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TRACK LIG H TIN G%u201cMention this AD for anExtra 10% OFF%u201dCity lig h tin g %u00a3%u00bb.S%u00a3%u201d I%u2018AveInvites Y ou To C om e In, S ay %u201c H E L L O %u201d A nd View A Fine S election o f A ntique C locks A nd W atch esTues.-Fri. 2477 Nostrand Ave.1-4:30 BrooklynSat. Sun. 12-5 252-9032Exhibiting artistsSabra Moore Margaret Cusack Natasha Harsh t lyse TaylorPainting %u2022 Sculpture %u2022 Prints %u2022 Stitchery139 Baltic Street (Cobble Hill)Brooklyn, N.Y, 11201(212) 875-0690Hours: Sat., Sun., Mon., 11-6 or by appointment.In a world of choice . . .it's time for Interludei \\r%u25a0\\\\ m tQuality DatingService3. 6. 9 and 12 monthmembershipsInterview by appointment only%u20acl*t%u00a3e /ilu d e ,Brooklyn's Personal Dating Service. Inc. 26 Court Street, Suite 603 PHONE 834-9630 NOT A COMPITER SERVICEAlso located at240 Prospect Park West 768-0800Credit Cards Acceptedby PhoneServing Brooklyn lor over 100 years with reliable service, superb artistry, quality dowers and plants with prompt delivery. Wire service available Corner ot 25th St. & 5th Ave.M o v e m e n tPage 4, The PHOENIX, November 15, 1979Precinct Line Info HeardThe Police Department%u2019s (PD) plan to implement new precinct lines contiguous with Community Board boundaries will be up for a public hearing at Borough Hall on November 20. The PD%u2019s plan has been twice postponed because of opposition from the Borough President, Howard Golden, who requested data on manpower allocations. Golden also wanted the Borough Board and Community Boards to review the information.Marcy Feigenbaum, Director of Community Boards at Borough Hall says that all of Brooklyn%u2019s 18 Community Boards have a copy of the plan and members of the Boards can testify to make their views known before the Borough Board votes on the matter. The Borough Board is made up of chairmen of Community Boards, the Borough Councilmembers and the Borough President.New precinct lines contiguous with Community Board boundaries are required by the City Charter and should be in effect by January 1980.%u2014IVSBrooklyn Bridge Closes RoadLate-night commuter motorists may find themselves foiled by the Department of Transportation over the next several weeks if they try to cross the Brooklyn Bridge. The landmark span, as part of its 96th birthday sprucing-up, has been carrying an inspection team of engineers since spring, cataloguing and checking each piece and member of the bridge, and the team is now ready to start sounding out the roadbed.For the next five weeks, the Bridge will be closed to traffic Sunday through Thursday nights from 9pm to 6am, The Department of Transportation recommends that people seeking aerial access across the East River adjust their routes and take the Manhattan and Williamsburg Bridges instead. The Brooklyn Bridge will be closed for its final time on December 13, after which it will resume its hours as an all-night haunt for drivers.%u2014LZGBaruch Move DiscussedThe first hearing to be held outside of Manhattan by the Board of the City University of New York took place at Borough Hall on Wed. Nov. 7, and Borough President Howard Golden took the opportunity to announce a new drive to bring Baruch College to Brooklyn. Saying that he had \report,%u201d a study which advised against moving the Manhattan! College to the site planned for it at the Atlantic Terminal Urban Renewal Area, Golden promised bo release shortly a new plan for the Baruch campus which would be %u201crealistic%u201d and %u201c fiscally responsible.%u201d Golden also denounced the %u201c totally obsolete%u201d physical plant of Medgar Evers College in Crown Heights, saying that %u201cone might question the motives behind City University planning%u201d with regard to the college, which serves %u201c 3000 minority students.%u201d%u2014L.H.School Board 13 MeetsCommunity School Board 13 will hold its monthly meeting on Tuesday, Nov. 20 at 7:30pm at P.S. 11 at 419 Waverly Ave. A public hearing for preliminary statements regarding the 1980-81 school budget will be held prior to the meeting. The hearing is scheduled for 7pm. A resolution to request the addition of grades 7 and 8 to P.S. 8, voted down at the October Board meeting, is expected to be brought up again this month.%u2014L.H.i ax m e e tin g I o b e H eldBusiness people interested in the advantages of tax incentives related to certain kinds of hiring can learn all the facts at a conference on %u201c Manpower Incentives%u201d , sponsored by the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce and other groups, next Tuesday, Nov. 20, at the Montauk Club at 25 Eighth Ave. at 8:30am. A full morning of informative presentations about %u201ctargeted job credits and other initiative programs will be followed by a luncheon address by Howard Samuels, of Howard Samuels Enterprises, formerly head of the Off-1 rack Betting Corp. Cost is $5 per company; call 875-1000 for further information.Community Leaders MeetLeaders of community organizations will swap their solutions to the problems of crime, sanitation, and neighborhood maintenance in a meeting on November 20th. The Brooklyn Heights Association is sponsoring the meeting with hopes that individual organizations who are struggling with these problems will become aware of the local help that is available to them. Representatives of block associations, merchant groups, churches, schools, and service organizations are expected to attend.All leaders of community organizations are urged to attend, and the meeting will be open to the public as well. It will take place at the Undercroft of the First Unitarian Church on Monroe Place and Pierrepont Street, 8pm on November 20th.%u2014J.L.Heights Brownstones SoldTwo Brooklyn Heights brownstones, 123 and 125 Pierrepont Street, have been bought by Pierrepont Investors Corporation, which will be converting them into 14 cooperative apartments. Albert Gottlieb of Collins Tuttle ana Company of Mannattan, wno nanaiea tne sale ot the buildings by Pierrepont Street Education Fund, reports that they are %u201cthe last two vacant brownstones in Brooklyn Heights%u201d . Modernization will include an elevator, while wood burning Fireplaces will be preserved.

