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Page 14, PHOENIX, May 23, 1974Filmmakers Invited to EnterSeventh Boro Film FestivalA touch of internationalism will add extra flavoring to the upcoming Seventh Annual Brooklyn Film Festival, sponsored by the Brooklyn Arts and Culture Association, Inc. (BACA). Festival applications have already been requested for this year%u2019s event from Europe, Canada and the Orient, as well as from Brooklyn and points across this country.All amateur and independent filmmakers (those who earn no more than 25 percent of their income from films) have been invited to submit works to this latest of Brooklyn%u2019s searches for creative new cinema. Gaining in stature and prominence each year, the Brooklyn Film Festival spotlights works, up to 20 minutes in length, done in 16mm or super 8 mm. Deadline for submission of works is Tuesday, July 21, 1974. Works will be screened by a panel from the New York Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.Films will be judged on their own merit rather than in any predesignated categories. The Festival judging thus corresponds to the system of selection of the Emmy Award activity of the National Academy. A Grand Prize of $100 and six additional cash awards to top films, and additional certificate awards, will be made. The entrance fee for 16mm films is eight dollars for each work; the entrance fee for super 8mm work is five dollars for each film.The award-winning films will be shown at The Brooklyn Museum on August 24, and subsequent screenings will include, among others, an October 16 viewing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and a subsequent tour of city colleges and universities. For a complete list of rules and regulations, and for entry blanks, write to BACA, 200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn 11238, or call BACA at 783-4469 or 783-3077.Visitors toured the Brooklyn Heights Promenade Art Show last weekend. The semi-annualshow of arts and crafts will continue this weekend, May 25 and 26, along the Promenade, fromRemsen to Cranberry Streets. [Ann Mandelbaum Photo]Works of Modern MastersLoaned to Brooklyn MuseumBaptist Temple 150 Years OldThe Baptist Temple of Brooklyn, Third and Flatbush Aves., is celebrating its 150th anniversary year with a Conference on Evangelism, beginning Friday, May 24, continuing Saturday and Sunday, May 25 and May 26. Dr. Bill Piper, nationally known evangelist from Greenville, South Carolina, will be the speaker, with guest musicians assisting in the program.Dr. Piper will address a Banquet Meeting on Friday evening at 6:30 p.m., on the subject, %u201c Are Demons a Reality? What is God%u2019s Answer to the Exorcist?%u201dA massive Patriotic Raliv will hefeatured on Saturday night, May25, at 7:30 p.m.' An extended musical program will be under the direction of trumpet soloist, George Sadler, of Flushing. Choir and soloists will participate. Dr. Piper will speak on the subject, %u201c Thank God for America-The Sanity of Christianity.%u201dIn the Sunday services of May26, Dr. Piper will speak at 9:45 a.m. and 11 a.m. The final service of Sunday evening will be at 6 p.m.; the subject will be on the prophetic theme, %u201c The Second Coming of Jesus Christ-Is this an Imminent Expectation?%u201dA major exhibition of paintings, watercolors, drawings and sculptures by Cezanne, Van Gogh, Degas, Toulouse-Lautrec, Soutine and other modern masters m uie collection of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pearlman and the Henry and Rose Pearlman Foundation will open at The Brooklyn Museum on Wednesday, May 22, and will remain on view through September. The exhibition is a tribute to the generosity and to the memory of Mr. Pearlman, who died on April 10.The Pearlman collection is one of the most remarkable American private collections in terms of its scope and depth. It includes one of the largest and finest groups of Cezanne watercolors in eitherARTISTS CO-OP EXH IBITGRACE CHURCH %u2022 HICKS STREET AT JORALE M O N * &KLN HTSweekdays 2-g> JUNL2-JUML9weekends 12*>-gStill considering works forinclusion in the show.Interested artists shouldcall Bill Pyles, 875-1716or Barbara Spiller,624-48 1 I , or cometo The PHOENIXShowcase fo r A rtists living and w o rkin g in O lde City B rooklyn. A ll M edia: Painting, prints, photography, sculpAure, crafts...- M eet artists ...technique d e m on stra tion s.- proceeds from 1 Otn A n n u a l A rtis t s Lo-op S how w iii be used to r: C ontribution to non-sectarian nursery school at church, resto ra tion of hymn boards, and p e rp e tu a tio n of Showpublic or private collections, representing works ranging from the 1880%u2019s to a major still-life believed to have been the artist%u2019s last work.Among the 71 works in the exhibition are the major oil paintings by Cezanne, \Sainte-Victoire%u201d and the famous %u201cTarascon Diligence%u201d by Vincent Van Gogh, as well as important works by Pissaro, Manet, Renoir, Soutine, Modigliani, and Kokoschka. Some of these are being exhibited here for the first time. The exhibition also includes sculpture in wood, bronze and stone by Gauguin, Lehmbruck, Lipchitz, Modigliani and Manzu.In the introduction to the new, fuUy illustrated catalog which accompanies the exhibition, JohnKewald notes that Henry Pearlman was %u201c ...guided by his enjoyment rather than by any other more or less conventional factor such as the tendency to assemble a representative survey of any period or school. There are great names which do not appear in this catalogue and there are others which appear many times. The reason is simple: he never felt that he ought to have a work by any given artist but acquired whatever promised to make him happy.%u201c It was always the wish of Mr. and Mrs. Pearlman that the public have an opportunity to enjoy the works of their collection, and they have been generous in their loans i over the years,%u201d said a Museum %u25a0 spokesman.BREAKfi\\sr, lunch, dinner]W COCKTAILS/O-j%u00ab Co r n e r of Atlantic & t h ir dr tel 625 0863 OR 625 0?$4-RESTAURANT WEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 530MTo/Mt>8\\QHTam lYuaiDELM umSENSITIVE PORTRAYAL OF CHILDREN THROUGHPHOTOGMPHY643*9654 JKLYN HEIGHTS Cinema*Wed.thru Tues.May 22-28I Winner GoktonGlob* Award1974| %u201cSUPSfiS,AN AWKSOMBACCOMPLISHMENT.%u201d %u2014JU0ITH CRIST NtW YORK MAGAZINEMaximilian v u _Schali%u2019s T H EI PEDESTRIAN '.ENGLISH TITLES!A t: 2 :30-4:15-8:00-7:45-9:30pm70 HENRY St at ORANGE ST_ Tel 596-7070 Wed.thru Tues.May 22-28\Gene Shalit, WNBC-TVp r a r2:00-3:40 -5:20-7:00-8:40-10:20Every banking service fori i a i i a p v / r v i i \\r y \\ j u u i y u u ibusiness and free checkingfor seniorcitizens a t....<30 u ju n i o i n tx iF>LUSFLATBUSH, SHEEPSHEAD BAY, & BROWNSVILLEBank ofCommerceNew York'sit c t s t u h u i n g bankM C U I f ftF f O f R A L DEPOSIT IN SU R A N C E CO R PO R ATIO N

