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r U P F R O N T lC L A S S IF IE D SEnclose check for $5 for every five words or part thereof.Articles or numbers count as a word. $10 minimum. Mail or call:P H O E N IX N E W S P A P E R3 9 5 A tla n tic A v e n u eB ro o k ly n , N Y 1 1 2 1 7T e le p h o n e (7 1 8 ) 6 4 3 -1 4 0 0__________ Deadline Tuesdays at 3pm. _ _________EDITORIAL ASSISTANT. Lower Manhattan newspaper seeks detail-oriented person to compile its weekly calendar. Part time. Work in Downtown Brooklyn location. Must have arts in%u00ad terest and know how to type. Send letter detailing your interest and skills to: Calendar Editor, 395 Atlantic Ave. Brooklyn 11217. (A14)%u201c ROCK THE BOAT%u201d Moonlight Cruises. Private/Corporate parties up to 100. Elegance on a shoestring. Fully catered. Call ' %u2018 Food for Thought. %u2019' (718) 375-1350. (A28)7,999 BOOKS FOR SALE in one lot for someone who wants a book business $3,999. Call Barry Weisent 212-736-1100 24 hours. (A21)VENDORS WANTED: Flatbush Frolic Street Fair. Sun. Sept. 21. Focus: Youth and Family. Good crafts and food wanted. Call (718) 469-8990 for application.RUNNERS WANTED:Flatbush footrace. Sun. Sept. 21. 3 1/2 mi. Long-sleeve designer tee-shirt. Call for application (718) 469-8990. (A21)PSYCHIC FAIR SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 7. 11AM-7PM. Doral Inn, 49 Street/Lexington Avenue. Adm. $3.00 (A21) 'VENDORS WANTED FOR FLEA MARKET: Three Sats.. Sept. 13. 20, 27. Landmark Pratt area, Brooklyn. (718) 522-2613.BLOCK BAZAAR - VENDORS WANTED. August 23. Saint Felix St. between DeKalb & Fulton. 625-2857 or 855-1243 for info. (A14)WANTED: CONTEMPORARY, INSPIRATIONAL GOSPEL ARTISTS for Gospel Music Week in Bklyn. Aug. 18 to 21. Out%u00ad doors. Exposure. Benefits & Awards. Call (718) 756-8763 or write U.G.A., #240, Bklyn 11203.RESUMES BY PROFESSIONAL WRITERREASONABLE %u2022 (718) 376-7847IF YOU%u2019RE A TEACHER OR INSTRUCTOR WHO TEACHES ATHOME, We'd like to list you in The Phoenix Home Instruction Guide, a feature presentation in our Sept. 4 edition. These tree listings are available to anybody who teaches at home and will accompany a feature story on the subject in that issue. To be listed, send us in writing, a 10-12 word description of your course, together with your name and address and phone and a brief description of your background or expertise. Deadline for listing, August 22. No calls please. Write: Home Instruction Guide. Phoenix. 395 Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn 11217. (A21)PIANO TUNING: REPAIRING: REGULATING: Resident tuner at BAM Call tor estimate, appraisals, Prank, 643-0968m-05-87)LARRY%u2019S -500 PIANOS. New $1,250. Used $495. Tuning services. (718)469-9378.PASSAP DU0MATIC 80 KNITTING MACHINE, Like new, 4 color changes. All tools, weights and stand. Retails for $1400. Asking $900. 596-0188 after 7pm, wkends.CHARLES PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE CO., INC. has an open%u00ad ing for a salesperson or broker who lives in Ft. Greene or Clin%u00ad ton Hill. If you are self-motivated and would like to be affiliated with one of Brooklyn's oldest Real Estate firms, call us at 638-6600. (A7)FOUND: BEAUTIFUL DOG WITH LIMP Friendly, housebroken, but landlord will not allow. Needs a loving home desperately or must be given to ASPCA. Call Liz at 643-1400. (A14)ASSISTANT TO THE DISTRICT MANAGER: Community Board #7-K. College pref%u2019d. Background public administration/rela- tions or related. $20,000 plus benefits. Submit resume and three references by August 18,1986 to: Mr. Andrew Di Orio, 21232ndSt., Bklyn, NY 1132. (A7)FOR SALE %u2014 Olympus copying machine, 4-phone system, desk, chair, lamps. (718) 768-3220 ' (J31)FLEAMARKET - BAM PARKING LOT at corner Flatbush and Atlantic Ave. (10 Lafayette Ave.) EVERY SUNDAY - 9am to 6pm starting &10-86 Parking Available - Call (212) 752-8475 or (212) 593-FAIRIMMEDIATE F/T, P/T POSITION Available for word process ing/data entry; versatile office experience; good telephone voice, non-smoker. For small fast-paced environmental con%u00ad sultant in Brooklyn Heights. Salary negot. 718-330-0550. (A7)Way Back When From the Pages of The PhoenixM a rvin and W a lte r R osen o u ts id e th e ir fire -d a m ag ed re s ta u ra n t in A u g u s t1981. (P h oenix P hoto)FOURTEEN YEARS AGOAugust 17,1972Illegal parking is a threat to safety in Brooklyn Heights says the New York City Fire Department. A Phoenix survey of No Parking Fire Zone locations in the Heights on a weekday morning showed that over 80 percent were occupied.Incumbent 52nd A.D. Assemblyman Joseph Martuscello, who was defeated for renomination in the June Democratic Primary by challenger Michael Pesce, announced this week that he would seek re-election as an independent candidate in November.Two landmarks, the fire-damaged Hogland Laboratory Building of Long Island College Hospital on Hicks Street, and the Heydenreich Pharmacy at Atlantic and Clinton Sts. were in the news this week. A citizen group in Cobble Hill mobilized to prevent demolition of the Hogland remains, and a Phoenix editorial lamented the replacement of the pharmacy, founded in 1849, by a fried chicken franchise outlet. %u201cWe welcome every kind of business to the area in an appropriate place,%u201d the editorial said, %u201cbut not at the sacrifice of even one inch of our historic past.%u201dTEN YEARS AGOAugust 19,1976Brooklyn Congressman Fred Richmond, appearing personally in New York State Supreme Court in a challenge to his legal residency, denied he had offered $20,000 in 1967 for the support of a man who was challenging him for U.S. Congress this year, Luis Hernandez. At the end of the case, Hernandez is thrown off the Democratic Primary ballot and Richmond%u2019s Heights residency is upheld.This week, 75 Red Hook residents blocked off traffic on Hamilton Avenue to protest what they called the neglect of their community by the City of New York which had left an unfilled sewer trench up Van Brunt Street abandoned for nine months following the collapse of a President Street building in which one man was killed.Nine buildings on Atlantic Avenue, between Third and Fourth Avenues, part of the Atlantic Terminal Urban Renewal Area (ATURA), have been sold to two local men, the City of New York announced this week. Ted Hillis and William Harris, the buyers, paid $67,100, the price advertised by the City%u2019s Housing and Development Agency.FIVE YEARS AGOAugust 20,1981Mayor Ed Koch joined residents of Park Slope and Boerum Hill in a march that started at Union St. and Fifth Avenue, protesting the active prostitution business in the area. Themarchers, accompanied by City Councilmember Abe Gerges and his challenger for the Council seat that year, Tom Dunne, ended their trek with a rally at Fourth Ave. and Pacific St.Brothers Marvin and Walter Rosen, owners of Junior%u2019s Restaurant, were trying to pick up the pieces of their business from temporary offices in the basement of Albee Square Mall. A fire Aug. 17 totally destroyed the famed eatery%u2019s second floor. They vowed to reopen as soon as insurance claims made it possible to begin work and denied rumors they might relocate. %u201cJunior%u2019s is the pulse of downtown Brooklyn. There is no other place,%u201d said Marvin Rosen.Efforts to find a permanent home for the activities of the Carroll Gardens Neighborhood Women, which sponsors a college program for local women are boosted by a grant from Manufacturer%u2019s Hanover Trust Bank, said co-director Elizabeth Ferraioli.ONE YEAR AGOAugust 22,1985Formation of a new group, Mothers of Black Youth, is announced in the wake of a series of incidents in Ft.Greene and Clinton Hill where youngsters have been beaten and killed. %u201cToo many of our children have met violence,%u201d said Rev. Michael Harris of Emmanuel Baptist Church. %u201cToo many of our young people have gone to the cemetery.%u201d An open house at the 88th Precinct, a parent support group and a teen rap center are among the proposals for action.By a vote of six to five, the Board of Estimate approves a plan to build the first of eight proposed garbage incinerators in the city at a site in the Brooklyn Navy Yard. City Council President Carol Bellamy, comptroller Harrison Goldin and Borough President Howard Golden cast their votes against the plan.An investigation into the 1980 campaign of Rep. Charles Schumer by District Attorney Elizabeth Holtzman was declared ended by Holtzman. Though she found Schumer made %u201cextensive use of State-paid employees of his Assembly staff and State office facilities to promote his candidacy,%u201d there was no basis for prosecution under New York laws. She referred the matter to the Federal Elections Commission.C hairm an of the BoardD.8. ArmstrongEditor & PublisherM ichael A. ArmstrongA ssistant EditorTracy GarrityR eporterLiz KochRob TaylorEditorial InternJared CloudC ontribu ting EditorsDennis HoltThe Hom etow n N ew spap er o f Downtown B ro o k ly n 's H istoric Brow nston e N eighb orhood s395 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn 11217Telephone (718) 643-1400Serving Brownstone Brooklyn since 1972Arthur KroeberPhotographyKathryn KirkG eneral M anagerGeorge FialaA dvertising M anag erBinni I pearA dvertising SalesEd GillespieC lassified A dvertisingLydia BurleyA rt, TypographyMine MoianpnyMember of New York PressA ssociationWinner of More than 6 0 Awards Since1972For Outstanding Reporting andCoverageBest in the State of New York for General Excellence and Coverage of Business and EconomicIssues%u2014 N .Y. State Press AssociationHonored for Outstanding Reporting on the Courtsand Legal Issues, 1983, 1985%u2014 N .Y. State BarAssociationThe Phoenix (USPS 044650) is published weekly by the Serif Press, Inc., Michael A. Armstrong. President. Second ClassPostage Paid at Brooklyn, New York II201. Annual subscription by mail in Brooklyn S12.50. Elsewhere $15. Single copy priceat office and newsstands 35 cents. Copyright %u00a91986 Serif Press, Inc. Postmaster: Send changes o f address to Phoenix, 395Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn, New York 11217.P %u00abB * 2, T H E P H O E N IX , A ugust 2 1 ,1 9 8 6

