Brooklyn Eagle_20190425

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BROOKLYN EAGLE

Volume 19, No. 28 Volume18, 19,No. No. 37 26 Volume 18, No. 25 Volume 14

Two Sections

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2019 THURSDAY, APRIL 25,21, 2019 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2018 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2017 1,

MONUMENTAL Brooklyn's Shirley Chisholm’s planned Prospect Park Hottest statue is uniquely Brooklyn Graphic Novelist

$1.00 $1.00 $1.00

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

Don Newcombe

Rendering courtesy of She Built NYC

Artist: Leon Polk Smith. Gallery: Lisson Gallery.

SEE PAGES 18-19

FREE 1926-2019 BREAKFAST FOR KIDS at Bareburger Brooklyn Cobble Hill 149 Court Street Brooklyn, NY 11201 347.529.6673

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Brooklyn Brooklyn Eagle Eagle Group Group

Photo courtesy of Carla Shen

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NEIGHBORHOOD

NEWSBEAT BED-STUY

Strength for All, a new weightlifting club in Bedford-Stuyvesant, is geared toward teaching women, non-binary and LGBTQ athletes how to power lift and strength train, according to NY1. The owner, Shannon Wagner, encourages everyone who’s ever felt left out of a traditional gym to join. Men can also join, as long as they follow the gym’s zero-tolerance policy. 

BOROUGHWIDE

Tech-focused Dynamo PR, which has offices in London and San Francisco, has opened a new office in Brooklyn, according to Holmes Report, a public relations industry website. The office is launching with a new client, Brooklyn-based Tekniko, which makes educational electronic kits. 

BROWNSVILLE MTA staffers found a dead man on the subway tracks at the L train’s Livonia Avenue station, according to the New York Post. A passenger saw the man on the tracks and pulled the emergency brake on an eastbound train on Monday night, police said. After the train stopped, workers searched the tracks and discovered the man’s body under the train. His identity wasn’t clear as of press time. 

BUSHWICK Two NYPD officers refused to escort an EMS worker to the scene of an ax murder in Bushwick on Saturday, leaving a 4-year-old girl in her apartment for more than an hour, according to the Daily News. Police were summoned to the apartment after Angela Valle, her head dripping with blood, flagged down an Uber driver. An EMS worker who responded to the building asked two officers from the 83rd Precinct for an escort to the NYCHA apartment but they ignored the request, police sources said. Both cops were suspended on Monday, an NYPD spokesman said.

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CONEY ISLAND

City Councilmember Mark Treyger (D-Coney Island-Bensonhurst) last week introduced a resolution in front of state Sen. Roxanne Persaud’s bill to put an end to the practice of non-consensual pelvic exams on anesthetized patients to train medical students, according to Kings County Politics. “No patient should ever enter a medical facility for care and leave the victim of such an egregious violation of their body and their human rights,” said Treyger. 

CROWN HEIGHTS A robbery suspect grabbed a taser from one of four cops who were trying to arrest him in Crown Heights, then used it to jolt the other three, according to the Daily News. The officers recognized the suspect from a wanted poster for five separate subway cell phone snatchings since February. When they approached the suspect, he ran into a deli and tried to jump over a counter to escape them, the News reported. He then fled outside, where the incident occurred. 

CYPRESS HILLS

Thieves pried open the doors of seven doors to mausoleums at Beth Olam Jewish Cemetery in Cypress Hills and stole them as well as 75 air vents, police said. The theft happened sometime between Friday afternoon and Sunday morning. The missing materials were worth $30,000, according to the New York Post. 

DOWNTOWN BROOKLYN

Business Insider recently spotlighted some of the “over-the-top” amenities in Brooklyn Point, the still-unfinished residential skyscraper in Downtown Brooklyn that is now the borough’s tallest building. Among them are a rock-climbing wall, a chef’s demonstration kitchen, a movie screening room, a wine room, a landscaped terrace lounge, a “forest adventure”

Founded in 1841 by Isaac Van Anden

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: Stephanie Kotsikonas Legal Editor: Rob Abbruzzese Digital Editor: Scott Enman Sports Editor: John Torenli Religion Editor: Francesca Tate Community Editor: Mary Frost

Veteran Islanders forward Casey Cizikas and his teammates can’t wait to get back on the Barclays Center ice after nearly a week-and-a-half of waiting for their next postseason opponent. AP Photo by Frank Franklin II playground, a game room with billiard and ping-pong tables, a fitness center and two pools. “With a surplus of luxury residences available in New York City, residential buildings are offering increasingly outrageous amenities to attract tenants, from residence-only bars and restaurants to private rooftop pools,” Business Insider says. 

FLATBUSH Two civilians and one firefighter were injured in a fire in Flatbush on Sunday evening, according to the FDNY. The blaze started on the second floor of a two-story building at 1254 Rogers Ave. All three injured people were transported to local hospitals. 

FULTON MALL Two more ax-throwing bars

are heading to Brooklyn, according to New York Eater. One, Bad Axe Throwing, is moving into a 4,500-square-foot space at 436 Albee Sq. near the Fulton Mall. It will be the 31st location for this national chain. Th second, Hatchets and Hops, will move into a 3,000-squarefoot space at 98 North 11th St. in Williamsburg. 

GRAVESEND Assemblyman William Colton (D-Gravesend-BensonhurstBath Beach) has received a complaint that West 11th Street near Kings Highway was home to an enormous amount of garbage bags and other trash that took up most of the sidewalk, according to Kings Couny Politics. Colton called the Sanitation Department, which investigated the location and found that a local homeless person had created a “nuisance and unhealthy condition for the neighborhood.” Sanitation then contacted the Department of Homeless Services and cleaned up the garbage. 

PARK SLOPE Brookland Capital, a well-

known Brooklyn real estate 2 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, April 25, 2019

firm, has sold all the condo units at its property at 544 Fourth Ave., Park Slope, to Spruce Capital, another real estate firm, according to The Real Deal. Brookland has been dealing with several financial problems in Israel, where founder Boaz Gilad was forced to step down from the firms’ Israeli affiliate earlier this year. Still another firm, SME Capital

Ventures, was “closing in on” a Brookland-owned rental property at 692 Marcy Ave. earlier this year, although the sale has not closed yet, The Real Deal said. 

WILLIAMSBURG

Two Williamsburg artists, Ellie Sachs and Matt Starr, have been giving away used furniture that they’ve found

in the neighborhood. As part of an art installation in SoHo, they put the furniture on display with a sign saying, “Free. Take What You Want.” While collecting the discarded furniture, they found that it’s hard to recycle because much of it is made with artificial materials containing chemicals and isn’t meant to last, according to CBS2.

United States District Court for the Southern District of New York SANWAR AHMED, Individually and On Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated, V. CITY OF NEW YORK, 17 CV 3044 NOTICE TO NEW YORK CITY MOBILE FOOD VENDORS: This settlement affects the rights of licensed or unlicensed New York City mobile food vendors who, in the three years preceding the filing of this lawsuit through and including the preliminary approval date of the stipulation, were issued a summons during the relevant time period and have had their nonperishable unpermitted vending equipment seized by the City of New York without the City of New York providing a voucher to enable retrieval of the seized property. If the settlement is approved, the City of New York will pay $585.00 to each class member who files a successful claim, with the possibility of a supplemental payment up to $415.00. Additionally, the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (“DOHMH”) shall conduct one additional training session on how to properly document and notice property seized from mobile food vendors, and establish when applicable new DOHMH staff members will be trained in due course after they are hired on properly documenting and noticing property seized from mobile food vendors. IF YOU WISH TO OBJECT TO THE FAIRNESS OF THE PROPOSED SETTLEMENT, YOU MAY APPEAR AT AUGUST 13, 2019 AT 4:00 PM OR SUBMIT WRITTEN OBJECTIONS BY JULY 23, 2019 TO: Clerk of the Court United States District Court for the Southern District of New York 500 Pearl Street New York, NY 10007 IF YOU ARE A CLASS MEMBER BUT WISH TO BE EXCLUDED FROM THE PROPOSED SETTLEMENT, SUBMIT YOUR REQUEST IN WRITING BY JULY 23, 2019 TO: Matthew Shapiro Urban Justice Center 40 Rector Street, 9th Floor New York, NY 10006 For further information or to get a copy of the full settlement notice or the settlement agreement, contact the Urban Justice Center at 646-602-5681 OR mshapiro@urbanjustice.org.


‘Bold and self-assured’: Shirley Chisholm’s planned Prospect Park statue is uniquely Brooklyn A talk with one of the artists behind the monument By Scott Enman Brooklyn Eagle

New York City announced the winning design on Tuesday for its new statue in Prospect Park honoring former Brooklyn U.S. Rep. Shirley Chisholm. The monument, commissioned by She Built NYC, a public arts initiative formed in June to honor trailblazing women, is 40 feet tall and features Chisholm’s silhouette intertwined with the outline of the U.S. Capitol building. It is named “Our Destiny, Our Democracy.” The imposing sculpture is the brainchild of artists and architects Amanda Williams and Olalekan Jeyifous, a Crown Heights resident. Although Williams is from Chicago, she calls Brooklyn her “second home,” and said that in addition to Chisholm’s legacy, the borough itself played a key role in the inspiration behind the project. “There’s something that is so exciting and fresh about Brooklyn and its personality,” Williams told the Brooklyn Eagle. “I knew that when I started going there in the early ’90s. Now, having gotten to know Shirley Chisholm through her autobiography and the documentaries about her bid for the presidential election, I can see how she’s just so Brooklyn. “She embodies so many of the things that I love about Brooklyn. It’s okay with itself. It loves itself. It’s not trying to be Manhattan. It’s potentially eclipsed Manhattan in its popularity at this point in time in the way we’ve seen it develop and evolve over the past 20-plus years.” Chisholm grew up in Bedford-Stuyvesant and became the first African-American woman elected to office in Albany. She was also the first woman elected to Congress, and in 1972, she became the first woman to run for president in the Democratic Party — and the first black woman to run in either party. Her trademark slogan was, “Unbought and unbossed.” “You don’t want something that can be just plopped anywhere,” Williams said of the statue. “It’s just so bold and so self-assured, and that feels like two things that describe everything that I know about Brooklyn.” Viewers can enter the monument and rest on rows reminiscent of the amphitheater-like congressional seating. The seats will be engraved with the names of other trailblazing women, while some will also be blank — leaving room for women of the future to also leave their mark. Williams said she hopes the statue will encourage viewers to reconsider space and change the stereotype about a monument as not just artwork to admire from a distance, but something that

Shirley Chisolm Monument.

A look at the Shirley Chisholm monument.

Amanda Williams

Photo by Tony Smith

encourages interaction, involvement and inclusiveness. “From many vantage points, you will see her image, her iconic afro, her glasses and the colorful patterns of the clothing that she wore,” Williams said. “But at the same time there are other symbols that relate to the way in which she really pushed to open up the democratic process by using the Capitol dome itself as a symbol of that and creating a door or an opening within that. “You approach her and you see her, but by the time you’re up to the sculpture it’s something that you can occupy, and that really seemed like a powerful analogy for how democracy should be working.” Set on correcting a clear gender imbalance in the city’s public spaces, Deputy Mayor Alicia Glen and First Lady Chirlane McCray teamed up with She Built NYC to erect monuments of women who not only helped define New York City, but also incited changes outside the five boroughs. The Chisholm monument will join a group of 150 memorials of historical figures across the five boroughs — only five of which depict women. Four other trailblazing women will also be receiving statutes in the other boroughs. The monuments will depict women in the

Rendering courtesy of She Built NYC

Rendering courtesy of She Built NYC

medical field, talented performers and musicians, avid activists, dedicated politicians, loyal civic servants — and devoted parents. They include Billie Holiday in Queens, Elizabeth Jennings Graham in Manhattan, Dr. Helen Rodriguez Trías in the Bronx and Katherine Walker in Staten Island. Williams, who is part of the multidisciplinary team at the Obama Presidential Center, and Jeyifous, who has designed large-scale installations at Barclays Center, will now refine the design with input from the Parks Department, Prospect Park Alliance and local community boards. Up to $1 million will be available for the commissioning of the statute, and it’s expected to be erected by the end of next year. “It makes me so proud to know that my participation with the She Built NYC initiative is going to be in Brooklyn,” Williams said. “That seems hugely important that not only is it honoring this amazing woman, but it’s honoring that spirit of how Brooklyn always does things differently, always sets trends. “That’s how I first knew it, and that’s how it feels like it’s continued to aspire to be known. I feel excited that I’m contributing something that hopefully is uniquely Brooklyn.” Thursday, April 25, 2019 • Brooklyn Eagle • 3


FAITH IN BROOKLYN

Renewal at Easter for Old First Reformed Church

Zion German Evangelical Lutheran Church hosts well-attended Interfaith Seder

When the Rev. Klaus Dieter Gress became pastor of Zion German Evangelical Lutheran Church last year, he pledged to continue the tradition of his parish’s involvement in the wider community. Last Christmas, his parishioners joined members of the First Presbyterian Church to sing carols at the Engine 205/Ladder 118 firehouse. And on Maundy Thursday, Gress and Zion Church hosted an interfaith Passover Seder for First Presbyterian Church, Congregation Mount Sinai and the St. Charles Jubilee Senior Center. This sit-down meal incorporated the traditional Seder foods — include the matzoh, glass of wine for the prophet Elijah, lamb shank bone, bitter herbs and the sweet charoset — with aspects of the Christian understanding of liberation from sin and death. Maundy Thursday commemorates Jesus’ giving of a new commandment to love one another. And that spirit was evident at Zion Church. Pictured are attendees praying from a Passover booklet prepared for this occasion. Eagle Photos by Francesca N. Tate

Bishop DiMarzio blesses sacramental oils at annual diocesan Chrism Mass

The Old First Reformed Church, founded in 1654, on Easter Sunday reopened its 128-yearold church building following an eight-year hiatus to repair and restore the sanctuary. The Easter service, in addition to celebrating the principal feast of the Christian faith, the Resurrection of Christ, also marked the completion of the renovation campaign’s Phase I, which covered the ceiling, floors and pews, a $1.6 million endeavor. Phase II will focus on the sanctuary’s walls, windows and organ, with an estimated cost of $4 million. Phase III will cover the bathrooms, classrooms and accessibility aides. The church had hosted the neighboring Congregation Beth Elohim following the collapse of the temple’s ceiling in 2009. Two years later, during High Holy Day services, Old First Church’s ceiling began to crumble and the church was closed for safety precautions. The National Fund for Sacred Places has helped Old First Church raise $1.28 million; the fundraising campaign is ongoing. Photo by Milan Church Restoration

Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio, leader of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn, was the principal celebrant at the Chrism Mass at the Co-Cathedral of St. Joseph in Prospect Heights. Pictured, DiMarzio blesses the oils that are used in the administration of sacraments, such as baptism, confirmation and ordinations, over the course of the liturgical year. The Chrism Mass is named for these sacramental oils. DiMarzio also led hundreds of diocesan priests and deacons in renewing their promises of service to the church. Photo courtesy of DeSales Media

Unity Seder held at the Bridge MultiCultural Project

Cantor Joshua Breitzer and Rabbi Andy Bachman of Congregation Beth Elohim (left and center) have enjoyed a strong bond with Pastor Daniel Meeter of Old First Reformed Church. The two congregations have hosted each other’s High Holy Day and Easter services while their respective buildings underwent extensive renovations after their ceilings collapsed. On Easter Sunday at Old First Church, Breitzer chanted the victorious Psalm 118, and Bachman read from Isaiah, Chapter 65. Bachman, who four years ago stepped down from the leadership of Beth Elohim, returned for this occasion. Eagle Photo by Francesca N. Tate

4 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, April 25, 2019

The Bridge MultiCultural Project, based in Flatbush, recently conducted its third annual Interfaith Unity Seder. Many civic leaders, including New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, Kings County District Attorney Eric Gonzalez and FDNY Chaplain Rabbi Joseph Potasnik, and more than 300 guests representing the Jewish, Muslim and Christian faiths, attended the unity Seder that celebrated the then-upcoming Jewish holiday of Passover. The Unity Seder also highlighted the common bond of humanity that is at the root of cultural, religious and ethnic diversity. Pictured, left to right: Bridge founder Mark Meyer Appel, Rabbi Joseph Potasnik, Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez, and Bill Tingling, head of the Holocaust Project. Among those honored were NYPD officers Sergeant Zagham Abbas and Detective Mohamed Amen. Other elected officials in attendance included City Councilmember Mathieu Eugene (D-Flatbush, East Flatbush, Prospect Lefferts Gardens) and Assemblymember Mathylde Frontus (D-Coney Island, Bay Ridge). Photo courtesy of Mark Meyer Appel/The Bridge Multicultural Project


may Calendar of Events Week of the 25th to 1st

Art CITY ROOTS ART SHOW Show up for a night of art, music, wine, cheese, and more. They’ll be showcasing Docious Godfrey’s work from her series “This Space of Equilibrium.” When: Thursday, April 25th, 6 – 9 p.m. Where: Park Slope/City Roots Realty (400 7th Avenue)

DUMBO OPEN STUDIOS 2019 This year, over 100 artists will open their studio doors, showing work across all media. Artists in DUMBO’s artist residency programs – Art in General Residency Program, Sharpe-Walentas Studio Program, Smack Mellon Artist Studio Program, Triangle Arts Association – will also participate, as will New York Studio School’s DUMBO-based sculpture students. DUMBO’s galleries

will extend their hours throughout the weekend. When: Saturday & Sunday, April 27th & 28th, 1 – 6 p.m. Where: DUMBO/Vinegar Hill Various locations

DIGITAL FAIRYTALES: VENGEANCE IS MINE When one encounters the term “Vengeance,” it is with excitement, suspicion and dread. For vengeance to exist, there must be a prior perception of victimhood, a grievance. The scale of which is determined by the protagonist, but the roles can quickly be flipped. And flipped and flipped again. The chain of vengeance can go on and on and, unless broken, lead to ever escalating levels of calamity. When: Mondays-Sundays through April 30th Where: DUMBO/Made in NY media Center (30 John Street)

TRANSCENDENTAL PATHWAY Featuring work by Rachel Cohen, Deanna

Lee, Christina Massey, Elizabeth Riley, Christine Romanell, Linda Schmidt, Transcendental can be described simply as abstract. It has other definitions though from mathematical use, such as incapable of being the root of an algebraic equation with rational coefficients, (π for example), or as relating to an experience determined by the mind’s makeup. Six artists in this exhibit take on different approaches to that definition through their individual styles of abstraction, be that from their intuitive creative approaches to inspiration from mathematical equations. When: Tuesdays-Saturdays through April 29th, 10 a.m. – 6 p.m. Where: DUMBO/Gallery 55 (55 Water Street)

CATHERINE HAGGARTY- BENCHED An exhibition of site-specific work. When: Daily through April 29th, Where: DUMBO/Main Window (1 Main Street)

GOYA IN TIJUANA A collection paintings by modern contemporary surrealist painter Tony Geiger. Geiger’s work encompasses both classical surrealism with modern

contemporary concerns. When: Saturdays through May 4th, 12 – 6 p.m. or by appt Where: Carroll Gardens/Court Tree Collective (371 Court Street)

through which to explore human interconnection. When: Daily through May 10th, 11:30 a.m. – 7:30 p.m. Where: Fort Greene/Agnes Varis Art Center (647 Fulton Street)

LEA THOMAS– CURRENTS

KITCHEN STILL LIFES BY JAN GROOVER

A drop of dark blue appears, its stain spreading over the surface. Tendrils stretch across, their circuits entwining and dispersing, carving lucid pathways in their wake. The deepest blue requires more than just one application, it is a multitude of layers blended into one another, with slightly different circumstances and results each time, as sapphire streams ebb and flow concurrently. The azure currents of time, energy, and memory upwell and merge in union. Lea Thomas applies this aesthetic philosophy in her practice, creating a pool of the deepest blue for her hand-woven textiles. With a lineage harkening back to the traditional use of Japanese indigo in its process and symbolism, Thomas’s work echoes the motion of her predecessors, diving far under the waves of deep time. As the fibers submerge into a vat of natural dye, so does one’s consciousness surge in connection to our environment, our humanity,

CC SABATHIA

Image courtesy of the artist and Irondale Center

The Irondale Center presents Both Sides Now: The Music of Joni Mitchell through May 4th. and the depths of our psyches. When: Wednesday, Friday, Saturday & Sunday through May 8th Where: Sunset Park/Trestle Gallery (850 3rd Avenue)

A CERTAIN SET OF DYNAMICS Curated by Sarah Rebekah Byrd Mizer Featuring the work of Embodied Empathy, Christopher Mahonski, Valerie Shusterov, and Kristen Neville Taylor. Jurors: Will Hutnick and Gaby Collins-Fernandez Selected through UrbanGlass’ open curatorial call, a certain set of dynamics looks at artists using glass as a literal and metaphorical lens

Jan Groover created her famous Kitchen Still Lifes in 1978 and 1979. Using a large-format camera, she transformed colanders, knives, spatulas and baking pans into objects of beauty that still hold a visual interest that transcends their common use. Her seductively modern color palette of greens, pewter, bronze and brown tonalities permeates the space dissected by kitchen paraphernalia. These take on a new visual meaning as a result of Groover’s juxtaposition of the elements. Although never unrecognizable as everyday objects, these utensils float into an abstract amalgam of planes and shapes. When: Tuesdays-Sundays through May 11th, 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. Where: DUMBO/Janet Borden, Inc (91 Water Street)

THE OUTSKIRTS, EXPOSED AND PUNCHED A solo exhibition of new work by Odette England.

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YANKEE STADIUM

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may Calendar of Events Week of the 25th to 1st continued from previous page

This will be the artist’s second solo show at the gallery, and brings together a selection of artworks from three recently completed and ongoing projects. Home is the center-weight of England’s artistic practice, with memory and forgetting being the counterbalances. Her photographs are fragile, contemplative and temporal spaces. When: Wednesdays-Saturdays through May 11th, 11 a.m. – 6 p.m. Where: DUMBO/Klompching Gallery (89 Water Street)

THE 2018 FEATURE SHOOT EMERGING PHOTOGRAPHY AWARDS To celebrate the announcement of the 2018 Feature Shoot Emerging Photography Awards, United Photo Industries is exhibiting the work of two artists, Amelie Satzger and Lauren Menzies,

in a dual exhibition at the UPI Gallery. When: Tuesdays-Saturdays through May 31st, 11 a.m. – 6 p.m. Where: DUMBO/United Photo Industries (16 Main Street/ Suite B)

RACE AND REVOLUTION: REIMAGINING MONUMENTS The show questions the relationship between historical memory and historical monuments and what the underlying implications are for those histories that remain absent. Seventeen artists were asked to envision monuments that add depth and truth to New York’s compelling history. Exhibiting artists include Alexis Callender, Ayasha Guerin, Chip Thomas, Damien Davis, Emmaline Payette, Kamau Ware, Kimberly Becoat, Lyra Monteiro, Maureen Conner,

Maureen McNeil, Marilyn Nance, Rose Desiano, Sal Munoz, Studio Darn, Zaq Landsberg and Jennifer Mack Watkins. When: Fridays through June 14th, 3 – 6 p.m. Where: Park Slope/Old Stone House (336 3rd Street)

DON’T FOLLOW THE WIND: NON-VISITOR CENTER Beyond the threshold of the inhabitable, how does culture contest the crippling effects of long term catastrophe? Don’t Follow the Wind is a project situated inside the radioactive Fukushima exclusion zone in Japan, the inaccessible area surrounding the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant, established in the wake of the 2011 disaster that contaminated the environment separating residents from their homes, land, and community. As radiation knows no borders, transported on wind and water currents, it is a form of contamination that implicates us all in its unseen isotopic presence. When: Tuesdays-Saturdays through July 13th, 12 – 6 p.m. Where: DUMBO/Art in General (145 Plymouth Street)

ONE: EGÚNGÚN One: Egúngún tells the life story of a twentieth-century Yorùbá masquerade dance

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may Calendar of Events Week of the 25th to 1st continued from previous page

costume (egúngún), from its origins in Nigeria, to its current home in Brooklyn. Composed of over three hundred textiles from Africa, Europe, and Asia, this egúngún swirls into motion during festivals honoring departed ancestors. Centuries old, egúngún is still practiced in Nigeria, the Republic of Benin, and in the Yorùbá diaspora. When: Daily through August 2019, 11 a.m. – 6 p.m. Where: Crown Heights/ Brooklyn Museum (200 Eastern Parkway)

BROOKLYN ABOLITIONISTS/IN PURSUIT OF FREEDOM This major, long-term exhibit explores the unsung heroes of Brooklyn’s anti-slavery movement–ordinary residents, black and white–who shaped their neighborhoods, city and nation with a revolutionary

vision of freedom and equality. The exhibit is part of the groundbreaking In Pursuit of Freedom public history project that features new research on Brooklyn›s abolition movement in partnership with Weeksville Heritage Center and Irondale Ensemble Project. When: Wednesdays-Sundays through Winter 2019, 12 – 5 p.m. Where: Brooklyn Heights/ Brooklyn Historical Society (128 Pierrepont Street)

Books & Readings

AN EVENING WITH AUTHOR SUSANNAH MARREN Susannah Marren is the pen name for well-known author Susan Shapiro Barash (www.susanshapirobarash. com) who writes non-fiction books focusing on women’s

issues, most notably her bestseller, “Tripping the Prom Queen” about female rivalry. When: Thursday, April 25th, 6:30 p.m. Where: Park Slope/The Montauk Club (25 8th Avenue)

KRIS WALDHERR LOST HISTORY OF DREAMS A story about a post-mortem photographer who unearths dark secrets of the past that may hold the key to his future. When: Thursday, April 25th, 7 p.m. Where: Bay Ridge/BookMark Shoppe (8415 3rd Avenue)

MIN JIN LEE Moderated by Deborah Treisman Author Min Jin Lee creates “radical empathy through art” with a sharp focus on diaspora, human rights, and telling the stories that often don’t get told. Her work is a powerful meditation on the challenges of migration, immigration, assimilation, and discrimination. When: Wednesday, May 1st, 6:30 p.m. Where: Fort Greene/BAM Peter Jay Sharp (30 Lafayette Avenue)

St. Dominics 2001 Bay Ridge Parkway

Indoor

Flea

Market April 27th, 2019 May 11th, 2019 9am to 3pm

Over 50 vendors For more information leave a voicemail at 917-498-8424

Open House! Sunday, April 28 11am - 1pm 4INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of April 25 - May 1, 2019


FIND YOUR PURPOSE AS A FINANCIAL ADVISOR Does helping people reach their goals energize you? Would you feel rewarded in a career where you empower others to build stronger financial futures? Thrivent is growing in Brooklyn, and if you have a heart for service and a passion for helping Christians be wise with money, you can grow with us. A career as a Thrivent Financial advisor allows you to earn an attractive income while making a big impact in peoples’ lives. If you think you’d be a good fit for Thrivent Financial, or if you know someone who would, email Brooklyn@thrivent.com or visit thriventfinancial.com/brooklyncareers.

Week of April 25 - May 1, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 5INB


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Cakes | Pastries | Cookies Weddings

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Damascus Bakeries 56 Gold St. Brooklyn, NY 11201 (718) 855-1456

Chadwick’s Restaurant 8822 Third Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11209 (718) 839-9855

Damascus Bakeries has devised a new way to serve a classic Margarita pizza. Its Sticks a la Margarita is a delicious new recipe that turns Damascus’s always fresh Brooklyn Bred Bistro Sticks into a tasty Italian favorite. The recipe calls for the Bistro Sticks, olive oil, fresh mozzarella sliced thin, a medium tomato sliced thin, grated Parmesan or Romano cheese, and basil leaves. It’s easy to create, cooks in just 10 minutes and you can serve immediately. It makes a delicious dinner option and it’s perfect for hors d’oeuvres! Go to the website for the full recipe! brooklynbred.com

Chadwick’s Restaurant in Bay Ridge is known throughout the borough for its steaks and seafood. One reason is because Chadwick’s only serves the finest cuts of meat and the freshest seafood available. Another reason is the creative and always delicious entrees you will find on the menu. For example, the Scallops with creamed spinach, bacon crumbs and Pernod butter is a sight to behold and a taste to savor. It’s just one of many selections you’ll find at Chadwick’s, one of Brooklyn’s most sought-after dining experiences for decades! www.chadwicksbrooklyn.com

Savarese Italian Pastry Shoppe 5924 New Utrecht Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11219 (718) 438-7770 Savarese Italian Pastry Shoppe is ready to bake you the perfect dessert for any special occasion: birthday, wedding, anniversary or any milestone event. Owner and pastry chef Mario Giura tells Faces about the variety of mouthwatering cakes Savarese offers. Its delicious cakes are part of a tradition that has been part of family gatherings for generations. Savarese also offers sugar free cakes and desserts! www.savaresepastry.com

FACES BEHIND

THE BIZ By John Alexander

Three Guys from Brooklyn 6502 Fort Hamilton Parkway Brooklyn, NY (718) 748-8340

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Now that we’re enjoying warmer weather, it’s time to fire up the barbecue! Three Guys from Brooklyn has some incredible backyard-ready recipes perfect for your grilling pleasure. For example, the BBQ Veggie Hash is a healthy and delicious dish that features some of Three Guys’ always fresh and colorful vegetables. In fact, Three Guys has everything you need to make it including carrots, rutabagas, parsnips, parsley, bell peppers, garlic, onion, squash and tomatoes. You can find the full recipe on the website! www.3guysfrombrooklyn.com

6INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of April 25 - May 1, 2019


BBQ VEGGIE HASH INGREDIENTS Carrots, rutabagas & parsnips Cajun spice blend Yellow onion & garlic 2-3 leaves collard greens, trimmed Carolina-style barbecue sauce (S)

2 eggs (E) 7 sprigs parsley 1/4 cup heavy cream (D) 2/3 cup grits 1/2 green bell pepper, sides

DIRECTIONS PREP HASH VEGGIES Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Medium dice green bell pepper into about ½-inch pieces. Place in a large bowl. Add carrots, rutabagas, and parsnips. Drizzle with about 1-2 tablespoons cooking oil. Season with salt and pepper. Toss to combine. ROAST HASH VEGGIES Spread veggies out in a single layer on a foil-lined baking sheet. Roast 18 minutes. (See Step 6 to finish.) PREP COLLARDS & ONION Meanwhile, remove center stems from collard greens; discard. Roughly chop leaves into bite-size pieces. Cut ends off yellow onion and remove peel. Medium dice into about ½-inch pieces. Mince garlic. De-stem parsley; roughly chop leaves. COOK COLLARDS & ONION Heat about 1 tablespoon olive oil in a medium pot (with lid) over medium heat. Add onion to hot pot. Cook 2-3 minutes, or until onion begins to soften, stirring occasionally. Add collards and garlic. Lightly season with salt and pepper. Stir. Cook 3-4 minutes, or until collards begin to soften, stirring occasionally. Add Cajun spice blend; stir. ADD GRITS Add 2 ½ cups water to pot with veggies. Season with salt and pepper. Bring to a boil. Slowly add grits to boiling liquid while stirring. Reduce heat to low. Simmer 7-8 minutes, or until grits have thickened and water is absorbed; stirring occasionally. Remove from heat. Add heavy cream; stir. Salt and pepper to taste. Cover to keep warm until plating. FINISH HASH VEGGIES Drizzle 2-3 tablespoons Carolina-style barbecue sauce over baking sheet with veggies (reserve the rest). Stir to coat. Sprinkle with about half of the parsley (reserve the rest). Roast 2-4 more minutes, or until fork tender. FRY EGGS Meanwhile, heat about 1 tablespoon olive oil in a medium nonstick pan over medium heat. Carefully crack eggs into hot pan. Cook 3-4 minutes, or until whites have set (or to desired doneness). Lightly season with salt and pepper. PLATE YOUR DISH Divide barbecue veggie hash between plates. Spoon grits next to hash. Top grits with fried egg and garnish with remaining parsley. Serve remaining barbecue sauce on the side (or drizzle over top). Enjoy!

Week of April 25 - May 1, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 7INB


Animal Clinic of 20th Avenue Serving the community over 35 years

718-372-6600 A. Alexandru, D.V.M., P.C. Alexander Cortes, D.V.M. Attlee Douglas, D.V.M.

OFFICE VISIT $25 FREE OFFICE VISIT FOR NEW CLIENTS! No Appointment necessary except for Surgical & Dental Procedures.

SURGERY everyday except Wednesday. Call the Clinic for an appointment for Surgery procedure. BOARDING AVAILABLE ANYTIM Cat $25.00 per da E y Dog $30.00 up to 25lbs (Bring Food For Yo ur Pet)

Quality Low Cost Health Care for Dogs & Cats, provided by experienced, compassionate Veterinarians and our staff. 8317 20th Ave. Brooklyn, NY 11214 •

(Trap, Neuter and Release)

718-372-6600 • www.animalclinicof20thavenue.com

We also offer discounts to: Student, City Workers, Military and Senior Discounts OFFICE HOURS Mon. Tues. Thur. Fri 10am - 12noon • 2 - 4pm • 5 - 7pm Sat. - Sun. 10am - 3pm Wed. CLOSED

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Photo courtesy of Amanda Alexander

Pet Adoption Corner

Seanthe Casey Rescue has shared terfun! than that. Come on in and meet Dewey! Onyx catAnimal is exhausted from holiday Photo by Hbriz B

these photos of pets up for adoption with us. Lawrence is a seven-year-old Domestic Dewey is a four-year-old Pit bull mix. Dew- Short hair. Lawrence is a sweet calm boy ey is the sweetest boy who gets along with who loves a ton of affection. Come on in everyone he meets, smallfrom children, andfun! meet him! Onyx the cat is exhausted from holiday fun! the Onyx cat is including exhausted holiday Onyx the cat exhausted from other dogsis and even cats! Heholiday seemsfun! to be Sean Casey Animal Rescue (718-436crate-trained and even knows some basic 5163) is located at 153 East Third St. commands. We don’t think it gets much betPhotos courtesy of Sean Casey Animal Rescue Photo by Hbriz B

Photo by Hbriz B

Photo by Hbriz B

Dewey

Lawrence

of December14-20, 14-20, 2017 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Record/Bay Ridge Eagle/Greenpoint GazettePress/Brooklyn • 11INB Week ofWeek December 2017 • INBROOKL YN — of A Brooklyn Special Section of Eagle/Heights BrooklynPress/Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Record/Bay Ridge Eagle/Greenpoint Gazette • 11INB

W eek of December 14-20, 8INB ——A A Special Section of2017 Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of April 25-May 1, 2019 8INB ••INBROOKLYN INBROOKLYN Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint GazetteRecord/Bay • Week of April Ridge 25 - MayEagle/Greenpoint 1, 2019 Week of December 14-20, • INBROOKLYN — A Special SectionPress/Home of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Brooklyn Gazette • 11INB

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2


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Week of April 25 - May 1, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 9INB


Rendering by Dattner Architects and Easton Architects via the Landmarks Preservation Commission

Eye on REAL ESTATE

RIGHT: Petitioners in the Dean Sage Mansion case include (from left) Adrian Straker, Robyn Berland, Ethel Tyus and Lynn Cave. BELOW: The new building that’s second from left in this image would have occupied more than half the Dean Sage Mansion’s garden. INBrooklyn photo, right, by Lore Croghan

Judge rules against affordable housing construction in landmarked Crown Heights garden By Lore Croghan INBrooklyn

The city’s need for affordable housing and services for the mentally ill should not influence the fate of landmarked buildings, according to a Brooklyn judge. Those are not among the criteria the Landmarks Preservation Commission is legally mandated to consider when deciding whether to give developers permission to make changes to landmarked properties, Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Katherine Levine ruled earlier this month. The case concerns the Dean Sage Mansion at 839 St. Marks Ave. in the Crown Heights North Historic District. It focuses on the city Landmarks Preservation Commission’s 2016 approval of a plan by the property’s owner, the Institute for Community Living, to construct a new building that would have occupied more than half of the mansion’s garden. The preservation commission’s decision was “arbitrary and capricious and based upon an error of law,” Levine wrote in an April 2 decision. She overturned the preservation agency’s approval of a plan to develop 70 apartments on the site — a mix of supportive housing for mentally ill adults and affordable units. She

did so by vacating a certificate of appropriateness the Landmarks Preservation Commission had issued. That’s a document property owners must obtain before altering the exteriors of landmarked buildings. The judge also ruled that the commission must hold a new hearing about the Dean Sage Mansion project. She said in her decision that cutting the size of the garden by 60 percent would obscure the eastern facade of the house — so it would no longer look like a stand-alone mansion. Most mansions in the landmarked district were torn down a long time ago, making the Dean Sage Mansion’s contribution to the neighborhood’s historic character especially important, Levine wrote.

WHAT FACTORS ARE WITHIN LANDMARKS’ JURISDICTION?

Levine’s ruling was a victory for community groups and neighborhood residents who’d filed suit against the Landmarks Preservation Commission and the Institute for Community Living. The groups were the St. Marks Avenue Independent Block Association, the Bergen-Kingston Block Association and the Crown Heights North Association. The case is an Article 78 proceeding, which means it was brought against government agencies. In this type of

suit, the plaintiffs are called petitioners. The defendants are called respondents. An important architect, Russell Sturgis, designed the HighVictorian Gothic mansion. Dean Sage, who made his fortune in the lumber industry, constructed it in 1870. The Landmarks Preservation Commission erred in its decision-making by considering factors outside its legally mandated jurisdiction, Levine decided. In her ruling she cited landmarking law, which instructs the commission to consider “the factors of aesthetic, historical and architectural values and significance, architectural style, design, arrangement, texture, material and color” as well as “other pertinent matters.” The phrase “other pertinent matters” should be narrowly interpreted, the judge said in her decision. “It would be absurd and contrary to the raison d’etre of the [landmarks law] to give the [Landmarks Preservation Commission] carte blanche to consider, as pertinent to its determinations, factors that did not enhance and protect and perpetuate these buildings such as the LPC’s finding that it was socially desirable to build more housing for the developmentally challenged and/or the economic and fiscal constraints of developers of such projects,” Levine wrote in her ruling.

— Continued on page 11INB —

The Catskills are calling! Here is the perfect property to escape to from Brooklyn, bring all your friends and relax in the peace and quiet of this home and surrounding property. Plenty of spots for a fire pit, especially next to the Pond. Main house has 5 large bedrooms + sleeping loft. Two full & 1/2 baths, remodeled kit. dining, laundry/half bath/sauna. Family room w/cathedral ceiling, stone fireplace, sliding doors to a large wrap round deck & enclosed porch. Several sliding doors to deck and large grape arbors. Lovely guest cottage with eat in kit., living room w/stone fireplace, bedroom, bath w/shower & sleeping loft, totally private from main house, rent on AirBnb for additional income. There is more; oversized three car garage, plenty of storage, large attic room and an office for working from home. This building has its own septic, water & heat. Wonderful property for the person who works from home. Barn and established veg. garden, fruit tress, woods, pond, lawn. This 49.80 acres borders State land, walking distance of state hiking trails, near three ski mountains, golf & more. Perfect for private retreat, large family, bed & breakfast, weddings, walk to well known West Kill Brewery. Call Mary F. Donovan, Licensed Associate Real Estate Broker PH: 518-734-3300 (WORK) 518-312-5548 (CELL) EMAIL: Maryfdonovan@earthlink.net WEB: gallagherandcompany.com 10INB •• INBROOKLYN Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of April 25Gazette to May 1,• Week 2019 of April 25 - May 1, 2019 10INB INBROOKLYN — — AA Special SpecialSection SectionofofBrooklyn BrooklynEagle/Heights Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint


Eye on REAL ESTATE “We hope the Institute for Community Living will continue to use their other properties (of which they have more than 10 in Brooklyn) to provide supportive housing services to their target population,” she added. “We are extremely pleased by Judge Levine’s decision and believe it may have a wider impact,” Derrick Hilbertz, a petitioner in the Dean Sage Mansion case, told INBrooklyn.

‘REFOCUS THE LENS OF PRESERVATION’

Here's a Brooklyn Avenue view of the Institute for Community Living's development plan for the Dean Sage Rendering by Dattner Architects and Easton Architects via the Landmarks Preservation Commission Mansion site.

Judge rules against affordable housing construction in landmarked Crown Heights garden — Continued from page 10INB — But in public hearings, commissioners “lauded the social and economic values espoused by the Institute for Community Living in expanding its mission at the [Dean Sage Mansion] site,” Levine wrote.

A spokesperson for the Institute for Community Living told INBrooklyn it’s “very disappointed” by Levine’s ruling, “which disregards the long-held principle that the Landmarks Preservation Commission is an expert panel whose decisions should be accorded deference.” The Institute is “considering all options for moving forward and remains fully committed to continuing with our mission as a nonprofit to help New Yorkers lead healthier lives,” the spokesperson said. “We went above and beyond to ensure the project was in sync with the historic district requirements and met with various community organizations to take questions and suggestions,” he told INBrooklyn. “We allocated considerable funds to fully restoring the mansion, which will benefit the entire community and enhance the historic district.” The spokesperson said there’s a “great and growing need” in Brooklyn for services the institute provides for people living with mental illness, substance abuse issues and developmental disabilities. “Our plans for the Dean Sage Mansion, where we have provided services since the late 1990s, would not only have allowed us to continue to provide support services to New Yorkers, but also created much-needed affordable housing for many more,” he said.

Preservation experts say Levine’s decision will remind the Landmarks Preservation Commission that its purpose is to preserve sites with historic, social or cultural significance rather than to promote affordable-housing construction. “Landmarks should be adaptively reused, and the Landmarks Preservation Commission’s oversight plays a crucial role in determining how historic buildings can appropriately evolve to be functional in the 21st century,” Kelly Carroll, the Historic Districts Council’s director of advocacy and community outreach, told INBrooklyn. “It is excellent that this ruling serves as an example that preservation, under the Landmarks Law, has nothing to do with [a building’s] use,” she said. “Hopefully this ruling will refocus the lens of preservation and aid in reminding all parties involved that preservation is about buildings, not their uses, however lofty or attractive aspirations might seem.” Carroll provided an expert affidavit to support the petitioners in the Dean Sage Mansion case. If the commission’s approval of the housing development in the mansion’s garden had been allowed to stand, “an unruly precedent would be introduced into Landmarks Preservation Commission proceedings,” Historic Districts Council Executive Director Simeon Bankoff told INBrooklyn. “Regardless if one wants the Landmarks Preservation Commission to have the ability to consider use in their judgments, they do not and this decision rightly doubles down on this determination of authority,” Bankoff said. “To have not done so might open the door to great uncertainty within the regulation of our city’s landmarks and an erosion of their continued existence,” he added.

‘WRONG COMPASS’ FOR THE LANDMARKS PRESERVATION COMMISSION

This is the eastern facade of the Dean Sage Mansion.

THE INSTITUTE FOR COMMUNITY LIVING IS ‘VERY DISAPPOINTED’

The city is considering whether to appeal Levine’s decision. “The [Landmarks Preservation] Commission thoroughly reviewed this proposal and determined the proposed changes will not detract from the historic and architectural character of the mansion or the Crown Heights North Historic District,” City Law Department spokesperson Nick Paolucci told INBrooklyn. “The Commission stands by its approvals and is evaluating its legal options, including whether to appeal this court ruling,” he said. Law Department attorneys represented the Landmarks Preservation Commission in the case.

Community groups took the Dean Sage Mansion case to court to compel Meenakshi Srinivasan, who was then the Landmarks Preservation Commission’s chairperson, to “reassess her priorities in fulfilling the agency’s mission, which is historic preservation, not housing,” Ethel Tyus of the Crown Heights North Association told INBrooklyn. “We felt vindicated for expending the money and time to closely examine what was actually happening within the inner workings of the Landmarks Preservation Commission,” she said. “The former Chair brought the wrong compass with her from her prior positions with the Board of Standards and Appeals and the Department of City Planning.” The community groups want the Dean Sage Mansion to be “preserved and celebrated for its design, its architecturally significant character and its importance to the entire historic district,” Tyus said. INBrooklynphoto by Lore Croghan

April 25 to May—1,A2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle/HeightsPress/Home Press/HomeReporter/Brooklyn Reporter/BrooklynSpectator/Brooklyn Spectator/BrooklynRecord/Greenpoint Record/Greenpoint Gazette Gazette •• 11INB Week of April 25 - May 1, Week 2019 •ofINBROOKLYN Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights


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12INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of April 25 - May 1, 2019


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Week of April 25 - May 1, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 13INB


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14INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of April 25 - May 1, 2019


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We are a Brooklyn Media company with multiple HEALTH publications and websites, located in both Bay Ridge and Downtown Brooklyn. WeY are looking repOUR LIFEforIStalented, ABOUTexperienced TO resentatives to work with our growing CHANGE FOR THE BETTERsales ! division inIndisputably print and digital the advertising. most widely read and influential booktoever • Walk workwritten about the human mind • Make yourDIANETICS own morning or afternoon The Modern Science of Mental Health four-hour shift By: L. Ron Hubbard • Base salary, plus generous commission Paperback: $27.50 • Celebrity Bonus opportunities Centre New York 65 East Street, New York, NYattitude, 10028 Must 82nd have: basic computer skills, positive be fluent in English, and have a clear phone voice. Bilingual is a + Great opportunity to make full-time income with a part-time schedule.

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16INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of April 25 - May 1, 2019


Thursday, April 25, 2019 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette/The Record • 5


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6 • Thursday, April 25, 2019 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette/The Record


Thursday, April 25, 2019 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette/The Record • INSIDE BACK PAGE


BACK PAGE • Thursday, April 25, 2019 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette/The Record


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