Oct 23, 2019

Molovinsky, The Morning Call and News


The article about Hooks Seafood restaurant closing states that this type of failure isn't unusual in an urban renewal area, according to experts. So says the Morning Call.  The article also states that The $6 million renovation of the long-closed Sal's Spaghetti House included a crystal chandelier from Hess's department store.... As you can see from my photograph above, Sal's wasn't renovated. The long closed former spaghetti house was demolished, and a new building was constructed in its place.  Now, I can understand the paper not knowing this, after all, the building is over a quarter block away from the newspaper building.  Assuming that people at the Morning Call read the paper, apparently nobody caught the error, twice. This was the second time in about a week that this misinformation was printed. However, this post is about the important part of the story, not covered by the paper.

The restaurant was built pre-NIZ. Save for a $50,000 city grant, the entire cost was borne by the owner. It happens that the owner and his wife were retired from a very lucrative business, and always wanted to own a high end restaurant. Opened as the Cosmopolitan, it was high end indeed.  When that failed to attract enough well heeled, it was transformed into the more price friendly Hook Seafood. However, with the NIZ and Reilly's hospitality group of eateries, the market was now over-saturated.

The owner of the restaurant when asked about lack of foot traffic downtown stated, "I'm not going to get judgmental or say anything negative." Those are traits that nobody accuses this blogger of having.

photocredit:molovinsky- site of the former Sal's Spaghetti House being prepared for new foundation

reprinted from March of 2017

Oct 22, 2019

Sign Of The Time


As Allentown eagerly awaits the opening of the Cosmopolitan Restaurant and banquet facility on 6th Street, lets go back in time. Before the former Sal's Spaghetti House was demolished on that parcel, preservationists from Bucks County saved the historic sign. Had the couple been somewhat more familiar with Allentown's history, they may have realized that the sign was neither very historic or iconic.

Before Hamilton Street was bi-sected architecturally by the now gone canopy, the street was lined with large neon signs, many of which were much more elaborate than Sal's; That sign became historic by default. Interestingly, the Sal's sign for most of it's


business days, said Pat's. Pat's and the sign go back to the mid 1950's. In the late 70's, the business was taken over by Sal, and the P and T were simply changed to an S and L. But time goes on; Sal's family is now in the sauce business and have a most interesting website.

1963 Pat's advertisement courtesy of Larry P
Hamilton Steet watercolor by Karoline Schaub-Peeler
photo of Sal's sign by molovinsky                                                 

reprinted from 2010

Oct 21, 2019

A Meat Market In Easton


When I was in high school, on weekends and summers I would work at my father's meat market on 4th Street in Easton. Taking those curves on Rt. 22 at high speed was just an extra high school thrill, while getting and going from the job. The Market has long been replaced by an insurance agency. At that time my uncle owned the Mohican Market across the street.  Now, 55 years later,  I still occasionally take the trip, but much, much, much slower on the curves.

While I'm in the neighborhood, it's nice to park along the convergence of the Lehigh and Delaware.  The dam there gives me great pleasure, especially since Easton told the Wildlands Conservancy to take a hike when they proposed tearing it down.  Allentown would have said sure, like they did in Lehigh Parkway.

Yesterday Larry Holmes Drive was closed to host a food truck festival. I felt bad for the vendors...  between the rain and the cold,  the visitors were sparse.  When I told an Easton policeman that I came for the river view, he encouraged me to patronize the food trucks while I was there.  I thought that it was nice that he was concerned for the vendors.  I almost asked him if he remembered the Melbern Meat Market,  but then realized that he wouldn't yet be born for another 25 years.

photocredit:The Morning Call

Oct 18, 2019

Back In The Bunker Fighting Allentown Again


When I started molovinsky on allentown in 2007, one of its missions was to expose Pawlowski for the phony that he was. At that time, community activists and fellow bloggers were still entranced by him. I was accused of harboring sour grapes, because I was an independent opponent in the 2005 election. Within two years, blogger Bernie O'Hare starting noticing that little people in Pawlowski's way were squashed. We joined forces about Lanta and the bus stops, about the abuse of the minority merchants and other assorted bruised victims. During the Pawlowski trial, the FBI agent mentioned Bernie's blog, and Bernie subsequently credited my influence on him.

Yesterday I participated in an intensely heated court hearing for a homeowner, who I believed was being harassed to accommodate a code supervisor's friend.  A code officer testified that he noticed the violation over the fence from the adjoining property,  which is owned by this friend of the supervisor.  This adjoining property is a mess, but no enforcement ever seems to occur there. The court certainly tried to accommodate the city, by allowing the inspector to cite an item not on the complaint. The judge was finally forced to find the homeowner not guilty, when she produced a permit from 2002, demonstrating that the item was indeed grandfathered. Although the city had falsely testified earlier in the hearing that no such permit was ever issued,  the judge seemed to have no issue with that, or the other improprieties.  In addition to the code officer, the code supervisor himself attended the hearing. Neither the Director of Community Development nor the mayor were interested in my concern that the rights of a homeowner were being violated. I'm particularly offended by the notion of public officials using the machinery of the state to settle personal grievances.

During those pre FBI years, I referred to having a bunker to take refuge in. After the recent dealings with community development and code, I have once again opened the bunker, and am stocking it with provisions,  in case it proves necessary.

photo of blogger in bunker

Oct 17, 2019

Broom Needed At Allentown City Hall


When former mayor Pawlowski was convicted, there were those who called for a clean sweep of city hall.  At the time I argued against it.  I felt that the city needed the remaining institutional knowledge, and that Pawlowski's downfall would sufficiently put the necessary fear in the bureaucracy... I was wrong.

I will be appearing in District Court this morning as a witness for a harassed homeowner.  She has  apparently been victimized to accommodate a friend of a city supervisor.  Corruption is not only limited to bribery and graft, but includes abuse of power and violation of citizen rights.

About a decade ago, blogger Bernie O'Hare and I teamed up to expose some shenanigans in Pawlowski's city hall.  Although we have not cooperated for several years,  we will be sharing notes on this story.

Oct 16, 2019

Allentown In Fort Worth


There was a police shooting this past weekend in Fort Worth, Texas. A woman was shot in her own home, after allegedly pointing a gun toward her bedroom window, by a police officer outside in her yard. Allentown and Fort Worth have a former police chief in common.

Former Allentown police chief Joel Fitzgerald's lawyer is claiming that if he hadn't been fired from his position in Fort Worth last May, the black woman shot early Saturday morning would probably still be alive. While Fitzgerald is fighting to get his Texas job back, he omits the fact that if things had gone his way, he would have gotten the top police job in Baltimore, and would not have been in Fort Worth anyway. 

Fitzgerald was hired by former mayor Pawlowski, and resigned to take the Fort Worth job. Fitzgerald's son was given a job at Lehigh County prison, and was subsequently arrested for pointing a gun at county detectives. Although acquitted with the help of high power Philly lawyer Jack McMahon, his subsequent suit for racial profiling against the county was dismissed. McMahon would later become a daily figure in Allentown, unsuccessfully defending Pawlowski against corruption charges.

I don't know if Fitzgerald's guidance would have prevented the shooting last weekend, but he certainly has expertise when to comes to hiring lawyers.

photo of former mayor Pawlowski swearing in former police chief Fitzgerald/The Morning Call

Oct 15, 2019

Looking For A New Political Tribe


Swimming upstream is nothing new to me, I have never been in calm waters. Recently when I decided that I must cut bait with Donald Trump, I assumed that there would be plenty of tents available to me. I have always considered myself a conservative independent. What I'm finding out is that the country has become so polarized, that there only remains for or against Trump, nothing else.

Even such prestigious sites as AmericanThinker have a distinct slant, now pro Trump. While there are Independents Against Trump, there are no Independents for being independent. when I refer to independent, I don't mean that you won't vote for either party, but that your vote isn't based on party.

In addition to writing molovinsky on allentown since 2007, I have another blog titled Rainy Morning Chronicle. On that venue I place posts that are not Allentown centric, such as this one. If that's not enough of me, there are also two facebook pages...  Allentown Chronicles majors in Allentown history and minors in local politics. The facebook page Rainy Morning Chronicle mirrors the blog of the same name. If there are any other people out there who are not polarized,  perhaps you can direct me to your tent?