i [i^n ' •• • citytnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030608/1978-08-15/ed... ·...

1
I [i^ n ■I H r ; ! . / / ■' •• • Neither CtiartesM. <i^oor5i«9ne Toirnefd^“ med- whenthevrtoved,. •heireating hW M I to the present ir V location, that 86 \l ■years later it V : vw)UtdJ3edeslg-"^'V natedasacity land^' markMn 18$9,10 , : mahogany tables Is oneoT the finest examples of “ La Bello Epoqtie** 0 {p ie Good Old t>ay5l , lysllnallof /N e w York. And ybequajllyof the r# jpvuw «ji lu .itie TT( y f^y^ftlsservedstlll www^wf^w — , ir— ^r. 3dHcfcs to thcIgH years after Its opening, 4 ''"pwndards established by the Totiner’s splendidly tong gas-(lt'/?""foundefs nearly a century ago. It's diningroom provided a fashion- their legacy of graciousness and able setting for NewYqrk's leading our claim to fame. Gaiie ficlbllner < e« ib79 i 5?^^* i I l S a r o < J t / y n \ landfnafif Se^/ood A .^r«4fc Hotne Changed. The softly gas-lit dining 372 Fulton Street (nr Boro Had) roomwithitscutglasschandellqrs. For reservations, 875-5181 mirrored mahogany walls lined Dally except Sunday, Amex & Diners with red velvet brocade, finely carved plasterwork and sturd t *UndnrigrXComm«t$«<t|>tvgA«(iQ«iMirch», l9fBJ Casa £ StoricO 111 Dining In a landmark Brownstone with old world charm. Prix fixe $8.50410.50 Tuesday, Wsdneeday, Thurac%, Sunday from 5 pm, Friday and Satur> day from 8 pm. Reservations only 6384617. 148Rark Place, comer of 7th Corsican, Italian, French cuisine. Most of antlqua dscor Is lor sala. Queen Restaurant One of the finest Italian restaurants in Brooklyn 9 ICont$t. Queen Pizzeria "best Italian pizza in Hew Yoib", N.Y. Mafazina IMCovitSt. Tel. MA 4-9621 bleKBnt Dininf; In the heirt of OreenwM yUUa<M.iervliit Ihe fifiett Northern Itilun* Prvndi and American Culdne for{ over 50 vcari at Ihe ume location^ B f aura to aik for onr apeclalty of the day r noon enjoy late aftemt cocktilli with hora d’oevrea Tuci-Prldiy iflcmoopi TSWWiliiaMPIaGa Vi blockWest of Perk ' ffl ......................... . on 84028 CITYt V*. > Rlchmoiid: Middle, t o Income HiusinglMixm IncdiiAilile’ BYFEIERHALEY Brooklyn Congreasman Fred Richmond told community oppon- ent! of a planned mixed income houilog development fh it **mlied middle and IbW income ptojecU ate not Incompatible" and' p l^ e d continued support for the develop- aite in downtown ' Boerum -HIU section of Brooklyn, The state’s Urbaq development Corporation has designated two poitloas of this urban renewal site for boosing developments, one fbr dtiiddle-^ income housing and the oilier for . t h e controverslid km to moderate ment of bofo'the middle Inpoine .Income, 161-im lt^ject sponsored and mixed Income housing projects designated for an, urban renewal site in the downtowjn Brooklyn area. Richmond and former Deputy Schools Chancellor Bernard ^Gif- ford, his opponent In the upcoming Democratic primary for Brooklyn's multi-ethnic 14th Congressional District seat in northwestern Brooklyi^, were among several political candidates toeaking at the Neighborhood ^Action Coalition meeting held Monday night in BoenunHUL , NAC was formed by community residents to combat the develop- ment of the proposed 161-unit mixed income ilevelopment on the by the Gowanus Boerum Hill Housing Asfodatkm * (G^A), To date, neitBer proposal has received Rnancing forconatruction, Ridiinond and .Giflbrd did not debate at the meeting, but rose at separate points to address varioui Hasidic leaders to mediate in the iisues. dinote. Richmond indicated that he had ^irop^d mixed Income bnsing be Gifford deferred oonunent on the GBA mixed income proposal, dafaning-that he "had the oppor- tunity to talk wHh both sides," meaning NAC and the mixed income local sponsor, GBA. Gifford attacked Ridunond at the meeting for not Intervenh^ in the recent Crown Heights crisis between blacks and Haaldim (part of Crown Heights lies in Rich- nxMid's district), Glflbid daimed he had gone to both Mack and opposed a strictly middle-lnoome housing development ontil the UDC designated an adjacent lot for low and moderate-hicome boosing. The two-term Cragiesamaii laid that he w u working with Sylvan cfaoae not to appioadi the Crown Heights issue spedfle- ally, but told the NAC andience that his position u,secxetsiy of the New York State Congreksional deleoation had enabld him to produce federajly-fosded jobs for state-owned Schermerhotn-Padfic middle-income housing and the Lawrence,. private developers of the dty, and to bring an estimated the middle income project, and the $30 million into bis heavlly- Williamsburg Savings Bank to minority district to fanprove the Insure that both the tong-delayed District's public housing. School Board Super Bucks Parent Panel on Principars Job BY ELIZABETH COUiER ViUage/East Side Comm- unity School Board 2 Superin- tendent Barbara Weldon has recommended two candidates for principal of l.S. 70 in response to a contr;>versisl Boa^ 2 resolution that required her to submit two names by August 10, Neither of the two namea offered by Weldon, who w u not available for comment Tuesday, were among the recommend- ations of a parent scteenlog committee, formed to advise the iocs] Board on the selection of candidates. Weldon has previously Raised the parent’s Kreening committee during the selection process. The move by Weldon has further complicated a controver- sial issue which has been festering for a month over the appointment of a principal for the intermediate school in Chelsea. The Greenwich Village Chelsea branch of the Nattoiutl Assn, for the Advancement of Cblored People (NAACP) has charged that a candidate for the position, Ron Davis, was refused an Interview from the screening committee beoauae he was black. The NAACP Is now seeking an injunction which would prevent the Board from appointing a principal until the charges of ra ^ m are resolved in court. Members of the screening committee say that Dav]^ submitted his personal profile late and that they have followed the screening procedure according to regulations, Weldon had decided not to recommend a candidate to the board until the legal questions involved in the Davis complaint were cleared up. But the Board last week passed a resolution by a 5 to 4 vote forcing Weldon to make the recommendations. The five members of the Board behind the ruolution — Kathy Beseida, Jean Casko, Sy Syudelman, Gall Gans, and Eugene Glaberman — have been pushing for the appoint- ment of a prindpsl before the start of the school yeu. But President Dorothy Ryan termed the resolution "illegal" at lu t week's stormy Board meeting and voted against It. Board members must select a principal from among the* recommendations of the Super- intendent, according to S c ^ l Board by-laws. The Board inet in a private perionnel suston Tuesday night to decide whether or not to accept Weldon's recommendations, if they do not vote to accept the recommendations, they msst begin the hiring procedure, which h u already lasted several months, according to Ryan. Brooklyn Helots Merchants Seek Stepped Up Cop Foot hrtrol Brooklyn Heights merchants and some local residents wUl hold a usually only aifotd one toot-pati conference with the 84th prednet In Ung ofUoet at a time. At the time of because staff is so low, he can commented that when called, the usually only afford one foot-patrol- 84th precinct eventually "reapond- responie to the attempted robberv th« attempted burglary, the patrol- ed with flying colors," found Ueberman bleeding on the floor ling officer had been responding to and'rushed him to the hospital, a call on Court Street. "H e wag the "Hiey were responsible for saving of Morris Ueberman, owner of St George Radio and TV, who w u auauHed in his fnnehise at 145 only officer in the area at the his ' life ," Stein ssld~ Monugue St. on Augiut 10. The Ume," commented Maltby. Stein meeting will be held dn August 25, uci^’f'o^fm'htau^ Anti-Redllners (tontinue Picket, Legal Action Against The Dime neighimhood bufinen w n en Rldind DehcM, a ipokemun br neigbboilioodf. Dime fnotcanmn "P??. B«"k-<«-BiooUyn. an antl^dlin. Oieg Sullivan denied the c h ^ . that the Inddmt o o ^ hmw,beM |ng gwup, n y i that the organin- hoiwver, dalmlim that "no M - »lon «in continue ha pldellng of nlteconinittmentrwe(emade."He ' w “ **** Savings Bank Indefinite- added that the Dime has ah prednrt. Cartaln u filing legal action "excellent record of loans to from the u4th Pteclnct, who will be against the hank* D^aaa saya that Brooklyn oommnnHiea'' and that in the featured maker, 4ayithat the ihe Dime rM e|||id on Ha agree- the fln t six months of 1978 The Montague Street area is his ment to giv_* ■? million in aru Dime made over W. hflUton worth "number one or number two foot loans for the Downtown Brooklyn, of loans for Brooklyn, post prioHty," hut explained that Crown Heights and Hast Flatbuah

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Page 1: I [i^n ' •• • CITYtnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030608/1978-08-15/ed... · 2018-10-26 · with red velvet brocade, finely carved plasterwork and sturd t *UndnrigrXComm«t$«tvgA«(iQ«iMirch»,

I [i^n■I

Hr

; !

. /

/

■ ■' •• •

Neither CtiartesM. < i^ o o r5 i« 9n e Toirnefd^“ med- whenthevrtoved,. •heireating hW M I to the present ir

V location, that 86 \l ■years later it V: vw)UtdJ3edeslg-"^'V natedasacity land^' markMn 18$9,10 ,

: mahogany tables Is oneoT the finest examples of “La Bello Epoqtie** 0 {p ie Good Old t>ay5l, lysllnallof

/N e w York. And ybequajllyof the

r# j p v u w «ji l u . i t i e TT( y

f^y^ftlsservedstlllwww wf^w — , iiir— r. 3dHcfcs to thcIgHyears after Its opening, 4 ''"pwndards established by the Totiner’s splendidly tong gas-(lt'/?""foundefs nearly a century ago. It's diningroom provided a fashion- their legacy of graciousness and able setting for NewYqrk's leading our claim to fame.

Gaiie ficlbllner <e« ib79i5 ?^^* i I l S a r o < J t / y n \ landfnafif Se /ood A . r«4fc Hotne

Changed. The softly gas-lit dining 372 Fulton Street (nr Boro Had)roomwithitscutglasschandellqrs. For reservations, 875-5181 mirrored mahogany walls lined Dally except Sunday, Amex & Dinerswith red velvet brocade, finely carved plasterwork and sturd t

*UndnrigrXComm«t$«<t|>tvgA«(iQ«iMirch», l9fBJ

Casa £ StoricO

111Dining In a landmark Brownstone with old world charm.

Prix fixe $8.50410.50 Tuesday, Wsdneeday, Thurac%, Sunday from 5 pm, Friday and Satur> day from 8 pm.Reservations only 6384617. 148Rark Place, comer of 7th Corsican, Italian, French cuisine.Most of antlqua dscor Is lor sala.

Queen RestaurantOne of the finest Italian restaurants

in Brooklyn 9ICont$t.Queen

Pizzeria"best Italian pizza in

Hew Yoib", N.Y. MafazinaIMCovitSt.

Tel. MA 4-9621

b le K B n t Dininf;In the heirt of OreenwM

yUUa<M.iervliit Ihe fifiett Northern Itilun* Prvndi

and American Culdne for{ over 50 vcari at Ihe ume

location Bf aura to aik for onr apeclalty of the day r

noonenjoy late aftemt cocktilli with hora d’oevrea Tuci-Prldiy iflcmoopi

T S W W iliia M P Ia G a

Vi block West of Perk '

ffl ..........................

on 84028

CITYtV * . >

Rlchmoiid: Middle, t o Income HiusinglMixm IncdiiAilile’

BYFEIERHALEY Brooklyn Congreasman Fred

Richmond told community oppon­ent! of a planned mixed income houilog development fh i t **mlied middle and IbW income ptojecU ate not Incompatible" and' p l ^ e d continued support for the develop-

aite in downtown ' Boerum -HIU section of Brooklyn, The state’s Urbaq development Corporation has designated two poitloas of this urban renewal site for boosing developments, one fb r dtiiddle-^ income housing and the oilier for

. t h e controverslid k m to moderate ment o f bofo'the middle Inpoine .Income, 16 1 -im lt^ je c t sponsoredand mixed Income housing projects designated for an, urban renewal site in the downtowjn Brooklyn area.

Richmond and former Deputy Schools Chancellor Bernard ^Gif­ford, his opponent In the upcoming Democratic primary for Brooklyn's m ulti-e thn ic 14th Congressional D is tric t seat in northwestern Brooklyi^, were among several political candidates toeaking at the Neighborhood Action Coalition meeting held Monday night in BoenunHUL ,

NAC was formed by community residents to combat the develop­ment of the proposed 161-unit mixed income ilevelopment on the

by the Gowanus Boerum H ill Housing Asfodatkm * (G^A), To date, neitBer proposal has received Rnancing forconatruction,

Ridiinond and . Giflbrd did not debate at the meeting, but rose at separate points to address varioui Hasidic leaders to mediate in the iisues. d ino te .

Richmond indicated that he had —

^ iro p ^ d mixed Income bnsing be

Gifford deferred oonunent on the GBA mixed income proposal, dafaning-that he "had the oppor­tunity to talk wHh both sides," meaning NAC and the mixed income local sponsor, GBA.

Gifford attacked Ridunond at the meeting for not Intervenh^ in the recent Crown Heights crisis between blacks and Haaldim (part of Crown Heights lies in Rich- nxMid's district), G lflb id daimed he had gone to both Mack and

opposed a strictly middle-lnoome housing development o n til the UDC designated an adjacent lot for low and moderate-hicome boosing. The two-term Cragiesamaii laid that he w u working with Sylvan

cfaoae n o t to appioadi the Crown Heights issue spedfle- ally, but told the NAC andience that his position u,secxetsiy of the New York State Congreksional deleoation had enabld him to produce federajly-fosded jobs for

state-owned Schermerhotn-Padfic middle-income housing and the

Lawrence,. private developers of the d ty , and to bring an estimated the middle income project, and the $30 m illion into b is heavlly- W illiam sburg Savings Bank to minority district to fanprove the Insure that both the tong-delayed District's public housing.

School Board Super Bucks Parent Panel on Principars Job

BY ELIZABETH COUiER ViUage/East Side Comm­

unity School Board 2 Superin­tendent Barbara Weldon has recommended two candidates fo r principal o f l.S . 70 in response to a contr;>versisl Boa^ 2 resolution that required her to submit two names by August 10,

Neither of the two namea offered by Weldon, who w u not available for comment Tuesday, were among the recommend­ations of a parent scteenlog committee, formed to advise the iocs] Board on the selection of candidates. Weldon has previously Raised the parent’s Kreening committee during the selection process.

The move by Weldon has further complicated a controver­sial issue which has been festering for a month over the appointment of a principal for the intermediate school in

Chelsea. The Greenwich Village Chelsea branch o f the Nattoiutl Assn, for the Advancement of Cblored People (NAACP) has charged that a candidate for the position, Ron Davis, was refused an Interview from the screening committee beoauae he was black. The NAACP Is now seeking an in junction which would prevent the Board from appointing a principal until the charges of ra ^ m are resolved in court. Members of the screening committee say that Dav]^ submitted his personal profile late and that they have followed the screening procedure according to regulations,

Weldon had decided not to recommend a candidate to the board until the legal questions involved in the Davis complaint were cleared up. But the Board last week passed a resolution by a 5 to 4 vote forcing Weldon to

make the recommendations. The five members of the Board behind the ruolution — Kathy Beseida, Jean Casko, Sy Syudelman, Gall Gans, and Eugene Glaberman — have been pushing for the appoint­ment of a prindpsl before the start of the school ye u . But President Dorothy Ryan termed the resolution "ille g a l" at l u t week's stormy Board meeting and voted against It.

Board members must select a principal from among the * recommendations of the Super­intendent, according to S c ^ l Board by-laws. The Board inet in a private perionnel suston Tuesday n igh t to decide whether or not to accept Weldon's recommendations, i f they do not vote to accept the recommendations, they msst begin the h irin g procedure, which h u already lasted several months, according to Ryan.

Brooklyn Helots Merchants Seek Stepped Up Cop Foot hrtrol

Brooklyn Heights merchants andsome local residents wUl hold a usually only aifotd one toot-pati conference with the 84th prednet In Ung ofUoet at a time. At the time of

because staff is so low, he can commented that when called, the usually only afford one foot-patrol- 84th precinct eventually "reapond-

responie to the attempted robberv th« attempted burglary, the patrol-ed w ith f ly in g co lo rs ," found Ueberman bleeding on the floor

ling officer had been responding to and'rushed him to the hospital, a call on Court Street. "H e wag the "H iey were responsible for saving

of Morris Ueberman, owner o f St George Radio and TV, who w uauauHed in his fnnehise at 145 only officer in the area at the his ' l i f e , " Stein ssld~ Monugue St. on Augiut 10. The Ume," commented Maltby. Stein meeting w ill be held dn August 25,

uci^’f'o fm'htau Anti-Redllners (tontinue Picket,Legal Action Against The Dime

neighimhood bufinen wnen Rldind DehcM, a ipokemun br neigbboilioodf. Dime fnotcanmn"P??. B«"k-<«-BiooUyn. an antl^dlin. Oieg Sullivan denied the c h ^ .

that the Inddmt o o ^ hmw,beM |ng gwup, nyi that the organin- hoiwver, dalmlim that "no M -»lon «in continue ha pldellng of nlteconinittmentrwe(emade."He

' w “ **** Savings Bank Indefinite- added tha t the Dime has ahprednrt. Cartaln u filing legal action "exce llen t record o f loans tofrom the u4th Pteclnct, who w ill be against the hank* D ^aaa saya that Brooklyn oommnnHiea'' and that in the featured m aker, 4ayithat the ihe Dime rM e |||id on Ha agree- the f ln t six months of 1978 The Montague Street area is his ment to giv_* ■? million in a ru Dime made over W . hflUton worth "number one or number two foot loans for the Downtown Brooklyn, of loans for Brooklyn, post prioHty," hut explained that Crown Heights and Hast Flatbuah