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STANDING O: Standing O is at it again!

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By Joanna DelBuono

Brooklyn Daily

Sheepshead Bay

Congratulations to the members of the Challenger Program at St. Mark’s Church on completing 16 successful seasons of basketball. The group of 40 local men and women is affiliated with the Special Olympics program, and meets each week to enjoy the game they love. The final game was held with season closing ceremonies and breakfast on March 20 at the church. Trophies were handed out at the game that was refereed by Pythians Craig Kligfeld and Barry Resnick.

Jim Bahan from St. Mark Church has headed the program for many years. The Knights of Pythias, who have sponsored the group for many years, provided the players and coaches with T-shirts.

Standing O wishes the group many more years of b-ball.

St. Mark’s Church [2609 E. 19th St, and Ocean Avenue in Sheepshead Bay, (718) 891–3100].

Borough Wide

Weaving a new web

Congrats to Aviator Sports and Events Center on the launch of its new and improved website. The revamped Aviatorsports.com was created in conjunction with Synapse Marketing Solutions — with customer experience firmly in mind. The site integrates advanced search and navigation components which allow visitors to find exactly what they are looking for, faster and more efficiently, say Aviator bigs. Whoo hoo!

“As we entered into our 10th year in operation, it was essential to be able to provide our customers with a functional method of interacting with us online,” said Dean Rivera, chief operating officer. “This new website is exactly what we had in mind.”

Robert Deraco, chief executive officer of Synapse Marketing Solutions, was “very happy” to have been able to take on this project with the Aviator team.

“It has been an exciting journey, and we are happy to have been a part of it,” he said.

The site will be updated on a regular basis with special events, news, and program additions and changes. The new Aviator Score Box will be updated accordingly, allowing families to follow Aviator’s in-house and travel leagues. The launch coincides with Aviator’s 10th anniversary, and will be a key marketing asset in forwarding various promotions and offers throughout the year.

Check out the new and improved website at AviatorSports.com.

Park Slope

Save the date

New York Methodist Hospital is hosting its third annual evening for women’s health on April 7, from 6 to 8:30 pm at the hospital’s main building. This year’s theme is Thrive!

The evening will combine Brooklyn-worthy fun, including wine tasting, door prizes, mini-massages, acupuncture, light bites from local eateries, health information, and screenings. Presenters include Dr. Stephen Peterson and Registered Nurse Karen Kupinski.

Thrive! is open to attendees 21 and older. Tickets are $15 in advance or $20 at the door. Tickets may be purchased at www.nym.org/thriveevent or by calling (855) NYM–WELL.

New York Methodist Hospital (506 Sixth St. at Seventh Avenue in Park Slope).

sunset park

Dance the night away

The 2016 New York University Lutheran Annual Dinner Dance on April 6 celebrates its 133rd anniversary and will benefit Lutheran’s Emergency Department.

Honorees include Carla Solomon, trustee, New York University Langone Health System, and New York University Lutheran Advisory Board; Antonio Magliocco, president, Bulldog Ventures LTD; and Claudia Lyon, section chief of Family Medicine, for her 23 years of service and dedication to the New York University Lutheran family.

The gala — on April 6, from 6 to 11 pm — is at Chelsea Piers, Pier 60, in Manhattan.

NYU Lutheran Medical Center [150 55th St. and First Avenue in Sunset Park, (718) 630–7000].

Read Standing O every Thursday on BrooklynDaily.com!

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MARINE PARK: Wheely big winner! Marine Parker wins ‘Wheel of Fortune’

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By Julianne Cuba

Brooklyn Daily

He spun — and won!

Marine Parker Matthew Epstein won a whopping $16,500 representing Brooklyn College on “Wheel of Fortune” on an episode that aired on March 29. Pat Sajak and crew taped the edition of “America’s Game” last month, but they put Epstein under a gag order until the show aired. Keeping his lips sealed about the win was definitely a challenge — especially because classmates and family members would badger Epstein to spill the beans — but the secret was worth keeping, because he got to see everyone’s faces when they found out, he said.

“It was incredibly difficult keeping it a secret, because I would have people asking me every day,” Epstein said. “But it would have ruined the surprise. It was incredibly exciting, we had a viewing party. Everybody was just screaming and going crazy.”

Epstein’s mom Robin Sherman-Epstein is incredibly proud of her son’s big win, and even more so that he said the alphabet backwards in less than five seconds during the show’s introduction — something Epstein has been doing since he was in preschool, she said.

“I noticed he showed off in the beginning,” she said. “That was terrific. I was like ‘Oh my god!’ ”

Epstein hasn’t decided what he will spend the money on — right now he’s balancing going buck wild and practicality.

“Definitely a few impulse buys, but not entirely sure yet,” Epstein said. “For the most part, I’m going to try to save it up, as lame as that sounds.”

Reach reporter Julianne Cuba at (718) 260–4577 or by e-mail at jcuba@cnglocal.com. Follow her on Twitter @julcuba.

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HEALTH: On the cutting edge: Blood-clotting gel wunderkind moving company to high-tech Industry City

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By Dennis Lynch

Brooklyn Daily

They’ve got a prescription for success!

Brooklyn biotech firm Suneris and its prodigy founder are moving into a huge space at Industry City in Sunset Park later this year so the company can adapt a revolutionary blood-clotting gel that had veterinarians gushing last year for use in humans. Researchers’ Park Slope digs were just too small to keep up with demand for the liquid tourniquet, so the company had to move to a cutting-edge facility where it could really up its production flow, the 23-year-old founder said.

“This new building will let us build the capacity to supply the animal health market — the need was too great for what we could produce, we would have been constantly sold out,” said Joe Landolina of Brooklyn Heights, who developed the gel right here in Brooklyn as a masters student at New York University Polytechnical School of Engineering Downtown.

Suneris inked a lease for a chunk of Industry City slightly bigger than two professional basketball courts and is planning to more than double that space in the future. At the end of the day, Landolina is looking at a space 10 times the size of Suneris’ current office in Park Slope. The firm currently employs 30 people but the new space can accommodate up to 150 employees, and Landolina plans on bringing in some fresh blood, he said.

Suneris’s meteoric rise was like a rush of blood to the head, Landolina said.

“It’s an odd feeling to see it go from just a few of us working in a library into something that’s more like the pharma standard — nice facilities to put out the best-quality product,” he said.

Landolina’s product, called Vetigel, can stop traumatic bleeding in pets in under 12 seconds. It is currently only approved for use on animals, but Landolina aims to bring it into the human sphere. Facilities for people-grade Vetigel should be built out by the end of this year, and Landolina hopes to have a product approved by the Federal Drug Administration within two years, he said.

Next, the medical whiz kid will secure a new injection of cash for the company and will look to hire more biomedical talent to flesh out the team, which has Landolina more in the company of architects and lawyers rather than test tubes and syringes lately, but he’s enjoying the entrepreneurial side of things as well, he said.

“I’m enjoying building the team, it’s a lot more fun that I thought it would be,” he said.

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

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HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS: Poly focused on reclaiming state crown

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By Joseph Staszewski

Brooklyn Daily

Poly Prep’s baseball team is putting the disappointment of last season as far behind it as it can.

Speaking about the first-round playoff loss that ended its quest for a fourth-straight private school state title is verboten. The only talk is about what this year’s team needs to do to bring the championship back.

“I think it motivates them, but they don’t talk about it,” Blue Devils baseball coach Matt Roventini said. “I don’t think we need to talk about it. We know it’s there.”

Poly is also fully aware it again has the ingredients it used to string crowns together. The Blue Devils feature three shutdown arms at the top of a deep group of pitchers. Louisiana State University commit Nick Storz is already throwing in the low 90s early in the season and will look to build off a year where he went 3–1 with 52 strikeouts in 33 innings. Storz, who will also play right field, is looking to further harness his control will rely on more than just speed to get the ball by batters.

“It’s definitely slowing the game down and getting back to the mechanics,” he said. “Sometimes you try to overpower hitters when you can take it easy and pinpoint locations.”

Sophomore Oliver McCarthy, who stands 6-foot-3, has emerged as the team’s No. 2 starter. He was consistently at in the low to middle 80s while the team was down in North Carolina.

Senior Tyler Wincig, who is headed to Bucknell, is back on the mound after elbow trouble last season. Dylan Martinelli and Henry Smith fill out the staff.

“Those guys throw strikes,” said senior third baseman Daniel Baskst. “They have good pitches, and they move. They keep the ball in play. They don’t keep us stale out there. It’s fun to play behind them.”

The pitcher will have the support of a veteran infield defense led by Baskst at third and Anthony Prato, who is dealing with a hamstring injury, at short. Prato is arguably the best at his position in the five boroughs. Wincig is at second, McCarthy is at first and junior Freddy Reichlt is the starting catcher.

Poly will have to fill a hole in centerfield after Pat DeMarco transferred. Junior Travis Zurita takes over for him and Ethan Wallace. Chris Cannizzaro will also see time in the outfield.

Roventi is counting on Prato and Wincig at the top of the order — but he’s also leaning on the guys at the bottom to set the table for Storz, Basket, Chris Klein, and Angelo D’Acunto in the middle.

Bakset, who is committed to Stanford, had a breakout season as a junior. He hit .346 with 22 runs batted in, 20 runs, and a .596 slugging percentage. He is expected to build off it after a strong summer.

“This season he is going to have a monster year,” Storz said.

The Blue Devils hope the same can be said by season’s end — when they plan to hoist the championship trophy yet again.

“Our pitching depth is there,” Storz said. “Our hitting is there. Our defense is there. Everything is going to click for us this season.”

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A BRITISHER’S VIEW: Brussels aftermath? Muslims must reform their culture and religion

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By Shavana Abruzzo

Brooklyn Daily

Radical Islamo-bastards killed more than 30 people and wounded hundreds more in three separate explosions in Brussels last week — in addition to carrying out 116 attacks and 22 suicide blasts in 23 countries, resulting in 1,161 deaths and 1,821 injuries, in the past month alone, documents TheReligionOfPeace.com.

But Muslims are the ones grumbling about an alleged backlash, and grousing about living in fear, suspicion, and harassment. Give over, already.

Vulnerable Westerners are the chronic victims of Islamo-resentments. They are also humanity champs for meeting each new barbarity — now as sure as clockwork — with renewed allegiance to their Muslim compatriots, who respond with howls of unsubstantiated Islamophobia and lukewarm condemnation for the terrorists.

And so the sick cycle continues:

• Islamo-excrebles wage jihad against the West.

• Western Muslims play martyr and deflect blame.

• Non-Muslims call for unity for fear of being branded bigots.

The Brussels terrorists, like their worldwide peers, schemed and detonated their deadly plots under the noses of so-called moderate Muslims, whose pleas of ignorance are wearing thin. If these Muslims were at all interested in eradicating radical Islam they would seek community surveillance, police their own neighborhoods, and infiltrate terrorist lairs through organized search-and-destroy missions.

But no end to the mayhem is in sight, until Muslims — devoted to their religious identity above all else — clear the cobwebs off Islam and start a public conversation about why so many believers are lovin’ terrorism. A great starting point would be the realization that freedom is a birthright that Muslims have historically denied themselves and others, to the detriment of one and all.

Short of an Islamo-epiphany, expect more terror and turmoil, as projectors predict the global Muslim population will increase to 2.2 billion by 2030. Until then history continues to document the ugly Islamo-compulsion to dismantle free societies. The reason? An unyielding submission to a religion that has sacrificed progress and human relations along its spiritual journey, its heart beating in the trenches of an everlasting global holy war to restore the Muslim caliphate above all else.

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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CARROLL GARDENS: Ripple F-ect: MTA must add more trains if it brings back F express, riders say

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By Lauren Gill

Brooklyn Daily

Tangerine, she is folly they claim.

Brownstone Brooklynites living along the tangerine-colored F line will not support a push to reintroduce express service unless the cash-strapped Metropolitan Transportation Authority increases service along route, say commuters who use stations the train would skip as it jets between Coney Island and Manhattan.

“I would be in favor of the express if there was an increase in trains,” said Erika Chiu, who lives in Carroll Gardens and uses Carroll Street station — which the express would pass by — to get to Manhattan. “If not, it would kind of suck.”

A former transportation authority bookkeeper says the publicly-funded agency doesn’t have the money to add more trains to the line, though, so F riders who don’t live along express stops will be left waiting as the orange bullet whizzes by.

The F express used to quickly shuttle Brooklynites between Coney Island and Manhattan, skipping stops in brownstone Brooklyn except Bergen Street in Cobble Hill and Seventh Avenue in Park Slope, but the authority cut it more than 30 years ago to save money.

Now the transportation authority is considering bringing back the rapid ride to and from the People’s Playground. It completed a study on reviving the service last year but is refusing to release the paper until its president signs off on it.

Supporters of the F express argue it will relieve congestion during peak hours when trains — which run every four to six minutes — are so crowded that many straphangers can’t get on and are forced to wait for other trains to arrive.

Councilman Brad Lander (D–Cobble Hill) said he’s in favor of the F express as long as the transportation authority adds more trains along the line, but a rep refused to comment on whether he would offer his support to speedy service sans more trains, dismissing it as a hypothetical he did not want to get into.

Another Carroll Gardens resident who has worked to bring back the F express said the entire service’s success depends on adding more trains to the line.

“The key to it is you need to increase the level of service to make it work,” said rider and Community Board 6 member Gary Reilly, who catches the subway at Carroll Street and once campaigned for the area’s City Council seat advocating for the F express. “You have to make sure you maintain a level of service and people are not going to see the service suffer.”

A rep for the transportation authority refused to comment on the F express route and if it would add more trains to the service, but said it will have more information on the logistics of the service in the near future.

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

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BAY RIDGE NIGHTS: Bay Ridge Nights is staying home

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By Dennis Lynch

Brooklyn Daily

Nothing to do this week. Sorry.

We looked for some fun activities in Bay Ridge this weekend, but there is nothing worth doing. Instead, we will use the rest of this column to list the reasons to move out of the Ridge — maybe to New Jersey, where all the action really is. April Fool’s!

Yeah, there is plenty of stuff happening in the Ridge, as always. Start your weekend with a double-decker party on Friday night with Full Disclosure and Gary Weiss at Greenhouse Cafe (7717 Third Ave. between 77th and 78th streets). This is not one to be missed — the Full Disclosure frontwoman Cathy Lau Hunt and Gary Weiss are both celebrating birthdays tonight — and that’s no April Fool’s joke.

The next afternoon, treat yourself to the 4 pm show at Red, White, and Brew (8910 Fifth Ave. between 89th and 90th streets) with Staten Island’s Dusk To Dawn, led by vocalist Dawn Sansevero.

Then you can rock out and do some good for your community by heading to Three Jolly Pigeons (6802 Third Ave. at 68th Street). Nine local bands will play from 8:30 pm until 1 am, and they will be passing the hat to raise money for amputee kids and their families to attend Camp No Limits, which helps the tykes to cope with their injuries and develop a healthy and happy lifestyle.

And the late night nod goes to Wine With Sue, who come all the way from beautiful Rockaway Beach to lay down some “party rock” covers at the Wicked Monk (9510 Third Ave. between 95th and 96th streets). The pole-vaulting, drinking, and dog-racing enthusiasts go on at 11 pm and refuse to leave the stage until 3 am.

The Irish had their big day last month, but now it is time for the Welsh to have a turn. Longbow Pub and Pantry (7316 Third Ave. between 73rd and 74th streets), Brooklyn’s only Welsh bar, will host the second night of Welsh Trivia Cup New York on April 5 at 7 pm (the first night is in Queens, which no one care about). So you think you know Wales, you apparently existent Brooklyn Welsh population? Prove it on Tuesday, when the Welsh tourism board gives prizes to those who can answer their toughest questions. Pob lwc!

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

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BOOKS: What to read this week

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Brooklyn Daily

Word’s pick: “All Tomorrow’s Parties” by Rob Spillman

Spillman’s memoir is about the desire to seek out the unexpected, the dangerous, perhaps even the destructive, to find out what it means to live “for art.” Rob is a child crossing into East Berlin with his father, illegal Western currency tucked in his sock. Rob is a young man living on a heroin block of the East Village with his girlfriend Elissa. Rob and Elissa are drinking absinthe in Portugal and writing their great expatriate novels. It all leads to the liminal moment in history after the collapse of the Berlin wall, but before reunification proper. “All Tomorrow’s Parties” shows East Berlin in anarchy — riot police and skinheads and all — and a young writer finding his way back home.

— Michelle Chen, Word [126 Franklin St. at Milton Street in Greenpoint, (718) 383–0096, www.wordbrooklyn.com].

Community Bookstore’s pick: “Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up to Me” by Richard Farina

Published just two days before his death, Richard Farina’s only novel is a 1960s classic worth a 21st-century read. The protagonist, Gnossos Pappadopoulis, just wants to quit the scene and go way out, but continually finds himself involved in politics. Although the book is a product of the ’60s, Farina’s ecstatic prose allows an apathetic modern reader to tune in and drop out. If you don’t trust me, listen to Thomas Pynchon, who describes the book as “coming on like the Hallelujah Chorus done by 200 kazoo players with perfect pitch … hilarious, chilling, sexy, profound, maniacal, beautiful and outrageous all at the same time.”

— Sam Jaffe Goldstein, Community Bookstore [43 Seventh Ave. between Carroll Street and Garfield Place in Park Slope, (718) 783–3075, www.communitybookstore.net].

Greenlight Bookstore’s pick: “The Quick and the Dead” by Joy Williams

This novel presents the rules of writing and then systemically destroys them. You can ask yourself how Joy Williams does it — how she gets away with having an 8-year-old talk like an adult, or how she can reveal the detailed thoughts of a character, only to have them kill another character and then vanish from the story. Williams’s skill defies any expectations, so don’t have any. Instead, read this book for its beauty.

— Jess Pane, Greenlight Bookstore [686 Fulton St. between S. Elliott Place and S. Portland Avenue in Fort Greene, (718) 246–0200, www.greenlightbookstore.com].

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SPIN CYCLE: Tom wallks tall, with a big stick

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By Tom Allon

Brooklyn Daily

When I was a college student at Cornell University more than three decades ago, I decided to major in history because I felt it would allow me to understand the roots of so many 20th-century riddles that plagued me.

How did the Holocaust happen? Could America have prevented it if it intervened earlier? Why did we care so much about a small Communist country in Southeast Asia that we sent tens of thousands of our young men to die in those killing fields? Why didn’t the countries of Europe decimated by World War I learn from their tragic mistake just two decades earlier before they rushed headlong into another period of bloodshed and devastation?

Studying history would at least allow me to dive into these troubling questions, particularly the first two that affected me directly as the son of Holocaust survivors. When it came time to choose a concentration of study in the history department, I opted for American Foreign Policy. I thought it would be an interesting prism through which to study world events — and also because of Professor Walter LaFeber, whose scholarship and teaching about the Cold War and the history of American foreign policy made him a legend on the Cornell campus.

But then one day at dinner, a cynical graduate student I lived with mocked my major decision.

“There is no history of American foreign policy,” he proclaimed to my horror. “It changes every four or eight years when there is a new president who changes course.”

I’ve been thinking a lot about that conversation as this year’s presidential primaries confront chaotic and ever-changing global issues. Our next president will need to tackle very complicated problems and must learn from the mistakes of the past.

In addition to recalling my college studies on foreign policy, I have also been remembering another period: When I was 11 years old, my family moved to Munich, Germany, from the Upper West Side. It was 1973, and the world seemed as chaotic as it is now. But then the perceived enemy was Russia, not radical Islamic terrorism.

I attended the American Military School, which was situated on a large military base, one of many that America placed around Germany in the wake of World War II. I remember traveling to other bases to play basketball against other pre-teen American ex-pats whose fathers were in the military. It was a fascinating subculture — Americans who moved around the world from base to base in order to keep the peace.

I’ll never forget one ominous day in October 1973, when my best friend Scott, whose father was head of American military intelligence in Germany, told me that American troops had been put on “alert.” This meant, he whispered to me, there might be another World War brewing in the aftermath of the tense “October War” in the Middle East. America and Russia rattled sabers in this conflict and the American troops throughout Europe provided a bulwark against any further Soviet aggression.

Today, more than four decades later, America has very few military outposts in Europe, and virtually none in Germany. In a few weeks, I will be visiting some relatives there, and I am curious what became of that military base that really stood for America’s “soft power” in the world.

As Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders, Donald Trump, and Ted Cruz talk tough about ISIS, I wonder whether it is time for America to try to wield this kind of “soft power” again. America’s presence in Europe in the second half of the 20th century not only assured Germans would not militarize again, it also contained the Soviets and allowed America to be powerful without ever going to war.

In the post-Vietnam era — with the exception of George W. Bush’s tragically misguided military intervention in Iraq, the costly conflagration in Afghanistan, and the failed mission in Libya a few years ago — America has had a peaceful 50-year period. One major factor is because America asserted its position in the world through its omnipresence, not its military escapades.

As we enter a post-Obama foreign policy world, I would like to hear a candidate who echoes Theodore Roosevelt’s famous slogan about American power: “Walk softly and carry a big stick.”

Tom Allon was a mayoral candidate in 2013. Reach him at tallon@cityandstateny.com.

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LETTERS: Sound Off to the Editor

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Brooklyn Daily

To the editor,

As a cyclist who bikes from Marine Park to the beach at least four times weekly in the summer, I applaud any improvements to the current infrastructure on my route from E. 36th Street to the Rockaways (“Bicyclists rejoice! Board approves new protected bike lane proposal” by Julianne Cuba, March 25).

However, I think some of the big picture is missing. The worst part of a bike ride down Flatbush Avenue is the state of the sidewalk on the far side of the Belt Parkway since the gas pipeline was put in. I tried contacting the city and the pipeline company myself last year, and felt I got the run-around in regard to who would replace the sidewalk sections that were damaged or destroyed along the way. Admittedly I haven’t been along there yet this year, but until the sidewalk in that area is replaced you are often at risk when riding through it. Perhaps the city could expend some effort there. And while I am on my soapbox, how about getting the streetlights back in order from the Belt down to the drawbridge? I contacted the city off and on all last summer and finally got a response in February! No lights, just an e-mail. Bike safety is no joke, and there are more cyclists on that route every year. We need to see improvements all the way down, not just from Hendrickson Place to the Belt Parkway.Jim Schmidt

Marine Park

Jo n’ Don

To the editor,

My deepest and heartfelt condolences to the families of Americans Justin and Stephanie Shult, and Alexander and Sascha Pinczowski, who perished in the Brussels attacks. Prayers are also extended to the families of all those who died or were injured in this senseless attack on innocent lives. However, I cannot sign on to agree ever with Donald Trump (“Jo jumps on the Trump bandwagon after terrorist attacks in Brussels,” Not for Nuthin’ by Joanna DelBuono, March 25). Nor can I ever imagine calling him “Mr. President.”

I will agree with the American public whether Republican, Democrat, or an Independent, we are “tired of being tired.” The loss of so many innocent lives in this country and abroad is overwhelming and sickening. The who (the innocent), where, when, and how, has become primary to the secondary. Do we really care about their why? Or have we finally had enough and require a swift end to those inflicting pain and sorrow upon others?

I cannot say for sure that the terrorists hid in plain sight within the Muslim community, walked freely, yet were not turned in by the people who are welcomed into homelands other than their own. What if they too were unaware of who really walks among them until its too late? Underground cells with deep deadly secrets versus innocent Muslims trying to re-settle families, get work, health care, acquire a new language. Fear will make one distrust the many instead of the few.

Better investigation methods, able staff, and most importantly an updated, hard-to-penetrate, universal online system, in order to investigate quickly and as efficiently as possible, would be welcomed. The world is smaller now, due to technology, online media, and easy access to weapons.

If there is a red phone in the White House for emergency action to be taken, I cannot envision — nor do I want to see — Donald Trump’s hand at the ready to make a permanent decision on behalf of the U.S.

Debra Justin

Canarsie

• • •

To the editor,

I agree with Joanna DelBuono that we do not want to allow terrorists into our country, but I do not believe that we should refuse to allow starving, homeless refugees, including frightened, hungry children to receive shelter in our country out of fear that a terrorist may sneak in with them.

I should hope we have made some progress in the last 80 years since President Roosevelt turned away terrified Jews who were trying to escape persecution, and sent them back to Europe to die in concentration camps. He also locked up all our Japanese citizens in internment camps after Japan attacked us, because he feared they were dangerous. We cannot send innocent Muslims and other persecuted refugees back home to starve or be murdered. There has to be a better way to stop terrorism! We must also remember that both Muslim and non-Muslim Americans are being recruited on the internet right here at home. Not all terrorists come from other countries! I don’t know if there is any way to control the internet.

I am frightened at the idea of Donald Trump becoming president because he would probably antagonize our friendly European allies as well as the terrorists.

I was glad to read that the NYPD is planning to put more police officers and dogs on the subways. However, after what happened here recently, I think I trust the dogs more than I do the police officers. A police officer shot someone’s beloved pet dog for absolutely no reason except his own baseless fear. That police officer should never have been carrying a gun! I am sick of hearing about police officers shooting and choke-slamming harmless children and adults, and now an innocent dog.

Why aren’t police officers properly trained and psychologically evaluated before they are allowed to carry guns? Every police officer should be periodically re-trained and re-evaluated. We need to put a stop to needless police violence as well as terrorism in order to keep our country and our world safe.Elaine Kirsch

Gravesend

• • •

To the editor,

Continued success on your fine newspaper.

Regarding the presidential election, Donald Trump’s supporters, aside from being illiterate losers, are wasting their time. Trump was never a viable candidate. He really did dodge the draft by committing medical fraud, which is illegal and an act of treason.

The truth about Hillary Clinton’s e-mailgate is that the e-mails couldn’t be marked as classified because by not using a government e-mail address she actually prevented the government from reviewing her e-mails. Had she done so, they would have seen material that was classified, and she would not have been able to hit the send button.

Another successful policy change in a career of many marks Bernie Sanders’s campaign. Seventeen year olds vote in Iowa— #FeelTheBern.

Jes Ferri

Downtown

Easter charade

To the editor,

Not one non-cable television channel showed a movie, documentary, or even a cartoon celebrating the events of the day on Easter Day. The evening before one station played “The Ten Commandments,” all four plus hours of it, with commercials ad nauseam, but that was all.

I remember over the years waiting eagerly for the annual Easter Sunday broadcast of “The Wizard of Oz.” Yes, we had a black-and-white Philco television and until the late 1960s never knew the Land of Oz was in color. “The King of Kings” was on the air as well a Noah and other biblical productions, making the Easter and Passover weekend something special. The kids loved to watch Peter Cotton Tail and other Easter-themed cartoons that nowadays have seemingly vanished.

I gave up on cable television years ago, and after speaking with friends who have cable, I suspect there must be some conspiracy against religious programming in favor of inane and boring “shoot-’em up” programming.

Family traditions are fading away in favor of big-production and politically correct programming that brings the networks the big bucks in commercial sales. I will make sure my little grandsons get to fully enjoy the holidays and learn the true meaning of each. Robert W. Lobenstein

Marine Park

Median madness

To the editor,

What could be more ridiculous than to propose a seating area on the median in the middle of Fourth Avenue (“Peturb appeal! Locals slam 4th Ave. median makeover,” Sound off to the Editor, March 25).

It is absolutely absurd to think you can convert Fourth Avenue to an Eastern Parkway or an Ocean Parkway with a few benches and some puny trees. Also no mention has been made of the steel gratings which cover much of the ground surface. They’re permanent features and are there to ventilate the subway tracks below the street.

Since the overwhelming desire is for more park space we must demand real parks that are an oasis from the noise, fumes and dangers of the heavily trafficked streets. Do not waste money on schemes that are doomed to fail.Anthony Marchese

Carroll Gardens

Hizzoner’s delusion

To the editor,

Homeless people can’t be taken to the hospital against their will, as a result of a lawsuit that the American Civil Liberties Union brought against the city and won.

Most mentally ill people on the streets are schizophrenic. They have delusions and don’t realize they’re sick and need treatment. Therefore they would never give permission to go to the hospital because they don’t think they are sick.

Mayor DeBlasio believes, as the A.C.L.U. does, that they have a right to stay on the street and being taken against their will infringes on their rights.

This means the mayor is unwittingly saying thousands of people have the right to suffer and die on city streets. Some mental health experts believe involuntary commitment is a necessity to rescue these people. Let’s hope the mayor reconsiders.

Jerome Frank

The writer is a member of the National Alliance on Mental Illness.

Better times

To the editor,

“Desperately in need of some stranger’s hand, in a desperate land ...” — Jim Morrison, “The End.”

The apocalypse of immigration is upon us, according to some folks running for office and in the mainstream media. The refugee class is tainted, they say. Put up a wall and keep them out, others plead. The fear spreads. Sad times.

I live in one of the oldest and largest of melting pots mankind has created. Yes there are legitimate concerns and there have been very real, devastating events, but the society I grew up in, and still live amongst, is vital, despite the fear mongering. Hope lives. Here’s to better times ahead.

I ask that everyone please vote with their informed and considered minds and hearts for the candidates they strongly believe will think and act as representative of “we, the people,” and not bid for the monied interests that currently rule much, if not all of governance.

Barry Brothers

Homecrest

Sounding off

To the editor,

They say America is the land of opportunity. For whom? The rich, the powerful, the wealthy, the immigrants? How is the U.S. supposed to be the richest, most advanced, most profitable nation on the planet when two percent of the country’s population controls the other 98 percent?

Young American soldiers make the ultimate sacrifice time and again, year after year, war after war, while wounded soldiers and veterans get the shaft for their bravery. And to think politicians make a boatload of money off the blood, sweat, tear, heartache, and carnage of our troops.

The country is going to hell in a hand basket, and its Constitution is its only distinction, providing inalienable rights to some degree. As for fighting the Islamic State, I want no part of it. I would rather resign my American citizenship than pick up a weapon..

Another thing that sorely ticks me off is the government wanting to cut off the city’s large population of homeless, unemployed, starving people begging for money on the streets and in subways. How are they supposed to eat?

Sebastian Casalenova

East Flatbush

•••

To the editor,

In response to “Tom-foolery” (Sound off to the Editor, March 18), Donald Trump is doing so well because there is a huge segment of the population that is suffering economically. Their legitimate concerns must be dealt with. There has been a decrease in low-level jobs for many reasons, including automation, increased technology, and jobs going overseas to nations with lax labor and safety laws. Online shopping also puts stores at a severe disadvantage, further reducing entry-level jobs.

If wages went up some businesses would fail. This has always been the case. When the price of goods go up, businesses either fail or pass on the cost to their customers. It’s a risk all businesses take. Workers in low-end jobs often resort to food stamps and other government subsidies. Raising the minimum wage would give more spending power, create more jobs, and reduce government expenditures on items like food stamps.

The writer claims making the tax rate more progressive will result in every individual becoming poor. This is ridiculous, as a small increase in the tax rate paid by the top one or two percent will only have a minimum impact, if at all. It will increase government revenue and enable our government to improve our terrible transportation system. This will help increase jobs and productivity.

There are people who will take advantage of paid sick time and maternity leave. I worked at a job with those benefits and very few people abused the privilege. The few who did were watched and some were fired. I do not want to work in an environment where there is no sick leave, nor do I want sick people coming to work because they can’t afford to miss a day’s pay.

The writer then implies that free college tuition never existed. I am approaching 70 years of age and I remember when City University was free. There were vigorous admission standards, and it was recognized that by giving needy students a free education society would benefit in the long run. Many leaders of industry and government took advantage of this opportunity. They paid back this investment many times over through taxes, creating businesses, and serving on civic associations.

Alan Podhaizer

Trump Village

Aim for life

To the editor,

I remember many years ago a story about a father having a licensed gun at home. It was late at night when he heard a noise and thought someone had broken into his home. He shot the “burglar” with his loaded gun, only to find out he had shot and killed his only son. How’s that for the Second Amendment?

So which is more important — having guns or saving lives. I go for saving lives.

Jerry Sattler

Brighton Beach

Hell-ma mater

To the editor,

Another day, another gun. This time a gun was brought into MS 61 in the very troubled District 17 of Crown Heights.

I attended that school and graduated in 1961. Seven years later when I returned to do my student-teaching there, I found a totally different school. Things have just deteriorated terribly over the years in practically all of the District 17 schools and other districts throughout the city.

Why has this occurred? No one wants to admit that we have a major social problem in this society in the form of a refusal to accept authority. Civil libertarians add to the problem by not allowing teachers or supervisors to properly discipline recalcitrant youth. You can’t even tell a child to stand in the corner or write over and over that they must behave themselves. These are regarded as corporal punishments. By not disciplining youth properly we are emboldening them to commit more serious infractions as they get older. The refusal to follow orders from teachers just carries over to the police department years later.

We now have a mayor and chancellor who advocate for fewer suspensions and taking away metal detectors from our schools. These people refuse to admit that some of our schools are so bad the national guard needs to be called in just to restore order.

Not only did I attend District 17 schools, I also taught in them for 19 years before transferring. I had some very good students there, but there was also a group intent upon total disruption. You can’t teach without discipline, and one day our elected officials will realize this.

Ed Greenspan

Sheepshead Bay

GOP v. Trump

To the editor,

The secret meeting of Republican leaders in Georgia made me think of Hitler’s “weekend of the long knives.” It was so hush-hush, almost no one knew about it. Then information leaked out that these high-powered politicians, other party bosses, and big-money contributors were working overtime to dump Donald Trump, and attempt to possibly install Mitt Romney as savior of the Republican Party.

Liberal media and newspapers call Trump Hitler, saying that his supporters wave their hands in a Nazi salute, but people in his own party are staging a modern-day “night of the long knives” — a purge that took place in Nazi Germany, from June 30 to July 2, 1934, when the Nazi regime carried out a series of political murders.

It also made me think of how back in the 1970s Orson Wells starred in and narrated a special broadcast covering the quatrains of Nostradamus. One by one the predictions made hundreds of years ago were discussed, and each one was chillingly accurate: The attacks then destruction of the World Trade Center, the rise and fall of the Third Reich, and the exploits of Napoleon were a few predictions that were right on. At the end of this broadcast, nuclear missiles from Iran and other Arab-Muslim countries were shown, blasting off into history as they were aimed at the “new city,” generally regarded to be New York City of today.

Iran, in violation of all too many treaties, has fired off nuclear-capable missiles bearing the Hebrew words for “death to Israel!” The video news reports mirrored almost to the exact detail what was shown on that Nostradamus program so many years ago.

Iran and fellow terrorist Muslim states have no intention of stopping development of missile technology and the so-called nuclear agreement is a sham. Everyone knows that they are busy making and testing nuclear materials, in secret desert locations. This present administration shows no backbone in stopping the proliferation of these weapons of mass destruction. I only pray we are not too late and a change in Washington takes place soon or the last prediction of Nostradamus may very well come true.

Robert W. Lobenstein

Marine Park

•••

To the editor,

Why is Trump being called a racist, a fascist, and Hitler? Why are some people so against him? Because he wants the immigration laws on the books enforced? Because his father worked hard and was successful, and so is he? Because he’s a good businessman? Because he wants to lower taxes? Because he wants smaller government? Because he’s pro life? Because he wants better health care for Americans? Because he doesn’t want to touch social security and medicare? Or is it because if he improves the economy some lazy bums might have to get a job?

Peter G. Orsi

Marine Park

Partisan wars

To the editor,

I read the recent pro-Democrat Party letters (“Sound Off to the Editor) and wonder if anyone recalls when President Bush had over a year left on his second term and Harry Reid’s bootlicker, Sen. Charles Schumer (D-Brooklyn) remarked, “We should not reverse the presumption of confirmation. The Supreme Court is dangerously out of balance. We can not afford to see Justice Stevens replaced by another Roberts or Judge Ginsburg replaced by another Alito.”

Notice his lack of respect when he didn’t call the other justices by that term. Now with less than a year left to serve, these same Democrats think the current occupant of the White House should have the same courtesy they wouldn’t extend to President Bush. Now these Democrats think this year’s docket is so important, but the one in 2007 was nothing because it wasn’t in their favor.

Basically the Democrats started this going back to the nominations of Robert Bork and Justice Clarence Thomas. Payback hurts, doesn’t it, Dems?

I watched the debates where Democrats competed to see who could give away more of other people’s money to those that didn’t earn it, and to bow down to special interest groups whose vote they were courting. They say Republicans want to cut social programs. Well many of them don’t work and are wasteful, yet they’re given more money every year. It is this current president that doubled the national debt in seven years, effectively burdening future generations to pay for it. Both parties voted on the war in Iraq and Afghanistan. These wars would be closer to ending if this president hadn’t withdrawn troops before it was secure, and hadn’t let Libya and Syria go to hell causing a rise in the Islamic State — his “JV team.”

Eleanor Six

Brooklyn

Barking Hill

To the editor,

Don’t “lie” with dogs, Hillary! I can’t understand the uproar of hearing Hillary barking at a news conference. We’ve known for quite some time now that she was a dog and her hubby, Bill, has been a stray for years!

Robert W. Lobenstein

Marine Park

•••

To the editor,

The incessant noise between Hillary-Bernie fans informs and entertains me. I get a chuckle when folks chide Bernie Sanders for making promises they say he can’t keep. So what is a converse candidate? One not making any promises, or making very minimalist promises so they can be kept?

Bernie’s healthcare plan, and other promises he makes (e.g. on education) are not economically feasible. Hell, our damned massive industrial war machine budget is not economically feasible either, yet many a candidate are willing to fund that machine, so why find it offensive to fund affordable health care for all citizens too?

What the hell happened to the politic of this day that has people so fearful of daring, of dreaming large, and working hard toward finding the way to begin approaching the lofty goals of an ideal that helps the many? Has our once productive and prosperous energy become encumbered by laziness and fear created by the one percent and spread like germ warfare by its wholly owned mainstream media? When it comes to political conversations on media and social media, they are without humor and perspective, and my head nearly pops off from shaking it far too much.

Donald Trump is a marketer; with marketers, perception is far more important than truth. And who believes the snake oil salesmen? The gullible, the uneducated? Those who went to schools where critical, individual thinking was frowned upon?

I ask that everyone please vote with your informed and considered mind and hearts; and vote for the candidate who you strongly believe will think and act as representative of “we, the people,” and not bid for the monied interests that currently rule much, if not all of governance.

Barry Brothers

Homecrest

•••

To the editor,

As a concerned citizen, I am closely watching the race for the presidency, with particular interest in Donald Trump’s campaign. He has ascended to the top of the Republican field in large part by attacking or insulting his opponents and others, rather than for his detailed policy proposals. His attacks know no bounds. They are often personal and no one is immune. The list of those who have felt Trump’s wrath is long and growing all the time. Here, in no particular order is a list of those Trump has attacked, insulted or feuded with since he announced his candidacy for president: Megyn Kelly, a FOX News Anchor for having “blood coming out of everywhere”; Roger Ailes and Fox News; Mexican immigrants who according to Trump are largely criminals, rapists or drug couriers; all Muslims whom he would deny entry into the U.S.; American Muslims for allegedly celebrating the 9-11 attacks in New Jersey; Sen. John McCain for being shot down and held for years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam; Sen. Lindsay Graham, whose personal cell phone number Trump disclosed; President Obama, Hillary Clinton, and Secretary of State John Kerry; Serge Kovalski, a disabled reporter for the New York Times and all disabled Americans by extension; Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and President George W. Bush; Sen. Ted Cruz, whom Trump purports is ineligible to run for president and is a liar; Sen. Marco Rubio; Soldier Bo Bergdahl who was captured and held as a hostage by the Taliban; Carly Fiorina’s face; former Texas Gov. Rick Perry; all government leaders for being incompetent; Planned Parenthood, and the Pope.

Given the extent and vituperative nature of Trump’s attacks, it is clear that he lacks the temperament and positive vision needed to be president. The American people must reject his candidacy.

Arnold Kingston

Sheepshead Bay

Southward bound

To the editor,

So now there are summonses to be issued and not jail time for those caught urinating in the street. Would city officials like it if these recalcitrant people were caught urinating in front of their homes? Our city and nation continue to go southward due to these liberal politicians.

The lack of respect continues towards our police and youngsters in school can now literally get away with anything now that it is becoming impossible to suspend an unruly child from school. Then we have candidates such as Democratic presidential challenger Bernie Sanders who is upset that too many prisons are being built and minorities are occupying the jail cells. Well, this wouldn’t be the case if the latter people and others behaved themselves and followed societal rules.

It’s a vicious cycle. Allowing youngsters to get away with anything in school only emboldens them to create further havoc as they get older.

Ed Greenspan

Sheepshead Bay

Taylor-n-Kanye

To the editor,

Taylor Swift’s recent remarks on misogyny and the inhuman void known as Kanye West made me think of megalomaniac and greedy marketing “geniuses” (ghouls) who created megalomaniac-infused “creative acts” and successfully sold them to a willing public. Before their time arrived, and often before the individuals in these acts have had time to hone their craft, let alone know themselves, or pay their rightful dues via the passage of time.

I agree with Carlos Santana when he said about the Super Bowl half-time festivities: “This is just an invitation for you to consider iconic bands as part of your halftime entertainment. Real live music, real live vocals, and give the audience real live chills.”

In today’s world the vast reach of the Internet allows most anyone to now do this for themselves. All one need do is create and post a video on YouTube. Couple this with the desire of the mainstream media to distract citizens from being informed about the vital, socio-economic-political issues of the day by shoving garbage “reality” programming in front of the willing, and we have a vast, thick, tasteless soup of mediocrity defining too much of our culture today — a la the likes of the Kardashian clan, which includes Kim Kardashian’s misogynistic and messaging fool of a husband, Kanye West.

Good for Taylor Swift for having the composure and smarts to respond as she did to West. I hold on to a hope that if reminders like this, about misogyny, or racism, or greed, or other non-ideals keep finding a way to reach the masses, one at a time, then change can and will arrive, hopefully in my lifetime.

Barry Brothers

Homecrest

Town halls

To the editor,

As the Republican District Leader of the 46 Assembly District, I was compelled to attend the recent densely packed town hall meeting with Mayor de Blasio in Bay Ridge, the heart of my Assembly District. While I recognized the usual politicos and their staff filling the room, it was refreshing to see that actual concerned citizens and residents of Bay ridge were there in full force. Too bad the current Assemblymember of the 46 Assembly District did not present her views on the topics discussed, and opted to sit quietly.

Some of the issues discussed were the illegal conversions in Dyker Heights, sex shops posing as spas, and the waste transfer station being built upon our shoreline. A question was posed to the mayor about property tax rates and assessments. He stated that he would look at the tax rates, and request the City Council not raise tax rates, but he skirted the assessment issue. Let us clarify the fact that property assessments are based upon the property’s market value. Market value is how much a property would sell for under normal conditions. The property’s assessment is one of the factors used by our city government to determine the amount of the property tax.

Property tax rates are set by the City Council by determining the amount of taxes it needs to raise in proportion to the amount of money it needs to spend to maintain city programs.

Property tax rates and assessments are important points that pertain to illegal conversions of one- and two-family homes, especially in Dyker Heights, into multi unit dwellings. The main bone of contention is the lack of enforcement by the city and their inaction to alleviate this burgeoning problem. I believe that city agencies remain inactive in dealing with illegal conversions because illegal conversions generate high profit margins to those who invest in certain areas. Homeowners are offered and paid very large sums for their one- and two-family homes, increasing the market value of these homes, which result in higher assessments. Thus, the higher the assessment, the higher the tax rate for the neighborhood, resulting in more money for the city’s coffers.

The mayor stated he is aware of the situation, and has hired some new building inspectors, but he also pointed out that not every complaint is a true illegal conversion. He also placed the burden of accessing these illegally converted properties onto the shoulders of the NYFD. Mr. Mayor, the NYFD is there to save lives, not to generate income for the city through inspections resulting in fines and violations.

Quality of life issues regarding “spas” acting as illegal sex shops were brought up. A resident pleaded with the mayor to close down these “spas,” and shut down at least one avenue of human sex trafficking. A “follow the money” approach was the mayor’s cookie-cutter answer for this problem, but clearly more needs to be done to close these sex shops. In addition, the proliferation of Hookah lounges in Bay Ridge leads to the problems of exposing minors, especially teenagers, to the dangers of smoking. There are smoking bans throughout the city of New York, I am curious as to how and when these hookah lounges became exempt from this law.

Regarding the waste transfer station under construction on our neighboring shoreline, the shoreline of Brooklyn is not a dumping ground and our concerns need to be addressed and not be brushed aside. The sanitation commissioner clearly stated that Bay Ridge is one of the better areas in the city that follows recycling rules, and that garbage tonnage is down five percent in our area. Obviously no good deed goes unpunished!

Many other issues and concerns of Bay Ridge still need to be addressed and discussed. It is only through participation and awareness that they can be resolved. Town hall meetings should be more common, proliferate, and not be an occasional occurrence.

Lucretia Regina-Potter

The writer is the Republican District Leader of the 46th Assembly District and the Secretary of the Kings County Republican Party.

Challenger ‘lie’

To the editor,

The Space Shuttle Challenger disaster took place 30 years ago, leaving us with more questions than answers over the decades.

Why did it lift off on a day when it was too cold to function properly? President Ronald Reagan liked to talk to the astronauts in space. His State of the Union speech was the next day. The shuttle had to be launched the day before to be up and running so he could talk to them during his speech.

Reagan pressured NASA to go through with it, even though it was too cold. Unfortunately the astronauts, who were also scientists, were not told about this. A news conference was held by the panel which investigated the disaster. The panel members were from NASA, except for Richard Feynman, a noted physicist and an independent member. He showed that the sealant got brittle and lost its ability to seal if too cold. He put a piece of it in a beaker of liquid nitrogen, then he took it out and broke it. Likewise the shuttle seals were rendered useless. The official story said the disaster was caused by a defective worker, but that was a lie.

Jerome Frank

Coney Island

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****

Roving Randi

To the editor,

It’s bad enough when elected officials are running for other offices and they are away from their official positions. It is just as bad when people, such as American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten will be criss-crossing the country for Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.

Randi, you have responsibilities that await your urgent attention. In the city more teachers are resigning than ever, they’re throwing the towel in because of the discipline procedures you and other liberal lunkheads have created. Hillary does not need you directly, but teachers throughout the country do, as they struggle with burgeoning class sizes, unruly pupils, overly aggressive administrators, and parents who rule the teacher and principal.

If Randi Weingarten and other officials can’t fulfill their responsibilities, they should take a leave of absence without pay.

Ed Greenspan

Sheepshead Bay

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 goes the extra mile — for free travel

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By Stanley P. Gershbein

Brooklyn Daily

My column last week included some of the correspondence I received recently from readers. I saved one of the letters that dealt with the free airline miles I wrote about last year. For the person who wrote — and for anyone else who might be interested in free airline tickets — here goes. Some time ago, I ordered an American Airlines AAdvantage credit card that awarded me 50,000 miles if I spent $3,000 within the first three months. Between gasoline, holiday gifts, groceries, household bills, and insurance that $3,000 total was easy.

I now had 53,000 miles. It was then my wife’s turn to apply for the same card. When it got close to the $3,000 and she realized she was going to be short about $300, she went to the local supermarket and bought three $100 gift cards for herself, which was to be used for our regular grocery shopping.

Not only is my wife beautiful and sexy, she is the most intelligent female I know and she also wound up with a total of 53,000 miles. Add hers to mine and it is not hard to realize that, for 106,000 miles, we can fly almost everywhere.

We visited Montana and Idaho, and in a few weeks we will be leaving for Las Vegas — all free. If by any chance you have used your cards for major expenses and find yourself loaded with a lot of extra miles, they can be used for hotels, car rentals, restaurants and … look it up. You will be amazed at how many available freebees there are. Have a good time.

• • •

I really wish that, when friends are waiting for me, they wouldn’t pass the time sitting at my desk making paper-clip chains. It is a time taker-upper, an awful lot of work, and a pain in the a-- when I need a clip in a hurry.

• • •

Barber shops are great places for listening to what the community is talking about. A member of the editorial staff of this newspaper recently referred to it as a modern-day Greek Agora. In Ancient Greece, the Agora was the central spot in the various cities. The literal translation of the word is “gathering place” or “Assembly.” The actual life, talents, entertainment, opinions, and politics of the cities took place in the agoras.

• • •

The following is from a barber shop on Calle Ocho in the Little Havana section of Miami. It was shouted in Spanish and was translated to me by three different, extremely loud customers. This is exactly the way it went:

From the barber: “President Obama is in Cuba.”

From several of the very loud, more vocal men waiting: “He should only stay there.”

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

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FORT GREENE: Art of the cell: Exhibit captures phone chats

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By Sarah Iannone

Brooklyn Daily

It is a technological translation.

A Dumbo couple have created a multi-media art exhibit out of a fleeting series of their phone calls, text messages, and Skype conversations. The paintings, videos, and music of “In-Communication/ In-Transit,” opening April 7 at Bric in Fort Greene, preserve moments that may have barely registered at the time, says one of the creators.

“Having a camera ready at all times allows us all to capture experiences as they pass before our eyes, even before being able to feel or process them,” said artist Laura Karetzky. “We are able to save the experiencing part for when we go back and look at them later.”

Karetzky and composer Manuel Sosa began the project in 2004, when Karetzky was on a residency upstate. The pair communicated regularly, and Karetzky began capturing random moments of their technological communication.

“We share our work ideas constantly. Often via text, sound clips, or photos as we are each working in our own spaces, so this kind of a collaboration is natural and perhaps even inevitable,” she said.

Karetzky turned her screen-shots and photos into elaborate oil-on-wood paintings. A friend described the project as “translating 21st-Century experience through 15th-Century technology,” she said.

She and Sosa also created a soundtrack for the show of voices singing and speaking, along with some instrumental sections. The music pieces are based on words that the pair often used during their conversations, including “here,” “blue,” “opening,” and “there.” Each video also has its own music, so the sounds will change as visitors walk around the space.

“The music is in constant dialogue with itself, as well as with the visual work,” said Karetzky.

The snapshots of conversation, presented without their full context, have a powerful effect on viewers, said Karetzky, and even on the person who created it.

“When a moment takes you outside of your own immediate reality and makes you see that moment as an outsider, that can be both poetic and comedic at the same time,” she said.

“In-Communication/ In-Translation” at Bric [647 Fulton St. at Ashland Place in Fort Greene, (718) 855–7882, www.bricartsmedia.org) Opening reception on April 7, 7–9 pm. On display through May 7.

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MIDWOOD: Sharp tongued: Kathy Griffin plans to cut loose on Brooklyn

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By Dennis Lynch

Brooklyn Daily

She’s coming for Brooklyn!

No holds-barred comedian Kathy Griffin will bring her unadulterated act to the Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts on April 10 — and the borough’s hipster pretensions will definitely be a target.

“You’re very high and mighty, trying to shame Manhattan for being a cooler place to live — we will definitely talk about the Brooklynite attitude,” promised Griffin.

The self-proclaimed “good and bitter 55-year-old” is known for skewering celebrities and vacuous pop culture in her Grammy-winning stand-up albums and on her Emmy-winning series “My Life on the D-list.” Griffin’s last tour sold out Carnegie Hall in November, but she promised an entirely new act for her Brooklyn show.

“I have to come back because I have even more brand new material,” she said. “It doesn’t matter if you saw me in November a year ago or five years ago, I’m always hanging up my material and I cannot keep up with the crazy things happening in the world — it’s a great time to be in comedy.”

During a rapid-fire conversation, this reporter attracted Griffin’s withering wit several times. Her threats to hang up seemed most real when she extracted a confession that her interviewer prefers organized athletics to the Lifetime network. Griffin, who believes that no human should ever waste time on professional sports, was not amused.

“I’ll f------ hang up on you right now, Dennis,” she threatened.

Enticed to stay on the line, Griffin shared a few details about her upcoming show, promising a bevy of personal stories about her run-ins with Republican frontrunner Donald Trump, the best friend of drug kingpins Sean Penn, and recent Oscar-winner Leonardo DiCaprio.

The subjects may be well known, but her material is unique, she said.

“I’m not just making fun of [Donald Trump’s] orange face and crazy hair — I’ve had one-of-a-kind run-ins with him,” she said. “This is stuff you can’t get from anyone else.”

Everything Griffin does is “grist for the mill” she said, so anything that happens to her on the road could end up in the act on Sunday night. She will perform in Queens the night before her show in Kings County, so she may play up the borough rivalry for the crowd at the Brooklyn Center. Either way, she promises to “let the fur fly.”

“Six o’ clock is a bit early for all the inappropriate things I’m going to say,” she said. “But you know what — I’m going to do it anyways.”

Kathy Griffin at the Brooklyn Center for the Performing Arts [2900 Campus Rd. between Hillel Place and Avenue H in Midwood, www.brooklyncenter.org, (718) 951–4500]. April 10 at 6 pm. $45–$75.

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

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GRAVESEND: Zap, pop! Balloons causing Southern Brooklyn blackouts, Con Ed sez

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By Dennis Lynch

Brooklyn Daily

These blackouts aren’t to be taken lightly.

Con Edison will invest a $9 million jolt of funding to minimize blackouts in response to a wave of outages that hit Gravesend, Sheepshead Bay, and Manhattan Beach in recent months. Balloons and boughs are to blame for the frequent outages, a utility spokeswoman said.

“The recent outages in Gravesend were caused by tree limbs and Mylar balloons on the overhead lines, and equipment issues,” said Con Ed spokeswoman Joy Faber. “Mylar balloons, which are made of metallic material, are issues for overhead electric lines throughout the country. When the balloons are aloft and the metal material comes in contact with critical overhead electric infrastructure, they can create short circuits thus creating outages.”

But the metallic party favors are really foiling locals, one community activist said.

“Some had scary problems — one woman with multiple sclerosis has to refrigerate her medication, so losing electricity was dangerous,” West Street resident Priscilla Consolo said.

Consolo and her neighbors experienced roughly half a dozen blackouts since January — some lasting only a few minutes and others a few hours, she said.

Monk Parakeets, an invasive bird species, nest on electrical transformers, and the bird beds can ignite or overheat boxes, blog Sheepshead Bites reported.

But the area’s outdated electrical infrastructure is also to blame, a local pol said. Area transformers serve a disproportionately high number of homes, so when a outage occurs, larger swaths of the neighborhood go black — something the utility must remedy, the elected said.

“If one line goes down for whatever reason, too many households are attached, so if they increase the number of lines in the area it will affect fewer households if one goes down,” said Councilman Mark Treyger (D–Coney Island). “It’s just not acceptable with the frequency they were happening.”

The electric company recently fixed a faulty transformer and replaced some cables, and it will re-jigger the existing grid over the course of this year so fewer homes will lose power in future outages, Faber said.

Treyger suggested locals report outages, nests, balloons, and conspicuous-looking branches directly to Con Edison using its (800) CONED complaint line — or Treyger’s Coney Island office at (718) 307–7151 — instead of 311.

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

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SHEEPSHEAD BAY: Signs of neglect: Calls for city to replace missing street signs after ambulance can’t find Sheepshead Bay woman’s home

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By Julianne Cuba

Brooklyn Daily

The city must replace missing street signs in a Hurricane Sandy-ravaged section of Sheepshead Bay — even though it claims it is not responsible for maintaining them — before someone dies, locals are demanding.

The 2012 storm blew away the sign marking Lincoln Terrace — one of a handful of streets in a sub-neighborhood of beach bungalows served by narrow, alleyway streets — and no one ever put up new ones. So ambulances couldn’t find an elderly Lincoln Terrace resident who called 911 with chest pains and difficulty breathing in February, and her family blames the missing sign and the city for endangering her life, her grandson said.

“There’s no sign and no indication that Lincoln Terrace exists,” said Donald Sutcliffe, whose grandmother Donata Halstead has lived on the byway for 43 years. “They drove right past where she lives. So luckily I was standing outside to tell the dispatcher to back down the street. When someone is not breathing, seconds — let alone minutes — make a huge difference.”

Halstead’s home is a stone’s throw from Nostrand Avenue — her front porch overlooks the arterial roadway. But the ambulance drove right past the woman’s house after dark on Feb 27, Sutcliffe said.

Ambulances are not equipped with global positioning systems, and it is up to drivers to know how to get to calls, officials said.

“Units are familiar with their response area,” said Fire Department spokeswoman Elisheva Zakheim.

The ambulance arrived in five minutes, the average for an emergency call, according to Fire Department records.

Lincoln Terrace connects Nostrand and Emmons avenues and is only wide enough for a bicycle. But a dozen homes have Lincoln Terrace addresses. And a handful of such streets exist in an area bounded by Shore Parkway, Emmons Avenue, E. 29th Street, and Batchelder Street that locals call “the Courts” because many of the streets have “court” in their names.

But the city is not responsible for replacing street signs there, according to a Department of Transportation spokeswoman. Instead, residents must pay for signs, paving, and maintaining sewer lines, officials said.

Locals know they are responsible for sewers, which turned the below-street-level Courts into fetid flood zones during and since Hurricane Sandy. But many assumed fixing signs was the city’s job.

“That’s news to me,” said Jimmy Schneider, a Mesereau Court resident for four decades. “They put them up, they should be responsible.”

Halstead asked the local community board, 311, and some area politicians for a new sign, but no one gave her a straight answer, she said.

“I’ve been asking for years,” she said.

Homeowners in the area — a ghost town more than three years after Hurricane Sandy — are too fractured to organize around public needs, Halstead said.

“Nobody knows anybody,” she said.

Many homeowners have washed their hands of the nabe and are trying to sell their homes, others are still waiting on help from the city’s sluggish disaster recovery program Build It Back, and still others have abandoned the area entirely.

It’s time the city step in and take care of the vulnerable folks who remain, another resident said.

“We pay taxes, we get mail service, we get jury duty, why wouldn’t you put a sign there?” said longtime Lake Avenue homeowner Missy Haggerty.

Reach reporter Julianne Cuba at (718) 260–4577 or by e-mail at jcuba@cnglocal.com. Follow her on Twitter @julcuba.

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HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS: Last hurrah! Jefferson’s Curtis Smith gets one final high-school game

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By Trey Rodriguez

Brooklyn Daily

Thomas Jefferson’s Curtis Smith wasn’t even scheduled to participate in the Mayor’s Cup boys basketball competition at Baruch College until teammate Shamorie Ponds intervened.

Seniors Ponds and Rasheem Dunn were the only Jefferson representatives, but Ponds decided to give up his spot on the roster to allow Smith to participate.

“He’s supposed to be in this game,” said Ponds, who watched from the stands. “He showed up all year, he deserves to play in this game.”

Smith responded with a 13-point performance on the afternoon — his final official high-school game.

The game featured the best senior players from public schools all across New York City. Smith’s team — composed of Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Staten Island players — fell to a team of Bronx and Queens players 105–89 on April 3 at Baruch College.

But the all-star game’s real focus was on the individual performances.

Smith has not decided where he’ll play in college, and was glad Ponds gave him one last chance to impress potential coaches.

“Shamorie, he’s basically an All-American … so he just gave me an opportunity to showcase my talent, so they could see how good I really am,” Smith said. “He’s a humble dude, he doesn’t only look for himself, he looks to get other players better … he’s just a good guy.”

Smith’s career at Jefferson wrapped up after the Orange Wave took home the state Federation championship last month. Now the graduating senior will now focus on where he’ll play basketball next season.

“I looked at a couple of Division II’s … so I’ll probably be choosing in about a month to see where I’m going,” Smith said. “[The Mayor’s Cup] does a lot, because the season is over and I have nothing else to do, so I just have to work and try to get a Division I scholarship.”

But Ponds’s act of kindness did remove the possibility of him playing one final high-school game with his longtime friend and teammate Dunn. The two have been playing basketball together since about the fifth grade, and they will now become city rivals next year as Ponds plays at St. John’s and Dunn goes to St. Francis.

“It’s tough, I’ll miss all of them … all of the seniors,” Ponds said.

Dunn took losing his final chance to play with his longtime best friend in stride.

“We’re still in the gym with each other to this day, even after the season we’re still in the gym with each other, working out with each other, getting ready for next season when we do play against each other,” Dunn said.

Looking forward to next season, Dunn will get a chance to remain in Brooklyn at St. Francis. The Terriers could use a point guard like Dunn who can attack the basket.

“Next year, I’m coming in, and I’m trying to bring the buzz back to St. Francis,” he said.

Van Arsdale’s Rice earns most valuable player in girls’ contest: Harry Van Ardsdale forward Nina Rice scored a game-high 22 points to lead her team to a 67–63 win in the Mayor’s Cup girls’ game. Midwood’s Jai Moore, who is headed to Niagara, tallied 15 points for the losing side — including two in the second half. Grand Street’s Kaisha Lucky chipped in nine points for the winning side.

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HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS: Here they are! All-Brooklyn boys’ basketball honors

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By Joseph Staszewski

Brooklyn Daily

What a hoops season it was in Brooklyn!

Three teams took home city titles, but no story was more compelling than Jefferson winning the Public School Athletic League Class AA crown for the first time in 62 years. The Orange Wave and coach Lawerence “Bud” Pollard cruised past rival Abraham Lincoln in the title game before going to Albany to win the program’s first state Federation title.

While Jefferson came into the year as title contender, Xaverian surprised everyone but themselves by beating favored Bishop Loughlin for its first CHSAA Intersectional championship since 2005.

Telecommunication sent retiring coach Chris Weil out with the first PSAL Class A crown in school history. Poly Prep went back to the private school Class B state title game before losing to Collegiate.

You needed plenty of good players to win all these championships. Here are the best of the best:

Player of the Year

Shamorie Ponds, Jefferson: The St. John’s-bound guard lived up to all of the hype and expectations and even exceeded them at times. The back-to-back winner averaged 28 points, eight rebounds and six assists, while understanding how to dominate games on both ends of the floor. Ponds won most valuable player honors at the Federation tournament after scoring a game-high 31 points, grabbing 12 rebounds, dishing out five assists and collecting six steals in the city title game.

Coach of the Year

Jack Alesi, Xaverian: Alesi, who took home this award last year, led a team that never cease to amaze, especially this year. The Clippers finished fourth in their division and lost in the diocesan semifinals. Somehow Alesi was able to get his kids to dig a little deeper when it mattered most and he put them in position to succeed. Gritty Xaverian gutted its way to its first city title since 2005 by being mentally tougher than everyone else in a tight game late.

First Team

Forward Cahiem Brown, Abraham Lincoln: The St. Ray’s transfer became Lincoln’s unquestioned leader once Jahlil Tripp was ruled ineligible. His consistent play spearheaded the Railsplitters’s second-half rebirth and a Brooklyn borough title thanks to a 30-point night. Brown averaged 19 points and 9.3 rebounds per game.

Guard Rasheem Dunn, Jefferson: Dunn was the perfect Robin to Shamorie Ponds’s Batman. The St. Francis College-bound guard was tenacious on both ends of the floor and averaged 16 points, five assists, and four rebounds per game. He had 23 points during a big first half in the city title game and dropped in 21 points in the Federation final.

Guard Markquis Nowell, Bishop Loughlin: The St. Anthony’s (N.J.) transfer made quite an impression in his very first season in New York City, where he wowed with his game and his heart. The sophomore averaged 18.1 points and 6.9 assists per contest while helping the Lions get to and win the Brooklyn-Queens title — and reach the Intersectional final.

Forward Keith Williams, Bishop Loughlin: Williams did a little bit of everything for the Lions during his junior season. He could knock down a three, bury a step-back jumper, or take it to the hoop. The three-year varsity player had his best season, averaging 16 points and 7.4 rebounds per game to become one of the city’s best all-around players.

Foward Nyontay Wisseh, Xaverian: The senior wing took his game and his team to another level in the post season. Wisseh willed the Clippers through an Intersectional semifinal win over Archbishop Molloy with clutch plays on both ends of the floor. He averaged 14.8 points per game, nine rebounds, four assists, and four steals.

Second Team

Guard Zach Bruno, Xaverian: The junior took the most important charge in program history to seal the city title in the game’s closing seconds. He was one of the city’s most explosive players, and he led the Clippers with 15.7 points per game and netted 20 points or more in nine contests.

Guard Rakym Felder, Abraham Lincoln: Lincoln began to soar as Felder got more accustomed to playing point guard. Felder used his speed to average 16.3 points, five assists, and four rebounds during the regular season. He was also a lock-down defender, often guarding the opponent’s star.

Guard Gianni Ford, Boys & Girls: It was an up-and-down year for the Kangaroos, but not for its senior star. Ford again proved why he is one of the best players in the city. He averaged 18.8 points, 4.5 rebounds, and 4.1 assist during the regular season — and poured in 25 points per contest in the playoffs.

Center Isaac Kante, Paul Robeson: Few big men are as imposing on both ends of the floor than shot-blocker Kante. The senior dropped in 15.5 points and grabbed 12.6 rebounds per game to help lead the Eagles back to prominence this season.

Guard Curtis Smith, Jefferson: Big Shot C.J. hit plenty of shots this year, but no performance was better than his nine three-pointers and 30 points in a quarterfinal win over Curtis. Smith, who can change a game quickly, averaged 11.7 points per game.

Forward Gerald Williams, George Westinghouse: Westinghouse enjoyed the best season in program history – including a trip to the semifinals — and Williams was a big reason why. The senior averaged 13.5 points and nine rebounds per contest.

Honorable Mention

• Guard Donald Cannon Flores, Abraham Lincoln

• Guard Devin Ballour, Telecommunications

• Forward Israel Farrington, Paul Robeson

• Guard Brandon Leftwich, Xaverian

• Forward Damarri Moore, George Westinghouse

• Guard Anthony Munson, Bedford Academy

• Guard Shaquille Ricks, South Shore

• Guard Malick Sylla, Transit Tech

• Forward Najee Taylor, Poly Prep

• Guard Jordan Williams, St. Edmund

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GREENPOINT: Steeling hearts: Speed metal speed dating at St. Vitus

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Note: More media content is available for this story at BrooklynDaily.com.

By Carlo Bosticco

Brooklyn Daily

Cupid’s arrows are made of metal!

Single headbangers should thrash their way to the St. Vitus bar in Greenpoint on April 10 for a night of metal music and speed dating. The dates might be as short as a blistering Slayer tune, but sometimes that is enough, says the evening’s host.

“You see someone you find attractive in a Motörhead t-shirt and then you unzip your biker jacket to reveal your Black Sabbath t-shirt — and the next thing you know you’re at the free clinic together. It can happen really fast if you just believe,” said Dave Hill.

The comedian and self-proclaimed “King of Metal” has a proven track record of combining music and romance, regularly hosting a Morrissey-themed speed dating night at Greenpoint bar Black Rabbit.

“It was instantly really popular,” said Hill. “The place was packed and people were making out in the bathroom and stuff. Mission accomplished. Anyway, since I love metal it seemed crazy not to try a similar thing with metal music.”

Hill, who says that “Living After Midnight” by Judas Priest is the most romantic song of all time, confirms the night will run like any other speed dating event, with metalheads pairing off for “dates” that last just a few minutes. But the evening’s atmosphere will be assisted by a fog machine, and “Iron Maiden Trooper” beer.

Hill reports that Brooklyn’s population of female metal fans have jumped at the opportunity, with as many ladies signing up for the night as dudes. And Hill has also kept gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender metal fans in mind for the night.

“If the night proves not to be LGBT-friendly enough, we will start an LGBT Speed Metal Dating night,” said Hill. “In fact, I can’t wait to whip up the flyer.”

People are also welcome to come and observe that night, without a need to jump into the mosh pit of love.

The world of metal music is split by huge divisions between the micro-genres, with trash metal fans set against symphonic metal enthusiasts, and both snubbing the growls of death metal warblers. But Hill thinks that love will be able to conquer all.

“I am hoping everyone can open their hearts to other forms of metal and, while they’re at it, their pants to love,” he said.

Speed Metal Dating at St. Vitus (1120 Manhattan Ave. between Clay and Box streets in Greenpoint, www.saintvitusbar.com). April 10 at 8 pm. Free.

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DEVELOPMENT: Councilman: Elected, powerful community boards would be a disaster

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Note: More media content is available for this story at BrooklynDaily.com.

By Lauren Gill

Brooklyn Daily

He votes nay!

A Brooklyn activist group’s idea of turning the city’s 59 community boards into elected bodies with real power would just result in expensive elections for panels that would use their clout to veto any changes to their neighborhoods, says a former board member turned councilman.

“You can’t give community boards power because nothing would get done,” said former Community Board 18 member and current Councilman Alan Maisel (D–Mill Basin), slamming recent demands from a coalition called the Brooklyn Anti-Gentrification Network, which includes tenant groups and social justice organizations from Sunset Park, Flatbush, Prospect-Lefferts Gardens, and Bushwick.

The outfit’s members rallied outside Borough Hall on Wednesday arguing the current boards — composed of volunteers who offer advisory-only recommendations to city Council members and agencies on issues such as rezonings, liquor licenses, and changes to landmarked buildings — leave neighborhoods with no real way to fight unwanted development.

Their case in point is the recent passage of Mayor DeBlasio’s sweeping changes to the city’s zoning rules, which are supposed to create more affordable housing in new buildings, but critics say will just encourage rampant development the city’s most vulnerable still can’t afford.

Council overwhelmingly passed his bills last month, despite the vast majority of community boards rejecting them.

“Because community boards lack this power, thousands of New York City residents now face a disastrous development plan, imposed on us against our will, that will bring even greater displacement to our communities,” the group said in a release.

The rabble-rousers are also demanding the city allow citizens to vote for the each member of the 50-person boards.

Currently, borough presidents and Council members nominate locals for the slots — and the beeps ultimately appoint them — but the activists claim members are afraid to criticize development proposals in case that puts them on the wrong side of the pols backing their seat.

“There are good, well-meaning people on the community board but they can’t really speak up because they’re afraid of not getting appointed again,” said Flatbush activist Imani Henry.

But electing 2,950 members across the city would just eat up taxpayer dollars, says Maisel — and few would turn out to vote anyway.

“Could you imagine the cost and expense of having elections for 50 people and nobody showing up?” he said.

A spokesman for Borough President Adams said the Beep doesn’t support elected community boards either, because it goes against the City Charter — although that is the very thing the activists are trying to change — and rejected the notion that members have hold their tongues to hold onto their positions.

“Community board members should never be afraid to speak their minds,” said Borough Hall communications guru Stefan Ringel.

Henry acknowledged his group hasn’t come up with an actual plan for holding such huge elections, but said it is still speaking to community members and politicians before presenting a proposal for how to execute its vision.

The organization says it has reached out to every Council member in the city with its idea, and its only Brooklyn respondees were Councilman Antonio Reynoso (D–Bushwick), who supports elected community boards, and Maisel.

Reynoso — who has previously described community boards as “political cesspools” that don’t reflect the demographics of their neighborhoods — did not return requests for comment.

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

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GREENWOOD HEIGHTS: Police: Hit-and-run carjacker runs over and kills owner of truck he stole

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By Zach Jones

Brooklyn Daily

A dirtbag stole a truck then fatally ran over its owner in Greenwood Heights on Monday morning, police said.

The 63-year-old victim — Phillip Dellegrazia of Bensonhurst — was loading and unloading goods between two vehicles in front of his store on 24th Street between Fourth and Fifth avenues some time before 9 am, when the lout jumped in one of his pickup trucks and sped off, police said.

The man got in a sports utility vehicle and chased after the thief, and the two stopped on Fourth Avenue between 22nd and 23rd streets, where they got into a physical fight, cops said.

The victim ended up on the ground, and the carjacker then got back in the truck, ran over him, and fled, authorities said.

Medics pronounced the truck owner dead at the scene, police said.

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