Oct 30, 2020
The Morning Call Excludes Molovinsky
Oct 29, 2020
The Mohican Markets
The Mohican Markets were owned and operated by Bernard Molovinsky, who purchased the three Lehigh Valley stores from a small chain located in New York and Pennsylvania.
revised and reprinted from September of 2007
Oct 28, 2020
Send Your Message Down Ballot
Although Voter Registration is in the basement of Lehigh County Government Center, yesterday the line stretched out the first floor building entrance and up 7th Street, toward Center Square.
The Election Office reports that most of the new registrants are Democrats. While news reports speculate on a 70% turnout, including mail-in votes, I expect it to be higher. I know that 100% of those standing in that line yesterday will vote.
I've never seen a more polarized, energized electorate. As an independent write-in candidate, it is my hope that voters will refrain from straight ticket voting. While I know that the inclination is to send a message, I'm hoping that at the bottom of the ballot, I will be their message in the 183rd State House District.
While I have no connection to the Biden/Trump contest, I'm well connected to the issues facing citizens of the Lehigh Valley. While I have no connection to either the Democratic or Republican Party, my commitment to better government has spanned decades of involvement.
Write-In Michael Molovinsky
Oct 27, 2020
Jennie Molovinsky Was A Quiet Neighbor
For nearly a hundred years the Wenz Memorial Company had a tombstone factory at 20th and Hamilton. Their parcel extended from Hamilton Street back to Walnut Street, across from the home of former mayor Joe Daddona. Years ago, large granite slabs would be delivered by railroad, using the the Barber Quarry spur route. During the Phil Berman era, the facilities were also used to produce large stone sculptures. Behind the office and production building, most of the property was used for storage of tombstones. Some of the stones were samples of their handiwork, and others were old stones that had been replaced with new ones, by family members. Such was the case with my great grandmother's first stone, which has laid at Wenz's for several decades. The row houses and their front porches on S. Lafayette Street faced this portion of Wenz's, and it was very quiet, indeed.
Some readers may have noticed that Wenz's has been demolished, and the parcel will now contain a bank, Dunkin Donut, and Woody's Sport Bar. The residents of Lafayette Street, experiencing complete quietness for all these years, attended the zoning hearing as objectors. Their previous view, a dark, quiet lot, would now be replaced with a lit parking lot, with bar patrons coming and going. Although I will not comment on the zoning issues, residents were supposedly told by the zoners that the development would improve their quality of life. It's one thing to have the quality of your life degraded, it's another to have your intelligence insulted, to boot. Perhaps the zoners need some training in sensitivity.
reprinted from May of 2016
Oct 26, 2020
My Challenge For The State House
Ruff himself, and several of his surrogates, have asked questions on my facebook promotions. I have yet to see an insightful comment or idea from that camp. He heralds the usual union endorsements, and supports the party positions, which would all require more taxes to implement. Of course, at the same time, he wants property tax reform.
I can assure voters that with Mako or Ruff, there would be no changes coming your way from Harrisburg. They both need the job, and the security that the old incumbent system provides.
While the primary function of a state representative is to make sure that the state returns proportional benefits to those communities within the district, I have objectives beyond the obvious. If elected, I would work to eliminate some representatives, there are far too many districts in Pennsylvania. I would work to eliminate pensions for representatives, there are too many long term incumbents, preoccupied by being re-elected. I would work to eliminate most of the commissions, many unnecessary, stuffed with patronage jobs.
I would vote on each bill with quality government being the only criterion, not a party platform.
I understand that voters are passionate about the national election, and some think that by voting straight ticket that they're sending more of a message. If you live in the 183rd, make your message at the top of your ballot, but improve your state government by writing-in my name for State Representative...Michael Molovinsky
Oct 23, 2020
The Corner Market
Oct 22, 2020
Growing Up Parkway

I'm a baby boomer. I was born in December of 1946. As soon as my mother climbed out of the hospital bed, another woman climbed in. I grew up in the neighborhood now called Little Lehigh Manor, wedged between Lehigh Street and the top of the ravine above Lehigh Parkway. That's me on our lawn at the intersection of Catalina and Liberator Avenues, named after airplanes made by Vultee Corporation for the War. We had our own elementary school, our own grocery store, and the park to play in. On Saturdays, older kids would take us along on the trolley, and later the bus, over the 8TH Street Bridge to Hamilton Street. There were far too many stores to see everything. After a matinee of cartoons or Flash Gordon, and a banana split at one of the five and dimes, we would take the bus back over the bridge to Lehigh Street.

Not that many people know where Lehigh Parkway Elementary School is. It's tucked up at the back of the development of twin homes on a dead end street, but I won't say exactly where. I do want to talk about the photograph. It's May Day, around 1952-53. May Day was big then, so were the unions; Most of the fathers worked at the Steel, Mack, Black and Decker, and a hundred other factories going full tilt after the war. The houses were about 8 years old, and there were no fences yet. Hundreds of kids would migrate from one yard to another, and every mother would assume some responsibility for the herd when it was in her yard. Laundry was hung out to dry. If you notice, most of the "audience" are mothers, dads mostly were at work. I'm at the front, right of center, with a light shirt and long belt tail. Don't remember the girl, but see the boy in front of me with the big head? His father had the whole basement setup year round with a huge model train layout. There were so many kid's, the school only went up to second grade. We would then be bused to Jefferson School for third through sixth grade. The neighborhood had its own Halloween Parade and Easter egg hunt. We all walked to school, no one being more than four blocks away.
reprinted from June of 2008
Oct 21, 2020
When Lehigh County Valued History
Back in the early 1970's, a former teacher in Allentown's West Park neighborhood borrowed my photograph of a grain mill, and championed its preservation to the Lehigh County Commissioners. Her efforts resulted in Haines Mill being preserved. It was a time when the county commissioners understood the concept of history and uniqueness. The county now preserves farmland, with the pollyanna notion that farmers will spout there, wear straw hats, and sell organic vegetables on the weekends. Although 22,000 acres have already been preserved, the county just authorized additional $millions to that end. A comment in the Morning Call said that it will insure that we have food in the future. Amazing how little people know about how food gets to the supermarket in 2016. While there is nothing unique about this farmland, and nothing really guaranteed about the preservation, it seems like progress to the environmentalists. Meanwhile, the commissioners and Historical Society turn a deaf ear to Wehr's Dam and other irreplaceable structures, being needlessly threatened.
That former teacher just passed away at 98 years of age. I still take photographs and champion for places that will never be again, but the current board of commissioners does not have the sense of history and esthetics of their predecessors.




