVING ROOM WOOD WORKS Call John (718) 543-1934 Plastering 10 yd $295 + tax Visit us Carpenter, Contractor, Designer Specializing in custom 763-0379 FURNITURE licensed, insured L50 Cell: 1 (917) 771-0407 R50 20 yd $495 + tax For all your home improvement bookcases, wall units and entertainment centers. Absolute 30 yd $595 + tax REUPHOLSTERED needs, we get the results you’re Designed to meet your specific 1, 2, 3, MEN on-line at Plastering Inc. Prices reflect services for household goods • Kitchen & dining chairs recovered looking for. needs. We also produce W/TRUCK/VAN landmark doors & windows. CALL NED Ornamental, run cornice mould, only: furniture, clothing, appliances. • New foam cushions • Slipcovers Quality Craftsmanship, Creative Any Job a box to truck load. Demolition Debris is additional price. • Vertical and mini blinds We use the finest hardwoods & veneers Plastering • Roofing • Sheetrock and tinted plaster. Skim coating Solutions, Reasonable Prices Reliable, Experienced Clean out truck 9 yd $325 per load. and employ superior techniques Ceramic Tile • Carpentry & domes and vaulted ceilings. • Shop at Home • Free Est. Low Low Rates to produce heirloom quality results. Cement Work • Painting (718) 322-3436 Interior Demolition, Cleanout 347.268.8143 Call Marcel All major credit cards Perfect Touch Decorators Call for free estimates Wallpaper • FREE ESTIMATES (917) 412-5593 718.858.2794 917-771-0407 Ask for Fitz CALL ANYTIME 718-263-8383 Licensed and Insured • Free Estimates (718) 238-4626 718-871-1504 Custom Design & Restorations 718-230-8488 Quality Work • Serving the 5 Boros R47 R26-06 R26-08 917-531-7505 R26-04 R26-39 R26-10 R26-36 EVENT INSIDE

CINEMA PAGE GO 3 Dutch treats St. Nicholas will be among Original ‘Solaris’ at BAMcinematek the hosts at the Lefferts Home- stead Winter Festival in Prospect Park on Sunday, Dec. 1. MUSIC PAGE GO 6 From 1 pm to 4 pm, St. Nick will distribute chocolate coins Brooklyn Phil maestro to step down and oranges to children while artisans from a variety of disci- plines demonstrate handicrafts BROOKLYN EVENTS CALENDAR: GO 2 GO SHOPPING: GO 7 from the 1880s. Enjoy the olekeoks (doughnut holes) at the outdoor cooking demonstration as well as quilting, spinning, weaving and woodworking demonstrations and toymaking, The Brooklyn Papers’ essential guide to the Borough of Kings (718) 834-9350 • December 2, 2002 scharren-knippen ornamental paper cutting and candlemaking workshops at one of Brooklyn’s last remaining Dutch farmhouses. To reach the Lefferts Homestead Children’s Historic House, enter the park at the intersection of Flatbush Avenue and Empire Boulevard. Admission is free. For more informa- tion, call (718) 789-2822.

SHOPPING Great gifts 1 Brooklyn offers treasure trove of memorable holiday presents By Lisa J. Curtis The Brooklyn Papers

his holiday season take the time to show your friends and family how much you cherish them by presenting them Twith a thoughtful gift. Many of Brooklyn’s mom-and- pop stores offer a variety of one-of-a-kind gifts with the per- sonal attention and service you need — minus the crowds. Novel Made with love For handcrafted gifts, go to Brooklyn Artisans Gallery in Cobble Hill and Patrias in Park Slope. At the Brooklyn Artisans Gallery, owned and operated by local artisans since 1994, you’ll find a treasure trove of gift ideas — accessories for men, women and the home. The se- 2 lection includes everything from handcrafted cuff links, to menorahs, to antique-style coffee grinders, to champagne glasses to rayon-chenille scarves. ideas For a truly unique gift, Carol Shiber’s set of four hand- painted, fabric coasters ($32) make a whimsical hostess gift. Her large, leaf-shaped coasters have silken cords for stems. (If you really love the recipient of this gift, you can also pur- Bklyn Public Library toasts chase the matching place mats and napkin holders.) You’ll also find a variety of handmade gifts at Patrias, the Latin American boro’s VIPs at fundraiser folk-art boutique owned by Cobble By Lisa J. Curtis seum executive director Carol Enseki; Hill resident Paulina The Brooklyn Papers Brooklyn Arts Council president Ella Weiss Perez Bemporad. and Time Out New York publisher Allison Patrias offers au- he Founda- Tocci. thentic Latin Ameri- tion honored best-selling author Ter- New BPL executive director Ginnie can jewelry, pottery, T ry McMillan, 1998 Nobel Prize-win- Cooper attended the gala, and made a brief home furnishings, ner Dr. Robert Furchgott, Caldecott remark from the podium, but rebuffed GO 4 3 kitschy Spanish Medal-winning author-illus- Brooklyn’s attempt to ei- movie poster mag- trators Ted and Betsy ther chitter or chatter. Another world: (1) The Brooklyn Public Library held its “Bringing the World to nets, CDs and paper Lewin and jazz legend McMillan (author of Brooklyn” gala on Nov. 21 at the Central Library in Grand Army Plaza. (2) Jazz products. Max Roach at its sixth CHITTER “A Day Late and a Dollar legend Max Roach, with daughter Dara Roach, was given the Arts, Media, Mu- For the cat lover, annual gala on Nov. 21. Short,” “How Stella Got Patrias carries artist sic and Sports Award. (3) Guests included gala co-chair and children’s book au- Cuckoo for cocoa: Handcrafted NewsChannel 4 re- Her Groove Back” and thor Jon Scieszka and New York Times columnist Jane Brody. (4) Children’s Joaquin Hernan- porter “Waiting to Exhale”) dez’s gaily colored Karangis Chocolates come in a Ti-Hua Chang CHATTER book author-illustrators Betsy and Ted Lewin were given the Youth Services Di- served as master of cere- called in sick to the event. cat sculptures ($24 variety of flavors and gift box Brooklyn Public Library vision award. The Brooklyn Papers / Greg Mango sizes. The Brooklyn Papers / Vince DiMiceli monies. (Chang also intro- Foundation Gala Literally. small, $36 large) duced his father Jen-Chung Her cousin Jaqueline that’ll be a treasured Chang, a Midwood librarian, November 21, 2002 Dixon accepted the award on in Brooklyn. War on Film” at 30 Lafayette Ave. at Ash- gift to brighten any nook. to the audience.) her behalf, but McMillan did call “Thank you for acknowledging that my land Place is attracting all kinds of Holly- Currently, the shop is carrying an array of folk art — rang- Other guests included author Ami- from California and her remarks were works mean something to anyone,” said wood celebs. ing from necklaces to beaded wall hangings — inspired by tav Ghosh (“The Glass Palace”) with his amplified on a PA system. McMillan. On Nov. 10, Vincent D’Onofrio and Mexican artist Frida Kahlo (1907-1954). wife, editor Deborah Baker; gala co-chair “I apologize for being menopausal,” she The gala, catered by Great Performances, Matthew Modine answered questions for and children’s book author Jon Scieszka; jokingly told the black tie room while they raised $300,000 for the Brooklyn Public Li- an hour about the making of the 1987 film Remember when New York Times “Personal Health” colum- dined. “To be honest with you, I had surgery brary, announced acting executive director “Full Metal Jacket,” directed by Stanley For the nostalgic friend, go to either the Brooklyn Cy- nist and author Jane Brody; Brooklyn and the doctor advised me I couldn’t fly.” Siobhan Reardon. Kubrick. (Modine remembering having an clones or Uncle Matt’s Brooklyn Merchandise Web sites. Heights Councilman David Yassky; As- “I lived in Brooklyn for seven years,” said “anxiety attack” during the filming.) The ac- At Uncle Matt’s Web site, you’ll find an array of Brooklyn- semblywoman Joan Millman; Rep. Jer- McMillan. “I hate that I had to miss this.” ’Nam flashbacks tors remembered how long it took to finish a themed collectibles. While there are coffee mugs, holiday rold Nadler; Prospect Park administrator Dixon said that McMillan lived in Cob- BAMcinematek’s Vietnam film series, scene by the number of days it took — not greeting cards and ornaments emblazoned with classic vin- Tupper Thomas; Brooklyn Children’s Mu- ble Hill and her novel “Mama” was born “From Hanoi to Hollywood: The Vietnam the number of takes. tage and contemporary landmark photographs, we think the Celebrated filmmaker Milos Forman handmade wooden boxes — old-fashioned cheese boxes with will participate in a Q&A at BAM following metal handles and wooden spindle-grips ($17.95) — have a screening of “Hair” (1979) on Friday, Nov. great gift basket potential. 29. Forman’s list of achievements include At the Brooklyn Cyclones Web site, there’s a variety of “Loves of a Blonde” (1965), “One Flew sportswear for fans of the minor league Mets affiliate — or Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (Best Director even for the person still agonizing over Brooklyn’s loss of the Academy Award, 1975),” “Ragtime” Dodgers. Their new one-size-fits-all baseball cap, the Nike (1981), “Amadeus” (Best Director Academy Flexi-fit Pinwheel Cap ($20), has “Brooklyn” emblazoned Award, 1984) and “The People vs. Larry across the front and the interlocking “BC” logo on the back. Flynt” (Best Director nomination, 1996). But if you really want to wow ’em, spring for the Cyclones’ Also participating in the Q&A are writer “Mission” Pro Satin Jacket ($150). This jacket proudly features Jim Rado, composer Galt McDermott “Brooklyn” tackle-twilled on the chest with the “BC” logo on and producer Michael Hausman. For the left sleeve. It has a nylon outer shell, heavy quilt lining for more information and to purchase tickets to those chilly nights in the stands, snaps in front, and elastic knit the screening, call (718) 636-4100 or visit trim on the collar, cuffs and waist. The jacket is available in the Web site at www.bam.org. sizes M-4X. Grey at BMA Delicious surprises Academy Award- and Tony-winning ac- Often the best way to a loved one’s heart is through the tor Joel Grey (father of “Dirty Dancing” stomach. Try a box of handcrafted chocolates by Sunset Park- actress Jennifer Grey) read stories to chil- native John Karangis or assemble a gift basket from the Park dren and signed autographs at the Brooklyn Slope gourmet grocery store Bierkraft. Museum of Art, 200 Eastern Parkway, at the Karangis Chocolates (created by chef John Karangis, a (At left) Broadway legend Joel Grey reads to kids at the Brooklyn Museum of Art’s First museum’s First Saturday event on Oct. 5. New York City Technical College grad who honed his skills Saturday event. (Above) Actors Vincent D’Onofrio and Matthew Modine wax nostalgic The next First Saturday event is Dec. 7. at Danny Meyer’s Union Square Cafe and Gramercy Tavern) about the making of “Full Metal Jacket” at BAMcinematek. Brooklyn Papers/ Greg Mango — Additional reporting by Greg Mango See GIFTS on page GO 2

alicia’s CAFE & EATERY Sunday Night Eat TURKISH at Jazz Your with orhood Carl Thompson eighb & Friends n ith Experience Brooklyn Heights’ rant w 7-10pm estau Only Turkish Restaurant r food ••••• great Featuring our Hookah Bar, Prix Fix Belly Dancing Thurs-Sat, after 5 Grilled salmon with garlic mashed potatoes. 3 COURSE Lounge • Sushi Antique Furnishings Asian Cuisine MEAL – $20 OOD Enjoy Mediterranean, d G Mon-Thurs an Ottoman & Turkish ! 5-10pm NDS Culture & Cuisine FRIE eclectic Grand Opening! american cuisine Fantastic downstairs OPEN 142 Montague St., 2nd Fl. Chef Sijbe with owner Wayne Anderson. lounge available Sun-Thurs: 12noon-11pm (bet. Clinton & Henry) Bklyn Hts casual atmosphere • kid friendly for private parties. Fri-Sat: 12noon-midnight 112 Court Street (corner of State and Court) (718) 875-2211 • dinner tues-sun 6-11pm • brunch sat&sun 10am-4pm 8716 3rd Avenue BROOKLYN HEIGHTS • www.grappacafe.com 10 Columbia Place bet State & Joralemon (718) 238-8250 • open 7 days • • (718) 237-4024 Serving lunch & dinner 7 days parties of 4 or more Free Valet Parking: Thursday - Saturday (718) 532-0050/532-0069 • • call for reservatons 2 THE BROOKLYN PAPERS WWW.BROOKLYNPAPERS.COM December 2, 2002 GIFTS... Continued from page GO 1 are crafted piece by piece with fresh, all-natural ingredients without preserv- atives or stabilizers. (Because it is pre- servative-free, this healthy chocolate — wink, wink — should be consumed within three weeks of purchase.) A white-and-gold box with the Karangis logo and ribbon comes in a range of sizes for a range of budgets ($5 for four chocolates to $45 for 48 chocolates). Truffles are $38 a pound. Chocoholics will be thrilled by the choices among the molded choco- lates. There are chocolate and creams stenciled with the “I Love NY” logo, passion fruit hearts, pistachio domes and more. Among the hand-rolled BARRACUDA truffle flavors are cinnamon, tiramisu, BARRACUDA ginger & kaffir lime and port. Choco- lates are a classic, timeless gift for any SEAFOOD age (but these would tickle the fancy SEAFOOD of even the most discerning chocolate Smart choices: (Above) At Classic Impressions, 296 Court St. at Degraw Street in Carroll Gardens and 9008 R E S T A U R A N T connoisseur). Third Ave. at 90th Street in Bay Ridge, you’ll find whimsical, plastic Chinese food containers to use as gift If it’s Fresher than here, Bierkraft, on Fifth Avenue in Park boxes or to package sweets. (Right) At Made 4 Me boutique in Carroll Gardens a variety of handbags can Slope, is a gourmet grocery store and make a fun gift or the perfect accessory for a holiday outfit. The Brooklyn Papers / Greg Mango it’s still swimming! beer emporium that offers 160 cheeses, brick-oven breads, an inter- 3 Course national array of canned and jarred Oh baby cotton, and topped with bunny ears, perie, you’ll find gift ideas for the BRUNCH goods and more than 600 beers. For children’s gifts, visit the $39.95!) person on your list who values fine DINNER (Saturday & Sunday, 12noon -4pm) This is the place to go to make the month-old Baby Bazaar in DUMBO. The store also carries the line of papers, quality note cards, handmade (Monday - Friday, 4-6pm) Includes soup, Includes ultimate gourmet gift basket. This spacious store, opened by French Lamaze developmental toys. We papers, and albums and journals entrée and $ 95 complimentary $ 95 The variety is stunning: check out emigrant Marc Cohen, carries deluxe loved the Lamaze Foot Finders bound by hand. We liked the hand- beverage 7 glass of wine 9 the Swedish Pepparkakshus Ginger- European clothing lines for babies ($7.95). Small enough to pop in a made brag books with fabric covers bread House kit ($6.10), a bottle of and children including Petit Bateau Christmas stocking, these baby ($32) and the pocket-sized “Total At- 71 St. & 3rd Ave. 833-3759 Farnum Hill Semi-Dry Cider ($16), a and Baby Dior. (A three-piece Baby booties have soft sculpture elephant titude” backpack photo album Open 7 days: Serving Lunch & Dinner • Valet Parking: Fri and Sat can of John Lusty French Onion soup Dior set for baby, $42.) Cohen says and lion heads on them that entice 3- ($4.50) with cartoon illustrations on ($4.50), and the dizzying array of his store is one of the first to carry the month-old babies to play with their its cover. The mini album is just jams, jellies and preserves. You’ll find new clothing line by photographer feet. They also double as rattles, and large enough for wallet-size photos plenty to stuff into a gift basket, gift Anne Geddes. (Look for the Geddes they’re washable. (and small enough to be a stocking bag and your own cupboard, too. fleece jackets, lined with polka dotted stuffer), and it can attach to your Seniors: 15% Discount Wrap it up pocketbook with the clip. every Tuesday night (dine-in only) For the all-important finishing 9008 Third Ave. at 90th Street, (718) touches on a gift, go to Classic Im- Accessorize 745-2176 pressions in Carroll Gardens and Bay Last, but not least, Made 4 Me in Where to shop Ridge or Lion in the Sun in Park Carroll Gardens has a variety of hand- Karangis Chocolate, (718) 980-7666 Baby Bazaar, 55 Washington St. at Slope. These stores offer top-of-the bags that make great gifts. (Or pick up or (917) 535-1485 Water Street, www.babybazaar.com, line handcrafted gift bags and high- one for yourself and complete your (718) 875-4007 Little Eric’s Shoes, 226 Atlantic Ave. quality greeting cards. holiday outfit.) Bierkraft, 191 Fifth Ave. at Berkeley at Boerum Place, (718) 254-0106 As important as the gift you buy is Made 4 Me is a one-room depart- Eric’s shoes in Boerum Hill. These Place, www.bierkraft.com, (718) 230- D • E • L • I • C • I • O • U • S Made 4 Me, 315 Court St. at Sackett the attention you pay to its appear- ment store that offers everything a girl Italian-made shoes (which go up to a 7600 Chinese Cuisine & Vegetarian Nutrition Street, (718) 596-7362 ance. At Classic Impressions, you’ll could need for a lifetime — from re- woman’s size 9 in some styles) range Brooklyn Artisans Gallery, 221A find whimsical, plastic Chinese food ceiving blankets and layette sets, to from a pre-teen girl’s first low-heeled • Fast Free Delivery 162 Montague Street Court St. at Warren Street, (718) Patrias, 167 Fifth Ave. at Berkeley containers (small $1.95, large $2.95) christening gowns, to racy lingerie, to patent leather Mary Janes ($90) to a Brooklyn Heights 330-0343 Place, www.patrias.com, (718) 857- decorated with Christmas trees. Use office wear. Look to their jewelry case toddler’s tiny patent leather shoes in • Open 7 Days a Week (718) 522-5565/66 9091 them to cleverly package a gift, pres- for a last-minute accessory for an out- red, brown and black ($64), to boys fax (718) 522-1205 (24hr) Brooklyn Cyclones, Keyspan Park ent seasonal cookies or to send left- fit or to their array of fun and funky dress shoes — just like dad’s with Team Store, Surf Avenue at West Lion in the Sun, 463 Fourth St. at • Party Orders Welcome Mon - Thurs 11:30am - 10:00pm overs home with your dinner guests. handbags — from beaded bags to tap- leather soles and laces ($85) or casu- Fri - Sat 11:30 am - 11:00pm 16th Street, (718) 449-8497 or Seventh Avenue, (718) 369-4006 We Only Use Vegetable Oil Sunday 2:00pm - 10:00pm www.BrooklynCyclones.com Classic Impressions also has high- estry coin-purse styled bags ($65) — al sueded, lace-up shoes ($90). We Uncle Matt’s Brooklyn Merchandise, quality wrapping paper, ribbons and for yourself or a gift. approved of their cushioned tongues, Natural Cooking FREE $7.00 Classic Impressions, 296 Court St. at www.unclemattsbrooklyn.com or ornaments. When looking for the right shoes which are less likely to pinch, and DELIVERY min. and Fresh Vegetables DeGraw Street, (718) 596-8728; (866) 855-5799 At Lion in the Sun, Park Slope’s for your son or daughter’s holiday the kids will like the fashion forward answer to Manhattan’s Kate’s Pa- outfits, look no farther than Little designs.

arT eXhiBITs • LiVe EnTertAinMeNt • dAnCiNg • CocKtAiLs • Dj • PoEtRy compiled by Come WHERE TO Susan Rosenthal Menorah Dance Latin TWO BOOTS: singer Sonido Coste- PERFORMANCES FRI, NOV 29 no. No cover. 10 pm to midnight. lightings on Thursday nights 6-11:30pm 514 Second St. (718) 499-3253. BROOKLYN FAMILY THEATER: First Night of presents “Pirates of Penzance.” To celebrate the Jewish festival of DINNER THEATER: Bread and Wine / File Photo at Downtown Brooklyn’s Most Elegant $12. 4 and 8 pm. Church of Hanukkah Productions presents “The Last Gethsemane, 1012 Eighth Ave. Hanukkah, which begins at sundown Supper.” 7 pm. See Sat. NIGHTCLUB MENORAH LIGHTING: The first (718) 670-7205. Friday, Nov. 29, and continues through candle on the giant menorah ST. ANN’S WAREHOUSE: pres- OPERA: Regina Opera Company Saturday, Dec. 7, giant menorahs will be Our Ovation outside Borough Hall is lit at 2 ents “Salome: The Reading,” presents Mozart’s “The Marriage pm, at Grand Army Plaza at by Oscar Wilde. 8 pm. See Sat. of Figaro.” $15, $10 students lit daily near Borough Hall and at Grand

3:30 pm. Free menorah and BROOKLYN FAMILY THEATER: and seniors. 7 pm. Regina Hall, Army Plaza, accompanied by music. Papers The Brooklyn $5 cover after 8:30pm candles to take home; hot presents “Pirates of Penzance.” corner of 65th Street and 12th There will be gifts for the children, free Latin Complimentary Buffet latkes and music. Rain or shine. 8 pm. See Sat. Avenue. (718) 232-3555. See box on this page. Free. DINNER THEATER: Bread and menorahs and candles to take home, The Grand Army Plaza menorah will Wine Productions presents Mature Attire: No Sneakers, BRIDGE WALK: Dr. Phil’s New and hot latkes will be served. be lit 3:30 pm Fridays, 7:30 pm Satur- York Talks and Walks takes a SAT, NOV 30 “The Last Supper,” dinner the- Athletic Gear, T-Shirts walk over the Brooklyn Bridge. ater for 12 people in the play- As in past years, a giant Chabad day, and 6 pm Sunday through Thurs- Thing No Exceptions Learn about how this bridge OUTDOORS AND TOURS wright’s kitchen. Suggested menorah will be lit outside the state day. was on the cutting edge of offering for dinner and show Supreme Court building at Court and Hanukkah commemorates the victo- technology, architecture and OUTDOOR SKATING: Prospect $25 to $40 per person. 7 pm. O v a tio n 860 Atlantic Ave. / betw. Clinton Ave. & Vanderbilt Ave. transportation. $12. 1 pm. Park’s Kate Wollman Rink is Reservations necessary. 410 Montague streets — at 2 pm Fridays, 6 ry of Jewish rebels against Syrian op- (718) 636-1400 / By Train: A/C to Clinton Ave. & Washington Ave. station Meet inside Blimpie’s open. $4 rental fee, $4 admis- 16th St. (718) 499-7758. pm Saturday, and 5 pm Sunday through pression in the Jewish state in Palestine • arT • dAnCiNg CocKtAiLs Dj PoEtRy EnTertAinMeNt • LiVe eXhiBITs By Car: Atlantic Ave. to Clinton Ave. (7 blocks from Flatbush Ave.) • arT • dAnCiNg CocKtAiLs Dj PoEtRy EnTertAinMeNt • LiVe eXhiBITs Restaurant, 38 Park Row, lower sion fee. 10 am to 1 pm and 2 BARGEMUSIC: presents a cham- Manhattan. (888) 377-4455. to 6 pm and 7 to 10 pm. Enter ber music program of works by Thursday. Borough President Markowitz 2,300 years ago, and a miracle in which BAMCINEMATEK: “From Hanoi park at Parkside and Ocean Haydn, Bartok and Brahms. will light the menorah on Monday. a one-day supply of oil lasted eight days. to Hollywood.” Today: “Hair” avenues. (718) 287-6431. $35. 7:30 pm. Fulton Ferry (1979). $9. 7 pm, followed by MENORAH LIGHTING: Outside Landing. (718) 624-2083. Q & A with filmmaker Milos Borough Hall at 6 pm, at Grand HOLIDAY CONCERT: The St. Fin- Forman after 7 pm screening. Army Plaza at 7:30 pm. Free bar’s Parish presents its pro- 38 Water St. (866) 468-7619. OUTDOOR SKATING: Prospect SUN, DEC 1 30 Lafayette Ave. (718) 636- menorah and candles to take gram of seasonal music. $20. TWO BOOTS: blues with Gene Park. See Sat. 4100. home, latkes and music. Rain or 7:30 pm. Benson Avenue Ambutter. No cover. 10 pm BARGEMUSIC: chamber program shine. See box on this page. Free. between Bay 19 and Bay 20 until midnight. 514 Second St. OUTDOORS AND TOURS PERFORMANCES of works by Haydn, Kodaly and streets. (718) 236-3312. (718) 499-3253. WINTER FEST: Prospect Park event BCBC: Brooklyn Center for the Per- Kreisler. $35. 7:30 pm. Fulton CHILDREN ST. ANN’S WAREHOUSE: pres- features arrival of St. Nick on forming Arts presents a Hanukkah Ferry Landing. (718) 624-2083. HOLIDAY CELEBRATION: Hanukkah ents “Salome: The Reading,” OTHER horseback. Also, Dutch treats, celebration with singer Debbie BARBES BAR: Delta Dreambox puppet show by “Small Wonder by Oscar Wilde. Al Pacino, ART: Seventh annual BWAC Small candle making, more. 1 to 4 pm. Friedman. $30. 1 pm. Walt Whit- doing blues from the 1920s Puppet Theater.” $5 includes Marisa Tomei and Dianne Wiest Works art exhibit. Noon to 4 Lefferts Homestead, Children’s man Theater, Brooklyn College, and 1930s. 9 pm. No cover. refreshments. 4:30 pm. 401 are among the performers dur- pm. 499 Van Brunt St. (718) Corner, Flatbush Avenue at Empire one block from the intersection Serving fine Italian Cuisine 376 Ninth St. (718) 965-9177. Ninth St. (718) 499-0836. ing its limited run. $50. 8 pm. 596-2507. Free. Boulevard. (718) 789-2822. Free. of Flatbush and Nostrand Parking is available. Dine in or take out. DON’T MISS THIS TUESDAY’S SPECIAL! Wine lover’s night – Any bottled wine on list 1/2 price All specials valid 5pm to 10pm excluding holidays Cono’s Opescatoré 301 Graham Avenue (cor. Ainslie St.) (718) 388-0168 Williamsburg • • Open 7 days 11am-11pm

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Fresh fruit smoothies • Wraps & Sandwiches Vegetable & Fruit Juices • Salads • Wheat Grass innocence Sweet Good Stuff • Soy Milk Shakes • Soups Fine Coffee • Herbal Teas • Chai • Yerba Mate Series of Tarkovsky films 151 Smith St. explores mankind’s darkside (bet. Bergen & Wycoff) Mon-Fri: By Kevin Filipski coin a phrase) themes. After making 8am-7:30pm for The Brooklyn Papers an interesting 45-minute failure that Saturday: planted the seeds of his later work 11am-7pm ussian director Andrei Tarkov- (“The Steamroller and the Violin,” Sunday: sky’s dense and willfully un- not in the series), Tarkovsky moved 11am-6pm R compromising films are the sub- on to his debut feature, “Ivan’s Child- ject of a long overdue retrospective at hood” (aka “My Name Is Ivan,” the BAMcinematek. showing Dec. 6-7). The retro, “My Name Is Andrei An orphaned teenager, Ivan has Tarkovsky” grown up know- (Dec. 6-18 at ing only warfare, the BAM Rose CINEMA which has trans- Cinemas), is formed him into near-complete, BAMcinematek presents the a walking zom- Lip Smacking, “My Name Is Andrei Tarkovsky” Lip Smacking, showing six of film series Dec. 6-19 at 30 bie as he assists his seven ma- Lafayette Ave. at Ashland Place in the Russian mili- ture films: only Fort Greene. Tickets are $9, $6 for tary spying on students and seniors. For more in- Been there, done that: Filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky’s sci-fi epic “Solaris” (1972) was based on the same nov- Good Food! his penultimate formation, call (718) 636-4100 or the Nazis. This , feature “Nostal- visit the Web site at www.bam.org. bleakly knowing el by Stanislav Lem as the new Steven Soderbergh film featuring George Clooney. Photofest at Park Slope s Original Southern Restaurant ghia” (1983) has, dissection of the unfortunately, simultaneous loss which may or may not be a conscious spired use of newsreels, music, spo- talghia” — with its quite apropos • Southern Fried Chicken Come Join Us For not been included. of innocence and humanity will haunt entity. ken poetry and interspersing “reali- story of a displaced Russian artist • Down Home BBQ Sat & Sun Brunch Although Tarkovsky (1932-1986) Tarkovsky’s subsequent work. That “Solaris” has been remade by ty” with dream states, “The Mirror” wandering through a foreign land — 11am to 3pm was allowed a surprising degree of His second film, “Andrei Rubelev” director Steven Soderbergh and star is unmissable. Tarkovsky filmed his blackest, most • Cajun & Creole Specialties www.cornbreadcafe.com independence by the Soviet authori- is a gorgeous-looking psychobiogra- George Clooney (who are smartly The 1979 film “Stalker” (Dec. 18- troubling study of humanity in crisis • Po-Boy Sandwiches ties — notwithstanding his films be- phy of the 15th-century icon painter saying it’s merely based on Stanislav 19) is another sci-fi journey to the while he was dying of lung cancer. Free Delivery 5-10pm ing misinterpreted and branded in- and monk. The film’s banning in its Lem’s original novel) is a weird trib- center of the mind, but its strengths “The Sacrifice’s” look at the bar- • Macaroni & Cheese scrutable, and including bizarre native country caused it to be shelved ute to Tarkovsky, but I doubt it will are different from those of “Solaris.” gain an old man makes with the • Collard Greens Corn censoring of his epic “Andrei for several years, only to be original- be able to compete with his truly After the crash of a meteorite, a Almighty when an impending nu- and much more... Rubelev” — he eventually left Russia ly shown around the world in mutilat- awe-inspiring view of humanity’s “zone” has been created in the mid- clear holocaust has rendered every- for the West, where he made his final ed form. The new print, being shown own morality and mortality. dle of Russia that houses a “room” thing else null and void may be a Bread two films. Dec. 8, is of the complete, 3-hour, 5- Possibly his most mysterious film where every person’s heartfelt de- mite precious, but as a visual specta- After finishing “Nostalghia” in minute version, which is a master- among several contenders, 1974’s sires come true. cle, thanks to Bergman cinematogra- Cafe Italy, he went to Sweden to make piece. “The Mirror” (Dec. 15-16) finds Far more than merely rehashing a pher Sven Nykvist, “The Sacrifice” what would be his last work, “The When Tarkovsky’s gargantuan Tarkovsky coming as close as possi- “genie in a bottle” story about granti- (Dec. 9) is unforgettable, culminating 434 7th Ave. Sacrifice,” a stunning summing-up of space epic “Solaris” (Dec. 13-14) ap- ble to successfully showing and inter- ng wishes, “Stalker,” with slow, in an astonishing sequence of a house (bet. 14th & 15th Sts.) all his earlier themes into a heady peared in 1972, it initially seemed a preting dreams on film; Bergman was gradually accumulating strength, burning to the ground that includes psychological brew. response to Kubrick’s groundbreak- the only other filmmaker to show the shows how dangerous unleashed de- an incredible, six-minute long, (718) 768-3838 No less a cinematic eminence than ing “2001,” but the director — who truth and the substance of dreams. sires can be. It may or may not be unedited take. fax# (718) 768-2371 Ingmar Bergman marveled that disliked Kubrick’s soulless view of Tarkovsky has created a plotless, ironic that Tarkovsky had to re-shoot For some, Tarkovsky’s cinematic Mon-Thur: 5-10pm; Fri: 5-11pm Tarkovsky “invented a new lan- the past and future of man — instead seemingly unstructured vision of all of “Stalker” after a fire destroyed swan song is too studied and obscure; Sat: 11am-11pm; Sun: 11am-10pm guage.” probes deeply into the psyches of his consciousness as a mirror for the in- the only existing print of the original that unbroken six-minute shot alone, Each of his memorable films de- characters, who are seemingly at the terior of our souls. Edited with a version. however, makes “The Sacrifice” a velops those truly Tarkovskian (to mercy of the eponymous planet hypnotic power, including an in- After defecting and making “Nos- must see, as is the entire series. Authentic Japanese Food in Park Slope

avenues. (718) 951-4500. BARBES BAR: music with Steve Dol- Club hosts its annual event. “Mercy.” $45, $30, $20. 7:30 GOSPEL BRUNCH: BAM hosts lar. 6 pm. Jam session follows $25. 12:30 pm. 25 Eighth Ave. pm. Harvey Theater, 651 Fulton Inaka Dickson Guillaume and the from 8 to 11:30 pm. No cover. (718) 638-0800. St. (718) 636-4111. Inaka New York State Haitian 376 Ninth St. (718) 965-9177. OPEN HOUSE: at Urban Glass. LIST YOUR EVENT… GALAPAGOS ART SPACE: pres- OPERA: Regina Opera Company Tours, workshops and more. ents cornet player Taylor Ho Sushi House Interdenominational Mass Choir To list your event in Where to GO, please give us as much notice as Our experienced Sushi Chef as part of its “Sounds of presents “The Marriage of Also, store at Urban Glass Bynum and the Spider Monkey Praise” series. $23 includes Figaro.” 4 pm. See Sat. offers selection of glass art possible. Send your listing by mail: GO Brooklyn, The Brooklyn Papers, Strings. $8. 8 pm. 70 North prepares the freshest Sushi food. 2 pm. 30 Lafayette Ave. works. 2 pm. 647 Fulton St. 26 Court St., Ste. 506, Brooklyn, NY 11242; or by fax: (718) 834-9278. Sixth St. (718) 782-5188. & Sashimi to order! (718) 636-4100. CHILDREN (718) 625-3685. Free. Listings are free and printed on a space available basis. We regret we ST. ANN’S WAREHOUSE: “Salome.” CONCERT: Brooklyn Friends of HANUKKAH PARTY: Kids age 6 READING SERIES: Soft Skull pres- cannot take listings over the phone. 8 pm. See Mon. Sukiyaki, Yosenabe & Shabu Chamber Music presents a pro- and under and their families are ents Maggie Estep and Wayne Shabu prepared at your table gram of works by Mackey, invited to a singing and story- Koestenbaum. 2 pm. 71 Bond telling event. $5 adults, children Bermel, Larsen, Kirchner and St. (718) 499-5872. Free. WEDS, DEC 4 Combination Teriyaki & Tempura Available free. 3 pm. Park Slope Jewish AUCTION: Scandinavian East President Markowitz lights to- MENORAH LIGHTING: Outside Hindemith. $15, $5 students. 3 Center, Eighth Avenue and night outside Borough Hall at 5 Borough Hall at 5 pm, at Grand pm. Lafayette Avenue Coast Museum hosts its annual KIDS HEALTH: Health Plus talk on A light, healthy meal for the entire family. 14th Street. (718) 768-1453. event. $20 includes lunch. 2 to pm. A menorah is also lit at Grand Army Plaza at 6 pm. Free me- how kids can maintain healthy Presbyterian Church, Lafayette Army Plaza at 6 pm. Free me- norah and candles to take home, Avenue and South Oxford OTHER 5 pm. Bethlehem Lutheran teeth. 8:30 am. PS 1, Annex, 309 236 7th Ave.(bet 4th & 5th Sts.) Church, corner of Ovington norah and candles to take home, latkes and music. Rain or shine. 47th St. (718) 630-0125. Free. Street. (718) 855-3053. FLEA MARKET: hosted by St. latkes and music. Rain or shine. See box in this section. Free. and Fourth avenues. Call for CAROLS: St. Joseph’s College MUSIC: Police Officer Daniel Finbar Center. 9 am to 3 pm. See box in this section. Free. (718) 499-7856 reservations. (718) 748-5950. BRIC STUDIO: presents jazz with presents The New York Virtuoso Rodriguez performs “Christmas Bath Avenue and Bay 20th MEETING: Waterfront Develop- Possible Fireworks, featuring sax Continuously serving lunch and dinner Magic.” Program features tradi- Street. (718) 236-3312. BAMCINEMATEK: “Peggy and Singers. 12:30 pm. 245 Clinton Fred On and Off.” 5 pm, fol- ment Committee of Com- and clarinet player Marty Ehrlich. tional Christmas songs, hymns, munity Board 6 meets. 6:30 Ave. (718) 783-0374. Free. Mon. - Sat. Noon - 10:30pm, Sun. 5pm - 10:30pm ADOPTIVE FAMILY PROGRAM: lowed by Q & A with director $10, $8 students. 7:30 pm. 647 operettas, sacred music and Jewish Child Care Association pm. 76th Precinct, 191 Union Fulton St. (718) 855-7882. CONCERT: FREE DELIVERY • Catering Available • Major Credit Cards patriotic songs. $25. 4 pm. St. Leslie Thornton. $9. 30 St. (718) 643-3027. choral concert and drummer Lenny offers a talk “Hanukkah Lafayette Ave. (718) 636-4100. TRYOUTS: AAU Basketball Organ Thomas Aquinas Church, 249 Celebration.” $20 for one par- CONCERT: Long Island University ization invites 12-year-old girls White performs. 4 pm. Flatbush Ninth St. (718) 768-9471. ent family; $25 for two parent HOLIDAY ART SHOW: at Sarafina vocal jazz program. 7 pm. Flatbush to tryout. 7 to 9 pm. St. Marks Avenue Extension and DeKalb Gallery. 3 to 7 pm. 411 . (718) 488-1051. Free. BARGEMUSIC: chamber program family. 10:30 am to noon. Avenue Extension and DeKalb School, Avenue Z and East Established 1935 of works by Haydn, Bartok and Congregation Beth Elohim, 274 Ave. (718) 522-1083. Free. Avenue. (718) 488-1051. Free. 18th Street. (718) 934-5032. DINNER DANCE: Bensonhurst Brahms. $35. 4 pm. Fulton Garfield Place. (212) 558-9949. READING: Novelist Alexandra ST. ANN’S WAREHOUSE: “Salome: NEXT WAVE: Ann Hamilton’s mul- West End Community Council Ferry Landing. (718) 624-2083. HOLIDAY BRUNCH: The Montauk Styron reads from her book The Reading,” by Oscar Wilde. timedia music-theater work Continued on next page... 7117 13th Ave. “All the Finest Girls.” 3 pm. Al Pacino, Marisa Tomei and Sunny’s Bar, 253 Conover St. Dianne Wiest will be among 232-5226• 232-2820 (718) 625-8211. Free. the performers during its 26 MICRO MUSEUM: presents “Odd performance run. $50. 8 pm. 38 Sundays,” a series featuring Water St. (866) 468-7619. interactive art work by William BARBES BAR: presents the film and Kathleen Laziza. Also, guid- “The Match Factory Girl” ed tours of museum. $10, $5 (1989). No cover. 9 pm. 376 ITALIAN seniors and students. 3 to 6 pm. Ninth St. (718) 965-9177. The 123 Smith St. (718) 797-3116. DISCUSSION SERIES: Brooklyn RESTAURANT SUPPORT: Monthly meeting host- Public Library, Central branch, ed by Laryngectomee Support presents “Postwar Years, Cold PIZZERIA & LUNCHEONETTE Group. 2 pm. St. Athanasius War Fears: American Culture Pearl Room Convent, 2201 62nd St. (718) and Politics, 1946 to 1960.” Come Dine at Romano Restaurant 837-3058. Free. Today’s discussion is on Dwight Celebrating MENORAH LIGHTING: Outside Eisenhower. 6 to 8 pm. Grand and Play Quick Draw or Any Lotto Game! Borough Hall at 5 pm, at Grand Army Plaza. (718) 230-2100. Free. 34 Years! Army Plaza at 6 pm. Free me- Monday thru Friday $ 50 norah and candles to take home, Quick Draw Dinner 23 latkes and music. Rain or shine. TUES, DEC 3 See box in this section. Free. Baked Clam or Stuffed Artichoke; Ziti Carbonara or Ziti HEALTHY EATING: Health Plus Primavera; Broiled Salmon or Veal Piccata or Chicken Francese talk on how to get kids to eat (with Fried Zucchini); Dessert – Chocolate Mousse or Cheese Restaurant MON, DEC 2 right. 8:30 am. United Metho- Cake; one glass house wine or two glasses of soda incl. dist Head Start, 4419 Seventh $1 Quick Draw Ticket FREE • tax & tip not included  LECTURE: St. Francis College ser- Ave. (718) 630-0125. Free. Please make reservations – mention dinner ies “Terrorism: Danger Deepens.” JAZZ: Long Island University hosts Today: “Peace in Ireland.” Rep. a student jazz performance. 1 Oyster Bar Peter King is guest speaker. pm. Also, drummer Lenny White We deliver 7 days a week 12:20 pm. 180 Remsen St. performs. 4 pm. Flatbush Sun.-Thurs. 12-11pm • Fri. & Sat. 12-1am (718) 489-5272. Free. Avenue Extension and DeKalb Garden Dining MENORAH LIGHTING: Borough Avenue. (718) 488-1051. Free. All major credit cards accepted. Visit us at romanorestaurant.com Available for Private Functions 531 Henry Street • CARROLL GARDENS 8201 Third Avenue Classic, Elegant Italian Cuisine Brooklyn, NY 11209 (718) 834-0863 • FREE DELIVERY Still one of the best restaurants in Brooklyn! Tel: 718.833.6666 Fax: 718.680.4172 OPEN 7 DAYS: Mon-Sat: 11am-10pm; Sun: 12noon-10pm

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Union & Sackett Sts. • CARROLL GARDENS 345 Court Street (at Union Street) 718-852-5015 8405 5th Avenue • BAY RIDGE Open 7 days for lunch and dinner • Free Valet Parking • 2929 Avenue R (at Nostrand Ave.) • (718) 998-7851 718.858.2960 • www.2fifteen.com (718) 238-1300 Visit our website www.MarcoPoloRistorante.com www.michaelsofbrooklyn.com • 2OO2 4 THE BROOKLYN PAPERS WWW.BROOKLYNPAPERS.COM December 2, 2002 Celebrate the SEASON 2OO3 withHolidays BROOKLYN CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS Look again AT BROOKLYN COLLEGE BAM brings a Japanese interpretation of ‘Macbeth’ to Brooklyn All Shows: Children Brooklyn Center debut! By Paulanne Simmons The mirrored surfaces work with 12 & under, DEBBIE FRIEDMAN for The Brooklyn Papers Ramotsu Harada’s lighting to create a half-price! A Chanukah Celebration variety of illusions onstage — scenes SUN • DEC 1, 2002 • 2PM ven for a time noted for its gore, with only a few actors appear crowded, Tickets: $30 William Shakespeare’s “Mac- and entrances from the auditorium, re- E beth,” written in 1606, is a fa- flected on mirrored sliding doors, seem CHRISTMAS IN THE CARIBBEAN mously violent play. The audience as if they are coming from upstage — rarely sees the actual murders, but they all part of Ninagawa’s vision of theater featuring the Mighty Sparrow, Lord Nelson, T.C., are quite adequately represented on- as an “uber art.” Becket, Hopeton Lewis and others stage by bloody hands and bloodier de- Ninagawa, who began his career as SAT • DEC 14, 2002 • 8PM scriptions. There’s Banquo’s death, an actor, made his directorial debut in sponsored by Duncan’s death, Lady Macbeth’s sui- small-scale theaters in Japan in 1969 Tickets: $30-$35 cide, and at last, and achieved crit- Macduff bearing ical acclaim for Brooklyn Center debut! Macbeth’s sev- THEATER his direction with Moscow Ballet’s ered head. “Romeo and Juli- THE GREAT RUSSIAN NUTCRACKER In The Nina- The Ninagawa Company’s “Mac- et” at the Nissei beth” plays Dec. 4-7 at 7:30 pm at the SUN • DEC 22, 2002 • 2PM gawa Company’s Theatre in Tokyo “Macbeth,” at BAM Howard Gilman Opera House, 30 in 1974, was last sponsored by Lafayette Ave. at Ashland Place in Fort BAM’s Howard Greene. Tickets are $25 and $50. For seen at BAM dur- Tickets: $30-$35 Gilman Opera tickets, call (718) 636-4100 or visit the ing the 1990 Next House Dec. 4-7, Web site at www. BAM.org. Wave Festival this stark brutality with an earlier in- Shakespeare and samurai: The Ninagawa Company’s production of “Mac- Call 718.951.4500 is augmented by terpretation of Tuesday - Saturday 1-6pm the mirrored surfaces of the sets (de- “Macbeth.” And the company is cur- beth” will be performed at the Brooklyn Academy of Music Dec. 4-7. Seiji Egawa Group Sales 718.951.4600 x27 signed by Tsukasa Nakagoshi) that rently directing all 37 of Shakespeare’s for complete season • brooklyncenter.com multiply the bloody bodies and severed plays at Tokyo’s Saitama Arts Theatre many Japanese love Shakespeare,” he because he sees the play as a kind of heads. These reflecting surfaces are in- as part of the Sai-no-kuni Shakespeare says. end of innocence. spired by and reinforce the witches’ un- Series. But Ninagawa is not only working “If there is a last day of youth, this is settling vision in Act IV of a line of “Shakespeare’s plays are filled with with a Japanese translation, he is also a story on that night — the story of kings — “And yet the eighth appears, his strong desire to completely under- working with and within the Asian tra- young folks,” he says. “Macbeth and Brooklyn Youth Chorus who bears a glass, which shows me stand and accept human nature and dition. Lady Macbeth are making a choice of many more.” the world. His strong will touches us, “I want to believe that it’s meaning- how to live. They choose to believe in “In order to believe the prophecy, I who live in contemporary society and ful for us to do Shakespeare. We are the witches’ prophecy. It is young peo- thought we needed the carnage in bat- rarely have a broader view. I’d like to trying to destroy and at the same time ples’ privilege to get to choose one out Come and sing-along! tlefields and bloody revenge,” says di- share this view of the world with oth- create the Japanese tradition by com- of many possibilities.” rector Yukio Ninagawa via e-mail from ers by staging his inspiring plays,” he bining the Asian theater, which values Through choosing evil they come to Japan. “If we do not believe in the ex- says. style, and the European theater, which a “deeper realization of things.” istence of the witches themselves, then Ninagawa believes that although is largely based on realism,” he ex- “I see the human impulse there,” he the action by Macbeth and Lady Mac- “Macbeth” will be performed in Japan- plains. says. “This is universal.” beth does not seem real.” ese translation (with English surtitles), In the end, however, it is the univer- And what could be more universal But Ninagawa also gives another in- audiences will “still be moved by sal message Ninagawa chooses to em- than a Scottish story retold by an Eliza- spiration for the mirrored set: “my Shakespeare’s appealing and beautiful phasize. He has cast young actors in bethan playwright, reinterpreted by a aching desire to mirror the contempo- language.” both the title role (Toshiaki Karasawa) Japanese director and presented to an rary world.” “You can tell that from the fact that and as Lady Macbeth (Shinobu Otake) American audience in Brooklyn?

Fellowship winners. 5:30 to 8 ping opportunity. Live music, Mount Sinai invites kids ages Dianne Berkun, pm. Brooklyn Public Library, raffles and more. Shopping dis- 2.5 to 9 to a program featuring Artistic Director WHERE TO GO... Central branch. Grand Army trict stretches from Hicks Street song, prayers and games. 6 to Plaza. (718) 625-0080. Free. to Fourth Avenue. Stores open 6:45 pm. 250 Cadman Plaza TREE LIGHTING: Atlantic Avenue until 9 pm. (718) 403- 9757. West. (718) 875-9124. Free. Continued from previous page... NEXT WAVE: “Mercy.” 7:30 pm. event. Entertainment includes MUSIC: Enon performs. South RECEPTION: Art at the YWCA hosts its 42nd annual dance. See Tues. Atlantic Avenue Doo Wop Paw, 125 Fifth Ave. at Sterling reception for its exhibit “Self $80. 5:30 pm. El Caribe, 5945 Singers and Santa Claus offer- Place. Call. (718) 230-0236. Portraits.” 6 to 8 pm. 30 Third Strickland Ave. Reservations ing cookies and cider. 6 pm. NEXT WAVE: Brooklyn Academy Ave. (718) 875-1190. Free. necessary. (718) 946-6665. THURS, DEC 5 Belarussian Church, on Atlantic of Music presents “Mercy.” 7:30 MENORAH LIGHTING: The final MENORAH LIGHTING: Outside Avenue at Bond Street. (718) pm. Also, BAM Dialogue with candles are lit outside Borough oliday Harmonies Borough Hall at 5 pm, at Grand FILM: St. Francis College presents 875-8993. Free. Meredith Monk and Ann Hamilton Hall at 2 pm, at Grand Army oliday Harmonies “Sum of All Fears.” Noon and H Army Plaza at 6 pm. Free me- AUCTION: New York City College follows performance. Included Plaza at 3:30 pm. Latkes and norah and candles to take home, 6 pm. 180 Remsen St. (718) of Technology hosts a live and in admission with same-night music. Rain or shine. See box in Saturday, December 7, 2002 200 young voices sing in the latkes and music. Rain or shine. 489-5272. Free. silent auction. Tech alumnus performance. See Tues. this section. Free. See box in this section. Free. CANDLELIGHT TOUR: Wyckoff and Visiting Distinguished NEXT WAVE: Ninagawa Company POTLUCK DINNER: at Plymouth St. Augustine R.C. Church holiday season with 2 heart- MEETING: Youth Services and Ed- House Museum hosts a tour of Professor Michael Lomanaco is in “Macbeth.” 7:30 pm. See Weds. Church. Bring a dish to share. ucation Committee of Commu- New York’s oldest house, deco- guest auctioneer. $20 includes 6:30 pm. Also, caroling and 116 Sixth Avenue, warming concerts of seasonal nity Board 6. 6 pm. South Brook- rated for the holidays. $3, free buffet dinner. 6 to 9 pm. 300 tree decorating. 75 Hicks St. Park Slope, Brooklyn music and choral classics. lyn Community High School, for members. 5 to 6 pm. 5816 Jay St. (718) 260-5025. FRI, DEC 6 (718) 624-4743. 173 Conover St. (718) 643-3027. Clarendon Road. Reservations BARGEMUSIC: program of “The BROOKLYN AUTHORS’ SERIES: SMALL BUSINESS TALK: Boricua necessary. (718) 629-5400. Four Seasons” by Vivaldi. Also, CRAFT FAIR: PS 102 sale. 9 am to Montauk Club presents a College Small Business Devel- MENORAH LIGHTING: Outside Verdi. $35. 7:30 pm. Fulton 3 pm. 211 72nd St. (718) 834-1713. memorial to 9/11 in a program My Heart Rejoices A Children’s Celebration opment Center offers talk Borough Hall at 5 pm, at Grand Ferry Landing. (718) 624-2083. HOLIDAY FAIR: at Our Saviour’s featuring diverse media. Music 7:30pm 2:30pm “Preparing a Business Plan and Army Plaza at 6 pm. Free me- LOW BAR: reading by playwright Lutheran Church. 11 am to 3 and readings. 7 pm. 25 Eighth Getting a Small Business Loan.” norah and candles to take home, Lee Blessing. No cover. 8 pm. 81 pm. 414 80th St. (718) 745-0020. Ave. (718) 638-0800. Free. Enjoy the beauty and sophistication of For the young and the young at heart, 6 to 8 pm. 4 Chase Metro Tech latkes and music. Rain or shine. Washington St. (718) 222-1LOW. FAMILY NIGHT: Fort Hamilton mil- NEW MOON GATHERING: Center. (718) 963-4112. Free. See box in this section. Free. BARBES BAR: Strauss Warschauer itary family night for current De- Create a sacred space during a the Concert Chorus, joined by the BYC’s Training Choruses present an TOWN HALL MEETING: New York- SEMINAR: Brooklyn Arts Council Duo klezmer concert. No cover. partment of Defense card hold- women’s gathering of ritual, Intermediate Divisions, as they assortment of international holiday ers for Parks hosts a meeting. presents “Artists and Audience 9 pm. 376 Ninth St. (718) 965-9177. ers. 5:30 to 9 pm. Fort Hamilton song, dance and play. $15. 7:15 6:30 pm. Brooklyn Hospital, Exchange,” a presentation of FIRST THURSDAY: Atlantic Avenue Parkway. (915) 630-4754. Free. pm. Devi, 837 Union St. By present excerpts from Bernstein’s favorites and carols and old and new. 121 DeKalb Ave. (212) 838-9410. Brooklyn-based NYFA Artist hosts a monthly late-night shop- TOT SHABBAT: Congregation eservation. (212) 501-3892. Mass, Galuppi’s Dixit Dominus, and WRITERS LIVE: pre- HOLIDAY SHOW: The Brooklyn sents writers Jim Elledge and Music School presents “A works by Schumann, Ebeling, and Tickets from $8–$25 Thad Ziolkowski reading from Brooklyn Nutcracker.” $50 Brewbaker. their works. 7 pm. 200 Willough- includes a champagne recep- Subway directions: by Ave. (718) 636-3473. Free. THE BEST PIZZA IN BROOKLYN tion. 7:30 pm. 126 St. Felix St. Take the 2 or 3 train to Bergen Street, BOOK DISCUSSION: Union Center (718) 638-5660. for Women hosts a book talk and other delicious Italian Specialties! BARGEMUSIC: presents a cham- or the D train to 7th Avenue. on “Back When We Were ber music program of “The Grownups.” 7 pm. Call to pre- Call for FREE, Open Four Seasons” by Vivaldi. Also, For information: register. (718) 748-7708. Free. FAST DELIVERY Mon-Sat Verdi. $35. 7:30 pm. Fulton call 718-243-9447 or visit: NEXT WAVE: Brooklyn Academy (11am-9pm, $5min) Ferry Landing. (718) 624-2083. of Music presents the Ninaga- 10am-9pm TWO BOOTS: Super #7, doing www.brooklynyouthchorus.org wa Company in “Macbeth.” jazz and blues. 10 pm. No cover. $50, $25. 7:30 pm. Howard 514 Second St. (718) 499-3253. Gilman Opera House, 30 DROP-IN CENTER: Union Temple Lafayette Ave. (718) 636-4111. hosts a place for infants and h FORUM: Associations of Brooklyn toddlers during the cold-weath- Heights, Cobble Hill, Boerum er months ahead. Tuesday through Hill and Carroll Gardens meet Friday. $5 for one child, $7.50 The Rabbi Jacob J. Hecht Menorah to discuss East River bridge tolls. for two. 10 am to 2 pm. 17 East- 7:30 pm. St. Francis College, ern Parkway. (718) 638-7600. 180 Remsen St. (718) 489-5272. DINNER THEATER: Bread and THE BARBES BAR: music with The Will Wine Productions presents “The Holshouser Trio. No cover. 9 pm. Last Supper.” 7 pm. See Sat. 376 Ninth St. (718) 965-9177. ST. ANN’S WAREHOUSE: pres- HANUKKAH CELEBRATION: Park ents music with Loose Fur, with Slope Hadassah dairy supper, folk Jeff Tweedy, Jim O’Rourke and dancing and a raffle. $25. East Glenn Kotche. $25. 8 pm. 38 LARGEST MENORAH Midwood Jewish Center, 1625 Water St. (718) 858-2424. Ocean Ave. Call. (718) 382-6454. HEIGHTS PLAYERS: “Camelot.” $15, LOW BAR: evening of burlesque. $12 seniors and children. 8 pm. in Downtown Brooklyn No cover. 9:30 pm. 81 Washing- 26 Willow Place. (718) 237-2752. ton St. (718) 222-1LOW. 291 THIRD AVE. LOW BAR: live music with Derek TUSCANO’S Richmond and Schwervon. No ST. ANN’S WAREHOUSE: “Salome.” (COR. CARROLL ST.) (718) 624-0010 8 pm. See Mon. PIZZERIA & RESTAURANT cover. 10 pm. 81 Washington

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Lots of funding went away. We tic excellence. What fuels us all adjusted to new realities, and it — I love the people I work with was difficult. — is we all have a passion for “Now, here in this season, what we’re doing, and without • • • Fort Greene • • • however painful it was and is, that passion nothing will work.” we have a real commitment to Spano would also like the Spano passes baton good planning, so that doesn’t Philharmonic’s programming to happen,” the maestro said. “This continue the identity he and his season is unfolding as planned.” predecessors, such as Lukas Brooklyn Philharmonic Cahill told GO Brooklyn in Foss and Dennis Russell Davies February that both she and have helped it create. Spano had taken “massive” pay “Our concerts are unique,” maestro to quit in 2004 cuts because of the budget said Spano. “We’re doing crunch, but Spano said the Phil- things you won’t hear any- By Lisa J. Curtis Catherine Cahill. “We are very harmonic’s financial challenges where else in the city or pre- The Brooklyn Papers pleased he’s going to continue were not the reason he opted out sented in a new way with a an active role with us even when as music director. fresh perspective. That’s very rooklyn Philharmonic this contract is expired.” “If that was a reason to important.” Try our conductor and music di- Hints that the maestro might leave, I would have left a long In a co-production with the MOJITOS mussels B rector Robert Spano has be distracted by other commit- time ago,” he said. “In the mu- Brooklyn Academy of Music smooth & announced that he will not re- ments — he’s also the Atlanta sic world, [budget shortfalls] and the Mark Morris Dance sophisticated grilled new his contract with the fi- Symphony Orchestra’s music di- are not an uncommon prob- Group, the Brooklyn Philhar- Sol Elixirs salmon nancially strapped orchestra rector — materialized at last lem. It’s not something you monic will present Morris’ and will step down at the end May’s Brooklyn Philharmonic can run away from. You have “The Hard Nut” Dec. 17-22. of the 2003-04 season, the 50th gala fundraiser at the Brooklyn to meet it head on. The performances will mark Restaurant •❖ Bar •❖ Lounge anniversary year of the Brook- Museum of Art when Spano “I’ve had to recognize the re- the 10th anniversary of that lyn Philharmonic. was a no-show. alities of my own life. That’s production and the grand finale Serving Latin and Caribbean Cuisine Spano told GO Brooklyn on Spano, in a telephone inter- very difficult. I don’t have a lot to BAM’s 20th Next Wave sea- Tuesday that he will take on the view from Atlanta Tuesday, of reasons to want to leave [the son. The Philharmonic, under 229 DeKalb Ave. (cor. Clermont) Fort Greene title of music advisor for the or- said he had already given up Brooklyn Philharmonic], but I the baton of Robert Cole, will Sun-Thurs: 6-11pm • Fri & Sat: 6-12mid • 222-1510 chestra in 2004-05 and will aid his apartment in Brooklyn and have a lot of reasons to stay,” perform Tchaikovsky’s original the orchestra in its search for a that “demands on my time and said Spano. “That’s what is so “Nutcracker” score. new music director. energy meant it would be in- Never can say goodbye: Brooklyn Philharmonic Music Di- nice about the principal guest “Orchestras in general are Philharmonic Board President evitable that I would have to rector Robert Spano says his new title as principal guest con- conductor arrangement. It’s bet- experiencing challenging fiscal Craig Matthews (retired vice leave. But I didn’t want to. ductor means not yet having to say farewell. Michael Darter ter rather than a goodbye.” times,” said Cahill, “and cer- chairman and COO of Keyspan This way I can relinquish the Spano said that he would tainly we’ve had our troubles, Energy) said in a release that the responsibilities of music direc- Baptist Temple Church on if he was afraid of budget short- work in an advisory capacity but we have been on a road to Caribbean Soul Cuisine & Bakery Philharmonic has begun the tor and still have the joy of Schermerhorn Street. The falls, he would have changed vo- with the Philharmonic in choos- recovery. We’ve balanced our search for a new music director working with the orchestra.” change of venue resulted in a cations a long time ago. ing a new music director. budget for the last two seasons and confirmed that Spano would Because of budget shortfalls, ticket shuffle for Philharmonic “Last season’s changes were Spano has been widely and reduced our accumulated “favorite restaurant” be a consultant in this process. the orchestra had been forced subscribers, and the orchestra’s disheartening for everybody, but praised for his work with the deficit by 50 percent. And we – Judge Glenda Hatchett Spano, who came to the Phil- to reprogram its 2000-01 and union, Local 802 of the Ameri- the reason we did it, is so we Philharmonic, and his successor opened the season with a sold- harmonic in 1996, will assume 2001-02 seasons midway can Federation of Musicians, wouldn’t accumulate new debt,” will have big shoes to fill. out run of [Osvaldo] Golijov’s CATERING AVAILABLE FOR ALL OCCASSIONS the title of principal guest con- through. Rather than an orches- seized upon the opportunity to said Spano. “I’m convinced we “The most critical thing for ‘Pasion.’ OPEN ductor for the orchestra’s 2005- tra performance on Feb. 15 and turn their contract negotiations did the right thing. After 9-11, I Brooklyn Philharmonic leader- “Because of Robert’s dy- 112 DeKalb Ave. M-Thur 11-11pm 06 and 2006-07 seasons. Feb. 16 of this year at the into a public brouhaha. know a lot of organizations have ship,” said Spano, “meaning the namic leadership, commitment (718) 246-2800 Fri-Sat 11-12pm “He’s internationally sought Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Spano, however, said he re- said this, but for us, it was really board and staff and whoever the and passion for this institution,” Sunday 3-10pm out as a major conductor,” said opera house, the Philharmonic mains enamored with the true. After that happened it had a new music director is, is to have she said, “we have this good Philharmonic executive director produced a piano recital at Brooklyn Philharmonic and that serious impact on our budget. vision and commitment to artis- story to tell.”

When the rain pours, the with the ability to stop, rewind or MEXICO... wind blows and your favorite pause. And, only digital cable Continued from page GO 8 businesses during the Day of the Dead celebration. show may suddenly not be an can hook you up to the “The Day of the Dead is a very enjoyable day,” continued Lopez. “In the evening, people internet with a high-speed, wait in the cemeteries talking, option, DTV–Digital Television joking and singing. Food is laid out. It is a nice celebration.” Another holiday decoration from Time Warner Cable phone-free connection that lets are edible skulls made from sugar. A small mold is made in the shape of a skull, and then brings you incredible reception you surf, shop, download and sugar and water are heated un- til syrup is formed, poured into On the rise: The smell of the mold and hardened. After baking bread welcomes on over 250 crystal clear channels chat at speeds up to 50x faster the sugar has dried the mold is visitors to Don Paco Lopez opened, and the skull is painted a bright color. Panaderia in Sunset Park. of movies, sports, news, music, than dial-up. We know you’ll “In Mexico,” said Lopez, “it The Brooklyn Papers / Greg Mango is typical to find skulls with the names of the dead painted on tortas. A torta is a round, theater, documentary, international miss the attractive flying saucer them.” yeasty roll filled with chicken Don Paco Lopez’s pana- and a mole sauce (spices, deria, or “bakery,” produces ground pumpkin or sesame and lifestyle programming, includ- hanging off the side of your special breads and other baked seeds and unsweetened choco- goods for the occasion. late) and can be topped with The pan de muertos, or mayonnaise, tomatoes and ing all the locals and NY1. It’s all home, but when you sell back “bread of the dead,” is a round jalapeno peppers. Authentic loaf with a crisscrossed design chiles rellenos [a poblano pep- on its surface that resembles per stuffed with a mild cheese your favorites, yes all of them, your satellite dish and decide bones. (queso fresco), battered and “The bread changes from fried], is a specialty of the town to town,” said Lopez. restaurant. that incredible reception round- “Some people like their pan de We concluded the tour with and all you need to watch them is muertos covered with sesame superb cups of strong coffee seeds; others prefer it with red and champurrado a hot, roast- sugar.” ed, blue cornmeal and choco- a remote and digital cable box. the-clock, Movies On Demand, In business for 12 years, late drink. with a branch on 116th Street and Third Avenue in Manhat- The next step If having access to hundreds of and an instant, uninterrupted tan, Don Paco has grown from Upcoming Brooklyn His- a small bakery where locals torical Society Walks & Talks could also buy tamales, to an include: Dec. 15, “Saturday programming options isn’t enough, internet connection are things operation that includes the Night Fever Revisited,” a large, spotless bakery where walk through Bay Ridge led we watched five men spread a by architectural historian DTV also means you get access to you could get used to, give us mixture of lard and sugar over Francis Morrone; Jan. 15, “In- the tops of rolls. side The Arab-American com- “They are delicious after munity in Brooklyn,” that be- Movies On Demand—movies that a call and we’ll set you up. they’re baked,” said Lopez. gins with a demonstration of “Believe me.” pita bread making at the Dam- In the grocery area a shop- ascus bakery on Atlantic Av- you can order on your own time per can find all manner of dried enue, then continues a few spices and chiles and a variety doors down at Sahadi’s where of imported canned and jarred owner Charlie Sahadi will dis- and view just by using your remote, goods; and in the restaurant a cuss the growth of the Arab- diner can sit on a stool along American community in this one long counter and enjoy au- borough; and on Sunday, Feb. thentic Mexican snacks. 2, “Bringing Africa to Fort Lopez is nostalgic for the Greene,” wherein a member store’s early years. of the Brooklyn Historical So- “My mother made tamales ciety will lead the group on a that were truly great. People tour of stores along Fulton At least your dish isn’t completely useless. lined up around the street for Street where merchants have them,” said Lopez. interpreted the arts of Africa in In addition to tamales, contemporary home decor and which are now served only on fashion. The tour finishes with When you choose digital cable and sell us back your dish, we’ll give you Saturdays and Sundays, Don snacks at Keur n’ Deye, a Paco sells sandwiches called Senegalese restaurant. a nice chunk of change (up to $200†)and take that equipment off your hands. W46 Then we’ll show you just what we’re talking about, with a DTV–Digital Television package worth over $300!

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As Low As Call 718.670.6633 $ 99 GOOD 8 Offer expires 12/31/02 and is available to new residential Time Warner Cable customers in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens who trade in their satellite dish and connect to a DTV package. Installation charges of $43 for cable; $99 DEALS for Road Runner are waived for this satellite trade-in promotion. A $25 cable box deposit is required per household. Custom installation may incur additional charges. Basic Service ($16.95 /mo. N. Manh.; $18/mo. S. Manh.; ON ALL $17.90/mo. Bklyn./Qns.; includes equipment and FCC regulatory fees) must be purchased to receive Standard Service (add'l $24/mo. N. Manh.; add'l $22.95/mo. S. Manh.; add'l $23.42/mo. Bklyn./Qns.). *Basic and Standard Service must be purchased to receive the three month free offer. Additional sets added later will cost $30.50 for installation. $1/mo. digital programming duplication charge per box applies. Additional box and remote cost $4.72/mo. After MAJOR your three free months, billing will begin for the DTV package selected. Packages include: DTV Value Package ($49.95/mo. Basic, Standard, DTV, cable box and remote); DTV Premium Package ($65.95/mo. Basic, Standard, DTV, BRANDS cable box and remote and 3 multichannel premiums); DBest package ($107.95/mo. Basic, Standard, DTV, 4 multichannel premiums and Road Runner, box and remote); It's All Here Package ($115.95/mo. Basic, Standard, DTV 6 multichannel premiums, Road Runner, cable box and remote). The actual speed that a user receives data may vary depending upon the traffic on the internet, the web server to which the user is connected and the user's computer. Not all programming is carried in full or available on all service tiers and may be subject to preemption. Franchise fee not included in prices. All prices are subject to change. †Time Warner Cable will reimburse $75 for each satellite dish and $25 per receiver up to a total of $200 for all equipment. Allow 8 weeks from connection date for receipt of reimbursement payment. NY 10/02 December 2, 2002 THE BROOKLYN PAPERS WWW.BROOKLYNPAPERS.COM 7 SH PPING

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Happy Holidays! 8 THE BROOKLYN PAPERS WWW.BROOKLYNPAPERS.COM December 2, 2002 Taste of Mexico Walking tour introduces visitors to Sunset Park’s little Mexico via their tastebuds

By Tina Barry homelands that include tamales [meat or for The Brooklyn Papers DINING vegetables coated with a masa (corn dough) wrapped in a corn husk and steamed]; fresh n honor of the Mexican Day of the Don Paco Lopez Panaderia is located at fruit like pineapple and mango that are cut Dead celebration, Annie Hauck-Law- 4703 Fourth Ave. between 47th and 48th and scored then sprinkled with salt, pepper streets. For more information, call (718) I son, a scholar who studies the relation- 492-7443. Cash only. and chili powder; deep-fried tortillas [soft, ship between food and culture, led a tour To attend a Walks & Talks event or for unleavened bread made from masa or wheat more information about The Brooklyn His- through Brooklyn’s Sunset Park, home to torical Society call (718) 222-4111 or visit flour and lard, baked on a griddle] rolled and many Mexican immigrants. www.brooklynhistory.org. filled with pork; and cotton candy,” said The Oct. 26 tour, “Mexican Meals in Hauck-Lawson. Sunset Park,” was one of a monthly series A participant commented on the groups of of historical walking tours sponsored by the traditional fish cakes and steamed fish men seen dining together in the taquerias the Brooklyn Historical Society and held puddings that were popular with the early (restaurants that serve burritos, tacos, que- from September through February. settlers of the area. sadillas and other authentic Mexican foods). About 12 foodies gathered at 41st “[By the 1970s] immigrants from the Do- “The area’s restaurants become a very Street and Fifth Avenue and listened while minican Republic, and New Yorkers origi- important social environment for trading Hauck-Lawson, an associate professor in nally from Puerto Rico, many of whom job information, and emotionally to ease Brooklyn College’s health and nutrition moved here from the Bronx when that area the pain of separation from their families department, described the immigrants became too crowded, moved to Sunset Park and their homeland,” said Hauck-Lawson. who have shaped this area. and opened businesses,” said Hauck-Law- “The taquerias serve the sort of food Hauck-Lawson, framed by the neigh- son. “A smaller number of Brooklynites the men ate in their families’ kitchens, in- borhood’s skyline and harbor view, began from Honduras, and also Mexico, moved to cluding tacos with a filling made from dif- the tour with a description of late-19th the neighborhood.” Over the past decade the ferent parts of the animal — sliced pigs Baker Francisco Lopez, at work in Don Paco Lopez Panaderia, a bakery and grocery store on Fourth Avenue at 47th century groups — mostly Scandinavian, population of Mexicans in New York City ears, beef tongue — flavors that reflect Street in Sunset Park, specializing in Mexican foods. The Brooklyn Papers / Greg Mango Polish, German and Italian — who settled has tripled with many Mexicans settling in the traditional foods of the residents, not along the two-mile stretch of the neigh- Sunset Park. necessarily the visiting customer.” commemorating Dia de los Muertos, or some people include oranges, tangerines “We believe that the intensity of the col- borhood’s waterfront. From the late 1980s through the 1990s Our walk concluded in the Don Paco Day of the Dead, which takes place on and apples. Sometimes there is sugar or will guide the dead back home safely,” “At this time,” said Hauck-Lawson, Sunset Park became home to Asian immi- Lopez Panaderia, on Fourth Avenue at Nov. 1 and Nov. 2, had been erected in cane, sometimes cigarettes and liquor if said Lopez. “there were German delicatessens and grants who concentrated primarily along 47th Street. Once inside the bustling shop, memory of the Lopez’s deceased family that is what the dead person enjoyed. Hanging across the grocery area of the Scandinavian food shops with gold signs Eighth Avenue creating Brooklyn’s China- which includes a bakery, grocery and and friends. There are, of course, candles and framed store like brightly colored garments on a in their windows that read, ‘Norwegian town. small restaurant, we were met with the Paco Lopez, the son of Don Paco photographs of the deceased. We also dec- clothes line, were intricately cut squares of food sold here.’ Until the 1980s, you As we walked along Fifth Avenue, we no- spicy aroma of chiles and the warm, Lopez, who owns the store, described the orate the altar with flowers. Typical flow- paper in fuchsia, red, electric blue and bright could go into some of the delis along Fifth ticed tamale stands set up on the street. yeasty scent of bread baking. holiday: “Families set out an altar decorat- ers found on Day of the Dead altars are yellow that traditionally decorate homes and Avenue and Eighth Avenue and still buy “Immigrants sell specialties from their In the grocery area of the shop, an altar ed with food and fruits of the region — marigolds and chrysanthemums. See MEXICO on page GO 6 2 DDeessttiinnaattiioonn

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