Brooklyn Eagle_20191110

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BROOKLYN EAGLE

Volume 19, No. 28 20, 951 Volume18, 19,No. No. Volume 18, No. 26 25 Volume 14

Two Sections

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2019 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 2019 THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2019 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 2018 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2017 1,

The case for Brooklyn's WORDS OF complete Hottest WISDOM Brooklyn legend streets Graphic Pete Hamill A Q&A with addresses Danny Harris, Novelist Prospect Park the new leader

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Photo by Daniel Garcia

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

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Eagle photos by Caroline ebrooklyn media/Photo byOurso Arthur De Gaeta

Artist: Leon Polk Smith. Gallery: Lisson Gallery.

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Prospect Park Alliance gala honors supporters, raises funds for Brooklyn’s backyard By Caroline Ourso Special to the Brooklyn Daily Eagle

Nature enthusiasts gathered at Bartel Pritchard Square on Saturday, Oct. 5 to celebrate Prospect Park and honor special supporters at the Prospect Park Alliance’s 2019 gala and fundraiser. Local industry leaders mingled with politicians and philanthropists in the name of preserving, sustaining and improving Brooklyn’s forested wonderland. The Alliance chose to honor three guests for their dedication to preserving and promoting the 585-acre park via two distinct avenues. Lorraine and Gordon DiPaolo jointly received the Wilbur A. Levin Award for their generous donations to the park over the past several years. Iris Weinshall, board chair of the alliance and COO of the New York Public Library, introduced the DiPaolos, noting that they have given $50,000 to the alliance for the past five years. “The DiPaolos simply want to inspire as many people as possible to get involved with the park and our work,” said Weinshall, who is married to Sen. Chuck Schumer. “Their generosity has encouraged thousands of park supporters to give back to the park,” Weinshall concluded. “Thank you for your dedication to Brooklyn’s backyard.” The DiPaolos gave separate short acceptance speeches, focusing on the progress made in the park and neighborhood since the couple moved to the area in 1969. “The park has enjoyed a renaissance, a rebirth,” said Gordon after Lorraine noted that the park was nearly unapproachable in the ’70s due to neglect and crime. “It’s safe and gorgeous, a place to escape the trials and tribulations of daily living.” The award given to the DiPaolos is named after Bill Levin, a founding member of the Prospect Park Alliance’s board of directors who died in 2005. His widow, Phyllis Lee Levin, a former reporter and historian, watched the ceremony from the center dining table seated between Schumer and her son, Peter. Pete Hamill, the renowned journalist and Brooklyn native who has served as editor of both the New York Post and the New York Daily News, received the James S. T. Stranahan Award, reflecting his lifelong connection to the park and borough. “Pete helped make Brooklyn what it is today,” said Schumer, recounting Hamill’s prolific career as a journalist, editor and author. Schumer lauded Hamill for his journalistic standards by bringing a small taste of partisanship into an otherwise apolitical affair.

Vicki Cerullo, Alex Zablocki and Regina Myer at the Prospect Park Alliance gala. “We need journalists like Pete now more than ever,” said Schumer. “A free and robust fourth estate is how we discern democracy from autocracy and guard against the slide from one to the other. “This is a time when many of us who have had complete faith in the wellspring of democracy that’s graced our country genuinely worry, ‘Will it survive?’” he continued. “As long as Pete Hamill and his intellectual descendants are on the case, I believe our democracy will not just survive, but prevail.” Hamill, who grew up mere blocks from the park and has continued his close residency throughout most of his life, shared both touching and harrowing memories upon receiving his award, guiding the audience through a brief but personal history of the park. His childhood contained regular visits to the park, first with his mother and then with friends as he grew up, he recalled. “Once you entered it and moved across some slopes, the city itself disappeared,” Hamill reminisced, “unlike in Central Park, where a visitor could never escape the rigid sky clawing at Manhattan buildings.” But living near the park was not always pleasant, and after a shot was fired through his window while he was home with his two daughters, he moved away for their safety. “The park is surely at its historic zenith right

Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon and Senator Charles Schumer posed during the Prospect Park Alliance gala. 2 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, October 10, 2019

Eagle photos by Caroline Ourso

Pete Hamill spoke at the Prospect Park Alliance gala.

now,” said Hamill fondly, and the park’s Administrator Sue Donoghue seemed to agree. “We all know Brooklyn is booming, with more people coming to the borough and coming to the park than ever before,” said Donoghue. But this boom in visitors begs for a renewal of donations to keep the park thriving, and Donoghue called on her guests to continue their giving streak. “It is essential that we keep this park accessible to both new Brooklynites as well as communities who have lived here for generations,” Donoghue said. C.K. Swett helped move the funding along as a charismatic auctioneer. “I submit to you that behind voting, there is no greater expression of the democratic ideal than a public park,” Swett belted into the microphone while standing on top of a chair. “We have to have these parks and make these parks safe and clean, welcoming for all,” he continued. “Throw those doors wide open. That’s what the Alliance does; it opens the doors wide for everyone to celebrate that democratic ideal.” And indeed the doors did swing. Guest after guest pledged thousands of dollars to the alliance at Swett’s behest, and by the end of the night, he had raised $50,000 for the park. Nearly every speaker throughout the night referred to the park as a refuge or an oasis, likening it to a spot of heaven on Earth.

Gordon and Lorraine DiPaolo at the Prospect Park Alliance gala. But Hamill, the writer, eloquently stated the obvious unconventionally, declaring, “If there’s no Prospect Park in heaven, I ain’t going.”


The Prospect Park Alliance held its annual gala in Bartel Pritchard Square on Saturday, Oct. 5.

Eagle photos by Caroline Ourso

Sue Donoghue addressed the crowd.

Gordon DiPaolo speaks as Pete Hamill listens intently.

Phyllis Lee Levin chatted with her son, Pete Levin, during the Prospect Park Alliance gala.

Guests toasted Prospect Park during the gala held by the Prospect Park Alliance to honor supporters and raise money for the oasis.

Pia Raymond, left, and Jackie Cuscuna at the Prospect Park Alliance gala. Thursday, October 10, 2019 • Brooklyn Eagle • 3


With a pop-up photo studio, this Bed-Stuy artist turned her neighbors into stars By Evan Nicole Brown Brooklyneagle.com

When Hidemi Takagi, a visual artist and photographer originally from Japan, moved to Bedford-Stuyvesant six and a half years ago, she felt a warmth she hadn’t experienced elsewhere in her 20 years living in New York City. “I’ve lived in different parts of Brooklyn and this is the first time I’ve felt like this is a community,” Takagi said. “This is the best neighborhood I’ve ever lived in.” Takagi wanted to share that sense of unbridled community with others while also reflecting the neighborhood’s transformation. She started documenting her neighbors, welcoming 80 of them, over time, into a front-stoop photo studio. Now, Takagi’s solo exhibition “The Bed-Stuy Social ‘Photo’ Club,” has opened at Restoration Plaza. The project started as a quasi-social experiment. In the spring of 2018, Takagi created a pop-up photo studio in front of her building and offered free portraits to members of the community. She started to draw inspiration from Bed-Stuy’s colorful personalities. “A lot of them are characters, to be honest. [The] people who are middle-aged and older than that, they are born and raised in Bed-Stuy and have lived here their entire life. They’ve grown up together and are still friends,” Takagi said. As the photo sessions went on, Takagi said she felt they began to reinforce the sense of connection. “I started just taking photographs more casually, using my phone, so they started recognizing me as a photographer,” Takagi said. “Then I started making prints and giving them to them and they appreciated it.” Word traveled fast. Before long, Bed-Stuy locals began lining up down the block for the chance to get in front of Takagi’s lens. The photo studio, which was visible from the street, attracted long-standing residents and people who had recently moved in — across all age groups and backgrounds — which facilitated new connections that may not have happened otherwise. “They didn’t come there [just] to get a photograph … it’s not the point of getting a free portrait, but at some point, it becomes an activity,” Takagi explained. The social photo club became a collaborative project, with neighbors volunteering to assist with props, styling and the switching of Takagi’s colorful backdrops. In a time when gentrification and real estate development continues to threaten the authenticity of long-standing, working-class communities, Takagi’s open-air photo studio illustrates the tenacity of neighborhoods built on genuine connections. While the photography project exists in a rapidly gentrifying neighborhood, it shows that an alternate reality — one outside of the sticky power dynamics associated with new developments and homeowners — can exist when the space is created for it to. “I think this gave them an opportunity to talk and meet each other which is good,” Takagi says. “I didn’t ask anybody to do anything, but it’s so nice that people get together with no payment involved.” Grants from arts organizations like Culture Push and Brook-

Hidemi Takagi. Photo courtesy of Hidemi Takagi

The stoop setup.

Photo courtesy of Hidemi Takagi

lyn Arts Council helped fund the purchase of props, color backdrops and prints. BRIC Arts Media invited Takagi to bring her pop-up studio to its space and replicate her entire process last year. According to Takagi, subjects were as eager to model for her at BRIC as they were at her front stoop. “This is about photography … [but] it’s very fascinating to see how they perform,” she said. Even though Restoration Plaza isn’t a formal art gallery, Takagi was determined to show her work here. “The project is about Bed-Stuy, so it had to be here,” she said. Only a select number of images, featuring 42 people from Takagi’s project, are featured in the show due to limited space. But the range of subjects she photographed are represented; ensuring that men and women were included in equal number, as well as age and family diversity, was paramount. “Of course, people living here appreciate the fact that I’m showing their faces, and [that] they can represent this neighbor-

hood,” Takagi said. “[Some of] these people have never had this type of opportunity before … they’ve never seen themselves or their family like this before.” The photographer said it was surprisingly easy to photograph non-models. As a family portrait photographer, she’s used to working with strangers and new subjects. “I hope more people come [to the show] so they feel like a star,” she said. “I want them to remember the feeling that they’re very special, because they are.” “The Bed-Stuy Social ‘Photo’ Club” will be open to the public seven days a week in the lobby of Bedford Stuyvesant Restoration Plaza, 1368 Fulton St. Evan Nicole Brown is a freelance writer living in Brooklyn, covering the arts, culture and design. Her work can be found in Atlas Obscura, Bushwick Daily, Bustle, Fast Company and Gothamist, among other places.

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Left: “Linda,” from “The Bed-Stuy Social ‘Photo’ Club.” Right: “Sylvon,” from “The Bed-Stuy Social ‘Photo’ Club.”

Photos by Hidemi Takagi

4 • Brooklyn Eagle • Thursday, October 10, 2019

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Week of October—10A-Special October 16, 2019 •of INBROOKLYN — A Eagle/Brooklyn Special Section ofEagle/Heights Brooklyn Eagle//Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/GreenpointGazette Gazette••1INB 1INB Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019 • INBROOKLYN Section Brooklyn Daily Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint


BROOKLYN AND ITS COMMUNITY BOARDS Community Board #1 435 GRAHAM AVE., Brooklyn, NY 11211 Phone: 718-389-0009 Fax:718-389-0098 Email:bk01@cb.nyc.gov Flushing Ave., Willamsburg, Greenpoint, Northside, Southside Chairperson: none District Manager:Gerald Esposito Regular monthly board meetings held the 2nd Tuesday of the month/ 6:30pm.

Community Board #6 250 BALTIC ST., Brooklyn, NY 11201 Phone:718-643-3027 Fax: 718-624-8401 Email:info@brooklyncb6.org Red Hook, Carroll Gardens, Park Slope, Gowanus, Cobble Hill Chairperson: Peter Fleming District Manager: Michael Racioppo Regular monthly board meetings held the 2nd Wednesday of the month/6:30p.m.

Community Board #2 350 JAY ST., 8THFLOOR Brooklyn, NY 11201 Phone: 718-596-5410 Fax:718-852-1461 Email:cb2k@nyc.rr.com Brooklyn Heights, Fulton Mall, Boerum Hill, Ft.Greene, BK Navy Yard, Clinton Hill Chairperson: Lenue H. Singletary, III District Manager:Robert Perris Regular monthly board meetings held the 2nd Wednesday of the month/ 6:00pm.

Community Board #7 4201 4THAVE., Brooklyn, NY 11232 Phone:718-854-0003 Fax: 718-436-1142 Email:bk07@cb.nyc.gov Sunset Park, Windsor Terrace Chairperson: Cesar Zuniga District Manager: Jeremy Laufer Regular monthly board meetings held the 3rd Wednesday of the month! 6:30p.m.

Community Board #3 1360 FULTON ST. Brooklyn, NY 11216 Phone:718-622-6601 Fax:718-857-5774 Email:bk03@cb.nyc.gov Bedford-Stuyvesant, Stuyvesant Heights, Ocean Hill Chairperson: none District Manager:Henry Butler Regular monthly board meetings held the 1st Monday of the month! 7:00pm. Community Board #4 1420 BUSHWICK AVE., SUITE 370 Brooklyn, NY 11207-1422 Phone: 718-628-8400 Fax:718-628-8619 Email:bk04@cb.nyc.gov Bushwick Chairperson: none District Manager:Celestina Leon Regular monthly board meetings held the 3rd Wednesday of the month! 6:00pm. Community Board #5 404 PINE STREET, Brooklyn, NY 11208, 3RD FLOOR Phone: 929-221-8261 Fax:718-345-0501 Email:bk05@cb.nyc.gov East New York, Cypress Hills, Highland Park, New Lots, City Line, Starrett City Chairperson: Andre T Mitchell District Manager:Melinda Perkins Regular monthly board meetings held the 4th Wednesday of the month! 6:30pm. xxx • August, 2019

Communi Board #8 1291 ST.MARKS AVE., Brooklyn, NY 11213 Phone: 718-467-5574 Community Board #11 Fax: 718-778-2979 2214 BATH AVE., Email:info@brooklyncb8.org Brooklyn, NY 11214 North Crown Heights, Prospect Heights, Phone:718-266-8800 Weeksville Fax: 718-266-8821 Chairperson: Ethel Tyus Email: info@brooklyncb11.org District Manager: Michelle George Bath Beach, Gravesend, Mapleton, Regular monthly board meetings held the Bensonhurst Chairperson: William Guarinello 2nd Thursday of the month/ 7:00pm. District Manager: Marnee Elias-Pavia Regular monthly board meetings held Community Board #9 2nd Thursday of the month/7:30p.m. 890 NOSTRAND AVE., Communi Board #12 Brooklyn, NY 11225 5910 13THAVE., Phone: 718-778-9279 Brooklyn, NY 11219 Fax:718-467-0994 Phone:718-851-0800 Email: bk09@cb.nyc.gov Fax: 718-851-4140 South Crown Heights, Prospect Lefferts Email: bk12@cb.nyc.gov Boro Park, Kensington, Ocean Parkway, Gardens, Wingate Midwood Chairperson: Fred Baptiste Chairperson: none District Manager: Currently Vacant Regular monthly board meetings held the District Manager: Barry Spitzer Regular monthly board meetings held the 4th Tuesday of the month! 7:00pm. 4th Tuesday of the month/ 7:00pm. Community Board #10 8119 5THAVE., Brooklyn, NY 11209 Phone: 718-745-6827 Fax: 718-836-2447 Email:bk01O@cb.nyc.gov Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights, Fort Hamilton Chairperson: Lori Willis District Manager: Josephine Beckmann Regular monthly board meetings held the 3rd Monday of the month! 7pm. Except during January and February

CommuniJy Board #13 1201 SURF AVE., 3RD FLOOR Brooklyn, NY 11224 Phone:718-266-3001 Fax: 718-266-3920 Email: edmark@cb.nyc.gov Coney Island, Brighton Beach, Bensonhurst, Gravesend, Seagate Chairperson: Joann Weiss District Manager: Eddie Mark Regular monthly board meetings held the 4th Wednesday of the month! 7:00pm.

t Commun· Board #14 810 EAST 16TH ST., Brooklyn, NY 11214 Phone: 718-859-6357 Fax: 718-421-6077 Email: info@brooklyncb14.org Flatbush, Midwood, Kensington, Ocean Parkway Chairperson: Ed Powell District Manager: Shawn Campbell Regular monthly board meetings held the 2nd Monday of the month/ 7:30pm. Community Board #15 KINGSBORO COMMUNITY COLLEGE 2001 Oriental Blvd., Cluster Room C124 Brooklyn, NY 11235 Phone: 718-332-3008 Fax: 718-648-7232 Email: bklcb15@verizon.net Sheepshead Bay, Manhattan Beach, Kings Bay, Gerritsen Beach, Kings Highway, Madison, East Gravesend Chairperson: none District Manager: Laura Singer Regular monthly board meetings held the last Tuesday of the month/ 7:00pm. Communi Board #16 444 THOMAS BOYLAND ST., ROOM 103 Brooklyn, NY 11212 Phone: 718-385-0323 Fax: 718-342-6714 Email: bk16@cb.nyc.gov Brownsville, Ocean Hill Chairperson: none District Manager: Viola D. Greene-Walker Regular monthly board meetings held the 4th Tuesday of the month! 7:00pm.

Community Board #17 4112 FARRAGUT ROAD Brooklyn, NY 11210 Phone: 718-434-3072 Fax:718-434-3801 Email: bk17@cb.nyc.gov East Flatbush, Remsen Village, Farrgut, Rugby, Eramus, Ditmas Village Chairperson: Aaron Ampaw District Manager: Sherif Fraser Regular monthly board meetings held the 3rd Wednesday of the month/ 7:00pm. Community Board #18 1097 BERGEN AVE., Brooklyn, NY 11234-4841 Phone: 718-241-0422 Fax:718-531-3199 Email:bkbrd18@ogtonline.net Canarsie, Bergen Beach, Mill Basin, Flatlands, Marine Park, Georgetown, Mill Island Chairperson: Gardy Brazela District Manager: Dorothy Turano Regular monthly board meetings held the 3rd Wednesday of the month/ 7:00pm.

UPDATED SUMMER 2019

2INB Section of Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/HomeEagle/Heights Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of-October 10 - October 16, 2019 2INB ••INBROOKLYN INBROOKLYN——A ASpecial Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019


News From Your Neighborhood CATHOLICS PROTEST SNUB OF ST. FRANCES CABRINI

The massive Times Square-style advertising barge that popped up in New York’s waterways last October will no longer operate in the state, according to a settlement reached on Monday between the city and the company responsible for operating the boat. The announcement, first reported by the New York Post, ends a roughly seven-month legal battle between the city’s Law Department and Ballyhoo Media. For the full story, visit brooklyneagle.com.

CITYWIDE — Even though St. Frances Cabrini, also known as “Mother Cabrini,” was passed over when First Lady Chirlane McCray chose subjects for her “She Built NYC” statue program, more than 1,000 parishioners packed a Brooklyn church on Sunday to honor the Italian immigrant saint. Cabrini, who founded 67 institutions to help the needy, finished first in a citywide poll asking who should get a statue, but McCray and former Deputy Mayor Alicia Glen decided to honor seven other women, the best known of whom is the late jazz singer Billie Holiday. The pro-Cabrini Mass took place at Sacred Heart of Jesus and Mary and St. Stephen Church on President Street. Many Catholics criticized McCray, who later insisted she wasn’t anti-Catholic, and actor Chazz Palminteri accused McCray of being racist. 

INBrooklyn file photo by Todd Maisel

COPS INVESTIGATE MULTI-CAR CRASH

SUNSET PARK — Police are investigating after at least two pedestrians were struck during a multi-vehicle crash in Sunset Park, according to PIX11. The incident was reported at 54th Street and Fourth Avenue on Monday just before 2:30 p.m. At least three vehicles were involved in the crash. At press time it was unknown how seriously the pedestrians were injured, PIX11 reported. 

POL CALLS ATTENTION TO DYSLEXIA AWARENESS MONTH

PARK SLOPE — Assemblymember Robert Carroll (D-Park Slope-Windsor Terrace-Kensington) recently noted that October marks Dyslexia Awareness Month. Last year, Carroll started a petition calling on the state to fund universal dyslexia screening for all kindergarten, first-grade and second-grade students, according to Kings County Politics. “A disproportionate amount of the over 50 percent of students who aren’t reading at grade level are dyslexic,” said Carroll in a statement. “Our literacy problem touches all types of students and stems from improper curriculum and a lack of screening of students for phonological awareness issues.” 

AFFORDABLE BUILDING BREAKS GROUND IN EAST NY

EAST NEW YORK — A new affordable housing building designed by Dattner Architects recently broke ground in Cypress Hill, according to New York YIMBY. Located at 50 Pennsylvania Ave., the nine-story development includes 218 apartments, amenity space and ground-floor retail stores. Amenities are concentrated on the second floor and include recreational, fitness and laundry facilities, as well as storage space for 109 bicycles and parking for 15 vehicles, New York YIMBY said. The building also includes photovoltaic panels, landscaping on the roof and insulation to improve energy efficiency and temperature maintenance. 

BAY RIDGE FOOD EVENT BENEFITS ST. MARY’S CHURCH

BAY RIDGE — St. Mary’s Antiochian Orthodox Church at 8100 Ridge Blvd. recently hosted its fourth annual Bay Ridge Eats for a Cause. The event was held to raise money for the church’s teen youth group and its parish ministries, according to the Brooklyn Reporter. Almost 200 people attended to support the cause and eat food from well-known local restaurants including Chadwick’s, Ella’s, Gino’s, Le Sajj, Salty Dog and Paneantico. Guest also enjoyed live music courtesy of Cliff Massab and Breaking News. “Bay Ridge Eats for a Cause is an important event for St. Mary’s,” said Parish Council Chair Daria Mayrose. “It gives us an opportunity to support our local restaurants and open our doors to the Bay Ridge community.” 

COPS SEEK PREDATORS WHO ACCOSTED KIDS IN BOROUGH PARK

BOROUGH PARK — Police are looking for four men who are accused to trying to lure children to their vehicle several times on Saturday night in Borough Park. According to PIX11, around 8:30 p.m., four men in a blue SUV first offered candy to two boys, trying to get them into their vehicle near 47th Street and 18th Avenue. Thirty minutes later, around 9 p.m., the same men pulled up alongside a 12-year-old girl and a 9-year-old boy on 55th Street and offered them candy, police said. The children ran away and were unharmed. 

MADONNA CANCELS CONCERT AT BAM

FORT GREENE — Madonna postponed last Monday’s Brooklyn Academy of Music show because of a knee injury, according to the New York Post. “Unfortunately, Madonna’s ‘Madame X’ concert this evening at BAM’s Howard Gilman Opera House is postponed,” a statement by Madonna’s representatives read. Other “Madame X” tour dates at BAM scheduled for Oct. 10 and Oct. 12 are expected to proceed as scheduled. In a message posted on Instagram on Monday night, Madon-

na said she is “not a quitter” and assured fans that she would see them “in a few days.” 

DRIVER WHO KILLED CHILD NEVER APPLIED FOR LICENSE, SAY PROSECUTORS

KENSINGTON — A driver who struck and killed a 10-year-old boy who was riding a bike in Kensington on Saturday has never applied for a driver’s license, prosecutors said. Victor Mejia was making a left turn off Seton Place onto Foster Avenue in a 2002 Ford Explorer when he struck young Dalerjon Shakhobiddinov, the Daily News said. As the Eagle previously reported, Mejia was granted a supervised release Sunday during his arraignment in Brooklyn Criminal Court on charges of unlicensed driving, failure to yield and failure to exercise due care. Justice John Hecht ordered him back to court Nov. 4 and told him to stay off the road, the News said. 

BAZAAR CLOSES IN GREENPOINT

GREENPOINT — Brooklyn Night Bazaar is closing its Greenpoint location before the end of November because of conflicts with its landlord over a new lease agreement, according to the Brooklyn Paper. The business opened within the old Polonaise Terrace Banquet Hall at 150 Greenpoint Ave. in 2016, offering karaoke, ping pong, miniature golf, an arcade and a live music venue on the second floor. In his announcement, Belvy Klein, one of the owners, promised a “killer run” of shows and events through Nov. 30, and added that the venue would host a burger shop during its last eight weeks. 

WEGMANS TO INCLUDE RESTAURANT-LIKE FEATURES

BROOKLYN NAVY YARD — When Wegmans supermarket opens at the Brooklyn Navy Yard later this month, it will include several “restaurant concepts,” including a full bar, madeto-order salads, a sushi bar and gourmet burgers, according to NY Eater. The two-level store will have several to-go food counters on the bottom floor, but also the bar and seating on the mezzanine level. Executive chef Stephen de Lucia told NY Eater he’s most excited about the sushi bar, which will offer 28 options. Wegmans will also have a pizza station with a rotating brick oven that can cook a custom pie in 90 seconds. The burger bar will also make lobster rolls, crab cakes and fried chicken sandwiches. 

TANKER TRUCK CRASH LEADS TO OIL SPILL

GOWANUS — An oil tanker truck spilled thousands of gallons of oil at Warren Street and Fourth Avenue on Saturday afternoon after smashing into a cement barrier, according to the Brooklyn Paper. Troy Gilberti, who saw the incident first-hand, told the Brooklyn Paper, “It was like a waterfall.” Firefighters closed off the surrounding blocks and used vacuums to collect the spilled oil, although some of it found its way into nearby sewers. There were no injuries, a firefighter said. 

DANCE GROUP SEEKS $150K FOR NEW STUDIO

GOWANUS — A dance organization that has been in Gowanus

for more than 40 years is asking for help raising $150,000 to renovate its new studio on Butler Street, according to Patch. Spoke the Hub Dancing, which first opened in Park Slope in 1979, is partnering with Koko NYC, a kids’ program, to open a new dance and art studio called the Gowanus Arts Annex. The new studio needs extensive renovations before it can open. Spoke the Hub founder Elise Long started a GoFundMe account to raise the $150,000 for its needed upgrades. “This new Brooklyn arts center will house two of Brooklyn’s oldest, finest and most innovative not-for-profit community dance and arts organizations, in addition to the studios of artist Ben Lai,” Long wrote. 

PERMITS FILED FOR SUNSET PARK B’LDG

SUNSET PARK — Permits have been filed for a five-story mixed-use building at 228 55th St. in Sunset Park, according to New York YIMBY. The semi-vacant lot, which is located between Second Avenue and the Gowanus Expressway, is two blocks from the R train’s 53rd Street subway station. The building is slated to have 12 apartments, most likely rentals, as well as community facility space. Lam Engineering is listed as the architect. 

BURGERS ARE A HIT AT RED HOOK TAVERN

Bill Durney, the man behind Hometown Bar-B-Que in Red Hook, recently opened a new restaurant known as the Red Hook Tavern. While the tavern was designed as a fried chicken emporium, its main attraction turned out to be a cheeseburger, according to The New York Times. The burger is a “pub burger,” a type of burger served in many traditional bars and restaurants such as P.J. Clarke’s, Fanelli’s and Peter Luger. According to the Times, the hallmarks of a pub burger are a thicker-than-average patty and “a relative lack of adornment.” Durney has said he designed his Red Hook Tavern burger as an homage to the one served at Peter Luger. 

LANDLORD, SON ACCUSED OF BEATING, INSULTING TENANT

SHEEPSHEAD BAY — An elderly Brooklyn landlord is accused of breaking into a tenant’s apartment, beating her with a cane and calling her the “N-word,” according to the Daily News. The landlord, identified as Eugene Simonetti, hasn’t been charged yet because he was hospitalized with a possible stroke after the confrontation. Simonetti and his son, Rocco Simonetti, went to the victim’s apartment on Voorhees Avenue at East 23rd Street in Sheepshead Bay on Sunday, prosecutors said. The elder Simonetti removed the hinges from the tenant’s door, yelled a racial epithet in front of her children and then started beating her with a cane while the younger Simonetti started punching her, prosecutors claim. However, Simonetti’s lawyer, Nicole Mull, said the victim, identified in court papers as Veronica Cochran, grabbed the 87-year-old landlord’s cane and started beating him. Eugene Simonetti was charged with burglary, assault and child endangerment, the Daily News said.

Week of October—10A-Special October 16, 2019 •ofINBROOKLYN — A Eagle/Brooklyn Special Section ofEagle/Heights Brooklyn Eagle//Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/GreenpointGazette Gazette••3INB 3INB Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019 • INBROOKLYN Section Brooklyn Daily Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint


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Damascus Bakeries 56 Gold St. Brooklyn, NY 11201 718-855-1456 Damascus Bakeries has an incredible line of Brooklyn Bred products that are perfect for sandwiches, side dishes and even pizza. For example, the tomato, mozzarella and basil pizza is a real keeper. Just take one package of Brooklyn Bred Bistro Sticks, 1 tablespoon olive oil, 4 oz. fresh mozzarella sliced thin, 1 medium tomato sliced thin, 1 tablespoon grated parmesan or romano cheese and ¼ cup fresh basil leaves, and you have all the ingredients for a mouth-watering pizza. Brush the Brooklyn Bred Bistro sticks with olive oil, place the sliced mozzarella evenly along the crust and sprinkle with grated cheese. Bake directly on a rack or pizza stone at 400 degrees for 10 minutes, or until toppings are melted and the crust is crisp. Remove and sprinkle with chopped fresh basil and serve immediately. It makes for a perfect dinner or hors d’oeuvre! To find the complete recipe and learn more about Damascus Bakeries’ delicious products, just go to the website. www.brooklynbred.com

Three Guys from Brooklyn 6502 Fort Hamilton Parkway Brooklyn, NY 718-748-8340 Three Guys has a unique and tasty fall recipe that sounds absolutely delicious! Its Roasted Bacon & Brussels Sprouts is the perfect dinner side dish. Three Guys stocks the freshest fruits and produce in Brooklyn, and it has the best Brussels sprouts in the borough. For a serving that feeds four to six, just take 4 strips of thick-cut bacon, 2 tbs. butter, 1 lb. halved Brussels sprouts, a medium chopped onion, salt and pepper, and you have all that you need for a flavorful new favorite. Cook the bacon in a large skillet over medium-high heat until crispy. Remove to a paper towel-lined plate and break up into pieces. In the same pan with the bacon fat, melt the butter over a high flame. Add the onions and Brussels sprouts and cook, stirring occasionally, until the sprouts are golden brown. It should take about 8 to 10 minutes. Season with salt and pepper to taste, place the bacon back into the pan and serve immediately. For this and other great recipes visit the website. www.3guysfrombrooklyn.com

Brooklyn-based artist designs new jerseys for Brooklyn Nets BY JAIME DEJESUS JDEJESUS@BROOKLYNREPORTER. COM

The Nets are making a statement with their new jerseys. Brooklyn artist Eric Haze designed the team’s 2019-20 statement edition uniform by Nike in concrete gray which features hand-drawn letters spelling “BKLYN” across the chest, as well as Haze’s signature stars running down the jersey’s left side, as a contemporary twist on one of the team’s most iconic throwback looks. Haze also played a role in the creation of last year’s popular Nets statement jersey, which paid tribute to the Notorious B.I.G. via a customized *BED-STUY* mark for each player on the bottom of the uniform. Haze, who has been an artist for 40 years, told this paper how he got involved in the organization.

“The professional working relationship started last year when the Nets and NBA commissioned me to do a spot graphic on the Biggie Small homage city jersey from last season,” he said. “Then, about a week after delivering that work, they circled back to me and said they were really happy with that initial graphic and that they wanted to take it Photos courtesy of the Brooklyn Nets to the next level and have me actually work on an on-court Players donned the jerseys for the first time at Practice jersey, which of course was at the Park in Brooklyn Bridge Park. an opportunity of a lifetime for me.” was created organically by in the Park in Brooklyn Bridge The design process was an hand. Park on Saturday, Oct. 5 where “I’ve heard people refer to it all the players donned the new exciting and organic one for as the new font,” he explained. threads in front of their fans Haze. “It is decidedly not a font. It is while they provided a public “It was a perfect marriage based on my actual handstyle team practice. Thus far, the of black, white and gray,” said Haze, who also has a history as but it was important to find response has been very posia graffiti artist. “Those are the that balance where it looks tive, said Haze. team’s colors, and if anyone done by hand but clean, crisp “The energy and response follows me, they know that and universal enough that it with the event on Saturday those have been my signature read as professional and crisp.” was phenomenal,” he said. colors for decades as well.” The jerseys were officially “The real icing on the cake for He stressed that the design unveiled at the team’s Practice me on Saturday was having

the new president of Barclays “sets the tone for big games Center come up to me and tell or rivalries and is inspired me not only was he happy with by the team’s desire to make the design, but he asked the a bold statement every time team candidly what the players they step on the court. For thought and they all thought it each team, the aesthetic was great.” expresses the specific spirit Since Nike took over cre- of the current roster.” ating NBA jerseys in 2017, The Nets will wear the each team has been provid- jerseys during 22 games this ed with a statement jersey, season. They will debut offiwhich according to Nike.com, cially on Nov. 1.

Artist Eric Haze with new Brooklyn Nets Statement jersey.

4INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019


ROASTED BACON & BRUSSELS SPROUTS Three Guys has a unique and tasty Fall recipe that sounds absolutely delicious! Its Roasted Bacon & Brussels Sprouts is the perfect dinner side dish. Three Guys stocks the freshest fruits and produce in Brooklyn and it has the best Brussels sprouts in the borough. For a serving that feeds four to six just take 4 strips of thick-cut bacon, 2 tbs. butter, 1 lb. halved Brussels sprouts, a medium chopped onion, salt and pepper, and you have all that you need for a flavorful new favorite. Cook the bacon in a large skillet over medium-high heat until crispy. Remove to a paper towel-lined plate and break up into pieces. In the same pan with the bacon fat, melt the butter over a high flame. Add the onions and Brussels sprouts and cook, stirring occasionally until the sprouts are golden brown. It should take about 8 to 10 minutes. Season with salt and pepper, to taste, and place the bacon back into the pan and serve immediately. For this and other great recipes visit the website. https://www.3guysfrombrooklyn.com/recipes/roasted-bacon-brussels-sprouts/

Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 5INB


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Pet Adoption Corner

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Pet Adoption Corner

Sean Casey Animal Rescue has shared these photos of pets up for adoption with us. Baxter is a one-year-old Labrador mix. Baxter is a happy pup that will bring a smile to your face. He loves to play and loves nice walks in the park. April is a one-year-old Domestic Shorthair. She arrived nursing a litter of six kittens that have since been adopted. April isRescue waiting forshared a Sean Casey Animal has lovingphotos home toof callpets her own these up for adoption

with us. Casey Animal Rescue (718Sean Cody is a is handsome Shep436-5163) located atfive-year-old 153 East Third herd mix. Cody is a laid-back and relaxed St. boy that walks well on a leash. He is also a total sweetheart!

Cody

Lauren is an eight-year-old Domestic Shorthair. Lauren is a sweet cat that loves everyone including small children. Sean Casey Animal Rescue (718-4365163) is located at 153 East Third St. Photos courtesy of Sean Casey Animal Rescue

Lauren Photos courtesy of Sean Casey Animal Rescue

14INB INBROOKLYN —— ASpecial Section Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette• •Week Week January1010-16, 201916,Record/Bay 8INB — ADecember Section ofofBrooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Gazette ofofOctober - October 2019 8INB• ••INBROOKLYN INBROOKLYN ASpecial Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of October – October 16, 2019 Gazette • 11INB Week of 14-20, 2017 • INBROOKLYN — A Special SectionPress/Home of Spectator/Brooklyn Brooklyn Daily Record/Greenpoint Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Brooklyn Ridge10Eagle/Greenpoint


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Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 9INB


Arcade brings virtual reality to Bensonhurst BY JAIME DEJESUS

JDEJESUS@BROOKLYNREPORTER.COM

There’s a new game in town. Over the years, arcades have mostly become places of the past, where kids from the ‘80s and ‘90s fed quarters into their favorite arcade games. Whether it be Ms. Pac-Man, Street Fighter or Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, arcades offered friends the opportunity to get together to experience competition and a gaming experience they couldn’t get at home. With leaps in technology for home consoles and computers, many arcades have shut their doors, leaving a void. Now, however, the emergence of virtual reality (VR), a technology that requires relatively expensive and cumbersome headsets, has breathed new life into arcades. Enter Futuristic VR, 6604 18th Ave., Bensonhurst’s first virtual reality arcade. Owned by a local family, the arcade, which opened on July 1, provides tons of VR experiences using the PC-powered HTC VIVE PRO Headsets. Owner Elona Lopari discussed the inspiration behind bringing a VR arcade to Bensonhurst and hopefully making it a family destination for years to come. “We’ve actually lived in the area for the last 15 years and we had always struggled with finding things to do around Bensonhurst, so we’ve been using VR in our home for years

Photos courtesy of Futuristic VR

The virtual reality experience can now be enjoyed in Bensonhurst. now and it always brought us together as a family,” she explained. “We thought, why don’t we bring the same kind of idea down to our neighborhood?” she explained. “The idea was always around bringing people together and creating an environment where they could come in, just have fun and connect with their friends and families,” Lopari said. The arcade also provides an educational component: students on class trips can virtually dissect a frog, for example, Lopari said, adding that customers have to experience VR to understand it. “You can’t really describe it to them. That’s why we try to get them on the headset so then it speaks for itself. The response, once they finally put it on is, ‘Woah this is so cool.’” Futuristic VR is open Monday through Friday from 1-9 p.m., Saturday, 11 a.m.-10 p.m. and Sunday, 12-8 p.m. For more information or to book a station, visit www.futuristicvrworld.com.

10INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019


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Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 11INB


FIAO honors Brooklyn Columbus Day Parade grand marshals at 38th annual brunch BY JOHN ALEXANDER JALEXANDER@BROOKLYNEAGLE. COM

Christopher Columbus would be proud of the FIAO! The Federation of Italian American Organizations kicked off its annual Brooklyn Columbus Day Parade, which will take place on Saturday, Oct. 12 and run along 18th Avenue in Bensonhurst, with a festive brunch at which its grand marshals were honored. The event, held at Sirico’s, 8023 13th Ave., on Sunday, Oct. 6, honored this year’s grand marshals: Francesco Genuardi, consul general of Italy in New York; Dr. Salvatore Cumella, executive vice president Lenco Diagnostic Laboratory and president and CEO of Cumella Professional Services; Capt. Anthony Longobardi, commanding officer of the 62nd Precinct; Robert Ciulla, principal at Dyker Heights Intermediate School; and Denise Daniello, director of admissions and community liaison at the Bensonhurst Center for Rehabilitation. Brooklyn Columbus Day Parade Committee Executive Chairperson Jack Spatola served as master of ceremonies for the brunch. President of FIAO and brunch chairperson Carlo Scissura said he was delighted with the multicultural aspect of the parade and the caliber of grand marshals selected this year, who were all chosen based on their exceptional service to the community. “I think it’s an opportunity to celebrate the Italian culture, celebrate the community, celebrate the fact that our Columbus Day Parade includes all different ethnic groups and religious groups and people from across the communities,” Scissura told this paper.

City Councilmember Justin Brannan addresses guest at 38th annual Columbus Day brunch.

Parade Grand Marshal Francesco Genuardi, consul general of Italy in New York.

ebrooklyn media/Photos by Arthur De Gaeta

Grand Marshals Francesco Genuardi, Capt. Anthony Longobardi, Denise Daniello and Dr. Salvatore Cumella. “And we’ve highlighted some amazing people that are serving as grand marshals this year. We’re just excited about a great day on Saturday when the parade comes alive and everyone comes together,” added Scissura. One of the topics discussed at the brunch was the refusal of the city to honor Mother Frances Xavier Cabrini with a statue for her many contributions to the city.

“The Italian-American community has contributed so much to our city and state, and in particular the contributions of Mother Cabrini should be recognized in the form of a statue and I’m an advocate of that,” Assemblymember Nicole Malliotakis told this paper. “And just like we were successful in preserving and landmarking the Christopher Columbus statue in New York

President of FIAO and brunch chairperson Carlo Scissura, and Columbus Day Parade Executive Chairperson Jack Spatola with honoree Denise Daniello and supporter.

President of FIAO and brunch chairperson Carlo Scissura. Grand Marshal Capt. Anthony Longobardi, Suzanne Longobardi, Jack Spatola and Anselina and Anthony Longobardi IV.

City, I’m hopeful that we will be successful in our battle to get Mother Cabrini a statue which garnered the most votes City Councilmember in New York City’s ‘She Built Mark Treyger speaks at NYC’ contest,” she added. Columbus Day brunch. Also attending the event were U.S. Rep. Max Rose, Assemblymember William Colton and City Councilmembers Justin Brannan and Mark Treyger. “The FIAO has served residents for over four decades and established Il Centro, the first Italian-American cultural community center in New York City,” Treyger told this paper. U.S. Rep. Max Rose “All year long, FIAO pro- salutes honorees at vides essential social services Columbus Day brunch. that improve the quality of life for Brooklyn residents. parade grand marshals. “As This past budget cycle, with a son of Italian immigrants, I my advocacy, along with the realize the importance of celleadership of Speaker Corey ebrating and honoring our rich Johnson, the Council was able culture, heritage and tradition,” to secure a significant amount he said. “It is so important to of grant funding for FIAO to come together as a community ensure that the organization every year for the parade to celcan continue serving residents ebrate all of our achievements.” with vital programming and Brannan said he was gratepromote Italian-American ful to the FIAO for keeping this tradition alive. “This is culture that reflects the vibrant diversity of our community,” about celebrating the heritage, added Treyger. culture and achievements of Italian-Americans,” he noted. Ciulla said he was honored and humbled to have been “It is so important that we all selected as one of this year’s honor and cherish our personal

President of FIAO and brunch chairperson Carlo Scissura with Grand Marshal Robert Ciulla and his family.

Jack Spatola, executive chair of the Brooklyn Parade Committee, greets guests at brunch.

Assemblymember Nicole Malliotakis speaks at Columbus Day brunch. immigrant story because this is what makes Brooklyn and America so special. I look forward to marching in the parade this weekend!” The pre-parade mass will be celebrated at St. Athanasius Church, 2154 61st St., at 10:15 a.m., followed by a reception in the St. Athanasius school auditorium at 11:30 a.m. The parade will kick off at 1 p.m. at the corner of 61st Street and 18th Avenue and it will end in front of Il Centro, 8711 18th Ave. For more information, visit www.fiaobrooklyn.org.

Brooklyn Columbus Day Parade Grand Marshal Salvatore Cumella surrounded by friends at annual brunch.

12INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019


Beauty and the Beast Les Miserables Hairspray Miss Saigon Ragtime Annie Aida Seussical Children of Eden Smokey Joe’s Café Shout the Mod Musical Barry Manilow • Billy Joel • Abba ...And many more

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Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 13INB


OBITUARIES We Notify • Social Security Administration • Veterans Administration • Insurance Companies • Pensions & Unions • Irrevocable & Revocable Accounts

Free Consultation at Our Funeral Home Joseph P. Clavin Sons, Inc. 7722 Fourth Avenue Brooklyn, New York 11209 718- 745-1445 www.clavinfuneralhome.com

+++ ZUKOWSKY, Katherine — On Sept. 23. Beloved wife of Nicholas Zukowsky. Longtime resident of Glen Cove, New York. A funeral service was held Friday, Sept. 23, at Our Lady of Kazan Orthodox Church in Sea Cliff, New York. Interment at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Maspeth, New York. She was loved and will be missed by her caring family and many dear friends. All services arranged by Clavin Funeral Home.

+++ HENNESSY, Gertrude — Feb. 8, 1930 to Oct. 6, 2019. Born in Red Hook. Preceded in death by her husband, Kenneth; her parents, Catherine and Andrew; her brothers Rev. William., Andrew and Joseph. She attended St. Joseph’s High School and pursued a career in business which included Higgins Inc., Goldman Sachs and OTB. Gertrude enjoyed the theater, family celebrations and the companionship of her many friends. Gertrude is survived by her beloved sister-in-law Anne Hennessy and her many nieces, nephews, great nieces, great nephews, great grand nieces and great grand nephews. Memorial gifts may be made to St. Francis Bread Line 144 West 32nd St., New York, NY 10001. All arrangements handled by McLaughlin & Sons Funeral Home. Mass of Christian Burial St. Anselm’s Roman Catholic Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery.

+++ MCLAUGHLIN, Helen — Wife of the late Eugene, companion of John. Loving mother of Marie, William, Eileen, Eugene, Helen and the late James. Devoted grandmother of 10, great grandmother of eight. Sister of Roseanne and the late James. Niece of James and Catherine Sweeney. Cousin of Elizabeth and Daniel.

Also survived by many other cousins, nieces and nephews. All arrangements handled by McManus Funeral Home. Funeral Mass St. Thomas Aquinas Roman Catholic Church. Burial Holy Cross Cemetery.

+++ O’MALLEY, John — Of Brooklyn, passed away on Sept. 27 at the age of 84. John was born on May 1, 1935 and is

718-238-3600 Home. Mass of Christian Burial St. Columba Roman Catholic Church. Committal St. Charles Cemetery, Farmingdale. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Lustgarten Foundation for Pancreatic Cancer Research.

+++ GREENE, Margaret S. “Peggy” — Of Norwalk, Connecticut. Beloved mother, grandmother and aunt. Passed away peacefully on Oct. 1, at the age of 91. She was predeceased by her husband Thomas. She is survived by her children Rev. Michael Greene, Patricia Maher (Ted), Tim Greene (Mary Ann) and Peggy Tomasi (David). Peggy is remembered lovingly by her five grandchildren, Matthew (Kirsten), Maggie, Cristin, Tommy and Jack, and her great-grandchildren Declan, Isaac, Madeline and Lillian. All arrangements handled by McLaughlin’s and Sons Funeral Home.. Mass of Christian Burial Immaculate Heart of Mary Church.

9620 Third Avenue - Brooklyn, NY 11209

+++ the first child of the late Patrick and Margaret O’Malley. John honorably served in the United States Army from 1959-1961 and retired from the NYPD after an illustrious 21-year career attaining the rank of sergeant. John is survived by his loving wife Joan and children John, Daniel and Deborah; son-in-law Michael Wismer; daughter-inlaw Michelle O’Malley; beloved brother Thomas O’Malley; and his adoring grandchildren Quinn, Jacob, Christian, Lucas, Ashley, Cameron, Molly, Grace, Matthew and Michael. John is predeceased by his beautiful daughter Suzanne O’Malley Wismer; his beloved sister Mary Palmiotti and his beloved sister-in-law Genevieve O’Malley. All arrangements handled by Marine Park Funeral

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Sharpshooter Badge. Beloved brother of Harry Dusenberry, Jean Marie Driscoll, the late Philip Dusenberry, the late Bernard Dusenberry and the late John Dusenberry. Loving uncle of Matthew, Maya, Brian, Kevin, Karen, Maureen, Laura, Christopher, Keith, Christine, Lori and Erica. All arrangements handled by Marine Park Funeral Home. Mass of Christian Burial Good Shepherd Roman Catholic Church. Burial St. Charles Cemetery, Farmingdale.

+++

DUSENBERRY, Joseph — Age 71, of Brooklyn, entered into eternal rest on Sunday, Sept. 29. Joseph was born Sept. 18, 1948 in Brooklyn. He is the son of the late Harry and the late Margaret (Shaw) Dusenberry. Proud and dedicated U.S. Army veteran. During Joseph’s time in the service, he was the recipient of the National Defense Service Medal, Vietnam Service Medal, Vietnam Campaign Medal, Good Conduct Medal and

son of the late Vincent and the late Josephine (Assante) Lubrano. Proud U.S. Army veteran. Beloved husband of 52 years to the late Judy Lubrano. Loving father of Suzanne Gucciardo (Anthony DeFelice), Anthony Lubrano (Lisa) and John Lubrano (Jeanette). Cherished grandfather of John DeFelice, Krystyna Lubrano, Matthew DeFelice, Phyllise Lubrano, Sienna Lubrano and Michael Lubrano. All arrangements handled by Marine Park Funeral Home. Mass of Christian Burial Good Shepherd Roman Catholic Church. Burial St. John’s Cemetery, Queens.

PRAYER TO THE BLESSED VIRGIN

LUBRANO, John — Age 89, of Brooklyn, entered into eternal rest on Monday, Sept. 30. Mr. Lubrano was born Dec. 29, 1929 in Brooklyn. He is the

Remember a loved one in our paper To place an In Memoriam

Call the Home Reporter and Brooklyn Spectator at 718-238-6600

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

J.S.

14INB • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019


Our World In Pictures ENGLAND — Mothers’ Earth: Women held upSimone their DEFYING GRAVITY:

babies at the the U.S. finish of an ExBiles of performs on tinction Rebellion “mass the balance beam during the nurse-in” heldat the on women's protest team final Wednesday London to Gymnastics inWorld Champihighlight environmental onships the in Stuttgart, Germabenefits of breastfeeding. ny, Tuesday, Oct. 8. Photo/Matt Dunham APAP Photo/Matthias Schrader

10.22.19 Champions of Justice

Women in Leadership in Law and Administration ALABAMA — Making history: Montgomery Mayor-elect Steven Reed spoke at his victory party on of Justice Tuesday in Montgomery. Reed became the first black mayor of the Alabama capital after defeating businessman David Woods by a decisive margin.

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10 • BQ Daily Eagle • Thursday, October 10, 2019 Week of October 10 - October 16, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle//Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 15INB Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 15INB


Eye on REAL

ESTATE

Welcome to Cypress Hills Cemetery, a fine place for a fall stroll.

INBrooklyn photo by Lore Croghan

By Lore Croghan INBrooklyn

Halloween is coming. What a perfect time for a walk in a Brooklyn graveyard. Why not visit the one where American icon Jackie Robinson was laid to rest? Robinson, who broke the color barrier in Major League Baseball in the 1940s when he played for the Brooklyn Dodgers, is buried at Cypress Hills Cemetery. His grave can be found high up on a hill of the historic cemetery. When I was there a few days ago, his admirers had left a stack of baseballs and three baseball bats in front of his headstone. Robinson, who died in 1972, spent a lifetime fighting for racial equality on and off the baseball field. After his retirement from the sport, he became the first African American to work as a vice president of a big American company and also the first African American to work as a Major League Baseball commentator, History.com says. “A life is not important except in the impact it has on other lives,” is the inspirational message engraved on his tombstone.

There’s high-profile Green-Wood Cemetery in Greenwood Heights, where the celebrity graves include those of Neo-Expressionist artist Jean-Michel Basquiat and composer Leonard Bernstein. If you really want to get into the mood for Halloween, Green-Wood offers night-time tours. And there’s the Evergreens Cemetery in Bushwick, where tap dancer Bill “Bojangles” Robinson and many victims of the

Triangle Shirtwaist Fire are buried. Non-sectarian Cypress Hills Cemetery, which was established in 1848, is situated on 225 acres of hilly terrain. Its front entrance is at 833 Jamaica Ave. It is open every day of the year. If you don’t live in the neighborhood, ride the J train to the Cypress Hills Station to get to the graveyard.

— Continued on page 17INB —

TAKE THE J TRAIN Three of Brooklyn’s numerous graveyards are famous, and Cypress Hills is one of them. If you have time this busy autumn, Brooklyn Dodgers great Jackie Robinson makes a home run in a 1948 game at Ebbets Field. AP Photo/Ray Howard you should visit the other two as well. 16INB Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • Week of OctoberGazette 10, 2019• Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019 16INB •• INBROOKLYN INBROOKLYN— —AASpecial SpecialSection SectionofofBrooklyn BrooklynEagle/Heights Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint


Eye on

REAL ESTATE

ABOVE: Jackie Robinson’s gravestone is an inspiring sight. RIGHT: This is one of Cypress Hills Cemetery’s largest monuments. INBrooklyn photos by Lore Croghan

Take a stroll around Cypress Hills Cemetery — Continued from page 16INB — Before you start your stroll, go to the cemetery office and ask for a map that shows notable burials. It’s different from the map that’s online.

AN UNDERGROUND RAILROAD CONDUCTOR AND AMERICA’S FIRST BLACK FEMALE LAWYER The graveyard’s winding, scenic roadways can lead you in lots of different directions. The path I took on my recent stroll led me to a monument for Rev. Charles Ray and his daughter Charlotte Ray. The clergyman was also a journalist and an Underground Railroad conductor. His mother was a fugitive slave and his father was a free black man, author Tom Calarco says in “People of the Underground Railroad: A Biographical Dictionary.” Between 1840 and 1853, Ray was the secretary of an anti-slavery organization called the New York Committee of Vigilance. During those years, he helped more than 1,700 slaves escape to freedom, and helped an unknown number of fugitives after that, Calarco writes. The minister’s daughter Charlotte Ray was the first black woman in the United States to become a lawyer. She used her initials instead of her full name to disguise her gender when she applied to Howard University’s law school. She graduated with a law degree in 1872 and was admitted to the bar in Washington, D.C. that same year, a posting on the website BlackPast says. She opened her own law firm. In 1875, Ray went to court seeking a divorce for a woman whose violent, drunken husband had chopped a hole in their home’s wood floor and threatened to push her through it, a posting on History.com says. Divorce was rare in that era, but Ray won the case. Because of racial and gender bias, Ray couldn’t get enough clients to keep her law firm open. She moved to New York City in 1879 and became a schoolteacher in Brooklyn.

EARLY RESIDENTS OF THE NEIGHBORHOOD After paying my respects to the Rev. Charles Ray and Charlotte Ray, I headed up the hill (one of many, many hills in the bucolic landscape). Shortly thereafter, I discovered the grave of John Pitkin, who was born in 1794 and died in 1847. He was an early developer in East New York. Neighborhood residents remember his name every time they head out on Pitkin Avenue. An East New York Street that runs perpendicular to Pitkin Avenue — Eldert Lane — is named after John Eldert, who died in 1905 and is also buried at Cypress Hills Cemetery. The Eldert family owned a farm and farmhouse at the corner of Atlantic Avenue and Eldert Lane, the cemetery’s map says. Further along the way, I saw lovely statues on pedestals. On the Dreyer monument, the statue is a woman wearing a beautifully draped dress and holding a wreath. On the Newman monument, the statue is a winged angel.

A PLACE OF HONOR FOR POLICE OFFICERS Stone obelisks are another popular type of monument at Cypress Hills Cemetery. The one that marks the grave of Oliver Halsey has rows of realistic-looking tassels carved into it. It’s very eye-catching. Despite all my meandering around the peaceful graveyard, I did get to Jackie Robinson’s grave to pay my respects. What an inspirational person. After that, I headed to the other side of the cemetery to the Police Arlington Memorial, which is a special burial place created by the Metropolitan Police Benevolent Association in 1871. It is also known as the NYPD Honor Legion Police Memorial Garden. There are markers to alert visitors to two notable people buried there. One is Rabbi Abraham Blum, who was the NYPD’s first Jewish chaplain. He was appointed to his post in 1911 and served until his death in 1921, the NYPD said when it celebrated the 100th anniversary of its Jewish chaplaincy. The other is Henry Haywood, a New York City police officer who served as one of Teddy Roosevelt’s Rough Riders in the 1898 Spanish-American War in Cuba. Haywood died from a gunshot wound he sustained during the Battle of San Juan Hill. His body was ID’d thanks to the police badge he’d attached to the inside of his shirt, a posting on the website Find A Grave says.

He got his start in business by working as a clerk in a grocery store that also sold wholesale tobacco products. He used his savings to buy the shop in the early 1870s when the owner couldn’t keep it afloat financially, a Brownstoner.com story by architectural history expert Suzanne Spellen says. His first factory was the Bushwick Tobacco Works. He later set up a larger factory in Glendale, Queens. There’s another extraordinary thing to see in this part of Cypress Hills Cemetery. In 1862, a National Cemetery was established for Civil War soldiers. Thousands of ghostly white tombstones are lined up in long rows on the hillsides. There’s something to keep in mind when you take a graveyard stroll. The distances are vast and the gates are locked at a specific time. In Cypress Hills Cemetery, it’s 4:30 p.m. After you leave, take a moment to look at the old-fashioned arched entryway on Jamaica Avenue. It’s made of brick and stone and has an elaborately decorated roof. It’s an impeccable replica of the original structure, which was built in 1893.

A CIVIL WAR BURIAL GROUND

This is Cypress Hills Cemetery’s Jamaica Avenue gate.

Near the NYPD’s memorial garden, you’ll find one of the largest monuments in Cypress Hills Cemetery. It’s an imposing statue of a woman pointing skywards. She’s standing on an extremely tall pedestal. The monument marks the grave of Henry Meyer, a German immigrant who grew wealthy by founding the Ivanhoe Brand Pipe and Chewing Tobacco Co.

of October 10, • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Eagle/HeightsPress/Home Press/HomeReporter/Brooklyn Reporter/BrooklynSpectator/Brooklyn Spectator/BrooklynRecord/Greenpoint Record/Greenpoint Gazette Gazette •• 17INB 17INB Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019 Week • INBROOKLYN — A2019 Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights


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ON OCT. 9, 1927, the Eagle reported, “The New York Yankees are baseball champions of the world today by virtue of the fact that they won four games from the Pittsburg Pirates in a row — and because in yesterday’s battle, the last of the series, John Miljus inserted a wild pitch into the ninth inning with the bases loaded with Yankee ball players. The score of the fourth game was 4 to 3. And it was just about as hectic and wild a bit of athletic drama as one could want to see. They made baseball, it seems, for this … ‘I can’t blame Miljus a mite for the wild pitch that lost the game,’ [Pirates] Manager Donie Bush said. ‘It was just the final break. Johnnie Gooch has caught worse balls in his career, although that was a very bad pitch, but the series is over and I must give credit to the Yankees as one of the finest clubs in the history of baseball.’”  ON OCT. 9, 1939, the Eagle reported, “Moscow, Oct. 9 (AP) — Soviet Russia threw her weight behind Adolf Hitler’s peace gestures today in an editorial in the government newspaper Izvestia, accusing Great Britain and France of ‘returning to the Middle Ages’ for waging war to ‘exterminate Hitlerism.’ At the same time, it was announced Premier-Foreign Minister Commissar Vyacheslaff Molotov had reached a quick decision last night with leaders of a German trade delegation. The delegation arrived only yesterday to expedite stimulated trade between Russia and Germany under the recent formal trade and credit agreements between the Nazi-Communist partners. It was not specified what goods were involved.”  ON OCT. 9, 1945, the Eagle reported, “Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, the white-haired grinning Texan who steered the Pacific fleet from the ruins of Pearl Harbor to the triumph of Tokyo Bay, took New York today in the most impressive reception awarded heroes of this war to date. Given a tumultuous ‘well done’ with him were 13 veterans who earned the Congressional Medal of Honor under his command during the three years it took to send the Japanese fleet to the bottom of the sea. Climax of the reception, at which even the skies cleared for the man who was not afraid to ride typhoons to victory, was the stop at City Hall. There, before massed thousands, after a triumphal parade led by 4,000 sailors, marines and coast guardsmen and seven proudly blaring bands through the traditional ‘heroes’ canyon’ of downtown Manhattan, Admiral Nimitz received the city’s honorary citizenship and a specially struck gold medal.”  ON OCT. 10, 1849, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle reprinted an article from the New York Evening Post, which read, “Edgar A. Poe. — This distinguished author, who was well known in our city for his infirmities as for his genius, died suddenly in Baltimore, on Sunday. His life had been one of unusual and painful vicissitudes. His youth was embittered by the wreck of hopes in which he had indulged until it was too late for him to be educated to the career of independence that awaited him. After leaving the University of Virginia, he passed some time in Europe, and on his return, still young, he entered the Military Academy at West Point, which he left, to undertake the profession of literature. His experience is an addition to the many mournful examples of the vexations and sufferings which follow such an election. He was an industrious, original and brilliant writer; and besides his numerous contributions to the periodicals, he published in volumes Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque; Arthur Gordon Pym (a nautical romance), Poems, Eureka (an essay on the material and spiritual universe), Tales, and two or three elementary books on science. He resided the three or four last years at Fordham near this city.”

Week of October 10 – October 16, 2019 • INBROOKLYN — A Special Section of Brooklyn Daily Eagle/Brooklyn Eagle/Heights Press/Home Reporter/Brooklyn Spectator/Brooklyn Record/Greenpoint Gazette • 23INB


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Thursday, October 10, 2019 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Bay Ridge Eagle/Greenpoint Gazette/The Record • 5


Isles end season-opening homestand homewith a dud Neal scores four goals as Edmonton rolls to 5-2 win at NYCB Live By John Torenli Bay Ridge Eagle

“Soft” is a bad adjective for a professional hockey club, but it fit the New York Islanders’ performance in Tuesday night’s 5-2 loss to the Edmonton Oilers, according to Head Coach Barry Trotz. “I think we were looking for an easy game, and I’m disappointed with that because we knew it wasn’t going to be,” Trotz lamented after New York fell to 1-2 on its season-opening threegame home-stand in front of 10,985 fans at NYCB Live, better known as the ren-ovated Nassau Coliseum. “Too many turnovers, too soft on the battle and [we] took too many penalties,” Trotz added. After splitting their first two contests, including Sunday’s 4-1 victory over Winnipeg in Uniondale, N.Y., the Islanders (1-2-0) broke out to a 1-0 lead over the visiting Oilers when Anthony Beau-villier lit the lamp on a shorthanded tally with 5:46 remaining in the opening period. But, it all went downhill from there for New York, which watched helplessly as Edmonton’s James Neal scored the next three goals, includ-ing two on the power play, on his way to a career-high four-goal night. Isles goaltender Semyon Varlamov, signed this summer to re-place departed Vezina Trophy finalist Robin Lehner, was pulled af-ter yielding four goals on only 19 shots. He was replaced by Thomas Greiss, who surrendered Neal’s fourth goal and sixth in three games this season to give Edmonton (3-0-0) a commanding 5-1 lead. “We took too many penalties,” Trotz said. “It’s not a winning combination when the only two things that you did for the most part tonight was win face-offs and turn pucks over.” Matt Martin capped the scoring with his first of the year, with just under 6 1/2 minutes remaining, but by then it was too late for the Isles to mount a serious comeback as they prepared for their first road contest of the season in Carolina on Friday night. “We certainly didn’t quit, so that’s a positive,” said Martin. “But we’ve got [to] get out of the gates better. We haven’t really come out of the gates in the first period and played well at all yet. In our build-ing, that’s usually our forte. We’ve got to do a better job of that.”

Islanders goalie Semyon Varlamov allows one of four goals by Edmonton forward James Neal during Tuesday night’s lackluster performance in a 5-2 loss to the visiting Oilers in Uniondale, N.Y. AP Photo by Kathy Willens. The Isles, who led the league in goals allowed last year, had surrendered just three tallies over the season’s first two games, but were uncharacteristically porous on the defense end Tuesday against the Oilers, something they must correct Friday against the team that swept them out of last year’s playoffs. “We’ve got to reflect a little bit on this one,” Islanders captain Anders Lee said. “It wasn’t a very good effort. Top to bottom, we were just kind of all over the place,” he added. “We gave them too much room, didn’t close on them and we were sloppy. A team like that with that much skill, we can’t give them that kind of space. Our overall effort was just disappointing.” *** In other local pro sports news, the Brooklyn Nets are still scheduled to play their two exhibition games in China against LeBron James and the Los Angeles Lakers despite mounting tensions between the NBA and the Chinese government.

The first game will be in Shanghai on Thursday and the second is slated for Saturday in Shenzhen. However, for the second straight day the Chinese government cancelled an NBA Cares event Wednesday, this one to be hosted by the Lakers after the Nets’ initial event was called off on Tuesday. The cancellations came in response to a tweet by Houston Rockets General Manager Daryl Morey last Friday in support of the ongoing Hong Kong protests calling for more political freedom in China. The Rockets and the NBA have already lost several notable Chinese sponsors over the ongoing controversy and tensions have not exactly eased during this week, which was designed to help the league grow its global brand in the world’s largest international market for basketball. According to the Associated Press, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver did not expect the games to be cancelled, but was heading to Shanghai to help repair the situation.

ISLE HAVE ANOTHER Beauvillier has scored in consecutive games and rookie defenseman Noah Dobson, one of the Isles’ two first-round picks in the 2018 NHL draft, collected his first career assist in his NHL debut Tuesday, helping to set up Martin’s late goal. ... The Isles aren’t scheduled to host their first game at Downtown’s Barclays Center until Nov. 5, but will be back at the Coliseum this weekend, hosting Florida on Saturday and St. Louis on Monday as they play five of their first six contests on home ice. ... Isles forward Josh Bailey played in his 800th career game against the Oilers on Tuesday.

Name ChaNge NAME CHANGE

James Neal (right) scored three consecutive goals and a career-high four overall during Edmonton’s 5-2 victory over the New York Islanders at NYCB Live on Tuesday. AP Photo by Kathy Willens.

JABLONSKI NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT AN ORDER ENTERED BY THE CIVIL COURT, KINGS COUNTY ON THE 24TH DAY OF SEPTEMBER, 2019, BEARING THE INDEX NUMBER NC-001131-19/KI, A COPY OF WHICH MAY BE EXAMINED AT THE OFFICE OF THE CLERK LOCATED AT CIVIL COURT, KINGS COUNTY, 141 LIVINGSTON STREET, BROOKLYN, NEW YORK, 11201, GRANTS ME

6 • Thursday, October 10, 2019 • A SPECIAL SECTION of Brooklyn Heights Press/Brooklyn Eagle Weekly/Greenpoint Gazette/Bay Ridge Eagle/The Record

(US) THE RIGHT TO: ASSUME THE NAME OF (FIRST) NATASHA (MIDDLE) MARGARET SCARLETT LAURA (LAST) JABLONSKI. MY PRESENT NAME IS (FIRST) LAURA (MIDDLE) ANNE (LAST) JABLONSKI AKA LAURA A. JABLONSKI. THE CITY AND STATE OF MY CURRENT ADDRESS ARE BROOKLYN, NY. MY PLACE OF BIRTH IS QUEENS, NY. THE MONTH AND YEAR OF MY BIRTH IS FEBRUARY 1983. #173950


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