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                                    3 M enand a C radleFrt.: 5:30, 7:25. 9:20, 11 10 Sat.: 1:30. 3:35, 5:30, 7:25, 9:20,- 11:10 Sun., Mon.: 1.30, 3:35. 5:30.M 7:25. 9:20 Tue%u00bb.-Thura.: 6. 7:50,1 ^ l%u201c M ona L is a %u201dFrt: 5 15, 7:10, 9:10, 11 Sat.: 1:15.3:05, 5 10. 7:10. 9 10. 11 Sun. 6 Mon.. 1:15, 3:05, 5:10, 7 10. 9:10 Tues. Thur*.: 6, 7:45, 9:30f n L a z a f t 314 FLATBUSH at 7th AVE.,w PARKSLOPE *1718)636 0170. .iCCJJin c in e m a ^4 4 ITII m i m i *265 COURT STREET. BROOKLYN 596-9113Farah Fawcatt%u201c E X T R E M IT IE S ;%u2019Frt., Mon.Thur*.: 4 15,6, 7-50. 9:45 Sat.: 2 45 4:30, 6 15, 8. 9 45 Sun4, 5:50, 7:40, 9:30%u201c Flig h t of the N avig ator%u201dFrt., Mon Thura. 1, 2:35 Sat, Sun.: 1pmTom Hanks & Jackie Gleason%u201c N othing in C o m m o n %u201dFn. & Sun.: 3, 5:20, 7:40, 10 Sun.-Thurs.: 3, 5:15. 7:30. 9 45%u201cThe G reat M ouseD etective\Every Dey but Sunrtey at 1:15 1 Sun: 1.2:30HVl!l!NM!iH*H e ld O ver%u201c H e a rtb u rn %u201dMeryl Streep, Jack NicholsonM R2,4,6,8,10Another Brooklyn TraditionO N THE FARKProspect Park West at Ninth Street in Park SlopeFor information and reservations tei. 768-3723Boerum H ill CafeSince 1S68Fine Cuisine in one of the oldest and most beautifully preserved restaurants in New York.Hours: Wednesday thru Sunday 5 to 11 p.m.148 H o y t S tre e t C o r n e r o f B e rg e n S tre e tR eservations 875-9391If YouCan WriteAbout TheArts, We%u2019ve Got SpaceFor YouOver the past decade ThePhoenix has won m oreaw ards for its arts reporting and coverage thanany o th er n e w spap er intow n. And w ith the bo o m %u00ading gro w th o f Brooklynbased arts a c tiv ity we arecon stan tly ch allen g ed tom ore and b e tte r coverage.T h a t%u2019s why w e are seekingto add new w riters andcritics to o u r roster offree-lancers fo r th e seasonahead. If y o u %u2019ve got thew riting s kills and thecritical eye, w e w ould liketo h e ar from you.W e are p a rtic u larly s eeking p e o p le who haved e m o n stra te d journalisma b ilitie s in: th e areas ofclassical m u s ic and jazz;w riting abo u t dance; reporting and w ritin g about th evisual arts; th e independent and e xp e rim e n ta l filmscene; b o o k publishingand sm all press scene.If you w a n t to be c o n %u00adsidered fo r free-lancea ss ig n m en ts on Brooklynstories In th es e fields,please s en d us a lette rabout your backgroundand s kills w ith som epublished s a m p le s of yourw riting.W rite to : A rts E d ito r, T h e P hoenix, 395 A tla n tic A venue B ro o k ly n 11217(No Calls Please)FASHIONSOF THEPHOENIXFour Times a Year We look at the Fashion Scene In and A round Downtown BrooklynNext FashionReport ComingSeptember 25For AdvertisingInformation, Call641-1400BEN NORRISDistinguished American Painterdrawings ... watercoiors ... oilsSFCTION 2Free-W heeling In BoroContinued from rage iipreservation and the Bill of Rights to Westway and fishing expeditions in New York%u2019s harbor.TOWARD GREEN WOODOnce we left Prospect Park, we rode toward Green-Wood Cemetery before heading up Seventh Ave. and 41st St. to Sunset Park. While every member of the group talked about who they knew that was buried at the cemetery, few had ventured to see the harbor view found from the Park%u2019s vista.Looking out over Bush Terminal toward the Statue of Liberty, we thought we%u2019d found one of the few undiscovered sights in the city. Neither Zhoroff, Lemer, or myself was familiar with the neighborhood, but the rangers said it was definitely the spot to be when the Statue was lit last month.Our tour then continued down the hill toward Bay Ridge where we hit the Promenade and bike path that hugs the Shore Parkway. Despite the humidity, a ride along the waterfront can be tremendously refreshing with the sea breeze fanning the tired cyclist. Owls Head Park, was another stop and unique find. Located just at harborside, the park%u2019s vantage point peers out over the bay to Staten Island and down to the Verrazano Bridge that we eventuallyrode under on our way to Dyker Beach Park.From Dyker Beach we traveled Fourteenth Avp through Borough Park and back to Prospect Park. A unique part of a bike tour is the opportunity to see the neighborhoods change. With an historically Scandinavian and now becoming Hispanic community found in Sunset Park, we then saw signs of both Norwegian and Italian communities in Bay Ridge before finding the Hassidic Jewish community in Borough Park. Along the way, neighborhood residents are happy to talk about some of their local lore.While the touring speed might be considered a disadvantage by some cyclists with more experience and the potholes found in many city streets a minus by the less-experienced rider, bicycling Brooklyn with a group of friends or on an organized tour will open a lot of chapters in the borough%u2019s history that are otherwise unknown to most local people.For more information about the Urban Park Ranger bike tours, call 287-3400.The Urban Park Rangers, have no more summer tours scheduled, but are now planning their post-Labor Day schedule which should be available in several weeks. Call 287-3400 for more details.M e rlin 's M agic Featured In Penny Bridge PlayThe Penny Bridge Players are now presenting a new version of the Arthurian legend, %u201cMerlin the Magical,%u201d at the Penny Bridge Playhouse in Brooklyn Heights through Tluirsday Aug. 28.%u201cMerlin%u201d is written by Barbara Elliot and Jane Stanton, with music by Ann SmilleShafer, Tina Shafer and Adele Dinerstein, with special arrangements by Sid Cherry, music director. Warren Kelley will direct and choreograph. Richard Buchsbaum portrays the title role. Familiar to Penny Bridge audiences, Buchsbaum performed last season in many featured roles including the Wolf in %u201cRed Riding Hood,%u201d the Ogre in%u201cPuss and Boots%u201d and earlier this summer as Beast in %u201cBeauty and the Beast.%u201d He has appeared in many roles with the National Shakespeare Company Conservatory, the New York Renaissance Festival and the Florida Shakespeare Festival, as well as in dinner theatre and regional theatre in the Middle Atlantic States.%u201cMerlin the Magical%u201d is presented at the Playhouse, 59 Cranberry Street, through August 28. For information about time and reservations call 522-0255 or 858-9152. Individual admission $3.75, group rates available.Shakespeare's In The Park A t Local ParksJoseph Papp%u2019s New York Shakespeare Festival Theater will present its production of %u201cRomeo and Juliet%u201d and %u201c As You Like It%u201d in Brooklyn parks over the next few weeks, directed by Estelle Parsons. This season is the 31st anniversary of free Shakespeare in the parks and the festival%u2019s mobile theater.%u201cAs You Like It%u201d will be performed in Fort Greene Park on Friday, August 22. %u201cAs You Like It%u201d will be presented in Sunset Park on August 23. %u201c Romeo andJuliet%u201d is there August 24.%u201cAs You Like It%u201d will be performed at the Red Hook Recreation Center August 26 and at Von King Park in Clinton Hill on August 27. The same work will be presented in Prospect Park at the Ninth Street Bandshell August 28 and 30; on August 29 and 31, %u201cRomeo and Juliet%u201d will be performed.All shows are free and start at 6pm, except for the Prospect Park performances, which begin at 8pm. For further information, call (212 ) 598-7105.Art TakesSUNDAY JAZZ SERIES: The Williamsburgh Music Center will be concluding its August series of performances on Aug. 24 and 31. Vocalist and viola virtuoso, Alva Anderson is featured in the first performance. Frank London will be performing on his trumpet with the accompaniment of his sextet on the 31st. Both concerts are from 4-7pm, and are held at the center, 367 Bedford Avenue. Admission is $5; half price for members. For more information call 384-1654.GARDEN BENEFIT: The first benefit party for the Hilton A. Vaughan Scholarship Fund will be held in the garden of 334 Park Place August 24, 3-6pm, featuring classical music by the Manhattan Woodwind Trio, and jazz by flutist Sherry Winston,Vaughan was the first black ambassador from Barbados to tne U.S. and the United Nations since the independence of that i. %u2018and. >nd the scholarship fund will be used ' support and promote scholarship .,mongHook Arts, there will also be presentations by the Young Dancers in Repertory dance company, rhythm and blues band Germani, and professional mimes and jugglers. There will also be a band contest. For information, call 852-8058.GARDEN QUINTET: Concert goers are invited to sit on the grassy slopes of the Brooklyn Botanic Garden for a performance by the Virtuosi Quintet on Aug. 24 at 3:15pm. The classical quintet, under the direction of James Jeter, bassoonist, includes Bradley Gamer, flute, Larry Tietze, clarinet, Robert Botti, obie, and Milton Phibbs, French horn. The program, set for the Alfred T. White Memorial area, includes Mozart%u2019s %u201cWind Quintet.%u201d The concert is free, and the garden is located at 1000 Washington Ave, For information call 622-4433.'HOR v .\\COITIONS: Auditions for pro v. members of the Grace Choral%u25a0' Brooklyn begin August 25th, and* %u25a0 %u25a0 - :*v-f4-i'jpn; WednesdayDtrecf.eo o> \\ exander R. >rn, p<*rfor~* i t'e :>eni in December and will 1 r>\\ tile Haydn Mozart1 * he fall concert season- %u201c *' %u25a0%u2019 ivaldi \%u2018 -om Gaeli's \'%u2022eoMwable pitch and sightai i %u25a0 should call 842-312)1rc m \m.001men, write Mrs. Joy Vaughan u %u25a0rone Brooklyn. : 1238.'GDANCE CELEBRATION:%u2022 >%u2019! bold its sixth annual Musioance. ; %u25a0 ., I ,'4 jf) ; Jiffp'/%u25a0 .cos and V rona .streets, ;>pm. m action to performances by students at Red%u2022qe 24. THE PH O EN IX, August 21, 1986
                                
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