Aug 28, 2020
Bill White's Selective Memory
Fellow blogger Bernie O'Hare and I don't talk much, but when we do, we usually wonder who is the bigger bastard? Bernie is often accused of having favorite people who can do no harm, nobody accuses me of that. What brings on today's rant is Bill White's column yesterday.
White gets nostalgic for the closing Morning Call offices at 6th and Linden. He recalls the pride when the reporters covered the trial of former mayor Pawlowski so efficiently. That's funny, because I recall the decade of Pawlowski's corruption which they silently missed. Bill also doesn't mention their windfall from the NIZ. The Morning Call building was included in the district, although across the street, and now is the property of the NIZ baron J.B. Reilly.
I appreciate the local articles, and the job done by the reporters, but I'm too much of a bastard to let White get away with whitewashing the paper. They have repressed news of numerous shenanigans by local sacred cows they have chosen to protect.
Pictured above is Wehr's Dam. There is an active conspiracy in motion to circumvent the citizen's referendum to keep the dam, and demolish it anyway, to accommodate the Wildlands Conservancy. Although I provided proof to the Morning Call that the Wildlands is communicating back channel with the State to that end, Morning Call editor Mike Miorelli refuses to print the story. However, Mike did hire Bill back to write his puff column.
Building or no building, business and censorship as usual at The Morning Call.
photocredit:Gregg Obst
Aug 27, 2020
Misguided To Mt. Sinai In Fairview
In 2000, when I was looking for the burial place of a Jewish woman who died in 1918, I ended up searching the Jewish orphan cemeteries. An orphan cemetery is one that is no longer actively maintained by a congregation, usually because the congregation no longer exists. Mt. Sinai was begun by an association of early Allentown Jews in 1875. Eventually, the group established a synagogue, which in turn started its own cemetery in 1928 on Walbert Avenue. After that time mostly only spouses of earlier burials were interred in Mt. Sinai. The last such funeral had occurred in 1976.
I was intrigued by the new Levine marker, near the front of the Mt. Sinai section. A few years later I took it upon myself to locate any remaining family members. Joseph was 103 when he passed away, so when I met his son at a local diner for coffee, he himself was an elderly man. Years earlier the family had moved from Brooklyn to the Pennsylvania countryside. When Joseph's wife died in 2000, he contacted Boyko's Funeral Home in Macungie. When he asked Boyko about a Jewish cemetery, Boyko guided, or misguided him to one that he owned in Fairview. Boyko did not mention that the cemetery was no longer affiliated with a congregation, or that there hadn't been a Jewish funeral there in twenty four years. Six years later Joseph joined his wife at Mt. Sinai.
A few years ago Boyko also buried another Jew, a hispanic man, in Mt. Sinai. These burials are assuredly taking place in plots that long ago belonged to other families. However, at this point in time I don't think that anybody will know or care. Several years ago I asked a local woman about a very prominent marker at Mt Sinai with her family name. She told me that her parents and grandparents are buried in the Walbert Avenue cemetery, but she recalled that her great-grandfather was buried somewhere else. She didn't know about Mt. Sinai at Fairview, nor was she ever there. When Jews visit a cemetery they leave a pebble on the gravestone. There are no visitors to Mt. Sinai.
Aug 26, 2020
Revive Fairview Cemetery
About twelve years ago, I began searching for the grave of a young Jewish woman, who died around 1900. Among several Jewish cemeteries no longer in use, I searched Mt. Sinai, a small section of the sprawling Fairview Cemetery on Lehigh Street, just west of the 8th Street Bridge. The cemetery is the history of Allentown's past, including the graves of Harry Trexler, John Leh, and Jack Mack. As one proceeded deeper into the cemetery, away from sight on Lehigh Street, conditions worsened. As is the case with many old cemeteries, fees paid for perpetual care, 100 years ago, were long gone. Complicating the situation, the current private operator wasn't particularly assessable. In addition to extended family members upset about conditions, the situation was compounded by his refusal, with few exceptions, to allow private upkeep. My early posts on the situation drew response and phone calls from people with no interest in local political blogs; They were just exasperated relatives, with a family member buried long ago at Fairview. After beginning a series of posts, and letters to the editor, I prevailed upon The Morning Call to write a story one year later. The Call's story appeared on August 11, 2008. Within two weeks, the cemetery operator agreed to a public meeting I had organized at a local church. Arrangements were made between the operator and several parties. As with several of Allentown's older cemeteries, the issue of maintenance would be ongoing.
The current operator of Fairview, in addition to operating an on-site crematorium, is actively having new burials in the cemetery. It appears as if some of these new burials might be on old large family plots, which haven't been used or even visited in decades. In other cases, they appear to be along the internal roadways, which were previously not considered proper burial places.
Because of my longtime blogging on Fairview, periodically I would be contacted by someone with a family member buried at the cemetery. They were always frustrated by conditions at the cemetery, and asked where or to whom they could turn. The photo shown above was taken by a frustrated family member. It occurred to me that a facebook group page could be a common meeting ground for such families. Recently, after I started the Allentown Chronicles facebook group, local resident Tyler Fatzinger demonstrated strong concern for conditions at Fairview. I suggested that he moderate a new group dedicated to the cemetery. He agreed, and started Revive Fairview Cemetery.
reprinted from previous years
UPDATE AUGUST 26, 2020: Tyler Fatzinger has turned out to be a tireless advocate for Fairview, volunteering his free time working and clearing at the cemetery.
Aug 25, 2020
Looking For News In The Trump Era
As a blogger it's important that I stay informed. Even before the previous election in 2016, a few media companies made a business decision to choose a target audience, with no pretense of objectivity. As the Trump administration progressed, or declined depending on your point of view, the concept of objectivity became a rare commodity, perhaps even extinct.
Regardless of how one feels about Trump for president, certainly the sequence of minority speakers at the Republican convention's first night was inspirational. For CNN to portray the evening as a parade of dishonesty is ironically dishonest. Even more unfortunate is the former institutions of journalism, such as the NY Times and Washington Post, which now feel morally justified slanting the news.
What will happen to CNN if Trump wins again in 2020? I suppose that they could continue their format, but such an agenda eventually completely erodes credibility. At what point does it become a tabloid at the check out rack, next to the National Enquirer with the Space Aliens Among Us?
Aug 24, 2020
Biden's Little White Lie
In one of the Biden's first interviews since the convention, he said that he didn't feel any pressure to choose a black woman for VP. Of course, in reality, the only suspense was which black woman was he going to pick.
Black women are a big block in North Carolina, and that state was a big factor in Biden's primary win. When he obligated himself to picking a woman, Harris's nomination was practically a done deal.
In Biden's final short list, four out of six women were of color. Among the black women, Harris and Rice were immensely more qualified. While Rice has extensive international experience, she also had some associated baggage.
When I questioned this blog's Democratic focus group, they all replied what else could he say? In their minds, no big deal there. After all, it's not like one of Trump's lies.
Aug 21, 2020
Obama's Third Term
With the Democratic world going ecstatic for Obama's put down of Trump, I felt compelled to watch/listen to the speech. Because Obama is such an eloquent speaker, it took two sessions for me to complete the watching. Although only 19 minutes long, the eloquence which mesmerizes others, annoys me. Obama could make a rain gutter commercial sound monumental. That quality of such elocution must be put aside, so that the meaningfulness of a speech can be evaluated.
Right off, Trump could not have caused both more virus deaths and also more damage to the economy. If more restrictions were put into place, there would have been more economic damage. Unfortunately, both results are proportional to our country's size, and experienced throughout the world.
Both Obama and Biden keep telling us that Joe was Obama's right hand. However, now Joe would be steering the ship, but still the best they can say is that he would be steady. We hear that steady is enough. Those satisfied with steady think that the country can protect itself, and all it needs is a president less embarrassing. Perhaps the country can lead itself back to being dependent on outside manufacturing, and picking up the tab for world defense.
Those so offended by Trump would gladly settle for Obama's third term. However, it won't actually be Obama delivering their cherished speeches. It would be Biden, occasionally telling us how the massive bureaucracy has been reengaged, to reproduce the previous status quo. Actually, that's the best it could be, because if it's worse, we'll be paying to make everything free for everybody.
photocredit:Pete Souza
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