RETAIL THERAPY SALES & EMPORIUM ART ON SIDEBAR
Apr 25, 2018
A Tale Of Two Bridges
In the mid 50's, it was a big deal to us southsiders when they opened the new 15th Street Bridge. Prior to that, we had to either go over the 8th Street Bridge, or use the old stone arch bridge by the fertilizer plant. The fertilizer plant is long gone, but the old stone bridge is still there. Schreibers Bridge was built in 1828, and rehabilitated in 1920. The new 15th Street bridge was built in 1957, and is now restricted to south bound only, until which time it can be completely replaced. So the new bridge lasted 54 years, while the old stone bridge is still in use, 182 years later.
Recently, I urged Donny Cunningham not to replace the stone arch bridge on Reading Road. His project manager, Glenn Solt, insists that the historic bridge must be replaced. He stated that stone arch bridges look nice on the outside, but inside, they're filled with "crap." Thankfully, Don and Glenn didn't target Schreibers Bridge, because we're really going to need it with the new 15th Street Bridge out of commission. Hopefully, they will reconsider about stealing our history on Reading Road.
above reprinted from November of 2010
ADDENDUM APRIL 25, 2018: The 15th Street Bridge has been replaced. Historic Schreiber's Bridge will now be closed to repair the north side entrance wing, which was damaged by a truck during the new, new bridge replacement. I did manage to save the Reading Road Bridge. Hopefully, I can now prevail upon the new mayor, Ray O'Connell, to save the endangered Monumental Double Stairway in Lehigh Parkway.
Apr 24, 2018
Congressional Candidates Night In Bethlehem
Brith Sholom, the largest Jewish congregation in Bethlehem, is holding a conversation with the 7th District Congressional candidates tomorrow evening at 7:00 p.m.. Although all Democrats and the Libertarian are expected to attend, both the Republican candidates had prior commitments. Marty Nothstein will be at the Lehigh County Commissioner meeting. The candidate's views, especially in regard to Middle East affairs, will be a topic of special interest. Members of the general public are welcome to attend.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 2018, 7:00p.m.
Congregation Brith Sholom
1190 West Macada Road, Bethlehem, Pa.
Apr 23, 2018
Morning Call Editorials
In his column yesterday, Lehigh Valley congressional candidate Marty Nothstein owes League of Women Voters an apology, Bill White took Marty Nothstein to task for dodging the League Of Women Voters debate. This is the League's debate focused on the new 7th Congressional District primary, which invited all the candidates. White's complaint against Nothstein's decision is fair in its own right. However, Bill White's column is now the de facto political editorials for the paper, and the paper's record is questionable, at best.
For example, in 2005, although I was the first independent to run for mayor in two decades at the time, the Morning Call excluded me from their sponsored debate with Muhlenberg College, televised by Channel 39. Every day for two weeks they promoted the debate, running a quarter page photograph of both Pawlowski and Heydt in the paper. The paper's circulation was considerably larger back then, and those debate advertisements essentially told the public that there were only two candidates running for office, not three. They justified that action by claiming a poll by Mulhenberg showed my support below their threshold for inclusion. At the time the paper's other columnist, Paul Carpenter, ran a column about the inequality of that decision. I can appreciate that my complaint sounds egocentric, but I assure you that over the years the paper has marginalized many other candidates as well.
I can accept that Bill White now writes the editorials for the paper, but he should know that at least one local blogger will scrutinize them.
Apr 20, 2018
Spongebaths For The Homeless At Starbucks
Starbucks, in their yearning to be politically correct, has probably irrevocably degraded their brand, at least in the urban markets. The policy of restricting restroom use to paying customers is standard procedure in large urban areas. A white middle class woman told me that she was denied use of the restroom for not being a paying patron at the same Philadelphia Starbucks at the center of the controversy.
Apparently, it is a Starbucks CEO tradition to let PC race ahead of common sense. Last year they promised to hire 8,000 immigrants. While nobody is waiting for the immigrants before they buy their latte, the homeless will start availing themselves of the restrooms. While my liberal readers, all six of them, will welcome the better restroom facilities for the homeless, their tune may change next time they use the bathroom in a Philadelphia Starbucks.
If Starbucks' corporate reaction to the incident wasn't enough, now the Philadelphia Police Commissioner is walking back his previous support of the arresting officers. He has apologized to the two men arrested, who refused to leave as instructed by the responding officers. While only reinforcing victim mentality, I don't see anything productive in these reactions.
photocredit: Bryant/Philadelphia Inquirer
If Starbucks' corporate reaction to the incident wasn't enough, now the Philadelphia Police Commissioner is walking back his previous support of the arresting officers. He has apologized to the two men arrested, who refused to leave as instructed by the responding officers. While only reinforcing victim mentality, I don't see anything productive in these reactions.
photocredit: Bryant/Philadelphia Inquirer
Apr 19, 2018
Dent Turbocharges Congressional Election
With Charlie Dent announcing that he is resigning within weeks, chances are that a short term incumbent will be running in the November election for the new 7th Congressional District. With the primary elections coming up in about a month, the winners will most likely be chosen to compete in the special election which Governor Wolf will call for after Dent's formal resignation. The winner of the special election will complete Dent's current term in the 15th District.
Pundits of the cynical nature will assume that Dent is resigning to enhance the chances of his chosen successor to win the November general election. As it stands right now, I believe that Nothstein and Morganelli are their respective party favorites.
Dent's resignation, for whatever reason, will not be popular locally in the short term. However, he has served his constituents on both the state and federal level for many years, and he will be appreciated for that long service.
Apr 18, 2018
Bill White's Artificial World
I hate it when Bill White compels me to review him, as he did yesterday while writing.... since the only people who buy into his propaganda(Hannity) at this point are Trump true believers who are beyond caring about the actual truth of what’s happening. White was criticizing Sean Hannity at White's Morning Call blog about not disclosing that he (Hannity) had received legal real estate advice from Michael Cohen. White went on to question both the journalistic integrity of Hannity and Fox News.
Therefore, according to Bill White, a lot of Morning Call readers don't care about the actual truth. Perhaps Bill should concern himself more with actual truth in the Morning Call's little world. His paper might be more forthcoming about Allentown's NIZ, and its(The Morning Call) landlord, J.B Reilly. While the FBI investigation and indictment of Ed Pawlowski finally brought an end to the paper's bromance with city hall, it continues to praise the NIZ, as if Allentown's revitalization is real, as opposed to a richly subsided staged production at taxpayer expense.
In our era of reduced newspaper circulation, the Morning Call survived because of corporate affiliation, not journalistic merit. Although White, now after so many years is a senior tenured employee for the outside management, he needs to realize that journalistic integrity should start with the home paper.
Apr 17, 2018
Allentown, Syria and Trump
Allentown has one of the largest Syrian Christian communities in the United States. Most members of that community attend St. Georges Orthodox Church, and have been in Allentown for three or more generations. Like other ethnic groups they settled in the 6th Ward in the early 1900's. Although a minority in Syria, they are protected by Assad and his father before him. The Morning Call has been featuring their defense of Assad and their objection to the recent missile attack by the United States. It is their position that the gas attack was anti-Assad propaganda, and not carried out by the Syrian Government.
The Syrian civil war continues to be a tragedy. With over 400,000 deaths and 5 million refugees, a missile attack on possible gas production facilities is the least of Syria's problems. Putting aside the Syrian Christian objections, the attack has also become a political football with other factions. The anti-Trumpers find fault with it, or anything he would do. Because both Britain and France participated in the military action, the opposition parties in those countries accuse both Theresa May and Emmanuel Macron of kowtowing to Trump.
United States and its allies cannot turn a blind eye to the use of gas and poison even in the most horrendous of wars. Likewise, the coalition cannot be deterred by threats from Russia. The response was both measured and appropriate.
photocredit:April Gamiz/The Morning Call
Apr 16, 2018
A Meat Market In Easton
When I was in high school my father owned a small meat market in Easton. It was called Melbern, and was on South 4th Street. That small row of old buildings was replaced in the early 1980's by the current KWM Insurance Agency. I spent my high school summers working in the meat market, and exploring Northampton Street on my lunch breaks.
Recently, I returned to retrace my steps. Back then I would walk down to the circle for lunch, usually stopping to visit a friend who worked at the lunchmeat counter in the five and dime. The circle is still busy with a lunch crowd, even without a NIZ subsidized by Pennsylvania taxpayers.
The buildings, for the most part, are original and charming. Easton is up and coming, because it wasn't lucky enough to become revitalized with sterile towers of architectural mediocrity.
I even stopped in to visit Sal Panto at the new city hall. I suspect he saw me coming through a surveillance system, because his secretary assured me that he wasn't in.
photo of Easton Center Square, 1948
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)






