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                                    GRAND OPENINGDE PRICE IS RIGHTFlea Market Items.A Touch of Everything837 to 839 Union St.(between 7th & 6th)Open Everyday, Mon. through Sat.r- accelerated-----------------------PASTE-UP & M E C H A N IC A LPORTFOLIO COURSE6 WEEKS/12 SESSIONS CLASSES BEGIN NOV 19C A L L TO S E E C L A S S IN A C T IO N(212)925-5385 GAP Workshop225 Lafayette St New York, N.Y. 10012 |piL%u2019ETIQUETTEAtlantic Gardens 539 Atlantic Avenue Brooklyn. N.Y. 11217 875-2059TAIZ YEMEN 172 Court St.(RESTAURANTFrench & International Cuisiner ' joy e ,r Specialties:Ch, k. ih Crc.im Sauce & SpirwchBeans & Lamb TjizSpecial Veal with Peaches Other Yemen & Middle Eastern FoodsWc acccpt Mastercridt^ie and Visa625-3907 or 839711AM 11PM (7 Days) Bring Your Own WineGiftware. Accessories & Glassware Greeting CardsLE CAFEPLUS 163 Joralem on St. 852-7498Seafoods, steaks, soups, saladscappucino. espresso, pastriesCatering tor parties %u2014 up to 55 peopleOpen tor Breakfast. Lunch and Dinner163 Joralemon St. 852-7498BRENNAN'SW ine and Liquors, Inc.Full Line of Imported& Domestic Chilled WinesO PEN 8 A .M.-12 M ID N IG H T455 Atlantic Ave. (Cor. Nevins St.)TR-5-8877JIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIgJ o e %u2019sP l a c e, ()>P%u201dAU|268 Clinton Streetserving european cuisine Swith a prix fixe dinner menu LJdinner served from 6-11 wed.-sunbring your own wine 596-2623on exquisite ploce to dine264Waverly Ave.Brooklyn, N.Y.Join us In ouroutdoor garden%u201c Joe s Place is the 1kind of restaurant to |take Manhattan friends fwho believe that Bropklyn |has no interestingrestaurants.\PHOENIXOct. 28,1976| Open 4-12 every night || except Monday & Tuesday |I Only 5 minutes from BAM %u00a7E 622-9244 Credit Cards E! ^CookjL^Exquisite Hom e MadeCookies, cakes, pies,Quiche, breads,m uffins, croisant etc.AND NOWNo sugar, natural &nutritious cookies,muffins, bread, buns,jams, sodas, &much more.70 7th AvenueBrooklyn OpenTues thurSat 636-5288 8a m to6p mSun, 9 a m lo 3 p mRpst'rt ations R r t o m m e n d rdWHITE ELEPHANT SALEHHi 3* S iu15m< />mc ojrandnesB r o o k ly n 's O n ly a cafeN o n * S m o k in g C a feS ta rv in g : r o t t r p s , t e a s . p a N lr ir s . s a l a d s , v r d p l a r i a n r r p a s l sM e n %u2014F r i. 11:3 0 %u201410 r %u201c* S a l 6 - 1 0S u n d a y 11- 97 8 3 -9 4 4 5 1 9 6 h a ll s i. b r o o k lv nSPONSORED BY PHILOPTOCHOS SOCIETYOF STS. CONSTANTINE 8 HELENPage 16, The PHOENIX, November 15, 1979p l a c e 64 SCHERMERHORN ST. (n e a r c o u r t st .j 1SEED S O F T H E 1 F U T U R E C A F E438 Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y.(Bet. Bond & N e vins Sts.) 6 2 5 97 5 9LUNCH %u2022 DINNER %u2022 CATERINGG uiseppes Home C ooking & Jazz & Fine A rtCanneloni, Stuffed Whiting, Stewed Rabbit,Chicken a la Luciana, C aponata-Sicilian Eggplant Stew,and m uch moreTues.-Thurs. 11 AM-11 PMSat. 3 P M -12 PMFri. 11 A M -12 PMSun. 1 P M -11 PMMime Time At BACAThe television generation got it easy, with words, music and images all running in concert at the flick of a switch, but ihe Festival playing this weekend at the Brooklyn Arts and Culture Association (BACA) Downtown Culture Center is abandoning the multi-sense media approach for the simple visual. It%u2019s time for mime, and a roundabout of three gropes, Mimelights Theatre, the D.C.C. Mime Workshop and Moni YakinTs New York Pantomime Theatre will be playing their best to give you full sensory impressions thorough only a few of your senses.Mimefest %u201979, at the BACA Downtown Cultural Center,111 Willoughby St., Nov. 16, 17, 18 at 8pm, admission$2.50, call 596-BACA for information or reservations.Absent Day Plays PrattOkay, picture this: you%u2019re living roundabout the late 50%u2019s in a small town south of the Mason-Dixon line, and one morning you wake up and find that the black population has up and vanished. Confusion; madness; chaos; followed by the collapse of everyday life and the influx of wild anarchy. All rounds out well in the end, with the blacks returning, oblivious to their absence, and things return to normal. Well, maybe not normal...there could be some differences...or it could be that things there will never be the same again. Go and see Douglas Turner Ward%u2019s %u201c The Day of Absence,%u201d presented by the Indoda Entsha Society and sponsored by the Clinton Hill Repertory Company.%u201cThe Day of Absence,%u201d Nov. 16 and 17 at 8pm, Nov. 18 at4pm, Nov. 20 at llain, in the Pratt Institute Memorial Hallat DeKalb Ave. and Hall St., tickets $4 ($3 students andseniors], for more information call 783-7346.RSVP Opens Fall SeasonThe season%u2019s opener is always a touchy proposition, but the RSVP Theatre Cooperative seems off on a good leg as it kicks off with a production of Leonard Gershe%u2019s %u201c Butterflies Arc Free,%u201d directed by RSVP Director Bernadette Caruso. The two-act comedy will be performed on only two of the upcoming weekends, so catch it while the catching%u2019s hot.%u201cButterflies Are Free,%u201d by the RSVP Theatre Cooperative, Nov. 17, 18, Dec. 1, 2 at 8pm, Sunday matinees at 3pm.Admission $2 at the Park Slope Methodist Church, 8th St.and 6th Ave., call 596-2222 for information andreservations.Tokyo Quartet Plays BAMContinuing its series of Chamber Music concerts, the Brooklyn Academy of Music will host the Toklyo Quartet in three performances this weekend, rounding out the group with special guest artists John Clark on horn, Julius Levine on bass and Robert Routch on horn. As its regular fare of instruments, the Quartet has two violins, a viola and a cello. With its extra players, the Quartet will perform pieces by Haydn, Bartok and Mozart.The Tokyo Quartet will appear at the Brooklyn Academyof Music, 30 Lafayette Ave., on Nov. 16, 17 at 8:30pm, Nov.18 at 2pm. Tickets are S6.50; for more information orreservations, call the Academy at 636-4100.LIU Houses Double ShowThe Humanities Building at the Brooklyn Center of Long Island University now houses an exciting and compelling exhibit that can be seen only once a year. In the downstairs lobby gallery of the building the interested viewer will be able to abserve and critique paintings, sculptures, and graphics by members of the Contemporary Artists Guild.Additionally, artist Beatrice Riese will be exhibiting her work in the Selena Library Learning Center through November 20. With a mixture of 4 to 6 primary and secondary colors apiece, Riese will show eight of her abstract oil paintings on canvas each harmonizing on a common theme.The Comtemporary Artists Guild show will be on display9am-10pm, Monday through Friday and 9am-5pm Saturdayand Sunday at Long Island University, Flatbush and DeKalbAves. Hours for the Salena Library are 9am to 5pm Mondayto Friday. For further information phone 834-6090.Logos Show In Pratt HallEven though the disco-mania from the Saturday Night Fever craze has waned, the original lithographic design of the trend-setter production that put disco dancing on the cinematic map is very much alive at the Visual Communications exhibit at the Pratt Institute Gallery. The show, which will run through Wednesday November 21, is a collection of approximately 117 drawings, photographs, illustrations, and graphics by members of the faculty. A compilation of advertising and graphic art enhances the comtemporary theme that is present throughout the varied exhibit. On one edge, an intriguing three dimensional painting engineered for a Medical seminar is projected from the left corner of the exhibit; directly across is the logotype creation for the Arrow Corporation, which rightly conveys the electronic aspect of the corporation.Many oil paintings on canvas are included in the exhibit that have been used to depict particular messages. A life-size picture of fast food from the Florida Capital Corporation is juxtaposed on the corporations%u2019 annual report, near the cover for %u201c Marvin and Tige,%u201d a novel by Franeina Glass, along with other covers on show.%u201cVisual Communications%u201d , at the Pratt Institute Gallery,200 Willoughby Avenue through November 21, openMon.-Fri. from 9am-5pm, call 636-3462 for moreinformation.
                                
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