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Summer Ferry Ideab All Wet For 1986Despite Promises For A SummerStart-Up Date, Brooklyn ServiceHasn%u2019t Happened, Page 3Marchers ProtestTerminal ProjectDemonstrators Hold March ToDemand More Jobs And CheaperHoming In Plan, Page 3Republicans MakePush For OfficesRepublicans Gather Twice ToRally Support For LocalRaces, Page 19Frantic For%u25a0w iiB m m -T h e A n t icm m vm .' n !!%u25a0>>%u25a0 n m *hB u m n M vd i- j %u2018 %u2019HiM a.hSu%u00ab4ti>a Romm iM i- w; I k l w M IteS R H; l n v t i l m m i . f w . i w U O *trv a tk S M tfh w tv a M S iM ite M V t.i J U M K W I M ^ t N M A I M i n i III ItM M im N t W H I t lt '%u00bb%u00abr tvrtWr kforavttM n it, iMIk VHm.'m M Mir :N \\September 28thSee Center, Section TwoGold Street Blues: A Day In The LifeOf Brooklyn%u2019s Busiest Police PrecinctBY LIZ KOCHIn the business world, successoften depends on how well thehead o f a company can coordinatehis employees and resources toachieve stated goals. A division o flabor assures that all work isultimately completed, a feat thatoften involves juggling who andwhat is available and matching theappropriate person with the appropriate tasks. When everythingis finally put together, you canevaluate your work by the resultsachieved.Police Captain John Schneider,who commands Downtown Brooklyn%u2019s 84th Precinct oversees anoperation that, in many aspects,can be likened to running a busyservice-oriented business. He iscaptain o f one o f Brooklyn%u2019s mostheavily populated precincts, whichhe describes as %u201c more like aManhattan precinct than the resto f Brooklyn, which is largelyresidential in character.%u201d Theroutine o f daily business for himC ap tain S c h n e id e r s p e n d s hours o n th e s tre e t every w e e k a s a part o f his job.(P h o e n ix /K irk P h o to )includes a load o f paperwork,fielding phone calls and the trickybusiness o f overseeing the work o f200 uniformed police officers onduty each day.With a fine number o f officers,these days he is also looking tothe community and its residents asa resource that will help make thebusiness o f running a policeprecinct run a bit more smoothly.This year, crime figures formurder, rape and robbery haveContinued on Page 5A Reporter%u2019, Notebook:BY ARTH U R KROEBERRev. Paul Smith was formally installed in front o fmore than 300 as the 14th minister o f FirstPresbyterian Church Sunday, with all the pomp andcircumstance a usually tight-lipped congregation o fliberal Calvinists in Brooklyn Heights could muster.Smith, a mid-westerner whose most recent postwas a pastorate in suburban Atlanta and who happens to be black, introduced a leavening of controversy into an occasion customarily reserved forcongregational self-congratulation. He invited Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young to give the day%u2019s sermon,for one thing, and for another he prefaced thetional Sunday service and installation with six hoursof seminars on social ministry the day before.Young, mellowed somewhat from his days as Jimmy Carter%u2019s outspoken Ambassador to the UnitedNations, gave a pacific and good-humored addresswhich nonetheless sounded the keynote of Smith%u2019sministry: to forge a pluralistic congregation %u2014 or atleast a congregation that is critically aware of thedemands made on a religious body in a pluralistsociety.In the array of Saturday seminars, attended byContinued on Page 9lis te n s q u ie tly d u rin g hisin s ta lla tio n as th e 14th p a s to r o f th e F irs t P res b y te ria nC h u rc h . (P h o e n ix /C o llin s P h o to )

