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U PFRO N T i iie e ic ir n9E n c lo s e c h e c k fo r $5 fo r everyfive w o rd s o r part th e re o f.A rtic le s or n u m b e rs c o u n t as aw o rd . $ 1 0 m in im u m . M a il Or call:P H O E N IX N E W S P A P E R39 5 A tla n tic A venueB rooklyn, N Y 11 2 1 7T e le p h o n e (7 1 8 ) 6 4 3 -1 4 0 0Deadline Tuesdays at 3pm.LOFT BED FOR SALE Queen size. Mattress included. $175. 788-1413. (A21)LARRY%u2019S%u2014 500 PIANOS. New $1,250. Used $495. Tuning services. (718)469-9278. UFNPIANO TUNING: REPAIRING: REGULATING: Resident tuner at BAM. Call tor estimate, appraisals. Frank, 643-0968.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 S a ts. Sept 13. 20, 27 Landmark Pratt area, Brooklyn. (718) 522-2613.7,999 BOOKS FOR SALE in one lot for someone who wants a book business $3,999. Call Barry Weisent 212-736-1100 24 hours. (A21)EDITORIAL ASSISTANT. Lower Manhattan newspaper seeks detail-oriented person to compile its weekly calendar. Part time Work in Downtown Brooklyn location. Must have arts interest and know how to type. Send letter detailing your interest %u2022and skills to: Calendar Editor, 395 Atlantic Ave. Brooklyn 11217. (A14)RESUMES BY PROFESSIONAL WRITER REASONABLE %u2022 (718) 376-7847IF YOU'RE A TEACHER OR INSTRUCTOR WHO TEACHES AT HOME, We%u2019d like to list you in The Phoenix Home Instruction Guide, a feature presentation in our Sept. 4 edition. These free listings are available to anybody who teaches at home and will %u2022 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)IMMEDIATE F/T, P/T POSITION Available for word processing/data entry: versatile office experience: good telephone voice: non-smoker. For small fast-paced environmental consultant in Brooklyn Heights. Salary negot. 718-330-0550. (A7)LARRY%u2019 S -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 opening for a salesperson or broker who lives in Ft. Greene or Clinton 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. (A 7)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)WANTED: CONTEMPORARY, INSPIRATIONAL GOSPEL ARTISTS for Gospel Music Week in Bklyn. Aug. 18 to 21. Outdoors Exposure. Benefits & Awards. Call (718) 756-8763 or write U.G.A., #240, Bklyn 11203.FOR SALE %u2014 Olympus copying machine, 4-phone system, desk, chair, lamps. (718)768-3220 %u2019 (.131)FLEAMARKET - BAM PARKING LOTai corner Flatbush and Atlantic Ave. (10 Lafayette Ave.) EVERY SUNDAY - 9am to 6pm starting 8-10-86Parking Available - Call (212) 752-8475 or (212) 593-FAIR%u201c ROCK THE BOAT%u2019 %u2019 Moonlight Cruises. Private/Corporate parties up to 100. Elegance on a shoestring. Fully catered. Call %u2014i i t u ojrtv ft-%u00bbr 4^rr\\ , , - _ASSISTANT TO THE DISTRICT MANAGER: Community Board #7-K. College pref'd. Backgrounctpublic administration/relations or related $20,000 plus benefits. Submit resume and three references by August 18. 1986 to: Mr. Andrew Di Orio 212 32nd St . Bklyn, NY 1132. (A7)Way Back When From the Pages of The PhoenixKorvettes in the Fulton Mall, was one of th e first stores to stay open on Sundays Ionabefore blue laws were repealed. (Phoenix file photo) %u2019FOURTEEN YEARS AGO August 24, 1972Inmates at the Brooklyn House of Detention on Atlantic Avenue filed a class action suit this week against the practice of six N.Y. State Supreme Court Justices, charging them with setting excessive bail amounts and other arbitrary abuses of the judicial process.The Chelsea Theater Center of Brooklyn was honored in ceremonies at Borough Hall by Mayor John Lindsay and Borough President Sebastian Leone for its contribution to the cultural life of Brooklyn and the quality of the New York theater.Phoenix reporter Corrine Coleman visited the Longshoremen%u2019s Medical Center on Court Street in Carroll Gardens where there were, this month, some 60,000 active charts on file.TEN YEARS AGO August 26,1976Korvette's Department Store on Fulton Street announces it would open its doors to shoppers on Sundays for the first time. An official of Abraham and Straus, its neighbor across the street, says it %u201cis and has been opposed in principle to the idea,%u201d but that %u201cthe competition would probably push us to it.%u201d Max L. Schulman of May%u2019s said he shares the A&S position.An around-the-clock police task force for the area of Fifth Avenue between 3rd Street and Flatbush Ave. is announced by the Brooklyn South Borough Command in an effort to rid thearea of its drug trade problems. William Cuff of the Triangle Park/ Flatbush Ave. Improvement Association hails it as a positive step.Just back from the Republican Party%u2019s National Convention in Kansas City is Carroll Garden businessman Salvatore %u201cBuddy%u201d Scotto, who was responsible on the convention floor for keeping Brooklyn delegates in the camp of President Gerald Ford. The nomination and the voting were based on %u201cparty discipline,%u201d not issues, he said.FIVE YEARS AGO August 27, 1981Five different proposals were received by the City and State of New York for development of the waterfront land and the landmark Empire Stores buildings between the Brooklyn and Manhattan Bridges. Developers%u2019 ideas for use of the area range from a hotel, marina and commercial complex to developer David Walentas%u2019 plan to tie the waterfront area to his own development of the adjacent Gair and Sweeney Buildings he just purchased from the Helmsley-Spear organization.Engineering student Robert Diamond made a first-person report on his August 18 descent into the 137-year-old Atlantic Avenue Tunnel, the abandoned Long Island Railroad tunnel under the avenue between Court and Hicks Sts., sealed and unvisited for at least 40 years. %u201cI was hysterical with joy,%u201d he said. %u201cAll around me was this huge, magnificent structure ... so overwhelming in its perfection.\Long Island College Hospital is accepting sealed bids for the sale of a 120-year-old brownstone at 363 Henry Street, the first of seven Cobble Hill row houses the institution plans to sell. Minimum price, says the announcement, is $210,000.ONE YEAR AGO August 29,1985Developers of the new Pierrepont Office Building at Clinton and Pierrepont Streets announce they will include a new home for the Brooklyn Public Library%u2019s Business library on the ground floor of the new building. Hearings on the $86.4 million project%u2019s environmental impact statement are coming up.Campaigning reached a fever pitch in South Brooklyn and Park Slope as the three men who hope to replace veteran 30th District Councilmember Tom Cuite pulled out all the stops with election day only a week away. Steve DiBrienza, who narrowly lost to Cuite three years earlier is labeled %u201cthe man to beat this time.%u201dWith a new term set to start next week, Pratt Institute officials say the adult section of the Brooklyn Museum Art School, moved to the Clinton Hill campus in February, is facing a real challenge to re-establsh its identity outside the museum setting. However, during the most recent term, they say, 90 percent of the courses offered were taught by former Museum Art School faculty.Chairman of the BoardO.B. ArmstrongEditor & PublisherMichael A. ArmstrongAssistant EditorTracy GarrityReporterLiz KochRob TaylorEditorial InternJared CloudContributing EditorsDennis HoltArthur KroeberPhotographyKathryn KirkGeneral ManagerGeorge FialaAdvertising ManagerBinni IpcarAdvertising SalesEd GillespieClassified AdvertisingI DurlawArt, TypographyMike MolanphyThe Hometown Newspaper of Downtown Brooklyn's Historic Brownstone Neighborhoods3 9 5 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn 1 1 2 1 7Telephone (7 1 8 ) 6 4 3 -1 4 0 0Serving Brownstone Brooklyn since 1972M ember ofN OUI Vnrl/PressA ssociationW inner o f More than 6 0 Awards S in ce1 9 7 2For O utstanding Reporting andC overageB e s t in th e S ta te o f N e w Y o rk fo r G e n e ra l E x %u00adc e lle n c e a n d C o v e ra g e o f B u s in e s s a n d E c o n o m ic Is s u e s %u2014 N .Y . S ta te P re s s A s s o c ia tio nH o n o re d fo r O u ts ta n d in g R e p o rtin g o n the C o u rts a n d L e g a l Is s u e s , 1 9 8 3 , 1 9 8 5 %u2014 N .Y . S ta te B a r A s s o c ia tio nThe Phoenix (USPS 044650/ is published weekly by the Serif Press, Inc., Michael A. Armstrong, President. Second ClassPostage Paid at Brooklyn, New York 11201. Annual subscription hv mail in Brooklyn $12.50. Elsewhere $15. Single copy priceat office and newsstands 35 cents. Copyright I9H6 Serif Press. Inc. Postmaster: Send changes o f address to Phoenix, 395Atlantic Ave., Brooklyn, New York 11217.Page 2. THE PHOENIX, August 28, 1986

