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Page 12, May 24,1973, PHOENIXith 78th Precinct Council PlansMembership Meeting forFor Tuesday, May 29th at 8Stan Mongin, newly elected president of the 78th Precinct Community Council which covers Park Slope and Prospect Heights announces the next membership meeting of the Council is set for Tuesday, May 29, at 8:00 p.m. at St. Augustine%u2019s School Auditorium on Sterling Place, just off 6th Avenue.Mongin, who is taking the post from retiring president Margaret Lickdyke, promises to continue the Council%u2019s aggressive posture toward a safer, crime-free neighborhood. %u201cWe want to work even more closely with the Precinct to help our men make the fullest , best possible use of their manpower. It is time to stop our random criticism and make certain that we understand what the policeman%u2019s problems are before we offer suggestions on how he can improve on service.%u201dMongin already has met with the Precinct%u2019s commanding officer, Dep. Inspector Joseph Sampson, and he reports a visit behind the scenes at the station house is an enlightening and eye-opening experience. %u201cWe must acquaint more of our thinking neighbors with the amount of activity going on at Precinct Headquarters. It seems to me helping them communicate with us civilians and residents should be one of the Council%u2019s first concerns. We don%u2019t know enough about the way they function, what tremendous oddsuniformed patrolmen for assignments on the streets.An important part of Community Council membership meetings (which fall on the last Tuesday of each month) will continue to be the opportunity for civilians to register complaints with the police and other City agencies. This will be done, however, via another Mongin innovation%u2014by filing an %u201cAction Item%u201d form. Completed forms will be reviewed by the proper Precinct or City personnel, and the filing citizen will be advised in writing as to what action was taken. %u2022At the May 29 meeting, the agenda also will include Ms. Zeda Weiss, Community Relations and Education Officer for the Department of Air Resources of the City%u2019s E.P.A. who will explain to police and civilians details of the new City Noise Control Code.All of the public is invited to this and every monthly meeting dealing with police related community problems and City services. There are no dues. Membership is automatic once a person attends three successive meetings.Other new officers serving with Mongin for the coming year are Anthony Ceraso (South Oxford Place), Vice President; Carmelita Blake (St. Marks Avenue), Recording Secretary; Hall Winslow (Bergen Street), Corresponding Secretary; and Sophia Edeler (Prospect Place), Treasurer.11 reasons to enjoyour Coffee Servicein your office.I s**m%u00bb%u00bb#**( aSave money. 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Enjoy the great flavors that have made Maxwell House and Yuban America's best-selling coffees.Make coffee easy as 1-2-3.CALL TODAY FOR A2 1 2 - 7 8 4 - 3 0 3 0FREE WEEK TRIALBUNN COFFEE SERVICE10% DISCOUNT: IF YOUMENTION THE PHOENIXthey are working against, and%u2014- most of all%u2014what great accomplishments they are already making. With all this pseudo secrecy, the police seem to be their own worst enemy.%u201dMongin also has indicated he will unveil shortly a specific program enabling members of the community to participate in Precinct responsibilities and free moreLIU CenterFor Therapy InterviewingOngoing registration is now being conducted for the Spring session of Long Island University Brooklyn Center%u2019s Speech and Hearing Center on LIU%u2019s downtown Brooklyn campus, Flatbush Ave. at DeKalb Ave.The center %u2014 operated as a nonprofit service to die community by The Brooklyn Center%u2019s SpeechTheatre Department %u2014 treats children from age four, adults and LIU students who have speech, language or hearing problems.Preliminary diagnostic interviews are required and may be arranged by telephoning Professor Meade at 834-6265 or 834-6266. Modest clinical fees are charged for these services.Sessions are held weekdays from 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M., and on Saturdays from 11:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M.New 78th Precinct Community Council Officers visit training session of P.A.L. team, the %u201c Knights.%u201d Star player Melvin Ross of Park Slope (kneeling) is greeted by (I to r) Treasurer Sophia Edeler, Recording Secretary Carmelita Blake, Corresponding Secretary Hall Winslow, President Stan Mongin, and P.A.L. coach Pete Kallinicos, community relations police officer with the 78th. Missing is Vice President Tony Ceraso.Clark Street StationTo Have Face LiftedA face-lifting for the Clark Streetstation and arcade of the SeventhAve. IRT Subway Station at the St.George Hotel will begin within afew weeks, announces CityCouncilman Fred Richmond, whosaid that the refurbishing wasagreed to at a meeting betweenrepresentatives of the TransitAuthority, the hotel managementand merchants who lease stores inthe arcade.The Councilman said: %u201c TheClark Street Station, the officialentrance to Brooklyn Heights, usedby many Heights commuters, hasfor too long been neglected by theTransit Authority and themanagement of the Hotel St.George. The arcade and subwayFeaturing a selection of fineJ amaican ProductsTrinidad CurryJamaica Fruit SyrupsJamaica Cane JuiceOrganic- Edible Red Palm-oilSt. MARTIN S VARIETY STOREj 27 Third A ve (across from YMCA) __station are dimly lit, the floors are filthy, the doors on Clark and Henry streets are in deplorable condition and the entire arcade is a disgrace.%u201dAccording to the Councilman the Transit Authority is bound by a 1916 lease to periodically maintain the turnstile area and the management of the Hotel St. George must do the same for the arcade and its entrances.Richmond said: The T.A. is committed to repainting all subway entrances and exits, to cleaning up the tile walls of the station and to scraping the turnstile area floors. In addition plans are under way to install a new bullet proof token booth.%u201dRichmond says that the merchants of the Hotel have promised to pay for scraping the floor of the arcade, removing all gum and ground in dirt. Moreover, owners of the newsstand, The Eastern Newstand Gorporation, h%u00abr*e pledged to repolish the six brass columns which decorate the arcade.Richmond also said: It is vitalthat the hotel replace the uglygreen swinging doors on Clark andHenry Streets with modernshatterproof glass doors.(Paid Advertisement) (Paid Advertisement)ELECTR t t b e r fSteingvtBROOKLYN%u2019S * *COUNCILMAN -AT- LARGEBob Steingut will fight to encouragenew industry for Brooklyn.Bob Steingut will fight to reverse thetrend of decaying housing.BobSteingutwillyvork to see that Brooklyngets its fair share of city services.Bob Steingut will fight for more money for police,not to turn our streets into battlegrounds, but into safeand peaceful paths we can all walk freely and without fear.And , Bob Steingut will listen to the people of Brooklyn,hear their problems am and act to solve them.Bob Steingut believes that Brooklyn had a glorious past,and will nave an even more glorious future,DEMOCRATIC PRIMARYMonday t JlEBie 1573, 6 A.M. to 9 P.M.Citizens Com m ittee fo r the Election o f Robert Steingut 1722 Kings H ighw ay, Brooklyn, N. Y.

