Oct 16, 2020
The Short Life Of Allentown Bill 72
Oct 15, 2020
The Sunday Drive

My family wasn't much for recreation. My father worked six days a week, from early morning until early evening. We did go for a long car ride on Sundays. Back then gasoline was cheap, and having no destination wasn't thought of as wasteful. Children were more content to sit in the back seat and look out the window, now they want a video screen in the vehicle.

Even children's play then involved more imagination and interaction. Howdy Doody was just a puppet on strings, who spend most of his time talking to an adult, Buffalo Bob, can you imagine?
Sitting in that back seat in the mid fifties, I might well had

my "coonskin" hat with me. Fess Parker was a genuine American hero. It mattered little if he played both Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone, both were king of the wild frontier. The ride probably lasted for two hours and then we would go to a restaurant to eat dinner. Compared to now, there were very few restaurants.

My mother would cook all the other meals that week, and we probably ate out more than most. Supermarkets were the new rage in food shopping, but the butcher, baker and candle stick maker were still going strong. If my father headed west or south, chances are we ended up at Shankweiler's Hotel, famous for chicken and waffles. They were at the intersection of Old 22 and Route 100. The building still exists and currently is a bank. The family also owned another hotel on Route 309. Both locations also operated adjoining Drive-In movies.
If my father headed north or east, we would end up at Walp's, which was on the corner of Union Blvd. and Airport Road. Walp's was a much more urban place. While Shankweiler's was an old country inn, Walp's was built as a modern restaurant. I enjoyed those rides, they were a learning experience.

reprinted from previous years
Oct 14, 2020
As Harrisburg Turns
In his quest last year to make voting easier, Governor Wolf reluctantly agreed to something this state has needed for a very long time, the elimination of straight party ticket voting. While the pundits are not in agreement about which party this change will benefit, I know it will benefit informed democracy.
While Pennsylvania was one of the last states to still host this mindless straight party lever pull, it constituted nearly 40% of the votes cast. My phrase about lever pull refers to the mechanical machines previously used in Lehigh County for decades. While I miss the reliability and confidence those metal booths provided, I welcome the end of the all too easy down ballot.
If this new policy stays in place, perhaps the voters will have to learn more about the local races, which actually effect their lives much more.
Oct 13, 2020
The Morning Call Shuns Molovinsky
Today, the Morning Call began a series of questions and answers with the candidates in the local state representative races, but did not include me. In the first installment on the 187th District, it mentions that each candidate received written questions...None were sent to me.
In the 22nd District, I fully expect to see Enid Santiago listed... She is also a write-in, not on the ballot, no different than my candidacy.
The Morning Call reads this blog everyday, and is fully aware that I'm waging a write-in campaign. I receive numerous notes from the publisher/editor complaining that I misrepresent the newspaper.
Mr. Miorelli, editor/publisher of the Morning Call, by excluding me you are grossly underserving your subscribers in Slatington, Walnutport, Northampton and all the other communities in the 183rd District, in both Lehigh and Northampton Counties.
When the Morning Call excludes articles and letters on certain topics to reflect their political agenda, they compromise their journalistic integrity. When they start excluding certain candidates, they undermine local democracy.
Oct 12, 2020
Pennsylvania's State House Problem
Pennsylvania has the largest state house in the country, with 203 districts. An incumbent would be hard pressed to actually need more than $10,000 to wage a campaign for reelection. A war chest of over $200,000 would take care of the next 20 years of campaigning. There are 24 representatives with chests well over $100,000.
While representatives, especially ones running for the first time, promise reform and term limits, I know of none who actually did what they promised. If I were to be elected as the write-in candidate for the 183rd district, I would limit myself to two terms. The current Republican incumbent is already running for his third term. His Democratic opponent is running for a job and a paycheck.
Write-in a true independent for the 183rd, vote for true reform, write-in Michael Molovinsky.
Oct 9, 2020
Allentown's Vanishing History

Years ago a reader sent me the above image. It looks down the hill from 7th and Hamilton, north, toward Linden Street. He had been attempting to locate the old Lafayette Radio store on 7th street, because of a pleasant memory from his childhood. By my day the store had moved onto the southern side of the 700 block of Hamilton Street. History is quickly succumbing to the wreaking ball in Allentown. All the buildings shown above, on the unit block of 7th Street, have been knocked down for the arena and Reilly's Strata complexes. When Salomon Jewelry departed, Tucker Yarn remained one of Hamilton Street's last remaining businesses from the glory days.
Phil and Rose Tucker opened their first yarn store on N. 7th St. in 1949. That first store can be seen on the left side of the above photo. The Tucker Yarn Company had been at its current location at 950 Hamilton Street for over 50 years. For knitting enthusiasts the endless inventory was legendary. Phil told me years ago how even in May, traditionally a slow month for the industry, Hess's annual flower show kept Hamilton Street and his store busy. A busy Hamilton Street is a memory now, shared only by a couple of surviving merchants. Although many of Tucker's customers were elderly, the business was much more than a time capsule. His daughter Mae, nationally known in the trade, gave classes and operates a large mail order web site, tuckeryarns.com
Tucker Yarn has closed. In the near future you will see the building replaced by one more new office building. This blogger will continue his downtown recons, but I will no longer be sitting in a familiar place with familiar faces.
The above image can be found in Doug Peters' Lehigh Valley Transit



