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rCoutourier Dressmakinaby f f a F a / t - S /S u its %u2022 d re s s e s %u2022 fo rm a lw e a r, y o u r d e s ig n o r o u rsChoose from pattern or photo we will design from muslin tofinish. Also quality alterations.409 A tla n tic Avenue (betw . N evins & Bond Sts.) (718)624-5899 Open: Mon.-Sat. (10-6)When You NeedA Good FloristHere We Are!Where We%u2019ve BeenFor 133 Years...James Weir Ecklebe and GuverAmerica's Oldest Urban FloristF lorists %u2022 F ru ite re rs C ity & W o rld w id e D elivery A lw ays o p en 7 d ay sWe Take Major Credit Cards 160 Montague St. %u2022 Brooklyn Heights_____________624-0270________________ART CLASSESIN THE ARTIST%u2019S STUDIO: An established artist working in the realist tradition wilt continue classes in painting and drawing Atlantic Avenue. Small classes Call tor information 625-3872. (F21)DANCE EXERCISEPRIVATE EXERCISE CLASS Your home or my studio Experienced Prolessional Instructor References %u2022 (718) 852-1305MUSIC(F L U T E L E S S O N S )P'-olessiona w/master now accepting students of all levels and ages. Studios in Park Slope and Manhattan Call (718) 788-1988SLOPE JAZZ: Beginning, returning, crossing over? Learn to create your own sons Study the complete program, including: scales, theory and applied harmony, tunes, transcribing lines and solos: ear-training, jazz rbyth'-1 I have 22 years teaching experience and I love it My playing follows the tradition of Louie Billie. Prez. Fats. Art. Fatha. Bird. Dizz. Oscar, Lenny. Lee. Sal Ail instruments and voice $20 per hour. Charles SiDirsky (718)768-3804 (024)PROF ROBERT SCOTT. PHD ol Jacksonville University Now in Brooklyn ottering:Piano %u2022 Voice %u2022 Theory Lessons Beginners %u2022 IntermediateAdvanced Call 718-237-9381 (J5)TENNIS INSTRUCTIONTENNIS INSTRUCTORTennis. Learn from the best: WD. CARTER BATSON, DIRECTOR, Universal Christian Alliance Professional tennis registry U.S.T.A.; Y.W.C.A. Competed in Pan-American and Olympus and Hall of Fame: (718)622-8542. (Jn11,87)JUNIOR TENNIS CLINIC SUMMER 8 6 . ^ 0 OXFORD TENNIS CLUB187 S. OXFORD BKLYN, NY: Beginners %u2022 Intermediate %u2022 Advanced %u2022 Boys and girls, ages 6-18. Session I June 2-August 1,1986. Thurs. & Fri.: 4 to 6. Session It August 8-September 12,1986. $150.00 per session. Partial financial aid available. One session videotaped.FURTHER INFORMATION (718) 624-5461. INSTRUCTORS MEL SWANSON, KEVIN N. HARPER. (S3)TENNIS AT THE PARADE GROUNDS We feature adult beginner clinics, junior programs beginner to advanced, leagues for men and women, mental toughness clinics and more Call Steve Carberry at 436-8233. (J5)TUTORING 'T E S T TA K IM G %u2022 T U T O R IN G : Assessment %u2022 Counseling %u2022Referral %u2022 Workshops %u2022 SAT %u2022 GRE %u2022 SSAT %u2022 COOP %u2022 GEO %u2022ACHIEVEMENTS %u2022 COLLEGE ADVISEMENT %u2022 Dr Mae Sakharov %u2022 JoanMargolis, MA, MCS Educational ft Testing Services, complete battery of Educational Testing now available 220 Court St. Days 858-0050. Eves.(212)807-8941. (S2)Instruction Advertising%u2022 $64 for 8 weeks %u2022 (Jp to 30 words %u2022 DeadlineThursday, at 4pm for following week%u2019s publication. Send -nnv and rhprk to The Phoenix Newspaper 395 Atlantic Ave. %u2022 Bklyn 1 1217See the Statue of Liberty in Many colors plus one that Glows in the Dark at thePark PlazaRestaurant101 C a d m a n PlazaAll the Creations of William Rice Paint Point Products WilliamsburgTHE PHOENIXFor The BestCoverage ofEducation andSchools inBrownstoneBrooklyn.E v e ry w e e k , 5 2 w e e k s a y e a r, th e a w a rd -w in n in g P h o e n ix s ta ff is on th e jo b to b r in g you a ll th e n e w s o f th e b u s y D o w n to w n B ro o k ly n b ro w n s to n e n e ig h b o rh o o d s .T h e P h o e n ix w a s th e 1 N u m b e r O n e w e e k ly n e w s p a p e r in N e w Y o rk S ta te in 1985,O u r re p o r tin g o n e d u c a tio n is ju s t o n e o f th e re a s o n s w hy.G e t The P h oenixd elivered rig h t toyour m ailbox everyw eek. Use th ecou p o n on P a g e TwoHelp to FixUp YourHomeF in d It E v e ry W e e k in th e N e ig h b o rh o o d S e rv ic e C la s s ifie d sGoing Out? SeeUp & Coming forWhere to Go.N.Y.P.D.QUICK GRAB: An 85-year-old woman had her shoulder dislocated and possibly fractured her hip when two male teenagers grabbed her pocketbook from her and fled with the $400 it contained. This occurred June 24 at 3:20pm on 2nd PI. between Court and Smith.ROWDY SHAVERS: Several youths were accused of reckless endangerment and disorderly conduct after being caught on June 25 at 11:25am at the Carroll and Smith Sts. subway spraying shaving cream into train windows. They had already covered 60 percent of the platform with cream, police report said.TWO WITH TOOLS: A business was the scene of a June 24 attempted burglary on Baltic St. between Carroll and Smith Sts. Antonio Vasquez of 22nd St., age 37, and 20-yearold Eddy Chalmers of Hoyt St. were arrested by Officer Ozieskli at 3:20pm after they stole a Black and Decker professional table saw machine valued at $500 and a M ilw aukee Heavy-Duty Sawzall valued at $200.STATE PROPERTY: A $1000 car cellular phone was removed from a State-owned 1986 Plymouth on Congress St. between Clinton and Court Sts. some time between 12am on June 24 and 6am on June 25.DOUBLE TROUBLE: Two men seated in a car at Bay and Court Sts. were arrested for possesion of a controlled substance, a clear bag of white powder. Juan Ferre, 19 was also accused of possession of a forged South Carolina license. His accomplice was David Virreil, 22, and they were caught on June 23 at 9:20am.One Year Later, Police Still Search For Ft. Greene KillerA year after the shooting death of three teenagers in a grocery store in Fort Greene, police are still searching for Ali Nagi, the owner of the store. Nagi shot and killed Sean Kibbler, 17, Gary Feldman, 14, and Pierre Fautin, 19, and wounded Line Thompson, 16, in a dispute over a can of soda. Detectives at the 88th Precinct believe that Nagi has left the country and possibly returned to his native land of Yemen.The June 12 shooting last year occurred after the four youths entered the Imperial Supermarket at 65 Lafayette Ave. and Nagi argued with Kibbler and Fautin over a can of soda he accused them of stealing. According to the police, Kibbler claimed he brought the soda into the store, at which point, Nagi pulled out a .44 caliber gun from behind the counter and shot Kibbler and Fautin and then shot the other two youths. Thompson wastaken to Brooklyn Hospital and survived. Three were dead and Nagi escaped. The deaths spurred an outburst, from the Fort Greene community where the youths lived as parents and neighbors sought answers for the killings and precautions against future confrontations.Detectives from the 88th say that other law enforcement agencies have joined the search for Nagi, but it is doubted that he still remains in the United States.Police arrested Moslah Nagi Fadal, an employee of the store, after the shooting for allegedly blocking the door while the incident took place. He was charged with two counts of coercion and two counts of unlawful imprisonment but according to the office of District Attorney Elizabeth Holtzman, Fadal was acquitted on July 30 last year. %u2014 L.K.Narcotics Cops Crack Down On Red Hook Drug DealersOn June 18, at approximately 6pm, two undercover narcotics officers approached a building at 437 Columbia St., Red Hook, to purchase some vials of crack, a manufactured cocaine drug. After they entered the building%u2019s main door, they climbed several stairs and found a half inch steel door covering the stairwell. The two officers tapped on a small six by eight inch sliding window through which they buy was made.Two men, Collins Hagans and Adolphus Brown, were subsequently arrested after the police officers had to enlist the department%u2019s Emergency Services unit to rip the fortified steel door out of the stairwell. The two men were charged with criminal sale of a controlled substance, a Class B felony.Once inside the premises, police found 100 vials of crack valued at approximately $950 to $1000 and two ounces of cocaine valued at about $2000. The two men arrested were allegedly strictly selling the drugs and not manufacturing them.Narcotics Division Lt. Ronald Naimoli said that the goal is to eventually get to the top man manufacturer, but that they %u201cgo up one level at a time.%u201d The warrant for this arrest was authorized after a three week investigation. While the door was being removed, the alleged crack dealers had little chance of escaping through the back door as 20 officers were securing the building. %u201cThe show of force was sufficient to obviate any resistance,%u201d said Naimoli. %u2014 R.T.Lt. Ronald Naimoli and O fficer StevenRichardson (right), of the South BrooklynNarcotics division, with some of the vialsfound at 437 Columbia in Red Hook.(Phoenix/Taylor Photo)______PROSPECTD A D l f ls Everyone'sr A K I l Business!Be an Active Supporter ofBrooklyn%u2019s Great OutdoorsApply Now For V.I.P.P.(VOLUNTEERS IN PROSPECT PARK)%u2022 Gardening & Maintenance %u2022%u2022 Art Exhibition Staff %u2022* Public Outreach *For More Information, Contact:Susan Moore, (/i%u00bb )V 6 5 -8 V o oProspect Park Administrator%u2019s O ffice95 Prospect Park WestBrooklyn, NY 11215PREPARE FOR:TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS S*ICE 1938Classeswill be held locallyv i i n v n r a w i i v i .For furthor InformationCall: 336-5300Page 42, TH E PHOENIX, July 3,1986

