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WILLIAMSBURG: Love less: Game show busts up couples

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By Allegra Hobbs

Brooklyn Daily

This weekend, learn that love is a lie and we all die alone.

On the day before Valentine’s Day, a Park Slope comedian will attempt to shatter the unions of obnoxious lovebirds by pitting them against each other in a cynical spin on classic dating shows. But the harbinger of broken hearts swears she has nothing against Cupid, just the sickening people who parade their romance in front of lonely singles.

“I don’t hate love,” said Carly Filbin, who will host “Let Me Break You Up” at Pete’s Candy Store in Williamsburg on Feb. 13. “I just hate everyone who has it when I don’t.”

During the faux game show, Filbin will grill two couples on potentially bicker-triggering trivia to show them just how wrong they are for each other. Her arsenal includes such disorienting questions as “What is your partner’s most annoying habit?” “When is your anniversary?” and “If your sex life was a candy bar, what candy bar would it be?”

Contestants must answer the questions solo, then compare answers to discover how hollow and disappointing their relationship truly is. The couple with the least points at the end of the game must break up live on stage, says Filbin, a process that involves locking eyes and saying (among other solemn vows) “I do not love you. And I am currently picturing other people naked.”

The comedian insists the show is all in good fun, and that no hearts have actually been broken in her quest to turn her bitterness into laughs — in fact, some couples have said afterwards that it brought them closer together.

“It is a comedy show,” she said. “I’m not a monster.”

Filbin has staged the anti-dating show monthly since last summer, but she is particularly thrilled to drive couples apart so close to the holiday most loathed by sad singles everywhere.

“I think this show coming up is really special because it’s right before Valentine’s Day, and I can take my bitterness out on couples,” she said. “And I’m really, really excited to do it.”

“Let Me Break You Up: An Anti-Dating Gameshow” at Pete’s Candy Store [709 Lorimer St. between Richardson and Frost streets in Williamsburg, (718) 302–3770, www.petescandystore.com]. Feb. 13 at 7:30 pm. $5 suggested donation.

Reach reporter Allegra Hobbs at ahobbs@cnglocal.com or by calling (718) 260–8312.

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BOROBEAT: Steeped in history: Kids, grandparents share tea at Ridge school

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Brooklyn Daily

Talk about a par-tea!

Students and grandparents bonded over tea and crumpets at St. Anselm Catholic Academy’s Junior-Senior Tea on Feb. 4. The tykes had a ball hanging out with their elders, and a few adopted new grandparents along the way, one attendee said.

“The tea party was great — the kids enjoyed it,” said Jenny Frka, whose granddaughter Alexendria Sullenger accompanied her. “They needed grandparents — of course not every grandparent was able to make it. Most of the kids in the class whose grandparents could not come, they made cards for me.”

The Bay Ridge parochial school hosted the shindig as part of Catholic Schools Week, which kicked off Jan. 31.

One student particularly enjoyed performing a song for her forbearers, a parent said.

“Lina’s favorite part, of course, was when her grandmother showed up and then the singing — when they sang the song for their grandparents,” said mom Maria Stagnitta.

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SHEEPSHEAD BAY: What the flood? Calls to beef up resiliency after light snow causes inundation in coastal nabes

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By Colin Mixson

Brooklyn Daily

They’ve had it up to here!

The city must complete coastal resiliency projects it has been promising since Hurricane Sandy, locals said after Manhattan Beach and Sheepshead Bay streets flooded on Feb. 8 and 9. The same factors that raised Hurricane Sandy’s deluge to biblical proportions — a slow-moving storm, unfortunately timed high tides, and a full moon — temporarily turned Emmons Avenue and Shore Boulevard into canals. The latest inundation is proof the city must shore up its shorefront before a more serious storm hits, one resident said.

“It’s been three years since Sandy, and politicians come and say, ‘We’ll do this — we’ll do that,’ but nothing’s ever done,” said Manhattan Beacher Robert Gevertzman, whose Langham Street home partially flooded on Feb. 9. “Every storm that comes along, they say, ‘There may be some ocean flooding.’ I worry, I really do. If another Sandy comes, it’s going to cost billions of dollars.”

An area councilman is calling on the Department of Environmental Protection to install storm water retention tanks in waterfront communities to temporarily stem the tide that the city’s antediluvian sewers cannot handle — and give residents a little piece of mind.

“Since Hurricane Sandy more than three years ago, the 48th District’s waterfront communities continue to remain susceptible to significant amounts of flooding,” said Councilman Chaim Deutsch (D–Sheepshead Bay). “My constituents should not have to live in fear of high tide.”

Water from residents’ drains and streets’ catch basins ends up in the same city sewer pipes, and new developments such as a 28-story residential building going up on Voorhies Avenue and a 40-story tower coming to Neptune Avenue will fill sewers with more bath water and leave less room for rain — something the city should be planning for, Deutsch said.

“They should have an extensive water-retention basin for all of these buildings, so all the storm water should be held there before it’s let out into the main sewer system,” he said.

A city official agreed Southern Brooklyn’s sewers can’t handle big storms, because it was sea-level rise and not rainfall that flooded Sheepshead Bay and Manhattan Beach.

“The [Department of Environmental Protection] drainage system — catch basins and sewers — handles storm water,” said mayoral spokeswoman Amy Spitalnick. “They are not meant to handle the amount of water coming in from coastal flooding and storm surge.”

Officials have set aside $20 billion for tidal safeguards citywide, she said. So far, the city has dumped sand on beaches and bulkheads in an attempt to keep back the water, Spitalnik said.

“These combined measures mitigated some of the flood impacts this week,” she said.

Reach reporter Colin Mixson at cmixson@cnglocal.com or by calling (718) 260-4505.

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HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS: Shamorie Ponds managing growing star power

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By Joseph Staszewski

Brooklyn Daily

New York City’s uncontested best high-school baller is ready for the next step.

Thomas Jefferson’s Shamorie Ponds is embracing his commitment to St. John’s, and he’s starting to show it. The guard’s on-court prowess is no secret — Entertainment and Sports Programming Network named him the nation’s No. 36 recruit, and he’s averaging 28.4 points, 6.7 rebounds, and 5.6 assists per game. Ponds netted a game-high 29 points to help the Orange Wave beat powerhouse Christ the King 68–65 on Feb. 6.

But his post-game demeanor speaks volumes about how he’ll handle playing at the next level. Fans mobbed him after the win over Christ the King, taking pictures and asking for him to sign autographs. He took it all in stride.

“It’s fun, but it could be annoying sometimes, but I just do it,” Ponds said.

Ponds understands what he’s become around New York City. He is willing to handle the responsibly that comes with being the face of high-school basketball in the five boroughs and the face of St. John’s No. 17-ranked recruiting class.

That group recently added German sharpshooter Richard Freudenberg to go along with former Kennedy guard Bashir Ahmed, partial qualifier Marcus LoVett Jr. and Tennessee transfer Tariq Owens — all people Ponds is excited to share the court with.

“That’s some good additions,” Ponds said. “I feel we are going to have a good shot next year.”

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JOE KNOWS: Lincoln, Robeson biggest threats to Brooklyn champ Jefferson

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By Joseph Staszewski

Brooklyn Daily

One potential public Brooklyn high-school basketball finale match-up stands out among the rest — Lincoln versus Jefferson.

Jefferson — and its St. John’s-bound guard Shamorie Ponds — are favorites to repeat as champions. The squad lost just one game in the regular season, with Ponds and Rasheem Dunn sitting out against Abraham Lincoln to rest for the playoffs. It is one of the many reasons an Orange Wave-Lincoln final would pack the championship game at York College.

The game would be a rematch of last year’s final — and a rematch for the Wave’s upset over the Railsplitters in the city semifinals two years ago.

Jefferson coach Lawrence “Bud” Pollard announced after that contest that he was the “big dog” in Brooklyn now. It’s a distinction he upheld since then.

A victory would also be super sweet for Orange Wave assistant coach Kenny Pretlow, who lost to Jefferson as Lincoln’s head coach in last year’s final. A second-straight Orange Wave victory should secure the club the top seed in the citywide playoffs.

For the Railsplitters, it is a chance to reclaim a place atop Kings County and validate its improved play in recent weeks.

Lincoln ended the league season with consecutive wins and knocked off New Jersey power Roselle Catholic 85–74 last weekend behind 31 points from star Caheim Brown and 22 from Tyler Bourne. Morton’s patience has paid off, and the Railsplitters are playing some of their best basketball — just in time for the post season.

Jefferson versus Lincoln is certainly the sexier match-up, but the Railsplitters taking Paul Robeson for a third time would certainly be a juicy game.

The Eagles pose a tough match-up for the smaller Lincoln team. Few squads in the Public School Athletic League have better bigs than the Eagles do. Size cost the Railsplitters two games already this season.

Robeson taking on Lincoln would also present plenty of intrigue. Consider it Duke versus Maryland instead of Duke against North Carolina.

The Eagles have spoken all season about returning the program to its early 2000s greatness with guard Gary Ervin at the point. A trip to the borough final would do that, and a win would shake up the city playoff seeding.

Beating Jefferson to get to the final is certainly realistic for Robeson. The team only fell to the Orange Wave by two points back on Jan. 31 in East New York. It held Ponds to just 22 points.

The road to a city title will be paved this weekend. The most intriguing path is still unfolding — rivals Jefferson and Lincoln clashing again for what could be the third of a possible three meetings this season. But Robeson has a chance to spoil that and write a new chapter in the program’s storied history.

In a topsy-turvy year in the Brooklyn AA division any match-up is possible, but only two teams will make for the most memorable of nights.

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HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS: Everywhere a sign! Brooklyn’s gridiron Goliath’s commit

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By Joseph Staszewski

Brooklyn Daily

They’re all signed up! Brooklyn football players committed to colleges this past week. Here’s a breakdown of which programs will be blessed with which players:

Rutgers

Ahmed Bah (Grand Street, wide receiver)

Stony Brook

Tahriq Gordon (Nazareth, defensive line)

Indiana

Taysir Mack (Grand Street, wide receiver)

North Carolina A&T

Justin Philip (Grand Street, defensive back)

Boston College

Ray Marten (Poly Prep, tight end)

Pittsburgh

Justin Morgan (Poly Prep, offensive line)

Elias Reynolds (Poly Prep, linebacker)

Monmouth

Mahmoud Shabana (Brooklyn Tech, offensive line)

Wagner

Christopher Williams (Lafayette, defensive line)

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STANDING O: Standing O celebrates a whole lotta ice!

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By Joanna DelBuono

Brooklyn Daily

Prospect Lefferts Gardens

Thank you Stop and Shop!

The super grocery emporium at 1009 Flatbush Ave. in Prospect Park South donated $10,000 to the Prospect Park’s LeFrak Center at Lakeside last month to benefit its Recreational Hockey Program. The program teaches approximately 150 Brooklyn children ages 5 to 17 the fundamentals of the sport.

“Youth sports are vital to keeping today’s youngsters active and healthy,” explained Stop and Shop manager TJ McLeod, who presented Shanley Pascal, Recreation Manager at Lakeside, with the generous grant, as members of the team looked on.

Standing O gives Stop and Shop a great big 10, along with a big, yellow “O” for its generosity.

LeFrak Center at Lakeside [171 East Dr. in Prospect Park, in Prospect Lefferts Gardens, (718) 462–0010].

Read Standing O every Thursday on BrooklynDaily.com!

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STANDING O: Standing O is adding interest to this bank opening

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By Joanna DelBuono

Brooklyn Daily

Midwood

Welcome and bienvenue to the newest branch of Investors Bank. The lending institution opened to big hoopla with sweepstakes drawings and mega prizes including a big-screen TV, Apple watches, Kindle Fire tablets, and $1000 Visa gift card. Sheesh! I remember when opening an account got you a toaster.

The bank forged ahead in the neighborhood and formed relationships with non-profits including Council of Jewish Organizations, Masbia Soup Kitchen, and My Extended Family. Each time a customer opens up an account at the Avenue J branch, the bank donates $25 to one of the non-profits.

Manager Steven Shnitman, personal banker Marc Lighter, customer service associate Jean Mouscardy, and Quentin Road manager Michael Blinder were all on hand to congratulate grand-prize winner Jason App on his brand-new, big-screen television.

Standing O says “Congratulations on the win — and welcome to the neighborhood.”

Investors Bank [1201 Avenue J and E. 12th Street in Midwood, (718) 377–0385].

Sunset Park

Reading is fun!

Three cheers to Assemblywoman Nicole Malliotakis (R–Bay Ridge), who shared her love of reading with kindergarten students at the Hellenic Classical Charter School.

“I love to read, so I was thrilled to have the opportunity to spend time with these kindergartners and read this book about the election process,” she said.

During her visit, she read “Grace for President,” which tells the story of a little girl who dreams of being the first woman president. “They were genuinely excited, and I hope my visit helps encourage new readers to explore a variety of books on their own,” Malliotakis said.

Standing O shares the love of a good book with the reading Republican representative, too.

Hellenic Classical Charter School [646 Fifth Ave. and 19th Street in Sunset Park, (718) 499–0957].

Sheepshead Bay

Fighting poverty

Three cheers to Assemblyman Steven Cymbrowitz (D–Sheepshead Bay) on his appointment to the state’s new Anti-Poverty Work Group by Speaker Carl Heastie. He joins with 13 other members to examine the drastic increase of New Yorkers living in poverty and how best to combat the scourge. Factors to be discussed include education, supportive housing, fair labor practices, job training, and shelters and rental assistance.

Assemblyman Cymbrowitz is the chairman of the Aging Committee and has spoken out on this alarming trend.

“According to the 2013 American Community Survey conducted by the United States Census Bureau, approximately one in 10 New Yorkers aged 65 and over are currently living in poverty,” he explained. “Older adults are living longer due to better health and medical advances, but their quality of life can suffer when they need to make difficult sacrifices with severely limited resources. It is imperative that we do more to ensure that seniors’ later years are truly golden ones. I look forward to working with my colleagues to improve efforts to prevent poverty.”

Assemblyman Cymbrowitz’ district office [1800 Sheepshead Bay Rd. between Emmons Avenue and Bay Court, (718) 743-4078].

Windsor Terrace

Mmm mmm good

“Nothing hits the spot on a cold winter’s day like a bowl of piping hot, hearty soup,” says Chef Chris Scott and wife Eugenie Woo, the owners of Brooklyn Commune in Windsor Terrace.

The charitable culinarians will donate a can of soup to the food pantry Beyond Hunger Food Pantry (operated by CAMBA) for every bowl of soup they sell between now and March 20.

What are you waiting for, the soup to get cold? Get slurping.

Brooklyn Commune [601 Greenwood Ave. at Prospect Avenue in Windsor Terrace, (718) 686–1044, www.brooklyncommune.com]

Read Standing O every Thursday on BrooklynDaily.com!

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STANDING O: Standing O is adding up the accolades

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By Joanna DelBuono

Brooklyn Daily

Bay Ridge

Budding Aristotle!

Forget those Venn diagrams, no need for a calculator!

St. Anselm Academy’s fifth grader James Schmidt wowed the crowd and ciphered faster than an abacus to win the math bee challenge, as part of Catholic School’s Week.

Teacher Janet Batista organized the bee that had third, fourth, and fifth graders vying to be named ace arithmetician.

James easily waded through those complex polynomials, searched for X and found Y, and broke through the wall of the 10th power to be crowned math bee wizard. James will now go on to represent the school in the regional event that will take place later in the year.

Principal James McKeon, director John Quaglione, parents, family, and fellow students were all on hand to cheer James on, and give him high-fives on the victory.

James can now add a Super Standing O to his credits.

St. Anselm Catholic Academy [365 83rd St. at Fourth Avenue in Bay Ridge, (718) 745–7643].

Read Standing O every Thursday on BrooklynDaily.com!

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PROSPECT HEIGHTS: Tour of booty: ‘Love and Lust’ at Brooklyn Museum

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by Carlo Bosticco

Brooklyn Daily

Make a date with the saucy history of Coney Island!

Visitors to the Brooklyn Museum on Feb. 13 and 14 can take a special, tantalizing tour that uncovers the sexy gems of the collection. “Love and Lust in American Art” will pull back the covers on artwork that can heat up the blood, says the tour’s organizer.

“Many of the works would have been considered scandalous for their time,” said curator Connie Choi.

The interactive tour will lead visitors past the sexy sculptures, passionate paintings, and romantic photographs contained in two recent installations: “American Identities” and “Coney Island: a vision of an American Dreamland.” The exhibit on Coney Island, once known as “Sodom by the Sea,” is especially appropriate for a lustful tour, and Choi says that it contains the hottest image in the museum.

“There’s a fragment of a mural from the Spook-a-Rama that shows a red-haired, muscular vixen posing seductively,” said Choi. “She’s a mix of Rosie the Riveter and the pin-up girl. Even though she’s meant to be more disturbing than sexy, the combination of strong and sexy is very sexy.

And the People’s Playground has long been a place where it is okay to bend the rules of propriety.

“For much of its history, Coney Island was popular as a place to mingle with the opposite sex and, perhaps if you were lucky, to find love,” said Choi.

A 1928 New York Times article in the show’s catalog notes: “Statistics are not at hand, but probably more people fall in love at Coney Island than in any other spot in the world.”

The tour takes a peep at the evolution of romance in art, from stuffy Victorians standing apart to modern couples snuggling in the sand.

“Works of art can tell us a lot about the periods in which they were produced and the way people interacted” said Choi. “Since the exhibition is organized chronologically, visitors can see what physical contact between people looked like at various points in time.”

In addition to the stimulation offered by the art, tour guides will engage visitors with a conversational style, encouraging them to contribute with their stories, ideas and questions during the tour. So while the tour makes a great date for couples, singles might take the opportunity to chat with like-minded art lover on the tour — and take some inspiration from the images on display.

“Love and Lust in American Art Gallery Tour” at the Brooklyn Museum’s Rubin Lobby, First floor (200 Eastern Pkwy.between Washington and Flatbush avenues in Prospect Heights, (718) 638–5000, www.brooklynmuseum.org). Feb. 13 and 14 at 1 pm. Free with $16 suggested museum admission.

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PARK SLOPE: Slice of heaven: ‘Pizza Project’ documents endangered local shops

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By Lauren Gill

Brooklyn Daily

They finally shot their piece of the pie!

Five Brooklyn pizza enthusiasts showcase the city’s mom-and-pop pizza shops with a book and exhibit of photos, opening in Park Slope on Feb. 13. One of the goals of the “New York City Pizza Project,” which was published as a coffee-table book in September, is to bring attention to a local pizza scene that is threatened by an onslaught of Domino’s and Papa John’s, says one of the photographers.

“The landscape of what was mom-and-pop pizzerias is changing and there’s a heavy wave of chain stores moving in,” said Nick Johnson, who lives in Cobble Hill.

He and his four pizza-loving friends spent five years photographing and interviewing owners and eaters at more than 100 pizzerias all over the city. The group had strict rules about which places qualified — they stuck to simple slice joints, eliminating spots that only serve full pies. They also steered clear of 99-cent spots and anything that seemed like “hipster pizza” — two forms that they fear are taking over New York’s pizza scene.

“The places that we are focusing on are kind of being squeezed out by the low-end 99-cent pizza and the high-end pie joints,” said Johnson.

They also correctly rejected any place that focused on Chicago-style “pizza.”

“A lot of people would not even consider Chicago-style as pizza,” said Johnson. “They say it’s like a pie or a cake.”

One of the most memorable stories in the book is Johnny’s Pizza, on Fifth Avenue in Sunset Park, which proved it could stand up to big-name competitors after at Papa John’s outpost moved in next door in 2007. The pizza joint implemented an online ordering system to keep up with the commercial pie slinger.

“He made it his mission to match them and fight them and it’s been really successful,” Johnson recalled.

Brooklyn has the strongest pizza scene in the city due to its large Italian presence, he said, with L&B Spumoni Gardens in Gravesend, and Lenny’s in Bensonhurst serving up especially classic slices.

The worst slice in New York comes from mall chain Sbarro, said Johnson, and his favorite place is Caruso’s in Cobble Hill. But the best pizza joint is in the mouth of the beholder.

“The best pizza is what tastes like home,” he said. “It’s really whatever is familiar to you.”

“New York City Pizza Project” at Powerhouse on Eighth [1111 Eighth Ave. at 11th Street in Park Slope, www.powerhouseon8th.com]. Feb. 13 at 4 pm. Free.

Reach reporter Lauren Gill at lgill@cnglocal.com or by calling (718) 260–2511. Follow her on Twitter @laurenk_gill

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BENSONHURST: Serial killer convicted

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By Dennis Lynch

Brooklyn Daily

A 67-year-old Bensonhurst native murdered three Brooklyn shopkeepers in cold blood over the course of five months in 2012, a jury found on Feb. 10.

Salvatore Perrone’s spree started in August of 2012, when he shot and killed 65-year-old Mohamed Gebeli in his Fifth Avenue store in Bay Ridge. A month later Perrone shot 59-year-old Isaac Kadare in the head and slit his throat inside his Bensonhurst dollar store. In November that year, he murdered 78-year-old Rahmatollah Vahidipour in his Flatbush boutique.

Perrone, who lived on Staten Island at the time of the murders, tried to conceal all three of his victims’ bodies under clothes and other items from their stores, police said.

Police caught up with Perrone after they released a photo of him carrying a duffle bag near a victim’s shop.

They found the bag containing the .22-caliber rifle and the knife he used to murder his victims in his girlfriend’s Midwood home, according to the New York Times. An overwhelming amount of genetic evidence, cell phone records, and surveillance videos linked him to the murders, the district attorney’s office said.

He will be sentenced on March 4, and faces 75 years to life in prison, officials said.

Reach reporter Dennis Lynch at (718) 260–2508 or e-mail him at dlynch@cnglocal.com.

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FLATLANDS: House of the crammed: City must raze Flatlands hoarder home, neighbors say

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By Colin Mixson

Brooklyn Daily

Talk about a full house!

The city must intervene and raze a Flatlands house that is so packed to the rafters with garbage that the junk spills out onto the sidewalk, neighbors say. The Department of Buildings issued a vacate order on the Avenue L home between E. 54th and E. 55th streets in 2014, but the owner hasn’t complied, and area residents are demanding action.

“It’s gotta be demolished — it’s gotta be cleaned up,” said Larry Feigenbaum, who lives down the block. “They put a vacate notice on that gate. Less than 30 days later, the g------ signs were covered up and gone, and [the owner is] back, and he didn’t give a s---.”

John DePietro owns the property. He admitted that a hoarding obsession compels him and claimed he is planning an April spring cleaning.

“It’s something we’re going to straighten up, because it controls me,” he said. “I allowed it and it’s nothing but garbage.”

But locals say that DePietro is anything but apologetic. He hid from city enforcers when the city issued the 2014 vacate order, only to emerge once they’d left and, in a bizarre fit of spite, placed a caged opossum atop his car and drove around the block blaring his car horn, Feigenbaum claimed.

“A half hour after the city pulled their cars out of here, he was driving around with that cage on the top of his car beeping his horn, harassing everyone on this block,” he said.

DePietro has more than $18,000 in outstanding city fines for the dangerous property’s condition, city records show.

And the house may be full of more than junk — the city demolished a Staten Island home DePietro owned in 2007 and found it was “packed with debris and combustible propane and gas tanks,” the bucolic borough’s paper of record reported.

DePietro doesn’t inhabit the Avenue L house — rather he lives in a trailer perpetually parked around the corner on E. 55th Street, neighbors say. He defecates onto the street, flushing his feces into a nearby storm drain, Feigenbaum claimed. A garage behind DePietro’s house literally bulges under the weight of junk inside, and its partially collapsed roof reveals rodent infestations amidst the piles of refuse, junk, and antiques, neighbors said.

The Department of Buildings has not received any complaints on the property since September 2014, and it will only demolish the house if it’s in danger of collapse, according to spokesman for the agency.

Another neighbor who described DePietro as an eccentric millionaire and “like a godfather” defended the man, claiming DePietro is quick to lend a neighbor a shovel or a handyman spare parts, but admitted the man’s compulsion is unmatched.

“He’s probably the biggest hoarder in America,” said Donald Valentino who has known DePietro for 25 years. “I kid you not.”

Reach reporter Colin Mixson at cmixson@cnglocal.com or by calling (718) 260-4505.

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A BRITISHER’S VIEW: Love is color blind, and conquers all — in true Valentine’s Day fashion

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By Shavana Abruzzo

Brooklyn Daily

Every day is Valentine’s Day for Brooklyn sweethearts Katherine and Ali Khatari.

The Bay Ridge couple — she’s a former Irish Catholic from Flatlands, he’s a Muslim-American from Yemen — are living proof that love is color blind, and if nurtured properly can grow into an oak.

The Khataris have been married for 37 years and have six children — the fruits of a sweet union many predicted wouldn’t last: Anisa and Zachary are Board of Elections employees, Samira is a stay-home mom, Alia is an Administration of Children’s Services’ worker, Ali is an after-school teacher, and Yahya is a probie fireman, following proudly in the footsteps of his legendary great-uncle, Jack Pritchard — “the most decorated firefighter in FDNY history” and star of History Channel’s “Hardcore Heroes.”

Katherine and Ali are grandparents five times over — “number six is coming” — but they still dig each other like a pair of love-struck teens.

“My husband is my breath,” says Katherine, 53, an award-winning civic activist and a community liaison for the Brooklyn district attorney’s office.

“My wife is my sweetheart,” returns Ali, 73, a retired business owner, before his missus quips mischievously, “I thought he was gonna say I’m his pain in the a--!”

The pair met when Katherine lived above Ali’s family candy store. They married in 1979, in a simple Muslim ceremony their families did not attend.

“It was just me and my husband, and a friend of his,” she says. “It was a lonely day.”

The couple made it legal in 1986, after a relative told Ali that Katherine’s family would get to decide her final resting place if she died.

“I was very upset,” he says. “I told my wife we need to get married in a civil ceremony, so we get to be together forever.”

Katherine rewarded her hubby’s devotion by converting to Islam. She was renamed “Warda” (Arabic for rose), although Ali still calls her Kathy.

Nearly 40 years later, the couple cannot understand the prejudice sceptics continue to heap on their everlasting love.

“We don’t see ourselves as anything other than two human beings who love each other,” they say. “Not race, not religion, but as a man and a women.”

The Khataris continue to have the last laugh: They will celebrate Valentine’s Day on Sunday — as they do every holiday — with the big, loving family their awesome alliance has created.

“We’re going to have a nice roast beef dinner,” says Katherine. “There’ll be a huge box of chocolates, and about 15 smaller boxes for the grandkids and their moms.”

The sumptuous shindig will be an eloquent endorsement of their marriage made in heaven.

Follow me on Twitter @BritShavana

Read Shavana Abruzzo's column every Friday on BrooklynDaily.com. E-mail here at sabruzzo@cnglocal.com.

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PARK SLOPE: It’s a ho-down!: Country comedy duo Reformed Whores plays around

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By Colin Mixson

Brooklyn Daily

These girls put the “O” in country!

Brooklyn’s sauciest country comedy crooners, the music duo Reformed Whores, will tell jokes and sing risque tunes at a pair of upcoming shows on Feb. 14 and 15. The droll dames from Dixie will play songs about sex and bad romance at “The Rejection Show’s Heartbreak Haven” at Littlefield on Valentine’s Day, and then host a music video-release party at Union Hall on Feb. 15 for their new song “Eating Out.”

“You can guess what that one’s about,” said Marie Anderson, a Fort Greene resident who sings and plays ukulele for Reformed Whores.

The night will also offer a sneak peek at the band’s upcoming second album “Don’t Beat Around the Bush,” subtitled “Songs that Hit the Spot.” At the release party, the pair will preview some of the new songs, including “Hump-A-Lot Bear,” “Willy for a Day,” and “Whorny.”

Anderson, a Nashville native, and bandmate Katy Frame, who hails from Maryland and now lives in Greenpoint, met five years ago at a mutual friend’s birthday party in New York City. The then-aspiring actresses decided to form a band after learning of their shared musical interests, said Anderson.

“Katy said, ‘I play the accordion,’ and I said, ‘I play the ukulele,’ and we said, ‘Let’s start a band!’ ” Anderson recalled.

The girls, who were inspired in equal part by country legend Dolly Parton and Jack Black’s rock-comedy project Tenacious D, did not set out to start a comedy band, but found it was more fun to roast their love lives than mourn them, according to Frame.

“We really fell into the comedy music thing ass-backwards,” she said. “We were inspired by our pathetic love lives, and when we started writing about those things, we found it was more fun to make them funny than traumatic and sad.”

The Dixie duo’s on-stage antics include bouts of witty banter between songs, in homage to classic country acts like Parton and June Carter Cash, said Anderson.

“We just loved kind of the parallel between country music and comedy,” said the girl from Nashville. “Country artists are known for having great stage banter, so we’re always telling jokes between songs.”

Reformed Whores play at the Rejection Show Valentine Day’s Heartbreak Heaven at Littlefield 622 Degraw St. between Third and Fourth avenues in Gowanus, www.littlefieldnyc.com). Feb. 14 at 7 pm. $12 ($10 in advance).

Video release party at Union Hall [702 Union St. between Fifth and Sixth avenues in Park Slope, www.unionhallny.com, (718) 638–4400] Feb. 15 at 8 pm. $8 ($6 in advance).

Reach reporter Colin Mixson at cmixson@cnglocal.com or by calling (718) 260-4505.

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BAY RIDGE NIGHTS: Bay Ridge Nights has a brunch date for Valentine’s

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By Dennis Lynch

Brooklyn Daily

No need to leave the neighborhood this Valentine’s Day!

On this weekend of romance, Bay Ridge has some lovely events for all you lovely couples out there.

When Saturday night rolls around, fall in love with the wedding band Head Over Heels at Greenhouse Cafe (7717 Third Ave. between 77th and 78th streets). The eight-piece matrimonial ensemble goes on at 10 pm.

For Valentine’s Day on Sunday, we are sure you need no help from us to find a classy eatery for a traditional romantic dinner. But it is never too early to show someone you love them, so here are some savory options for you and your sweetheart earlier in the day.

An unlimited supply of mimosas and a three-course menu that includes buttermilk pancakes and eggs Benedict makes the brunch at the Greenhouse Café from 11 am to 3 pm the most decadent of local Valentine’s Day fetes.

But there is another packed brunch worth checking out — at the Pearl Room (8201 Third Ave. between 82nd and 93rd streets), starting at noon. For $25 a head you get French toast, sliced steak, home fries, and more.

After brunch you can catch the Brooklyn And Beyond Chamber Ensemble playing a selection of Johann Sebastian Bach at the Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd (7420 Fourth Ave. between 74th street and Bay Ridge Parkway). The ensemble, which goes on at 3 pm, will be classy-ical Valentine’s Day treat.

Love can be cheesy, folks, and that is not always such a bad thing. Starting at 5:30 pm, the Owl’s Head (479 74th St. between Fourth and Fifth avenues) is hosting a four-course cheese meal that will have any fromage-lover loving you. Choose from two fancy grilled cheese sandwiches, gorganzola-stuffed and bacon-wrapped dates, and more cheesy stuff than we can describe. The meal will run you $120 for two people, but it includes a bottle of Mestres Cava, a super-fancy bubbly.

Reach reporter Dennis Lynch at (718) 260–2508 or e-mail him at dlynch@cnglocal.com.

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DYKER HEIGHTS: EXCLUSIVE: Nuns selling Angel Guardian Home

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By Dennis Lynch

Brooklyn Daily

This orphanage is up for adoption!

The Sisters of Mercy are selling Dyker Heights’ sprawling Angel Guardian Home. The nuns, who operated an orphanage there until the 1970s, can’t afford to keep up the city-block-sized campus, but they won’t need alms after the sale, a local pol joked.

“My assumption is that it’s worth a lot of money,” said Assemblyman Peter Abbate (D–Bensonhurst). “Every nun is gonna get a Mercedes. It’s gonna be the richest order around.”

An education advocate didn’t think it was a sin to covet the convent, considering the district is one of the city’s most overcrowded.

“I want that site,” said Laurie Windsor, president of the District 20 Community Education Council. “I’m putting it on my list. That’s a lot — a lot — of seats. I’m sending an e-mail to the [Schools Construction Authority] right when I get home.”

The grounds take up an entire block — roughly the area of three football fields — between 12th and 13th avenues and 63rd and 64th streets. The lot is zoned for rowhouses, and a developer could build up to three stories on the land, city records show.

Abbate added that he will petition the School Construction Authority to look at siting a school, and hopes the giant space will “maintain its purpose as a force of good in the community.”

“If we can get the city to buy it, it would be nice to put a couple of schools there maybe some senior housing in the area,” he said. “We could always use another regular junior high for zoned students and a grammar school.”

The nuns sold a piece of land on the other side of 64th street in 1989, and a developer built row houses there a year later, records show.

The Sisters built Angel Guardian Home in 1899, housing hundreds of children until the 1970s. The campus now houses the offices for the Sisters’ foster care program and a senior center. A Montessori school operated there until recently, Abbate said.

The order, called the Walking Sisters for their on-foot outreach, hung their habits at a Clinton Hill nunnery for more than a century before walking away in 2008 because they needed more than $20 million to fix their iconic-but-crumbling convent.

Reach reporter Dennis Lynch at (718) 260–2508 or e-mail him at dlynch@cnglocal.com.

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BEDFORD-STUYVESANT: War on elder poverty! Struggling seniors focus of Bed-Stuy panel discussion

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By Shavana Abruzzo

Brooklyn Daily

“The cry of the baby was heard across the land” almost nine months to the day after World War II ended — resulting in a massive generation of baby boomers now aging past 65 at a rate of 250,000 a month. And facts show many of them struggle to make ends meet.

“The percentage of seniors living in poverty is staggering,” New York City Department for the Aging Commissioner Donna Corrado told CityLimits magazine in June. “Too many older New Yorkers make difficult choices about purchasing food, medicine, and paying their rent.”

More than 25 million Americans aged 60-plus live at or below the federal poverty level of $29,425 per year for a single person (or $11,770 for a single senior), but Supplemental Security Income provides just $433 each month for the average elder and may be the individual’s only source of income, according to the National Council on Aging.

Retirement security was a major topic at last year’s once-a-decade White House Conference on Aging, but many seniors don’t realize Federal help is available, according to a civic activist at the Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Corporation, which will hold a panel discussion called “New York Seniors and the Rising Food Insecurity Crisis” at Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Plaza on Feb. 23.

“We want to educate them about the possibility of supplementing their income with government subsidies, so they get to keep more dollars in their pockets,” said Blaine Arthur, program manager of social services.

The symposium, which is aimed at seniors whose annual pre-tax income is $23,544, is the result of a partnership between the New York City Department for the Aging and the Aging in New York Fund. Jennifer Goodstein, the President and Publisher of Community News Group — the owner of this publication — will be a guest speaker along with: Caryn Resnick, Deputy Commissioner for the New York City Department for the Aging; Lisa A. Boyd, Chief Operating Officer of the Northeast Brooklyn Housing Development Corporation; Terry Kaelber, Director of Community Engagement Projects at United Neighborhood Houses of New York; Maggie Meehan, Associate Director of Nutrition Education at City Harvest; and Jose Luis Sanchez, Program Manager at Citymeals-on-Wheels.

Workers will pre-screen seniors for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (formerly known as food stamps). The allowance — based on certain financial factors and immigrant status — has been a lifeline for poor Americans for 40 years as the first line of defense against hunger and a powerful tool for improving nutrition among low-income people. Benefits come to the household via electronic debit Electronic Benefit Transfer cards that recipients can use to buy food at more than 246,000 approved retail stores nationwide.

Gotham’s graying

The golden years of New Yorkers could be tarnished ones:

• More foreign-born seniors live here than in any other American city — with one out of every 10 older immigrants in the country calling the Big Apple home, according to the Center for an Urban Future.

• The city’s 60-plus community will equal Chicago’s current population by 2020, increasing the odds that more seniors will struggle to put food on the table and pay their bills, Mayor DeBlasio informed an astonished American Association of Retired Persons forum in December.

Bridging the gap

The first national food stamp program was instituted in 1939 after the Great Depression. Its chief architects were Secretary of Agriculture Henry Wallace and Milo Perkins, the program’s first administrator.

“We got a picture of a gorge with farm surpluses on one cliff and under-nourished city folks with outstretched hands on the other,” Perkins famously said. “Then we set out to find a practical way to build a bridge across that chasm.”

Panel discussion “New York City Seniors and the Rising Food Insecurity Crisis” at Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration Plaza [1368 Fulton St. between New York and Brooklyn avenues in Bedford-Stuyvesant, (212) 602–4460] on Feb. 23 at 3 pm. RSVP by Feb. 20; https://nycseniorsfoodinsecurity.eventbrite.com.

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LETTERS: Sound Off to the Editor

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Brooklyn Daily

To the editor,

For far too long the people and the treasures of the Coney Island peninsula have been undervalued, and have thus been left unprotected. The iconic Coney Island Boardwalk has been the unfortunate recipient of just such treatment. This, in spite of the fact that by virtue of its scenic and historic status, its worldwide fame, and its importance and meaning to both its local communities as well as to all New Yorkers, it is de facto already a treasured New York City landmark. That the Landmarks Preservation Commission should long ago have accorded the Boardwalk the legal landmark status that it so richly deserves seems obvious (“On Board! Council wants Boardwalk landmarked,” online Feb. 8).

That is the powerful message being sent by the virtually unanimous support of the City Council, Public Advocate Letitia James, and other estimable public officials, of the resolution introduced by Councilman Mark Treyger (D–Coney Island) and co-sponsored by Councilman Chaim Deutsch (D–Brighton Beach), imploring the commission to do what is right by this landmark, and grant it the official recognition and protections it deserves.

We are hopeful that with the overwhelming support for landmark status from both the people and their elected representatives, and especially because by every definition of what a landmark is it is so deserving of this appellation, they will finally do what is right for this New York City jewel and for all the citizens of our city.Rob Burstein

The author is president of the Coney-Brighton Boardwalk Alliance.

• • •

To the editor,

I have lived in the Brighton Beach community my entire life. I have spent many hours on the Riegelmann Boardwalk, which runs through my community and Coney Island.

Those hours have given me great pleasure and moments of relaxation, as it has to visitors from outside the community. This facility has become an icon for many. I thus support all efforts to landmark the facility to preserve it for future generations.

William Zucker

Brighton Beach

• • •

To the editor,

The Riegelmann Boardwalk of Brighton Beach and Coney Island is a historic icon, a popular tourist attraction, and a destination for countless New Yorkers, year-round, and especially in the summer. Replacing the wood with concrete and plastic is a travesty. The plastic does not feel comfortable underfoot and is slippery when wet. The concrete sections are unsightly, already cracking, and fared much worse than the wood during Hurricane Sandy.

I urge the Landmarks Preservation Commission to grant the Boardwalk scenic landmark status, to preserve the beauty and functionality of this New York treasure. Rena Rice

Brighton Beach

• • •

To the editor,

Three cheers for our public officials who have come out in support of the resolution introduced by Councilmen Mark Treyger (D–Coney Island) and Chaim Deutsch (D–Brighton Beach), urging the Landmarks Preservation Commission to finally give the Coney Island Boardwalk the landmark status it long ago should have had!

It’s unbelievable that in our city where other far less important entities were granted this status, that such a historically important and useful scenic entity as this is even being discussed or debated by those serving on commission. One has to wonder if the commission’s initial knee-jerk rejection, and now long-delayed reconsideration, has more to do with pressure coming from City Hall on the supposedly objective members that make up this body, than it does to any intensive thought process being required of them to determine that the Boardwalk does indeed meet the definition of a true landmark, and is thus eminently deserving of being accorded that status by them.

It will be interesting to see if they are more interested in preserving true city landmarks or their own positions!Cindy Chalet

Brighton Beach

• • •

To the editor,

I was very pleased to see that our local leaders are fighting to protect our Boardwalk. As a result we now have three of our four local representatives working together in our community’s interests to preserve and protect this borough asset. This leaves only Assemblyman Steven Cymbrowitz (D-Sheepshead Bay) in the unique position of not only not supporting the landmarking effort, which would protect the Boardwalk from further diminishment, but as the person who because of his own political self interest, double-crossed the community by going back on his word to defund the Parks Department’s Boardwalk plan. He has put his energies and state funds toward backing a plan that most of us don’t want, and one that is ruining our Boardwalk.

If any entity in our city and our community is deserving of landmark status, our Coney Island Boardwalk surely is. If Assemblyman Cymbrowitz won’t actively support landmarking and protecting it, the least he can do — if he has any shred of decency left — is to not get in the way of those who are working so hard to do what most in our community want, namely, to preserve and enhance a wood Coney Island Boardwalk free of concrete and plastic!

William Burg

Coney Island

‘Filthy’ Shav

To the editor,

Once again Shavana Abruzzo (“A Britisher’s View”) is trumpeted for verbally attacking Muslims and encouraging violence against American citizens of Arab descent (“Bay Ridge sob mob dishonors MLK,” Jan. 29).

Racism is a disease that kills the mind, the body, and soul. Shavana Abruzzo is a foul-mouthed racist who is morally and ethically bankrupt. Her hate for Muslims, whether they are young, men, or women, good or bad, shows in her filthy writing. Usually I do not engage in such stupid bantering, but Ms. Abruzzo has to be answered in a language that fits her defecating mouth. There is no medicine for this illness, the only cure for her sick mind is to ignore her filth. Promise not to read her column again!

This community paper that we read and enjoy every week is encouraging violence and verbal abuse against your neighbor and your fellow citizens by allowing her to spew her venom. Muslims are accused of every ill deed, whether they are involved or not. She is programmed like a robot to hate Muslims. It is innate hate that is destroying her mental capacity to think rationally and to distinguish between right and wrong, and between truth and lies.

Ms. Abruzzo is British, and for this woman to come to this great land and spread her hate is unacceptable. Muslims were accused of bombing the World Trade Center, yet no one is asking about the white van and the men who were dancing on it. No one is asking about the Urban Moving Company and its involvement in the bombing (google this and read about it). No one is asking why the explosions came from the basements of the towers. No one is asking why tower number seven came down without being touched by the planes. No one is asking about the men who were detained by the FBI and the explosives they found in their van. No one is asking who is the leader of the Islamic State. Google the name Simon Elliot and read about him, who he is and where he came from.

Muslims are an easy target to every criminal and filthy mind. It is sexy to insult Muslims nowadays, and Ms. Abruzzo is enjoying the show. But we have faith in God and in this great nation to treat all its citizens equally. Ms. Abruzzo does not write about issues that benefit the community because she has nothing to give. Her sick mind only focuses on Muslims.

I encourage everyone to read about Islam with an open mind to learn who the Muslims are and what they stand for.M. M. Abdullah

Bay Ridge

Duh-OT

To the editor,

Frank Grassi’s recent letter regarding the Department of Transportation is what myself and other writers to this column have commented on (“DOT screech,” Sound Off to the Editor,” online Feb. 7).

Their main goal for the past two administrations seems to focus on causing as much traffic congestion as possible. Bicycle lanes, traffic-calming islands, lower speed limits, restricting turns, etc.

Oh, and let’s not forget the insipid idea for a Sunset Park-to-Queens trolly, which will remove a lane of parking and traffic along Third Avenue — both sides north and south bound (under the highway) through Downtown into Queens.

Richie Hecht

Bay Ridge

•••

To the editor,

A trolley in our future? Our dear leader, Mayor DeBlasio, is now proposing a new trolley-streetcar line from Queens to Brooklyn. I’m sure it will run as successfully as the trolley going down 42nd Street and the “phantom” Second Avenue subway — originally proposed more than three quarters of a century ago and still pipe dreams.

There have been all too many transportation schemes proposed by government officials, unrealistic and un-funded. Charles Patterson, the former city transit chairman in the early 1950s, commenting on another proposed Second Avenue subway and other new subway line plans, stated that for the money allocated, they would never be able to complete these schemes.

If money were not spent on the existing subway system, this system wouldn’t be worth the price of powder to blow it up! Rather than dump billions of dollars into election year, feel-good planning, why not step back and take care of the crumbling subway infrastructure before that critical transportation link grinds to an unfortunate halt.

Robert W. Lobenstein

Marine Park

‘Gentleman’ Horace

To the editor,

I read with great interest your articles regarding the late Horace Bullard, and his attempts to rebuild Steeplechase Park and the former Loew’s Shore Theater.

The comments, by people whom I know and respect, about “his revenge” and “bitterness” are not the Horace Bullard that I knew. Let me first state that my children are fourth-generation Coney Islanders, my family beginning with my maternal grandfather in 1902.

When Fred Trump was building Trump-Warbasse Houses I founded the Neighborhood Improvement Organization in1964, and by 1968 our group supported his plan to build luxury housing on the Steeplechase site. The Coney Island Chamber of Commerce and the Board of Trades opposed him, and got the elected officials to turn him down. As a co-founder of the Astella Development Corporation we wanted to see Coney’s Amusement area rebuilt, and we saw that opportunity in Horace Bullard.

I met with him many times, and he was a gentlemen’s gentleman. His failure in Coney Island was not racial. It was because he was an “outsider” and the powers to be were not going to let him in on their “turf.” The Bullard family deserves every dollar they can get from their properties.

Ralph Perfetto

Brooklyn

Free therapy

To the editor,

I was very happy to read your article “New and improved rehab therapy” about the speech therapy services offered for seniors at NYU Lutheran (“Standing O,” online Feb. 11).

It sounds like a great program. Since speech therapy can help people at all ages in life, I would like to address a speech therapy issue that could benefit many children in Brooklyn with speech difficulties.

I just want to mention the little-known fact that every child in the U.S. has the right to free speech therapy. This amazing benefit of free speech therapy covers all speech problems and is open to all children, as it is not an entitlement based on family income. The result of federal legislation 42 years ago, the free therapy can begin as early as preschool and run through high school. All children are eligible as it is not an entitlement based on family income. The free therapy covers all speech problems. The best source for parents to gain information on this right to free speech therapy is a brochure entitled “Special Education Law and Children Who Stutter” on the website of the nonprofit Stuttering Foundation (www.stutteringhelp.org). This website also offers many free resources to people who stutter of all ages and there is a Spanish-language version at www.tartamudez.org.

What is sad is that during the heated national debate on national healthcare policy over the last seven years, not once did the media ever make mention of this long-standing gem in our national healthcare policy. The U.S. has by far the best policy in the world for helping children with speech problems, and is a role model for the rest of the world. It is a shame that few people in the U.S. know about this amazing benefit of free speech therapy for all kids.

Ed Herrington

Longmeadow, MA

Tricky Hill

To the editor,

Hillary has to be one of the luckiest people on earth. Could you imagine winning six coin tosses in a row for the Iowa delegates? Wow! What are the odds? She should play the stock market or commodities market. Oh, wait, she did — almost 40 years ago she turned $1,000 into $100,000 in no time, lucky her.

I think she might have flimflammed poor Bernie the Socialist, maybe they used some double-sided coins she supplied them with, in case a coin toss was necessary or maybe he agreed to the old “heads-I win-tails-you-lose” trick. I could just picture her having him pick the cup the little ball was under while she scrambled them around, or the old odd finger trick throwing out the whole hand and telling him that was wild, she wins. Or even the old eenie-meenie-minee-moe trick, and tell him “and out goes you!”

However she did it, I guess we’ll never know — she is a pro.

Cronin Miller

Midwood

‘Bulldoze’ Brownsville

To the editor,

I’ve been living in Brooklyn in and around the Brownsville section for nearly 35 years. This neighborhood is terrible. I’ve heard stories about how many years ago this was a great place to live with some of the best shopping anywhere. Brownsville was a predominately Jewish neighborhood for many years, made up of hard-working, poor residents.

This neighborhood like most others always had a criminal element, but nothing like it is today. This small area — the birthplace of Murder Inc., — is full of public housing that is also full of gangs, drugs, guns, and crime. Young people in this area don’t have much of a chance of living a peaceful or long life. Either the gangs or the drugs will get you at a young age, and hold onto you until you’re either in jail or six feet under.

I wonder what the heck is going on here. Everyday there are gunfights, rapes, robberies, no respect for anyone, especially not for anyone in authority — not for teachers, not for cops, not for neighbors, not for friends, not for family, not even for themselves.

The only thing to do in this area would be to bulldoze it and make a cemetery out of it, as a reminder to everyone around here that the people who lived here killed a neighborhood and everyone in it.

Shanequa Johnson

Crown Heights

Sean Penn-alty

To the editor,

Sean Penn who was never a stranger to controversy really crossed the line meeting with El Chapo. I’m not a lawyer, but this egomaniac had to break some serious laws interviewing probably the biggest drug kingpin on the world, not to mention the thousands of murders and thousands of families destroyed because of his greed and complete disregard for human life. They don’t get much worse than this monster.

I guess Sean Penn would also have met with Osama bin Laden after he killed thousands of innocent people on 9-11, and promised not tell authorities where he could be found so that he could get the interview and movie deal of his life. I guess fame and fortune is more important to El Chapo and “El Pompous Culo” than life itself.

Maureen Parker

Gravesend

STEM ed

To the editor,

I applaud the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in South Korea for taking the steps to promote S.T.E.M. Education to the students in the Far East District in South Korea (“Sparking Engineering Interest in Kids,” Jan. 15).

As educators we are always looking for ways to empower our youth. I came across a wonderful quote by Michael J. Fox that really gives meaning to the word educate: “If a child can’t learn the way we teach, maybe we should teach the way they learn.”

All students learn differently. You have verbal-linguistic, word-smart learners. These students learn best through reading, writing, listening, and speaking. You have the logical-mathematical learners. These students learn best by classifying, categorizing, and thinking abstractly about patterns and numbers. You have the visual-spatial, picture-smart learners that excel at drawing and visualizing things. You have the auditory-musical students that thrive on singing and listening to music. You have the bodily-kinesthetic learners that do extremely well when they work with their hands. You have the interpersonal learners that learn through relating to others and sharing ideas. You have the intrapersonal- intelligent students that work best alone, setting up their own goals. You have the naturalistic learners that love working with nature. These students excel in the sciences and are very passionate about our environment.

Let’s model the success of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and collaborate with its north Atlantic division at Fort Hamilton to help empower Brooklyn students and map out a plan for STEM education initiatives in our local schools. We need outside resources — such as the Office of Naval Research, and the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers — to help explore and discover education leading to successful career opportunities in the army and navy.

Scott Krivitsky

The author is a teacher at PS 188 in Coney island.

English first

To the editor,

Jeez, it is bad enough that whenever I go into stores and into the subway I see all signs in English and Spanish. Now I’m seeing Spanish as first choice for a comic strip’s language, and English is written below the strip in fine print.

Jump Start in the Daily News is the comic I am referring to. What a bummer! Stop this baloney now. Why are you kowtowing to those who refuse to learn English? Do not grovel to non-English speakers, nor be servile to them. Thirty-one states have made English their official language. I’m sorry to say that New York still has not done this.

When I buy an English-language newspaper, and have done so since the 1950s when my dad was a linotype operator at the Daily News, I do not expect — and absolutely object — to seeing a daily cartoon written in Spanish. This upsets me to no end, seeing this as I am eating my breakfast. If this intrusion continues, I will be ending my “lifetime subscription” to New York’s hometown paper. That is a promise. Cross my heart.

The Courier (a weekly and delivered neighborhood newspaper) suits me fine!

Joan Applepie

Mill Basin

Nuke mook

To the editor,

So now it’s the little fat guy with the bad haircut from North Korea trying to shakedown America by pounding his chest like a gorilla to show his strength so he doesn’t have to fight another gorilla. We used to call this “selling woof tickets” when we were kids growing up in Brooklyn — it was all for show.

Obviously President Obama, who is said to be a poker player, probably isn’t a very good one because he can be bluffed over and over again. I doubt Obama ever read Trumps’ book “Art of the Deal” or Sun Tzu’s “The Art of War,” a book written more than 2,000 years ago, and still used today by generals and leaders all over the world. Obama telegraphs his intentions to our enemies, telling them when we are sending troops and when we are leaving, complete with date and time. He traded five hardened terrorists for Bowe Bergdahl, a deserter whom he praised and who is now being court marshaled.

Obama made a deal with the devils of Iran, a country whose mantra is “Death to America,” giving them billions of dollars and withdrawing sanctions so they won’t continue making a nuclear bomb. They went back on their word and broke the agreement before the ink was even dry. So now the little fat guy with the bad haircut is going to see what he can get from Obama, like some other tyrants will certainly be doing soon because they only have about another year before he leaves office. They have to work fast, but they also know that if the new president has some cojones, like a Trump for instance, they will be out of luck.

Let’s not forget Iran held 52 Americans hostage for 444 days during the Carter administration. Jimmy Carter — a good, decent and very intelligent man, but a poor president in many ways — wasn’t respected at all by the Ayatollah of Iran at the time. Yet only hours after Ronald Reagan was sworn in, the hostages were released. Any guess why?

Maybe Trump is pounding his chest with his fists like the others who have been shaking Obama down, and maybe he isn’t, but either way I really don’t think those who bully Obama will try their crap on a Trump.

Peter G. Orsi

Marine Park

Reader wars

To the editor,

In response to J.J. Lauria (“Elliott Kibosh,” Sound Off to the Editor,” Dec. 18, 2015), I proposed sodium pentothal (truth serum) for terrorists and other violent criminals and suspects because I regard America to be very hypocritical in trying to preach and teach justice abroad when we can’t practice it at home.

Are not the members of the Ku Klux Klan — whose ranks included late President Harry Truman, late Sen. Robert Byrd (D-W-Va.), and late Supreme Court Judge Hugo Black — and the American Nazi and Communist parties terrorists? Yet the First Amendment guarantees them the right to speak freely within the confines of reason.

Supreme Court Judge Abe Fortas, who served from 1965 until 1969, was a member of the Community Party, and even his most vocal critics — Sen. Howard Baker (R-Tenn.) and Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.) — did not even bother to bring this issue up during his nomination because he was a hawk on the Vietnam War.

I would also like to point out to J.J. Lauria that if we engage in waterboarding what will our enemies do to our imprisoned soldiers? Remember, what is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.

Elliott Abosh

Brighton Beach

Republi-CONS

To the editor,

How interesting when the Republicans running for president talk about taking back our country. They must have amnesia, since it was our government that signed peace treaties with the Indians, and broke each and every one of them. Then it pushed the Indians out of their lands, making them less then second-class citizens. All the stolen land should be returned to each Indian nation — pronto.

So what is the Republican agenda, besides each one attacking the other candidate? All I hear is how they want to cut every social program. What they seem to want is another war. Since we can’t seem to get out of Iraqi and Afghanistan, why would we want to send more American soldiers in harm’s way? I often wonder if these Republicans would encourage their children to join the military.

In Israel you have two options: military service or community service. Let’s stop this madness of war once and for all, and for once save lives.

Jerry Sattler

Brighton Beach

Gov. Gavone

To the editor,

Republican presidential candidate Gov. Chris Christie showed his true colors when he showed disdain for the young woman in the audience who asked why he wasn’t in New Jersey, but campaigning, while the snowstorm and flooding devastated his state. A lot of people might think Christie’s tough guy talk is cool, but in this case I think a lot of people think he’s a “gavone” — an Italian word for disrespectful and ill mannered.

That lady asked a sensible question and she deserved a reasonable answer. Don’t forget, Chris, you work for the people who your salary. To say to her, “What, do you want me to do go down there with a mop,” is as insulting and sarcastic as Hillary’s comment about wiping her server with “a cloth of something” while smirking.

If Christie wants to be known as the tough guy from “Joyzee,” try it with someone your size — if you can find someone. You just lost any slight chance you ever had of getting elected. The “I was only joking” doesn’t cut it. That’s what bullies say when someone finally stands up to them. You, governor, are a bully.

Peter G. Orsi

Marine Park

Chapter and verse

To the editor,

I am writing to convey my dismay at my treatment at a branch of the Brooklyn Public Library, where I went to replace a lost card. When I attempted to inquire about a new card at a room marked “staff” I was rudely told that I was in a staff work area. Someone vaguely gestured toward a hidden information desk, without standing up. At least four staffers were drinking coffee from large painted mugs.

I am a semi-retired, visually impaired senior citizen who has lived in Sheepshead Bay for 59 years. Two days after my family moved to the neighborhood in 1956, my father took me to the library to show me a place of “learning and safety.” He would be very surprised at the way library consumers are treated there today. When I reached the information desk and asked about renewing my card I was met with blank stares from two staffers. After repeating my question two times I was told to go to the computer behind the desk. A staffer expressed impatience when the computer was slow to reboot. She said she did not have time to hold my hand and said I should “just fill in the blanks and press send.” I asked how long it would take to obtain a new card and she clearly said one to two weeks.

I returned to the library in the given time period to inquire about my card. Two staffers ignored me until I asked to see a supervisor. Within five minutes I had a new card. One of the unnamed staffers asked me why I had waited so long to come back to the library. When I asked the supervisor what she was going to do about the way I was treated, she said she would meet with the staff “sometime in the future.” I returned to the library a few days later to pick up a book for my wife and asked a staffer about the supervisor that I had spoken to. I was told that she was at an all-day meeting. I went back to the library the next day and asked to talk to a supervisor. I was told they were off until the following month.

That Saturday I went to the library to read a newspaper. The supervisor I originally talked with suddenly appeared and asked to speak with me. With her voice raised so that all of my friends and neighbors in the room could hear, she said she hoped that we could be good friends and that I could be a “star” of the library. I told her that I had called the New York City Human Rights commissioner to lodge a complaint for discrimination. She said loudly that was my right. As she continued to talk to me in a raised voice she was joined by two other staffers. I left the library immediately because I felt embarrassed and confronted.

Martin Adelstein

Sheepshead Bay

****LARRY PENNER****

Off-track Andy

To the editor,

There is more to Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s announcement that the Metropolitan Transportation Authority- New York City Transit will increase rehabilitation for subway stations to a state of good repair by 10-percent to 50-percent from originally 20 planned in the proposed 2015-2019 capital plan. The original $34 billion plan announced in Oct. 2014 proposed $448 million for bringing 20 subway stations to a state of good repair. The plan was cut by $6 billion to $28 billion. The MTA Board approved this revision. That was prior to Cuomo’s declaration about increasing the number of stations (or dollars) for New York City Transit’s renewal program. This plan still needs approval by the State Capital Program Review Board. It also requires the State Legislature to find $8 Billion promised by Gov. Cuomo. The City Council must also come up with $2.5 billion to meet commitments made by Mayor Bill DeBlasio to fully fund the capital plan..

If you increase the number of stations, the overall station renewal program would grow by $224 million to $672 million. Just what other transit capital projects and programs would have to be cut to support finding $224 million? Cuomo was silent on this key question.

According to a New York City Citizens Budget Commission report released several months ago, it will take 52 years or until 2067 for all 468 city subway stations to reach a state of good repair. Cuomo’s math just doesn’t add up. He reminds me of the cartoon character Wimpy who famously said, “I’ll gladly pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today.” When the bills become due, taxpayers will end up paying Cuomo’s bill.

Larry Penner

Great Neck. N.Y.

Tarnished Silver

To the editor,

The legacy of former State Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver in the area of transportation leaves much to be desired. Consider the schedule, budget, and the cost for four major transportation projects that he took great pride in promoting.

Washington paid twice with your tax dollars for building the new South Ferry subway station. First, for almost $600 million in 9-11 funding, a second time with more than $300 million in Hurricane Sandy funding to rebuild what was damaged. The downtown Manhattan Fulton Street Transit Center was first paid for with 9-11 funding. Cost overruns of several hundred million were covered by American Recovery Reinvestment Act funding.

Fourteen years after 9-11, the Cortland Street World Trade Center subway station is still several years away from being back in service. If there are no new delays, perhaps the station will reopen by December 2018. Transit officials fought for years over budget, funding sources, scope, and schedule. Construction for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority portion of the project just started a few months ago.

There is no funding in the agency’s propose 2015-2019 capital program to initiate construction for the second segment of the Second Avenue subway, north from 96th Street to 125th Street. It will take several decades and $20 billion more for completion of the next three segments of the Second Avenue subway, north to 125th Street and south to Hanover Square downtown in the financial district. The project was originally proposed in 1929!

Silver claimed to be a friend of both commuters and the 99 percent. In reality, he lived the life style of the one percenters. He frequently traveled around town with a personal driver at taxpayers’ expense. I doubt if he ever purchased a MetroCard or rode the subway, like several million New Yorkers do daily.

Larry Penner

Great Neck, N.Y.

Two-fare drone

To the editor,

The proposal by state Sen. Marty Golden (R-Bay Ridge) to offer two free transfers for those who have to ride two buses before boarding a subway is wishful thinking. People who moved to Bay Ridge, Dyker Heights, Bensonhurst, Marine Park, Gerritsen Beach and Gravesend — areas represented by Golden — knew full well that they would be living in a two-fare (bus to subway) and sometimes three-fare (bus to bus to subway) zone with longer commutes to and from work.

Metropolitan Transportation Authority services continue to be one of the best bargains in town. Since the 1950s, the average cost of riding either the bus, subway or commuter rail has gone up at a lower rate than either the consumer price index or inflation. The MetroCard, introduced in 1996, affords a free transfer between bus and subway. Prior to this, riders had to pay two full fares. Purchasing either a weekly or monthly pass further reduces the cost per ride. Many employers offer transit checks, which pay even more of the costs.

For years, local politicians would stir the pot on this issue. Now the latest cause is the cost for those handful of people out of several million daily riders who have to pay two fares versus one. An overwhelming majority can afford and already purchase either a weekly or monthly unlimited MetroCard, which makes the “double fare” issue moot.

Residents, taxpayers, and commuters in Golden’s district would be better off if he worried more about how the State Legislature will find the $8 billion Gov. Cuomo promised to bridge the $8.3 billion shortfall in the Metropolitan Transportation Authority-proposed $28 billion, five-year capital plan when they reconvene in January.

It all comes down to the availability of increased funding for additional transportation service to serve residents of two fare zones in the outer boroughs. Operating subsidies are required to increase the level of service and reduce the amount of time one waits for a bus on existing routes. Same for adding more off-peak, late night and weekend service.

Larry Penner

Great Neck, N.Y.

MTA delay

To the editor,

No one should be surprised by the recent news from the Metropolitan Transportation Authority that the Second Avenue Subway won’t be open by next December. The agency reminds me of Capt. Renault from “Casablanca” when he said, “I’m shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on!”

Riders who have been waiting since construction restarted in 2007 with an original service date of 2013 may not be able to pick up their “winnings” until 2017 or 2018. The project was originally proposed in 1929!

Larry Penner

Great Neck, N.Y.

****ROBERT LOBENSTEIN*****

Crooked pols

To the editor,

First Shelly, then Skelos, then others. So our dear New York State democratic leader, Shelly Silver, has been convicted on all counts of bribery and other misdeeds of directing clients’ money to his own pockets. Shelly lamented in his defense that it is standard practice by all legislators in Albany to do what he did.

A few months ago the State Senate refused to fund an expansion of jails. It was sad to hear that, as the good citizens of New York are eagerly waiting to hear about the next round of indictments and convictions of crooked politicians who infest Albany. Their next stop should be a few years in this fine state’s overcrowded jails.

Robert W. Lobenstein

Marine Park

Hill-n-Donald

To the editor,

Hillary Clinton was complaining that the Muslim terrorist groups were using Donald Trump for video recruitment purposes. That lie was quickly exposed and Hillary wound up with egg on her face. Then a video surfaced where Muslim terrorists actually were using footage from Trump’s campaign to recruit new terrorists. I wonder how much Hillary paid them to do this?

Robert W. Lobenstein

Marine Park

Pie in the $ky

To the editor,

Our dear Gov. Cuomo has been on a media blitz unveiling grandiose building schemes — rebuilding the old Pennsylvania Station to an almost former glory, expanding the Javits Center to house the world’s largest ballroom and exhibit center, and other fantastic municipal works endeavors.

One thing that was silently spoken about, off camera, was the way the multi-billion-dollar projects will be paid for. Yes, it will be you and I, and our children and future grandchildren, who will be paying off his follies for decades to come. To build any project on time and within budget is a pipe dream, knowing the ineptness of state and city governments. After these clowns leave office, we all will be saddled for years with the debt load created by their schemes.

Maybe most of these plans should be voted down until Albany straightens up its own corrupt financial mess though, as these politicians are busy picking our pockets, I doubt it.

Robert W. Lobenstein

Marine Park

*****ED GREENSPAN****

Get a grip

To the editor,

There is always an excuse for outrageous behavior. As the years have gone by, the new one is that the perpetrator was off their medication. In a recent case, several women were slashed by someone in and out of hospitals for mental illness. Why was he always released after each episode, only to cause additional mayhem? Same thing in school. Any teacher can tell you which of their students will go on to commit crimes. No one bothers to listen to them as children, when they are literally crying out by acting out for help. Instead, we either play their friend or just pass them on.

Since the family of the slasher knew what he was capable of, it was their responsibility that this individual be looked after. That is what families are all about. Don’t throw your problems on society and expect them to clean up the mess.

I just love when they say that the recalcitrant was in the process of getting his or life together. It is time for individual initiative and responsibility for one’s actions to rest on the individual and family members. Sure, many of these recalcitrant people and family receive welfare benefits and therefore they feel that everything is coming to them.

Ed Greenspan

Sheesphead Bay

Classroom sham

To the editor,

Politicians have conveniently ignored the problem of discipline in our schools. The lack of discipline is the major cause for teachers leaving the public school system within five years of starting to teach, or retiring as soon as they are eligible to do so.

No matter how good a teacher you are, you can’t teach without effective discipline and everyone knows that. Discipline problems start as early as kindergarten and with nothing done, the child goes from year to year in elementary school and will only cause havoc. If a parent doesn’t sign for special education placement, the child remains in a regular classroom and the disorder continues. As important as class size is, all you need is for one child to be continuously disruptive and little to no learning results. Years ago the 600- school concept for disruptive children was done away with. At least hard core troublemakers were kept out and sent to alternative settings.

When a disruptive child enters intermediate school (grades 6-8) the situation worsens because the child now has the added freedom of roaming the halls during change of periods. The problem is exacerbated now by principals who never taught a day, but are now rating teachers. If these principals taught they would see directly what is going on and change their attitudes about blaming teachers for everything. No matter how much money you pump into the school system, without discipline, the results will be the same, year after year.

The mayor and schools chancellor should be ashamed for weakening disciplinary codes. Lord only knows what else is covered up on a daily basis. Our deteriorating schools have become schools for scandal. Where is the union? It’s so happy to be out of the classroom that it couldn’t care less. Union officials get in overwhelmingly each time they come up for reelection, and the hierarchy within the union collects double pensions.

Ed Greenspan

Sheepshead Bay

Mitt’s a hit

To the editor,

Given the current crop of Republican presidential candidates for 2016, a new “three Rs” should be in vogue — “Run, Romney, Run.” Millions of voters now realize the mistake that was made in 2012, and many will cross party lines and vote for him. Why not? Richard Nixon came back from defeat in 1960 to win the presidency in 1968.

Ed Greenspan

Sheepshead Bay

Teaching trenches

To the editor,

As Warner Wolfe used to say, “Let’s Go to the Videotape,” when he would want something investigated further. Similarly let’s go to the school records of violent criminals, or better yet, do something with them in their formative years so that they don’t resort to such violence. If you opened the school records, you would see evidence of cutting class, constantly disrupting the class, roaming through the hallways, cursing, screaming, fighting, and causing all sorts of mayhem.

The city’s school system has failed these students and others by their complete refusal to deal with disruptive youth. As a result, the latter become more emboldened with each passing year, and their deviant behavior worsens until an innocent life is lost.

We keep such students in regular classes if the parent refuses to sign for special placement. As a result, chaos results as teachers desperately try to keep order with burgeoning class sizes. When are we going to face this problem head on and not keep sweeping it under the rug? This is not a racist problem. Disruptive pupils come in all races, religions and all backgrounds.

Empty out the regional and district offices and get teachers back in the classroom. We need more psychologists and psychiatrists in the schools. Less suspensions will not solve anything.

So-called staff development is a complete joke and everyone knows it. Let all the militants, ultra liberals and critics of teachers get themselves teacher licenses and get a taste of what it is like in the trenches.

Ed Greenspan

Sheepshead Bay

‘Demagogue’ Donald

To the editor,

It has become apparent to me that Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump would be absolutely perfect in still another remake of the great film, “All the King’s Men.” After all, as demagogue Willie Stark, Broderick Crawford received a well-deserved, best-actor Oscar. Trump could easily pass that, if not do even better in the part. He gives new meaning to the term demagoguery. Hollywood should definitely take notice.

Ed Greenspan

Sheepshead Bay

Pledge allegiance

To the editor,

Of course the Pledge of Allegiance should be recited in schools. As a student of public schools in the 1950s, I remember “the lord is my shepherd” being recited from the Bible in the auditorium until someone finally realized that this was a violation of separation of church and state.

Religion does not belong in our public schools. This means that all symbols representing a religion should not be in the school either. After all, by doing this, we are doing a disservice to those students not of a particular religion, as well as students who are atheists.

Ed Greenspan

Sheepshead Bay

Bernie Panders

To the editor,

Bernie Sanders, what’s so bad about living in a rent-controlled building? You bemoaned that fact about living in such a building in Brooklyn at the last debate.

The rent-controlled buildings on Kings Highway were, and are still, lovely buildings with affordable rents. Ditto for rent stabilization. You’ve been away so long that you probably don’t know that since 1970, if a rent controlled apartment is vacated, it becomes rent stabilized. May the Lord bless rent control and rent stabilization.

At the first sign of any change, you and so many other phony liberals are the first to move out of neighborhoods. Your remark about rent control shows that you’re a landlord’s man. Without rent control or rent stabilization, rents would be over the roof and this would lead to more homeless.

Apparently in Vermont, where you fled to, no such problems of homelessness exist to the degree we’re facing in New York.

Ed Greenspan

Sheepshead Bay

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IT’S ONLY MY OPINION: Stan boosts the sixth borough

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See this story at BrooklynDaily.com.

By Stanley P. Gershbein

Brooklyn Daily

After Winter Storm Jonas paid us an intense, fierce visit, several of my New York friends decided to pack it in, retire, and relocate. Okay — if you can afford to retire, do it and enjoy the rest of your life. Now comes the great big decision: Where do you want to move? Stop to think about all those things you have now that you enjoy so much. Will they have those same things in your new city?

Here, in and around the Big Apple, there is baseball, hockey, football, and basketball. Hmm. Florida has all of that without the snow. New York has Broadway shows. So does Florida. There is a performing arts center in every major Florida city, and if you follow the schedules, you will note that Broadway hits’ first road companies make their way down south. The best restaurants? Every major chain is represented. Shopping? A mere mention of the word to any gal that ever visited Florida will bring a super-sized grin to her face.

WalletHub, a personal finance website, ranked all 50 states and the District of Columbia in terms of quality of life and healthcare for retirees. The study covered cost of living, quality of drinking water, crime, taxation, the number of cultural insitutions, and affordability. The Sunshine State came in first. Right now, residents of Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and Orlando are marching around the breakfast table chanting, “We’re No. 1! We’re No. 1!”

• • •

Many, many years ago — when I was just a little boy — my mother took me to the local super market… Stop! When I was a very young child, there were no supermarkets. There were grocery stores of all sizes, and in Brownsville, where I grew up, there was one grocery store located on almost every intersection.

We were there in a grocery store on Riverdale Avenue when she picked up a bottle of milk and asked me to select a breakfast cereal. I looked at the assortment, and I don’t think there were more than five or six. I remember Kix, Cheerios, Wheaties, Corn Flakes, and there was one that was, according to the commercial on radio, “shot from guns.” How the heck could they ever make a cereal by shooting it out of a gun? I don’t know, but I do know that one could find the answers to almost everything by Googling a question.

Only folks older than me could possibly remember Quaker Puffed Wheat and Puffed Rice. I vaguely remember the ice box, air raids, the rumble seat, running boards, and five breakfast cereals. This morning, I wandered down an entire aisle of breakfast cereals and, not including the various sizes, I counted 161 different brands of cold breakfast cereals. Wow. Picture a youngster today having to make a decision of which brand he wants to eat. More important (to the mommies) which brand that is the healthiest?

• • •

Which takes precedent, political friends with influence or the rule of law? Ask that at your next cocktail party and throw Hillary Clinton and her e-mails into the mix. You’ll have a discussion that will last all night.

This is the most interesting and exciting presidential race — for Republicans and Democrats — that I have ever seen in my entire life. Do you think the Federal Bureau of Investigation should tie up the Clinton e-mails once and for all, despite the White House’s interference? I am StanGershbein@Bellsouth.net saying, I hope so. The Lying Queen does not deserve the presidency. I am not crazy about his politics, but I prefer to see Col. Sanders prevail over her. At least he’s honest.

Read Stan Gershbein's column every Monday on BrooklynDaily.com.

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