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                                    U P F R O N T \E n c lo s e c h e c k fo r $5 fo r ev e ryfive w o rd s o r part th e re o f.A rtic le s or n u m b e rs c o u n t a s aw o rd . $ 1 0 m in im u m . M a il o r call:P H O E N IX N E W S P A P E R3 9 5 A tla n tic A v e n u eB ro o k ly n , N Y 1 1 2 1 7T e le p h o n e (7 1 8 ) 6 4 3 - 1 4 0 0D e a d lin e T u e s d a ys a t 3 p mMOVING SALE: King waveless water-bed (complete) $550 neg.: queen sofa bed, $150; two 7-mo. memberships St. George Racquet Club.; Days 212-214-1107 eves. (201) 654-3899. Ask for Ray. (02)BAG SALE: Fill a bag for $5. October 2, 3, & 4. Berkeley Carroll Street School Thrift Shop. 42 Fifth Ave. Mon.-Sat., 10-6. 783-7422. (02)DRIVER WANTED: $60 per week to drive young gymnast to practice, pm, from Ft. Greene to Flatbush/Sheepsheads Bay. Call 789-3945 or 212-227-3132. (10-1)OBESE? UNIDUE PROGRAM. Safe, professional, effective, caring. Free literature. 855-3603. (02)PSYCHIC FAIR, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5 , 11AM-7PM. Doral Inn, 49 Street/Lexington. Adm. $3.00. (212)686-4121. (02)FLEA MARKET: 47th St. 5th & 6th Ave. Sat. Oct. 4th, 11am4pm. Rain Date 10/5. (02)SMALL PICK UP TRUCK 1980 Ford Courier, CAMPER SHELL, REBUILT ENGINE, 70,000 MILES $1700. 858-2945. (02)PLANT MAINTENANCE F/T: Electronics mfr. needs handyman for bldg, maint. Exper%u2019d plumbing/ boilers/carpentry/ electric. Good pay. Benefits. Call 718 522-3493 8:30-11am. for appt.REAL ESTATE SALES: Active Montague St. office. Long established seeks licensed co-op salesperson. Excel, financial oppty. Heights Cranford Inc. Mr. Glass/Mr. Young 624-7000. ____________________________________ (02)5 ROOM APT. B0ERUM HILL. Renovated, parquet floors $800.852-6380. (02)GARAGE AVAIL FOR MID-SIZE OR SMALLER CAR. Corner Bond & Douglas St. $85/month!y. (718) 875-5650. (S25)LARRY%u2019S%u2014 500 PIANOS. New $1,250. Used $495. Tuning services. (718)469-9278. UFNPIANO TUNING: REPAIRING: REGULATING: Resident tuner at BAM. Call for estimate, appraisals. Frank, 643-0968.PRODUCTION ARTIST: Phoenix seeks paste-up person with graphic arts skills including type specking. Must be available Fri., Mon., Tues. Call for interview, Mr. Armstronq, 643-1400. (0 9 )MOVING? I WILL PAY A SUBSTANTIAL REWARD for your rentstabilized lease. 1-2 bdrm. pref'd. Call 718-855-1925. (02)FOR SALE SCRIPTOMATIC ADDRESSING MACHINE: Like new. Plus cabinets and misc. supplies. Best offer over $500. Call 625-5456. (S18)PART-TIME/AFTER SCHOOL: Editorial assistant in busy newspaper office. Must be energetic self-starter with writing skills. Some Saturday work. Call Mr. Cloud, afternoons at 643-1400. (09)EXCITING CAREER OPPORTUNITY Deal with architects, decorators, designers, contractors and the public. On the job training. Apply in person M-F, 9-1pm. Decoware 944 McDonald Ave., Brooklyn; 240 E. 59th St. NYC. (S25)RECEPTIONIST P /T FOR CHIROPRACTIC OFFICE Brooklyn Heights. Front desk, phone, light typing, neat . . . possibilities. Tues. and Thurs. 8am-2pm. Sat. 10-1 optional. Call 852-3535 Tues. or Thurs. (S25)\parties up to 100. Elegance on a shoestring. Fully catered. Call \WEEKEND POSITION AVAIL, tor responsible adult. Contact Celia M-F. 788-6564.__________ (S25)BOERUM HILL VICINITY: Huge 6 rm. floor thru needs roomate M or F to share with painter F age 26. Nr. all trains. $400 mo. 797.4315GREAT JUNIORS TENNIS 13 WEEK PROGRAM^OW FORMING. Cobble Hill Racquet Club. Call Gary 643-4400.HATHA YOGA CUSSES w7 EXPER. TEACHERTPark Slope area. Register now. Wednesdays (Begin 9 /2 4 ) 7-9pm $30 month. Call Liana. (718)499-6115.\\y A Y BACK W HEjSJFreshman Congressmember Fred Richmond was nam ed as chair of theforestry subcom m ittee of the House C om m ittee on A griculture in September,1976.FOURTEEN YEARS AGOOctober 5,1972Joe%u2019s Restaurant, a longtime fixture in Downtown Brooklyn closed itsdoors forever, sparking a Phoenixeditorial on the civic apathy of theborough. While financially theborough was on something of anupswing, no civic leaders werearound to champion the causes of thebusinesses already at work.Three principals were needed torun District 15 schools. Vacancieswere at P.S. 124,130 and 131 %u2014 andthe school board said they would remain vacant until at least November.Councilmember Tom Cuite andBorough President Sam Leone helpedinstall street signs to direct artslovers to the Brooklyn Academy ofMusic, which was enjoying somethingof a renaissance at this time.Roughly 85 percent of the BrooklynHeights Association backed the City%u2019scontroversial pooper scooper legislation that had yet to pass. The other14.5 percent said dogs should becurbed, but the City should do thescooping. Some 967 members voted onthe issue.A community group was formed towatch the continued expansion of theLong Island College Hospital %u2014 tokeep it from infringing too much onCobble Hill. Executive DirectorWilliam Klein said there was no needto worry, because %u201cwhat is not needed is a group of seven-storybrownstones designed to look like ahospital.%u201dTEN YEARS AGOSeptember 30,1970Key Food opens at the corner ofAtlantic Ave. and Clinton Street, thesite of the former A&P unit, gutted byfire.The City%u2019s Department of Transportation said it was planning to allocate$270,000 to fix the walkway on theBrooklyn Bridge, in a plan that included new planks, a redrawing of thegrades on ramps to make bikingeasier, and possible safety improvements.Freshman Congressman Fred Richmond was named chairman of theForests subcommittee on the HouseAgriculture Committee.The Montague Hotel was threatened with closing as more than 90health violations were found in thebuilding. According to local officials,the hotel was in worse shape %u2014 20 ofthe violations were categorized ashazardous %u2014 than the PierrepontHotel that closed the previous winter.FIVE YEARS AGOOctober 1,1981The Red Hook Containerport wasdedicated by Gov. Hugh Carey and ahost of local officials. The $20 millionproject was said to create a $13million payroll for local employees.Members of Community BoarcfTwolistened to several proposals for theproperty in Fulton Ferry, giving themost attention to developer DavidWalentas%u2019 plan for the area, althoughstating that none of the plans was fully acceptable. Members were concerned that Walentas%u2019 hope to buy theSweeney and Gair buildings wouldpush manufacturing from the area.Other plans considered were from theDeMatteis Organization, and Specialty Restaurants that proposed a%u201cDisney World%u201d atmosphere for theland.Plans were unvieled in ProspectPark to begin renovations on theBoathouse and the Picnic House.A building at 30 Fort Greene Placewas accidentally demolished becauseof an administrative snafu.ONE YEAR AGOOctober 3,1985The homeless men living at 55 Hanson Place were given a five-day stayof eviction until the City could findanother shelter to relocate them. Thebuilding was to go under renovationso the Department of General Services could move in.Community School Board 15 attempts to create a policy towardsallowing students with Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) into the Slope/South Brooklyn/SunsetPark schools. The discussion wastabled when two proposals weremade, and no agreement wasforeseeable.The Atlantic Antic had another successful year %u2014 this time on the heelsof Hurricane Gloria. While two daysprior to the fair merchants were taping windows and barricading doors,the Sunday Fair got the whole community out into the sunshine.Chairman of the Boar-/D.B. A rm strongEditor & PublisherM ic h a e l A. A rm strongAssistant EditorTracy GarrityReporterLiz KochT h e H o m e to w n N e w s p a p e r o f D o w n to w n B ro o k ly n 's H is to ric B ro w n s to n e N e ig h b o rh o o d sRob TaylorEditorial InternJared C loudContributing EditorsD ennis HoltA rth u r K roeberPhotographyK athryn KirkGeneral ManagerG eorge FialaAdvertising ManagerB inni IpcarAdvertising SalesEd G illespieClassified Advertising3 9 5 A tlantic Avenue, Brooklyn 1 1 2 1 7Telephone (7 1 8 ) 6 4 3 -1 4 0 0Serving Brownstone Brooklyn since 1972Member ofW inner of M o re th an 6 0 A w ards Since1 9 7 2Fo r O utstan d in g R eporting andCoverageBest in the State of New York for General Excellence and Coverage of Business and EconomicIssues%u2014N.Y. State Press AssociationI uHIa D, * . 1 ------- 1 1CW \\r--1 _ 1kj1 r\\Art, TypographyM ike M olanphyAram BaumanPress Honored for Outstanding Reporting on the CourtsAssociation and Legal Issues, 1983, 1 9 8 5 %u2014 N.Y. State BarAssociationThe Phoenix (USPS 044650) is published weekly by the Serif Press, Inc., Michael A. Armstrong, President. Second ClassPostage Paid ai Brooklyn, New York 11201. Annual subscription by mail in Brooklyn $12.50. Elsewhere $15. Single copy priceat office and newsstands 35 cents. Copyright %u00a91986 Serif Press, Inc. Postmaster: Send clwir.es o f address to Phoenix, 395Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn, New York 11217.P a g e 2, T H E P H O E N IX , O c to b e r 2 ,1 9 8 6
                                
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