Feb 28, 2020
Learning Curve For School Board
Morning Call columnist Paul Muschick hopes that Allentown School Superintendent Thomas Parker stays on. I hope that he finds another job and moves on. We know that he has already tried, with Nashville.
Allentown has already greatly enhanced his resumé. Only 38 years old, he moved here from a much smaller job. Allentown was hell bend on hiring someone of color... all three finalist for the position were minorities. Parker knows that in these woke times, being a minority is a qualifier in itself.
I think that those school board members who hired Parker should consider it a teachable moment. Although I don't expect anybody to fess up to poor decision making, hopefully they will realize that for the next contract, fiscal expertise must be the yardstick.
Feb 27, 2020
Farce On Front Street
Back in the day before the FBI raid on Allentown City Hall, those interested in corruption in Allentown were pretty much limited to myself and O'Hare. Missing in action was the Morning Call. Although they would occasionally use this blog as an unattributed source, they avoided my most controversial exposés. Among them was my revelations about the Neuweiler Brewery.
Although the FBI and Justice Department decided to prosecute Pawlowski and Company on nine deals, I suspect that the menu actually had many more choices. Among them may have been the current Neuweiler Brewery deal. When Ruckus Brewing was introduced as an applicant for the Neuweiler Brewery, I wrote about it here, way back in 2013. My research revealed that Ruckus had no experience at the time in either actual beer brewing or real estate. What they did have was a business consultant very connected to the administration in Allentown, Mike Fleck.
Although Pawlowski and Fleck were indicted and convicted, the Allentown Commercial Industrial Development Authority proceeded with handing over the brewery to Ruckus. Ruckus received numerous deadline extensions on their application, and represented the brewery as a done deal to raise cash. All these irregularities were previously reported on this blog, and ignored by the local press. They are currently permitted to rent out space as is, in a building in which the previous owner was arrested and jailed for not correcting code violations.
When shenanigans occur in Allentown, this blog is often the first source to chronicle the questionable activity.
For the full story on the Neuweiler Brewery, please follow the links provided below.
Post on Neuweiler Brewery from May 29, 2008
Post on Neuweiler Brewery July 11, 2012
Sequel to July 11, Post (July 16, 2012)
Post on Neuweiler Brewery May 2, 2013
Post on Neuweiler Brewery Jan. 31, 2013
The Neuweiler Brewery, A Pawlowski/Fleck Shenanigan, July 8, 2015
Morning Call Catches Up To Molovinsky On Neuweiler Sept. 30, 2015
above reprinted from August of 2019
ADDENDUM FEBRUARY 27, 2020: The Morning Call reports today that the project has applied for a loan from the NIZ board, and will use the distribution portion for their own offices. The iconic brewery section has been allowed to deteriorate beyond practical salvation. However, being that it is really our tax money being used for private gain, I expect that down the road, we will pay to restore it anyway. Scott Unger, director of the ACIDA states that “Self-occupancy is the highest level of commitment." What that really means is that the boys haven't found a real tenant, but let that slide, like everything else about this project.
Feb 26, 2020
Edwards Replaces Mickenberg On NIZ Board
Rev. Gregory Edwards has been appointed to replace David Mickenberg on the NIZ Board. Although this appointment has not yet officially occurred, it is a done deal. Mickenberg just found out that he resigned as director of the Allentown Art Museum, and O'Connell states that his next nomination to the NIZ board will be Edwards.
Activists in Allentown have been demanding more diversity on boards and positions of leadership. Allentown hasn't had great results when color by itself becomes the criterion...So it seems with a previous police chief and the current school director. Although it is apparent that those two appointees only used Allentown for a stepping stone, this is an observation that you will only read on this blog. Don't look for the activists to be that introspective, or the media to be this politically incorrect.
The NIZ is a business board for which Edwards has marginal experience, but no less than Mickenberg, whom he replaces. However, now there are calls that diversity should be the factor in Mickenberg's replacement at the museum.....
ADDENDUM: I've been informed that O'Connell actually proposes that Edwards replace John Williams, former president of Muhlenberg College.
Feb 25, 2020
Wehr's Dam Conspiracy Against Voters
The South Whitehall Commissioners never expected the voters to approve the referendum in November of 2016 to retain Wehr's Dam, especially when they had associated it with a possible tax increase. They thought that they could accommodate the Wildlands Conservancy in demolishing the dam, with no political consequence to themselves.
In July of 2014, the Commissioners gave the Conservancy permission to conduct a study of the dam, which was intended to justify its demolition. The engineering firm for the Conservancy then claimed that the dam was leaking under itself, at one small spot. On February 13, 2015, the DEP wrote the township; "The Wildlands Conservancy has recently brought to our attention that there is some confusion relating to the current condition of the Wehr's Dam..." For the Commissioners to have granted the Wildlands Conservancy permission to interface with the state was improper. The dam is the historic property of the township residents, not an outside party.
A subsequent study of the dam by another engineering firm could not confirm the above referenced leak. It is now necessary for the Commissioners to put aside their agenda of accommodating the Wildlands Conservancy, and honor the results of the referendum. They must change their Park Master Plan, which still calls for the dam's demolition. They must now advocate for the dam with the state DEP, and correct any misconceptions about its condition. The reality is that the dam is an overbuilt massive concrete wedge, sitting on an enormous concrete platform, which would stand for another 100 years with no repair.
Although its been over three years since the referendum, the township hasn't applied one dab of cement to the dam. On the contrary, they have been rebidding the repairs trying to actually get a higher price, to exceed the amount authorized by the voter's referendum. They are trying to undo the will of the voters. The dam sits in a state of benign neglect, waiting for the state to accommodate the Wildlands Conservancy and condemn it.
photocredit: Jason Fink
above reprinted from February 2017
ADDENDUM FEBRUARY 2020: Since this letter to the editor was written in 2017, things have gotten worse for Wehr's Dam. The former South Whitehall park director, Randy Cope, is now in charge of Public Works for the township. His father is the former CFO of the Wildlands Conservancy.
1. Randy Cope now states that it will cost $1million to repair the dam, but he doesn't reveal that the cost increase is because of the communications between the Wildlands Conservancy and the state DEP. Those communications were intended to drive the repair cost above the amount approved by the voters in the referendum. Even though the dam is rated low hazard, the township made no attempt to defend the dam against the Wildlands' allegations. The Pennsylvania DEP is fine with the Wildlands' scheme, and boasts about more dam removals than any other state in the country.
2. The Wildlands Conservancy has campaigned to demolish the Dam since 2014, and now is in charge of the Township's multi $million dollar Greenway Project through the park.
3. Another main supporter of the Wildlands in South Whitehall is commissioner Tori Morgan, who has been appointed President of the new township board of commissioners.
4. Although the Morning Call has rejected and ignored the above letter since 2017, I'm hopeful that new leadership at the paper will investigate these violations against both the voters and local history.
Feb 24, 2020
Boxing Eggs

When I was a little boy, I would work at my father's meat market, boxing eggs. The job was pretty straightforward. I would take eggs from a big box, and put them in small boxes with folding lids, each of which held a dozen. If I did a whole crate without breaking an egg, I did a good job. The real adventure was the drive to the shop. We lived just off Lehigh Street, and would take it all the way to Union Street. The many landmarks are now gone forever, only remaining in my camera of the past. Shown above in 1952, is the portion of Lehigh Street near the Acorn Hotel, which is not visible in the photograph. Before reaching the Acorn, you drove under The Reading Railroad bridge overpass, which recently has been dismantled and removed. That line served the Mack Plant on S. 10th Street. Just beyond the area pictured, the Quarry Barber railroad spur also crossed Lehigh Street, at the bridge over the Little Lehigh Creek. That line also crossed S. 10th, and served Traylor Engineering, now known as the closed Allentown Metal Works. Just last week Mitt Romney was there, to rebuke Obama's former visit to the site. Mayor Pawlowski is now rebuking Romney, but none of them really know anything about its past. A half block away, on overgrown steps built by Roosevelt's WPA, a thousand men would climb home everyday, after working at Mack and Traylor. Freight trains, on parallel tracks, from two different railroads, were needed to supply those industrial giants.
After my father rounded the second curve on Lehigh Street, we would head up the steep Lehigh Street hill. It was packed with houses and people. At the top of the hill, we would turn right on to Union Street. Going down Union Street, Grammes Metal was built on the next big curve. Grammes made a large assortment of finished decorative metal products. Beyond Grammes were numerous railroad crossings. The Lehigh Valley Railroad tracks crossed Union, as did the Jersey Central and several spurs, near Basin Street. It was not unusual to wait twenty-five minutes for the endless freight trains to pass. A two plus story tower gave the railroad men view and control of the busy crossing. A few more blocks and we were at the meat market, in time for me to break some eggs.
reprinted from July 2011
Feb 21, 2020
Morning Call's Soft Coverage
As a local political blogger, I had to snicker at the headline shown above. While the Morning Call has never attributed a shed of credibility to Donald Trump, they now wondered if Pawlowski's punishment was too harsh? If newspapers were judged, the Morning Call would be found guilty of being clueless about a corrupt mayor for 13 years.
I've broken several stories about irregularities occurring in the valley. One was several years ago, about the highest paid positions at Lehigh Valley Health Network having offices above the arena, so that Reilly could harvest their state taxes. While the paper never investigated or printed the story, Wednesday night I heard it repeated at the City Council meeting. I take satisfaction in contributing to the local knowledge, even if I'm ignored by the paper. The Morning Call likewise continues to ignore my revelations about how the Wildlands Conservancy is conspiring with South Whitehall, to bypass the voter's referendum on Wehr's Dam.
The paper's new editor-in-chief, Mike Miorelli, while recently editorializing about the paper's gumption, hasn't shown any.
The newspaper article above wondering if Pawlowski's sentence was too harsh was signed Staff, instead of a reporter's name. I can understand not wanting credit for that story.
I've broken several stories about irregularities occurring in the valley. One was several years ago, about the highest paid positions at Lehigh Valley Health Network having offices above the arena, so that Reilly could harvest their state taxes. While the paper never investigated or printed the story, Wednesday night I heard it repeated at the City Council meeting. I take satisfaction in contributing to the local knowledge, even if I'm ignored by the paper. The Morning Call likewise continues to ignore my revelations about how the Wildlands Conservancy is conspiring with South Whitehall, to bypass the voter's referendum on Wehr's Dam.
The paper's new editor-in-chief, Mike Miorelli, while recently editorializing about the paper's gumption, hasn't shown any.
The newspaper article above wondering if Pawlowski's sentence was too harsh was signed Staff, instead of a reporter's name. I can understand not wanting credit for that story.
Feb 20, 2020
19th Street Theater District Goes Loud
Last night Allentown city council decreed that the noise complaints against the Maingate were actually racially based against the changing demographics in the city. That distorted logic played well with the hundred or so supporters that the Maingate owner brought with him. Candida Affa testified that her gay bar had experienced the same intolerance years ago.
Residents of St. George, 18th, Liberty and Allen Streets might be surprised to learn that hardly anybody will be adversely effected by the Noise Exemption District. These are the invisible people who conduct neighborhood cleanups and hold street fairs on 19th Street. There was no polling of the residents, and some only found out about the proposal yesterday. Many others do not yet even know that City Hall just arbitrarily compromised the quality of their lives.
Conspicuously missing from the contorted map of the new district is the Wert's Cafe complex. Although Police Chief Granitz stated that he will abide by council's decision, his concerns about equal enforcement of law were apparent.
Allentown doesn't belong in the bar business, especially choosing winners and losers. It's always interesting and disappointing to see the new council members trade their ideals for a seat on that dais.
Feb 19, 2020
Noise Exemption-The Wrong Thing
In a current Morning Call article, Mayor Ray O'Connell says that passing a noise exemption for the Maingate and Ringer's Roost is the right thing to do. In reality, it is exactly the wrong thing, almost by every measure.
O'Connell spends enough time at Ringer's to believe that his friend Don Ringer will not abuse the noise exemption that he has been lobbying for. However, Don, like many of us, keeps getting older, and may have the marketability of his business more in mind. We know from experience that the Maingate would test the noise level constantly, putting the Allentown Police Department in an incredibly awkward position.
In previous posts on this ill advised proposal, I have dwelled on the obvious easy conflicts, such as disrupting the harmony of the neighborhood, and the ambience of the theater on 19th Street.
However, mincing words is not my style. In the photo above the Morning Call referred to Ringer's as O'Connell's headquarters. O'Connell, over the years, has a unique relationship with the current city council, they are essentially all friends. If nobody hasn't noticed, the police department has enough to do with the current shootings and stabbings, without turning the existing theater district into Dodge City and the Long Branch Salon.
If O'Connell and council really want to reform Allentown, avoiding corruption alone is not enough, they must guard against cronyism.
Feb 18, 2020
The Lehigh Valley Old Main Line
The last portions of the Old Main Line were recently removed from Jaindl's NIZ waterfront parcel. Save for this blogger, not a peep from anybody else in protest. On the contrary, the track removal was spun as a positive, with notions that it would become part of the rail to trail network.
Shown in the photo above, the Old Main crosses Hamilton Street. There was a siding for the large white warehouse on the far right side of the photo. The line had numerous sidings, serving companies both along the river and on Front Street. For A&B Meats, the siding went into the plant.
Just south of Union Street there was a freight terminal and small yard. Although the old iron trestle bridge still spans the Lehigh north of American Parkway, only little scattered sections of rail remain on the west side of the Lehigh River.
ADDENDUM: My pieces on local history are not taken from Wikipedia and other sources, but rather from my experiences growing up in Allentown. My father's family operated a small meat packing operation on Union Street. Included in the parcel was a garage on Walnut Street, and the white warehouse shown above on Hamilton. I spent many hours waiting for the trains to cross Union Street.
Feb 17, 2020
Lehigh Valley Lifestyle
Last week's headlines centered on a daylight assault at the Lehigh Valley Mall's Lifestyle Center. The details were a little confusing...Seems one defendant was attacking another, for robbing him previously, while attempting to sell him stolen goods. Anyway, what got my attention was the juxtaposition of defendant and lifestyle. More and more these actors are becoming the news in the Lehigh Valley.
Some people blame the media, especially the Morning Call, for reporting on such happenings. I think that not to do so would be journalistically irresponsible. The valley is no longer Mayberry, we haven't been now for decades. For many of these characters, gangster seems to be the lifestyle of choice.
photocredit:Rick Kintzel/The Morning Call
Feb 14, 2020
Tea Leaves, Deed Transfers and The Atiyeh Park Deal
Some people read tea-leafs, I read deed transfers. It would be more accurate to say that I study deed transfer. There has only been two weeks in the last 35 years that I failed to scrutinize the list, and those omissions were failed attempts at relaxation. Recently, I mentioned Kenneth Heffentrager and his Tenant Association of Allentown. Kenneth has become a fixture at City Council meetings, complaining about housing and landlords. Kenneth is going to become a very busy boy. For the last several years the deed transfers have been dominated by landlords buying owner occupied houses. Many of these landlords are new to the business, attracted by $25,000, and even cheaper houses in center city. Landlording is tough for experienced operators, and the learning curve is steep. It will take years for the city to identify all the new landlords, and many will walk away when confronted with the realities of their new venture. Although Allentown has a strategy for Hamilton Street, it needs one for the remainder of center city.
ADDENDUM: The above portion was posted in February of 2014, and titled Allentown's Housing Future. In June of 2014, I published about the parcels purchased from Atiyeh, information I also gleaned from the deed transfers. Blogger Bernie O'Hare believes that these purchases by Pawlowski were intended to help Atiyeh finance a billboard company, I disagree. There is also a claim that the Basin Street purchase was to protect the water supply, I disagree. That parcel, off 2nd and Union, is near the sewer plant, the water supply inlets are near 15th St. A former park director, Greg Weitzel, was indeed obsessed with connecting the parks with bike paths. At the time I opposed those plans, because of the shortcomings in maintaining existing park features. I believe that the Martin Luther King parcel was purchased with expanded park land in mind. I speculate that the Basin Street parcel was included because Atiyeh out-negotiated the city, and Pawlowski's indifference to using public resources to further his own agendas. I do agree that both parcels were totally unnecessary, and a misappropriation of public funds.
reprinted from August of 2015
ADDENDUM: The above portion was posted in February of 2014, and titled Allentown's Housing Future. In June of 2014, I published about the parcels purchased from Atiyeh, information I also gleaned from the deed transfers. Blogger Bernie O'Hare believes that these purchases by Pawlowski were intended to help Atiyeh finance a billboard company, I disagree. There is also a claim that the Basin Street purchase was to protect the water supply, I disagree. That parcel, off 2nd and Union, is near the sewer plant, the water supply inlets are near 15th St. A former park director, Greg Weitzel, was indeed obsessed with connecting the parks with bike paths. At the time I opposed those plans, because of the shortcomings in maintaining existing park features. I believe that the Martin Luther King parcel was purchased with expanded park land in mind. I speculate that the Basin Street parcel was included because Atiyeh out-negotiated the city, and Pawlowski's indifference to using public resources to further his own agendas. I do agree that both parcels were totally unnecessary, and a misappropriation of public funds.
reprinted from August of 2015
Feb 13, 2020
Best By Test

Growing up in Little Lehigh Parkway, now called Little Lehigh Manor by the Realtors, the milkman was an early morning fixture. Almost every house had the insulated aluminum milkbox. The milk trucks were distinctive, and the drivers wore a uniform, indicative of their responsibility. Freeman's milk was the best by test, or so the slogan said. Their trucks were red and immaculate. The dairy building still stands, a quarter block north of 13th and Tilghman Streets. They competed with a giant, Lehigh Valley Co-Operative Farmers. That dairy, on the Allentown/Whitehall border, just north of the Sumner Avenue Bridge on 7th Street, even sported an ice cream parlor. Milk, up to the mid 50's, came in a bottle. The milkman would take the empties away when delivering your fresh order. In addition to white and chocolate, they produced strawberry milk in the summer. About once a week the milkman would knock on the door to settle up; times have changed.

Occasionally the bottle, and later the cartons, would feature themes and advertisements. A picture of Hopalong Cassidy would entertain young boys as they poured milk into their Corn Flakes. Earlier, during the War, (Second World) bottles would encourage customers to do their part; buy a bond or scrap some metal for the war effort.
reprinted from January 2013
Feb 12, 2020
A Personal Memoir

I'm not sure memoir is a good title, rather than facts and records, I have hazy recollections. Assuming my memory will not improve at this stage of the game, let me put to print that which I can still recall. In about 1958 my father built Flaggs Drive-In. McDonalds had opened on Lehigh Street, and pretty much proved that people were willing to sit in their cars and eat fast food at bargain prices. For my father, who was in the meat business, this seemed a natural. As a rehearsal he rented space at the Allentown Fair for a food stand, and learned you cannot sell hotdogs near Yocco's. He purchased some land across from a corn field on Hamilton Blvd. and built the fast food stand. In addition to hamburgers, he decided to sell fried chicken. The chicken was cooked in a high pressure fryer called a broaster, which looked somewhat like the Russian satellite Sputnik. The stand did alright, but the business was not to my father's liking, seems he didn't have the personality to smile at the customers. He sold the business several years later to a family which enlarged and enclosed the walk up window. Subsequent owners further enlarged the location several times. The corn field later turned into a Water Park, and you know Flaggs as Ice Cream World.
I'm grateful to a kind reader who sent me this picture of Flaggs
reprinted from August of 2017
ADDENDUM: Allentown and its environs have changed considerably in the last 60 years. While Yocco's is still a very viable business in the suburbs, the center city demographic changes no longer supported selling hot dogs at 625 Liberty Street. After 85 years, that store closed in the summer of 2016. Flaggs (Ice Cream World), rather than being outside of town, is now on the way to Hamilton Crossings.
Feb 11, 2020
Allentown Assaults Livability
With little fanfare, Allentown is preparing to push through a "Noise Exemption District" to essentially accommodate the profitability of the Maingate nightclub. This district would stretch from 17th to 19th Streets, between Liberty and Tilghman Streets.
In a previous post, I pointed out that the neighbors, both in the senior high-rises and the nearby row houses, will have their quality of life sacrificed for this private business scheme. Furthermore, in recent years, Allentown has improved the West End Theatre District to create an atmosphere of tranquility. A stabbing this past weekend at the View Club at 11th and Hamilton Streets should give City Council pause when they deliberate this ill advised proposal. There already has been a shooting at the Maingate.
The Civic Theatre has created a unique ambience on 19th Street for well over fifty years, contributing to the livability of that neighborhood, and the upscale businesses clustered around it.
If the Maingate cannot operate within the state LCB guidelines, why should the entire area be compromised for the Maingate's profit? What in the future will prevent a noise abated spot from opening opposite the theater?
Not to mince words, the proposal is based on blatant cronyism. City Council must rise above it.
photocredit:Discover Lehigh Valley
PREVIOUS POSTS ON THIS TOPIC
City Takes Cronyism To New Noise Level
Allentown Still Neeeds Lessons On Favoritism
Feb 10, 2020
McHistory In The Lehigh Valley
Readers of this blog know that I'm upset about what little value history is given in this community. Yesterday's Morning Call story on the Lehigh Valley Trust Bank building goes a step farther, and significantly alters the story of an important structure. After reading the Morning Call article, one would think that the bank closed, Abe Atiyeh purchased it and then sold it to the Jaindls, who are now opening an event center after restoration. The real story is so different, I can only conclude that this current article was only meant as another NIZ promotion, not a serious background of the building.
When the building was purchased by Seigfried Braun, unmentioned in the article, it had been modernized. He and his family spend years and most of their assets lovingly restoring it. The famed skylight and other adornments were covered over decades earlier, by a massive new lowered ceiling. What you see now is the fruit of his labor. Restoring the skylight alone took over a year. In addition to that bank, he also purchased the Dime Bank and the Elks Club. The Dime Bank has now been incorporated into the new Renaissance Hotel. The Elks Club was demolished to make way for J.B. Reilly's aborted massive Two Towers project.
Unfortunately, illness forced Mr. Braun to quickly sell these significant structures for pennies on the dollar, to Abe Atiyeh. We should thank Braun for saving these magnificent structures. Although, I like to think that my local political opinions have merit, my better calling is to defend and advocate for local historical structures, when I have the needed endurance. Meanwhile, I use this blog to present local history, and occasionally point out misconceptions about it.
above reprinted from January of 2017 and 2019 with a different photo
ADDENDUM FEBRUARY 10, 2020: This past weekend the Morning Call ran an article on an upcoming event with a $100 admission fee at the former bank, now Jaindl owned and called Vault 634. Like Reilly owned NIZ properties, the announcements for these commercial events are being presented as cultural news, sparing these titans the usual advertising fees. While mom and pop businesses pay through the nose to advertise, and the paper struggles to survive, the Morning Call continues promoting the NIZ district as news.
photo of Vault 634 by April Gamiz/The Morning Call
above reprinted from January of 2017 and 2019 with a different photo
ADDENDUM FEBRUARY 10, 2020: This past weekend the Morning Call ran an article on an upcoming event with a $100 admission fee at the former bank, now Jaindl owned and called Vault 634. Like Reilly owned NIZ properties, the announcements for these commercial events are being presented as cultural news, sparing these titans the usual advertising fees. While mom and pop businesses pay through the nose to advertise, and the paper struggles to survive, the Morning Call continues promoting the NIZ district as news.
photo of Vault 634 by April Gamiz/The Morning Call
Feb 7, 2020
Sad Sack Pennsylvania Voters
A new correspondent for the Morning Call in Harrisburg tells us that school tax reform is not on track after all, what a surprise!
In the late 1970's, when Pennsylvania legalized and took over the numbers racket with the lottery, the wide eyed were promised tax reform. When the state legalized casino gambling 30 years later, the gullible were promised tax reform.
Seniors on fixed income really do lose their homes because of taxes, I've known several. State elected officials really do promise reform, I've known many...They never deliver, nor do they actually try.
Here in Pennsylvania getting elected to Harrisburg is a job for life, unless and until such an official decides to give it up. We elect incumbents term after term, regardless of performance. There is a manual on how to stay in office, which includes sending out constituent birthday cards and other assorted nonsense to the morons in your district.
If ever there was a meaningless phrase, reform in Pennsylvania must be it.
Feb 6, 2020
Allentown's Double Parking
Yesterday, Paul Muschick of the The Morning Call speculated on the reason for all the double parking in Allentown. Being politically correct, he overlooked the oblivious answer... We have herds of Rude and Crude living in Allentown. Why has this problem persisted for so long? The Allentown Parking Authority doesn't want to deal with face to face confrontations with the offensive offenders, they prefer placing a parking ticket on an empty car and then running away. The Allentown Police consider the problem beneath their law enforcement pay grade. Muschick mentioned N. 7th Street as ground zero for the problem. Fellow activist Robert Trotner referenced Muschick's column on facebook, and a Hispanic business owner complained about the lack of parking spaces on 7th Street, for the volume of current businesses. He does have a point, but the double parking in Allentown occurs everywhere in center city, even with many empty spaces.
The city should identify parcels close to 7th Street that can be acquired for additional parking. Peter Lewnes has done an excellent job developing 7th Street into a business district, as it was in Allentown's distant past. Being as politically incorrect as I am, I cannot refrain from noting that the same merchants and clientele now on 7th Street, were deemed undesirable when they were previously on Hamilton Street. As I have written before, there was actually more commerce on Hamilton Street with the so called undesirables, than there is now. However, the NIZ wasn't really meant to increase commerce, but rather to increase the real estate portfolio of certain individuals. Another recent article in The Morning Call, on the NIZ, avoided such realities.
reprinted from June of 2018
Feb 5, 2020
The Radiation Mystery: Wetherhold&Metzer
The Shoe giant Wetherhold & Metzger started in 1908 on Hamilton street's south side. When business began to prosper, they moved across to the more prominent north side of Hamilton Street. Their store at 719 Hamilton was recently demolished, along with most of Allentown's mercantile history. It was a two story store, with the children's department on the lower level. This post originally was scheduled for sometime in the future, and was to include a Buster Brown poster. Today's Morning Call has a story on the mystery radium 226 found in the debris of the former buildings, and I thought perhaps the molovinsky on allentown historical division could help. Wetherhold & Metzer's downtown store was quite the adventure for a kid. In addition to your mother's money being transported away in a tube system like the bank drive-ups use today, you could look inside your shoes and see your feet.

Needless to say, eventually these shoe fluoroscopes were banned, but for many years one stood in the lower level of 719 Hamilton Street. Many a child, including myself, saw our foot bones in our new Buster Browns. Wetherhold & Metzger also had an uptown store in the 900 block of Hamilton Street.
reprinted from September of 2012

Needless to say, eventually these shoe fluoroscopes were banned, but for many years one stood in the lower level of 719 Hamilton Street. Many a child, including myself, saw our foot bones in our new Buster Browns. Wetherhold & Metzger also had an uptown store in the 900 block of Hamilton Street.
reprinted from September of 2012
Feb 4, 2020
Paul Muschick Might Become A Columnist
Since Muschick is already the Morning Call's columnist, this post title alone probably offends him...Offending people is never an issue for me, I do fancy myself a Lone Ranger in blogging. The Morning Call hasn't had a columnist since Paul Carpenter retired.... Bill White squandered his bully pulpit with Christmas Light Tours and chocolate cake contests. He's still judging chocolate cakes.
The reason I see hope in Muschick, is that his recent column takes Ray O'Connell to task for considering running for reelection, after he pledged not to. I don't have an opinion on that topic at this point, but appreciate that Muschick does, and that he expressed it. Muschick's new boldness goes somewhat awry criticizing the voters for reelecting an indicted mayor Pawlowski. A search of the paper's archives shows no-one at the paper writing against Pawlowski, including Muschick, at the time. Furthermore, the paper gave the indicted Pawlowski space for column after column during the election.
For a current columnist at the Morning Call the bar is very low. If I were Muschick, especially with the deteriorating corporate profile for the paper, I would be going all out against the local establishment.
Feb 3, 2020
King Of The Gypsies

According to my mother, a Gypsy king was buried in Allentown in around 1960*, she knew about such things. She was born in Galgo, Hungary, an area of Transylvania, now part of Romania, near present day Gilgau. In Galgo, the Jews and Gypsies lived on the edge of town. In the early 20's, my grandparents, along with their Gypsy neighbors, came to Bethlehem to work at the Steel. On weekends, to make extra money, my grandparents would open their house and show Hungarian movies. None of their relatives, Jew or Gypsy, save one cousin, survived the nazis... even the cemeteries were desecrated. As you can see from the document above, my grandfather earned his citizenship the hard way.
reprinted from 2008
*my research indicates that I remembered the story wrong, and that it was a prince who was buried in Allentown, after drowning in a local motel pool.
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