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The Brooklyn Paper Volume 35 Issue 39 PDF

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YYoouurr NNeeiigghhbboorrhhoooodd — — YYoouurr NNeewwss®® BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260–2500 (cid:129) Brooklyn, NY (cid:129) ©2012 Serving Brownstone Brooklyn and Williamsburg AWP/14 pages (cid:129) Vol. 35, No. 39 (cid:129) September 28–October 4, 2012 (cid:129) FREE SHIFTING GEARS y d a e R y a p l Controversial Bridge Park velodrome gets higher o t By Natalie O’Neil basketball court — which is The Brooklyn Paper perfect for activities such as yoga, A $40-million indoor bike pilates, and weight-lifting, project track in Brooklyn Bridge Park supporters say. will offer more space for other “We discovered an over- sports after critics bashed the proj- whelming demand for diverse dler ect for only catering to a niche recreation,” said the project di- Photo by Bess A gecrrresoU auwtnpeid laoelnf r r ceatyihigsceehl i ntst-ethfsowe.o vtp-eltalaonldl, grdoreomsuiegn dnto-- rmmeeucSntnodoirtom yuG.e”s roBepgrp ooBorrktoulonykintsyi.t fe“osIr t tc’hshe ea ce otrrmeed-- Don’t expect any loud colors inside the Barclays Center — the interior is mainly a floor space that accommodates the still-in-the works plan, say- stylish black. For more on the opening, see page 3. teams and community groups ing it’s a creative way to make near Pier 5. the most of the site. Getting the scoop The plan adds 3,000 extra “It’s a really imaginative way square feet of recreation space A proposed velodrome — like the one pictured in this file of maximizing space,” said Larry — slightly smaller (and far lower- photo — will be raised in the air at Brooklyn Bridge Park to Weiss of Brooklyn Friends School, ceilinged) than a high school create additional recreational space below it. See PARK on page 5 Famed L&B Spumoni Gardens to open Coney’s $90M option multiple spaces inside of new arena By Will Bredderman mous pizza, will be sold from tween W. 10th and 11th streets The Brooklyn Paper at least three kiosks in the $1 since 1939, said stadium repre- billion entertainment complex, sentatives approached the own- Land baron Bullard: Pay me and you can build more rides Bensonhurst’s famed L&B so arena-goers will be able to ers more than a year ago, claim- Spumoni Gardens is moving enjoy a taste of Bensonhurst ing that their pizza would fit Downtown — by way of the while catching a show or cheer- well with the Brooklyn theme By Will Bredderman $90 million, a major Coney Island terfront property where the ride- the Washington Baths site at Surf Barclays Center. ing on the Brooklyn Nets. they were building for the new The Brooklyn Paper land owner declared this week. and-home once stood — but he’d Avenue and West 21st Street — Barclays Center officials Workers at the pizzeria, center. The city wants to bring more Reports that the new rides will be willing to let the city do what it cost a pretty penny. confirmed this week that L&B which has been dishing out its Eatery owners jumped at the amusements to Coney Island and be built at the site of the fictional wants with his land if it pays him “They billed $90 million for Spumoni Gardens’ ice cream, ice cream and hard-to-resist Si- chance, feeling that it would in- the thrill rides could be built where home of “Annie Hall” character what he thinks it’s worth. that,” Bullard told us. as well as the restaurant’s fa- cilian slices on 86th Street be- See SPUMONI on page 11 the Thunderbolt rollercoaster once Alvy Singer are not true, said Hor- According to Bullard, other But until then, his property roared — if someone ponies up ace Bullard, who owns the wa- nearby properties — specifically See CONEY o n page 11 CAP’N’S The future of printing LOG Gowanus innovators want 3D printers for all By Danielle Furfaro in every home,” said Pettis. “At this STARDATE: − 311719.67 The Brooklyn Paper point, we would compare the Maker- Thank you @dish for rescuing Meet Brooklyn’s Steve Jobs. Bot Replicator 2 Desktop 3D Printer us from the Faustian @TW A Gowanus tech entrepreneur wants to the Apple II.” to follow the path of Apple by bringing The Apple II helped introduce per- Cable_NYC with your prompt the 3D printer — a high-tech device nor- sonal computing to the home user — a and professional service. Graham marachlliyt eucstesd — by i nintod uysoturira al pdaerstimgneenrts. and ncoomvepl uidteeras a wt tehree tliamrgee, lwy hliemn iotevde rtsoi zbeidg In e—pi s towdiet ttewro.c, oomur/ ShierrPoaictS Ctaepw- beth MakerBot’s Replicator 2 Desktop 3D companies and humongous labs. tain, Sir Patrick Stewart — a new Photo by Eliza Pvt—ririrai tnjluu tmaesltrlo yagd saievknle yscs,to hoamirnn eypgvoa, esnnnueyc a thCh m aeEs oaO tdbo eiyBls icrttea yd r Potso,eo i tmrnt dsiastuo.kspe- oa nt rhipis tsoh othpe’s h daorodrw barroek est —ore s.aving him pc—hria Mbnnutieutc rcaashll,s aowon fihnd tic hbcrihaeot a -asrtrieenemc ghcla oyei mnnpgsom iptnoureunleae rrf sofa otmro rm od3naeDgy- raaTe simspsiiodsetwe Wnhetairm fruno lefi n ra PlChlayia srbk inf lei gSd ehloemtep appegi rsae—pi.n a sctfe int hdtoes The techies behind the 3D printer company MakerBot want to win Pettis used the machine to create a “In the future, we envision a Maker- as a nifty home arts tool. On the next episode: whatever your heart. plastic wedge last week after a latch Bot 3D printer in every company and See MAKERBOT o n page 11 Sir Patrick Stewart tweets about. ¿Cuánto? DUMBO biz accepts pesos By Danielle Furfaro south of the border. The entrepreneur and his dollar amount. The Brooklyn Paper “It’s a great way to show right-hand man Louis Sala- “The law says you can’t Cash is cash in any lan- respect for the country,” said zar started listing the prices refuse U.S. dollars, but it Shrem, a dentist who decided for all the items — includ- doesn’t say you can’t ac- guage — just ask the owner of to open the store after vis- ing ceramics, woven place cept other kinds of money,” a new DUMBO boutique that iting Mexico and falling in mats, carved animal figu- said Salazar. accepts Mexican pesos. love with the country. “It’s rines, among other Mexican Currently, pesos trade at a Maurice Shrem, owner better for us to have pesos to wares — in both dollars and rate of about 13 to one, mean- of Escondido, a store at 145 use when we go down there pesos. For example, a piece ing that 40 pesos are worth Front St. that specializes in to buy things. And everyone dlerof black pottery from Oaxaca about $3. hmnbuoigatt dhhme-ine angiktd iea nmgMga seit,nrx asisncta asitandhc eat hirdoetoni slshla aanirns-, wbetahscS.ok”h gwroeimeths cpdleaosiwmosns i tEnh stechroeeni rcd poidomoce kiss- Photo by Bess Aioasbr lo3Tius,h8ttee 3dar5e c ap’cssee spsnoetosiltnl.ih gni gnp gfe osirol l$se,2 g9aa5sl weaxnocdSrh ratayhlna azagt,abe ru o runsatlat eeicsdshs etsehcovkemeyirne ygtd h oditnnha’yget pesos makes sense for a busi- the first store in all of Brook- Escondido is banking on people who like long as the store still pays drastic happens, the prices ness that gets all of its goods lyn to accept pesos. melding cultures in their pockets. the sales tax based on the See PESOS on page 5 Sounds a bright idea Giovannini o Traffi c noise could power Hamilton Ave art oto by Stefan Ph orative By Natalie O’Neill noise from passing cars to illu- and more visually interesting,” Aac srokastse trh wreaell rpidaerksi nagb osvpea cae nse inw Wdoil-liiat-myosubrusregl.f ramp built d Collab TheR Berdo Hokoloynk Paartpisetrs want to turn melsin, iaft teh aer pcrhoejde cret’cst daensgiuglnaerr ps agne-t saiAd tB nriicgkh.t, LED lights inside Ramping it up Buil a dreary space under the Brook- their way. the installation will react to the Courtesy Artist lSHytanuAm–d Qiiodlut ro5ean4eb n oAssf vEt srexiindppue reewo sfwas wlsiktlarsly e.b eient ctono emthaeer ppfrarioteThjneh dmcetly oy wh,r eois lpfale uim dtnh aeaak nr“etdS i tishlpte eenM dtw eLisacitlghrkhieiatlnnslg”e- llhmeiikvgaeenh Mlwy o .aafyr sc-osuiusd nLed ein afsrrtnoaemlrla’ sct iaaocrnsc ,li anmi Gmuecerhd- Skateboarders colonize Artists want to build a glowing installation under the home to a pulsing, multi-col- Brick. Brick said the group Artists Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. ored light installation that uses “It makes the street feel safer See ART o n page 5 parking spaces under BQE Ready to pimp your stroller? By Danielle Furfaro and wallrides on the banked sur- The Brooklyn Paper face at a party on Friday after- BTrsothryleolAi lnNBl egBraor osrotuo caktoo l“lykmiPnel iypP mlOnaep pt’e eMNen wrteyri eitRlhpli rsdepene”ea–ukstery rlises, BdtpuoirnrsuCeaicstari esyon u nFascitrrhnraso giialez slde-e iebrrP vsaow iswdcie eliddtlso h ,r c aefkaintsnrndo,vc gffyeill tnoaf esbtoohaar-r--l ufsrasoie“TdmsI.h t ei lnei pgjnauhttreteisrnn ttgtaeod imn apsor rrtteahhvyee eor nsfc ,ta”h f idFtlerdrria mviazeanerrds-r owuerumostF,r e Hlra darno ie—zdnme dLr o,ai Ewtn eoDch flc o utlo hiddgneoeth serbt sosaanl. b,’s ty och uucapvan erdhr kiovaidlogdsle--, Photo by Stefano Giovannini ftsiinEtnhope-xgoyroaGpe totut-reshuulne ol erssaWnstrsashergwntilei clcfwla l ltoyaaBiieno.a desrcnmdkkorei aoesitdtnitbke oes utlr nkhyrsra ae gntbtmo –elua pppQaitlaa eatgurr scakkretr o edi1bownno5esgss---- ntaggDlihmooivaveioe“nb encnsWinngi t t—y in ayohs e ku oMf waaase!rn @toavsbedtnueype# drlt pad $haeb r s%enlrkuolyid, ip! p fl ha tamwro aroisut daeij ktness d lah ctitahtfthotelti.e,elulr”e mi ml r wdsf oiea onhbnaisgdoer-t flashing headlights, and an alarm ing lights to make transporting ket accessories — which turns an said he recently collided with a Local inventor Bruce Fraizer Dozens of skateboarders prac- the party. “It’s very cool that system to scare off thieves. tots safer and more fun. ordinary stroller into the tricked- See STROLLER o n page 11 shows off his plan. ticed grinds, slides, flip tricks, See SKATE on page 11 2 $ E V A9 4 E T8 T2 E7- Y9 A7 AF8- TUESDAYS 9PM – 1AM (cid:85)(cid:202) HOSTED BY SHELLY WATSON 3PM – UNTIL 0 L71 8 2 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 September 28–October 4, 2012 Meet the new boss ing all voting powers for the “at-large” members — bring- ing an end to a party policy that critics complained was a power grab by Lopez. However Seddio had no Frank Seddio is boro’s new Democratic honcho trouble landing the influen- tial job — which will allow him to choose judges across By Danielle Furfaro the runaway favorite before the borough — without the The Brooklyn Paper the vote, though he was ex- help of Lopez appointees. The new boss of the pected to face some competi- Seddio says Brooklyn Brooklyn Democratic party tion from Simon, who painted Dems will be more active un- is Frank Seddio — a member herself as a reformer capa- der his oversight, and the party of the old guard Thomas Jef- ble of cleaning up the party’s will be more transparent. ferson Democratic Club and tarnished reputation after fe- “[Expect] more participa- male staffers accused Lopez a longtime ally of scandal- tion by the leaders [and] a of sexual harassment. scarred Assemblyman and But before borough Dems more democratic process,” former party leader Vito chose their boss, Simon said he said. “Our meeting goal Lopez. she realized she couldn’t win is to attract Democrats to get Party officials almost and that collaboration was Obama reelected and [Sen. unanimously appointed Sed- the best course of action — Kirsten] Gillibrand and to dio to fill the powerful post so she bailed out of the run- get a Democratic mayor in a meeting at Kingsbor- ning. next year.” ough Community College “I’m committed to work- The boss gig only opened last Wednesday night. ing toward an improved party up after Lopez — who did not ljuydn“g,”Te hasnaisid d iA sS steshedemd inboel,yw am Bfaonrr owmohkeo-r De Gaeta fmCoooru nan ,s cwhilah croae mdla fpuuantiguchnre ea,dg” aasia nfiasdti ltSehide- attohtt asettn ehdpe dtghorewo mpnee adem taininddg a a—ltlete gamagtrpieoteendds NYPD idsi astlsroic at lCeaandaerrs. i“eI Dt’se nmoot cthraetmic Arthur Lchoipneez i-nru 2n0 D09e.m “oWcera’ltli cw morak- to kTihses ienmflpuleonyteiaels B.ushwick TPolice obelievem this man vabndalized Grreen-aWood Ciemdetery. er afscuuonlpld l peeuoaxsgr,p tbue ueroitsfe w naseonc.e d Im ttt’soha aenh ywsa uovopnefp dmtoehrrye-t File photo by tietol egwDceottienhsdt’er ttri.o”c a tt nhledeai drit eo’rlbsls —hcau prweph peoan ar otryer paChseoo lhmcitahimsca iiniarto ntote frea e ltosshnioge H nlAoeosdsuts sfehirmnoisgmb ,t l bihytuli’esst of so many people who had Frank Seddio will replace embattled Assemblyman seats — predicted a Seddio Assembly seat and is seek- been in opposition.” Vito Lopez as Brooklyn’s Democratic party boss. landslide in the days before ing re-election. Seddio — who Lopez the vote, claiming “at-large” His predecessor as party a ppointed to his first party were wearing stickers that only Dems to vote against members controversially ap- boss, Clarence Norman, was Green-Wood cemetery vandalism gig and later won the dis- read: “Meet the new boss, Seddio, while Brooklyn pointed to their posts by Lo- disbarred and removed from trict leader spot on his own same as the old boss.” Heights district leaders Chris pez would sway the vote. the chair position in 2006 merits — became boss after Councilman Charles Bar- Owens and Jo Anne Simon But before choosing the after he was found guilty suspect caught on surveilance vid 36 Dems voted in his favor, ron and his wife Assembly- abstained. new boss, party officials on corruption and bribery even though some of them woman Inez Barron were the Seddio was considered passed a resolution eliminat- charges. By Natalie O’Neill The Brooklyn Paper Bad touch! to find something, acting all Cops released video of a innocent, then — bam! — fence-hopping man who they they’re inside.” believe destroyed dozens of The ex-cop also claimed monuments and tombstones that the girls who work at inside Green-Wood Ceme- Ridgers: Massage parlor Blue Ocean are living inside tery on Aug. 25. the spa, since he never sees Surveillance footage does more than massage any employees entering or shows an agile rule-breaker leaving the building. jumping a gate at the cem- “At night, they bring the etery’s main entrance at 7 By Will Bredderman This paper saw several man shutters down, and no one am — about an hour before The Brooklyn Paper men entering and leaving der comes out,” Levins said. “I’m toesbsoehhturnfnoease sue pItt t dphhnnuehsie i e eesdtsaoc s hctmfenn toaeoe sdtron nvtcov irrdeclc2 ionirt ed 5gmgyhei etnrenrdehboaodge m v,sus .a Sw eainrodtts dhlrhreFtoeeoesewine nnf totehat iep,wh nla smek tns oAhhn ia r4—deaevkl0dndee-- Source: Green-Wood Cemetery lawcaRrool nahiarwddAR iyoimg s,suie BsetA ssstra Aahie vuycdy eebv olea niRbebfnneu uniingtindeussltrl igg sea ynlr e ni b—neeR vmdseepii stiO nuda twgihgstgswhese eia.batoel ceswgonnt seHru rNw sBpoae aal—nhaalrrydoyg-- tOdwadthugeoaceren “Psee mriIs a,a etg pc’nNndasoha o s aiiwt wsncthllhlaaoooga lisgr l itsntoeek eaa g sne winR, dar”.sy es netes ethaedvxhkei.e uid ,sanh “a psycgeWlpa.eum ”sa tipee s meBu xunjnualustunuclasye---lt munity Newspaper Group / Will Bred uctodtothoiofpnite ffu eLaffytrt ehtiege i ceo5oepvou,,p n oi etIl6neh rs tcn 8ept soii ttasanntmohhrhi g dolueeo Pc rt ihort dltroe,o’uieo srusstcsso ,tee oi g.rcIx” n. oo htacAi rnaun tev,pncsp me,edtrh ea rom eennanls’odydyss- egvlei dpeenrcsoe ns cuogugleds tbien gre asp soinn-- The cemetery was vandalized on Aug. 25 Cseouusrets calta iBml uteh aOt ctehaen m Sapsa- athllayt oitps efnr ousntetdil g1l1a spsm s,t oarned- Bay Ridge residents are complaining about all-Com bOeceena nc’os mlapnladilnaidnyg Atole Bxalune- sible for a n act of vandalism about the gravestone-basher comment on Monday — but practice the dark arts of mas- front aroused his suspicion male clientele, clouded windows, late hours, and dra Lazides. that’s shocking in its size and — but they are hoping pass- noted recently o n the cem- sage — claiming that the fa- shortly after he moved into allegedly illicit activity at Bright Ocean Spa. “Shame on her,” Levins scope . ersby can assist with de- etery’s blog that a restora- cility’s clouded windows, late the area three years ago. said. “I have a hard time Workers last month noted tails, an NYPD spokes- tion team is repairing some hours, and all-male clientele But he’s not alone in his believing she doesn’t know that the prolific perp, who woman said. is all the proof they need. assessment: several other res- “I don’t think it’s a posi- to no good. what’s going on here.” of the damage. is wanted for criminal mis- “We have no description “It’s odd for a spa,” said idents in his condo building tive presence on this block,” “As a retired police offi- Community Board 10 chief, scratched out porcelain — but someone might rec- “Many of the monu- neighbor Victor Pachwo, who brought up similar concerns Pachwo. “I’d really rather it cer, I knew right away what’s district manager Josephine photographs of dead people ognize him,” said Detective ments, after being toppled, says he watches people com- at one of their board meet- wasn’t here. We have a lot going on there. Experience Beckmann said she has re- and cracked statues of angels, Cheryl Crispin. remained intact,” he said. ing in and out of Blue Ocean ings, he claimed, although of kids around here.” has taught me,” said Daniel ceived complaints about the causing roughly $100,000 in Cemetery historian Jeff Anyone with infor- from his window late at night. they were unsure what to do Some of his neighbors Levins, a former Miami cop. parlor, and had passed them damage. Richman, who discovered mation about the crime “It’s all men and no women. about it. agreed, claiming that once “Their clients come down the along to the police. The 68th Officers at the 72nd Pre- the damage, did not imme- should call the NYPD tip Isn’t it supposed to be the Pachwo has a simple so- they saw the spa’s facade, street, looking this way and Precinct did not respond to cinct have little information diately return calls seeking line at (800) 577- 8477. other way around?” lution: shut it down. they knew the place was up that way like they’re trying calls for comment. (cid:75)(cid:63)(cid:60)(cid:23)(cid:57)(cid:73)(cid:70)(cid:70)(cid:66)(cid:67)(cid:80)(cid:69)(cid:23)(cid:57)(cid:56)(cid:58)(cid:66)(cid:74)(cid:75)(cid:70)(cid:73)(cid:80) (cid:57)(cid:73)(cid:70)(cid:76)(cid:62)(cid:63)(cid:75)(cid:23)(cid:75)(cid:70)(cid:23)(cid:80)(cid:70)(cid:76)(cid:23)(cid:57)(cid:80)(cid:23) (cid:58)(cid:60)(cid:67)(cid:60)(cid:57)(cid:73)(cid:56)(cid:75)(cid:64)(cid:69)(cid:62)(cid:23)(cid:75)(cid:63)(cid:60)(cid:23)(cid:69)(cid:60)(cid:64)(cid:62)(cid:63)(cid:57)(cid:70)(cid:73)(cid:63)(cid:70)(cid:70)(cid:59)(cid:74)(cid:23)(cid:70)(cid:61)(cid:23)(cid:75)(cid:63)(cid:60)(cid:23)(cid:57)(cid:70)(cid:73)(cid:70)(cid:76)(cid:62)(cid:63)(cid:23)(cid:70)(cid:61)(cid:23)(cid:66)(cid:64)(cid:69)(cid:62)(cid:74) Sheepshead Bay The center of Brooklyn’s thriving Riveria By Shavana Abruzzo It was followed by Lundy’s, for The Brooklyn Paper Villepigue’s, Seidel’s, and the The neighborhood of Sheep- Beau Rivage, all of them accessed shead Bay, which sits on Brook- by streetcars and railroads, in- lyn’s Riviera between Manhat- cluding one whose locomotives tan Beach and Coney Island puffed along E. 17th Street. like mighty Neptune, has al- The Sheepshead Bay Race ways been a fisherman’s para- Track, a majestic canopied grand- dise, but through its history it stand with twin tracks — includ- has been so much more — in- ing the nation’s first grass track — cluding the altar where Kings opened in the late 1800s between County sportsmen once bowed Ocean Avenue and Avenue U, their heads. soon galloping into history as the Named for a fish resembling nation’s Mecca of horse racing. a sheep’s head that once swam Prominent businessmen Augus- there, the neighborhood was part tus Jerome, August Belmont, and of the Town of Gravesend in the William Vanderbilt built the ad- 1600s, and its eponymous bay, jacent Coney Island Jockey Club, once called the Cove, used to con- and drew deep-pocketed horse- nect to Coney Island Creek. That men like Bet-a-Million Gates, was long before Emmons Avenue Diamond Jim Brady, and Abe became its heartbeat, Jimmy’s Fa- Hummel. mous Heros and Roll-n-Roaster Legend has it that the nearby made their tempting debuts, and Holwell mansion fueled a thriv- Andrew Dice Clay shocked au- ing tipster racket, enabling “tim- diences at the now-defunct Pips ers” to watch the early morning Comedy Club. trials from its top rooms and then An industrial boom in the sell the information to bookies. late 1800s transformed the ar- Two of the races — Suburban ea’s farmland into elegant ho- and Futurity — still continue to tels, fine restaurants, and plea- run at Belmont Park. sure palaces for thoroughbreds The influx of new businesses of all stripes. at the close of the 19th century A Millionaire’s Row stretched required a massive labor force. languorously between Nostrand African-Americans workers from Avenue and Knapp Street, attract- Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia, ing occupants like the Liebmans, on and the Carolinas eventually set- who owned a stake in Brook- ons tled in the bay, thanks to the ef- lpR2ofyi6paernntess’htnyts a. eha uSdonTrc sdahihpn neEia t t1e .aOa 8f2lneil47tddr5yt ,hI BT en wasrsntepatr,awsp ebb eeoielnntintssg we,hH ewmoCoefheoun tinms hcEethes-., Photo by Steve Solom fafFsAorh ivoprreestmiasetnd uoBv tBfehea eManXp ydtt,oi orosctartnhac erCwkEtr’ihh .snM u1o go5r a cswttrehhhince aSoue fJtfrri.r e reSfFsdoehti t rsell haaoetennahprddde-, in the area. ON THE WATERFRONT: Sheepshead Bay sits majestically on its eponymous waterfront, extending its welcome to a new community of dwellers. of bricks herself to the worksite 09/ 28/ 12 September 28–October 4, 2012 The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 AWP 3 Arbor-ation Vandals tagging up Bay Ridge trees By Will Bredderman tags left behind, claiming that she witnessed the vandalism, The Brooklyn Paper marring a tree affects the com- but didn’t contact police be- A group of teens spray- munity both aesthetically and cause she was unable to take painted more than a half emotionally. a photo of the taggers, which dozen trees on 70th Street in “It defaces a beautiful tree she described as a group of six in a pretty neighborhood,” said preteen boys. She said she does Bay Ridge earlier this month dler — apparently not caring that Susan Montague, who discov- not believe the youths live in Photo by Bess ABehold the Barclays Center’s much-anticipated facade. nttwhheiaeinTgt s dlhhyionbecweo advrmss at. hosneard webasl lot sahc nebkdm lf iart mozsmhea drt trk het euheipesr ettShrrteeereCe dmes o tvi aprnaers ksn fihriddnoaaegnvlnsstet , so yh bhfei uatht tv e otesorno s hemhido reoeum fng7 etg0ti.hefthdye tsbthheloeeeRi ncrnk e tneh sdeiiegdiumgherhb inhnbotasgorn hratgsohri ecneol gdhep ,aoaa nrpbso tiut unhytn geesd atht ahrteh.ga ’esst Will Bredderman IT’S OPEN! bAodnelvon eSctnskeu poetn b.a et1nht3dwe, Ceusetsounulno annlNliiyana lgs rl Rrerooeewspaidys- oot‘oHfffo et “t ehyTme,e hn alveeanatsgny’esed Ckaphilroiditasr smnot hpkn air.asos s sbt oraaemnbedle,y’ k shaiannaidddd ohtaufnofrdm“ no O.fde tsothh bemee rtf ropoerereeeos p gtihnlree af wfrvofaiinltnlti d sooeafne lts htt hreoeiipsr- wspaper Group / sktirne“deW to.fh goa ndgo?e”s atshkiesd, Msoamrie- ttrhhesiesind n ewenxett Kr oeen lveiik,’n ea O n‘Hdrt seizoy, , ow lneh,t”o’ ss h ahaiiddt oAfn iMtt,i”-e GmMrbeaelferfs is toaifi d tt.haes Nk YfPoDrc’es mmunity Ne Ribbon-cutting for Barclays debut lin Mele, who lives around a tree directly in front of his would not comment for this Co the corner. home vandalized. story. Calls to the 68th Pre- Kevin Lopez said he and his neighbors were dis- Others were outraged when One resident, who wished cinct were not returned by mayed that vandals targeted helpless trees on By Natalie O’Neill they saw the nonsensical blue not to be named, claimed that press time. their street. The Brooklyn Paper Developers and city of- ficials marked the opening Packed house in Greenpoint of the Barclays Center arena with a symbolic ribbon cut- ting on Friday, touting it as a “big win” for Brooklyn — but mask-clad protes- Planned building will overcrowd G train, schools, critics say tors slammed those same big wigs for failing to pro- vinid teh een boourgohu jgohb.s to residents Adler BThye NBraootakllyine P Oap’Nereill bmrainrkge mt-ruacthe- nheoeudsiendg b teol otwhe- cbuoiuldldin gcsr baechki ndc tehnet buuriyld-oinlgd sdBheoavMrreoeluadoyg paoh ecr rP oB Burlerorstuo-isdmcieedbn eRet s raMtgta n—gaeerkr ww oawinhthdo- Photo by Bess wibnuatioAnld at Gsinn rtegeoi e—g nthup tb-rousnitnt o nth rbeiysui g asphipnobaeorostlrsm smh seaaanlyntl gdplaoastBnt senutdaet tdain orbeenuia-gi,al hdnhbideno -gswra swai drifle.elh acorr uotwshede- atvonin dsDc ubeerr vtrihneoelguo Dtnpodeeorip snma mgrut ucsmthsret ce nnaeotrt ow stfr. acCfoifntiyc- itz — cheered the 18,000- Developer Bruce Ratner has the honor of wield- the still-sleepy area can’t ac- nearby streets, subway sta- Planning to change the manu- seat basketball arena as an ing these large scissors to cut the ribbon. commodate the hundreds of tions, and schools. facturing-zoned space to res- economy-stimulating, cul- new residents a development Neighbor Joanna Nowa- idential — a move that would ture-boosting venue that puts shot into the air. He said the second phase that size will attract. kowski said PS 34 and the put the lot in line with the Brooklyn on the map. 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She added construction it will be an issue.” mega-project, which has been A handful of protestors teen dream Justin Bieber, the subject of lawsuits , pro- — clad in bobblehead- superstar Barbra Streisand, tests , and even documen- style masks of the devel- and rap mogul Jay-Z begin- Red Hook burlesque plan stalled tary films . oper and project-supporting ning on Sept. 28. On Sept. 22, Ratner told politicians — staged a sa- Markowitz noted those more than 100 members of tirical performance, claim- big-name artists and excit- the media that the arena ing project honchos backed ing shows will help brighten By Natalie O’Neill tion employee and former — but keep stripper poles for open a legitimate entertain- lematic considering the his- would enrich the lives of out of promises to provide the future of the borough. The Brooklyn Paper math teacher — withdrew burlesque acts — said they ment venue in the long-trou- tory of the venue. Brooklynites and employ enough jobs. “For every entertainer Hold your dollar bills. a liquor license bid for the will revise their business plan bled Commerce and Richards “They didn’t have a leg to thousands of people. “They’re ripping off who comes, it will be a An ex-teacher who wants proposed club dubbed Con then resubmit it next to CB6 Street building, which was stand on. They couldn’t point “It’s a defining new model Brooklyn,” said project crowning achievement — Amore Cabaret after neigh- next month. formerly home to the c on- to turn a vacant strip joint into to anyone in the jazz com- for the role sports and enter- mega-opponent Daniel because they get to say they bors stormed a Community “We are reassessing troversial strip club Paris tainment arenas can play in Goldstein, who accepted made it to Brooklyn, USA,” a “burlesque cabaret” in Red Board 6 meeting to protest things,” Dicks said. “I was Cabaret and Burlesque and munity they’d worked with,” communities,” he said. a $3 million buyout after he said. Hook will have to wait be- the plan on Monday. surprised at the amount of the rowdy nightclub Hello said neighbor Kiki Valentine, He then used a three-foot the state condemned his Behind him, a screen fore she can raise the curtain Her husband and partner people who tossed out un- Brooklyn . a burlesque performer who long pair of scissors to snip a Prospect Heights home to above the court flashed on the sexy endeavor. Earl Dicks, who last month founded accusations.” Some residents claimed opposes the club. purple ribbon in front of the make room for the Atlantic the words: “September is Cynthia Thomas-Dicks noted the establishment would Angry neighbors were operators’ minimal experi- Thomas-Dicks, who didn’t basketball court as confetti Yards development. just the beginning.” — a Department of Educa- feature legitimate jazz shows skeptical the duo would ence in the industry is prob- See CABARET o n page 6 THE BAY NEWS Six things you need to know about this nabe’s history DICE-MAN: Potty-mouthed funnyman Andrew Dice Clay was born in Sheepshead Bay. FAMOUS: The more-than-70- year-old Jimmy’s Famous Heros on Sheepshead Bay Road is a staple. COMFORT FOOD: Roll-n-Roaster on BRIDGING THE GAP: (Above) The footbridge separating Sheephead Bay and Manhat- Emmons Avenue and tan Beach is a favorite with strollers who often stop to gaze at the choppy inlet, once E. 29th Street is a known as the Cove. (Left) A stately home stands proudly on Emmons Avenue and Dooley gravy-soaked tradition Street — a lasting reminder of the neighborhood’s Millionaire’s Row. on the bay. in a borrowed wheelbarrow. 1930s when the federal govern- that followed in the 1930s, and pages were where Jahn’s Old- when six of Brooklyn’s Bravest “It was very courageous of her, ment instituted a public works its waterproofing products that Fashioned Restaurant and Ice died after the roof of the Wald- particularly at that time,” said program to repair the crumbling were used to build the Brook- Cream Parlor on Nostrand Av- baum’s supermarket at Avenue HOMETOWN BOY: Rev. Orlando McReynolds, pastor docks. lyn–Battery Tunnel more than enue and Avenue Z advertised Y and Ocean Avenue collapsed The creator of of the church that still ministers Lundy bought the Bayside Ho- a decade later. its children’s parties and 99-cent during an Aug. 2, 1978 fire. “Seinfeld” and “Curb to the community from its orig- tel and the Bayside Casino on “Our contribution to the lunches. An immigration boost in the Your Enthusiasm,” writer inal site, now co-named Mother Emmons and Ocean avenues, growth of Brooklyn began when The Bay News, which made 1990s rejuvenated the neighbor- and actor Larry David Maria J. Fisher Way. and then tore them down to build Lundy’s contracted us,” says Nina its own headlines when reporter hood with a flood of new immi- was born here. New York outlawed horse his famous Lundy Bros. Restau- Doody, the founder’s great-grand- Pamela O’Shaughnessy was held grants, businesses, and top-dol- racing in 1910, and millionaire rant, opening in 1934 with a menu daughter. in contempt of court for refus- lar high-rises. sportsman Harry Harkness that offered $2.50 “Shore Din- Sheepshead Bay, some of ing to identify an under-cover “What saved the area was the turned the site into a speedway ners” — feasts of shrimp cock- whose roads are named after source during a narcotics trial, collapse of the Soviet Union,” where Louis Chevrolet won the tail, steamed clams, chicken, and surveyors Messrs. Coyle, Ford, was also where Baker St. Pub says borough historian Ron Sch- THE RACES: $10,000 Harkness Cup in 1917, lobster with julienned potatoes and Batchelder, thrived in the at 2801 Coney Island Ave. be- weiger. Sheepshead Bay to cheers from 50,000 people — and another vegetable followed 1940s and 1950s, the lives of tween Avenues Y and Z, prom- Today, the Sheepshead Bay Race Track was many of whom also flocked to the by dessert, and tea or coffee. His its mostly Jewish, Italian, and ised, “Steak, stout, spirits and a where comedians Larry David an American bustling piers for a fishing boat gastronomic reign continued un- Irish residents documented in swingin’ time,” complete with and Elaine Boosler were born is Thoroughbred cruise to Atlantic City. til the 1970s, before Lundy’s re- the pages of its hometown news- 25-cent roast beef sandwiches home to Asians, Russians, and horse-racing facility. Frederick William Irving opened from 1997 to 2007 un- paper, the Bay News, located on and silent films on Wednes- Arabs, while Emmons Avenue Lundy was another waterfront der new ownership, later closing Sheepshead Bay Road, off Shore days. continues to be the waterfront visionary with an enduring leg- permanently. Its landmark exte- Parkway, opposite the old Sheep- The recession of the 1960s community of choice for Euro- acy. rior remains untouched, although shead Theatre, once the site of closed Steeplechase Park in pean-style clubs, restaurants, and LANDMARKED: He sold clams from a push- its interior is now a small shop- a moving company and a dress neighboring Coney Island, and banquet halls — its mystique as Lundy’s exterior cart at the turn of the 20th cen- ping plaza. shop where Bally Total Fitness the following decade saw one of intact today as the cups and sau- is preserved, but tury, and then from a clam bar John J. Doody and Son, Inc. stands today. the worst tragedies in the history cers Irving Lundy’s staff once its interior is a on stilts above the bay next to a at Jerome Avenue and E. 18th The newspaper’s classified of the New York Fire Department carried across its rickety piers. modern shopping jumble of bait and tackle shops Street, are Depression-era sur- center. and other ramshackle businesses vivors that supplyed lumber to NEXT WEEK, WE CELEBRATE BAY RIDGE — all of them cleared out in the Lundy’s and the housing boom barclayscenter.com facebook.com/barclayscenter @barclayscenter 4 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 September 28–October 4, 2012 Prostitution sting ends in fatal shooting pects fled on foot, accord- near the corner of Hicks and The perp got into the build- Air heads through a door marked em- 76TH PRECINCT ing to police. Nelson streets and tried to POLICE BLOTTER ing between Hicks and Henry Clumsy thieves tried to ployees only at 3:30 am. Carroll Gardens–Cobble Cops chased the man to grab the phone at 7:30 pm, streets at 11:45 pm, when a break into an apartment on He stopped the sneaky Hill–Red Hook Hamilton Avenue and W. investigators say. witness saw him shatter the Second Street on Sept. 17 — burglar, who told him he A cop shot and killed a Ninth Street, where he re- But the victim held onto Find more online every Wednesday at lights in a hallway and kick but got scared off when the was looking for the bath- 22-year-old who pulled a sisted arrest and pulled out the device and called 911 — BrooklynPaper.com/blotter in a resident’s door. tenant screamed. room. The guard went back gun during a prostitution a loaded firearm, investiga- and police spotted a suspect The intruder then turned The 29-year-old victim told to his post, and a few min- sting on Sept. 20, investi- tors claim. near Ikea on Beard Street his attention on the witness, cops she was typing on her utes later, saw the sneak try- gators say. That’s when one of the cops later that night. Kids today The thieves fled on De- forcing his way into the man’s computer inside her home near ing to carry a cash register Officers were trying to bust fired a single round, fatally Chuck up Cops busted two teens graw Street toward Bond home and demanding the vic- Fifth Avenue at 2 pm when out of the building. men soliciting prostitutes in a striking the man. The other accused of mugging a 14- Street, and cops later appre- tim’s phone. 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Bo mwfr uaDecnaoe put oLogtnleia nesm g nS aettdhraeeere tftmh aaemat r1cot:oi2uar9s-l pbg3A:err4poahp0wail nce pdh amp enahd dto a tntnhCheedeo. cusvornirtac nttsecitmrhr eeo edfft rDsot hemae-t tt3Seh2tder-Oey hseefiitafdm irbec- eoweritrlddwas ilsmenkaeg.yan n ht h Doiesnye b Cg sicrtooaylwpucpml eea bdoni dnaa Boabc rlundiarum gsmduliansb rpaedyler ,c m ectth rialsaeincrsvdghp eeihaessifr tsi. hniynicmglu, dwaiinnthgd gaonon l ATaSdph e jaeepcr wtrt.2om e16ol7er-k.yny et a saownrnd-i o1 pcl5edatds hh v S sifctorrtomeimmeet aaha mnen tTo’iwsghn ohegekt l eoevoct ihftuc repthori e nmiaatitce v smty4o asldad.nmr dip n coakalfiistncehger, Varicose Veins? Sackett streets on Sept. 12 at Cops say they cuffed a told cops he left his home to find someone had bro- around 1:40 pm for pedaling package thief who stole a near Fourth Avenue at 9 am, ken in to his apartment be- his two-wheeler on the side- UPS delivery intended for then came back 10 hours later tween Wythe Avenue and walk. That’s when cops say a resident of a Jay Street and discovered his gold chain Berry Street and had stolen they found a box cutter in his building on Sept. 21. necklace, gold ring, and his safe, iPhone, Xbox, car hand, and other instruments A witness told investi- $300 missing from his liv- keys, and some cash. He told Effective Non-Surgical Alternative that could be used to commit a gators he spotted the 40- ing room. police his front windows do burglary in his possession. year-old suspect grabbing not have locks. — Natalie O’Neill for the Treatment of Varicose Veins is Available! Swing blade a package that wasn’t his Bike heist inside the mail room of the NO HOSPITAL STAY - OFFICE-BASED PROCEDURE slicAe dk nainfeo-tthoetirn mg paenr’sp ntheraorlayt bPulyilmdionugt hb esttrweeeetsn aJto ahrno uanndd B6ay8 RTidHg eP–DRyEkeCr IHNeiCghTts a mAan c’rso $o9k,0 h0e0lp beidke h oimn Gserlef eton Dr. Philip J. LoPresti in a scary Lorraine Street as- 12:30 am, according to doc- Phone fight Street on Sept. 23. sault on Sept. 16. uments from the District At- The 32-year-old victim The thug swung a silver torney’s office. Three goons pummeled a told police he left his pricey Serving the community for nearly a decade! folding knife at the 27-year- Bay Ridge man for his iPhone Colbago CX1 bicycle in front Window watch old victim’s neck between in front of his building on Bay of his house between Man- COMPREHENSIVE CARE AND TREATMENT FOR Columbia and Otsego streets An attentive cop heard Ridge Parkway on Sept. 23, hattan Avenue and McGuin- MOST PROBLEMS ASSOCIATED WITH VARICOSE VEINS: at aroun 11:40 am, accord- a window shatter — then police report. ness Boulevard at 12:30 pm ing to police. spotted a burglary in prog- The victim said that he was while he stepped inside to (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:44)(cid:65)(cid:82)(cid:71)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:54)(cid:65)(cid:82)(cid:73)(cid:67)(cid:79)(cid:83)(cid:69)(cid:0)(cid:54)(cid:69)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:83) (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:53)(cid:76)(cid:67)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:73)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:0)(cid:65)(cid:78)(cid:68)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:75)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:0)(cid:35)(cid:72)(cid:65)(cid:78)(cid:71)(cid:69)(cid:83) The victim managed to ress on Sept. 23, investiga- in front of his home between grab his mail. As he walked dodge the blade at the last tors say. Narrows Avenue and Colo- out, he saw someone riding (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:48)(cid:65)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:70)(cid:85)(cid:76)(cid:0)(cid:54)(cid:65)(cid:82)(cid:73)(cid:67)(cid:79)(cid:83)(cid:73)(cid:84)(cid:73)(cid:69)(cid:83) (cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:80)(cid:73)(cid:68)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:0)(cid:65)(cid:78)(cid:68)(cid:0)(cid:46)(cid:69)(cid:86)(cid:73)(cid:0)(cid:54)(cid:69)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:83) second and escaped unin- The officer claims he heard nial Road at 2:50 am when off on his bike. jured. Police are hunting the sound of breaking glass the thugs came up behind him SPECIALIZING IN THE FOLLOWING PROCEDURES: for the culprit. on Sands Street between Jay and started punching him the 90TH PRECINCT MacTook and Gold streets at 5:03 pm, face. The jerks then took his (cid:37)(cid:78)(cid:68)(cid:79)(cid:86)(cid:65)(cid:83)(cid:67)(cid:85)(cid:76)(cid:65)(cid:82)(cid:0)(cid:44)(cid:65)(cid:83)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:0)(cid:52)(cid:72)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:65)(cid:80)(cid:89)(cid:12)(cid:0) then saw a man crawl out of iPhone 4 and fled in an un- Southside–Bushwick (cid:51)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:79)(cid:71)(cid:82)(cid:65)(cid:80)(cid:72)(cid:73)(cid:67)(cid:0)(cid:39)(cid:85)(cid:73)(cid:68)(cid:69)(cid:68)(cid:0)(cid:44)(cid:65)(cid:83)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:0)(cid:52)(cid:72)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:65)(cid:80)(cid:72)(cid:89)(cid:12)(cid:0)(cid:45)(cid:73)(cid:67)(cid:82)(cid:79)(cid:84)(cid:72)(cid:76)(cid:69)(cid:68)(cid:69)(cid:67)(cid:84)(cid:79)(cid:77)(cid:89) A thief stole a MacBook the smashed window carry- known direction. Stay calm (cid:0)(cid:44)(cid:65)(cid:83)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:0)(cid:52)(cid:82)(cid:69)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:77)(cid:69)(cid:78)(cid:84)(cid:0)(cid:79)(cid:70)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:85)(cid:80)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:108)(cid:67)(cid:73)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:0)(cid:54)(cid:69)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:65)(cid:78)(cid:68)(cid:0)(cid:51)(cid:67)(cid:72)(cid:76)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:79)(cid:84)(cid:72)(cid:69)(cid:82)(cid:65)(cid:80)(cid:89) AStirre elat phtoomp ef roonm S eap tW. 2a4r.ren ionf gs uan dgilgasitsaels c, aa mweatrcah, ,a a pnadi ar Big theft A trio of thugs pulled off The burglar entered bottle of cologne, according A crook forced open the an armed robbery of a Grand For More Information Please Call through a rear window and to documents from the Dis- rooftop door of a Dyker Street bodega, getting away CONTINENTAL MEDICAL sfrnoamtc htheed r ethseid eAnpcpel be eltawpetoepn tricTt hAet ctoorpnse ayr’rse ostfefdic teh.e 20- Hhoeuigshe tos nw Soempat.n 1’s4 7 a7nthd Smtraedeet wasi twhe $l1l 5a0s tohf et hcele srtko’rse ’isP chaosnhe, Bond and Nevins streets at year-old suspect. off with $17,000 in jewelry, and cigars, on Sept. 17. some point between 1:30 pm Map quest cops say. The clerk told cops that the (cid:45)(cid:47)(cid:51)(cid:52)(cid:0) (cid:17)(cid:16)(cid:24)(cid:13)(cid:17)(cid:16)(cid:0)(cid:23)(cid:18)(cid:78)(cid:68)(cid:0)(cid:33)(cid:86)(cid:69)(cid:78)(cid:85)(cid:69) and 4:30 pm. The victim reported that men stormed the bodega be- (cid:41)(cid:46)(cid:51)(cid:53)(cid:50)(cid:33)(cid:46)(cid:35)(cid:37) (cid:38)(cid:79)(cid:82)(cid:69)(cid:83)(cid:84)(cid:0)(cid:40)(cid:73)(cid:76)(cid:76)(cid:83)(cid:12)(cid:0)(cid:46)(cid:57)(cid:0)(cid:17)(cid:17)(cid:19)(cid:23)(cid:21) (cid:34)(cid:47)(cid:33)(cid:50)(cid:36) Apple picking Cops say they cuffed an sometime between 12:01 am tween Olive and Waterbury (cid:33)(cid:35)(cid:35)(cid:37)(cid:48)(cid:52)(cid:37)(cid:36) 718-261-1471 (cid:35)(cid:37)(cid:50)(cid:52)(cid:41)(cid:38)(cid:41)(cid:37)(cid:36) A burglar plucked two astleoaolf a c groloobka wl phoos witaiosn trinygin sgy tso- aronodf 4o fp hmer t phaer jteiarlkly g doet toanc hthede srotrbebeetsr sa ts 6t:a0y5e pdm in. Othnee bofa tchke, Apple devices from a Hun- tem from a mini-van inside a house between 10th and 11th while the other two pointed (cid:67)(cid:79)(cid:78)(cid:84)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:69)(cid:78)(cid:84)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:77)(cid:69)(cid:68)(cid:73)(cid:67)(cid:65)(cid:76)(cid:32)(cid:89)(cid:65)(cid:72)(cid:79)(cid:79)(cid:14)(cid:67)(cid:79)(cid:77)(cid:0)(cid:115)(cid:0)(cid:86)(cid:73)(cid:83)(cid:73)(cid:84)(cid:0)(cid:85)(cid:83)(cid:0)(cid:65)(cid:84)(cid:0)(cid:87)(cid:87)(cid:87)(cid:14)(cid:77)(cid:69)(cid:68)(cid:86)(cid:69)(cid:73)(cid:78)(cid:14)(cid:67)(cid:79)(cid:77) tington Street apartment on well-monitored Downtown avenues, broke open the roof guns at the clerk, told him to Sept. 18. parking lot on Sept. 24. door, and swiped her $2,000 “stay calm,” and demanded The bandit got into the A employee at the lot at the wedding ring, two more cash. When the clerk opened residence between Colum- corner of Smith and Scherm- rings worth $1,000 a piece, the register, one of the men bia and Hicks streets between herhorn streets and the owner a $12,500 charm bracelet, and grabbed the cash, the phone The care you need 10:30 am and 2 pm, while the of the Dodge Caravan told in- a $500 gold chain. and the cigars, and they all tenants were out. vestigators that they spotted Textbook crook jumped into a car and drove When the victims returned the would-be thief trying to away. When you need it most. hwoemree ,u tnheloyc rkeeadli,z ethde tihre d droaowrs- g6:r4a0b pthme. mapping device at in Alo octr e—ep inscwluipdeindg $s8e0v9- Moore crime ers were open, and a Mac- Police apprehended a 46- eral chemistry books and A soulless thief broke into Book computer and an iPod year-old suspect. a lab coat — from the car a church on Moore Street and Nano were missing. — Ben Muessig of woman shopping at the stole more than $3,000 worth S The residents are not sure Walgreens on Third Ave- of equipment sometime over- whether they locked the door 78TH PRECINCT nue on Sept. 17, according night on Sept. 16. enior Helpers stands ready to before leaving. to cops. Officials at the church be- serve your family’s needs with Rite and wrong HeavPya rsk lSeloeppeer leftT hheer vciacrt iimn t thoel dp hcaorpms ashcye tHwuemenb oGldrat hSatrmee At tvoelndu peo alincde Cops cuffed a 46-year-old parking lot between 94th and that someone stole a ceiling personalized in-home care, and man who allegedly tried to A tip-toeing crook swiped 95th streets at 5:30 pm and projector, a Sony Laptop, a expertly trained, professional steal lots of nail polish from a video game system from returned 20 minutes later to 14-channel multiunit, a lock a Smith Street pharmacy on a sleeping woman on 10th find her $250 texts and $50 box, flat-screen television, caregivers. Sept. 25. Street on Sept. 17. white jacket — along with and $200 between 4 pm and The perp purportedly The 27-year-old victim her $399 iPad, wallet, and 11 am the next day. Let us ease your mind with a gporalibsbhe dat aabroouutn $d4 161 :o4f7 naamil thoelrd a cpoaprtsm sehnet wneeanrt T toh ibrde dA ivn- Cboeoklblaagr — s mtoisrsimng.ed Bad guest complimentary in-home care inside the Rite Aid at the enue at midnight and woke up A squatter broke into a corner of Warren Street and seven hours later to discover A crook pried open the vacant apartment on Devoe initial appointment. Call today tried to get away without pay- her window open — and the basement door of a 77th Street Street and significantly dam- ing for it. front door propped open with house and stole $5,000 of the aged it sometime between to learn more. a brick. That’s when she no- owner’s cash and jewelry on Sept. 5 and 17, the landlord ticed her 47-inch TV and Nin- Sept. 22, police say. told police. 84TH PRECINCT (646) 214-2086 tendo Wii gone. The victim reported that According to the owner of Brooklyn Heights– Stabbed he left his house at 6 pm and the building between Judge DUMBO–Boerum Hill– returned at 10:20 pm to see and Olive streets, the apart- Cops say a violent creep www.seniorhelpers.com Downtown that someone had forced his ment was vandalized some- Care and comfort at a moment’s notice beat up a man on Second Av- Beer bandit basement entrance and ran- time between noon on Sept. enue on Sept. 23. sacked the house. 5 and 1:45 pm on Sept. 17. A crook went berserk in- The 37-year-old victim — Will Bredderman Nearly every wall was writ- side a Clark Street apartment told police a thug sliced his ten on and the water had been Visit us on Facebook (keyword: Senior Helpers) or at www.youtube.com/GetAnswers123. building on Sept. 22, break- arms, torso and back with 94TH PRECINCT left on, causing water damage ing lights, kicking in doors, a knife near 13th Street at Bonded and insured. All rights reserved. Senior Helpers locations are independently owned and operated. throughout the apartment. and even stealing a 12-pack of 4 am, then fled. Cops ar- ©2012 SH Franchising, LLC. a beer from an unlucky resi- rested a 26-year-old sus- Greenpoint–Northside Struggle Savings stolen dent, investigators say. pect the same day. A thug stole a woman’s iP- Someone stole more than hone as she was walking into $3,000 in cash that an elderly her McKibben Street build- MEDICAL, COSMETIC & SURGICAL DERMATOLOGY woman had stashed in a ing in the middle of the af- dresser drawer in her Jack- ternoon on Sept. 18. son Street apartment some- The victim told police she time before Sept. 18. was entering her building be- Alan Kling, MD (Board-Certifi ed Dermatologist)(cid:1)(cid:116)(cid:1)(cid:36)(cid:66)(cid:83)(cid:77)(cid:90)(cid:1)(cid:56)(cid:66)(cid:77)(cid:77)(cid:74)(cid:84)(cid:13)(cid:1)(cid:49)(cid:34) The senior told police that tween White Street and Bush- she left $3,500 hidden in her wick Avenue at 3:05 pm when apartment between Kingsland the thug ran up behind her, and Debevoise avenues, and said “give me your phone,” hadn’t checked on it in two and then grabbed the phone Acne HPV infections Eczema months. When she opened in her hand. the drawer at 3:30 pm, the The two struggled and the Cysts Hair loss Skin allergies cash was gone. The woman woman fell to the ground. The told police that she has a ro- thug then ran off with her iP- Warts Spider veins Blemishes tating cast of home health at- hone, headed eastbound on tendants, and doesn’t know McKibben Street. White & dark who took the money. Train robbery Moles Genital warts Brutal bar brawl spots An opportunistic rob- Scalp Nail problems A rowdy bar patron threw ber stole an iPhone from a STD’s a chair across a Meserole Av- G train rider’s hand as the conditions enue nightclub, and struck doors opened at the Broad- Keloids Herpes another man in the head on way station on Sept. 18 — Rashes Sept. 22, said police. then punched her when she Complexion Fungal The victim from the bar gave chase. between Eckford Street and The victim told police the Psoriasis problems conditions McGuiness Boulevard suf- train was stopping at the sta- fered bruising and swell- tion near Union Avenue at 9 ing to his face and a four- pm when the thief snatched inch cut on the side of his the device out of her hand. Botox, Juvederm, Radiesse, Fillers, head when he was hit at 2 She chased the robber down am. He left the bar and went the platform, and jerk turned to Woodhull Hospital to get around and punched her in Laser Hair & Vein Removal, Xtrac Laser stitched up. the face. “I know I shouldn’t have Cops tracked the iPhone for Psoriasis and Vitiligo, Chemical thrown that chair,” the 43- to Kosciuscko Street via a year old suspect reportedly phone application, but po- told police. lice didn’t find it and made Peels, Cosmetic Skin Treatments, Splat attack no arrests. Someone shot a 54-year- Wheely bad Contact Allergy Testing old man with a paintball A crook took all of the gun on Nassau Avenue on tires and rims off of an out- Sept. 23. of-state car parked on S. First The man was near Diamond Street sometime overnight Street at 2 am when he was hit. 718-636-0425 212-288-1300 on Sept. 16. He suffered bruises and back The victim, who was visit- 27 8th Avenue 1000 Park Avenue pain from the shot. ing from Illinois, told police Registered he parked his vehicle between (One block from Prospect Park) (At 84th Street) Police arrested a 29-year- Berry and White streets 11 Brooklyn, NY 11217 New York, NY 10028 old man who they say tried to pm and returned the next day sneak out of a N. Sixth Street at 6 am to find all four tires nightclub with a cash regis- had been stolen and his car MOST INSURANCES ACCEPTED (FOR MEDICAL SERVICES) ter on Sept. 15. was propped up on cinder- A security guard at the blocks. The value of tires and EARLY MORNING, EVENING AND SATURDAY HOURS AVAILABLE club between Kent and Wythe rims were $3,100. avenues saw a man enter — Danielle Furfaro September 28–October 4, 2012 The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 AWP 5 Silver scream YOUR PROMOTIONS SUPERMARKET Midwood residents say Hollywood, the city disrupt holy day on Ave M CORPORATE & TEAM OUTFITTING 1 COLOR WITH By Eli Rosenberg YOUR LOGO The Brooklyn Paper 144 min. Observant Jews in Mid- Staff Shirts Giveaways wcnieotayor dlAe avt reaen umoeu otMvrai ega edcdar eytwh ba etf fiotlhmree Family Reunions BSRHAIRNTDS N OANMLEY the holiest day of the Jewish on School/Camps cMahmfianaloivladaRevey tnEi eeioedsdsn rpsai ’twudrseroe. eriddttnOha uat iJscf pnC fteimcio crSlnmaeet uinc imdotto amis folh tlspoho Mtawauontl ief ydnidt lganhmif ’eaa-t Photo by Steve Solomons C OUTrg-SanSizTaHtOioInsMR/EvTe nSAts PPAREL $ 2E AC9H5 Film crew trucks are crowding Midwood to shoot in front its facilities on Avenue “God Behaving Badly.” M near E. 14th Street knowing (Screen Printing or Embroidered) that Orthodox Jews would be CALL FOR FREE unable to park near the bustling cessions to the community as dios to only bar parking from CAPS/HATS UNIFORMS CATALOG commercial strip as they pre- the holiday approached. in front of the studio, which pared for Yom Kippur. “Our office has denied a takes up much of Avenue M JACKETS BACK PACKS 866.701.3263 “It is one hell of an insensi- request to have NYPD tow near E. 14th Street. 718.969.3144 tive time to do this,” said Bo- trucks relocate cars that “It’s like attempting to BAGS TROPHIES ruch Moskovitz, a resident of have not moved in time,” squeeze a large object into a E. 13th Street. “I’m not say- said city spokeswoman Ma- small container,” said Chaim YOU NAME IT, WE GOT IT!!! ing they shouldn’t be shoot- rybeth Ihle. Deustch, the chief of opera- ing here, but this is a commu- Tow trucks or not, Ave- tions for Councilman Michael nity where traffic is a major nue M merchants said film- Nelson (D–Midwood). “If they (We can customize your art, logo, messages on anything!) concern all the time and today ing a movie so close to Ave- can’t contain a film within JC everybody will be busy run- nue M during the high holy Studios without disrupting an Corporate Gifts Pens (All Types) ning around and shopping for days was an affront to their entire community’s quality of the holiday.” operations. life, then they should film else- Badges & Buttons Bags (Plastic/Paper) m The city said it will close “It’s a significant disrup- where.” beth Graha oiEnf.cf 1 lf4uitdvhei ns btgrl eopecatkrst sas ntoodf pELa.o r1ck3uitnshtg aa —nndd tsthieoelnf o, ”fwo srna biedur sJoiofn ntehasetsh Ymaenel nlZo lweikm Dem moooyrl-,, wwahEse rfmeil pm“Aloesyd e tuhenest iWal tt hoterhl sdeo Tasuptu rwndasio”s CElaelccturloantoicrss WCataeler nBdoatrtsles Photo by Eliza Cp“a Grdhoroedasdumtscn teuBidote ynah cavaobevmoninuupgtea Gs nB y—rae cde aklsny og ”f oi tl—hdmes wMbdeah.fy io“scrI heot ’s fsoe tnalhl esge ojr eyofw ettheaeserlq.r ”myu, oeo snvt iAsoovllaeetnmiounne ctwhareno“ycTn ewghl.leee rpdee nri’mnt di2to 0iisn0 fg9o ar intnhyseti hpsitrneogd- CEocmo pFuriteenrd Alyc cPersosdourcietss AwareFnoeosds GBirftascelets 866.701.3263 718.969.3144 Midwood residents such as Boruch Moskovitz say living in New York City star- Neighborhood legislators duction company,” said a man the city never should have approved permits al- ring Christopher Walken, Ali- were also up in arms, claim- who answered the phone at the lowing a film company to shut down streets in the cia Silverstone, John Turturro, ing that the city-issued permits studio, but refused to identify .PROMOTIONALEMPIRE. WWW COM neighborhood just before the holiest day of the and Sharon Stone. But the city were a violation of an agree- himself. “We don’t have any- year for observant Jews. promised to make a few con- ment it had made with JC Stu- thing to do with that.” ONE SIZE ONE PRICE PARK... SA L E Continued from page 1 more than 50 organizations who said his students would to discuss the plan, adding likely use the new, low-ceil- the facility could prompt a inged space for activities such cultural shift in the way the as gymnastics and fencing. city enjoys and defines year- Some critics say the new round recreation. recreation area will still ca- The facility will feature ter primarily to practitio- “drop in” cycling for all ages ners of niche sports, while — for $10 to $32 — and be others cited concerns about open to summer camp and traffic in nearby neighbor- after school programs and hoods, saying streets will feature about 1,200 specta- be backed up unless park- tor seats. ing spaces are added. At a Brooklyn Bridge “Parking is not part of Park Community Advisory the plan; it raises questions Council meeting on Monday, about how people are going some panel members said to get there,” said Jane Mc- they would not support the Groarty. project until representatives The new proposal comes present a formal rendering after b ike-boosting philan- and proposal. thropist Joshua Rechnitz an- “We need a full opportu- nounced he would give the nity to go through this in de- largest-ever park donation in tail,” said project opponent the city’s history to build a Peter Flemming. year-round recreational facil- But others — even some ity where people of all ages of the harshest critics of pub- can rent and race fixed-gear lic-private partnerships — bikes. called the new plan a big win Rechnitz did not return for Brooklyn. the ultimate clearance rug sale calls seeking comment on “It sounds great; more rec- Monday — but Brooks said reation is what we need,” said project backers had met with park advocate Roy Sloane. 6’ x 9’ $399 PESOS... now up to Continued from page 1 in pesos, but Shrem and Sala- will stay as they are inside zar are hoping that more cus- the tiny store, which opened tomers will use Mexican cur- 8’ x 10’ $799 this summer. rency as the word spreads. now up “It’s not like we’re the Bob Provazano is one cus- Gap and selling thousands to tomer who already taken ad- of dollars in merchandise,” vantage of the peso policy. said Salazar, who admitted he feared critics would blast the “I always bring 1,000 or 9’ x 12’ $999 business move as anti-Amer- 2,000 pesos back with me, now up ican — but has observed no so it’s great to be able to buy backlash so far. something with the money I to Only a few people have paid have left over,” he said. 10’ x 14’ $1299 ART... now up to Continued from page 1 Designers hosted a Sept. Build Collaborative has 20 fund-raiser for the proj- earned grant money and pre- ect, saying it will brighten up a drab street that feels more liminary approval from the like a service road than an Department of Transporta- inviting thoroughfare for pe- incredible savings on wall-to-wall carpet tion — and is working with destrians. city officials to make sure “We looked at space and the project isn’t too distract- thought, we can improve ing to drivers. this,” Brick said. hundreds of styles to select. all in-stock for immediate delivery. NOTICE OF DISTRICTING COM MISSION PUBLIC HEARINGS FROM OCTOBER 2, 2012 TO OCTOBER 11, 2012 now starting as low as $5 The NYC Districting Commission will hold five public hearings from sq yd ** October 2, 2012 to October 11, 2012. These hearings are open to the public. Individuals wishing to pre-register for speaking time or to submit written testimony in advance may do so by signing up online at $4.99 http://www.nyc.gov/districting. Individuals wishing to speak at any hearing hall & stair runners will be provided up to three minutes of speaking time. per ft** BRONX Bronx Community College Tuesday, October 2nd 2155 University Avenue 5:30PM – 9:00PM Bronx, NY 10453 MANHATTAN Schomburg Center for Research Thursday, October 4th in Black Culture 5:30PM – 9:00PM 515 Malcolm X Boulevard New York, NY 10037 STATEN ISLAND New Dorp High School Tuesday, October 9th 465 New Dorp Lane 5:30PM – 9:00PM Staten Island, NY 10306 QUEENS LaGuardia Community College Wednesday, October 10th Little Theater 5:30PM – 9:00PM 31-10 Thomson Avenue Long Island City, NY 11101 BROOKLYN Medgar Evers College Thursday, October 11th Founders’ Auditorium 5:30PM – 9:00PM 1650 Bedford Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11225 Prior to the hearings, you may submit written comments to the NYC Districting Commission by mail to: NYC Districting Commission, Attn: Jonathan Ettricks, 253 Broadway, 7th Fl., NY, NY 10007, or by email to: [email protected] on or before 5:00 P.M. on the date of the exclusively at 881 broadway, basement level hearing. Please indicate in your correspondence the date of the hearing for which you are submitting your comments. select rugs available at abchome.com NOTE: The hearing locations are accessible to those with physical disabilities. Individuals requesting an interpreter for sign language or any other language at any hearing should contact the NYC Districting Commission at [email protected] or by calling 212-442-0256 * select rugs, stock only. no special orders. excludes prior sales. sale ends 10/8/12.** excludes padding, installation and delivery. five days in advance of the hearing, and reasonable efforts will be made to accommodate such requests. 6 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 September 28–October 4, 2012 Mural resurrected “ I couldn’t pick up After destroying painting, Newkirk ” C-Town lets community paint new one my daughter. By Eli Rosenberg on their new blank wall. Redmond hopes C-Town The Brooklyn Paper “We’re probably going to will match any funds the orga- Ditmas Park residents out- put it right where the old one nization raises for the project, raged by the loss of a four- was,” said store manager Juan but Diaz would not say what Back pain can be debilitating, but we can help. year-old community mu- Diaz. his store planned to do. The Flatbush Develop- Community members who ral that was plastered over The New York Methodist Back and Neck Pain ment Corporation, which worked on the original mu- when the supermarket it was had helped organize the orig- ral say they are still smart- painted on underwent a face- Center is dedicated to providing patients with inal mural project, said it was ing over C-Town’s decision to lift have been given the go- happy to put up a new one, but cover up the diverse tableau ahead to put a new mural on the best possible treatment for disorders of the said the group’s larger con- depicting kids of all races the building — as long as they cerns revolved around raising painting together. can raise the money first. spine. Using methods that may include physical Workers at the C-Town Su- the appropriate funds. “It’s a bit disheartening to A new mural could cost hear it’s gone,” said Kevin permarket on E. 16th Street up to $7,000 to design and Augustine, one of the two therapy, medication, or even acupuncture, our near Newkirk Avenue ce- paint, but Flatbush Develop- teachers who facilitated the mented over the beloved mu- ment Corporation members two-month after school pro- team of specialists can help relieve back pain, no ral without checking with the said it’s worth it. gram that created the mural community or the creators of “The other mural stood in 2008. matter how intense. And if surgery is necessary, the artwork when they up- the test of time, and I’m going “It was a hot summer graded the store’s facade this to miss it dearly, but some- when we were working on minimally invasive techniques are used whenever summer, but said this week thing fresh and new might be that thing. A lot of work went they wanted to give a com- inviting here,” said Flatbush into it. I can’t say I’m not a possible—letting you return to what’s really munity group the opportu- Development Corporation di- little heartbroken,” Augus- nity to paint another mural rector Robin Redmond. tine said. important. Your life. CABARET... seedy scene considering its location near the Brooklyn– Battery Tunnel and the ven- We fixed that. ue’s troubled history. Continued from page 3 “not going to be an adult es- At the meeting, CB6 mem- return a call seeking com- tablishment,” and wouldn’t bers recommended the duo ment on Monday, f irst filed feature stripper poles. take more time to commu- papers with the State Liquor This newspaper later dis- nicate with neighbors, then Back and Neck Pain Center Authority last month then covered i t featured pole danc- return to a permits and li- noted she plans to cater to a ers, softcore porn on TV, and cense committee meeting classy “35-plus crowd.” lap dances — while neigh- in October. But she isn’t the first per- bors claimed it lured dis- “The committee thought son who promised the club ruptive and sometimes vi- the applicant needed more would be dedicated to a olent patrons who urinated time to work with com- performance art. Last year, on the street. munity to resolve discrep- Paris Paris Cabaret and Bur- Neighbors now say it’s dif- ancies,” said CB6 district lesque’s owner David Ruggi- ficult to imagine the new es- manager Craig Hammerman. ero told the same community tablishment will attract an “They’ll come back with a group that his nightclub was artsy crowd rather than a revised business plan.” Clear Healthy Skin isn’t it time you call? 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It’s one-stop day — to stay on top of the greatest city in the shopping with excitement on every page. world: Brooklyn. THE BROOKLYN PAPER and BrooklynPaper.com Your place for a full dose of Brooklyn! 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 MUSIC Getting dark There’s something inherently otherworldly about a band called Dark Dark Dark. The group, fronted by vocalist, pianist, and accordion player, Nona Marive Invie, plays folk songs that range from minimal, haunted confessionals showcasing Invie’s powerful voice to ramshackle, gypsy-style pieces driven by tumbling drum beats that somehow Photo by Tod Seelie ebctwoanei lgdl“m l aaT upennhpe,.d”ir n bfcsgoayasrcci mtkdlhe awasIt nt fh ftveeheieereelle , cK gytwohncoheiltiyod-- ting Factory on Oct. 12. “I feel like I write in circles a lot.” The hypnotic feel, however, is hardly iso- lating or dizzying. Rather, the intimacy of (718) 260-2500 The Brooklyn Paper’s essential guide to the Borough of Kings Sept. 28–Oct. 4, 2012 the music and lyrics provides for a very per- sonal experience, both for the band and the audience. & Invie said she enjoys exploring new ways Parties politics to connect with the individuals in the crowd, as she grows more and more comfortable on stage. Dark Dark Dark at the Knitting Factory [361 Metropolitan Ave. betw. N. Fourth and N. Fifth streets in Williamsburg (347) 529–6696] Oct. 12, 8 pm, $15. — Eric Dryden Where to imbibe while you watch presidential debates FREESTYLE Darkstyle By Eli Rosenberg Ceol The Brooklyn Paper The wood-panelled pub, with its long and Brooklynites hail from diverse places stolid bar, cultivates an air of traditional- This “rabbi” worships the god of dance. and backgrounds, but a few common ism. Perhaps that’s what’s made it a recent Genre-bending hip-hop artist Rabbi Darkside traits bind nearly all of us together: meeting spot for the Young Brooklyn Re- — who spits politically-tinged freestyle raps to the lack of a television and a desire to publicans — and a potential draw for the smooth, jazzy beats — is crafting on-the-spot enjoy most major events at a bar. borough’s rare Mitt Romney fans. songs using prompts from audience members And for the borough’s politicos, the up- [191 Smith St. between Baltic and at an outdoor concert during the Atlantic An- coming presidential debates are must-see Warren streets in Cobble Hill, (347) tic Street Festival. match-ups that are the prime showcases of 643–9911 www.ceolpub.com]. The Brooklyn-based politics as sport — and they’re also great rapper said he’ll call on events to watch with a drink. Building on Bond folks in the crowd to toss Even though 79 percent of Brooklyn This designer-centric drinking hole, out words and hold up ob- dler viathhntoa elnt2eemd0aryss0s eatc8 lnaa,v dbsett hoes tnue.h Ttrtei ewrih’ersa lhb ytsea’ tnsrli eollwol n tthor-spoy fwao owrmrat eitBs c cfaahoonr rtam g hcduepkei i ddbOleeeab dbttoea at mhtt—heiaess cHtaBe artrifool eoluo ,sf gk tabrhlneyr aedtnrti inrwIveyniis saletlt av inatueidugrndtahet snd tf tetao hbonraa ndStt eoama lnc reliieeageaalth -dfRtuyyspe tBisosne oficatoelsrurr cr dutohhems.es- jvlyeeoitcs u“tatshrIt tie’vtoso own a cailonall r bsadlpbyusiorl rafiueclrt osy he,w, xi tsy.ph oiaemunnrd p jibrunoasg--t Photo by Melanie Fi Obama-vs.-Romney slugfests of 2012: [112 Bond St. at Pacific Street in sis of reference, and use of Boerum Hill, (347) 853–8687, www. rhyme,” said the performer, whose legal name Mo’s buildingatbond.com]. is Samuel Sellers. “Everything you read be- The Fort Greene pub is sure to attract comes fodder.” a lively mix of neighbors from a com- Pacific Standard Sellers, who appeared on the MTV reality show munity that went all out in the streets for Berkeley grads and other Bay Area ex- “M ade, ” is not a real rabbi — he’s actually a teacher. Obama after his 2008 victory. pats congregate at this bookish bar, which But he did recently become an “ordained secular [80 Lafayette Ave. between S. Elliott will broadcast the debate on a big screen to officiant” so he could marry his best friend. In Place and S. Portland Avenue in Fort what will most certainly be a pro-Obama fact, he picked up the stage name in high school Greene (718) 797–2849, www.mosft- crowd. GOP fans are welcome however, because he “was the Jewish kid.” greene.com] the bar’s owners promise. Rabbi Darkside and other performers [525 [82 Fourth Ave. between Bergen Atlantic Ave. at Third Avenue in Boerum Hill, Commonwealth Street and St. Marks Place in Boerum www.atlanticave.org]. Sept. 30, 12–6 pm. A stand-up beer bar in the heartland Hill, (718) 858–1951, www.pacificstan- Free. — Natalie O’Neill of Brooklyn’s liberal intelligentsia is sure dardbrooklyn.com]. to draw an Obama-heavy crowd — es- Spike Hill pecially considering that it’s the place where local Democrats such as Council- Pabst tallboys for $4 and well drinks for EVENT man Brad Lander (D–Park Slope) cele- $5 are sure to loosen up the political atmo- brate their election wins. sphere at this Bedford Avenue bar. War house [497 Fifth Ave. at 12th Street in Park [186 Bedford Ave. at N. Seventh Slope. (718) 768–2040, www.common- Street in Williamsburg. (718) 218–9737, wealthbar.com]. www.spikehill.com]. Galapagos Art Space Cranberry’s A hulking facility that helped usher in history is This hip DUMBO performance space For those who believe politics really now part of a look back into the borough’s past. will host a panel on the relationship between happens in smoke-filled rooms, there’s A non-profit whose mission is to help New education and poverty before the domestic this Bay Ridge hookah bar, which will Yorkers appreciate the beauty and history of their policy-themed debate, and offer some spe- show the debates while patrons enjoy the surroundings is reintroducing the Brooklyn Army cial cocktails for the actual event. shisha and Middle Eastern fare. Terminal to those who don’t know about the giant build- [16 Main St. at Water Street in [9013 Fourth Ave. between 90th and DgoUsMarBtsOp.a (c7e1.8c)o 2m2]2.–8500, www.galapa- Rsheed’s d mriandke, bulpu eh edrr minikn?d: ,A aJt lKeealslite a, bao wuat iwtrehsicsh a dt rMinok’ ss hBea rp irne fFeorsrt. Greene, says 8918s1t6 ].streets in Bay Ridge. (718) 833– Giovannini islneuygpT tp—hhlaiee to ogsv n—roecrue sa plean iaudss n iE.nclvhvietidsin Pagrr mtehsye- RPAolitIicSs isE a m Aes syG buLsinAesSs, bSut itT’s aO lot TmoHre pEala CtabAle wNheDn eIveDryoAneT inEvolSved Photo by Stefano pc6gsioue,g nrbwn cltiiiorcfte h itictom eha w bnepelacaphnerfet.du mieltr sog a hturhoiis douteonns rdO i etcchaate-l. has had a few drinks. In celebration of our nation’s healthy and functional democ- “This building was build in just 18 months, which is unthinkable these days,” said building racy heading into this year’s presidential debate season, The Brooklyn Paper has operations manager Carmine Giordano. “It was compiled the following list of Obama-vs.-Romney-themed drinking games perfect built for the military in World War I, but it didn’t to play at home, at the bar. Drink — and vote — responsibly, Brooklyn: make it [in time]. It was used for World War II. Stuff like radios and blankets were stored here • Take a shot of booze every • Ask for a buy-back every time bet anybody $10,000 or more. and people were called to duty here.” time someone in the crowd talks your drinking buddy points out • Drinks on you for everyone in The Brooklyn Army Terminal was designed by about their Republican relatives that he or she paid a higher tax the bar if either candidate mentions famous architect Cal Gilbert, who also created the Photos by Elizabeth Graham ite“ihnnvMe eta•• rbha O Oysaienw rrrt ddsit Smeieaennrtmre rg sda eoe eenseim r ttsot haf”eeloted tnaerhr-t . nfhcieandaansgnn hc“ wddeiWo-i.idcntahhael tfidlepa Sa iperntv-ertdoder aka eidcsetkee”s rceoeaverbtynese•• rct TOtt yuiihanm rrtakdie n2meee f 0 Mrasea1 oc a 1sismtnto. hta m eRoibmoteoo noomupenfto, ne Mrrie atbreyroord’einrsn m iwb1gc4eosah.e n1luirls iyp pkse emaeovrnyr--. Btbsohaorrye ro“••rs’ osfSA ,so k“dtasoeWlrykyadis nlen f sklaot tf—h raaase irmnap etwy opssotoitpsifpam.r ”yts deoeho ,“ f”euM h lry“f iison ptsotuets cRuirtgie faonhrflm. eib”isifonmg ereh’,iy”s-- WtbfitWonroea rooiGio Bnntoothger lhdwoser ettm oChaorKk teerabiilt monnyhownygn reb sio iitdou.tenu eefiBr g lsl1ydRy uh9,wi t o5ntp lhci8iagutlek.’nl bsa dBl aanipmlncrdseoid orzaso h oerRkgkadmoleps yltp es lni osnomb piNfcene oltfatuchos vdiotera yefi flc n a dYhitgmtoeeya p Go’rsasdaue crer,sre ctaav ueefrnenosrlddyes-r Up for debate: (From left) Jeremy Barker, Pacific Standard owner kale in it if Obama mentions his otherwise, starts chanting, “USA! drink anytime Barack Obama says the Brooklyn Academy of Music. Jonathan Sten, and Glynn Sullivan plan on watching the debate at time living on Second Street in USA!” “fair share,” “tax cut,” or “rich- 2012 OHNY Weekend at the Brooklyn Army the Berkeley-centric watering hole in Boerum Hill. Park Slope. • Drink if Mitt Romney tries to est Americans.” Terminal (140 58th St. at First Avenue, ohny.org) 11 am–5 pm, Oct. 6. — Danielle Furfaro For Those Special (cid:60)(cid:79)(cid:58)(cid:60)(cid:67)(cid:67)(cid:60)(cid:69)(cid:75)(cid:23)(cid:64)(cid:69)(cid:75)(cid:60)(cid:73)(cid:64)(cid:70)(cid:73)(cid:74)(cid:23)(cid:56)(cid:69)(cid:59)(cid:23) RERUN GASTROPUB THEATER Occasions In Your Life (cid:60)(cid:79)(cid:75)(cid:60)(cid:73)(cid:64)(cid:70)(cid:73)(cid:74)(cid:23)(cid:74)(cid:64)(cid:69)(cid:58)(cid:60)(cid:23)(cid:40)(cid:48)(cid:48)(cid:45) (cid:74)(cid:92)(cid:105)(cid:109)(cid:96)(cid:101)(cid:94)(cid:23)(cid:107)(cid:95)(cid:92)(cid:23)(cid:69)(cid:80)(cid:23)(cid:100)(cid:92)(cid:107)(cid:105)(cid:102)(cid:23)(cid:88)(cid:105)(cid:92)(cid:88) (cid:116)(cid:1)(cid:35)(cid:42)(cid:51)(cid:53)(cid:41)(cid:37)(cid:34)(cid:58)(cid:52)(cid:1) (cid:63)(cid:70)(cid:68)(cid:60)(cid:23)(cid:59)(cid:121)(cid:58)(cid:70)(cid:73) (cid:116)(cid:1)(cid:34)(cid:47)(cid:47)(cid:42)(cid:55)(cid:38)(cid:51)(cid:52)(cid:34)(cid:51)(cid:42)(cid:38)(cid:52)(cid:1) (cid:155)(cid:23)(cid:57)(cid:92)(cid:91)(cid:105)(cid:102)(cid:102)(cid:100) (cid:155)(cid:23)(cid:57)(cid:88)(cid:107)(cid:95)(cid:105)(cid:102)(cid:102)(cid:100) (cid:155)(cid:23)(cid:59)(cid:96)(cid:101)(cid:96)(cid:101)(cid:94)(cid:23)(cid:73)(cid:102)(cid:102)(cid:100) (cid:116)(cid:1)(cid:56)(cid:38)(cid:37)(cid:37)(cid:42)(cid:47)(cid:40)(cid:52)(cid:1) (cid:155)(cid:23)(cid:66)(cid:96)(cid:107)(cid:90)(cid:95)(cid:92)(cid:101)(cid:106) (cid:155)(cid:23)(cid:59)(cid:92)(cid:101)(cid:38)(cid:61)(cid:88)(cid:100)(cid:96)(cid:99)(cid:112)(cid:23)(cid:73)(cid:102)(cid:102)(cid:100) (cid:116)(cid:1)(cid:41)(cid:48)(cid:45)(cid:42)(cid:37)(cid:34)(cid:58)(cid:52) (cid:155)(cid:23)(cid:62)(cid:88)(cid:100)(cid:92)(cid:23)(cid:73)(cid:102)(cid:102)(cid:100) 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(cid:60)(cid:100)(cid:92)(cid:105)(cid:94)(cid:92)(cid:101)(cid:90)(cid:112)(cid:23)(cid:105)(cid:92)(cid:106)(cid:103)(cid:102)(cid:101)(cid:106)(cid:92)(cid:23)(cid:106)(cid:92)(cid:105)(cid:109)(cid:96)(cid:90)(cid:92)(cid:106)(cid:23)(cid:88)(cid:109)(cid:88)(cid:96)(cid:99)(cid:88)(cid:89)(cid:99)(cid:92)(cid:37) 8 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 September 28–October 4, 2012 WHERE TO EDITORS’ PICKS SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY THURSDAY September 29 September 30 October 1 October 2 October 4 Greatest Oughta lit hits know Celebrating its Brooklyn comedian 20-year run, literary Mindy Raf is some- project Minus Times times the vegan will throw a release activist and poet Training party for its book musician Leibya Rog- days containing 30 issues. ers, a hilarious par- Good Rousing folk music, The magazine has ody of ‘90s female fortune raucous personalities, featured writers Wells songwriters. Raf also and a romantic voy- Tower, David Eggers, Buck up sings about the way This new play is a age on a vintage train David Berman, and men have failed her comedic look at one — this movie’s got it Sam Lipsyte, in this What makes a man? sexually and emo- of literature’s greatest all. Part road movie, impressive collection Poet and actor Carlos tionally — but mostly villainnesses, Lady part concert film, of stories, poems, art, Andres Gomez’s book sexually. See her per- Susan. Watch the “Big Easy Express” is and interviews. Editor “Man Up” takes a look form on her guitar beautiful widow go a film directed by Hunter Kennedy will at masculinity in the with other comedians on a blood-thirsty Emmett Malloy fea- read as well as sur- 21st century. See the and storytellers at manhunt to find a rich turing folk heroes prise guests. Def Poetry performer “Geeking Out.” husband, selling her read from his book, unwilling and helpless Edward Sharpe & The 6 pm at the Gutter [200 which is an honest and 8 pm at Union Hall [702 daughter off to mar- Magnetic Zeros, Ten- N. 14th St. between Union St. at Fifth Avenue, nessee’s Old Crow Nassau and Wythe ave- eloquent reflection on (718) 638–4400, union- riage, and generally Medicine Show, and nues, (718) 387–3585, race and sex through hallny.com]. $8. doing what it takes to Britain’s Mumford & tFhreeeg.utterbrooklyn.com]. the author’s own be a lady gangster in Sons. heart-breaking, violent Jane Austen’s cut- — and hopeful — throat world of court- 12:45 am (Sunday morn- experiences. ship as currency. ing) at Nighthawk Cinema [136 7:30 pm at Greenlight 7 pm at Saint Charles Metropolitan Ave., Bookstore [686 Fulton St., Borromeo Catholic between Berry Street at South Portland Church (21 Sidney Pl. and Wythe Avenue, (718) Avenue, (718) 246–0200, between Joralemon and 384–3980, www.nite- greenlightbookstore. State streets, www.the- hawkcinema.com]. $11. com]. Free. ater2020.com). $25. NINE DAYS IN BROOKLYN FRI, SEPT. 28 THEATER, A SOUND AND LIGHT INSTALLATION: Mate Series II presents an evening of illuminated landscapes. free. 8:00 p.m. The Find lots more listings online at Invisible Dog [51 Bergen Street in Cobble Hill, (347) 560–3641], www. BrooklynPaper.com/Events theinvisibledog.org. NEW RESTAURANT OPENS: Prospect a monthly reading series in which will offer an ambitious addition to poets of all persuasions teach you Brooklyn’s emerging New-Amer- a lesson or two about the long con ican culinary scene, with casually and read in a black room with alco- set fi ne dining and specialty drinks. hol. Free. 7 pm. Public Assembly Prospect (773 Fulton St. in Fort [70 N. Sixth St. at Wythe Avenue Greene), www.prospectbk.com. in Williamsburg, (718) 782–5188], ART SHOW: NURTUREart is pleased www.publicassemblynyc.com. to present Monochrome, Scott LECTURE SERIES: The Society for the Lawrence’s fi rst solo exhibition. Advancement of Social Studies Noon. NURTUREArt Gallery [56 (SASS!) is proud to present a series of NEBSwWtoirc geAkea,B tr( St7a T1Sn8Rtd.),A 7HbC8ea2Trt—r wPiseA7oe7InNn5 P 5TMl]Ia.Nc cKeGi biSnb: BMinu is-h- Giovannini lasneenucmdetu bienrnle yWls i[g 7dihl0leit asNeming. .snS bFeixrudterh get oS., 7t(b7. po1a8ttm h)W .7e P8ynu2tthbe–elr5it c1Aa 8Aivn8es ]-,- ccpFlfii ahagilgampauyuetrsfrieluvbe’swalwu atporiobgnarrksgi,kn ts( srt7b. cai1[ny1oc8 g6ttm)his8 o4 .e a nN8irr.6e . F v –Siirm7biex0remta2h.n1 e 1S]cd,–ty wi.6 a ai twnpne mdwWly .. i l- Photo by Stefano COw“sD3Mtw3ewrE8eegw8eDirr].tadY,p wcwo,u rP sebwS”Udlt iw.cc.N iao.$nl sim8C tsGt.eOp le8omeN fiwp tbeeTamll ydEnf.nounS LyrsyTi c,tcp: .t (.crWl7ceiozo1fimre8 miets).e l . 8da r5n s[ 65da2— n2d GET BARCLAID: You might not be a Providing support: (Left to right) Sword expert Donny Vomit, member of the Nets, but you still dancer Bombazeen Bean, and host Scary Ben are taking the deserve to score. Arrive early; the WED, OCT. 3 fi rst fi fteen guests will receive gift good old-fashioned United Service Organization shows of the bags fi lled with toys to up your game. World War II era for a Bushwick spin. MUSIC, RZA: The Iron Fists Tour: Leg- Free. 6 pm. Babeland (462 Bergen St, endary freak hip-hop. $20/$25. 8:00 between Fifth and Flatbush avenues p.m. Music Hall of Williamsburg in Park Slope), 99problemsbutavibra- Research [361 Manhattan Ave. (718) ect from Matt Pavolka. $10 donation. [66 N. Sixth St. between Kent and tor.eventbrite.com. 349–1210], www.cprnyc.org. 7 pm. Barbes [376 Ninth St. at Sixth Wythe avenues in Williamsburg, DUMBO ARTS FESTIVAL: Become a SOUL MUSIC: /_drian Daniel will be Avenue in Park Slope, (718) 965– (718) 486–5400], www.musichallof- superhero and fl y across DUMBO’s performing songs off his debut EP 9177], www.barbesbrooklyn.com. williamsburg.com. landmark buildings and enjoy this ‘Memoirs of a Stoner’. Audiences will ATLANTIC ANTIC: The 38th annual ROCK AND ROLL PERFORMANCE: year’s festival of art, unexpected in- be pleasantly surprise to hear the street fair that features one mile Strip Darling is playing in celebra- stallations, multi-story projects, in- unexpected from the young singer/ of food, music and fun throughout tion of the release of the their lat- teractive social experiments, music songwriter and Brooklyn native who Brownstone Brooklyn, children’s est LP, “Mend.” $10. 9 pm. Public and activities for all shapes and blends, soul, pop, world music, and activities, and live entertainment. Assembly [70 N. Sixth St. at Wythe sizes. Outdoor projections open hip hop. $10. 10 pm. Rhythm-N-Soul Rain or shine. Free. Noon–6 pm. Avenue in Williamsburg, (718) 6 pm to midnight all three nights. [403 Fulton St. in Bedford Stuyvesant, Atlantic Avenue [Hicks St. to Fourth 782–5188], www.publicassem- Free. 6–9 pm. DUMBO Arts Festival (347) 206–5781]. Avenue in Brooklyn Heights, (718) blynyc.com. (45 Main St. at Water Street), www. CHILE PEPPER FIESTA: Fire breathing, 875–8993], www.atlanticave.org. dumboartsfestival.com. scorching hot sauce and chocolates THURS, OCT. 4 TALK, CRIMINAL CORPSES: In this - yes it’s back the annual festival that talk, Sarah Tarlow will examine puts some heat into the gardens. MON, OCT. 1 MUSIC, PSYCHEDELIC SLUDGE tttdithhhsisrre ooes pevuuecoggtnwhhiot euitnthras eool j dorfw uet‘hehrpanieron edcsgy rigt iifnmieorgoonin mg iinanr lta ccahpho egahr irygpna asosvel’fe,l o it,t ows s, $FbGE1raeae5srre std(e) $.fe ro11nn0r1 P[ c1saahe0mrin0lkd–i0wor6 erWa spny,a m suisntn.hu CdBidnerregoorn two1otk2snn l yw aHAnnievt dBheig o.mi,hd taate,t snm ,i c- THEFbin ri Waoa,m ”bI Lc aL“orbI AmbroaMecc tSkceroBoslUtio” oR mtuGo tfi “ySlltoePriudEsrk Lw asLpiiIdtNehe lGlskinma BgpaE hrtEo :- RaMNWnO.uy dSCst hiiTxKcew t:H hFea aevaSleaktl . tno Bubufir eerWidntsw g i.iln le$ti aheW2men0i .slMK lb8ieae:umn0lrvt0gs i an bp[n6su. dm6rLg i.t ,e a medical museum or a cabinet of (718) 623–7220], www.bbg.org. people and beer. Free, open to all (718) 486–5400], www.musichal- curiosities. $12. 7:30 pm. Observa- DINING, FREE FOOD AND DRINKS: (21+). Signup begins at 7 pm, and fi rst lofwilliamsburg.com. tacoitelratysy (o-5Nb4SYs3cAC Uu-rTTna,hi.o ceSno- PmESotP/.wb aTelto .rNgf u2/elO-v9Cibnossrc Sputsrreae.-e Sto),- TabmaFnnrheeedneenei rvfWt,.a , ew 8mNer ispsnaeatmemd rw,y .e.ea i TlWdnnl hct daeeee fn rlWatetoearbewrei nr Bs aaestrtn proe[ 3ieM or7iistkt9aspsl ye srUene eWsn scbtisooaeoonbnsr,td nl i.s h- 1ypPa(7o8tea1 uRttp8ei’ior)ce’ esn3ho - C0afpoo2raulder–nt s 3e dgpo7vyeone7 t Slr0 Sitcyt]oto,oyr w ernpmeeewl aet[.7 ywaFi0n. nr.T 9peWsh ee Lmr!tioel el7oireas:ir3m-cmes0a tesp nrprbiad kmSureyttrss..ig c --,i- MUGdavaSacnaaIcrdrCrioken ,alrt iydecSy coz Uiooo pwRnfm tP,rii nmippRtseaiIitaSssnrnt uEiaieocm nPs ,s d eRcht nloOepatrrevs:ys i rRe-oifnsoallofacc rl,onmhu ggneds usl ial nie tga r DAsNoCloE, ASOntLoOnc: hBuA, LfeAaMtu’rse nse Awn dtoann ce A17v0e4. ]i,n t Eheawste Wstiblliraomoksblyunr.gco, (m71. 8) 599– tore.com. a8n pdm p. lBasatribc ebse [l3ls7.6 $ N10in dtho nSatt. iaotn . Zea-Nadal from Barcelona, Spain in TUES, OCT. 2 Sixth Avenue in Park Slope, (718) a bubbly fusion of ballet and Lester SUN, SEPT. 30 965–9177], www.barbesbrook- Horton Technique premieres in the US OH NO VARIETY SHOW: A group of lyn.com. 2012 DUMBO dance festival. Free. 2 MUSIC, NORWEGIAN PIANIST: The tawdry Brooklyn burlesque perform- PSYCHEDELIC ELECTRONIC pm. DUMBO Arts Center [30 Wash- program will include musical selec- ers are reinventing the form of en- MUSIC PERFORMANCE: Silver ington St. between Plymouth and tions indigenous to the Norwegian tertainment made famous by classic Apples. $14. 8:30 pm. Public As- Water streets in DUMBO, (718) 694– region of Vest-Adger, as well as United Service Organizations shows, sembly [70 N. Sixth St. at Wythe 0831], www.dumboartscenter.org. compositions by Grieg, Chopin, and giving a sideshow-style makeover to Avenue in Williamsburg, (718) THEATER, HIT FINNISH PLAY: Broken Gershwin. Free. 4 pm. Norwegian the wholesome acts that defi ned the 782–5188], www.publicassem- Heart story is about art and love. Christian Home and Health Center World War II era. $7. 9 pm. Morgan blynyc.com. The main characters are a political (1250 67th St.) [250 Varet St. between Bogart and ENTERTAINMENT, BURLESQUE writer and her complete opposite, a MUSIC, HORNS BAND: A horns band: White streets], www.facebook.com/ JAZZ: Ramblin Rose is a combina- vain and love-hungry scatterbrain. bass, trombone, cornet, alto sax and USOhNoVarietyShow. $18. 7 pm. Center For Performance more trombone round out this proj- POETRY READING: Hatchet Job is See 9 DAYS on page 10 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: Energy creation. Celia Weintrob (718) 260-4503 DISPLAY ADVERTISING SALES Brooklyn Heights Paper, Downtown News, Jay Pelc (718) 260-2570 Recycling programs. EDITORIAL STAFF Andrew Mark (718) 260-2578 Park Slope Paper, Sunset Park Paper, Windsor Terrace Paper, Lebert McBean (718) 260-2569 Closed-loop solutions. EDITOR Carroll Gardens–Cobble Hill Paper, Vince DiMiceli (718) 260-4508 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SALES Michael Filippi (718) 260-4501 Fort Greene–Clinton Hill Paper, Tcuhsotsoem aerers j uasntd a c foemw mofu tnhieti eins naolivkaet. iWones l iwvee ’irne ad ewliovreldri nwgh feorre DBeEnP UMTuYe EssDigIT O(71R8) 260-4504 OLisFaF IMCaEl wMitAz N(7A18G) E2R60 -2594 Bay Ridge Paper, Bensonhurst Paper, things can no longer go to waste. ARTS EDITOR Bushwick Paper, Greenpoint Paper, Williamsburg Paper Sol Park (718) 260-8309 PRODUCTION STAFF That’s why Waste Management is working to get the most STAFF REPORTERS ART DIRECTOR from our existing resources. It’s good for business and the Danielle Furfaro (718) 260-2511 Leah Mitch (718) 260-4510 © Copyright 2012 Courier Life, Inc. All Rights Reserved. environment. Colin Mixson (718) 260-4514 WEB DESIGNER Unsolicited submissions become the property of Courier Life, Inc. and Natalie O’Neill (718) 260-4505 Sylvan Migdal (718) 260-4509 may be used, copied, sublicensed, adapted, transmitted, distributed, Eli Rosenberg (718) 260-2531 PRODUCTION ARTIST publicly performed, published, displayed or deleted as Courier Life, Inc. Earl Ferrer (718) 260-2528 sees fi t. Unless otherwise agreed in writing, Courier Life, Inc. will not give any compensation, credit or notice of its use of unsolicited submissions. PUBLISHER EMERITUS Ed Weintrob HOW TO E-mail news and arts releases to [email protected] Listed: CONTACT E-mail calendar listings to [email protected] E-mail nightlife listings to [email protected] THE PAPER To e-mail a staff member, use first initial last name @cnglocal.com September 28–October 4, 2012 The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 AWP 9 So grilled to meat you San Fran sausage eatery lands in Williamsburg By Anthony Smith selection of craft beers hail- ccaamme to Brooklyn remarkably for The Brooklyn Paper ing from that other great city iinnttact. The sausages taste ev- on the opposite coast. eerryy bit as brilliant as they did A new restaurant in Wil- “At our stores on Mission iinn SSan Francisco, with the ro- liamsburg is reclaim- Street and Haight Street, we bbuust meatiness tempered with ing the phrase “sau- have a very diverse customer sswweetness and spice. And the sage fest.” base and we felt we would bbuun they come in is astound- sgiaotEnh veteyrinpn igtch atohlluaygt rhies f tmehreas d eteox pu“rpae nosy-f bbituey r aag n pcdeo ernfnseeicdrtge fyrii tin ti ghn at Whse t iocl lroiefaafmetirvs,”-- itithhnnggaaTnlyh i etg onmeoedyd rasis at wdo ebolelp .— tio nbse ttoenr Giovannini aatsragnage nue osn pGfu lgsaruuinlyalt lsRdl,y”ios sSlpaaalrmangy ueFs n rpiadtesner c cmSiesaoncusto--t smmauaiTdnn hadCgeehye aB rc.soreou oHldkanlry’ttnw h’saig vg,e e Rcnooemsraae-l lcliiakkteee ,WW Whhiiilsslikkaeemyy sBBbaaurrr wwg’oos uucllrdde aiinntiddviie-- blboooorrkhhioonoogdd t nnoee gwwebbt iiteeosso ww ahhdoov eaanrreetunnr’’-tt tiHftiHhnhniraaggeesr tfmt towirem insgeou rvm eciscoei ount mlaed wbm beceeeor nmh sdaaesru rrfssooa, wrgs oae- Photo Stefano literal definition — with per- at a better time. As the swim- energy exists side-by-side ous. What better way to marry topped with grilled onions Chomp: Manager Chase Hartwig of restaurant Rosamunde takes a bite from a fectly cooked sausages and a ming success of fratty joints hungry and thirsty neigh- perfect staple foods with raw and sauerkraut, slathered beer sausage with grilled onions, sauerkraut, and spicy brown mustard. creativity than through a sau- with spicy brown mustard. sage and beer bar that reminds It costs $8, and it’s incred- covered with grilled onions And for those with di- Rosamunde Sausage BAR SCRAWL a young foodie of his first trip ibly filling. and mango chutney. Wash etary restrictions, the res- Grill [285 Bedford Ave. By Bill Roundy to Haight Street? If you’re looking for a that down with a Roden- taurant has three delicious betw. First and Grand Whereas other neighbor- beer and sausage pairing, bach Flemish Sour Ale, or vegan sausages as well — streets, (718) 388–2170, ro- hood transplants have fallen Hartwig turns your attention any of the many beers they perfect for an all-inclusive samundesausagegrill.com]. flat on their faces, this one to the duck and fig sausage have to offer. sausage fest. Mon.–Sun. 11:30–2 am Whose Brooklyn is it now? Documentary takes on Fulton Mall’s mall-ifi cation By Hannah Palmer Egan MOVIE for The Brooklyn Paper Audiences had plenty to heckle when “My Brooklyn” screenings Wed. Oct. watching a new documentary about 3, 6 pm, Long Island University (Kumble Theater, Flatbush Avenue Extension, the borough’s rapid gentrification near Willoughby), and Sun. Oct.7., 7:30 — and that’s not because they didn’t pm, UnionDocs (322 Union Ave. near like the film. Maujer Street). More info at www.my- brooklynmovie.com The revelatory scenes of “My Brook- lyn” make the case that politicians and other officials paved the way for the con- tive Jamel Shabazz, showing Downtown troversial transformation of the Fulton Mall as a center of community resilience and from a shopping corridor catering to Afri- creativity during the 1980s and 1990s. The can-American customers to a hub for na- point they make is clear: good, hardwork- tional retailers — displacing a commu- ing people were displaced. nity and steering millions to developers But at times, the film gets a little pre- in the process. cious and heavy-handed about the glory The audience at a recent screening at of old Downtown. “My Brooklyn” feels Brooklyn Public Library bristled with ex- sentimental toward an era when landlords asperation as talking heads spoke, and a torched their buildings and Myrtle Avenue post-screening Q&A became a heated dis- was called “Murder Avenue.” cussion over who is to blame, and what Anderson also seems to upend fairness can be done. by selectively quoting newcomers (or those “Even for someone like me who is pretty big-box chains and high-end boutiques), cynical about the political process, I was portraying them as shallow, judgmental and still surprised to see [the political system] naive, although she is happy to point out so blatantly used for capital gain at the ex- that those moving into the new buildings pense of the community,” said co-director gcannot be blamed for others’ displacement Kelly Anderson, whose film is showing ber— as Anderson moved into Park Slope in Pork Slope [247 Fifth Ave., between President and Carroll streets, in Park aihthnto o LmOGrooceunutwmggoo hbIssr.eh klIraon. anteesd rA tUvhinene dwifveisler mwrsso iiitntshy i scanhlnfeoodapr Ur molywna intodienvirdeDs aaohnnceddsr Photo by Fivel Roth1dccho9o8amtAsn8 bmtg aieetusts,w n bauienetnesy dent ,eae c“rrniMlstgyyca yo gpg rBeoeinlnrmiotcgroye itk nfahiltneey. dr nBi. mn”u ecptio goinfhr nbtnaeooncrtthchseo it nohogdef Slope (718) 768-7675, www.porkslopebrooklyn.com]. Open daily, 5 pm–4 regular, working class folks feel candid and Changes: Director Kelly Anderson got audiences riled up else, Anderson reminds viewers that blame am (kitchen closes 2 am). insightful. They make poetic use of photos with her new documentary about gentrification in Down- can often be found by answering one sim- from legendary shooter and Red Hook na- town, “My Brooklyn.” ple question: “Who benefits?” www.NYParenting.com Where every family matters and Thinking about where New York parents fi nd how to save help, info and support. on heating oil costs? SCAN (cid:116)(cid:1) Great Articles Think Petro! HERE (cid:116)(cid:1) A Happening Calendar (cid:116)(cid:1) Informative Directories (cid:116)(cid:1) Ticket Give-A-Ways: Everyone’s a winner. Log-in, enter & fi nd out. 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P_12539 10 AWP The Brooklyn Paper (cid:129) www.BrooklynPaper.com (cid:129) (718) 260-2500 September 28–October 4, 2012 Puppets on last string Upcoming show could be venue’s fi nal feature By Hannah Palmer Egan Puppet Theatre’s creative Parent Lisa Dove and her hus- THEATER for The Brooklyn Paper successes. band Greg Paul frequented Clock- “If this show’s our last, works in ’90s when it was located Who’s cutting the strings on this we’re going to go down “Das WunderKammer Puppet Kaba- in the East Village. Now they live rett: Save the Clockworks edition” at puppet theater? singing,” said director Jon- in Windsor Terrace and bring their the Clockworks Puppet Theatre [196 An experimental perfor- athan “Jonny Clockworks” Columbia St. between Sackett and De- children. mance house on Columbia Street near Cross, who will put on the graw streets, www.cosmicbicycle.com, “It feels special, that’s what I re- the Cobble Hill waterfront and its fund-raising spectacle with (212) 614–0001] Sept. 28, 29, 8 pm. $20 member feeling back in the East Vil- suggested, $10 minimum. company, which has performed pup- his Cosmic Bicycle Theatre lage,” said Dove, as her son Finn pet theater for adults and kids alike Company. worked on a paper-bag puppet during — most recently collaborating with The scrappy Clockworks And while “experimental the- the post-performance workshop. Brooklynite Norah Jones — will stage Puppet Theatre opened in May 2011 atre” often excludes family-friend- The upcoming cabaret show mer Egan wthheaatt rceo muluds bt er aitiss ela $s1t 0c,h0a0r0a dteo acsa tthche apnroda hcha sto s pinucpep feetsa,t muraekdi nag u tnhieqmu efr aopm- lhionledsss ,a tShuen dCalyo ckkiwdso’r kmsa triengeuel aferlay- wpeirlli mhaevnet atlh ec osusptupmoret -oafn do-tpheurp pexe-t Photo by Hannah Pal usdTetdophaoi Deyotmia noeat nsarfbeptl ao o,ti chftta ekhetth etarthe hie“ leWnriS noftae,geu vae iCgemvlh iltonoah ifcgreda-k i olCewnlf.vls oioipmrcciktrkpiseow ePdnno u“,drp Dakipnnasegd”st rdaotoentoh cdwt“eyh Bracne gnly eav r redoreegt ugc tgfngryo-adcibres-lmehib nsar,. tgetetea usarko rmiincnneiitgenor t cg yilo en’asngt nottsrr ,iau abas pumhsstk iiioodninrnettogs-, tttaChhunoeerd“biaa nIbttf egrllaoeer mvv awHieinndolidtil reatl khr]gse,se ”eahi intCcodh hper[eioCasan. sotagsrfr io srcaaou slilt odal t cn.oGad lta hppreuud ppkeppnideess/tt tflMSWohraoweeotmaotretktraee iswtn,r,h P oegPeofer a i toGRrshuaoeirdpvne Iees enE’,rnt s vCefw Reerona,ia mcataluhntppi rdohaVi n nnGLiagylrel l;e a neTZag eoaatwey nSz do TmHa ohhcaa e&tillss--l Short rope: Puppeteer Jonathan Edward Cross has a moment backstage with WunderKammer Puppet Kabarett” art,” Cross said. “We make living But lackluster ticket sales could ater Festival at St. Ann’s Warehouse; his puppets. is a celebration of the Clockworks beauty out of decaying debris.” not make up for rising rent. and several musical guests. Thirst is everything the Vampire Slayer” re-runs? 9 DAYS... RM: A lot of it was historical re- search. Vampires have a history throughout many different cultures, Continued from page 10 and across continents. People’s expe- riences of these creatures come in var- tion of Hot Jazz, Sultry ious forms across the world, but there singing, and just enough Q&A with a vampire combat expert are also consistencies. I have tried to burlesque to make you By Colin Mixson alavtoeirdi pt saa nnroty ott vhf etihnryeg 2athc0cathut’ rsca ebtnee,te uannr dyd,o htnhaeisn ipnkr oitnhbge- wmFStraoaentreieto. ta9nog: 3[c6a0o8in m3p a meWn .bda Ta sahchgekina fWgiontra.o yn Giovannini WThe BroitMnhodokasrlnyo ounrf a T “Ple”Tar prhRaeeco rZeg roeemrs iMbdieean Cti ason mcde abluea--t abpliyrtoe b smpe itooheawunkesem eml tyrhsf,ae eutnlmolvi apessneusel.dlev Ta,me thmse esdaoey tbert’ervmya e ic v nmttarsioivmiedrede--. HIPA(tBf3o ioHrv4roenm7Oo.b) a kPik6nnl .y2 PbcPn7Eelr o–oLsR4g isFbv9spOey4pe ,9L oRcw]otMt,.i rctwHdAhoea NFmpyigiseC-. htrEa-tsS-,: Photo by Stefano nesse, DJ Evil Dee, Boo- New movements: Dancers Element and Scream are brating the release of his new how- What was once shunned gie Blind, Mood Doctors, bringing their burgeoning brand of dance, Flex, to to “The Vampire Combat Manual,” now seems attractive to Serge Severe, N.A., DJ which is hitting shelves on Oct. 2. most humans. Grouch, DJs Total Eclipse the DUMBO Arts Festival. As a service to our readership, and CM: Wow, I didn’t re- And Gen.Erik. $5. 10 pm. Public Assembly [70 N. mankind in general, the Brooklyn alize vampires have their Sixth St. at Wythe Avenue [627 Fifth Ave. between (718) 855—3388], www. Paper sat down with the expert on all own PR guys. I need to get in Williamsburg, (718) 17th and 18th streets littlefi eldnyc.com. ttpypvhhoraaeioumrnC evtrgvipoiscdseeilu rerlui-feln pn,ats irhar peMf nossrsdle epyion qxoy nttus otov seohu ab norminr tnwit:?pna BAisgbrt ereyaro esmw bto eatlktohnorleoea ydnrdcneeee. f,st aeashnnn taddoyt Photo by Melanie Fidler hemaf onbilpicguyltreeilmnoc. o? mviAbba Aaeiinrmnnrnes e fy spontt nhciartr ah eBktehcaresrekneo ilcisoaran?e knpt telyBrhy-e arnnnsot soi pago otonkahfly----t ARSp7sTe8t,r uem2CdsF–Ebei5RoRln1y1tAI8n0 ,B8yM ic]esO,.I acCwpuoClSwetm iTafSw.us.H .le p O5Bdue Wbtaoli:s c ta s- MUMi(fn7rSe 1UIGCd8SSrd), Ae I7HyCe6sT:Unb 8S,wNa– troO0uG.c1noAo3nCd1mRi nTH]I,.gA . ew Niv6gwo hwcta.sl,- DINAwd—FGthIiaTierNe lne lgr rAGcm!bar i aFen,nCa nr OgndHCed, ieK Eh Unap.uvTnR nr3arOiedCcz:n3r ehBH,gr 0 alEi[e:i 1s fvpRlT fl2iea mchFe5 amKeE .pHl r SiZunLereTiisud ozn i-elcnre,sy Roger Ma: In Brooklyn, you have The cure to vampirism: Roger Ma, author of the “Vampire RM: If there are, I’m not saying, an exhibition of work by ist Nikolett Pankovits will St. in Brooklyn Heights, to think subterranean. Even in day- Combat Manual,” has found a remedy for the undead affliction because I don’t want to spread any NMeawry YCoarrkl sboans.e Fdr eaert.i s7t– 9 sbhearrse o tfh teh eb iBll rwooitkhl ymne Smym- - (z7io1n8g) 8e5lc2.o–2rg4.5 3], www. light hours, if they’re insulated from plaguing Brooklyn, and it involves this home-made stake. false rumors there. It’s bad enough pm. Studio10 [56 Bogart phony Orchestra in an LITERATURE, WOMEN sunlight, that’s where they’ll congre- I have this book out, I’m probably St. (718) 852–4396], www. eclectic evening of clas- OF COLOR LIT MAGA- gate. So, even during the day you have pire manual, or no? erful, but not invincible. a target already. studio10bogart.com. sical and contemporary ZINE: Kalyani Magazine to be wary. Also, they tend to congre- RM: People, because of the me- CM: Have you fought any vam- CM: Fair enough, Roger, this is prob- MUHSAICIR, ODPOEWRAN :L OETpSe rIaT So n Hcounncgearrti ainnc mluudseisc .m Tuhsei c iws oam lietenr aorfy c molaoguar.z Finree eb.y 7 gate in large metropolitan centers, be- dia, have this perception that a vam- pires recently? ably a good time to end our discussion. Tap has discovered that from Liszt, Bartok, Hun- pm. Two Moon Art House cause that’s where there’s food. Every pire is completely superhuman; that RM: No, fortunately. When I was In concern for your health, we don’t want opera and beer go well garian pop group Quimby & Cafe (315 Fourth Ave. major metropolitan area is just a feed- they can fly, transform into animals, writing the book, I would go on a to give you too much publicity. together. The company is to traditional Hungarian in Gowanus), www.kaly- made up of young singers folk music. $15. 7 pm. ing frenzy. When you look at crime, turn into mist, and my theory is that number of late night runs after sun- RM: Same to you. Thanks. and instrumentalists who ShapeShifter Lab (18 animagazine.com. muggings, and assaults, those are at- these myths have been perpetuated set, which is the big hunting time “The Vampire Combat Manual” relish the direct contact Whitwell Pl.) brooklyn- MUSIC PERFORMANCE: tributed to regular criminal activity, by vampires to make themselves for vampires. Right after sunset is available at the Bookmark Shoppe. with audiences. $10 dona- symphonyorchestra.org, The Psyched, with per- but who’s to say those attacks weren’t seem more fearsome. Most vam- when they catch the going-home- Mention this Q and A, and the kinds tNioinnt.h 8 S pt.m a.t BSaixrbthe sA [v3e7n6u e wcowmw. .nikolettpankovits. fSotarmrsa, nRcaedsi cbayl MDaadjosr, foiled vampire assaults. Especially if pires have great strength, dexter- from-work crowd, and then, later on, folks there will give you a 10 percent in Park Slope, (718) 965– MUSIC, FOLK AND AMERI- Warm Soda, DJ Cassie someone who’s inebriated said they ity, hearing, and eyesight, but only they get the entertainment crowd, discount on the book. [8415 Third 9177], www.barbesbrook- CANA CONCERT: Andi Ramone. $10. 8 pm. Pub- were attacked by a vampire, they’re about double to triple that of a hu- people coming home from clubs. Avenue between 84th and 85th lyn.com. Rae Healy & The Back lic Assembly [70 N. Sixth not going to be taken seriously. man. So, if you can bench 100, if you But, so far, I’ve been lucky. streets in Bay Ridge, (718) 833–5115, MUSIC, FINNISH FOLK: Vel- River Bullies, Bucky St. at Wythe Avenue in lamo brings Finnish folk Hayes, Chris Moore. $10. Williamsburg, (718) 782– CM: How powerful are vampires? became a vampire you could bench CM: How did you research this www.bookmarkshoppe.com] Oct. to South Slope, Brooklyn. 7:30 pm. Littlefi eld [622 5188], www.publicassem- Do we even stand a chance, vam- 300 pounds. This makes them pow- book? Did you watch a lot of “Buffy 2. $15. Free. 8 pm. Freddy’s Bar Degraw St. in Gowanus, blynyc.com. 1.866.MOBILITY | ATT.COM | VISIT A STORE 4G speeds not available everywhere. Talk and surf requires mobile broadband, not available in all areas. Screen images simulated. All marks used herein are the property of their respective owners. ©2012 AT&T Intellectual Property.

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