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                                    unmnunnCIRST CHURCH O f BROOKLYN| Dr. McKinney will preach onMonty Python's new movie%u201c The Life of Brian%u201dJ _____________________________\\n unexamined faith is not north haxingJamet, iMther AdamgScottoFuneral Homein Carroll GardensA Business Concerned and Involvedwith the Community it Proudly ServesSalvatore Buddy Scotto104-06 1st Place \\TR 5-2515 Brooklyn, N Y. H 23l \\UNION TEM PLEof Brooklyn17 Eastern Parkway at Grand Army PlazaBrookl>n'<> Oldest Reform Synagogue %u2022 founded 1848A F T E R S C H O O L AN D S EN IO R C IT IZ E N P R O G R A M S !Religious school (Nursen through High School)Adult StudiesI ml i\\ iduuli/cd 1 duration ProgramsOutstanding Brotherhood and SisterhoodplusBrookhn's finest athletic facilities (including()l>mpic-si/ed swimming pool, 4-wall handballcourts, sauna & steam room, masseur, etc.)OPEN 6 DAYS \\\\ EIKIA !A SUPERB ENVIRO NM ENT FOR FULFILLING ALL YOUR SPIRITUAL AND PHYSICAL FITNESS REQUIREMENTS.Special all-inclusi\\e family memberships forunder-35s... and singles, too!Large Enclosed, AttendedPARKING EOT ON PREMISESWITH DIRECT ACCESSTO TEMPI E HOI SE\\ I M I ()l K I1MIM I. or( Al l O f I-l( T. (>48-7600The Brooklyn HeightsSynagogueT h e C o m m u n ity T e m p le 1 1 7 R e m s e n S tre e tDavid Glaser. Rabbi Cantor Abraham GlazerStanley Levenson, Pres.Yom KippurKol Nidre Sept. 30 6 pm sharp Day O c 1. 1 10:00 amHigh Holy Day Servicesin Hebrew & EnglishSpecial Memorial Yizkor Services for the C om m unity Yom Kippur Day, Oct. 1st.,3 PM at the Bossert Hotel. R em em ber your loved ones w ith a prayer. Tickets not required. Special ch ld re n %u2019s service Yom K ip p u r Day 2 PM at the Synagogue 117 Remsen St. C hildren and parents invited. Tickets not requiredSukkot Family Service7:30, October 5thHeiigious Scnooi ivieeisTuesday & ThursdayPlaces Still AvailableMon.. Wed . Fri., 10 1 522 2070B ro o k ly n S o c ie ty fo rE t h ic a l C u ltu re5 3 P ro s p e c t P a rk W e s t at 2 n d S t. 7 6 8 -2 9 7 2Speaker%u2014Dr. Bernard GiffordTitle%u2014The Andy Young Affair%u2014a n o t h e r D e rc n e rtiv pSunday, Oct. 7E V E R Y O N E W ELC O M EJOSEPH C CUSIMANOCH ARLES J.CUSIMANODOMINIC J. CUSIMANOC u s i m a n o & R u s s oF u n e r a l H o m eService to the community for 3 generations230 COURT STREET624-43302005 W EST 6TH STREET372-1348Want A ReligionFor Your Child?You may find it atThe School of Liberal ReligionFirst Unitarian Church 50 Monroe Place Brooklyn HeightsClasses begin Oct. 7th Brochure available - 624-5466S U K K O TT h e H a r v e s t F e s t i v a lServices Friday EveningOct. 7 ,8 :1 5 PMSat. Morning, Oct. 610:30 A.M.Registration For Religious SchoolStill in Progress225 New families during thepast two yearsWE ARE GROWING,JOIN USF o r In f o r m a t io nC a ll7 6 8 -3 8 1 4Judge Candidates EndorsedLess than a week after the Republican and Democratic parties released their Supreme Court nominations for this year%u2019s November judge elections, the Liberal and Conservative parties have passed their own endorsements. The Conservatives on Sept. 24 picked James G. Cansella, a8th Avenue at Garfield Place, Brooklyn, NY 11215A REFORM CONGREGATIONI H HU1 1 1H A* %u25a0%u25a0%u25a0%u25a0%u00ab!l %u201d %u2019 | H | I at aM i l lStop painting on layer after layer ot messy chemical paint remover The new Blower Heat Gun can cut through a dozen coats of old paint in seconds Try it' Call Bill Sikes: 857 9765county iCac*cr servative Partv and Paulin^Beth Elohim- c v tk N trz]D. Gold, the chair of the Brooklyn Women%u2019s Bar Association and co-chair of the Family Court Bureau of the Borough of Richmond to vie for the two vacant Supreme Court seats thisyear.The Liberal party, on the same day, cross-endorsed the two Democratic hopefuls, choosing Joseph Dowd, a judge on the Civil Court, and Vincent Pizzuto, who works as a law secretary for Brooklyn Surrogate Bernard Bloom. Once elected, Supreme Court judges serve 14 year terms on the bench.-LZGVigil Protests Stevens at A&SA vigil on behalf of the workers of J.P. Stevens, was.held on Thursday, September 27, in front of the A&S Department Store in downtown Brooklyn, where products made bv the Stevens mills are sold. The Stevens mills are concentrated in North and South Carolina. The vigil was conducted by the Brooklyn Council of Churches, affiliated with the National Council of Churches, an organization of Protestant and Orthodox churches which has protested Stevens actions nationwide. The Brooklyn Council was joined by other local organizations in the vigil, including Brooklyn NOW (National Organization for Women).The Brooklyn Council, NOW, and other groups are urging customers to boycott Stevens products on account of the textile company%u2019s continuing attempts to prevent unionization of the mill workers by the Amalgamated Clothing Workers%u2019 Union (ACTWU). The speakers at the vigil included people who had experienced the working conditions at the Stevens facilities, which they described as dangerous and degrading.A&S, where Stevens products are sold under the Utica label, and other designer labels such as Yves St. Laurent, insist on their right to continue to sell the products. Robert MacMillan, 'the Senior Vice President of the store, who is reported to be leaving that position, has said that the store would not stock the products only %u201c if there is no demand for them%u201d . Boycottcrs emphasized that the boycott is aimed at Stevens product only and not at A&S. %u2014L.H.Return of Engine SoughtA small number of Crown Heights residents demonstrated in front of Borough President Howard Golden's apartment building in Flatbush on Saturday, September 28 to call attention once again to the loss of fire engine company 234 from 1472 Bergen Street in Crown Heights. The group gathered in front of 303 Beverley Road, at East 8th Street carrying signs and protested the loss of fire protection in Crown Heights. They cited other losses and transfers of facilities in Crown Heights and the resulted toll in buildings and lives lost to fire in the neighborhood.Borough President Golden met briefly with the group, telling them that it was %u201c embarrassing\were protesting in front of his home. %u201c I%u2019m just a tenant here,%u201d he said, %u201c 1 have neighbors you should see me at my office.%u201d He defended his record in working tor better fire service in Brooklyn, saying that he had %u201cfought for 234, but lo s tT h e demonstrators accused Golden of failing to %u201c rally Brooklynites around him%u201d in working for better fire protection.When Crown Heights demonstrators protested the loss of Engine Company 234 in the fall of 1978, Councilmember Mary Pinkett and State Assemblyman Thomas Bartociewicz were arrested in the demonstration. Charges have since been dismissed%u2014LHMTA Keeps Buses For NowAfter a heady showing of Brooklyn politicians and community members at a public hearing held by the Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) on Sept. 12, three local bus lines that were scheduled for cancellation were granted a reprieve. The three bus lines, the B-19 Carlton Ave, bus between the Atlantic Ave. Long Island Railroad Terminal and the Fort Greene Navy Yard, the B-33 Hamilton Ave. bus from the Buttermilk Channel out around Prospect Park to Ocean Avenue via Prospect and Parkside Avcs., and the B-71 Union St. bus, running up and down Union St. between Smith St. and Grand Army Plaza, had been designated liabilities by the MTA, which cited diminutive ridership and financial disaster as the reasons for their plans to cut the service. Local residents, however, said (hat the buses should be left as they are, since Columbia Street is slated to undergo a massive urban renewal plan in the pending future, and work is underway to make the whole waterfront stretch a functional and populous spot.Following the hearing, the MTA announced that it would hold off plans for cutting the buses until a borough-wide, comprehensive study of all surface transit routes is made sometime in the next year.-LZGPope Uses Navy Yard PewterThe chalice and paten to be used by the Pope at his Washington D.C. mass will have been made by the Queens Art Pewter Ltd. located in the Brooklyn Navy Yard. A chalice is the ceremonial goblet used for the wine in the mass and a paten is a plate to hold the communion wafers.T h e Q u e e n s Art Pewter Ltd. is a tenant of the Commerce Labor Industry Corp. of Kings (CLICK) and Recording to Abraham N. Goodman, President of CLICK, it is a %u201c real milestone in CLICK%u2019S industrial history, because it recognizes John Arcate%u2019s Queens Art Pewter as a leader in the field nation-wide.%u201dFhe chalice will be eight inches high and seven inches in diameter; the paten will measure fourteen and a half inches in diameter.Page 4, The PHOENIX, October 4, 1979
                                
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