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                                    0 1 / 3 7 %u25a0ft- v- H1' %u2022 ' %u20184 A~ - n l f H ; 3 ROOM %u201e ~ ... ,,,,,. :-v, 'C BrtUOr'.t- < '%u25a0%u25a0' %u25ba ...%u2022 -%u25a03 r a n D A Sir's y A u A %u00bb- A &^OOHl.y n , N < -%u25a0 %u2022*%u2022 - - %u25a0Q L * n r , ^ Special Fourth o f July^ m n e S Section, Start?TVz^e75%u2022 %u25a0 rQsLocal MinisterIs RememberedRev. Melish Is Remembered AsDedicated And Peace-LovingIn Memorial Service, Page 4Swear In New School MembersDistrict 13 and 15 BoardMembers Officially Begin TheirNew Terms, Page 3MOBI Puts OnWhale Of A ShowB ro o k ly n 's H o m e g ro w n ja z zG ro u p R eadies F o r A S h o w A tP rosp ect P ark, Page 9Gathering TalentIs Easy As A BCBCThe Perform ing Arts Center AtB ro o k ly n C o lle g e Plans F o r itsN e x t Season, ra g e i iP 1 H s E C T I O N 2 [I T Y A A MXJ-JL---%u00a5 JlS \\Traffic Jams to WorsenBY ARTHUR KROEBERTraffic congestion and air pollution in Downtown Brooklyn are already bad and likely to get worse by the end of the decade. That is the conclusion to be drawn from the recentlycompleted studies of several proposed development projects.A comparison of the environmental impact statements for Atlantic Terminal, the Renaissance Plaza hoteloffice complex, and the Morgan Stanley building under construction at Pierrepont and Clinton Sts., showed that there are already a dozen airpollution %u201c hot spots%u201d in Downtown Brooklyn, where concentrations of carbon monoxide exceed Federal clean air standards.By 1988, when these three projects and the huge MetroTech development will be at least partially built, there will.be 17 %u201c hot spots,%u201d the reports say.Similarly, there are now at least fifteen m ajor intersections downtown where traffic flow exceeds the capacity of the road during at least one peak hour each weekday. That number will rise to 24 by 1988.While the traffic tangles will bring additional headaches to BrooklynContinued on Page 44Phoenix Photo by Kathryn KirkBrooklyn Marches For LibertyMembers of the First Unitarian Church Peace group gathered at thechurch%u2019s home in Brooklyn Heights to begin a march for peace andliberty that would take them across the Brooklyn Bridge to Battery Park,where thousands of other protesters would gather for a demonstration.Posters, banners, and candles and flashlights lit up the sky to protestthe homeport of the U.S.S. Iowa, which may call Staten Island home.%u201c I ir t h * 1 I n T b n U a r h n r f/v r D m n n \ c H a v r e -%u2022O -* - r ----- -- -------%u00bb ----- , -----------, ------------------------voiced their dissention.(Phoenix/Barber Photos)
                                
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