All the important meetings you should be going to.
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By Louise Crawford
Smartmom: Smartmom tries out the new Buddhist haggadah.
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By Grace Labatt
Art: Red Hook artist’s faith on paper.
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By Dana Rubinstein and Christie Rizk
Park Slope: Flatbush Avenue was in lock-down and crawling with cops on Tuesday night after a gun-toting, pot-smoking criminal allegedly shot a police officer in the ankle less than two blocks from his 78th Precinct headquarters.
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By John O’Connor
Music: The Brooklyn Paramont Theater returns to glory.
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By Giacomo Maniscalco
Event: Good Friday’s procession over the Brooklyn Bridge.
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By Lilo H. Stainton
Carroll Gardens: A gold-plated police department charm bracelet attracted the attention of a bandit in Boerum Hill — plus more crime from Cobble Hill, Carroll Gardens and Red Hook.
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By Lilo H. Stainton
Fort Greene: A quiet moment on a park bench turned out to be anything but for one Fort Greene man on March 22 — but at least the victim kept his valuables. Plus all the other Fort Greene and Clinton Hill crime.
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By Lilo H. Stainton
Downtown: The Ben and Jerry’s on Atlantic Avenue is robbed — plus all the other Brooklyn Heights, DUMBO and Downtown crime.
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By Matthew Lysiak
Bay Ridge: The FDNY will no longer send emergency ambulances to Victory Hospital — a decision that could doom the beleaguered hospital, days after local pols crowed that they had saved the troubled medical center’s ER.
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By Gersh Kuntzman
Park Slope: A woman was forced at gunpoint by two thugs to drive to her bank and withdraw $1,500 on March 20.
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By Sarah McCormick
Event: Coney Island celebrates Fools Day with a new Melville reading.
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By Joe Pompeo
Checkin’ in with: It’s a wonder that Larry Scott never got his ass kicked — the guy’s been clowning people since the age of 13.
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By Matthew Lysiak and Michael Giardina
Bay Ridge: A 22-year-old man was robbed by three men who took $70, two bags of marijuana, and, apparently, their victim’s common sense on March 10.
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By Laura McDonald
Music: GO Brooklyn’s Texas correspondent checks in with the borough’s finest at South by Southwest.
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By Christie Rizk
Everyone believes in God, but no one knows the basics of religion — and a new book says that’s a problem.
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Dining: Wombat’s Charlie Statelman helps GO Brooklyn make an Easter meal with a modern twist.
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By Neil Munshi
Seeing them in Prospect Park, their figures posed in unison, a passerby might assume they were just an early morning exercise group. But all that stretching is actually a faith.
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By Ariella Cohen
What is heaven? What is hell? We hit the streets to find out.
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Dining: Our staff on their experiences with the ‘Dine in Brooklyn’ restaurant week.
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By Nica Lalli
Perspective: When you identify your religious affiliation as “Nothing,” it can be challenging to figure out what you do believe in.
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By Joe Pompeo
Religious institutions reach out to gay and lesbian members.
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By Dana Rubinstein
Atlantic Yards: Bruce Ratner is buying the son of one of his fiercest opponents a Beemer.
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By Chris Varmus
Nightlife: Meet Brooklyn’s hippest preacher — live from a Williamsburg bar!
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By Tina Barry
Dining: Mediterranean cuisine on the Columbia Street Waterfront.
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By Jordana Rothman
Dining: The best holiday food is the kind that takes you home.
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By Liz Cooper
Surfing through profiles on ChristianMingle.com, it seems the prerequisite is to already be in a committed relationship — with the Lord.
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By Nick Kindelsperger
Dining: The reinvention of Clinton Hill’s Myrtle Avenue.
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By Gersh Kuntzman
Brooklyn Angle: If there are any atheist opponents of Atlantic Yards, they might want to start believing in God — because God, apparently, is opposed to Bruce Ratner’s mega-development.
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By Mat Probasco
Park Slope: From Gothic cathedral spires and towering synagogues to tiny storefront mosques, it’s hard to get around the Kensington or Flatbush neighborhoods without bumping into some manifestation of holiness. Faith lurks on nearly every corner.
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By Ariella Cohen
Atlantic Yards: State officials admitted this week that when they approved Atlantic Yards last year they were relying on documents that were incomplete — and may have even been in violation of Bruce Ratner’s original pact with the state and city.
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