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                                    B rooklyn S o c ie ty forE thical C ulture53 Prospect Park West at 2nd St. 768-2972Sunday, Dec. 16%u2014 11 A.M.ABORTION: The Woman%u2019s QuestionSpeaker%u2014 Baroara MeinvmEVERYONE WELCOMEThe Kane Street SynagogueConservativeCongregation Baith Israel Anshei Ernes236 Kane St. 6 short blocks beyond Atlantic Avenueinto the heart of Historic Cobble Hill.Friday Evening Services-6:30 p.m.Saturday Services-10:00 a.m.Sat., Dec. 1st, 10 a.m.Shabbat - ChanukahRabbi Special Music by theRaymond Scheindlin de ROSSi SingerS Estab.1856Relig.ous School in Session. Registration Open For information TR5-1550or 269 3445JOSEPH C. CUSIMANOCHARLES J. CUSIMANODOMINIC J. CUSIMANOCusimano & RussoFuneral HomeService to the community for 3 generations230 COURT STREET 2005 WEST 6TH STREET624-4330 372-1348The Brooklyn H eightsSynagogueThe Community Temple 117 Remsen StreetDavid Giazer. RabbiStanley Levenson, Pres.Friday Eve Chanukah Celebration& Family ServiceFri., Dec. 14, 7:30 p.m.Religious School MeetsTuesday & ThursdayPlaces Still AvailableOffice Hours: Mon. Wed. Fri, 9-12 coo ->070Tues & Thurs, 3-6UNION TEMPLEof Brooklyn17 Eastern Parkway at Grand Arim PlazaB r o o k l y n %u2019 v O l d e s t R e f o r m s > n a g o g u e %u2022 F o u n d e d 1 8 4 8AFTER SCHOOL ANDSENIOR CITIZEN PROGRAMS! *%u2022Religious School (Nursery through High School)Adult StudiesIndividualized Education ProgramsOutstanding Brotherhood and SisterhoodplusBrooklyn%u2019s finest athletic facilities (includingOlympic-sized swimming pool, 4-wall handballcourts, sauna & steam room, masseur, etc.)OPEN 6 DAYS WEEKLY!A SUPERB ENVIRONMENT FORFULFILLING ALL YOUR SPIRITUALAND PHYSICAL FITNESS REQUIREMENTS.Special all-inclusive family memberships forunder-35s...and singles, too!I #%u00bb%u2022%u2022%u00ab%u00ab#%u00bb E. A H o m r ln dPARKING LOT ON PREMISESWITH DIRECT ACCESSTO TEMPLE HOUSEVISIT Ol'K I KMPI I or < Al l <)l H< K 638-7600Page 22, The PHOEnTx' Decembe7T37l979%u2022 HANDMADE POTTERY AN D ETC.-O%u2022COQ%u00a3LUXOQ.%u2022COCt:3CLAtlantic CeramicIs BackWhoiesaie%u00bbReiaii At The Same Place347 ATLANTIC AVE.(At Hoyt St.)16 P.M.*7DAYS%u25a0VASES %u2022 CANDLEHOLDERSAlso located at24 0 Prospect Park West768-0800Credit Cards Acceptedby Phone\\c U f r aServing Brooklyn (or over MX) years with reliable service, superbartistry, quality flowers and plants with prompt delivery.Wire service available. Corner of25th St.& 5fh Ave.Established 1861CONGREGATION BETH ELOHIM(Garfield Temple) 8th Ave. &G arfield PI.in Park SlopeA Reform CongregationEugene Sack - Rabbi Emeritus%u2022 Gerald i. Weider - RabbiHANUKKAH FESTIVITIES* 1979Friday Evening. December 14th: at 8:15 P.M.Hanukkah Candlelight ServiceHanukkah Songfesf, Dreidel GamesGrab Bag for Children, Folk Dancingwith Karl Finger, Latkes for AllSaturday Morning, December 15th: at 9:30 A.M. -12 NoonHanukkah Family WorkshopsLectures for Adults. Arts & Crafts forChildren, Family Service, Light Breakfast ServedFriday Evening, December 21st: at 8:15 P.M.A Hanukkah Cantatawith music from Handel%u2019s Oratorio%u201cJudas Maccabeus%u201d225 NEW FAMILIESDURING THE PAST TWO YEARSWE ARE GROWING! JOINUS!For In fo rm a tio n , c a ll 768-3814ScottoFuneral HomeIn Carroll GardensSalvatore Buddy Scotto104-06 PlaceTR5-2515 Brooklyn, N.Y. 11231Artists Show Space WorksAstronomers express themselves through their science, philosophers by putting sentences to their, thoughts; reporters stick with a concrete vocabulary, and the artists showing in the Pratt Institute Gallery are working to create a system whereby they can hit on a concrete mode of expression channelled through abstract o u tlo o k s an u individual expression.The works showing at the %u201c Subject: Space%u201d exhibit share in common elements of style, including ranging abstraction, careful and meticulous structure, intense color, and a complex, interpretive suggestion of space. Five of the six artists on display met for more than a year before the show, working out some of the groundworks for their concept, so that the final product would be unified, and more than a haphazard wandering through spacial landscapes. Five of the artists in the exhibit, William Conlon, Fred Guyor, Nabil Bahas, Tony Robbin, and John Schnell, are painters; the final touch is sculpture by Richard Friedberg.%u201cSubject: Space%u201d will show at the Pratt Institute Gallery,DeKalh Ave. and Hall St., through Dec. 20; the gallery isopen weekdays from 9am-5pm. Call 636-3517 for moreinformation.All-Bach Program PlaysAn all Bach program with outstanding soloists in an intimate atmosphere are on the program for the Academy of Music. Johann Sebastian Bach is represented with his Sonata in D Major for Viola de Gamba and Harpsichord and arias and cantatas, and Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach%u2019s Sonata in G Minor for Oboe and Harpsichord. Performers are Benita Valente, soprano; Ronald Roseman, oboe; Timothy Eddy, cello; and Kenneth Cooper, harpsichord.Chamber Music Series at the Brooklyn Academy of Musicin an all Bach program, Dec. 14, 15 and 16 at 8:30 pm,Sunday at 2 pm, reserve tickets at 636-4100.BAM Recalls Ragtime DaysRagtime, it might become just about as popular in the 80%u2019s as it once was in the Gay Nineties. Max Morath who has been playing ragtime since 1963, will be at the Brooklyn Academy of Music December 17 as part of BAM%u2019s Musical America series.Morath, in his %u201c Living a Ragtime Life%u201d one-man show, will be singing his way through thirty years of ragtime from the Gay Nineties to the early Twenties with Scott Joplin, Irving Berlin, George Cohan, Bert Williams and May Irwin songs.Morath is a veteran of the Village Vanguard and the Newport Jazz Festival and after years of living in the shadow of the big bands and progressive jazz, Morath and ragtime have come into the limelight. And so Morath will play his piano accompanied by an old Edison phonograph and sing, chat and tell some jokes recreating the days when in America everything seemed possible.Max Morath %u201cLiving a Ragtime Life%u201d at the BrooklynAcademy of Music, Dec. 17, reserve tickets at 636-4100.Atlantic Gallery ReopensThe Atlantic Gallery, formally located at 81 Atlantic Avenue opened a group show at its new location, 458 West Broadway in So Ho. The show includes works by its new members such as; Linsey Pow, a new representational painter from Austra lia; Boldan Skupinski, an accomplished etcher from Poland; and Astred Fitsgeral, a seriographer from Norway. Artists from the metropolitan area will also be exhibiting abstract and realistic works in a wide variety of media. Rich Samuelson, the gallery director, feels that the newly expanded membership of thirty painters, potters, and sculptors will strenghten and broaden the gallery%u2019s public appeal.Friends of the gallery who would like to meet the new members are invited to stop by the Atlantic Gallery on Saturday, December 15 for the operiing party. The hours will be from 4pm-7pm. The regular gallery hours will be 12am-6pm, everyday but Monday.BACA Hails Decade PastThe Brooklyn Arts and Culture Association (BACA) will be doffing its hat to a decade of heady borough arts this year with a Tenth Anniversary Celebration across the East River and up on Manhattan%u2019s far shores, in Lincoln Center%u2019s Alice Tully Hall. While BACA has been on the arts scene for more than its commemorative ten years, the organization was actually officially chartered in 1969. This show will be pointed toward the past, taking recognition of the growth and programs and offshoots that have sprung from BACA, and will sport as performers a number of home-grown institutions, including the Of, By and For Youth Theatre, the Rolando Jorif Dance Company, the Atlantic Players, the A1 Browne Quintet, A Bakers%u2019 Half Dozen Dance Theatre and the Jeff Samaha Singers.%u201cBACA%u2014The first Ten Years%u201d will take place on Dec. 28at 7:30pm in Lincoln Center%u2019s Alice Tally Hall as part of theCon Edison Community Holiday Festival series. For moreinformation call 783-4469 or 783-3077.Church Exhibit OpensThe Long Island Historical Society has opened a photographic essay %u201c Brooklyn Churches and Synagogues.%u201d The exhibit, which will run until January 5, captures important architectural and cultural features of notable Brooklyn houses of worship, often providing historical and denominational information as well. Oscar Israelowitz, the exhibit%u2019s designer, is a former Guest Curator and Project Coordinator of the Whitney Museum, which will show Brooklyn Churches and Synagogues after its run at the Long Island Historical Society. The exhibit is free and the public is invited to attend Tuesdays through Saturdays, from nine to five, until January 5.%u2014J.L.
                                
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