Brooklyn Eagle_20202003

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BROOKLYN EAGLE

Volume 19, No. 28 Volume 20, No. 28 Volume18, 19,No. No. 51 Volume 18, No. 26 25 Volume 14

Two Sections

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2019 MARCH 19, 20208,21, THURSDAY, AUGUST 2019 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2018 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2017 1,

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The caseOF forTHE TIMES Brooklyn's SIGN A new take on social distancing complete Hottest streets Graphic A Q&A with Danny Harris, Novelist the new leader SEE PAGE 3

See page 6

of TransAlt

Photo by Daniel Garcia

SEE PAGE 2

Scaling the Heights: Arts Patron Shen Brings Fashion Into Unique Perspective

MarkingNewcombe 41st Don

ebrooklyn by Arthur De Gaeta Eagle photomedia/Photo by Paul Frangipane

Artist: Leon Polk Smith. Gallery: Lisson Gallery.

SEE PAGES 18-19

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The Navy’s ‘floating hospital’ is on its way to boost city’s health care capacity

The USNS Comfort is heading to New York City to help during the coronavirus outbreak.

Name ChaNge NAME CHANGE YAKUBOVA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN ORDER ENTERED BY THE SUPREME COURT, COUNTY OF KINGS, ON THE 10TH DAY OF MARCH, 2020 BEARING INDEX NUMBER 3790/19, A COPY OF WHICH MAY BE EXAMINED AT THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK, LOCATED AT 360 ADAMS STREET, BROOKLYN, NEW

By Mary Frost Brooklyn Eagle

YORK 11201, IN ROOM 189, GRANTS ME THE RIGHT TO ASSUME THE NAME OF KRISTINA YAKUBOVA. MY PRESENT ADDRESS IS 1460 E 13TH STREET, BROOKLYN, NY 11230. THE DATE OF MY BIRTH IS SEPTEMBER 2, 1980. THE PLACE OF MY BIRTH IS BAKU, AZERBAIJAN. MY PRESENT NAME IS ESTER SWED.

Founded in 1841 by Isaac Van Anden

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The Brooklyn Eagle (USPS Number 019555) is published every week on Thursday except the last week in December and the last week of August for $50 per year by EBrooklyn Media, 16 Court St., 30th Fl., Brooklyn NY 11241. Telephone: (718) 643-9099, ext: 103. Periodicals postage paid in Brooklyn, NY. Postmaster: Send address changes to Brooklyn Eagle, 16 Court St. 30th Fl., Brooklyn, NY 11241. Publisher: EBrooklyn Media, LLC (jdh@brooklyneagle.com) Managing Editor: Jim Harney Legal Editor: Rob Abbruzzese Sports Editor: John Torenli Religion Editor: Francesca Tate Community Editor: Mary Frost

2 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, March 19, 2020

U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Erin Olberholtzen, via Wikipedia

Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced on Wednesday that President Trump is dispatching the naval hospital ship USNS Comfort to New York City to help alleviate what could be a catastrophic shortage of hospitals as the number of novel coronavirus patients increases. The vessel and crew are just one component of a massive effort to build more hospitals beds in New York, especially intensive care beds. Experts have predicted the COVID-19 outbreak will peak in 45 days, Cuomo said Monday, setting an unprecedented deadline. “It’s an extraordinary step, [the Comfort] is literally a floating hospital,” Cuomo said at a livestreamed press conference. In addition, Cuomo said that after speaking by phone with the Secretary of the Army, a representative of the Army Corps of Engineers would be meeting with him in New York on Wednesday afternoon. For days, Cuomo has been urging Trump to send in the Army Corps of Engineers to help convert facilities like college dormitories and armories into backup hospitals. The state Health Department has also been speaking with FEMA “throughout the night,” he said. After years of cutbacks, there are only 53,000 hospital beds in New York State, including just 3,000 Intensive Care Unit beds, of which 80 percent are currently occupied. With the state’s current hospitalization rate for people infected with the virus somewhere between 15 and 19 percent, Cuomo projected New York would need between 55,000 to 110,000 additional hospital beds to handle the outbreak. Of these, 18,600 to 37,200 must be ICU beds equipped with ventilators, which are nearly impossible to find currently due to the increase in worldwide demand. The Comfort contains 12 fully-equipped operating rooms, 1,000 hospital beds, lab facilities and an oxygen-producing plant. She is staffed by officers from the Navy’s medical, dental, nurse and chaplain corps. According to Military Factory,

500 of the beds are designated for minimal case needs, 400 for intermediate cases, 20 for surgical recovery and 80 for intensive care patients. The president also told Cuomo during a phone call on Tuesday that he would dispatch federal mobile hospitals to New York that are capable of handling 250 patients at a time. “I told the president we would … expedite siting,” Cuomo said. There’s no word yet where the floating hospital will dock, but after the Sept. 11 tragedy in 2001, the Comfort docked at Pier 92 in Manhattan. Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams Tuesday said that his office is identifying sites in Brooklyn that could be converted to backup hospitals. These include the Brooklyn House of Detention on Atlantic Avenue, a Department of Education building on Livingston Street, the Armory in Bedford-Stuyvesant and the Brooklyn Cruise Terminal, along with other sites. The Aviator space at Floyd Bennet Field could add a heated tent as well, he said. Cuomo, who said several days ago that the federal government was not responding to the state’s request for assistance, said that Tuesday’s conversation with Trump was “open and honest.” “We’re fighting the same war, we’re in the same trench, I have your back and you have mine,” Cuomo said, adding, “He is fully engaged in trying to help New York and I thank him for his partnership.”

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A new take on social distancing: canoeing the Gowanus Canal

Owen Foote, founder of the Gowanus Dredgers, canoes along the Gowanus Canal to the Carroll Street Bridge on March 17. By Scott Enman Brooklyn Eagle

A group of Brooklyn residents is taking social distancing to the next level — by canoeing in the middle of the Gowanus Canal. Members of the Gowanus Dredgers Canoe Club, an organization that has been traversing the federal Superfund site for more than 20 years, were seen on Monday and Tuesday shouting from boats on the toxic waters, advocating for residents to support local establishments during the coronavirus pandemic, which has crippled many small businesses. “Eat local tonight!” screamed Owen Foote from just below the Carroll Street Bridge. “Have them deliv-

er! They’re open!” As of Wednesday morning, 1,339 New York City residents had tested positive for the virus. Brooklyn businesses, especially small ones, have been taking a hit from the outbreak, with many shutting down completely, while others have been forced to lay off employees so that they can apply for state unemployment insurance until the restaurants can reopen, Eater reported. Eighty-four percent of the borough’s 61,300 businesses have fewer than 10 employees, according to the Office of the State Comptroller. New Yorkers are not permitted to dine inside restaurants, but with eat-

Eagle photos by Paul Frangipane

eries still permitted to deliver food and takeout alcohol, Foote and Vogel said it was vital that the local community order in rather than cook inside their homes. “It’s important for people to remember that they can do something,” said Brad Vogel, captain of the canoe club. “Any individual’s actions can have an effect at this time. To the extent that you love a Gowanus restaurant or bar or establishment, do something. Do something to help them get through this rough patch. “Buy a gift certificate, go order out from them right now. Show them that you support them in some fashion because it’s going to be important for them make it through to

Brad Vogel, captain of the Gowanus Dredgers. Vogel and Owen Foote have been urging neighbors to support local businesses during the coronavirus pandemic.

Owen Foote in his canoe.

the other side.” Using the hash tag #GowanusStrong, the Canoe Club compiled a list of Gowanus restaurants, cafes and shops that are open, along with their delivery links. It also includes resources on other ways to help during these trying times. “The character of Gowanus is not just our waterway. It’s our surrounding community, including our businesses,” Foote said. “That’s very important to us. We enjoy our local self-made establishments. We’ve got to keep them alive. “These people have very small margins. They’re restaurateurs. They’ve got to pay the rent. They’ve got to support their crew. Now’s the time to step up.”

If one is in the middle of the 100-foot-wide waterway, he or she is not likely to contract the coronavirus. But better not fall in, as the waterway has tested positive for a litany of diseases over the years, including typhoid, cholera, tuberculosis and gonorrhea. As for their close proximity within the canoe? Foote assured the Brooklyn Eagle that from bow to stern, it’s about six feet — a perfectly safe distance. Asked whether he’d prefer to take a plunge or contract the coronavirus, Vogel took a moment to think. “I’d take my chances in the canal,” he said. “I’ve been out there enough where maybe I’ve built some immunity to it.”

Thursday, March 19, 2020 • Brooklyn Eagle • 3


THIS WEEK IN HISTORY

5

Founded 1841

CENTS

From the Original Eagle and Other Sources

THE WAR AT HOME

People line up on Fulton Street in New York to buy pre-ration meat on March 24, 1943. AP Photo

Hoarding rush hits city’s cheese supply BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE MARCH 18, 1943 A wave of cheese hoarding is sweeping the city, according to reports from many large stores, which say housewives are buying up the already limited supplies at a rate which threatens a shortage by the time the product goes under point rationing with meat March 29. Cooking fats were also at a premium and unavailable in many places. Because meat cannot be stored in large quan-

tities in the home without spoiling, trade experts explained, shoppers are buying all the cheese they can in order to use their ration points later solely for meat. According to the Food Distribution Administration of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, only 7,500,000 pounds of cheese are in storage in the city as against 23,000,000 last March. The run on cheese was one of a number of developments making up a general picture of reduced food supplies as a result of the war.

3 more types of shoes taken off ration list BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE MARCH 18, 1943 WASHINGTON (U.P.) — Shoe rationing restrictions were relaxed today to permit the purchasing of certain additional types of shoes without Stamp 17. Shoes now requiring no stamps are: 1. “Safety” shoes (those used for health protection in special work) may be acquired

through local ration boards by any person who has spent his stamps. 2. All sandals with open back and heels of less than 1 1/8 inches may be sold ration-free. (Previously, only sandals with uppers made of fabric, imitation leather, etc., were ration-free.) 3. Certain shoes with soles made principally of rope, wood or other non-strategic materials.

6 quarts of gas a week to go to ‘A’ drivers BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE MARCH 18, 1943 WASHINGTON (U.P.) — Eastern motorists will be rid of the pleasure driving ban next Monday, but their basic gasoline rations have been cut in half to limit non-occupational motoring to 90 miles a month. The present “A” ration in Eastern states is 24 gallons for a two-month period, based on the use of eight coupons valued at three gallons each. Under the new system, the same eight coupons will be used. The coupon value remains the same, but “A” holders 4 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, March 19, 2020

will have to stretch their allotment over four months instead of two. After next Monday, when A-5 coupons became valid, “A” cardholders can use the reduced amount of gasoline available to them for family or personal necessity driving such as essential shopping, meeting family emergencies, trips to the doctor, etc. Car owners who have been using “A” books for going to work or in connection with work now will become eligible for supplemental rations. Details of that procedure will be announced within a few days.

Martha Hill, left, uses a poster and a "vegetable man" to bring home her message to Dundee, Ill., housewives at her consumer conservation booth in the West Dundee village hall, Feb. 24, 1942. Mrs. Clarence Jensen signs a pledge to avoid food waste. AP Photo

OPA asks farmer to tighten belt like city cousin BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE MARCH 18, 1943 WASHINGTON (U.P.) — Price Administrator Prentiss M. Brown will put farm families “on their honor” not to eat more meat, butter and cheese than other Americans when rationing starts next month, it was learned today. The office of Prime Administration will urge farmers to market all their rationed produce and retain for themselves only an amount equivalent to what they would be able to buy with war ration book No. 2. They also will be asked not to

use the full number of red coupons in the ration book which will be valid for meat, butter, cheese, cooking fats and oils. OPA officials said the appeal would be put on a voluntary basis and that Brown does not plan to use police enforcement measures. Farm families account for approximately 24,000,000 persons, and if every member of a farm family ate, for example, two ounces of butter a week more than the average ration of four ounces, the loss of the nation, officials estimated, would run to at least 168,000,000 pounds a year.


News From Your Neighborhood BROOKLYNITES RAISE CASH FOR DOG INJURED IN CRASH

BAY RIDGE — Charitable Brooklynites have raised more than $7,000 for the dog who survived a March 5 crash that left her owner dead, according to the Brooklyn Reporter. Stormy ran off after her 66-year-old owner, Frank Decolvenaere, was struck, but she was found near her home the same night, and was taken to an emergency veterinarian, VERG Brooklyn, at 196 Fourth Ave. “Stormy is doing much better,” Dr. Amy Brida, who treated her, told this paper. “She is making a fantastic recovery. She was obviously very unstable, coming in, but over the last few days, she has gotten better and better. We anticipate that she will make a full recovery.” 

REP. CLARKE SEEKS CENSUS EXTENSION

FLATBUSH — U.S. Rep. Yvette Clarke (D-Crown Heights-Flatbush-Kensington-Midwood) led members of the New York Congressional Delegation in a letter to the U.S. Department of Commerce to extend the data-gathering period for the 2020 Census to September due to social disruption caused by COVID-19. “We must do everything we can to set our com�munities up for success by having the most accurate Census count. However, the current climate of practicing social distancing deepens the challenges of Census collection, and so I and my New York colleagues are requesting an extension to best allow for accurate collection of Census data,” said Clarke. 

CON EDISON SUSPENDS SERVICE SHUTOFFS

CITYWIDE — As New Yorker face the challenges presented by the coronavirus, Con Edison is suspending temporarily any electric and gas service shutoffs involving customers having payment difficulties. Any service terminations will proceed for reasons of safety, such as a gas leak. “We are committed to helping our customers and employees get through this difficult time safely and encourage everyone to follow U.S. Centers for Disease Control [directives]. We also will continue to work to provide safe and reliable service to our customers,” a statement from the utility company said. 

BROOKLYN COLLEGE STUDENT TESTS POSITIVE FOR VIRUS

FLATBUSH — A student at Brooklyn College tested positive for coronavirus, according to the New York Post. Last Thursday night, the student was in the hospital recovering from the illness, as the college was about to close. “Our thoughts are with her for a full and speedy recovery,” said Brooklyn College President Michelle J. Anderson. The patient was last on campus on Tuesday, March 3, but the spread of the virus appears to be low risk because she didn’t exhibit any symptoms at that time, the school said. The CUNY and SUNY systems, like public and private schools, have canceled all inperson classes and instituted remote learning. 

LUXURY DEVELOPMENT OPENS IN CONEY ISLAND

CONEY ISLAND — Coney Island’s first luxury high-rise apartment house has officially opened, offering hundreds of oceanview apartments, according to the Brooklyn Paper. Ocean Drive, at West 37th Street near the Boardwalk, has a 50-foot pool and a sun deck in addition to 425 apartments. Billionaire John Catsimatidis, the head of Gristede’s supermarkets, is the developer. Among Ocean Drive’s amenities are a children’s playroom, an underground parking garage, the pool, a gym and a games room with billiards and foosball. A free bus made to look like an old-time trolley is planned to shuttle residents between the building and the Stillwell Avenue subway terminal, the Brooklyn Paper said. 

LAWYER CALLS FOR PROBE OF CANARSIE COP ATTACK

CANARSIE — Attorney Sanford Rubenstein is calling for an investigation in the case of a young man who was attacked by several cops at a playground in Canarsie, according to Black Star News. Fitzroy Gayle is heard on video asking, “What crime did I commit? What did I do?” However, the officer didn’t respond to Gayle, and by the end of the video eight other officers are seen piling on top of Gayle, the video shows. “These police officers acted like thugs. They do deserve to get locked up,” Rubenstein said.

With so many businesses closed in New York due to the coronavirus outbreak, unemployment claims have gone through the roof. Shown: the iconic Junior’s Restaurant in Downtown Brooklyn has shut its doors. INBrooklyn photo by Mary Frost 

CATHOLIC SCHOOLS CLOSE IN BROOKLYN AND QUEENS

BOROUGHWIDE — Starting this week, Catholic elementary schools in Brooklyn and Queens are closed, the Diocese of Brooklyn announced on Friday, according to amNewYork. The decision came before Mayor Bill de Blasio decided to close the city’s public schools. Teachers are using today to develop distance learning plans, and students are expected to begin online classes tomorrow, amNewYork reported. The decision came a day after the Archdiocese of New York, which is responsible for Catholic churches and schools in Manhattan, Staten Island, the Bronx and several suburban counties, announced that its elementary schools would close. 

NEW SAKE BREWERY OPENS IN BUSHWICK

BUSHWICK — The market for imported Japanese sake has grown dramatically in the U.S., and the number of domestic sake breweries is growing as well, according to Forbes. The first in New York City was Brooklyn Kura, located in Industry City, Sunset Park. Following on its success, a second sake brewery, Kato Sake Works, is now opening in Bushwick, Forbes reported. Its founder and brewmaster is Shinobu Kato, who grew up in Tokyo. “I had plenty of cheap sake and horrible hangovers when I was in college,” he said. Then, “I had a glass of Kokuryu Shizuku, which was a really expensive sake. It was the moment that I realized what good sake really meant.” 

BROWNSTONER SPOTLIGHTS BAY RIDGE `BUNGALOW’

BAY RIDGE — Brownstoner last week showcased a fourbedroom Dutch Colonial wooden house in Bay Ridge, which it calls both a “bungalow” and a “cottage.” The home, at 262 77th St., is selling for $1.525 million. A porch, described as “the prettiest stone porch in the neighborhood,” is framed at either end by large wooden trellises that would be good for climbing plants. The living room and dining room both have large picture windows, and the dining room leads to a large, landscaped back yard. The second floor has four bedrooms, two bathrooms and a small covered terrace, Brownstoner said. 

B’KLYN DEVELOPER FACES MULTIPLE PROBLEMS

BOROUGHWIDE — The Real Deal recently profiled Brooklyn developer Toby Moskovits and her partner Michael Lichtenstein, principals of Heritage Equity Partners, who

are fighting off foreclosure at a Bushwick development site. One of their flagship projects, the Williamsburg Hotel, is in receivership. “No fewer than a dozen lawsuits have entangled Heritage in the past nine months, raising doubts about the future of the business,” The Real Deal wrote. In a lengthy statement to The Real Deal, Moskovits said the creditors she is fighting simply do not understand or appreciate how entrepreneurship works and described one of her creditors, Fortress Investment Group, as a “notorious predatory lender.” 

DEMARZIO RELEASES FAITHFUL FROM MASS OBLIGATION

BOROUGHWIDE — The Most Rev. Nicholas DiMarzio, bishop of Brooklyn, has dispensed the faithful from the obligation to attend Sunday Mass until further notice, according to Bklyner. “Sunday Public Masses will still be celebrated; however, the faithful are to exercise caution if they are to attend,” an official statement from the Diocese read. Weekday Masses will continue as usual, with the normal precautious people should take when gathering in public places. While celebrations such as weddings and funerals may take place, “attendance should be limited,” the Diocese said. 

COLLISION PINS WOMAN TO SIDE OF BUILDING

DOWNTOWN BROOKLYN — A woman was pinned to the side of a Downtown Brooklyn coffee shop on Friday afternoon after two cars collided, according to Gothamist. One observer, who was working at the corner of Livingston and Bond streets, said, “I thought it was like an explosion somewhere, but I didn’t react until I saw the people on my left and right look in my direction, then I jumped up and said, ‘Oh my God! Oh my God!’” FDNY sources said the woman and the driver of an SUV were taken to New York Methodist Hospital with non-life-threatening conditions. An NYPD spokesperson said that the SUV driver was traveling west, and the driver of a silver Ford was traveling east when they crashed. 

MAN FOUND DEAD OF GUNSHOT WOUND

BUSHWICK — A man was found dead of a gunshot wound to the head in the passenger’s seat of a car in Bushwick on Saturday, according to the Daily News. Officers found the man, 53, at the intersection of Palmetto Street and Broadway after receiving a 911 call shortly after 8 p.m., the News said. EMS workers declared the man dead at the scene. The car, a white Hyundai, was parked on Palmetto Street north of the Gates Avenue station on the J and Z lines.

Week of March 19 - March 25, 2020 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle//Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 1INB


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1250 67th Street Brooklyn, NY 11219 Contact: 718-306-5601 OR 718-306-5602 www.NCHHC.org

While we fully support the recent executive order limiting all New York City restaurants & bars to help halt the spread of the coronavirus, we also want to let you know that we WILL NOT leave our neighborhood out to dry. Here is what we will be instilling as of 8pm tonight in accordance with the new guidance from the Governor and NYC Mayor: 1. Starting tomorrow (3/17), New Corner will be offering Take-Out Only – from the hours of 12:30pm through 7:30pm. Please call us at 718-833-0800 - we will be sure to have your order ready for pickup. 2. For any take-out orders over $75, we will be throwing in $5 worth of NYS Lotto Scratch-Off tickets – in these uncertain times, we might as well try to have a little fun and add some hope/excitement. 3. Wine/Beer/Alcohol Delivery – according to the Governor, we are now allowed to offer carry-out wine, beer, and liquor in these unprecedented times. Please feel free to request these items if you would like and we can add to your order (bottles of wine, bottles of beer, etc.).

Norwegian Christian Home and Health Center has served the Community with Compassionate Care and Comprehensive Health Services since 1903. • Short-Term Rehabilitation • Out-Patient Rehabilitation • Respite Care • Medicaid-Funded Assisted Living • Independent Living Luxury Apartments

4. Delivery - we are strongly considering adding delivery in the coming days, but we do need some time to work out the logistics. We will get back to you once we are able to do so, but we want to be able to support our community as best we can in these coming days/weeks. Rest assured, we will be doing everything we possibly can to support our community - please continue to reach out to us and we will keep you updated on any new developments as well. All the best, New Corner Management

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Week of March 19 - March 25, 2020 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle//Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 3INB 3/11/2020 4:17:32 PM


Our World In Pictures

The Week in Pictures

NEW HAMPSHIRE — Early

start: Locals waited for their voting precinct to open outside Parker-Varney Elementary School in Manchester on Tuesday. AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

e quarantined Diamond Princess cruise dditional 66 cases of novel coronavirus

AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko EMERGENCY MEASURES: The U.S. Capitol in Washington at sunrise on Wednesday, March 18. The White House has sent Congress an emergency $46 billion spending request for coronavirus-related funding this year. AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster

TAKING STOCK: Traders at the New York Stock Exchange watch President Donald Trump's televised White House news conference, Wednesday, March 18. AP Photo/Mark Lennihan

as fouled by Philadelphia’s Tobias Harhia on Sunday. AP Photo/Matt Slocum

ay, February 12, 2020 • BQ Daily Eagle • 9

4INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of March 19 - March 25, 2020


Week of March 19 - March 25, 2020 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle//Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 5INB


6 • EAGLE NEWS MEDIA — HOME REPORTER AND BROOKLYN SPECTATOR • Week of March 20-March 26, 2020

STAY HEALTHY!

There are many things you can do every day to help stop the spread of germs.

Cover your coughs and sneezes

Wash your hands for at least 20 seconds

Avoid touching your face

Use your elbow or sleeve, not your hands.

Wash hands often with soap and water or use an alcohol-based hand sanitizer.

Do not touch your eyes, nose or mouth with unwashed hands.

• If you have fever, cough and/or shortness of breath, and recently traveled to an area with ongoing spread of coronavirus, or have been in close contact with someone who has, go to your doctor. • If you have symptoms but no travel history, stay home and call your doctor. • If you need connection to a health care provider, call 311. Visit nyc.gov/health for more information regarding coronavirus and the flu.

Bill de Blasio Mayor Oxiris Barbot, MD Commissioner

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QUEENS: jdh@queenspublicmedia.com Thursday, August 23, 2018 • BQ Daily Eagle • 17

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Week of March 19 - March 25, 2020 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle//Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 7INB


eye on REAL ESTATE I walked to Brooklyn Botanic Garden, which has now closed because of the coronavirus pandemic. The magnolias were magnificent, and one of the famous cherry trees was in full flower. By Lore Croghan INBrooklyn

Such serendipity. It was my sheer good fortune to visit Brooklyn Botanic Garden the very last day before officials decided to close it to help slow the spread of the deadly coronavirus. I wanted to do a better job of complying with the urgent need for New Yorkers to practice social distancing, so I made a resolution to walk more and stay out of the subway unless I had absolutely no alternative. My reward for resolving to do the right thing and walk, walk, walk was a glorious afternoon at the famous 52-acre horticulture mecca — and the privilege of being among the last people to photograph its early spring flowers before it was closed. The magnolia trees were magnificent at the venerable garden, which was founded in 1910 and opened in 1911. I’m glad I took tons of photos — because on Monday, the garden’s top brass decided it should be shut down “out of care for BBG staff and community members,” the garden’s website says. They had been keeping its outdoor spaces open — but had already closed their greenhouses because the aisles between the plants are narrow, and people might have wound up standing too close to each other.

I took these pictures of Brooklyn Botanic Garden before it closed to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus. “We are deeply saddened that the community will not be able to enjoy the pleasures of early spring here in the coming weeks,” the website’s message says. “We will regroup when this emergency has abated to welcome you back into the full embrace of the Garden.”

From now on, I am only going to write this column about places I can reach by walking from my apartment. On my strolls, I will practice social distancing, which as my wise readers know, means staying six feet or two meters away from other people.

The scene was serene on the last day Brooklyn Botanic Garden was open. Brooklyn Botanic Garden draws up to 1 million visitors per year. During the coronavirus crisis, the most important thing you can do for other Brooklynites — and yourself — is to stay at home as much as possible and keep a respectful distance from other people. (Of course fiercely thorough hand-washing is also crucially important. I hope that’s so ingrained in everyone’s minds by now that I don’t need to mention it. ) We all need to embrace the social-media messages #StayTheFHome and #stayhomesavelives.

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INBrooklyn photos by Lore Croghan

WILD RAMS WITH WINGS

So. Let me show you photos of the epic walk I took on Sunday as well as pictures of Brooklyn’s treasured botanic garden. I started on 95th Street in Bay Ridge, part way down the block from where Fourth and Fifth avenues converge. A big red sign at this intersection says “Welcome to Bay Ridge.” I’m not going to tell you how long my walk to the garden took me. I’m embarrassed to admit that I made a wrong turn, which added a huge amount of time to my trip.

Continued on page 9INB

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Here’s a close-up look at Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s magnolias.

INBrooklyn photos by Lore Croghan

I walked to Brooklyn Botanic Garden, which has now closed because of the coronavirus pandemic. Continued from page 8 INB I pride myself on being an excellent map-reader. I made the mistake of not checking my map as I blithely walked on and on and on in the wrong direction. At the beginning of my stroll, I headed up Fifth Avenue to 84th Street and turned right. This street has a fenced-in pedestrian overpass above the Gowanus Expressway. When you stand in the middle of the overpass and look south, you can see the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge. On the other side of the highway, the quiet streets of Dyker Heights awaited. I passed one of my favorite houses, which can be found on the corner of 84th Street and 11th Avenue. It’s made of stone and looks a bit like a medieval castle. It has statues of tigers on the lawn. Two statues of wild rams with wings flank the front steps.

LAST STOP ON THE G TRAIN

On my walk to Brooklyn Botanic Garden, I passed this home in Dyker Heights.

I turned up 12th Avenue for a serene walk north. At the corner of 64th Street, I saw a historic red-brick building with the name “Angel Guardian Home” on its front gate. The Sisters of Mercy sold the entire campus on which this former orphanage is located to Barone Management. As colleague Paula Katinas wrote in the Brooklyn Reporter, the developer is constructing market-rate housing and plans to build an elementary school. Community Board 10 District Manager Josephine Beckmann hopes the orphanage building will be turned into seniors housing.

Continued on page 10INB

One tree near the Cherry Esplanade was full of bright blossoms.

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eye on REAL ESTATE I walked to Brooklyn Botanic Garden, which has now closed because of the coronavirus pandemic. Continued from page 9 INB At 62nd Street I turned right and headed to 14th Avenue, which led me through Borough Park. At the intersection of Story Street, 14th Avenue runs into Church Avenue. Before I knew it, I was at the intersection of McDonald Avenue, where the last stop on the G train can be found. I love this part of Kensington. A few years ago, I wrote about the wonderful Bengali restaurants and food markets clustered around this intersection. Nearby, the wedge-shaped building at 130 Church Ave., which houses produce shop Carnival Fresh Market, caught my eye. One side of the building is curved to follow the contours of Beverley Road, which runs alongside it.

FIGHT FOR SUNLIGHT I should have kept walking on Church Avenue into Flatbush and turned at Ocean Avenue. (My wrong turn put me on Ocean Parkway. I had to backtrack.) On Ocean Avenue, there’s an entrance to Prospect Park, which looked alluring in Sunday afternoon’s sunshine. But I really wanted to see Brooklyn Botanic Garden. So I continued up the sidewalk that runs outside the park. The opposite side of Ocean Avenue was lined with handsome old apartment buildings. Just when I was feeling the tiniest bit weary — having wasted so much time walking in the wrong direction — I arrived at the intersection of Flatbush Avenue. One of the garden’s entrances is there. Beside the brick entrance gate, there’s a sign that proclaims, “Fight for Sunlight.”

The Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden looked so picturesque on the day of my visit. The sign refers to the garden’s campaign against two 39-story towers that Ian Bruce Eichner’s Continuum Company and development partner Lincoln Equities plan to build at the Spice Factory site at 960 Franklin Ave. Shadows cast by the towers would do lethal harm to thousands of plants in greenhouses and conservatories, garden officials say. The development site is just 150 feet away from the greenhouses. There’s an online petition expressing opposition to the proposed high-rise construction.

MAGNIFICENT MAGNOLIAS A pathway leading from Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s Flatbush Avenue entrance was lined with blooming bushes, including the common camellia and the dawn arrowwood. As I walked past the Shelby White and Leon Levy Water Garden, I noticed people were giving each other lots of social-distancing room. The Magnolia Plaza, which was first planted in 1933, has 72 trees, Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s website says. The saucer magnolias will bloom later this season with big, pink flowers. The types of trees that were in full flower on Sunday are called star magnolias. The blossoms are white and have long, skinny petals. There were fat buds on another type of tree, the Yulan magnolia. A young man sitting at the edge of the plaza with an easel made a painting of the scene. A woman stood close to a blossom-covered branch and drew a sketch in a notebook. Several photographers took pictures of loved ones or snapped selfies.

THE LAB BUILDING IS LANDMARKED For a bird’s eye view of the scene, I walked up the staircase above the front door of the Laboratory Administration Building, which stands beside the Magnolia Plaza. The Tuscan-Revival style building was designated as an individual city landmark in 2007. William Kendall of McKim, Mead & White designed the stucco and terra cotta icon. It’s considered a significant example of the famed architectural firm’s later works. It was constructed between 1912 and 1917. It’s modeled after small churches in the northern Italian region of Lombardy, the city Landmarks Preservation Commission’s designation report about it says.

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INBrooklyn photo by Lore Croghan

A frieze on its facade bears the names of 68 botanists including Carl Linnaeus and Charles Darwin. (Because Darwin is famous for developing the theory of evolution and natural selection, it’s easy to forget he was a botanist.) McKim, Mead & White also designed Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s next-door neighbor, the Brooklyn Museum.

‘A HOST, OF GOLDEN DAFFODILS’ Daffodil Hill, which is another beloved feature of Brooklyn Botanic Garden, can be found right across from Magnolia Plaza. The sweet yellow posies that populate this slope were beginning to bloom when I was there on Sunday. If you like English poetry, the hill will remind you of William Wordsworth’s poem “I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud.” It describes “a crowd, a host, of golden daffodils” dancing in the breeze. Nearby, a section of BBG is called the Shakespeare Garden. An apricot tree at its entrance was covered with delicate blossoms. The pond in the Japanese Hill-and-Pond Garden glittered in the afternoon sun. This was one of the first public Japanese gardens to be built in America. It was completed in 1915. There’s a huge, red Torii in the pond — it’s a gate for a Shinto shrine. One of the reasons I strolled around the pond’s perimeter was to take a look at an early-blooming cherry tree that grows along the water’s edge.

A DAZZLING CHERRY TREE Brooklyn Botanic Garden is best known for its annual Cherry Blossom Festival, Sakura Matsuri, which is held in late April. It’s a weekend full of cultural entertainment that includes Samurai swordsmanship, pop singers and cosplayers dressed in comic book, manga and movie characters’ costumes. A decision about whether to cancel this year’s festival was imminent when I wrote this column. Brooklyn Botanic Garden has more than 200 flowering cherry trees. They are most dazzlingly displayed in the Cherry Esplanade, a lawn flanked by two double rows of cherry trees. It’s too early in the year for them to bloom. But near the esplanade, one big, beautiful cherry tree was in full flower on Sunday. The sight of it was a salve that soothed my anxious mind for a moment. I’d have walked twice as far as I did for a look at that tree. Above the Cherry Esplanade, people strolled down the Robert W. Wilson Overlook’s 600-foot-long pathway. The overlook opened in November. The firm that designed it was Weiss/Manfredi.

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Pet Adoption Corner

THE ANIMAL CLINIC Of Marine Park

Sean Casey Animal Rescue has shared these photos of pets up for adoption with us. Cherie is a 7-year-old domestic longhair mix. Her owners were moving and, unfortunately, couldn’t take her with them. Cherie is an independent gal who would do best in a home with a patient owner. Nugget is an 11-month-old pitbull mix looking for his forever home. He is an active, happy pup who needs a lot of exercise. Sean Casey Animal Rescue (718-436-5163) is located at 153 East Third St.

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(Never known to fail) O, most beautiful flower of Mt. Carmel, fruitful vine, Splendor of Heaven Blessed Mother, of the Son of God. Immaculate Virgin, assist me in my necessity. O, Star of the Sea help me and show me, herein you are my mother. O, Holy Mary, Mother of God, Queen of Heaven and Earth! I humbly beseech you from the bottom of my heart to succor me in this necessity. (Make Request) There are none that can withstand your power. O, show me herein you are my mother. O Mary, conceived without sin, pray for us who have recourse to thee (3X). O Holy Mary I place this cause in your hands (3X). Sweet Mother, I place this cause in your hands (3X). Thank you for your mercy to me and mine. Amen. This prayer must be said for three days and after three days your request will be granted and the prayer must be published. Grateful thanks. B.C.

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Brooklyn Daily Eagle cover from March 17, 1953

ON MARCH 17, 1936, a letter to the Brooklyn Daily Eagle stated: “In regard to your recent editorial, ‘A Puzzling Message,’ with its speculation concerning the possible marriage of Edward VIII, it may be interesting to recall one royal marriage from which the sovereign’s consent was withheld. When the Duke of Sussex, one of the younger sons of George III, fell in love with Lady Cecilia Underwood, daughter of a British peer, and announced his intention of marrying her, the King refused his permission. The Duke, being over the age of 25, thereupon invoked the provisions of the royal marriage act and gave the required twelve months’ notice to the Privy Council of his intention to wed without the royal consent. As Parliament did not object, a perfectly legal marriage was solemnized at the expiration of the 12 months. But with the royal approval withheld, Lady Cecilia could not take the title of Duchess of Sussex. For years she had to be content with her maiden name. When Victoria came to the throne, she resolved to change the status of Lady Cecilia, for whom she had a warm regard. The Queen did not consider it desirable to authorize her taking the title of Duchess of Sussex since that would have been a deliberate reversal of a preceding sovereign. Therefore she made Lady Cecilia a duchess in her own right, creating her Duchess of Inverness. The Duke of Sussex’s marriage was a happy one; but since it produced no heir, the title lapsed with its holder’s death in 1843. It has never been revived.”  ON MARCH 17, 1953, the Eagle reported, “Brooklynites who camped by their TV sets to witness the first televised atom blast missed the actual explosion today because even the eye of the camera had to be shielded from the horrendous sight. There was a moment of blankness on the screen while an ominous voice counted off the seconds, and the blankness lasted until the camera focused on the towering mushroom which has become the symbol of this era. Familiar as the sight now has Weitare Brooklyn Medialate company become, wasastill worth being for workwith todaymultiple to view the publications websites, in both Baythe Ridge seething smokeand cloud. Eight located years had robbed atomand bomb Brooklyn. of Downtown none of its impact on the imagination.”

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ON MARCH 18, 1905, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle reported, “St. Patrick’s Day in New York City was more notable this year than ever before because the president of the United States came on from Washington and made a speech to the Friendly Sons at their annual banquet held at Delmonico’s last night. The president got one of the most cordial receptions ever given him in New York and he won the admiration of every Friendly Son when he offered a toast to Patrick McDonnell, a youngster two hours old, whose father sent the following telegram to Grandfather Peter McDonnell, one of the diners: ‘Peter McDonnell, Friendly Sons of St. Patrick. Patrick just arrived, tired after parade, Sends his regrets to President.’ … President Roosevelt, before he went into his speech proper, said: ‘Now, I want you to join me in drinking the health of Patrick McDonnell and Peter McDonnell and, above all, Mrs. McDonnell.’ There was a great cheer and the grandfather hid his blushing countenance behind a napkin.”  ON MARCH 18, 1918, the Eagle reported, “The eagerness of golfers the country over to take advantage of any scheme to assist the government in the successful prosecution of the war is shown by the taking up of the scheme for playing golf without caddies. It was only on November 22 last that the Eagle suggested that a large sum of money, not to speak of the freeing of boy labor, would be saved by doing away with caddies and playing the game sans caddies, as has been the rule for years with hundreds of players at Van Cortlandt Park, Pelham Bay and other municipal links. So strong an appeal did this make that on December 13 the New York Sun reproduced the Eagle article as presenting a very feasible plan for lowering the ‘high cost of golf.’ The idea was discussed elsewhere and on reaching the West was at once seriously considered by influential golfers. Already the golf clubs of the country had responded quickly to the request of the Fuel Administrator that they close their clubhouses during the cold weather to conserve coal, and it was quite to be expected that so practical a plan as doing away with caddies, involving as it did merely the personal comfort of players, would be received with favor.”  ON MARCH 18, 1949, the Eagle reported, “WASHINGTON — The North Atlantic Treaty would pledge the United States in general to help Western Europe repel any Russian attack for 20 years. But at a showdown, it would bind this country to take ‘only such action as it deems necessary, including the use of armed forces.’ This was disclosed today with the first official announcement of the exact text of the proposed treaty. The text was published here and in Western Europe capitals after months of negotiating on the basic points and weeks of final polishing of the language. It would be a 20-year ‘collective defensive’ alliance of the United States, Canada and Western Europe against Soviet Russia, although Russia is not mentioned by name. It would cover territory right up to the Iron Curtain, including the Allied zones of Berlin inside the Soviet zone of Germany. An armed attack against any pact member ‘shall be considered an attack against them all.’”  ON MARCH 18, 1963, the Eagle reported, “TAMPA (UPI) — An overflow crowd of 8,359, largest in Tampa’s history, saw the Cincinnati Reds beat the New York Yankees, 6-3, yesterday. Wally Post and Gordy Coleman socked homers for the Reds, who combed Yankee hurlers Jackie McCullen, Al Downing and Bud Daley for 12 hits. Jim Maloney, Jim Brosnan and Bill Henry teamed up to stop the Yanks on eight hits. Rookie Pete Rose’s single, a balk, and Gene Freese’s single gave the Reds a run in the first inning.”

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Sports

Nets taking care of their own at Barclays Franchise to compensate hourly workers for time lost to coronavirus By John Torenli INBrooklyn

Joe Tsai, the billionaire owner of the Brooklyn Nets, the New York Liberty and Downtown’s Barclays Center, may feel the economic effects of the NBA’s recent shutdown due to growing concerns over the coronavirus. But the 56-year-old co-founder and executive vice chairman of Alibaba Group knows that there are people working in and around his organization that need immediate financial relief from what is shaping up to be an extended stretch of inactivity for his team and its arena. “With the aim of helping Barclays Center staff get through this difficult time, we commit to provide relief to hourly employees for the paychecks they would have earned if Brooklyn Nets regular season games and non-Nets events at Barclays Center were to continue as originally scheduled,” read a statement issued over the weekend by Tsai’s Brooklyn Sports & Entertainment group. “The plan will cover the period from now until the end of May unless the events are rescheduled before that,” the release noted. “We will work closely and expeditiously with our partners, including service contractors, event promoters and unions to implement this plan.” During a time where all non-salaried employees or freelancers are waiting and wondering when, or if, they will receive some sort of compensation from their current employers, Tsai’s show of good will came without any pressure or prompting. “Hourly employees at Barclays Center are the bedrock of the fan experience in the arena,” the release said. “Whether it’s a big smile as fans enter the building or keeping the seats clean or making sure the concession stands are stocked with your favorite items, they are on the frontlines to make our fans feel special. They keep the lights on and the house clean, and they are the first ones to arrive and last ones to leave the building.” Last week’s suspension of the NBA season, which was im-mediately followed by shutdowns in Major League Baseball, the National Hockey League and virtually all professional and am-ateur sporting leagues worldwide, left Barclays Center dark for

The Barclays Center, shut down for sporting events and concerts during this ongoing coronavirus outbreak, will still compensate its non-salaried employees until at least the end of May, thanks to Nets owner Joe Tsai. AP Photo by John Minchillo the foreseeable future. While all of us are in a holding pattern, wondering how long and how far these restrictions on public gatherings will continue during the COVID-19 outbreak, Tsai was one of the first to step up and take responsibility for those who have worked so hard to keep his organization running smoothly. “While all of us are negatively affected by suspension of the NBA season and a state-wide ban on events with 500 people or more, we are especially aware of the difficulties faced by our hourly employees,” the release said. “When games and events are canceled or postponed, work stops and so do paychecks.” Tsai, who purchased the Nets for a record $2.5 billion from Mikhail Prokhorov last year, followed the lead of Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban in compensating his arena staff and other non-salaried employees. He was also the first among the owners of our tristate-area pro sports franchises to do so and should be commended for giving

Joe Harris and the Nets might not play again until June, if they play at all this season, after beating the Lakers in Los Angeles last week. AP Photo by Marcio Jose Sanchez

Nets owner Joe Tsai showed great sensitivity to hourly workers at Barclays Center over the weekend, promising to compensate them for time lost due to the arena’s shutdown during the ongoing coronavirus epidemic.

AP Photo by Mary Altaffer

those affected not only by the virus, but by the economic ramifications of it, one less thing to think about during this turbulent and frightening time. “It is our goal to alleviate the hit to household cash flow from work stoppage for people impacted so they can pay for necessary expenses such as rent, utilities, food and daily necessities,” the release said. The Nets, who were in the midst of a likely playoff-bound campaign, haven’t hit the hardwood since beating LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers at the Staples Center on March 10, the eve of this ongoing stoppage in play for the NBA. Though Brooklyn players are likely working out, both individually and/or in small groups, at the team’s HSS Training Center in Sunset Park, the Nets aren’t likely to return to play until June at the earliest, if at all for the remainder of the regular season. That will likely force Tsai to continue paying Barclays Center employees, who would have also been on hand for any concerts or special events at the arena, for the next several months if not longer. Judging from his rapid response during the initial phases of this crisis, I wouldn’t bet against him doing so. “We want to let our Barclays Center staff know that nobody is left behind and we are in this together,” the release said. Thursday, March 19, 2020 • SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly • 5


Sports

DURANT AMONG FOUR NETS WITH COVID-19 Infected players remain isolated and under care of team physicians

Nets superstar Kevin Durant is one of four Brooklyn players who tested positive for the coronavirus, according to Tuesday’s team-issued statement.

Rudy Gobert (right) and teammate Donovan Mitchell were the first two players to test positive for COVID-19 last week. The number of NBA players with the virus rose to seven this week after the Nets revealed they had four players test positive. AP Photo by Duane Burleson

AP Photo by Marcio Jose Sanchez

By John Torenli INBrooklyn

The Brooklyn Nets revealed Tuesday afternoon that four of their players, including superstar Kevin Durant, have tested positive for the coronavirus less than a week after the league suspended play due to ongoing concerns over the spread of COVID-19. “Four Brooklyn Nets players have tested positive for the COVID-19 virus,” read a team-issued statement. “Of the four, one player is exhibiting symptoms while three are asymptomatic. All four players are presently isolated and under the care of team physicians.” The remaining three players that tested positive have not yet been revealed, but Durant is not believed to be the player exhibiting symptoms at this time. Acquired this past summer during General Manager Sean Marks’ free-agent windfall, Durant is a former league Most Valuable Player, two-time NBA Finals MVP and arguably the best player in the sport. The 31-year-old Washington, D.C., native has not logged a single minute for the Nets this season, since he is still recovering from an Achilles injury suffered during last year’s NBA Finals as a member of the Golden State Warriors.

But Durant did travel and practice with the Nets on their recent West Coast swing, which was canceled last Wednesday when the NBA suspended its season indefinitely. When the Nets returned from San Francisco, where they were slated to play the Warriors last Thursday, the team was tested back here in Brooklyn, reportedly by a private company that the franchise paid out of pocket, according to an ESPN report. ‘Everyone be careful, take care of yourself and quarantine,” Durant told The Athletic Tuesday evening. “We’re going to get through this,’” The Nets, who were in seventh place in the Eastern Conference playoff race with a 30-34 record, drew some criticism from New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio, decrying their ability to receive tests while others in less-fortunate and more-dire circumstances were still waiting. “We wish them a speedy recovery. But, with all due respect, an entire NBA team should NOT get tested for COVID-19 while there are critically ill patients waiting to be tested,” de Blasio wrote in a tweet. “Tests should not be for the wealthy, but for the sick.” Utah’s Rudy Gobert was the first NBA player to test positive last week, prompting the league’s shutdown, before teammate Donovan Mitchell

It will be a while, if at all this season, before the Brooklyn Nets return to action at Downtown’s Barclays Center. AP Photo by Kathy Willens

and Detroit’s Christian Wood also contracted the virus, which has affected hundreds of thousands of people worldwide, resulting in over 8,000 deaths. NBA spokesperson Mike Bass defended the league’s decision for rapid COVID-19 testing when it was revealed that 58 members of the Jazz organization received tests after Gobert was infected. “Public health authorities and team doctors have been concerned that, given NBA players’ direct contact with each other and close interactions with the general public, in addition to their frequent travel, they could accelerate the spread of the virus,’’ Bass said in a statement. “Following two players testing positive last week, others were tested and five additional players tested positive. Hopefully, by these players choosing to make their test results public, they have drawn attention to the critical need for young people to follow C.D.C. recommendations in order to protect others, particularly those with underlying health conditions and the elderly.” The Nets are doing their due diligence to make sure those potentially affected by the four players who tested positive on their roster are informed and taking the necessary precautions. “The organization is currently notifying any-

6 • SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly • Thursday, March 19, 2020

one who has had known contact with the players, including recent opponents, and is working closely with state and local health authorities on reporting,” the Nets’ statement read. “All players and members of the Nets travel party are being asked to remain isolated, closely monitor their health and maintain constant communication with team medical staff. The health of our players and staff is of the highest priority to the organization and the team is doing everything within its power to ensure that those affected receive the best care possible.” While the league remains in limbo, along with Major League Baseball, the NHL and virtually every pro and amateur sporting league world-wide, there is a chance that the Nets could return to the Brooklyn hardwood as soon as mid-June, according to several published reports. However, this isn’t a time to anticipate when sports will be back in full gear. Instead, those in the Brooklyn community and around the world are wondering when they can feel a sense of safety and normalcy again in their everyday lives. “As always, we appreciate the support of our fans, partners and surrounding community, and we wish all those who are battling this virus a speedy recovery,” the Nets’ statement closed.


Thursday, March 19, 2020 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette/The Record • INSIDE BACK PAGE


BACK PAGE • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette/The Record • Thursday, March 19, 2020


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