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A rt TakesCLASSICAL COLLEGE CONCERT:Brooklyn College Conservatory of Musicpresents faculty recital with cellist MarionFriedman. Friedman will perform works byJ.S. Bach and 20th century composerGeorge Crumb. The concert will be held at8pm on October 31, in Levenson Hall, atAvenue H and Bedford Avenue. Tickets are$3, seniors and students $2. For informationcall 434-1900.MILLO PERFORMS BCBC: SopranoAprile Millo will perform her NY debut atthe Brooklyn Center for the PerformingArts at Brooklyn College on November 2, at2pm. The program includes songs and ariasby Gluck, Handel, Bellini, Dvorak, Rossiniand Verdi. The concert will be held at Whitman Hall, Campus Road and Hillel Place.Tickets are $17, $14, $12 and $8. For information, call 434-1900.OPEN STUDIO WEEKEND: TheAssociation of Williamsburgh/GreenpointArtists will hold its second annual ArtistsOpen Studio Weekend November 8 and 9,from 12-6pm. The event will feature a groupshow at 128 Greenpoint Avenue, which willserve as the starting point for the individualstudio tour. There is a suggested donation of$3. For information, call 388-9844.ADAPTORS AT BACA: BACA Downtownwill host the opening of %u201cThe AdaptorsUnderground Performance Series,%u201d with%u201cThe Bed Experiment One%u201d on November9, at 7pm. The show, performed by BACADowntown%u2019s resident company The Adaptors Movement Theatre, has four men andwomen on a giant bed, in a surrealisticreality on the edge of sleep. BACAP' itown is at 111 Willoughby Street. Admiss. n is $6 or TDF voucher. For information, call 596-2222.ACA AWARDS NIGHT: All CommunitiesArts will hold its annual Awards Night onNovember 3 at 8pm. Awards will be givento people who have done extensive work forthe organization in the past year. Theceremony will be at the Advent GravesendChurch, at E. 12th Street and Avenue P.ACA will also hold elections that night. Forinformation on the group, write to P.O. Box126, Ryder Station, Brooklyn, 11234.SOUTH AMERICAN FOLK: Aires Columbianos, and harpist Atahualpa Poalasin,will perform %u201cFolk Music of Columbia andthe High Andes%u201d in Celebrate Brooklyn%u2019smusic series at the Prospect Park PicnicHouse on November 9. The concert willstart at 3pm at the Picnic House, inside thePark at Prospect Park West and 5th Street.Admission is $5 or TDF voucher; $2.50 forchildren under 12. For information, call788-0055.SLIDES ON GIVERNY: Elizabeth Murray shows her slides and talks about heryear as gardener and tour guide at thegarden Giverny in France, at the BrooklynBotanic Garden. The event will take placeat 2:30pm on November 2, in the GardenAuditorium, 1000 Washington Avenue. Admission is $2; seniors and children under 12,50 cents. For information, call 6224433.FENCE SHOW WINNERS: The BrooklynBotanic Garden will present a show in its%u201cPeople Who Paint in the Garden%u201d exhibitseries, of works by Winners in the Garden%u2019s1986 Juried Fence Art Show, November8-December 14. The painters in the showare: Robert Axelrod, Nancy Beal, RickBrazill, Victoria Hershey, Donna Lampell,Mary Lou Schuck, Marie L. Stile, and HedySchwartz. The photographers are: LeonardByrd, Jian Chen, Annemarie Wong Mogil,John Simonelli. The show is open Saturdayand Sunday, llam 4pm in the membersroom in the Administration Building, 1000Washington Avenue, or by appointment. Forinformation, call 6224433.CONEY ISLAND HOLIDAYS: Sideshowsby the Seashore will present a newvaudeville musical comedy, %u201cRed LetterDays,%u201d November 7-30. The show is acelebration of 50 American holidays, andalso includes six other short plays: %u201cThe54th Anniversary of the Practical JokersWho Got Married on April Fool%u2019s Day,%u201d%u201cThe Three Minute Manifesto for UncleSam on Stilts,%u201d %u201cLover%u2019s Leap,%u201d %u201cUltimately Death With Dogs in Detail,%u201d %u201cThelifeguard Choir Theme Song%u201d and %u201cTheRabbi%u2019s Prayer for the Commissioner ofBaseball.%u201d The show will be performed Friday and Saturday, 8pm; Sunday, 4pm.Tickets are $6. There will be a champagnereception on November 15, at 7pm; ticketsare $25. Sideshows by the Seashore is at theConey Island Boardwalk and West 12thStreet. For information, call 372-5159.PAINTINGS AT YWCA: Josette Urso iscurrently exhibiting her %u201ctapestry-sized%u201dpaintings at the Brooklyn YWCA. The exhibition will be on display throughNovember 15 in the grand lobby, and is onview Monday-Saturday, 9am-9:30pm. TheYWCA is at Atlantic Avenue and ThirdAvenues. For information, call 875-1190.REGINA CONCERT: Regina Opera willend its 1986 Sunday Concert series with aperformance of arias and ensembles from%u201cRigoletto,%u201d %u201cTales of Hoffman,%u201d%u201cKismet,%u201d %u201cStudent Prince,%u201d and otheroperas and musicals. Mezzo-soprano Harriet Couch will make her debut at the concert, which will start at 4pm on November2. Regina Hall is at 65th Street and TwelfthAvenue. Admission is $3, children free. Forinformation, call 232-3555.YEMENITE DANCE: The Inbal DanceTheatre of Israel will present a special program entitled %u201cWoman%u201d at BCBC %u2014Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts atBrooklyn College, on Wednesday, November5, at 2pm. The life of the Yemenite womanin Israel is stunningly depicted in dance andsong. Sara Levi-Tanai, founder and ArtisticDirector of Inbal since its formation 35years ago, will introduce, through poetryand narration, each of the dances. Brilliantcostumes and jewelry of the Yemenite tradition are used as well as authentic musicalinstruments. At the end of the programmembers of the audience will be invited tothe stage to learn a Yemenite dance. InbalDance Theatre is the first event in BCBC%u2019s1986-87 Weekday Matinee Series. Tickets are$8, $6 for senior citizens. The performancetakes place in Whitman Hall on theBrooklyn College campus, one block fromFlatbush and Nostrand Avenues. For reservations and information, call 434-BCBC.EDO RISES AGAIN: The BrooklynMuseum%u2019s exhibit %u201cHiroshige%u2019s 100 FamousViews of Edo%u201d continues with the second installment of %u201cWinter series openingNovember 5. The complete series of exquisite woodblock prints, crafted during the1850s as the artist%u2019s last great statement,will be exhibited in five stages, followingthe seasons. Next September, the entire 118prints will go on display. The prints depicteveryday life in Edo, the long-tranquilwooden city that now lies in ashes beneathmodern-day Tokyo. The first installment of%u201cFall%u201d closes on November 3. The secondinstallment will run through January 5,1987.A Musician/Activist WillJazz Up Heights ChurchIn 1961, Brooklyn-born jazzpianist Randy W eston traveled to Africa, and returnedto becom e one of the mosteloquent spokesm en for AfroAm erican music and culture.A powerful m usician, com %u00adposer and activist, his richm elodic sense fuses the influences of Ellington andMonk with those of traditional African music. W estonwill perform his first soloconcert in New York onNovem ber 1, 7pm, at the FirstPresbyterian Church, 124Henry St. Tickets are $5 orTDF, including cham pagne.^ 4 1 S I M M I l T v T . . P A R K S I O P FB M W I I \\ ( . \\ K I 11 I I ) A C A R R O L Limi

