INSIDE: PAGES AND PAGES OF COUPONS TO SAVE YOU CASH! YYoouurr NNeeiigghhbboorrhhoooodd — — YYoouurr NNeewwss®® BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260–2500 (cid:129) Brooklyn, NY (cid:129) ©2012 Serving Brownstone Brooklyn, Williamsburg & Bay Ridge AWP/12 pages (cid:129) Vol. 35, No. 8 (cid:129) February 24–March 1, 2012 (cid:129) FREE BOROUGH FALL Pedestrians: Downtown plaza a tripping hazard By Kate Briquelet Instead, they’re filling gap- The Brooklyn Paper ing holes with orange traffic A stroll through the plaza in cones. front of Borough Hall is no walk “People are always tripping Photo by Stefano Giovannini itwmswhnidoiu rtteAorhshwktue n reuga geprlghpraskl y lrasiaak e piclmn rl—ee,e fid tgncrhe oeiheestn.fe’t bstira e oirmpaolfden koB,rser oD ensara osolbyipwulk uhtgehneah esatl otH tcto wri—antilypnel ow“iabtTnlvzhuoe Bheosrtes oh awtyhireod’oeronr ureretmek gh,s ,ssh”aaca ttanyeP srheriaerniaeeidadgr s l w fi tAdoJhtooaerad n snttar o’httemth ne Mpec isl rAoh aa Slncirlisteksvftrri ooeedterwsehedi.te”cr-,. Rose-Emma Lunderman — a barista at Root Hill Cafe in Gowanus — is one of three calling for function over fashion character of Brooklyn’s City Hall Brooklynites vying for the title of espresso master this weekend at the Northeast Re- before another person falls and must be maintained. gional Barista Championship. breaks a bone. “I wish the city could give my “This is deplorable!” said Su- office the budget so we can be COFFEE CLASH san Detrich, who often traverses responsible for the upkeep,” he the pock-marked plaza, which said. “But in the meantime, we government workers sometimes will strongly urge [the city] to uyoseu fro er ypeasr ktion gth. “eI fg yroouu nddo,n ’yto gulu’lel Briquelet maSktei ltlh, en on esclaepssdaarsyh rreeppaaiirrs .j”obs BTBhye r KBroaootekol yBnk rPiaqlpuyeerlnet bariiisnnggt mbaeoarnses t h aantnd a 1f0ro0kt hhoeinugr sm ogirliknn din- nbaatTtlhtee i 2ho8o montehteo’rws dno fyabevnoser itoesf wtthilel sitPthta eleroTp kPo hi ehnkeoats obps — rlbaeo eh’k seloe enHlnte ’a o.ss pFu lpaeosatreretig cilseonhutu Craisrtbo ocuolruupuonm.ts” dhsbiionnuwggs paper Group / Kate htratewugarnvao w ie-nui ebnspaect rheth, on eba al$enuv1ndey5o sg utfaooog vnohseeqt t r —uotnra map rwfreefo hinftcieotc, c ovh wtte c tih—ahnine-- This Gowanus barista is do- preparation for the Northeast demitasse at a chichi Manhat- for years, but neither the Borough ws cles that park on the crumbling ithnegR ceouvspee.r-yEthminmga s heL ucannd etor mwainn Rshei“gpTi tohhniisas i lsw aBe cearkraiefsntt vdae .rCsuhsa gmopinigo nto- tnaantAi osnhndoa wl Ltriuotlnoedm teh rfimos rsa pan r,si hnwoght. oa t hthaes Pmfurelelns rti edhceaonsnt s snntoargur cgthteiedo nPth afeor kfru st nhDdee spp flaoarrz taa- mmunity Ne wwoaTmlkwawona fyyeeslal . arsn da glaon, dae d7 1in-y tehaer h-oolsd- has put her brews, sweat and Starbucks and pressing one but- worked at Root Hill Cafe on bounded by Joralemon, Court, Co pital for a fractured hip , prompt- tears into becoming Ameri- ton — every little thing counts,” Fourth Avenue for the past eight Johnson and Adams streets and Jason Alfred and M.D. Diallo say they’ve stumbled over Bor- ing the city to fill some holes with ca’s espresso master — spend- said Lunderman. See BARISTAS o n page 2 Cadman Plaza West. ough Hall’s loose bluestone many times. See TRIP o n page 2 Tracking stink Passed over Sewer pipe sensors could give Despite concerns, Bridge Park’s real-time data on Canal waste walkway won’t get high fence By Daniel Bush Cleaning the The Brooklyn Paper By Natalie O’Neill ing for a bill that requires the city to in- The city says it will finally fig- Gowanus The Brooklyn Paper stall inward-curved, 8-foot-tall fences Adler ure out just how much noxious-smell- A proposed city law intended to pro- on footbridges crossing over streets File photo by Bess iatsnaindlgu TeP ss thr ewCoewt oaDea nlcgaeaterpilgo .aiensr ptpwmiopieulelnsr ii tann olsgoft n aiEnglln tt oshve eitnrh poseono Glmrlsuo etiwennd--- falcoc“ouWdra ebt eenlyeyoe mdn dbe aetsthtueerirer d wcaathape asnoc s ittehywa.te wr oe vcearn- The proposed footbridge into tprftehelracqeont uj ewekixcerapetdli ek lwpenee-isrhtdsihvu,e ctesrayl tiflrcnloi lfagoiesn tdntb secor aliviindnengdgrq ep—du arpeis nelvsaxteenscrs nwse tpefoortdu o f botmldoer awhcshifoadtouelepksrni pwn ati tgnaitn ygap c rwcbkoaehjsret itwacc ogthesna e a citnnonh s ditatlw d a wc orMyeo cFnmal oindsarhtrtns ao . Gtpftraproeneme dinn eaa- New meters inside of the pipes waterway that will help wastewater flows happen in real time,” said the Brooklyn Bridge Park won’t connect Brooklyn Heights with Brook- The proposed legislation applies that spew waste into the Gow- experts keep tabs on the quantity of agency’s Commissioner Carter Strick- have a fence tall enough to lyn Bridge Park. to “bridges between buildings” and anus Canal will monitor exactly household sewage and stormwater land. “These new sensors should give prevent people from throwing Eleven councilmembers including overpasses “under the jurisdiction” how much crud gets dumped that drain into the inlet during heavy us that critical information so that we things off it. Brad Lander (D–Park Slope) are push- See BRIDGE on page 2 into the polluted waterway. storms, when the area’s aging sewers See GOWANUS on page 9 Developer: No parking, no problem Planned parking-free development near Barclays Center stokes fear By Daniel Bush age car owners from moving to the traffic- he claims he couldn’t provide the spots TciiChnnoheegg’meAMns a tBam otea cdrhnrrour,eitl oosbnvyi snkupie stml tllyyD aoPtn anpahor k Pneoemfiaaer sn svdpappgto nee5rr rcsret5o hktbe-m Hiuyytn ni efncgsiriloestgoa s athmwi ipmthnaos ect srrr’hl tsesuhmee sde d.ie dBiwonneiatgann rb ntpgcustla siastrl haydtkyoes-- Photo by Stefano Giovanninichbncacllonoiooonmgmr“gsghlWge epeoaed- l oe$doe sid 2 hfxsnw ,0ta t ”rth2p-ae hmse0neeaa 0tdtBitsi l8 d tBlnrwoi. ooeeD ioanmrlorgkl f tamelirhvykneeaene p Tsn- losNiisattolkoc eenayer tf- ys, at b.t owlcheu-tetbhxot eouerb-y rrlfi ,yuis nnw erepie,shi lnhgatitrcehnaihd---l ieidctpfhnlnae agehorrBi kgemubau rgsouw oit hnwit uals n tdt ennotheieltd ianeleng c agdgsahcs tn altob rsatroemsotac e rbwrgketmse esieo cn .otonp-asdf’latut ea ertssvtkhateeeodie tlnphh , s g rtiedpesa r—p anklilvoctiaan eitntn lsghin gs eocpen byordr’ e’emta bl ccnlluaap i jouiurlulegunsdsxees--t do away with required on-site parking at A new building will replace the Ber- Domansky will need a variance to skirt spaces away from other drivers in Pros- his proposed apartment building on Flat- gen Tile factory opposite the arena city regulations requiring him to build pect Heights who will soon compete with bush Avenue and Dean Street to discour- — and it won’t have parking. roughly two dozen parking spaces — and See PARKING on page 9 Grimm hire under fi re Picks a staffer scarred by scandal, death Proposed locations for bike-sharing kiosks (black dots) By Dan MacLeod exclude much of North Brooklyn. Photo by Stefano Giovannini TutaD ghrehsyeoteeR kuhcd Beeoen hrprrndo e.Hht hrorMuo eipkssviliobg yceolanhhrfins tftaPiisdiececa alasaep cG la cew tcloirrrvohinemniesastnndmtr eywuh c aceshttdw hiioodoii ornenreldn sijdno ct t oobgae BTGRhyreiR m DeBemrapo. nopc k oMluynMla’d Pncsia’cLtp hefe aiornteddl ough dmritroerelnoecdn tioeanodgr a ewi npshnc ooaal i npttdiltecaaeaylnl eh taphdga aae-t OCity FcutFs s wCathsY ofC W’LbuErg, Some Williamsburg residents are outraged about noise — a gig in which his incompetent any love in February. girl’s death. from the Lorimer Street gay bar Metropolitan. management was blamed for the During the month But the Bay Ridge Greenpoint from bike share death of a 17-year-old-girl. the Bay Ridge Repub- Republican, a former Sound & fury Fran Vella-Marrone, a Con- lican has deflected alle- Marine, has no prob- servative party leader, and the gations that he broke cam- lem firing back at his op- By Aaron Short program this week. president of the Dyker Heights paign finance laws and did ponents. The Brooklyn Paper But the proposal omitted bike Civic Association, lobbied for- business with partners who have Here’s a breakdown of his Sharing pedals is going to be kiosks east of Bushwick Ave- Complaints about gay bar mer School Construction Author- criminal records; had to deal most recent battles: easy in North Brooklyn — un- nue and McGuinness Boulevard, ity Trustee Paul Atanasio to give with a recent staffer’s arrest; • The New York Times al- less you live in East Williams- where an estimated 30,000 tran- her husband Gary a job to oversee and then hired a new district See TOUGH o n page 9 burg and parts of Greenpoint. sit-starved residents live, accord- By Aaron Short unanimously rejected a Lorimer rehab work on PS 131 in Borough Department of Transporta- ing to 2010 Census data. The Brooklyn Paper Street gay bar’s request for a li- Park in 1998 — an ethics violation tion officials proposed about That means when the bicy- A Williamsburg gay bar is un- quor license renewal last week that ultimately led to the death of A city investigation into the sion” led to Zhao’s death. 300 possible bike share loca- cle sharing program hits the der fire — and neighbors say it’s over complaints that the boisterous 17-year-old Yan Zhen Zhao, who accident determined that a “le- Investigators blamed Atanasio tions in Brooklyn, including streets this spring, no one will not because they’re proud, it’s Metropolitan bar keeps its neigh- was killed when a brick falling thal combination of incompetent for giving Gary Marrone the job, 20 on Bedford Avenue in Wil- be able to hop on a rental at the just because they’re loud. bors awake late into the night. from the Fort Hamilton Parkway contractors, halfway safety mea- even though he had little construc- liamsburg alone, in a draft of bustling art center 3rd Ward on A North Brooklyn civic group See NOISE on page 9 building hit her head. sures and laissez-faire supervi- See GRIMM on page 9 the city’s planned bicycle rental See BIKES on page 9 quelet NQOTU ITE Fort Greene to city: Rotate this statue! JURISGTHT! Bri Sculpture of Gen. Fowler should be turned 90 degrees, neighbors claim Kate Group / BThye KBraootekl yBn rPiaqpueerlet iinntge rtrsaefcftiico nf roofm L ahfiasy peettrec Ah vaet nthuee tshpea cnea kmneoswakne a osf F tohwe lteirn yS qguraereen. fro“mIt ’tsh eid bioetgicin, nainndg .I” thought so wethtei cShq wuaasr et.hen known as Lafay- wspaper muFsot drto G anre aebnoeu’st- fCaicvei li fW hea rw haenrtos andR Figuhltt onno wS,t rteheet C.ivil War hero the“rIet’ sm saoym seotuhnidn gf rwivroolnoug sw, bituht RuTn haen bdr Gonezttey lsibkuenrge sfsig ohf ttehre o Briugl-l GoFldosrtte iGn sreaiedn teh aat cctiitvyi ostf fiRciuatlhs Ne to fit in with the neighborhood, lovingly called “Dear Old Ned” the way the statue is faced,” inally stood in Fort Greene Park, thought Gen. Fowler would face mmunity somMea rretisnid Heonrtos wsaityz. is urging the lLooouknsg set raanigd hatn a at dFjraacneknt’ se Cmopctyk tlaoitl. snaeiadr tHhoe rgoewnietrza, l’ws hefof ihgays f olirv aeld- bpuefto hriem v ainnd satolsr afogrec esodm theet icmitey iton thhies cmuorrset nttr apfofsiict iaonnd. Asut tnhleig thimt ien, Co city to rotate a statue of Gen. Ed- In the summer, his head is hid- most 40 years and wants to see the 1960s. A decade later, com- residents didn’t oppose the stat- Some residents want the ward Fowler about 90 degrees so den in the trees, making it hard the statue turned to look out to- munity members rallied to install ue’s orientation because they were ... so it isn’t looking at a bar city to twist this statue ... that he’ll properly greet oncom- for passersby to pay tribute to ward Downtown. the statue at the triangle park, See FOWLER on page 9 across the street. 2 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 February 24–March 1, 2012 No raves Bike lane isn’t free for ‘Smash’ Giovannini City already spent $140K fi ghting for PPW path Gcrreewe ntpoo pinatrekr es lwseawnht eTrVe Photo by Stefano BTinhygeB t NBaikxraoep otalaykalenlyirene m fP oOoaenp’seNe yar erbeyi l wdlraasgt-- Lalcoa auc asnottn sueeeuvrsxmt ea pcnrmaee smc aeetpr ot, tph rtoheee eyasc l hclaioinestslhgytl MStrEeAetNs cpmsuiotacyrIkctt’ saeea t Dsitlsoshefoneup alla fratluhtnlmedaeggne es enieddtt e o rtmefdh aTa almtrtlaay o tn hitrssoee-. ging out a lawsuit over the The crew for the show “Smash” is blocking parking on lawyer fees — a Jim Walden, a lawyer for world’s most talked-about By Aaron Short Street, blocking the bike lane sbpoor tJso asnedp hle Saovkinoglo twruskcak.s idling, says angry neigh- strip of green paint, cycling fnaecigt hthbaotr hinofoudr ibaitkees The battle for Brooklyn’s byways tchreit biciks eo lfa tnhee o Pprpoosnpeenctst ,P saayrks The Brooklyn Paper to the Pulaski Bridge and mak- activists claim. Greenpoint residents are ing the road dangerous. The city has already spent boosters. they’re just trying to make West path have the right to calling cut on a TV show that North Brooklynites say they bSuokilodloinwgssk a2, w4-hsoe cvleanim,”s thsareide Stitarle ebtu, iwldhiincghs h aosn n toh ree sbidloecnk- more than $140,000 on legal clin“gIt ’sa davno ocuattrea gaen,”d slaaiwd ycyer- more noise,” said Sonies. ampopreea lt h—an awndo rtthhey coafs eo nies they claim takes up too many aren’t entirely anti-Hollywood of her tenants moved out due to closest to the studio. But the fees to defend the Prospect Mitch Sonies — who thinks The lawsuit, which last — because they aim to ex- parking spaces and causes — they just want the Steven noise and air pollution caused crew says that they need to be Park West bike lane, accord- citizens shouldn’t foot the bill year earned international pose a government agency’s too much noise. Spielberg-produced “Smash” by the studio. close to the soundstage be- ing to documents obtained by for defending a lane that has headlines, argued that the wrongdoing. Neighbors of the Eagle to stop treating the partly resi- Broadway Stages owner cause they are there to load The Brooklyn Paper. And now the support of the community, bike lane turned the peaceful He described criticism of Street production stage that dential block like trash. Tony Argento promised the and unload equipment and that cycling path opponents according to a survey . street into a danger zone for the appeal as Kafkaesque. houses the network musical “We are not here to shut crew will park elsewhere and they can’t stray far from a working under the name “[The appeal] is not go- pedestrians and demanded “This is America,” said “Smash” say the fledgling down shows and we’re not stop idling their trucks. power source. Neighbors For Better Bike ing to change the outcome; it be removed. Walden. “Get real.” show’s crew regularly parks against film production, but “That shouldn’t happen, “Smash” is one of scores in loading zones, blocks resi- the staff of this show has been we’ll put somebody out there,” of shows, including “Blue dential driveways, and keeps aggressive and disrespectful,” said Argento. “I will person- Bloods,” “The Good Wife,” Cops: We caught bandit its trucks idling on the street said Eaton, who claims a stu- ally come and move the vehi- and “I Just Want My Pants for hours in the morning. dio worker cursed at him when cle myself.” Back,” that filmed at Broad- “They don’t use parking he asked the “Smash” staffer A location manager for the way Stages since the studio lots, they park on the streets, to move his truck. show said he is working with opened in 1999. and we don’t have any relief,” Parking isn’t the only prob- Argento to make neighbors as The Broadway-inspired By Kate Briquelet Police arrested a 17-year- out of a police lineup, ac- Valentine’s Day, snatch- said Eagle Street resident Todd lem, according to Eagle Street happy as he can, and promised drama starring Debra The Brooklyn Paper old suspect last Friday on cording to a source. ing an Apple mobile from Eaton at a Community Board property owner Alexandra the trucks are only left run- Messing, Anjelica Huston, Cops say they’ve nabbed Greene and Vanderbilt av- “We were able to solve a 14-year-old girl on Greene 1 meeting on Tuesday. Sokolowska, who says crews ning when they are loading and Katharine McPhee, has the bubble jacket-clad ban- enues after a motorist rec- these crimes because a driver Avenue. When things get really busy wake her up as early as 5 am and unloading equipment in plummeted in the ratings this dit who pretended he had ognized his puffy blue coat saw the man on television,” Police also charged the at the Broadway Stages sound- idling outside her window. the morning and evening. month, dropping from 11.5 a gun and robbed teenag- from an NYPD surveillance said an officer at the neigh- perp with t wo other robber- stage at West Street, trucks “They make noise all day Some residents urged the million to 6.5 million viewers ers in Fort Greene of their video and dialed 911. The al- borhood’s 88th Precinct. ies near Greene Avenue on park on both sides of Eagle and they block residential “Smash” crew to park on West in the past two weeks. iPhones. leged robber was later picked The thief last struck on Jan. 27 and Feb. 7 . Making Success — and more? need and not the school our community has asked for,” said Councilwoman Diana Reyna (D–Williamsburg). better Public school parents, who Push for two more charter schools in Williamsburg fear the charter could lead to the middle school’s demise, choices in clashed with Success Acad- By Aaron Short gration both racially and ec- emy supporters, many of The Brooklyn Paper onomically,” said Grannis, whom traveled to the hearing life can The Manhattan power who has sought support for on school buses from a Suc- couple behind a controver- his plan from neighborhood cess location in Harlem. occur at sshicoahplo ipnolgla nitno t olWa uoinlplceihanm taws bcohu margrot eriesr psTcahhreoe Tnoalt-spb etahsctrkroyiun Pggrh oo jrhegciastn . c“ihzNaaotrirtoetnhr Aaron Short coopneSfnoieuddteh dsh ietdhre a lSte uaifdc ecMresos pssr kiAvoacwtaeidtlyz- charter schools in North Brooklyn is an area where p / emy in a school building on Brooklyn, The Brooklyn this is very possible.” Grou the neighborhood’s North- any age. PapEerri ch aGs rlaenanrnise d—. whose schEoaoclh w Coiutilzde snesr ovfe t hbee tWwoerelnd paper sLiadtei naon dp raeraecnhtse do voeurt tmheo rpea tsot EXPERCIEANNC HEEDL,P L IYCOEUN SSEODR,T P OAURTK L SIFELO’SP RE OPASDYBCLHOOCTKHSE.RAPIST wEpWsthtrvaieoifatl peeLl Mi, oat ofomsoose orssAdmkpb onueSewgnrurge ctiC l—twcezoes,ou s-ai sbbsnp bracpAaesilinlechewcdaidnhod ctdemoeh s mtta ahhoryneef- 1dghstot2eoiu nr0ufdgni safeaietnnnr hbtdgt ese g1in tnfr6 wraa 20onde0 msdee1t nf u3bki ,dy3r iasen 62ntnd0 g0dte s1ar gra 7nigrdn.doae kwr4 bti8e netno0-- Scores of Success Academy parents and students Community News ywctaihceoecoanMlosrc b,emo oet thmschmkeaeeuyoo S sw dtw.eha Ti oeitttezh u hs ialcarsd dhdna m oieStdhwoto erlr et .ssehepc etlha i lckooceeoci tltalyoy.- ter chain Citizens of the World The charter network has from Harlem showed their support for charter “If folks want another SPECIALIZATION IN LGBT ISSUES Charter Schools in Williams- not proposed specific loca- schools at a public hearing in Williamsburg. school, we could talk about C F C T burg and Greenpoint next fall, tions, but claimed it would that,” she said. “Whenever ERTIFIEDIN AMILYAND OUPLES HERAPY according to documents ob- “involve the local commu- hood’s more affluent Northside, opened a Success Academy I propose a charter school AFFORDABLE SLIDING SCALE. tained through a Freedom of nity” to help secure space for according to the documents. in Bedford Stuyvesant and in a community, the com- O - -N I A Information request. its schools, according to a let- “We do not want pub- p lans to open another one in munity says they would be UT OF ETWORK NSURANCE CCEPTED Grannis believes Williams- ter sent with its charter ap- lic funds diverted to private Cobble Hill, said Williamsburg happy to have us somewhere burg could use more socio- plication to the SUNY Char- hands to benefit the few, the is a “phenomenal community” else. There’s a fear of change (cid:36)(cid:65)(cid:78)(cid:73)(cid:69)(cid:76)(cid:0)(cid:34)(cid:82)(cid:79)(cid:79)(cid:75)(cid:83)(cid:12)(cid:0)(cid:44)(cid:35)(cid:51)(cid:55)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:35)(cid:69)(cid:76)(cid:76)(cid:0)(cid:18)(cid:17)(cid:21)(cid:0)(cid:20)(cid:19)(cid:17)(cid:13)(cid:22)(cid:22)(cid:23)(cid:20)(cid:0) economically diverse educa- ter Schools Institute. white, the affluent — which and her school would serve “a and any new way of deliver- tion options — and he claims But some Williamsburg is exactly the aim of Grannis’s wide range of ethnicities.” ing education makes people www.danielbrookspsychotherapist.com his two proposed elementary parents claim the new char- two schools,” said parent Cyn- But opponents of the char- nervous.” schools fit the bill. ter schools will not be racially thia Walker. “That is obvious ter plan including hundreds A Department of Education [email protected] “I think it’s a good idea or economically diverse since from their outreach.” of parents, students, teachers, panel will vote on the Success for charter schools to inten- Grannis’s outreach has primar- The applications come and community leaders ral- application on March 1. If the tionally try to get more inte- ily occurred in the neighbor- amid p rotests against his lied outside MS 50 during a panel approves the bid, oppo- wife’s proposal to open a pub- public hearing, claiming her nents vowed to fight the city licly funded, independently proposed school is targeting to reverse course. “ run charter housing 200 stu- children in the gentrifying “There’s no such thing as I needed surgery but dents i nside the Southside’s Northside rather than Eng- a done deal,” said Frances struggling MS 50 on S. Third lish language learners in the Lucerna of El Puente, a Wil- Street this fall. Southside. liamsburg arts group that of- couldn’t be out of Moskowitz, who already “This is not the school we fers programs at MS 50. ” BRIDGE... Stephen Arthur, a cyclist who commission for too long. was hit with a brick in Fort Greene. “Are they trying to send the message that one Continued from page 1 “It was specifically not in- ‘type’ of person is more likely of the city — but doesn’t in- cluded because the city did to commit this crime?” The specialists at New York Methodist clude the m uch-anticipated not review the bridge for com- Others say the problem is Hospital are a step ahead in using robotic $si6g.n2e md tioll liionnk fSoqoutbibrbid Pgaer kd eto- pliaZnoclei’,s” m hee asnadide.ring locust tthhee plaucbkl iocf- opvrievrastieg hBtr boroekdl ybny surgery to treat conditions in a growing Brooklyn Bridge Park above plank footbridge doesn’t look Bridge Park project. Furman Street, according to much like the drab overpass “The city should have al- number of fields including gynecological architects in charge of the on Navy Street between Til- ready considered this,” said lary and Myrtle streets where Roy Sloane of the Brook- project. and urologic disorders, thoracic surgery, Footbridge designer and the city r ecently installed a lyn Bridge Park’s advisory taller mesh fence — one that council. “But [the develop- MacArthur “genius” Ted prostate cancer, and more. In fact, we are critics say l ooks like it be- ers] have been able to evade Zoli says his planned walk- longs in a jail — after kids scrutiny from public bodies the only epicenter for thoracic robotic surgery way will skirt the proposed injured and terrorized at least for years.” bill — which goes to vote in the northeast. Robotic surgery is known to next week — due to a rare and seven cyclists. Ellen Ryan, a spokes- But the fencing discrep- woman for Brooklyn Bridge controversial partnership be- be extremely precise, with fewer complications ancy irks transportation Park said “it’s premature to tween the city and the private safety advocates and park- speculate” on the bill. Lander – and typically results in a quicker recovery, developers building Brook- boosters, who say the rule did not return calls by press lyn Bridge Park. should be upheld on every time. less pain, and shorter hospital stay for patients. The Brooklyn Bridge Park pedestrian overpass citywide But even park advocates That means you can get back more quickly Development Corporation, — no matter if it’s in posh say the whole thing smacks which hired Zoli and his team Brooklyn Heights or between of unfairness. to what’s most important. Your life. of architects, is in charge of the Ingersoll and Walt Whit- “If it’s about safety, then the footbridge design and was man projects. why should this park be ex- not required to get Depart- “The less protection you empt?” said Tony Manheim ment of Transportation ap- have, the more likely the at- of the Park’s advisory coun- proval for its fencing. tacks will happen again,” said cil. We fixed that. COFFEE... just to hone our craft.” Teresa von Fuchs, a Dallis Bros. roaster and judge at this Institute for Advanced and year’s tournament, said that Continued from page 1 against fellow Brooklynite baristas must be “extremely Minimally Invasive Surgery months while moonlighting Justin Schulz, of Roberta’s smooth” presenters to win — as a Shakespearean actress, restaurant in Bushwick, and it’s never over until the is taking the competition se- whose secret weapon will final shot. riously. be a full-bodied espresso “People think what we do “I’m so nervous and ex- with a touch of green apple is silly, that we’re just wax- cited that I’ve been having and fennel. ing poetic about coffee,” von dreams where I bring a sword And working in the cof- Fuchs said. “This will be the to my espresso machine.” fee business in a borough best cafe service you’ll have Indeed, the tournament where people are so passion- in your life, and a lot can hap- will be the ultimate test of ate about java that they even pen in 15 minutes.” honor, passion and profes- s erve it to babies, Schulz says Preliminary rounds will sionalism. he and other Brooklyn baris- be held at 7W Event Stu- Java jockeys will have only tas have an advantage. dios [7 W. 34th St. near Fifth Avenue in Midtown] 15 minutes to serve four espres- “We’re already winning,” on Saturday from 11 am to sos, four cappuccinos, and four said Schulz, who modestly 5 pm. Finals are on Sunday. signature drinks. Their fate is sized up his Brooklyn com- For info, v isit usbarista- in the hands of seven eagle- petition. “We all came here championship.org. eyed judges, who will mer- cilessly rate them on taste, cleanliness, consistency, and TRIP... trict manager of Community other technical details. Only Board 2. “That could be a the top six will go to the na- good compromise when you tional showdown in Portland, don’t think bluestone is the Ore. in April. Continued from page 1 right answer.” Since December, Lunder- tinted cement. Detrich said that she’s man has become the coffee Some community officials written to the Borough Pres- world’s Rocky, steaming say that the plaza is beyond ident since 2010 to pressure and sipping late into the temporary repairs — espe- night to perfect her grape- cially since it last underwent him to finally replace the fruit espresso at Dallis Bros. a major renovation about 15 splintered stone. Coffee in Queens — a boot years ago. “A private homeowner camp for aspiring baristas. “If the plaza is going to would have gotten so many 506 Sixth Street, Brooklyn • 877-362-7148 • www.nym.org BroBoukt lsyhne b wreown’mt baes ttehre c oonmly- wweit hnsetaendd a vceohniccurleatre uthsaet, v“Yioelta tthioisn iss foourr tahdims,”i nsihster astaiiodn. peting. is tinted to look like blue- building and our visitor’s cen- Lunderman will face off stone,” said Rob Perris, dis- ter and no one will fix it.” February 24–March 1, 2012 THE BROOKLYN PAPER (cid:129) WWW.BROOKLYNPAPER.COM (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 AWP 3 THE PARK SLOPE stoop VETERINARY CENTER We have pets available for NEIGHBORHOOD REPORT adoption! Got a good home? RED HOOK BROOKLYN HEIGHTS Give us a call! Cinema gets a sequel Dr. Yvonne Szacki Dr. Beth Balsam (cid:45)(cid:69)(cid:68)(cid:73)(cid:67)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:85)(cid:82)(cid:71)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:89) (cid:36)(cid:69)(cid:78)(cid:84)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:45)(cid:73)(cid:67)(cid:82)(cid:79)(cid:67)(cid:72)(cid:73)(cid:80)(cid:0) Heights moviehouse won’t die, will get new digs (cid:47)(cid:78)(cid:13)(cid:51)(cid:73)(cid:84)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:44)(cid:65)(cid:66)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:36)(cid:73)(cid:71)(cid:73)(cid:84)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:0)(cid:56)(cid:13)(cid:50)(cid:65)(cid:89) (cid:22)(cid:19)(cid:25)(cid:0)(cid:20)(cid:84)(cid:72)(cid:0)(cid:33)(cid:86)(cid:69)(cid:78)(cid:85)(cid:69) By Kate Briquelet 1890s, the one-story structure (at 19th Street) The Brooklyn Paper has housed a variety of ten- The show’s not over for ants, including a pharmacy 718-369-PETS the Brooklyn Heights Cin- and coffee house — prompt- ema. ing the Brooklyn Heights As- Mon to Fri - 9am to 7pm Latin American food vendors at Red Hook Park Landlord Tom Caruana sociation to rally to protect Sat - 9am to 2pm are angry about a new city rule that will make says he will save space for the cinema building. it easier for kids teams to get field rights than the beloved movie house on Judy Stanton, executive di- (cid:80)(cid:65)(cid:82)(cid:75)(cid:83)(cid:76)(cid:79)(cid:80)(cid:69)(cid:86)(cid:69)(cid:84)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:65)(cid:82)(cid:89)(cid:67)(cid:69)(cid:78)(cid:84)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:14)(cid:67)(cid:79)(cid:77) adult soccer players. Henry Street when he tears rector of powerful neighbor- down the old-timey theater hood group, said she will try to FREE Taco debacle and constructs a new apart- convince Caruana to preserve ment building at the site — the theater building. succumbing to community “We wanted him to do his- pressure to keep the neigh- toric research and provided borhood icon around. him with then beginnings of BTHohyev oNBeraoootrakkl lyicne P ivOatp’eNeyren’isldl noerws c prya rfko ruul le sLtachaacoevnew“U e tTmludyna,!hmdos ”aetev b sm resla et uutifhddhomse oierpcamw wriltaoaeanenpnrrr p rwd.d ii.hl“ec”hotNatoorus dob r r ’woKesb u p eelgwaanehtlnne--t Photo by Stefano Giovannini s“m—bsutIero’cf uTlvophlc ehr onrte eeisie noss Cetienmdobaa t lrarothyuco vti hae siitn,n mea”f aa lDSpk lbhlot U.aeotr oTngauM trihhsonyeBeins m hcO scowi.aon ”mi—inedle--l. LIN DEESIGSNINSG FOOR PRNINT dorRs esda yH othoeky P’raer kth’se bleolsoevres di nL aat inne wA mcietryi cpalna nfo tood g vreann-t ewsitl lp gloan fsr,o mth ea tmwoinv iceihnoeumsae Kemenan, isL oewcsyt,a otiwc tnheart ohfi s tlhaen dBlorordo kisly sna vHinegig rhotosm C fionr- mtwao’s y seeaqruse tlo w ciollm tapkleet en.early 1.Files should be created using CMYK (cyan, kids more ballfield access than adults. to single screen in the base- the beloved theater after he razes it for a five-story “I don’t think Tom real- magenta, yellow, black) not RGB (red, green, blue) Thanks to a Parks Department regulation that gives “youth ment, with a lobby for art apartment building. ized how important the cin- color mode. leagues preference” for much-coveted spring and fall field and singer-songwriters on ema is to so many people,” 2.Black text should be 0%C, 0%M, 0%Y and permits, the largely Latino adult soccer teams that have the first floor. Lowy said. “Something else 100%K. played for years on the pitches near Bay and Court streets The building’s design is this point,” Caruana said. The property, which sits would be on the first floor 3.Ideally files should be designed using a vector might need to find new fields — forcing the park’s famous still a work in progress, but Movie lovers and preser- on the edge of the Brook- anyway. Why not keep the based program such as Illustrator or InDesign. taco and pupusas sellers to find new customers. Caruana said that Lowy and vationists were scandalized lyn Heights historic district, theater?” 4.Files should be saved as High Quality Print PDF Fofu Re“nIett’des s Ha, neox iomekc puPotairvrtkea .nd “ti rIpeta cwrttoi olrl f o hofa utvhre ec Fuaonsto oidmm Vpeearn cbdta o[sorens,” Cb souamsidinm Ceisetsst]ea.e”r hlthiikese slsyuc mrsatmpapyey r. t itlhle athteer ewnodu oldf abanfrtoaek pre la T tnhhneee dnB etrowo rosa kztlehy atnht eCP saqapruuear-t baagteeecrda mitnoe s1 at9any7 i 1an fdaleonpadte enhvdaeesrn smti ntahcnee--, eStmreBaer [ot7 o0ink Hl yBennr oryoH kSeltyi.g na htH tOse riagCnhgitnse-, f5il.eIsf .the file is designed to bleed (print to the edge) The hungry soccer players account for about half of the “We were inspired by the 150-seat cinema at the cor- w eathering several changes (718) 596-5095]. For info, vis- than a bleed must be included. So if the finished vendors’s profits, according to Fuentes — and they also help community and revised our ner of Orange Street to make in ownership . it brooklynheightsc inema. size of the printed piece is to be 4” x 4” then the anchor what has become a vibrant hub for Latino culture. plans to accommodate him at room for apartments. Since it was erected in the com. required file size with the bleed is 4.25” x 4.25” with But vendors and soccer players fear the new rule could all things intended to bleed extending to those bring an end to a weekend tradition marked by ceviche, WILLIAMSBURG dimensions and all things not meant to bleed be at sideline beers and athletes sporting brightly colored soc- least a quarter inch away from those edges. cer jerseys from around Spanish-speaking world. In Red Hook, the city’s new regulation could give more Market watch 20-year-old business only two This lesson brought to you by the good people at: space to youth football teams, which are mostly made up blocks away from The Edge. of African American kids, according to coaches. Tops’s manager Yvonne Coach Bill Solomon, whose Brooklyn Titans are com- Wong says she won’t fret the of Brooklyn peting for use of the turf, says the rule is only fair. new competition, but hoped “It’s a no-brainer,” said Solomon. “Youth who play Supermarket to open in it wouldn’t be a chain. sbpuorSerotasmu acerr eafo tlioecds bsile olsiwk, he tlooyw f toeoov gdee rv,t e sinendeto ot hrtser o apufotbellirec a.y” l aosn gy ehti astnoortyh oefr waterfront condo tower Giovannini ntoemw“Pe sretsoo rpdeloe, blciuoktem I t efoi nbbdrao cowku srte oc i unus as- 37B01ro58o .A8k5tlyla8nn.@0ti3cm1 A3inv Oeu.tp eBemrnoa Monkpolyrnends a([email protected] SSommaitthu Srdt.a) y ctpttohioeg enncPh fsoPatilemravikncrepsekt eDdfswot eeDriotp ediheagn prtu ttbrahmluiraedtcet mcdiknoiistetnn synasgp.t ,n o I fmdf knoo e rar2rs eadcm0t ie0isnar p8ageno, Prttfthu.hohelioeeli ldr Hi tp-chse Aaaeartlbl lttrreshae .r mqsDB usteeioofprn oeab rdsruea t ytimtdh h eeetahxmnte-t, BTca ohsymeuT pABphelreearo xmWor Tokailhrlynkleni e a ESPtm da—hgspobee a uwrr rtpgiol ltc heoonnutdisaoel cu hhooonomniAtd dle u’os stx ompuc soroooyksmm etd esepexwv lopeeofexl mton hps—eami vnnee e nfipagot r htro5h bp6atoeht5’rres--- A grocery store will Photo by Stefano bgfaobo foeon oicuuendatridiugsmqe,sh”pueeb ee stown sar.daie hCden oo nhdWofta frdeieco nrston hstanga aa uvv.tr reae“hanr Tannitsehtois toati ya sn tl nhooaidesflt 7t hAvrentue city has unofficially given youth teams priority for years, even game-changer for waterfront ties — confirmed that a mar- open on Kent Avenue. flavor of the neighborhood.” though the city only recently put the rule into writing. dwellers accustomed to schlep- ket will open in the coming Community Board 1 mem- Demand for the field is likely to increase after a $ 2.5 ping their groceries back to the weeks, but would not reveal ber Ward Dennis said the com- million renovation — which includes new lights and turf cluster of new developments its operator. The grocery will be the munity could use another gro- — wraps up next year. along Kent Avenue. Public officials welcomed fifth supermarket to open in cery store because it is “still Supplies If youth teams gain a greater footprint in Red Hook The food-seller will open the news. the rapidly developing North- woefully under served.” Park, the shift from futbol to football could trigger an on the groundfloor of the com- “A supermarket is an es- side, which boasts Khim’s Mil- “I think any good super- “interesting cultural fusion,” said Sharon Zukin, a so- plex’s south tower on the cor- sential component of a com- lennium Market on Driggs Av- market will do well, though 376 ciologist who wrote about Red Hook Park’s food carts ner of N. Fifth Street, where munity,” said Williamsburg enue, Sunac Natural Foods on this is mainly an amenity for in her book “Naked City: The Death and Life of Au- workers recently put up a sign Democratic district leader N. Seventh Street, Williams- people who can walk there,” Supplies for 7th Ave. thentic Urban Places.” that reads, “Gourmet Super- Lincoln Restler, who called burg Food Market on N. Third said Dennis, who saw the sign “If it’s a question of livelihood,” she said. “Maybe market Coming Soon! Organic it “a much needed addition Street, and Tops on the Water- and posted it on his blog, the Fine Artist, (bet. 11th & 12th Sts) they’ll start selling more hamburgers than huaraches.” & Natural Products.” to the Northside.” front on N. Sixth Street — a Brooklyn 11211 . Graphic Artist, Student 369-4969 and Children BAY RIDGE Former cop admits to running guns cil, and other civic groups, as they moonlighted as gun Affordable Family Dentistry runners, officials said. in modern pleasant surroundings Venezia was so loved by the community that state Sen. Dan MacLeod tional officer, for being part of and now they will pay for Venezia and fellow commu- Marty Golden (R–Bay Ridge) State of the Art Sterilization (autoclave) Emergencies treated promptly for The Brooklyn Paper a conspiracy to transport and their crimes.” nity affairs cop Joe Trischitta introduced a bill honoring the A beloved Bay Ridge cop- receive stolen merchandise. Venezia admitted to trans- were arrested with Masso in cop when he retired. Special care for children & anxious patients turned-gun runner admitted Along with jail time, porting the stolen booty, October. He received “cop of the WE NOW ACCEPT OXFORD to transporting $1 million in Venezia will be forced to which included three M-16 Six of the arrested officers month” awards from the 68th • Tooth Bleaching (whitening) • Cosmetic Dentistry, Porcelain Facings & Inlays, Bonding illegal firearms, smokes and pay $8,000 in fines, federal rifles, a shotgun, 16 hand- go served in the 68th Precinct, but Precinct Community Coun- Crowns & Bridges (Capping) ssctPfwittorcoaeueoMltcrele i,da nn apn cl rlpesidctn ulaco odaeto tV esmh hmd eiam— nmgaleufuc ziinyhlcintieaiyrt nay,pi a4em rarlss6oif.es fn,aa osagci n r 6wrts oh8 foiosttafhhs-rt pfDpbtoirrocaeros“evnaseArikeedsdy sci, tt K u,loMP”at a ouwMrnaerp rwseahec tnsnioo sahBfl hidoaVdhe trt.etarcha nrewenaem elUrzaarei.we aSn s s,t.aa unAoinpodftd---t. gtrtcMhuerutoroatnTnuesoss shska,o.a e s He nc— idxdairs ls is wla nl ogtofhgftoato ocl rmnre a ancagrlaeostd,coyo meh n dwrWims ino dooeer infkslnf ocl ,et iita.dtag rnh mieande-- File photo by Gregory Man nziat—dhfieaetew eB’tnyshrst o adess otyre ihedfr rw es vTncpse’iortentni phsjcgtucsi i ttfas ho roBtle i llrtwyoat t2iya carh0 aelRa akyldn rice tdddioahn g.mVre es2 eb ,mr0 nbee1ueuas0---tt chCitsnopioolg em nVm icionnaetmr e nn22 dyu0e0o z0nfo0o i9if7fattf ty—h iahc eBnewi aad obp il raolselielrt.ar eddor egbnu1xe0eget”d hem ’ns“saede ttrehe netdea--- •••• P RISCmato5epoionrl4tenal eoCnvD4s taehs D6n,enrC aeNa.i2lnde oo•tpnnJ 4iusEh-ttSoxrer -yOntut5r e raf•fgS sc5Fffi tci•tiircloa5 rlAineelen n4sGg eaH ysu• l tgmoD( (cid:85),et uoM e sTConri6ratstehua .2( a r S&cretmKo4wrs loA eoe•-nr relm7Celtta dlaGp0e)iamrl5)enai nr5Pedgaserrkninsg a co-conspirator David Kan- “They betrayed their duties in the 68th Precinct — pleaded Marco Venezia pleaded nity board meetings, the 68th tenced on June 21, prosecu- and insurance plans accommodated wisher, a New Jersey correc- order to make a quick profit, guilty for his role on Feb. 7. guilty on Wednesday. Precinct Community Coun- tors said. % 0 F 1 F d O his a h t wit FACILITIES/SERVICES GUEST ROOM AMENITIES (cid:85)(cid:202)(cid:45)(cid:147)(cid:156)(cid:142)(cid:136)(cid:152)(cid:125)(cid:202)(cid:69)(cid:202)(cid:32)(cid:156)(cid:152)(cid:135)(cid:195)(cid:147)(cid:156)(cid:142)(cid:136)(cid:152)(cid:125)(cid:202)(cid:62)(cid:152)(cid:96)(cid:202)(cid:133)(cid:62)(cid:152)(cid:96)(cid:136)(cid:86)(cid:62)(cid:171)(cid:202) (cid:85)(cid:202)(cid:10)(cid:156)(cid:147)(cid:171)(cid:143)(cid:136)(cid:147)(cid:105)(cid:152)(cid:204)(cid:62)(cid:192)(cid:222)(cid:202)(cid:220)(cid:136)(cid:192)(cid:105)(cid:143)(cid:105)(cid:195)(cid:195)(cid:202)(cid:133)(cid:136)(cid:125)(cid:133)(cid:135)(cid:195)(cid:171)(cid:105)(cid:105)(cid:96)(cid:202)(cid:22)(cid:152)(cid:204)(cid:105)(cid:192)(cid:152)(cid:105)(cid:204)(cid:202)(cid:62)(cid:86)(cid:86)(cid:105)(cid:195)(cid:195) 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(cid:85)(cid:202)(cid:163)(cid:228)(cid:228)(cid:175)(cid:202)(cid:45)(cid:62)(cid:204)(cid:136)(cid:195)(cid:118)(cid:62)(cid:86)(cid:204)(cid:136)(cid:156)(cid:152)(cid:202)(cid:20)(cid:213)(cid:62)(cid:192)(cid:62)(cid:152)(cid:204)(cid:105)(cid:105) (cid:85)(cid:202)(cid:44)(cid:156)(cid:156)(cid:147)(cid:195)(cid:202)(cid:220)(cid:136)(cid:204)(cid:133)(cid:202)(cid:9)(cid:105)(cid:62)(cid:213)(cid:204)(cid:136)(cid:118)(cid:213)(cid:143)(cid:202)(cid:31)(cid:62)(cid:152)(cid:133)(cid:62)(cid:204)(cid:204)(cid:62)(cid:152)(cid:202)(cid:54)(cid:136)(cid:105)(cid:220) Less than a block away from Flushing Avenue Stop of Subway (J, Z, M) Next to WoodHull Hospital SUMNER HOTEL (cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:18)(cid:18)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:85)(cid:77)(cid:78)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:0)(cid:48)(cid:76)(cid:65)(cid:67)(cid:69)(cid:12)(cid:0)(cid:34)(cid:82)(cid:79)(cid:79)(cid:75)(cid:76)(cid:89)(cid:78)(cid:14)(cid:0)(cid:46)(cid:57)(cid:0)(cid:17)(cid:17)(cid:18)(cid:16)(cid:22)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:52)(cid:69)(cid:76)(cid:26)(cid:0)(cid:23)(cid:17)(cid:24)(cid:13)(cid:21)(cid:23)(cid:20)(cid:13)(cid:17)(cid:21)(cid:16)(cid:16)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:38)(cid:65)(cid:88)(cid:26)(cid:0)(cid:23)(cid:17)(cid:24)(cid:13)(cid:21)(cid:23)(cid:20)(cid:13)(cid:17)(cid:21)(cid:16)(cid:17)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:37)(cid:77)(cid:65)(cid:73)(cid:76)(cid:26)(cid:0)(cid:83)(cid:85)(cid:77)(cid:78)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:14)(cid:72)(cid:79)(cid:84)(cid:69)(cid:76)(cid:32)(cid:71)(cid:77)(cid:65)(cid:73)(cid:76)(cid:14)(cid:67)(cid:79)(cid:77) 4 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 February 24–March 1, 2012 Cops: One man crime spree terrifi es nabe into the glass door of a Have- Detectives are still search- The owner of the home be- Brooklyn Masonic Temple shot him in the back with a 90TH PRECINCT meyer Chase branch, and ing for a suspect. POLICE BLOTTER tween Washington and Clas- near Lafayette Avenue at 2:30 BB before speeding away. Southside–Bushwick stealing $608 in change. Sham wow son avenues told cops that pm when she set her hand- — Dan MacLeod Crime spree The thief then pulled a $4,950 worth of electronics bag on a table. When she re- knife on a driver and stole Two thugs allegedly robbed Find more online every Wednesday at disappeared from his house. turned 90 minutes later, her 94TH PRECINCT a twPool-idcea ys arya ma mpaagne w, etrnats ohn- hSiesc ocnadr, Sstpreeeetd bienfgo rteo dwitacrhdi nSg. ait Bs oowrinnqeur’esn n Pelaccke o cna fFée abn.d 1 c7u.t BrooklynPaper.com/blotter — Eli Rosenberg scteulflpf —ho ninec —lud winags $ g17o0n,e a.nd a Greenpoint–Northside ing a Union Avenue gas sta- it, police documents note. The victim told police 88TH PRECINCT — Kate Briquelet House arrest tSitorne,e tr oCbhbaisneg b aa nHka,v aenmd ecyaer-r theC noepxst marorernstiendg .a suspect tChaafté h we iwtha hsi sin wsiifdee a tth 8e:1 W0 pomw 84 PRECINCT n4:u4e0, phmol wdihnegn ha ims ainP hgoranbeb, eadt Fort Greene–Clinton Hill 68TH PRECINCT robTbwedo a mmeanna icnisnidge hthisi eMveas- jacking a Nissan before be- Wythe homicide when the robbers cut the door Brooklyn Heights– it and ran away. The bold ca- Tech foul nahttan Avenue apartment ing arrested. open and demanded money. DUMBO–Boerum Hill– fe-goer then chased after the Cops say they arrested two Bay Ridge–Dyker Heights on Feb. 14. The spree started on Feb. A gunman shot a Williams- The manager gave one $5, but Downtown crook and — with the help teens for beating up a City Tech Jacket jacked The victim said the thugs 18 when the crook demanded burg man inside his Wythe Av- the thieves demanded more. Borough brawl of a nice guy on the street — student on Myrtle Avenue and A cold thief swiped a coat knocked on his apartment gas, money and cigarettes enue apartment on Feb. 16. caught up to the rascal and from a gas station man- Officials say David When he refused, one of them A thug was arrested for snatched the phone back. trying to filch his iPhone. from a woman on Third Av- door at 7:30 pm. When he slashed him. Police later ar- allegedly punching a man in The victim told police enue on Feb. 18. opened the door one held alkignfeei,fr e,a ,nt chdor cepuast tce hlnaiesi dmh e.thade wmiathn ’as Btnheoeau rft lrSoo.on Sr, io4x1ft h,t hwSiatsr sea efpota uarntt md3 :eo3n0nt resTtewdo t wdoay ssu lsapteecr,t sa. burglar tthraeTi fnha scete av atiitco ttnhi meo Bn s oFareiodbu .g h1he4 H.w aalsl 76TH— PNRatEalCieI NO’CNTeill tSthhtaeret y ehote ua wtn 8ga: s3t h0ni epeamvre Swst p.h Euetnd h woinmaer doinsf sahmeT w whhaees vn n itcehtaeir mp 7e 3troprdl ad pS cptorreopeastc thahtea 4dt htlhaipem too taphg.e arHi snteso tl setah hiedi s w pthahelol nwteh hauingldes theA sut s6p:1e0c ta wma st hbea cnke axtt i td: aayl-, pshmo.t Hweo suunfdfes raendd t hwreaes gpuron-- sbteoelre ffriovme tchaes eesa toefr yC.orona wthaei tsitnagti ofno rn tehaer JRo rtarlaeimn oant CarroHlli lGl–aRredde nHso–oCkobble a“ Dchoonk’te hmooldv.e T, haen odt hgeirv sea iudp, hfreorm a hnedr gharanbdbs.e Td hteh jee rjka caklseot pduowncsh aendd ofuletd t thoe D droiogrg sw Ainv-- legedly tossing a garbage can nounced dead at the scene. — Aaron Short Street at 11:50 pm when the Knife mug that iPhone!” They ran into made off with her passport enue, but cops arrested them box-cutter-wielding thug at- a nearby residence without and phone, which were in the a few blocks away. Why Choose tacked and stole his glasses. robAb ekd nai fe6-1w-yieealdr-ionlgd tmhuagn the mobile. coat pocket. Roebling mug Police say the thief tried to in an apartment building on Police later arrested two Apple eyed Two thieves stole a wom- run off, but they arrested the 13-year-old suspects. Center Mall on Feb. 13. A trio of punks swiped a an’s phone and purse on Roe- “A Good Plumber”? man moments later. The victim said he was Riding high straphanger’s phone at the bling Street on Feb. 16. Pick-pocket entering an elevator in the Some grifter plucked a 69th Street station on Feb. The victim told police she A thief stole a man’s wallet complex near Henry Street man’s wallet on Myrtle Ave- 13. was near N. Sixth Street at on the Q train on Feb. 16. at around 7 pm, when a nue on Feb. 17 — seconds after The victim told cops that 9:55 pm when the perps ap- The straphanger said he man wearing a black hood- he dropped it on the ground. she was sitting on a bench proached her from behind was on a Coney Island-bound ed-sweatshirt entered and The 74-year-old victim at 8:50 pm when the goons and punched her head. She Q train near the DeKalb Ave- pressed a knife to the older told cops that he parked near snatched her iPhone. The fear- dropped her phone, which one nue station at 8 am when the man’s face. The goon grabbed Ryerson Street at 3 pm and less commuter gave chase, but thief picked up, while the other crook bumped into him and $5 and a $130 cellphone from accidentally let go of his bill- the thieves got away. perp grabbed her purse. stole his wallet. the man’s pockets. fold. That’s when his wife, BB gun drive-by iSwipe Train gain Teenage terror who remained in the car, saw Wannabe gangsters shot a A thief grabbed a wom- A crook swiped a man’s Two gun-wielding teen- a goon stoop down and snatch man with a BB gun on 79th an’s iPhone on N. Third Street backpack at the Schermer- age thugs robbed a woman on it. The suspect got away with Street on Feb. 15 in the lamest on Feb. 14. horn Street subway station Clinton Street on Feb. 19. $450, a $556 payroll check, drive-by in recent memory. The victim told police she A Good Plumber Inc., with over 20 years of experience in on TFehbe. v13ic. tim said he was sheT whaes v nicetairm F otoulrdt hc oPplasc teh aatt Bandr ecraedkit cfaardist.h he Tlehfet vhicist imho tuosled cboeptws teheant wbeatsw leoeonk iBnegd afot rhde rA pvhenounee the plumbing and heating industry has built our reputation waiting for a Queens-bound 7:30 pm when the two thugs, A partygoer snatched a Third Avenue and Ridge and Berry Street at 1:15 am on recommendations. That reputation has grown due to our G train at the station near who she said were between woman’s purse at a Cler- Boulevard at 11:40 pm to when the perp ran toward reliable, honest and affordable service. Honesty means never Hoyt Street at 2:10 am when the ages of 12 and 14, grabbed mont Avenue church event buy a pack of smokes. That’s her, grabbed it out of her recommending work that is unnecessary and giving you an the thief grabbed his back- her shoulder and shoved a on Feb. 19. when a passenger in a red car hand, and ran toward Bed- accurate price before we do the work…no hidden fees. At A Good pack and fled. black firearm into her ribs. The Bronx victim told with a white lightning bolt ford Avenue. Plumber Inc., we believe customer service is about exceeding the — Daniel Bush “Give me your bag,” one police that she was at the painted on the driver’s side — Aaron Short of the goons croacked, be- customer’s expectations before, during, and after the job! 78TH PRECINCT fore taking the woman’s purse and fleeing. Base Lic. # B01363 (cid:115)(cid:115)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:48)(cid:36)(cid:51)(cid:37)(cid:82)(cid:84)(cid:77)(cid:82)(cid:82)(cid:79)(cid:85)(cid:65)(cid:80)(cid:70)(cid:71)(cid:73)(cid:69)(cid:76)(cid:71)(cid:0)(cid:79)(cid:83)(cid:65)(cid:72)(cid:89)(cid:83)(cid:78)(cid:84)(cid:69)(cid:73)(cid:68)(cid:0)(cid:79)(cid:38)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:78)(cid:34)(cid:79)(cid:83)(cid:65)(cid:82)(cid:1)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:87)(cid:67)(cid:76)(cid:89)(cid:75)(cid:65)(cid:0)(cid:71)(cid:52)(cid:82)(cid:68)(cid:82)(cid:82)(cid:65)(cid:79)(cid:0)(cid:48)(cid:73)(cid:85)(cid:78)(cid:82)(cid:78)(cid:73)(cid:69)(cid:67)(cid:68)(cid:68)(cid:73)(cid:0)(cid:78)(cid:0)(cid:52)(cid:45)(cid:71)(cid:69)(cid:83)(cid:69)(cid:1)(cid:84)(cid:67)(cid:69)(cid:72)(cid:68)(cid:65)(cid:0)(cid:78)(cid:73)(cid:67)(cid:83)(cid:1) (cid:115)(cid:115)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:38)(cid:38)(cid:40)(cid:55)(cid:85)(cid:65)(cid:79)(cid:72)(cid:83)(cid:76)(cid:77)(cid:76)(cid:69)(cid:84)(cid:89)(cid:0)(cid:69)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:65)(cid:51)(cid:0)(cid:76)(cid:78)(cid:48)(cid:83)(cid:84)(cid:68)(cid:118)(cid:79)(cid:82)(cid:79)(cid:0)(cid:67)(cid:1)(cid:35)(cid:84)(cid:75)(cid:69)(cid:76)(cid:69)(cid:69)(cid:67)(cid:68)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:0)(cid:78)(cid:73)(cid:104)(cid:79)(cid:0)(cid:55)(cid:51)(cid:78)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:65)(cid:48)(cid:82)(cid:82)(cid:76)(cid:86)(cid:65)(cid:69)(cid:73)(cid:72)(cid:78)(cid:67)(cid:79)(cid:83)(cid:69)(cid:85)(cid:1)(cid:1)(cid:83)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:0) BhFeaobnA.g o2ej6erk .rPko a nwbr keao aSntl r ouFmpp e tara sintr aopn- 77PTroHsp —Pec RCt EoHleCinigI MNhtisCxsTon Star2noR0dn e gOYCp evEouaefutrrfiarsctt eiiooeofnn ucsy OCoPrpEoSNrea WHA tae7e b AWW laDc eEcElsAocpuEoYanm~nKStoesl Beats me (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:34)(cid:69)(cid:83)(cid:84)(cid:0)(cid:55)(cid:65)(cid:82)(cid:82)(cid:65)(cid:78)(cid:84)(cid:73)(cid:69)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:33)(cid:82)(cid:79)(cid:85)(cid:78)(cid:68)(cid:1) (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:38)(cid:85)(cid:76)(cid:76)(cid:89)(cid:0)(cid:44)(cid:73)(cid:67)(cid:69)(cid:78)(cid:83)(cid:69)(cid:68)(cid:0)(cid:65)(cid:78)(cid:68)(cid:0)(cid:41)(cid:78)(cid:83)(cid:85)(cid:82)(cid:69)(cid:68)(cid:1) The victim told cops he was holding an electronic A crook stole a teenag- Our Professionally Trained, Clean and Courteous Staff Can Handle: book while riding a Man- er’s headphones on Bergen hattan-bound F train near Street on Feb. 14. (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:36)(cid:82)(cid:73)(cid:80)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:44)(cid:69)(cid:65)(cid:75)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:35)(cid:76)(cid:79)(cid:71)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:48)(cid:73)(cid:80)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:71)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:55)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:0)(cid:40)(cid:69)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:34)(cid:79)(cid:73)(cid:76)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:83)(cid:0) Seventh Avenue and Ninth The young victim told (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:34)(cid:73)(cid:79)(cid:76)(cid:79)(cid:71)(cid:73)(cid:67)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:0)(cid:36)(cid:82)(cid:65)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:0)(cid:52)(cid:82)(cid:69)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:77)(cid:69)(cid:78)(cid:84)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:45)(cid:65)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:69)(cid:87)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:50)(cid:69)(cid:78)(cid:79)(cid:86)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:73)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:83)(cid:0) Street at 7:45 pm, when a man cops that he was in the park (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:34)(cid:65)(cid:67)(cid:75)(cid:13)(cid:38)(cid:76)(cid:79)(cid:87)(cid:0)(cid:48)(cid:82)(cid:69)(cid:86)(cid:69)(cid:78)(cid:84)(cid:79)(cid:82)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:50)(cid:69)(cid:77)(cid:79)(cid:86)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:0)(cid:79)(cid:70)(cid:0)(cid:54)(cid:73)(cid:79)(cid:76)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:73)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:55)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:0)(cid:38)(cid:73)(cid:76)(cid:84)(cid:82)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:73)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:0)(cid:41)(cid:78)(cid:83)(cid:84)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:76)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:73)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:83) grabbed the gadget. The strap- near Carlton Avenue around 718-230-8100 (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:53)(cid:78)(cid:68)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:71)(cid:82)(cid:79)(cid:85)(cid:78)(cid:68)(cid:0)(cid:48)(cid:73)(cid:80)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:44)(cid:79)(cid:67)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:71)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:38)(cid:85)(cid:76)(cid:76)(cid:0)(cid:35)(cid:79)(cid:76)(cid:79)(cid:82)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:69)(cid:87)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:0)(cid:44)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:41)(cid:78)(cid:83)(cid:80)(cid:69)(cid:67)(cid:84)(cid:73)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:83) hanger held on tight — but 4:45 pm when he stepped the thug then whacked him away from his bag. When A Good Plumber Inc. $25 Off in the left eye and ran away he returned to it 10 minutes www.myrtlecarservice.com with the $300 device. later someone had dumped 24 HOUR Phone: 718-648-6838(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:38)(cid:65)(cid:88)(cid:26)(cid:0)718-646-4659 Failed getaway its contents on the ground (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:77)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:76)(cid:0)(cid:48)(cid:65)(cid:67)(cid:75)(cid:65)(cid:71)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:36)(cid:69)(cid:76)(cid:73)(cid:86)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:89) (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:44)(cid:79)(cid:67)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:0)(cid:33)(cid:78)(cid:68)(cid:0)(cid:44)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:71)(cid:0)(cid:36)(cid:73)(cid:83)(cid:84)(cid:65)(cid:78)(cid:67)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:86)(cid:73)(cid:67)(cid:69) SERVICE TO (cid:33)(cid:71)(cid:79)(cid:79)(cid:68)(cid:80)(cid:76)(cid:85)(cid:77)(cid:66)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:78)(cid:89)(cid:32)(cid:71)(cid:77)(cid:65)(cid:73)(cid:76)(cid:14)(cid:67)(cid:79)(cid:77) Any A slow-moving thief and plucked his fancy “Dr. (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:86)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:71)(cid:0)(cid:52)(cid:72)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:21)(cid:0)(cid:34)(cid:79)(cid:82)(cid:79)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:33)(cid:78)(cid:68)(cid:0)(cid:34)(cid:69)(cid:89)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:68) Call To Reserve Long Trips ALL AIRPORTS NYC(cid:87) L(cid:87)ice(cid:87)n(cid:14)s(cid:65)e(cid:71)d(cid:79) M(cid:79)a(cid:68)s(cid:80)te(cid:76)(cid:85)r (cid:77)Plu(cid:66)m(cid:69)b(cid:82)(cid:14)e(cid:67)r(cid:79) #(cid:77)1948 Plumbing Job sfrwoimpe ad ma afna nocuyt scideell pah coonfe- DDree”c hoeandpshtornuesc otuet.d $2W.0E A0CC EOPT FALFL M*AJ$OR3 CR.E0DIT0 C AORDSFF* When You Need A Good Plumber…Call Us! With This Ad fee shop on Union Street on Crooks stole thousands of 718-648-6838 Cannot be combined with Feb. 15. dollars worth of electronics Any Ride $25 or More To Any New York Airport any other offer. (cid:34)(cid:48) The victim told cops he from a man’s home on Ster- Coupon not valid for credit card sales. Coupon not valid for credit card sales. was standing outside Tea ling Place between Feb. 14 Rates subject to change. Please call for validation code______. Rates subject to change. Please call for validation code______. Lounge near Seventh Ave- and 19. *Not to be combined with any other offers. *Not to be combined with any other offers. This year, resolve m a k e s Rtarea tSdhoiitnui ognn doa fAl thlheeeraa pr®i a nsgt .a i d s to hear better Experience ReSound Alera®, a platform of hearing aids that provide superior sound quality and personalized settings that ensure your comfort throughout the day. 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(cid:115)(cid:0)Exceptionally rich sound (cid:115)(cid:0)Full awareness of the individual sounds around you (cid:115)(cid:0)Improved ability to locate where sounds are coming from (cid:115)(cid:0)Clear sound and complete comfort when using the phone or listening to music (cid:115)(cid:0)Better understand speech, even in noisy environments (cid:115)(cid:0)Whistle-free sound, whether you’re on the phone, or hugging someone (cid:115)(cid:0)A truly wireless hearing aid that connects you directly to your TV, cell phone and other audio devices Come to Our 3-Day Open House Event Saturday, Feb. 25th, Monday Feb. 27th & Tuesday, Feb. 28th, 2012 (cid:115) Free hearing screening and consultation (cid:115) Free demonstration of our most advanced hearing aid technology (cid:115) Trial-period and fi nancing options available (cid:115) AARP members please note we are authorized providers 50% OFF Appointment RSVP today for this special event—space is limited! Selected Models Required Through 3/31/12 (cid:8)(cid:23)(cid:17)(cid:24)(cid:9)(cid:0)(cid:24)(cid:23)(cid:21)(cid:13)(cid:19)(cid:17)(cid:19)(cid:17)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:8)(cid:23)(cid:17)(cid:24)(cid:9)(cid:0)(cid:24)(cid:21)(cid:24)(cid:13)(cid:22)(cid:23)(cid:19)(cid:20) No Walk-ins (cid:33)(cid:85)(cid:68)(cid:73)(cid:79)(cid:76)(cid:79)(cid:71)(cid:89)(cid:0)(cid:33)(cid:70)(cid:108)(cid:0)(cid:76)(cid:73)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:69)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:17)(cid:20)(cid:18)(cid:0)(cid:42)(cid:79)(cid:82)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:69)(cid:77)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:84)(cid:14)(cid:0)(cid:22)(cid:84)(cid:72)(cid:0)(cid:38)(cid:76)(cid:79)(cid:79)(cid:82)(cid:12)(cid:0)(cid:34)(cid:82)(cid:79)(cid:79)(cid:75)(cid:76)(cid:89)(cid:78)(cid:0)(cid:40)(cid:69)(cid:73)(cid:71)(cid:72)(cid:84)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:66)(cid:69)(cid:84)(cid:87)(cid:69)(cid:69)(cid:78)(cid:0)(cid:35)(cid:76)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:84)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:0)(cid:6)(cid:0)(cid:40)(cid:69)(cid:78)(cid:82)(cid:89)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:84)(cid:83)(cid:14) I N S I D E D I N I N G | PE R FO R M I N G ARTS | N IG HTLI FE | BOO KS | CI N E MA THEATER ‘Laramie’ play A heart-wrenching play that exposes the bizarre ethos behind small-town homophobia hits the stage at Heights Players on March 2. “The Laramie Project” — Moisés Kauf- man’s acclaimed tale about the real-life murder of Matthew Shepard, a gay college student in Wyoming — offers Giovannini apro eudenkod caiutn mtgh eetn heteva ercnyht-issl ltsiyunlrge- Photo by Stefano 1osWaf9 iet9“dhi8I net Da scpttrueieirrsmie hntocee.t .fso“i tnrIh td eR tf lrooiumrbtcehietr,”sst the audience to look in the mirror.” The production uses bare-bones props and costumes to cut to the heart of the 13-year-old script, much of which came directly from in- (718) 260-2500 The Brooklyn Paper’s essential guide to the Borough of Kings Feb. 24–March 1, 2012 terviews and court testimony. Part crime thriller, part sociological study, the sound-bite-driven play is a form of theat- rical journalism. It’s also a bold stylistic de- Balls to the wall parture for the Heights Players theater, which often sticks with light-hearted classics. It’s a risk worth taking, Weinstein said. “Hate doesn’t belong in our lives,” he said. “That message is always current.” “The Laramie Project” at the Heights Players [26 Willow Pl. between State and Joralemon streets in Brooklyn Heights, (718) 237-2752], March 2–18, Fridays and Saturdays at 8 pm; Sundays at 2 pm. Tick- A beefed-up meatball showdown at the Brooklyn Kitchen ets, $15. — Natalie O’Neill ART By Juliet Linderman DINING for The Brooklyn Paper Star studded It’s meatball madness — and you can The Third Annual Meatball Slapdown at the Brooklyn Kitchen [100 Frost st. hold the spaghetti. at Skillman Avenue in Williamsburg, On March 2, this meaty side dish is (718) 389-2982]. March 2, 7 pm. Tick- taking center stage at the third annual Meat- ets, $50. For info, visit www.thebrook- ball Slapdown at the Brooklyn Kitchen, lynkitchen.com. Bushwick’s gallery scene is growing up. Chelsea stalwart Luhring Augustine opened where the city’s best chefs will pull out its hugely anticipated Brooklyn space on Fri- all the stops to prove their culinary chops Dan Holzman, owner of the Meatball Shop, day night to a star-studded crowd that nearly as they compete for the title of the bor- whose rotating menu offers approximately overshadowed its engrossing video installa- ough’s meatball maestro. 50 different varieties of meatballs at any tion, “The Illusion of Democracy.” “There’s no shortage of food compe- given time with inventive flavor combina- Art world luminaries titions happening all over this city, but tions such as buffalo chicken. “It started including performance meatballs are concise — you can tell a with this idea that the American diet is artist Maria Abramovic, whole story in a single meatball, in a very moving towards eating out more often, sttlmhohhmareeevI aa BEneclt drl,rrd ekeoipaenekootvd kiotrin,hltr siyei eneoonn d fsyn. hK et,c”“haari Terptassc heafc hp teiooyade mf,son tHan c,pw prlaebyeiartat airrhrltttylei iih.oc v”qRiineups o iawwmrsteiheienmfonaeg bt,e oc blTnwhuataem lnyflissss-, awbmwtrnayhaoldSy ylro seis cm ux hhta roeaenc b vafhdusteee sb ms afematsr ols etalforos drel moaoke rrom eeetekeh s ocptierfanoe i iurgotst h r ltwtf,aaeh oeau nasrxyrt ctsaal roew.cna nsIttpa sltsdyyo s eo ,i! — xmn”nspc’oe tlbe numknuudnstes ioiwan vawtgee-t Mbacadiennroarrbtetocduo ohdM pJ rc,seLl eak erAovunr e’yfRdihsr e SoArKcowitaobvnhllniaeetgenzturn’erg,sts sumaa BenK bpp Sdiwaeoon mrhsrawiguaecriernnetkehyd---r- Photo by CNG/Aaron Short using unlikely ingredients such as fish, Masten Lake, the Meathook, and Meat- house to take in artist Charles Atlas’s three video lamb, cheese, pine nuts, raisins and whole ball Shop in Williamsburg; Roberta’s in projections of a sequence of numerals floating cubes of Guanchale, to name a few. Bushwick; Vesta in Astoria; and River- in space, causing some viewers to feel like they “One of the cool things about meatballs park in Manhattan will bring their juici- were traipsing through the opening credits of is they’re fairly easy to make, but in this est, beefiest balls to wow hungry attend- “The Matrix” or “Numb3rs.” competition you end up with chefs who ees and a panel of judges that includes Charles Atlas’s “The Illusion of Democ- are really pushing the envelope, and put- Rachel Wharton, author of the “Edible racy” at Luhring Augustine. [25 Knicker- ting everything they can into [their meat- Brooklyn” cookbook and food writer ex- bocker Ave. at Ingraham Street, Bushwick btfhmsaoio aalwe lrllsHiavlthansstea]uog bis,vlc ”anl eiuy ol n RBlrn fgsse ocr pasbaohs atereo hawgeenkeu hnhbrler eyoellanoutnn njtrnm oi tpoo g yoldl f osclir e,nlpa o adagirpntd ie eeqcsa.cdi,aud e atriiesecnensrdkn debi o,a dte eonic tavsw h-tnsefehae rnaaeein depibncrdn o e ta-ddwa nooelsnyodf-t Photo by Stefano Giovannini twCpCdAmrreailpieotanloaayglst rtr srsgd tGa er oitfomanor rottooa ,eo mlwaimrewrn’aeses daa rrPpir nltndplhea strtreatheo a bhBtradghoe rtMire u,osa K tteoeBm h.kieuirt lhscroyt bahhosnanleak aGn.ntl p yA readeannlgodn la Kwrugpbicecrinl atoeuF ctisclahsit eor useaemntnrnduae’’ysss-l. (d270a1D1y82 )a .An 3d86 SN-u2n74dC6a]y ,EF 1ri2d-a6y ps m10. Tahm—ro- 6uA gaphrmo Mn, aSSyah t2ou0rrt-, liciousness. Meatball mania: Dan Holzman, owner of the Meatball Shop on Bedford “We’re going to be cooking meatballs, “They’ve always been a staple of the Avenue, is one of six contenders who will face off at the Brooklyn Kitchen’s scary amounts of meatballs,” Holzman Make a ‘Mark’ American diet, but now they’re hip and Meatball Slapdown on March 2 to settle the score as to who makes the said. “God bless all the piggies we’re send- cool, and definitely in the zeitgeist,” said meanest meatball in Brooklyn. ing off to piggy heaven!” What do lit legend Gertrude Stein, famed cloth- MAKE YOUR OWN MEATBALLS Heat the olive oil in a large pot 1 lb. Grass-fed ground beef a ing designer Isaac Mizrahi and illustrator extraor- over medium heat. Add the onions, little on the fatty side dinaire Maira Kalman have in common? bay leaf, oregano, garlic, and salt 1 lb. Berkshire ground pork The Mark Morris Dance Group is combining Hungry for meatballs? We bet you are. Check out these meatball recipes from and cook, stirring often, until the 1 x 4-inch piece of garlic bread the works of all three ge- onions are soft and translucent, 1 cup cream niuses for its dual pro- two of Brooklyn’s beefiest chefs. about 10 minutes. 1 bunch of parsley, chopped duction of “Four Saints fine Add the tomato paste and con- in Three Acts” and “A 4-5 cloves of garlic, chopped fine CLASSIC BEEF MEATBALLS, per flakes, and fennel in a large tinue cooking for five minutes. Choral Fantasty,” which Salt to taste FROM “THE MEATBALL SHOP mixing bowl and mix by hand un- Add the tomatoes and stir con- will open on BAM’s COOKBOOK” (pictured right) til thoroughly incorporated. stantly until the sauce begins to Toast the garlic bread in the oven stage on March 1. Mhaalfk-einsc ahb moueta t2b dalolszen 1-and-a- g½o iRnlfco bhllea lstlh)-,s emi zaemk imixntgeu asrtuebr eain ltltoso pa abrocokuu ntth de1, bfooror si 1lo. h Ltooou wpr,er sert vtirehrneint g hte heaevt es araynu 5dc e ms ioimnnum ttheeesr adbtrr e3y,a0 lde0 tcd rietu cgmorbeosel wsa nuitdnht tailh fieto inos dcch opomroppc ilete sitnsetoloyr wbeoa“nuIdttie’fsru flu,a l t, esgnudorerpgrr eipsoiienucgse,, 2 tblsp. olive oil meat firmly. Place the balls in the bottom of the pot from burning. or chef knife and add the cream to of music,” said Mark Morris, the choreographer 2 pounds 80 percent lean prepared baking dish, being careful Taste and season with additional it in a bowl. While the crumbs are who created the hour-long dance piece to Virgil ground beef to line them up snugly and in even salt, if desired. Remove the bay soaking, get your other items to- Thompson’s 1928 choral arrangment and Ger- 12 claurpg eri ceogtgtsa cheese rfoorwms vae grrtiidca. Tllyh ea nmde haotbriazollsn stahlolyu tldo leaf before serving. gether in a large mixing bowl and trude Stein’s libretto, with sets designed by New ½ cup bread crumbs be touching one another. mix them slightly with your fingers, York-based author and artist Maira Kalman. ¼ cup chopped fresh parsley Roast for 20 minutes, or until TOM MYLAN’S MEAT HOOK and then add the cream and bread “Four Saints in Three Acts,” will be accompa- 1 tblsp. chopped fresh oregano the meatballs are firm and cooked MEATBALL RECIPE crumb mixture, and mix thoroughly nied by a world premiere of Morris’s “A Choral 2 tosrp 1. staslpt. dried tsherroteudg hin. tAo mtheea tc tehnetremr oomf ae tmeer aint-- CLASSIC TOMATO SAUCE Meatballs are a deeply personal wpoitsha yboleu rg hloavnedss .m Gaekte i nt hthise srelig! Dhtisly- Ffoarn Ptaiasyn,o” ,s Ceth too rBuese, tahnodv Oenr’csh “eFsatnrata, sOiap i.n 8 C0, ”m winiothr ¼ tsp. crushed red pepper flakes ball should read 165°F. Makes 7 cups food and everyone has their own less messy. costumes by fashion icon Isaac Mizrahi. Both ½ tsp. ground fennel While the meatballs are roast- ¼ cup olive oil ideas about what a meatball should Preheat your oven to 450 degrees performances feature a live orchestra and choir, 4 cups classic tomato sauce ing, heat the tomato sauce in a 1 onion, finely diced be, but this recipe keeps it sim- and get your baking sheet out. to complement the spontaneity and organic, fre- (see below) small saucepan over medium-high 1 bay leaf ple, and relies on the quality and Form the meatballs into whatever netic energy of modern dance movements. zleP trheeh eoaltiv teh eo oilv iennt oto a 4 590×°1F3. -Dinrcizh- hanedaWt ,fh usetllniyr r ticnhogeo okmfetedea,n t.br eamllso vaere t hfiermm 12 gtoearaerlsgipca ocnlooon vo ecrsh ,½o rp otpueegadshp lyfor ceohsnoh d prpieedd fmlaevIa oltirkb eoa flal st gh doee omlidce iaoamtu stoo. u mnta okfe c trheeasme seinivz teehn yelo yo uov tenhn ti,nh mke iatsrk bainyeg sat sn, udarr etrha trnoog twue r ttnhh teehmme Mo“rIr’ims spariidm. a“Arillyl minyte dreasntceedr isn, mlivuisnicgi tahnesa atenrd,”, baking dish and use your hand from the oven and drain the ex- 2 tsp. salt or to taste soaked bread crumbs and parsley sheet tray every five minutes or so ideally, all of my audience members are alive to evenly coat the entire surface. cess grease from the pan. Pour 2 tblsp. tomato paste in this recipe which was shouted to get even browning. I pull mine during our performances!” Set aside. the tomato sauce over them. Re- 2 26-ounce boxes Pomi Chopped across a busy butcher shop to me after they are lightly browned and Mark Morris Dance Group at BAM [30 Lafay- Combine the ground beef, turn the meatballs to the oven and Tomatoes or two 28-ounch by Caroline Fidanza, my former not completely cooked through, ette Ave. between Fulton Street and Ashland ricotta, eggs, bread crumbs, continue roasting for another 15 cans whole plum tomatoes, chef and Italian Godmother of all and finish them off by simmering Place in Fort Greene, 718.636.4100]. March parsley, oregano, salt, red pep- minutes. chopped with their liquid things food. them in sauce. 1–3, 7:30 pm. Tickets, $25–$80. For info, visit www.bam.org. — Juliet Linderman BICYCLE RERUN GASTROPUB THEATER REPAIR RESTAURANT Healthy 7 DAYS Jamaican DOG DAY CYCLERY Cuisine 115 VAN BRUNT ST T 347.799.2739 www.dogdaycyclery.com Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner FLAT Mon–Wed, 6am–Midnight (cid:52)(cid:72)(cid:85)(cid:82)(cid:83)(cid:110)(cid:51)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:12)(cid:0)(cid:22)(cid:65)(cid:77)(cid:110)(cid:18)(cid:65)(cid:77)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:85)(cid:78)(cid:12)(cid:0)(cid:23)(cid:26)(cid:19)(cid:16)(cid:65)(cid:77)(cid:110)(cid:17)(cid:16)(cid:80)(cid:77) FREE DELIVERY TIRES $10 Minimum TRY US AND COMPARE! SUCK 687B Washington Ave WWW. (at Prospect Place) DOG DAY CYCLERY 347-240-4217 RERUNTHEATER.COM 278 FIFTH AVENUE, BROOKLYN 115 VAN BRUNT ST 718.369.9527 T 347.799.2739 www.godisrestaurant.com www.dogdaycyclery.com All major credit cards accepted 6 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 February 24–March 1, 2012 WHERE TO EDITORS’ PICKS SATURDAY SUNDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY FRIDAY February 25 February 26 February 27 March 2 February 28 Nature, in Tobolowsky miniature Files The art of Jae Hi Ahn You may know Ste- is a fusion of the natu- phen Tobolowsky as a ral and synthetic, comedian, appearing which recreates scenes Almost in movies such as Canadian in nature on a surreal, Zeppelin miniature scale. Imag- “Groundhog’s Day” dance craze and “Spaceballs.” You ine plastic sheep graz- When the surviving might know him for his Formed in 2009, The ing in the shade of a members of rock ’n roll roles in dramatic films Young Empires are a supergroup Led Zeppe- bonsai tree, or glass ‘Baby’ book like “Mississippi Burn- fairly new addition to fish suspended from lin manage to re-unite the ceiling swimming Join former Black Pan- ing” and “Murder in the Canadian dance for a show, it usually through the air, within ther-turned-Oscar- the First.” Either way, scene, but their short devolves into a dis- the confines of a nominated writer, this dynamic, venera- career belies an jointed competition of household aquarium. musician and poet ble character actor’s immense and well- musical one-upman- The gardens outside Jamal Joseph for the got plenty of stories. deserved popularity. ship, punctuated by might have regressed release of his highly Join for the live record- The Candian synth arguments as to for the winter, but the anticipated book “Pan- ing of his popular radio trio has been com- whether or not to play miniature worlds inside ther Baby,” which tells show, “The Tobo- pared to The Killers, “Stairway to Heaven.” are in full bloom. the story of how he lowsky Files.” Arcade Fire, Yeasayer, Praise the rock gods went from inciting and and the Foals, but that this Zeppelin cover- 10 am. Brooklyn encouraging activists 7[1:4390 7ptmh .S Tt.h bee Btwelel eHno use defines itself with dis- band Zoso is stopping Botanical Garden [1000 to burn down Colum- Second and Third tinct and fevered bass 80 Lafayette Avenue in Brooklyn to portray WEmapshirien gBtoounl eAvvaer.d a itn bia University becom- Avenue in Gowanus, rythmns, and an arse- (corner of Lafayette and South Portland Avenue) tehxeis gterdo uinp tahse tirh peyri me! P62ro3s-p72e0c0t ]H $e1i0g,h ftosr, (i7n1fo8,) iGngra ad upartoef eFsislmor Daitv iitssio n. (iwn71w a8wd) v.6tah4ne3cb-e6e]5 lFl1ho0or] u $ins1ef8on ,[y $v.1is5i t nitaeld o df aynocueth tfrualc, kssp.ir- 718-797-2849 visit www.bbg.org. 6 pm. Brooklyn Bowl [61 com. 8 pm. 7 pm. Greenlight 8:30 pm. Glasslands Gallery Wythe Ave. between N. Bookstore [686 Fulton St. [289 Kent Ave. between S. Eleventh and N. Twelfth at S. Portland Street in First and S. Second streets streets in Williamsburg, Fort Greene, 718-246- in Williamsburg, (718) 599- (718) 963-3369]. $7, for 0200]. Free, for info visit 1450 ]$10, for info, visit info visit www.brooklyn- www.greenlightbook- www.glasslands.blogspot. Brooklyn bowl.com. store.com. com. Conservatory NINE DAYS IN BROOKLYN Register of Music online at www.bqcm.org FRI, FEB. 24 WORKSHOP, FUN FRIDAYS: Children get together with friends and play video games. Free. 4 pm. Eastern Parkway Public Library [1044 East- Find lots more listings online at ern Pkwy. at Kingston Avenue in Crown Heights, (718) 778-9330], BrooklynPaper.com/Events www.brooklynpubliclibrary.org. MUSIC, ESNAVI: Free. 8 pm. BAM- Eastern Pkwy. at Kingston Avenue Cafe [30 Lafayette Ave. between in Crown Heights, (718) 778-9330], Ashland Place and St. Felix Street in www.brooklynpubliclibrary.org. Fort Greene, (718) 636-4129], www. bam.org. WORKSHOP, TANGO LESSONS: For adults and youngsters interested in THEATER, “THE UNEXPECTED ballroom dancing. No experience GUEST”: A performance by the and no partners necessary. Spon- Narrows Community Theater. $20. sored by the FIAO Beacon pro- 8 pm. St. Patrick’s Auditorium [97th gram. Pre-registration for young- Check out our exciting new St. at Fourth Avenue in Bay Ridge, (718) 482 3173], www.NarrowsCom- sters required. Free. 6 pm–9 pm. munityTheater.com. IS 96 [99 Ave. P at W. 11th Street in Bensonhurst, (718) 232-2266]. Summer Workshop Series! THEAAn TeEvRen, “inFgO oLfL sOhWor tT pHlaEy sL EaAboDuEtR ”: BEGINNER’S ESL: 6:15 pm–9:15 pm. cults. 8:30 pm. Triskelion Arts [118 See Monday, Feb. 27. N. 11th St. between Berry Street READING, CRAIG TAYLOR: Author and Wythe Avenue in Williamsburg, of “Londoners: The Days and E N R O L L N O W ! (917) 270-7279], www.PanickedPro- Armisen sings: Go see “Portlandia” star Fred Armisen’s “Play- Nights of London Now.” 6:30 pm. ductions.com. list” live at Union Pool in Williamsburg on Sunday, Feb. 26. Greenlight Bookstore [686 Fulton St. between S. Elliott Place and S. Portland Avenue in Fort Greene, (cid:2) JUNIOR ROCK WEEK SAT, FEB. 25 (718) 246-0200], greenlightbook- Shelly Read, Michele Carlo, Cait- mons.gc.cuny.edu/feb-24-rsvp. July 9-13: For rockers ages 7-11 store.com. PERFORMANCE lHinu Fboeyr,l eE,m Miloy nHicuan Ate.r ,H Laensdli,e S Joanmyias on BINFGebO. 2N7I.G HT: 11 am. See Monday, SADIE HAWKINS DAY: Celebrate (cid:2) MUSICWORKS THEATER, “THE UNEXPECTED and Rebecca Klein. Free. 7 pm. FILM, MOVIE TIME: A different title Leap Day/Sadie Hawkins Day by JInutleyr a2c8t:i vaeg efas m6-i9ly; Jpurolyg r2a9m: sa goens r1o3c-1k7, ;jaAzuzg, uimstp r4o-v5,: maguessi c6 i-1n3 film and songwriting GUEST”: 8 pOmT. HSeEeR Friday, Feb. 24. PW3o0a4wt9ee]rr, HSwtowruewsee.tp iAonr wDeenUraMh [o3Bu7Os Me, a(a7rie1nn8 Sa) t6..c 6ao6tm -. eCtoalincn htAo wvnee .He aikltl. LLFaiobfrar ayaredytu t[l3et 8sA.0 vF Wer.e aiens. h C2in lpignmt-o. n cfMuhneodmosso ifnroigar l t aFh obeu aFcnrhdaenalctoieors nac.no Td Lh roeac iecsveise anninog CLASSIC COCKTAIL COURSE — READING, AMERICAN CREATIVE Hill, (718) 398-8713], www.brooklyn- includes a cocktail hour, sit-down (cid:2) MUSIC ADVENTURES FESTIVAL RUM: Learn to make a variety of WRITERS ON CLASS: A reading publiclibrary.org. dinner and an old fashioned auc- July 30-August 3; August 13-17; August 20-24: For children 18 mo.-4 yrs. rmuomr ec o[1c1k1t8a iClso. r$t4e5ly. o5u p Rmd.. Sbyectaw-een fHeaantudr,i nSgo nSyhae Hllyu Rbeeer, dE,m Miloy nHicuan Ate.r , BLATCIOKN H: IISnTclOudReYs Ma OscNreTeHn inCgE LoEf BRA- teinognaegerin tgo bleaacdh ethloer sb.i dTdiciknegt so mn tuhset se (cid:2) SCHOOL OF IMPROV INTENSIVE SDtirtamtfaosr Pda arnkd, ( 3W4e7s) t2m4i0n-s5t8e5r 0ro], awdws iwn. Loethsleiers J. afrmeeis.o 7n ,p Rme.b Peocwcae rKHeoituhs ean d “oSf lsapveecryia al tnadlk tsh oe nL athwe,” t owpitich oaf s rearciees. bpme p. Tuhrceh Raseexd M ina naodrv [a1n1c0e0. 6$06t5h. 6S:t3. 0 August 6-10: For teens in high school sycamorebrooklyn.com. Arena [37 Main St. at Water Street Free. 5:30 pm. Borough Hall [209 and 11th Avenue in Dyker Heights, (718) 238-6001], frankiesmission. in DUMBO, (718) 666-3049], www. Joralemon St. between Court Street org/upcoming_events.php. (cid:2) TEEN ROCK INTENSIVE SUN, FEB. 26 powerhousearena.com. and Brooklyn Bridge Boulevard in Brooklyn Heights, (718) 250-4850]. AFeuagtuusrte s1 1ja-1z2z-rock guitarist Mike Gamble PERFORMANCE TUES, FEB. 28 BEGSeINe NMEoRn’dSa Ey,S FLe: b6:.1 257 p. m–9:15 pm. THURS, MARCH 1 THEATER, “THE UNEXPECTED WORKSHOP, ENGLISH CONVERSA- GUEST”: 3 pm. See Friday, Feb. 24. TALK, CLIMATE CHANGE: Professor TION: 1 pm. See Tuesday, Feb. 28. 718.622.3300 www.bqcm.org MUSIC, FRED ARMISEN’S PLAYLIST Kimlapuasc Jt aocfo cbli mleaatdes dar diviesncu ssesaio len voenl rtihsee WED, FEB. 29 WORKSHOP, CROCHET: Adults meet 58 Seventh Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11217 LsPnwtIuowVaeorEw ’lis !n[. :4mo CW8ny4oesi lm-pUlimaanemcaidoensina. bcs noAhu aomrvgnew/,d. u. ( a 7n8“t1i P opM8onm) rep6t.el o0aUk9onen-ld.ri0 o iA4an”8v 4e]-, ihprneoa qBsoutrdroiir eoienskd tla.yh nFnedr’ sec joweum.ia c9tei:en1 wrg5f i rdlaol mebncet. a nbsdeweeirgrsvc.he .Ccbdooo. mfRrf-Se-Ve,P WOCaeRsrhnsKii lgPdSnarHemrOknew Pgna,e tyHst .POa FufMrtbeelEreic Ws. cL4hiO:b3oRr0oa Kplr y hmH e[1E.l 0pEL4 aPw4s:i tt-h ee[aw9nvc7wetd5swr .IyE .2i bn.w rp1 eMo6meotikhd.k MwlaSyntnoi.ddp obw udweob,to (olwi7rcdk1el i8eobP)nnur 2a bAt5rhlyvi2ce.e-o i0Lnrr i9gupb6e.rr 7oas] jr,J-y www.NYParenting.com MON, FEB. 27 CIVIC CALENDAR FRI, MARCH 2 WORKSHOP, COMPUTER BASICS: TAX HELP: 10 am–2 pm. See Friday, For adults. No experience neces- Feb. 24. sary. Free. 11 am. Gerritsen Beach MON, FEB. 27 Community College, 2001 Pbuebtwlice eLnib Braarryt l[e2t8t 0P8la Gcee rarnitdse Gn oAtvhea.m CSeormvimceusn Citoy mBmoaitrtde 1e4, MYoountthh ly O(71ri8e)n 3t3a2l -B3l0v0d8. .a t Decatur Avenue; WOSReKe SFHridOaPy,, FFUebN. 2F4R.I DAYS: 4 pm. Avenue in Gerritsen Beach, (718) meeting; 7pm; Community Board THEATER, “THE UNEXPECTED 368-1435], www.brooklynpublicli- 14 office, 810 E. 16th St. at THURS, MARCH 1 GUEST”: 8 pm. See Friday, Feb. 24. brary.org. Avenue H; (718) 859-6357; www. Community Education Council FILM, “DAYS OF MAJESTY”: For cb14brooklyn. District 22, Monthly meeting; 7 SAT, MARCH 3 adults. Free. 1:30 pm. Brighton com/?m=20120227&cat=3. pm; IS 78 - Roy H Mann, 1420 E. Beach Public Library [16 Brighton Community Board 10, Monthly 68th St. at Veterans Ave. (718) 968- PERFORMANCE First Rd. at Brightwater Court in meeting; 7:15 pm; Knights of 6111. Brighton Beach, (718) 946-2917], Columbus, 1305 86th St. at 13th MUSIC, “CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA”: www.brooklynpubliclibrary.org. Avenue; (718) 745-6827. WED, MARCH 7 An opera double-feature with sub- BINGO NIGHT: Bring your luck. $3. Bay Ridge Council on the Aging, titles and piano accompaniment. 6:45 pm. St. Columba RC Church TUE, FEB. 28 Monthly meeting; 9:30 am; St. $20. 3 pm. Regina Hall [1210 65th - Auditorium [2245 Kimball St. Ave- Community Board 15, Monthly Patrick’s Church, 9511 Fourth Ave. St. at 12th Avenue in Dyker Heights, nue U and Avenue V in Marine Park, meeting; 7 pm; Kingsborough at 95th Street; (718) 921-5949. (718) 259-2772], www.reginaop- (718) 338-6265]. era.org. READING, AMERICAN CREATIVE To list an event in the Civic Calendar, e-mail [email protected] THEATER, “THE UNEXPECTED WRITERS READING: Featuring GUEST”: 8 pm. See Friday, Feb. 24. Your Neighborhood — Your News® Published weekly at Online at www.BrooklynPaper.com 1 Metrotech Center North, Suite 1001, Brooklyn NY 11201 (718) 260-2500 PUBLISHER ADVERTISING STAFF The Brooklyn Paper incorporates the following newspapers: Celia Weintrob (718) 260-4503 DISPLAY ADVERTISING SALES Brooklyn Heights Paper, Downtown News, Eric Ross (718) 260-4502 EDITORIAL STAFF Jay Pelc (718) 260-2570 Park Slope Paper, Sunset Park Paper, Windsor Terrace Paper, DEPUTY EDITOR Andrew Mark (718) 260-2578 Carroll Gardens–Cobble Hill Paper, Where every family matters and where Ben Muessig (718) 260-4504 Lebert McBean (718) 260-2569 Fort Greene–Clinton Hill Paper, New York parents find help, info and support. 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PUBLISHER EMERITUS Ed Weintrob NYParenting Media/CNG (cid:46)(cid:57)(cid:48)(cid:65)(cid:82)(cid:69)(cid:78)(cid:84)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:71)(cid:32)(cid:67)(cid:78)(cid:71)(cid:76)(cid:79)(cid:67)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:14)(cid:67)(cid:79)(cid:77)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:23)(cid:17)(cid:24)(cid:13)(cid:18)(cid:22)(cid:16)(cid:13)(cid:20)(cid:21)(cid:21)(cid:20) H COONWT ATCOT EE--mmaaiill ncaelwens daanrd l iastritnsg rse tleoa csaelse tnod anre@[email protected] Listed: E-mail nightlife listings to [email protected] THE PAPER To e-mail a staff member, use first initial last name @cnglocal.com February 24–March 1, 2012 The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 AWP 7 Turning Japanese! Trippy Asian fusion resto Fushimi opens on Driggs By Sarah Zorn day-glow bar, and LED illumi- with crushed peanuts, mint and ci- “I’m actually a regular at the for The Brooklyn Paper nated dining area — dotted with lantro), Japan (sea bass with miso Fushimi in my neighborhood,” pod-like booths and tabletops of and a “Sex on the Beach” roll said Bay Ridge resident Mike Care for a side of psychedelia glistening colored resin cast with with tempura shrimp, spicy tuna, Vittorio. “I love the food, the am- with your sushi roll? Japanese river stones. salmon and avocado), France (pe- biance — it’s always a party.” Slide all the way down the “I feel like I’m in the final tit filet mignon with wasabi but- “I work in Manhattan, so it’s rabbit hole at Williamsburg’s su- scene of 2001: A Space Odys- ter and truffled mashed potatoes, easier to grab dinner in Williams- Giovannini p(o2fe6 rFs0ui zsseehadit m)(6 ai,n,2 td0h 0oe vs peqara-nrte-hA efe-setiota)pn o o uruetsstiptzaoeusd-t sanesey lw ,o”e fo wLbsaoenvrdev”ee r—de do uadnro p wehynoe tt-ohpgeor “paTppuihnneg-r hDaneirdjob en-vc merunus sIttteaadlr ydr a(ascnekda o rcefr dlaa bsm ecabo nswcfiiattl)h-, btou ruNgn,o”wt hliienk daed aadnfetyedor.n “aeI ’l cso agnnog ic ndogam ytoe.” mheirse- Photo by Stefano rsSsaoutnarb“yttde,I- l unooa veucIedstnrlu,agl”oane als,dl daay a nif dntidhr d seoi txnBu pekraor ycphi tiuRo’sslesai -tdkrieigniszne-ses.d,de aoninsf- cb“kiaiTaynrtochh M uicrsola aaosprfmil inapasoca. ”l etfih ti iniwsna a linonycot eetkordsg btalhyliaek tc ehut ienac I irTtseaeodlx--. lbmwoepiaatRsghn wu iscpb ia atbknhnei dptnr- nemdsesu.)utciokts,eh icdnra goum olloimofcmlaso lw—ss melo rn,io nobkgtl aitlnhecgdke tbayraouooklturlhe,h reaFoen douatedlsilcch y eji o—mwnitani l nbyft,octu rhito s aesr ae oc ammaknsoeayuotr aiktmkliy nine nises,du i,ag sanhohld-fli “dTianikneg a rind Ae saiannd Psychedelic sushi: Fushimi, Bay Ridge’s she led us past a pair of preening The strange journey contin- for a hot night out — along with a sweeet contact high. Tokyo-inspired Japanese joint opened Geisha girls flanking the front ued through Chef Chul Kee Ko’s crowds and couples from Bay Fushimi [475 Driggs Ave. be- explore the talents an outpost in a 6,200-square-foot entrance, floor-to-ceiling “jelly- globe-hopping menu, with stops Ridge and Staten Island, angling tween 10th and 11th Streets in of a kitchen that space in Williamsburg on Friday night. fish” chandeliers shadowing the in Thailand (spicy lobster salad for a peek at the competition. Williamsburg, (718) 963-2555]. serves up cuisine with tranquility, fair prices and good BAR SCRAWL It’s ‘rum’derful By Bill Roundy tastes.” — DAILY NEWS CHINESE CUISINE and This swill’’ss nnoott jjuusstt ffoor pirates VEGETARIAN NUTRITION Party orders and catering By Eli Rosenberg a tangled past. available The Brooklyn Paper “Sugar was the oil of its age,” said Frederick Smith, a 15% SENIOR DISCOUNT Rum running is back. professor at the College of Wil- every Tuesday night (dine-in only) The popular pirate- liam and Mary, who wrote “Ca- swill is the latest elixir ribbean Rum: a Social and Eco- (cid:44)(cid:85)(cid:78)(cid:67)(cid:72)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:80)(cid:69)(cid:67)(cid:73)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:4)(cid:22)(cid:14)(cid:21)(cid:16) to titilate the borough’s ever- nomic History” after spending shifting tastes, as drinkers many summers in Barbados. are rapidly realizing that “And the development of rum is rum drinks are so much tied to the rise of African slav- more than the umbrella-gar- ery [in the New World]. Rum nished cocktails of yore. was also a way to reward en- FREE “Rum is delicious and slaved people’s for hard work (cid:4)(cid:17)(cid:16)(cid:0) sweet, and light and refresh- — and keep the system going DELIVERY MIN ing,” said Wil Petre, the bev- without rebellion.” erage director at The Farm But the spirit also rep- 162 Montague Street, 1st Fl. Brooklyn Heights on Adderley. “But it can be resents the sweeter side of (cid:8)(cid:23)(cid:17)(cid:24)(cid:9)(cid:0)(cid:21)(cid:18)(cid:18)(cid:13)(cid:21)(cid:21)(cid:21)(cid:21)(cid:15)(cid:21)(cid:22)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:70)(cid:65)(cid:88)(cid:0)(cid:8)(cid:23)(cid:17)(cid:24)(cid:9)(cid:0)(cid:21)(cid:18)(cid:18)(cid:13)(cid:17)(cid:18)(cid:16)(cid:21) dark and complex, too.” the Caribbean — it goes ex- OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK lmDdtayoty i onmttnOhmriateaeenm a kBbs sFei a caP eaar rbpra’ m se.arr o 2k“neiAp5 ndatoe,nv r Ftr e tihrt tlxiouioeerpfmdwss lt, to h aeytcroenro eBs dRc hSrr kluiouyeptmaocma riaki’nnl”s--, Photo by Alice Proujansky teepiwnrxteeay aatm“r hlmodWiefne p w lhgemly oe’ti rot wio—ehd cc edhssh lmoltil epil mwlla aylo kre ipNftti hinuowec gfswfu ih rttnlh huiYatneiierostg lrs tyrv. rk, fa oafeorpporris---r- cocktail course. ical-style cocktails so we can Rum’s recent popularity all imagine a better time,” said is a return to its original sta- Ready to ‘rumble’: Trini- Mikos. “If you feel your man- tus in the country: the sug- dadian rum The Kracken liness is challenged by the idea arcane-based spirit, was the is named after the giant of a rum cocktail, you can just sip of choice for early Amer- sea squid of countless remember it was in Heming- ican colonists, though it fell drunken sailors’ tales. way’s cocktail of choice.” out of favor after the revolu- The Art of the Rum tion made American-crafted bartender at Sycamore who Cocktail at Sycamore Bar & whiskey more appealing to will be hosting the cocktail Flowershop [1118 Cortelyou newly founded nation. course. “But I don’t think Road between Westminster Don’t miss a Bar Scrawl. Bartenders now promise it’s un-American.” Road and East 11th Street in there is nothing unpatriotic The sweet swill does not Ditmas Park (347) 240-5850] Find them all at Oak and Iron [147 Franklin St., between India Street and Green- about drinking the Carib- spring from a history of life, Feb. 25, 5 pm. Tickets are point Avenue in Greenpoint]. Open Mon-Fri, 4 pm-4 am; Sat-Sun, bean liquor. liberty and happiness, how- $45. For more information, BrooklynPaper.com 2 pm-4 am. “It’s speaking to a differ- ever; like many New World visit www.sycamorebrook- ent era,” said Mike Mikos, a products, rum leaves behind lyn.com TWO WAYS TO LOVE IN PRINT PPGDBpaoacpaoirrnnarocroiivpddgenckwoeekte i nrtenukarnehaa lpntgpydoeegtl ne e owviTetcw.e irih oo nantrioIaen,nttlny,u’ r is dBnBlmaWdF dmr orr ’eoBnosicndeilwi aolioseblnvaiytknn-aesetys l,v,syrmR ts toesptancoi sdnpla Cncnubig rreeesyusotew no hcros.gtloo ss ouE,, pnn r ai apescritsnhst s g , NtnoVNeeenKioSwgi rKtihf znGSeeaoebptdvrSAtr(cid:3)neooe ee aeue s rnlytner lni(cid:3)e(cid:6)cpshBeo goBte(cid:2)r e(cid:3)dhD(cid:14)ca nnew(cid:7) rA MPy(cid:9) oRsralaera(cid:14)b(cid:3)piAi(cid:6)(cid:7)tiia(cid:4)elnq r(cid:13)rnbs(cid:9)iht (cid:3)ooAe(cid:14) ra(cid:8)kE eih Wheki(cid:9)u (cid:11)I(cid:13)pkesn(cid:9)dr,n(cid:7)iC(cid:14) a(cid:6)m(cid:7)alB (cid:10)tG thne(cid:4) mooltt(cid:10)te(cid:13)oe w(cid:14)ssHer“aIihh(cid:6)f(cid:1)(cid:8)ihi,ynlpv 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(cid:34)fgnt -d oo e (cid:15)vda nto’s (cid:1)(cid:17)(cid:4)(cid:10)(cid:8)(cid:1)(cid:3) F ESBaRtUuAr dRaYy 2 5 S2t:0a0rt PsM At with excitement on every page. ON THE WEB No one else — no blog, no website, no “news aggregator” — covers our neighborhoods with the intensity of BrooklynPaper.com. The FREE WINGS award-winning site is updated several times ALL DAY LONG! every day, offering fresh news, arts and features — faster, better and deeper than any other online publication. Visit it several times 37 Greenpoint Avenue a day — to stay on top of the greatest city in the Brooklyn, NY 11222 (718) 349-0149 world: Brooklyn. www.RedStarNY.com GENEROUSLY THE BROOKLYN PAPER SPONSORED BY and BrooklynPaper.com Your place for a full dose of Brooklyn! 8 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 February 24–March 1, 2012 ‘Black’ comedy to celebrate it even! KB: You also discuss how you and your wife daydream about divorce. How does she feel about the book? & MIB: My wife and I discuss divorce GENERAL COSMETIC the way other people discuss vacation SKIN CARE SPECIALISTS plans — with some regularity and cer- tain amount of wistfulness. Botox, Juvederm, Radiesse Michael Ian Black reads in Greenpoint I was dating another girl when Chemical peels I was going out with my wife and Spider veins broke up with her. My wife was in Laser hair removal By Kate Briquelet another relationship when we got to- COMEDY Acne. Herpes The Brooklyn Paper gether. We started having an affair when she was living with her boy- Warts. Moles Michael Ian Black will say what Michael Ian Black with Meghan friend, and that’s probably how my Blemish removal most people are unwilling to McCain at Word [126 Franklin marriage will end as well. St. between Milton and Noble Keloids admit about themselves: he streets in Greenpoint (718) She likes the book, though she was 718-636-0425 hates his baby, gets verklempt over 383-0096], Feb. 29 at 7 pm. For nervous about it. In a lot of ways, it is 27 EIGHTH AVE (AT LINCOLN PL) Creed on the radio, and fantasizes info, wordbrooklyn.com. And a love letter to her directly. Because at Greenlight Bookstore [686 PARK SLOPE, BKLYN about divorce. Fulton St. between S. Portland it’s as much about how I value our 212-288-1300 The funnyman behind the smash Street and S. Elliott Place in Fort marriage and our family as it is about 1DPIMNL0ASEA0YUA N0RAS AEHNP NCADACA RTELETVKLA AE FANNCOVI,CNR EN GEA P(Y NAHTE OATD PU8 FPR4OOSTRHIN M TSMETD)EINCTAL SERVICES BoAarCdL-AACReNLrtY ifiK eWLdAI NDLeLGrImS,,a MPtoAloDgist hmmavtai eetat immr bv,”eooo oiwsvrwk,ii e“ lep lY“ea rWtorehtugeye’aar tme rlHe tNo Mofdotae etAn rDgsamh toweaiednnir t gibMhc yI atch cnRCio sSian gnuishnemet wa,r”--t Natalie Brasington cisG1gs5rires eteea. ntnS leiog7, I:h3 (ht70ba1 o8dpo) t mko2s 4.ft i6onF-rd0oe 2.rac 0 owi0nm]af,y.o M ,t oav wricsirhti te dmmeoebMK dubeBtiI trr:Bca eWht:ae iMdn,h Iiga’en ltgag ls bh dhaoaootnu uaW tlM dshoh wceroCrder.? tae rixnepa iesdc gitn oagit n,y agon utdor WlesoB rmdla aicrnkr iG’asg reese,a ncrpdhooilindnihtc oo ontd oF menbee.u 2rto8as.ceks-, Photo by aabnodKu hBto m:p Wyefsuehlliflcy ih ne eans twesaratyyas it nhwianot guw.lads y hooun rees-t twdhoeem’nl lls ymh eoa’plkle ean so ukup mt tahe lesi otbtmloeoe bk qi ttu.o eI ps mtaioganeyss r aaannndd- and the horrors of suburban living Black attack: Michael Ian Black quire as mandatory reading for den- see if anything gets a laugh, the way with this unvarnished essay collec- will read his memoir to fans izens of suburbia? some people look for answers by ran- tion — featuring chapters such as and Meghan McCain (yes, that MIB: I would recommend to all domly opening up the Bible. “I Hate My Baby” and “F*** You, one!) at Word in Greenpoint on young parents regardless of gender, KB: How did you end up becom- Alan Alda.” Feb. 29. the chapter entitled “I Hate My Baby.” ing friends with McCain and work- It’s all about coming to terms with It comes from me hating my baby. In ing on a book — “America, You Sexy your middle-aged existence. Michael Ian Black: Well, yeah, all fairness, I hated both of my babies, Bitch”? Black shared some of these ex- I suppose it might, much to my cha- because they were sh***y babies and MIB: Ambien and Twitter. She’s Brooklyn. hortations with The Brooklyn Pa- grin. Chagrin … I’ve read about that I resented the amount of sleep I wasn’t one of my dearest friends now. She’s per last week, from a Hampton Inn one, but I don’t know that I’ve actu- getting as a result of their existence. like my kid sister. If you think it’s in Arkansas. ally experienced it. It was very difficult and quite awful, weird that you’d make out with your Kate Briquelet: Is this the opus I just figured I’d write about what I’m but nobody ever wants to acknowl- kid sister, you’re so in the last cen- that proves once and for all that Mi- thinking about and what I was thinking edge that sometimes parents hate their tury that I don’t even want to talk to Enhance your culture. chael Ian Black has emotions? about was myself, because I’m a nar- babies. I’m happy to acknowledge it, you anymore. Improve your bottom line. Behind the scenes of the city Move your business to DUMBO, Brooklyn. Find out how by visiting, TwoTreesNY.com DUMBO’s star architects open up their studios for tours Two Trees Management Co, LLC 4C5o Mmaminer Sctiraele atn, Sdu Ritees i6d0e2n, DtiUalM PBrOop, eBrrtoyo Mklaynna, gNeYm 1e1n20t1 By Colin Mixson architectural firms has be- The Brooklyn Paper come predominantly digi- tized, the architects over at In an unprecedented show Matter Practice, for instance, GOT SPRING of transparency, 25 archi- like to do things the old fash- tectural firms in DUMBO ioned way. are opening their doors to “We make a lot of models PROJECTS? the public as part of an on- and prototypes,” said Sandra going series organized by Wheeler, a partner at Matter Open House New York called Practice. “In our case there “Open Studio,” beginning are two types of models: pre- Call us to get ‘em done in no time! ocinon m BFreeosb ot.o k2 la5yr nc—h, tit heaecnrtdeu’,rs aw nl hofie brnme tis-t Giovannini sswehhnoitwcaht ti howene cm mlioeadnketesls ,w ,a wnhdehn idc ewhb eyr’oirsue, InWtearCPitoaaerrirn p &Dtei annEmgtxr tay-eg reior All WoFrrke GeG ruEeasarttai mnRtaaetteeedss tDcMerUree “anpMTtlkiahvBiceneOe gai n ,rta coe trhd hesi ieattt eamoccrirttot a.syn n,w”gd hst chaohei da imer Befo ioislnflt Photo by Stefano dtimtie’mossA idaegerlsncml ihtfnohoigtsere ttmyc hl’tei.srk” e pae rr ovesdk ehueroyctpct .ihr nSoignou mgtgh ihean-t, Landscaping & Built up: Architects Sandra Wheeler and Alfred Zollinger, of Matter Practice, Architect’s Newspaper. “Per- the event will give patrons Tree Cutting haps it’s because they’re of a are inviting the public to their 20 Jay St. studio on Feb. 25 to peruse their stock- a greater understanding and pile of models. Clean Up's certain age, but those com- appreciation of the buildings NO JOB TOO SMALL Call Today panies who have been there that surround them. for 10–15 years have really sure; perusing architectural reception at the Garrison One of “Open Studio’s” Open House New York matured. People will get to models, drawings, photo- Architects’ studio featur- biggest draws, however, is [81 Front St. between Main see what they’re working on graphs; exploring the cre- ing drinks, snacks, and the providing patrons with the and Washington streets in 917.771.6701 and sort of de-mystify what ative work-spaces; and en- chance to snag some one- opportunity to check out the DUMBO, (212) 919-6470] architects do.” joying presentations by the on-one time with some of participating firms various Feb. 25, at 12:45 pm. $35 Visitors can tour the par- architects themselves. Cap- the city’s most brilliant de- design practices — while the (30 in advance). For info, ticipating firms at their lei- ping off the day will be a signers. creative process for many visit www.ohny.org Council Member Domenic M. Recchia Jr., Food Bank For New York City, and The City University of New York invite you to FREE Tax Preparation * Friday, March 2, 2012 Fri. 10 am-4 pm * Qualified people will get their taxes completed for FREE. To qualify you must have the following: • If filing jointly with a spouse, both of you must be present with photo IDs. Gravesend Public Library • Social Security cards or ITIN (or copies) for you and your spouse if filing jointly and anyone you are claiming on your tax return, or a 303 Avenue X letter from the Social Security Administration. • W-2s for all jobs you held in 2011. Brooklyn, NY 11223 • Form 1099-G if you received unemployment insurance in 2011. • Form 1099-INT if you received interest from a bank account in 2011. • Form 1098-T if you paid tuition. Food Bank For New York City 212-894-8060 • Form 1098-E if you paid student loan interest. Council Member Recchia’s office 718-373-9673 • If you are claiming child care expenses, amount you paid and child care agency’s ID or name and Social Security number of the babysitter. Income limits DIRECTIONS: Subway: F train to Ave. X station, two blocks east to library. • $50,000 with dependents • $18,000 without dependents N train to 86th St. station, six blocks east to library. Bus: B1 to Ave. X at West 2nd St., two blocks east to library. We do not prepare the following returns: Itemized returns; Schedule C (Profit or Loss from Business (Except limited Schedule C for child care providers and taxi drivers); Complicated & Advanced Schedule D (Capital Gains and Losses); Schedule E (Rents & Losses); Form SS-5 (request for Social Security Number); Form 2106 (Employee Business Expenses); Form 3903 (Moving Expenses); Form 8606 (Nondeductible IRAs); Form 8615 (Minor’s investment income) foodbanknyc.org/taxhelp February 24–March 1, 2012 The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 AWP 9 Legendary journo Gerri Gross dies at 86 oversized crayons in her teacher’s lottery. “The Last Jew in Holz- burg” is the based on the true story of a Holocaust survivor, a cantankerous character who re- turns to his hometown and be- By Shavana Abruzzo nickel!” she quipped in a June with Lisa Malwitz, who worked Her first article at The Jewish comes its “Jewish problem.” The Brooklyn Paper 2002 interview with The Brook- with Gross in the early 1990s. Week, recalled assistant man- Gross’s powerful portrayals of Former Brooklyn Paper col- lyn Paper . “When my mother was diag- aging editor Adam Dickter, was people and their lives have re- umnist and Jewish Week corre- Gross landed her first job nosed with cancer, Gerri gave me about an aspiring actor named cently found immortality in cy- spondent Geraldine Gross — the with a film company while still a pep talk to help me from fall- Josiah Trager who later starred berspace where they are attract- journalist and author whose writ- a teenager. ing apart, and when I did, she in a television sitcom. ing new readers. ing chronicled a resurgence in “I was 16, but I lied and said I was would sit, listen and let me cry,” “Geraldine definitely stood out “She was an incredibly large- Jewish life in Brownstone Brook- 18,” she said in the interview. Malwitz said. as somebody who had the energy hearted, fair-minded, generous lyn — will be remembered at a Later, while doing P.R. for mon Gross and her late husband, and enthusiasm of someone half spirit who had respect for ev- mone mFeobr.i a2l7 s.ervice in Cobble Hill CGhroesms ibceagl aBna an wk eaenkdl yJ. Pc.o Mlumorng afonr, M. Solo GSteroeregt eS, ywneareg omgeume biner Cs oofb tbhlee K Hainlle. herA afgtee,r” h seari dh uDsibcakntedr’.s death in etrrayubbo,d wyh,”o s waiidl lR oafbfibcii Sataem h eWr meine-- HeGigrhotsss h odmieed oant Jhaenr. B28ro forokmly na Ttohpeic Bs rsouockh laysn “ PVaapneirs,h aidngd roeusnsicnegs Marsha Trehcee itveemd pitlse l,a ensdtmabalriksh setadt uins p1a8r5tl6y, 2it0a0ti7n,g G hreoaslst hb riosksue ehse wr hhiipc,h p dreidcinp’-t moGriraol.ss is survived by her two hGeraSerahtt e iD lglnereepwsrse .su sSpiho peno ,w otarh sed 8ud6rai.unggh ttheer a“stEnednr edionintcygrpe taehssei. ”nc gyS cphlere i ocwfe irtmoatgmes ,ia”gb raoanundtt Courtesy of bLeacn“adGumesoea rrokgfse GCgooetno usrseg raev gGartiaroonnst, sf a.rnodm I tghoet dwaom“mGpaeenrn wr ih hweora w sp aaioslwnn’eat eayrfsri aan igfdo stropth sirrpiiegt.ahkt saBtneedtph g d Eraalun Cgdechmhteielrdtser aernined.s S tahhtee C iirse cbdhuairrl idPedrae raknt of a Polish bookbinder. Gross Jewish life in North Brooklyn for Geraldine and George Gross at a party in 1998. a story!” Gross wrote in the tem- her mind!” said synagogue mem- in Paramus, New Jersey. didn’t attend college, but honed The Jewish Week and other news- ple’s 2001 anniversary journal. ber Marsha Solomon. A memorial for Geraldine her writing chops and entrepre- papers, and had two of her books She publicized temple events Gross’s prolific body of work is Gross will be held at the Kane neurial skills by age 10. published: “The Door Between” Jews, in her 70s. huge heart and an immense sweet- and profiled the congregation. painted broadly with candor and Street Synagogue on Feb. 27 at “I wrote a weekly newspaper in her 20s, and “The Persecution Gross’s gentility spoke vol- ness,” said Brooklyn Paper pub- When Debra Cantor became humor: In “Rachel and God,” she 7:30 pm [236 Kane St. between for which I charged a penny and of Tante Chava,” a collection of umes, too. lisher Celia Weintrob. Kane’s first female rabbi, Gross tells of a second grader who loses Court and Clinton streets in a monthly magazine that cost a short stories about impoverished “That teeny little exterior hid a Her kindness also resonates was the first to report the story. her faith after failing to win three Cobble Hill, (718) 875-1550]. Performing Arts PARENT Classes REGISTER NOW! KIDS (cid:129) SCHOOL (cid:129) STYLE (cid:129) TEENS (cid:129) CAMPS (cid:129) MUSIC Brooklyn Players, celebrating our 10th anniversary, runs non-competitive performing arts classes in Park Slope for Fun — and stress — on vacation Pre-K through adult during the school year Musical Theater Program Ages 8–13 It’s winter vacation week been one of those, fore, miss breakfast to cram child a teacher was talking the demands of a situation 7/2–7/27 and my family is off on with high points The their clothes into bags, then about because she certainly — no complaints, no whin- a trip. Sometimes, our routinely punctu- Dad moan about being hungry, wasn’t one of the girls liv- ing. One had a bad blister Spring classes travel goes smoothly; ev- ated by moments somehow making it my prob- ing under my roof. but kept up with everyone in singing, eryone is happy and smil- of tension. I’ve lem to find them immediate Now much older, my all day. The other had ill- guitar and ing from the moment we leave observed that my sustenance, I get frustrated. daughters still do the same fitting gloves and cold feet musical theater the house until the suitcases clan manages its They’re teenagers, shouldn’t thing, handing over their but didn’t slow the group 3/26–6/14 are rolled back in the door. anxieties by de- By Scott Sager they be able to manage their excess emotional baggage down. Corinne Goodman, Director Bwuitth s cohmalel evnogyeasg —es caarne cfeilllleedd pwoitshi tmineg. them of stress. It may be neces- ethmeo otivoenrsf wloiwth otuot dmeeli?v eArisn ga ftiorre md,e h tou ncgarrryy, worh weno trhne oy’urte. parAt nodf mI es uthpapto isse gtlhaedr eI ’mis 718-965-3150 www.brooklynplayers.com flights, missed connections, Other families, too, seem sary but is a bittersweet job parent, am I always going to They nearly made us miss a still a safe, emotional ref- hotel snafus — and this has to have a designated receiver at best. be the safe place for them to train through a lack of mo- uge for my kids; perhaps Small classes in a cozy, nurturing environment This isn’t about comfort- vent excess emotion? tion in the morning. One not happy but willing to (cid:42)(cid:1)(cid:44)(cid:28)(cid:202)(cid:45)(cid:29)(cid:34)(cid:42)(cid:13)(cid:202)(cid:85)(cid:202)(cid:55)(cid:22)(cid:32)(cid:12)(cid:45)(cid:34)(cid:44)(cid:202)(cid:47)(cid:13)(cid:44)(cid:44)(cid:1)(cid:10)(cid:13) ing my kids when something When they were toddlers, nearly melted down over lack gather the pieces when (cid:9)(cid:1)(cid:57)(cid:202)(cid:44)(cid:22)(cid:12)(cid:20)(cid:13)(cid:202)(cid:85)(cid:202)(cid:10)(cid:1)(cid:44)(cid:44)(cid:34)(cid:29)(cid:29)(cid:202)(cid:20)(cid:1)(cid:44)(cid:12)(cid:13)(cid:32)(cid:45) gcaosees swtorcoknegd. Iw kiethe pb amnyd asiudist-, tthhea tp marye nktiidnsg m boigohkts b wea grrneeadt oI’fv teis sseueens footrh heerr a rduonlneys cneonstes. tthhee isrt rmaoino odf s cpilricnutemrss tuanndceesr FOLLOW US ON ointments and medicine for at school but have tantrums do the same thing, one boy and their stress spills all over the unexpected illness or in- at home, managing to hold it calling his dad psychotic and the floor. If I can do this in jury, and I’ll willingly give together in one setting and another telling his mother, the service of a family trip, up a day of sightseeing to falling apart in the other, in no uncertain terms, that of moving us on to the next give everyone a needed rest. where they felt safe. I could he could not possibly be up high point, all the better. I More, when the train we need grasp this idea, and braced for breakfast at 9 am — two just may need to schedule to be on is at 9 am and they myself for difficult after- days in a row. a little vacation for myself. twitter.com/Brooklyn_Paper complain that it’s too early, noons. Sometimes I won- In fairness, there were Something quiet, peaceful or don’t pack the night be- dered who’s quiet and gentle moments my girls rose to and stress free. FREE KID’S MEAL EVERY NIGHT!! With a Dinner Entrée or Special get a Free Kid Combo, Pizza, Pasta or Mac & Cheese After 5:30p, Applies to Deliveries! Come Together THE with Family & Friends DAY SCHOOL, INC. 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W eekday Kid Fee is $2.50/child Tu 11a M/W/F 12p Th 11a DAYTIME Check THEMOXIESPOT.COM for www.parkslopedaycamp.com Special Events & Details Weekend Singalong, 1st & 3rd Sundays, 12pm NOISE... and have complained about GOWANUS ter quality in the city’s sewers way to prevent [pollution in the duce the ghastly effluvium by noise as early as 10 pm. and harbors — will only re- Gowanus] is to create a mod- a projected 34 percent. But the The board’s vote is only mind them of something they ern sewer system — and that’s Bloomberg administration is a recommendation and does know all too well: that the not going to happen.” under no obligation to spend Continued from page 1 rette smoke, and cacophonous not mean that the bar will lose Continued from page 1 idents real-time data about Gowanus stinks worse than Roughly 45 million gallons more on a much costlier city- Community Board 1 conversations from revelers its license. can better quantify the en- sewer overflows in what The usual whenever it rains. of household sewage drain into wide fix — even though federal members stressed that while that lasted past 4 am. The State Liquor Author- vironmental impact and in- Brooklyn Paper has dubbed the “Nothing will change,” the 1.8-mile canal each year, officials say their $300–$500 they love and respect the gay One Williamsburg res- ity has the ultimate power to form the public as soon as borough’s “Pungent Sound.” said Bill Appel, the execu- based on city estimates. million Superfund cleanup will community, Metropolitan bar ident told the board’s pub- grant or renew liquor licenses they happen.” But neighbors say the tive director of the Gowanus The city is required by fed- be a waste if the city keeps al- failed to abide by state guide- lic safety committee he had of bars and restaurants — and Strickland hopes the sen- high-tech devices — part Canal Community Develop- eral law to spend $180 million lowing sewage to flood the wa- lines that force the venue to to hose off the sidewalks in Metropolitan Bar likely won’t sors will give Gowanus res- of a $450,000 study of wa- ment Corporation. “The only to upgrade nearby sewers to re- terway. close its outdoor space by 11 front of the bar on Lorimer face much trouble, consider- pm on weeknights and 1 am Street to remove the smell ing it has no prior violations or on weekends. of urine. complaints on file, an agency BIKES... starting point, not the final dent Adrienne Wagner, out- agency can’t be blamed for “It’s equal grief for every- “If the owner just brought spokesman said. word, for bike share siting in side of Swallow Cafe on Bog- overlooking some suggested one,” said CB1 member Tom people inside at 1 am when But Williamsburg resi- your district,” agency plan- art Street. “We don’t always kiosk sites, considering that Burrows, who says he has vis- he is supposed to, this would dent Sinclair Rankin hopes ner Keith Bray wrote to CB1 have the money to take cabs several cyclists requested ited Williamsburg’s first gay have never happened,” said the board’s vote will at least Continued from page 9 posed map includes three to members. home and riding a bike is so pick-up and drop-off loca- bar many times and “always Linell Ajello, who has moved send a message to the bar to Morgan Avenue, the beloved four times more sites than the Greenpoint and East Wil- much more pleasurable.” tions in Newtown Creek. notices a violation.” her children’s bedrooms away better soundproof its back- pizza purveyor Roberta’s on city is ready to implement, liamsburg cyclists hope the Critics lashed out at the “It would be great to ride Neighbors approached the from windows facing the yard — without necessarily Moore Street, the youth-in- and noted that bike share ki- city adds more locations. city for not heeding the re- a bike on water alongside a board in January when the bar’s courtyard because of tamping down any of the fun fested McKibbin Lofts, or osks close to McGolrick Park “It’s ridiculous — we need quests of bike riders who ferry,” said one commenter. bar’s liquor license renewal the noise. its customers are having. anywhere near McGolrick are a possibility. more good transportation pitched locations all over “Imagine that.” appeared on the agenda, Metropolitan’s owner did “I could care less if peo- Park — and bike boosters at “This map is meant as a here,” said Bushwick resi- North Brooklyn. But the — with Natalie O’Neill claiming they were fed up not return a call for comment, ple were making out back North Brooklyn’s Commu- with shards of broken glass in but the bar’s manager said that there,” said Rankin. “You nity Board 1 say that’s unac- the courtyard, billowing ciga- neighbors are “never happy” can’t hear making out.” ceptable. GRIMM... hiring her — which is excep- The flap is among several “The entire area north of tional,” spokeswoman Carol currently plaguing Grimm, McGuinness is both highly Danko explained. “She is ex- who was accused of accept- PARKING... backed the plan, warned Do- residential and a far walk tremely well-qualified to ef- ing illegal campaign con- mansky’s project would set from the train station and I Continued from page 1 Yet Grimm (R–Bay Ridge) fectively serve the people the tributions during his 2010 a dangerous precedent. think many people that live in tion experience and was fre- said he didn’t hire Vella Mar- congressman represents in campaign, as well as hav- Domansky applied to the that area would love to jump quently absent from the site. rone, a Community Board 10 Brooklyn, which is what he ing covered up t ies to a former Continued from page 1 say they won’t sign off on the city’s Board of Standards on a bike rather than wait for Marrone, who investigators member, for her checkered cares about the most.” business partner who served arena crowds for spots. program because it amounts and Appeals to forego the the bus,” said CB1 member said had been fired from his past — he hired her for her Vella-Marrone, who is 18 months in prison. Cops “Getting people to take to a tax on something that has parking requirement. Ryan Kuonen. “It seems like previous two jobs, was never long track record as a com- also a member of Commu- also last week a rrested Liam mass transit is a good thing,” always been free. He plans to start con- a missed opportunity to really held criminally liable. munity leader, a Grimm nity Board 10, was hired two McCabe, an aide to Grimm, said Richard Goldstein, the Councilwoman Letitia struction in August and utilize the bike share in the best Vella-Marrone later ad- spokeswoman said. weeks ago to run Grimm’s for roughing up his 14-year- president of the Carlton Ave- James (D–Fort Greene), who open the tower in 2014. way for our community.” nue Block Association. “But The city announced its mitted that she lobbied Ata- “He was aware [of the in- Brooklyn office on 13th Av- old son outside of his Boerum not having a parking facil- plans last September to d e- nasio to give her husband the cident], but Grimm was most enue and handle constituent Hill school after the young- ity at the site will exacer- FOWLER... velop a network of privately job — a violation that cost concerned with her reputa- concerns. She declined to ster was allegedly found with bate the parking problem in funded cruising bicycles that her $5,000 in fines. tion in the community when comment for this article. marijuana. the neighborhood.” would allow anyone who pur- Neighbors fear the problem chases a $100 yearly pass to will only get worse once the Continued from page 1 could damage the statue or take trips lasting up to 45 min- TOUGH... Grimm says: “I have re- Grimm says: “These are 19,000-seat arena — the cen- the city was trying to trans- its pedestal. utes on clunky Dutch-style lied as a businessman on the serious charges that have not terpiece of developer Bruce form an asphalt no-man’s of “Changing a statue’s orien- bikes. City officials have h eld same principles of honesty been taken lightly.” Ratner’s Atlantic Yards mega- drugs and prostitution into tation is quite a bit more com- bike workshops in parks and that have guided my service • • • project — opens for concerts a plaza, she claims. plicated and costly than people s olicited locations for bicycle Continued from page 1 both as a candidate and a as a Marine, an FBI special • Grimm hired Fran Vel- and Nets games this fall . “He would look better fac- might think,” she said. pick-ups and drop-offs from leged that Grimm and an aide member of Congress by the agent and as a United States laMarrone as his Brooklyn The arena will only have ing the apex of the triangle This isn’t the first pro- the public to foment interest to a celebrity rabbi b ullied same high standards.” congressman. This attack is district director — a woman parking spaces for 1,100 cars, today, to be a greeter for the posed statuary U-turn. Last in the new project. potential donors — some of • • • politically motivated, as my who admitted to getting her but an estimated 3,000 cars neighborhood,” she said. fall, historian Richard Kessler Brooklynites suggested whom were not US citizens • The Times also questioned record as an effective con- husband a patronage job reha- and 80 trucks will visit the The city wants to give the was outraged that a 140-year- thousands of kiosk locations — into donating thousands to Grimm’s r ecord as a business- gressman, fighting for Brook- bing a Borough Park school in site before and after basket- brigadier swanky new digs, old statue of Abraham Lin- throughout the borough, in- his 2010 campaign, violating man , citing his ties to a for- lyn, cannot be denied.” the 1990s. A 17-year-old girl ball games, according to an thanks to a controversial pro- coln would be installed in cluding 100 in East Wil- federal campaign laws. mer FBI pal who served 18 • • • was killed at the site when environmental impact state- posal to close one block of S. Grand Army Plaza f acing liamsburg and Greenpoint Grimm says: “It’s disap- months in prison, his employ- • Police arrested Liam an unsecured brick fell from ment for the project. Elliott Place to traffic, bolster- the “wrong” way : south. east of McGuinness and 17 pointing that such a story was ment with a Wall Street firm McCabe, Grimm’s director the building. In November, City Coun- ing Fowler Square’s appeal Horowitz believes turning near McGolrick Park, where allowed to go forward with- that was frequently under fire of community relations, af- Grimm’s spokeswoman cil approved a controversial as a pedestrian plaza. Fowler is a “common sense” the nearest public transpor- out evidence. I have dedicated from regulators, and his role ter authorities said McCabe says: “He was most con- plan to sell parking permits to But a Parks Department campaign worth waging. tation is the temperamental my entire life to honorably as owner of a Manhattan res- grabbed his teenage son by cerned with her reputation neighborhood residents. But spokeswoman said the city “I don’t think it’s all that B48 bus. serving this country from the taurant that was accused of the arm and shook him. The in the community when hir- the proposal stalled in the state has no plans to rotate Gen. silly,” he said. “You can’t even Department of Transpor- US Marine Corps to the FBI bilking its employees out of teen was caught with pot, po- ing her — which is excep- Senate, where GOP leaders Fowler, claiming such work see the guy.” tation officials said the pro- and have conducted myself workers compensation. lice say. tional.” 10 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 February 24–March 1, 2012