Tin Front Cafe

216 East 8th Ave., Homestead, PA 15120

Sunday Buffet Brunch 11am to 3pm

Sunday Buffet Brunch 11am to 3pm
Tin Front Cafe

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Homestead Bridge garden "clean-up"


This Saturday, September 27, 2008 beginning at 9AM we hope to put the garden to rest at the Homestead Bridge site.

We want to "mulch" the flowers to add to the compost at 7th & Amity, cut the grass on both sides and remove the black plastic covering the flower beds.

Anyone interesting in volunteering to help with this project should be at the Homestead Grays Bridge garden at 9 am.


Ray Saunders
Steel Valley Young Life
412-462-1619

New West Homestead Web Site

The borough has launched a new Web site, www.westhomesteadpa.com.

The site includes community history, borough and business directories, event calendars, education information, property development and loan programs, news and a section geared to borough residents.

The site was a collaboration of Sharp Creative Co. and borough employees and residents, Mayor John J. Dindak said. Future plans call for allowing users to obtain building permits and pay taxes online. Feedback, suggestions and comments are encouraged, Mr. Dindak said

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Phantom Fright Nights named as the # 3 Amusement Park Halloween Event!


West Mifflin, PA (Vocus) September 19, 2008 -- Kennywood's Phantom Fright Nights continue to receive acclaim. On Sept. 12, 2008, Hauntworld Magazine, the "haunt" industry's leading trade magazine, named Phantom Fright Nights as the # 3 Amusement Park Halloween Event!

This year the Kennywood event, Phantom Fright Nights, opens Friday, September 26 and continues Friday and Saturday evenings through November 1. Hours are 7 PM to1 AM. (A bonus night, Sunday, October 12, has hours of 7 PM to 11 PM.)

We are thrilled to be listed as one of the best Halloween events in the country," comments Jerome Gibas, Kennywood General Manager. "Kennywood's goal is to produce the ultimate haunt experience, and it's especially gratifying to see that our Team Members effort is respected within the industry."

According to Hauntworld, "attractions are recognized for their attention to detail, high-quality special effects, and overall scare factor… In an industry that has reached the multi-billion dollar mark, these haunts are leading the way in scream-inducing innovations."


Hauntworld's Top 5 Amusement Park Halloween Events:

1. Universal Studios Horror Nights - Orlando, FL
2. Knott's Scary Farm - Los Angeles, CA
3. Phantom Fright Nights - Kennywood Amusement Park - Pittsburgh, PA
4. Universal Studios Horror Nights - Hollywood, CA
5. Tampa Busch Gardens - Tampa, FL

For those who know Kennywood, a first-time visit to Phantom Fright Nights reveals a somewhat disturbing transformation from the park's regular season. Approaching the parking lot one notices the happy lights and music have vanished. Instead, the Phantom himself guards the front gate. He's accompanied by fog, creepy music, and eerie figures. Visitors safely traversing through the creepier-than-ever tunnel may travel fog-filled midways and scare zones to brave the haunted mazes and rides.

This year Guests will find an impressive new haunt, Voodoo Bayou. Upon entering the Bayou, Swampland Canoe And Raft Excursions (SCARE Tours) beckons. SCARE Tours promises the adventure of a lifetime through Voodoo Bayou, once famous for its raging rapids. As soon as one enters SCARE's gate and steps into the swamp, he or she discovers it's too late to turn back! A warning from past victims is heard in Whispering Canyon, and dodging tombstones, coffins and evil spirits within the swamp's cemetery becomes a necessity. The massive collection of shrunken heads belongs to the Bayou's Voodoo King, who seems to have found the perfect cave for procuring interesting specimens.

Phantom Fright Nights take place every Friday and Saturday night from September 26 through November 1 from 7 PM to 1 AM, plus a bonus night: Sunday, October 12 from 7 to 11 PM. Tickets are $23.00 at the gate or $20.00 at participating Giant Eagle locations. Group Rates are also available; call 412.464.9931 to make a reservation. See www.kennywood.com for further details.

No food or beverages may be brought into the park during Fright Nights. Halloween masks, make-up, or costumes are not permitted. Phantom Fright Nights is not recommended for children under 13 years of age. For further information call 412.461.0500 or visit www.phantomfrightnights.com.

You've been warned.

About Hauntworld Magazine: Hauntworld Magazine www.hauntworld.com is the premier haunted attraction magazine in the industry, providing insider access into the world of haunted attractions to nearly four million people.

About PFN: Every year since 2002 Phantom Fright Nights and its cast of ghosts, ghouls, goblins and gremlins have continued to morph. PFN, which also features many scarier than normal thrill rides, has successfully added 10 operating days to Kennywood's shoulder season and led to the opening of a Halloween event for younger children - HallowBoo! - at sister park Idlewild www.idlewild.com, located in Ligonier, PA.

About Kennywood:
Kennywood first opened in 1898 as a "trolley park" at the end of the Monongahela Street Railway. Operated by Kennywood Entertainment, Kennywood is western Pennsylvania's largest provider of summer fun. It is often regarded as America's finest traditional amusement park and is internationally known among thrill seekers and amusement park enthusiasts for its collection of classic rides, state-of-the-art thrill rides, and world-class roller coasters and a wide variety of food, games, gardens, and live entertainment. For more information please call 412.461.0500 or visit www.kennywood.com.


Carnegie Library Lays Off Directors To Save Money

Lynn Blumenstein -- Library Journal, 9/23/2008

The Carnegie Library of Homestead (CLH), PA, one of only four libraries in the country built and endowed by philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, is facing hard times, having laid off its library director and executive director (the latter managed the fitness club and music hall sharing the facility).

CLH board president Dan Lloyd told LJ that the layoffs were a short-term solution to a budget crunch; the terminations save CLH $100,000. (The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette erroneously reported that the action was permanent.) Lloyd said the library relied too much on CLH’s endowment. Now board members are stepping up their money-making services offerings—the fitness and music facilities—in order to make CLH less reliant on the endowment. CLH is also ramping up fundraising efforts, promising that a donor will match every gift.

Endowment funding
Carnegie not only funded construction of the 34,000 square foot multipurpose facility (with 8000 square feet for library service) more than 110 years ago; he also funded its operation. (U.S. Steel managed CLH until the 1970s.) In recent years, said Lloyd, the directors relied too much on endowment funds to supplement the less-than-generous contributions from the four small communities it serves. which cut into principal. CLH’s annual budget is $680,000. Municipal contributions add up to less than $30,000 and about $75,000 comes from Allegheny County taxes.

Currently, five board members are helping an administrator manage the three facilities. Two library staffers have MLS degrees (at least one is required for continued state certification).

New revenues
The fitness club, which has a pool that Lloyd says “trained several Olympic athletes” in its day, has been upgraded. Formerly unused space now has modern weight-training equipment. Membership, at $32/month, has increased. More ambitiously, CLH has stepped up programming at the 1000-seat music hall, “a mini Carnegie Hall" (in Lloyd's words).

So far, CLH’s earnings from the music hall have been $60,000 in just six months and Lloyd predicts that revenue will be $150,000 for the first year. CLH’s only additional hire is a house manager for the events; the agent, promoters, and CLH each get a cut of the concert proceeds. Performers have ranged from Patti Smith to Emmylou Harris to various alt rock and metal bands. “It’s a major win for the community,” said Lloyd. “We put money up at first; but we made it happen.”

Festival of Bands


WMAHS Titan Thunder Marching Band's
8th Annual "Festival of Bands

Saturday, September 27, 2008

7:00 p.m. - WMAHS Athletic Complex

"Confirmed performers include members of the Hempfield, South Park, Schenley, Beth Center and Franklin Regional High Schools Marching Bands.

A special performance by the Duquesne University Marching Band and the University of Pittsburgh's Varsity Marching Band, under the direction of Mr. Jack Anderson, will highlight the event.

An estimated 3000+ spectators will enjoy great music, raffle drawings, prizes, food and fun.

Tickets available at the gate. $6.00/Adult and 3.00/Student

West Mifflin Area School District 3000 Lebanon Church Road - Suite 300West Mifflin, Pennsylvania 15122

Free Stroke Screening

SATURDAY
OCTOBER 11TH, 2008
10:00 AM - 2:00 PM
Clark Memorial Baptist Church
1301 Glenn Street, Homestead, PA

Screening includes:· Stroke risk assessment survey· Blood pressure check· HDL and total cholesterol· Blood sugar level· Body Fat Analysis·

Educational information and counseling To register for the free screening, call the Jefferson Regional Medical Center Community Program Line at 412-469-7100.

Registration is required.

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Thank you for a successful light up night!


Just a quick note to everyone about our successful 1st Light-Up Night. I guess the best way to sum up our success is that the Officers working that shift asked if we could do that more often. It was encouraging seeing so many homes with the lights on and in many areas, neighbors sitting outside spending time together. We where able to send a message that we care about our community. So I would like to thank all of you who participated.

We had our fire companies and the local police from the Steel Valley area patrolling with us as well as 2 police cars from West Mifflin, and 1 from Pleasant Hills.Not to bad for our first attempt. I have some different ideas for next years event but we have had a great start. We still have a long way to go but we are making progress.

So with that said, thank you for supporting our Crime Watch and keep up the work.

Dan Boehme
Crime Prevention Officer
Munhall PD

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Events

Friday September 19, 2008
West Homestead - Riverplex, Sandcastle
INTERNATIONAL TASTE OF PITTSBURGH Best of Pittsburgh's multicultural food, dance, music and heritage. Fri. 4 p.m.-midnight, Sat. 11 a.m.-midnight. Riverplex, near Sandcastle, West Homestead. $3 kids 3-12, $5 students, $8 seniors, $10 adults.

Homestead - Bost Building, 412-464-4020. "Seeing Pittsburgh," 44 Pittsburghers photograph what defines their community, through Jan. 31. Closed Sun.

The Pump House -- Pittsburgh Project REMIX" (through Sunday), on Waterfront Drive in Homestead. Created and directed by Megan Carney and inspired by W. Eugene Smith's 1950s photo essay, "Pittsburgh Project," it sets out to capture via "collage" aspects of Pittsburgh today. Featured are Brian Czarnicki, David Gebhardt, Wali Jamal, Gabrielle Kroner, Sharon McCune and Gayle Pazerski; info at 1-773-610-5514 or www.MCarneyProjects.com. Friday 7:30 pm, Saturday 9.20 @ 7:30

Munhall- Munhall Light Up Night 6 pm to 9 pm


Saturday, September 20, 1008
West Homestead -- The Bulgarian Cultural Center, 449-451 W. Eighth Ave., will kick off its 88th season of the vecherinka, a Balkan dance party, at 8:30 p.m. Saturday. Free dance lessons are offered at 7:30 p.m. Bulgarian foods and beverages will be available. For more, call 412-461-6188.

West Homestead -- Bulgarian Cultural Center, 449/451 W. Eighth Ave., begins its 10th season of Soup Sega! on Saturday, offering 14 varieties of gourmet Bulgarian soups. Eleven of the soups are vegetarian. Soups and other food are available from 9 a.m. to noon Saturdays, and from 10 a.m. to noon Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. To order, send e-mail to bmnecc@gmail.com, visit www.bmnecc.org or call 412-461-6188.

West Homestead - Riverplex, Sandcastle
INTERNATIONAL TASTE OF PITTSBURGH Best of Pittsburgh's multicultural food, dance, music and heritage. Fri. 4 p.m.-midnight, Sat. 11 a.m.-midnight. Riverplex, near Sandcastle, West Homestead. $3 kids 3-12, $5 students, $8 seniors, $10 adults

Homestead - Bost Building, 412-464-4020. "Seeing Pittsburgh," 44 Pittsburghers photograph what defines their community, through Jan. 31. Closed Sun.

The Pump House -- Pittsburgh Project REMIX" (through Sunday), on Waterfront Drive in Homestead. Saturday 7:30 pm

Munhall -- Munhall Community Day, Gummy Knight Memorial Field, 11 am - 9 pm. Fireworks 9:00 pm


Sunday September 21, 2008
Munhall -- St. Rita Church, 219 W. Schwab Ave., in Munhall Gardens, will hold a spaghetti dinner from noon to 5 p.m. Sunday, with a Chinese auction and baked goods. Tickets are $6 for adults; $3 for children younger than 12. Takeout available.

The Pump House -- Pittsburgh Project REMIX" (through Sunday), on Waterfront Drive in Homestead. Sunday 3:00 pm


PITTSBURGH IMPROV Waterfront, Homestead, 412-462-5233. Flip Orley Thurs. 8 p.m., Fri. 7 and 9 p.m., Sun. 7 p.m

Random acts of kindness

At The Waterfront, my lost purse came to the surface thanks to many helping hands

Pittsburgh Post Gazette
September 18, 2008

On Thursday, Sept. 4, I spent some time at the Waterfront mall in Homestead and at a favorite card shop called the 39er where there are a lot of great cards for 39 cents. (My friend Mort has dubbed me "the Queen of Cards.")

After chatting with the owner of the shop, Ed Ruck, I left to go on my way to GetGo to get some gasoline -- only to discover that I did not have my purse with me!

It was at that moment I realized that, before getting into the car, I had taken off a sweater and placed my purse on the roof of my car while I put my sweater in the car. I remembered that as I drove off, I did hear a thump -- but at the time, I figured it was my purse falling from the back seat to the floor of the car. Well, now I knew that "thump" was outside the car -- my purse had "flown the coupe!"

I decided to retrace my steps and headed back to the card shop. I did not expect to find my purse, but I was hoping that in some way I could get some help.

And that's just what happened.

At the card shop, Ed was deeply concerned with my plight and called 911. The dispatchers got in touch with the Homestead Police, where Officer Frank Snyder took the call.

Meanwhile, some other Waterfront customers had located my purse in the parking lot and they called 911, which then contacted the Homestead Police. Two Waterfront security guards -- Bryan Taylor and Shaun Helman -- heard the call on their radio and obtained the purse. They, along with two Homestead officers, Jeff Luptak and Sgt. Joe Derry, reunited me with my purse.

I do not have the name of the people who called security, but they truly did the right thing. I do want to thank all the wonderful officers who helped me. Everything in my purse was in perfect order and all of you made it a very happy day for me

-- THELMA (TEMMIE) GOLTZ, Oakland

Park Asbestos Informational Meeting

A 30-minute informational meeting to respond to questions will be held at 6 tonight in Steel Valley High School auditorium by Don Horgan, asbestos inspector supervisor for the Allegheny County Health Department.

Thursday September 18, 2008
6:00 pm
Steel Valley High School

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Park Elementary School Closed Over Asbestos Concerns


MUNHALL (KDKA) ― The Steel Valley School District is closing Park Elementary School in Munhall on Wednesday September 17, 2008 because of concerns about asbestos.

At a school board meeting Tuesday night, a number of parents asked what would be done to keep students safe.

Asbestos was discovered during roof work at the school and the project manager tried to assure parents that the problem was contained. School Board President Pam Terrick wanted to know why the project wasn't finished before school started as promised.

In the end, Superintendent William Kanavey ordered Park Elementary closed Wednesday while the district gets more answers from the contractor and the Allegheny County Health Department.

No word yet on how long the school may be closed.

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Vitamin Shoppe Opens Thursday September 25, 2008


The Vitamin Shoppe in the Waterfront (Old Boston Market Building) is scheduled to open Thursday September 25, 2008.


380 E. Waterfront Drive,
Homestead, PA 15120
Phone: 412-461-2367

Store Hours:
Monday-Saturday 9-9
Sunday 11-6

Monday, September 15, 2008

Tickets for Kids Charities


Tickets for Kids Charities brings the wonder and magic of live arts & cultural, educational, sporting, and family entertainment events to lower-income children and their families who might not otherwise have the opportunity to experience what most of us take for granted.

Every two minutes, we create a magical moment. . . lifetime memory for a child. We've included over one million children and are now focused on making moments for the next million! Moments matter. To learn more about Tickets for Kids Charities, please visit our website: www.ticketsforkids.org.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Linda Barnicott at The 39er


Linda Barnicott, well-known Pittsburgh artist, will be at The 39er at the Waterfront on Saturday, September 27th from 11:00am to 2:00pm to personally autograph all of your purchases of her limited edition prints & art collectibles.


The 39er
39 Cent Cards & More!

155 East Bridge St., Homestead, PA 15120
Phone: (412) 476-8539
(Across from the Improv)

Linda Barnicott began her career as a portrait artist. Today she is beloved and sought-after for her enchanting portraits of Pittsburgh. Using rich pastel colors, she captures the unique beauty of famous Pittsburgh places with a charm all her own.

It began in 1989 with the now-famous tribute to downtown holiday shopping entitled “Meet Me Under Kaufmann’s Clock.” The work immediately won the hearts of Pittsburghers, who have been meeting friends under the clock downtown for years. From this work Linda created several series of Pittsburgh scenes, capturing warm memories that are loved by generations.

Friday, September 12, 2008

Waterfront Food & Wine Celebration

Support the Pittsburgh Community Food Bank and join us at the Waterfront Food & Wine Celebration on September 18th from 5pm - 8pm.

Donate $15 to the Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank and sample food from Waterfront Restaurants and wines from local Pennsylvania Wineries.

Enjoy live music from Jazz Musician, Spider Rondinelli, as well as great shopping and a special gift compliments of The Waterfront.

Bring a bag of non-perishables for the Food Bank and receive $2 off your ticket price.

Tickets for the tasting may be purchased online at www.pittsburghfoodbank.org or during the evening of the event.

Participating Restaurants:
Bravo! Cucina Italiana
Dave & Busters
Mitchell's Fish Market
Bar Louie
Longhorne Steakhouse
Panera Bread
Rock Bottom Brewery
Unos
Red Hot & Blue
P.F. Changs China Bistro
Cold Stone Creamery

Sample Martini's from Bar Louie

Hand-crafted Beer from Rock Bottom

Sample Wines from Pennsylvania Winery and
Christian W. Clay Winery

2007 Waterfront Food & Wine Celebration

Munhall Community Day

Saturday September 20, 2008

Gummy Knight Memorial Field

FIREWORKS 9:00 PM!

Schedule of Events

Live Music All Day!
Suburban Sellouts, The Classmates (Doo Wop), Junior Tamburitzens,
Matt Tichon, The Dream Intended, and our Featured Act, Groove Guys

Food Vendors, Crafters, Children's Games and Games of Chance All Day!



11:00 AM Junior Olympics

Magician Eddie Ace
Following the Junior Olympics

2:00 PM - 6:00 PM Car Cruise
Awarding Trophies for 1st, 2nd, 3rd place and Fireman's
Choice. Dash Plates for the first 50 cars that enter.

2:00 PM - 8:00 PM ELF Inflatables
Your children can bounce away in these state-of-the art
inflatables.

5:00 PM - 8:00 PM Petting Zoo

6:00 PM - 9:00 PM Steel Valley Boxing

9:00 PM FIREWORKS!!!

Munhall Community Day 2007

Thursday, September 11, 2008

2008 Historic Steel Valley Christmas Parade


Dear Friends,

We are currently planning the 2008 Historic Steel Valley Christmas Parade and this year we hope to have the best Parade ever! But we can't do it without your help!

You can help by spreading the word, help us to get participant's, make a float, march in the parade with your craziest costume on or just come out and watch.

This is also a great way to advertise your business. The Steel Valley is your community and it would be a wonderful way to show your pride and holiday spirit.

As always, the 2008 Parade is the first Saturday in December, December 6th and it begins at 12:00 noon.

The participant’s lineup area is on Forest Avenue in West Homestead at 11:15 A.M. The Parade follows 8th Ave. from West Homestead to Munhall; approximately one mile.

There will be bands and units participating and they will be judged with the promise of a financial award as well as a certificate will be given for the most outstanding unit. There are also transportation funds available.

A $500.00 prize is being offered for the “best” creative float. Wouldn’t that be a wonderful way to make a donation to your favorite charity for the holiday season or as a fundraiser for your organization? Any organization can enter a float or if you aren’t a creative float maker, just march in the Parade.

We are looking for creativity and uniqueness in this year’s Parade. (A $10.00 float entry fee- made payable to the Spirit of Christmas)

After the Parade, the participants are then invited to enjoy refreshments which will be served at the end of the Parade in the Shop n ‘Save parking lot on Eighth Avenue. This is the area where the buses usually wait for the band members and all participants.

Don’t miss the activities at the Waterfront’s Town Center after the Parade too!

Your participation in this years Parade will be a great way to kick off your holiday season.

So put your creativity to work and join us in this year’s 2008 Parade.

Please contact me by email, fax or mail by November 7th so that we can add your organization to the 2008 HISTORIC STEEL VALLEY CHRISTMAS PARADE.


Sincerely,


Denise M. Kelly, Organizer
on behalf of Betty Esper, Mayor of Homestead, Ray Bodnar, Mayor of Munhall and John Dindak, Mayor of West Homestead

PS: We have some great surprises in store for everyone!!!!

Phone: (412)462-7272
Fax: (412) 461-2059
Email: homesteadwns@aol.com

140 E. 9th Ave.
Homestead, PA 15120

Munhall Light Up Night


Munhall Light Up Night, Friday September 19th From 6 to 9 pm

The Munhall Neighborhood Watch along with the Munhall Police Department will be holding our first annual Community Light Up Night.

We are inviting all the residents of Munhall to light up their homes, grab a chair, and join us outside to spend time getting to know your neighbors and show everyone that Munhall stands together to keep our community safe. ?

We are inviting all the surrounding police, fire, and ems departments in the area to join us.

For more information please Email munhallcrimewatch@comcast.net or call 412-464-7300.

Dan Boehme
Crime Prevention Officer
Munhall PD

Same recipies, new owners as bakery is back in business


Thursday, September 11, 2008
By Mary Niederberger, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

For 23 years, Judy and Dan Kevlish, of Carrick, made a weekly trek to Munhall to have coffee and doughnuts and to stock up on baked goods at A&B Donuts, a bakery on East Eighth Avenue.

But in January the bakery, which was operated for 46 years by Armand Panka, closed and the Kevlishes felt lost without their weekly fix.

Mr. Panka, 69, who used his great-grandmother's Slovakian recipes for his baked goods, closed the store on New Years' Eve, deciding that he was getting too old to operate it.

"We'd ride by here to see if maybe it had opened up again," Mrs. Kevlish said. "I just didn't believe that he would really close for good."

Then last month, the Kevlishes' wishes came true. The bakery was reopened. Inside, they found all the same delicious doughnuts and familiar Slovakian baked goods, including nut rolls, cold dough cookies filled with apricot, raspberry and nuts, and Paska, a traditional Eastern European Easter bread.

Mr. Panka had found a buyer for the business right next door -- Munhall District Justice Thomas Torkowsky, who had worked for Mr. Panka when he was 19 years old.

Mr. Torkowsky, 47, worked as a baker for various bakeries for about a decade before becoming a Munhall police dispatcher and constable. He was elected district justice in 1999.

Mr. Torkowsky's partner in the newly reopened A&B Donuts is Brad Hruska, who owns a plumbing and heating business.

Mr. Torkowsky gets to work between 1 and 3 a.m. every day the bakery is open -- Tuesdays through Sundays -- and bakes until it is time to go to work in his courtroom next door. He takes off his baker's whites, showers, then puts on his black judicial robe.

Mr. Hruska keeps all of the equipment in the kitchen operating and works at the counter during busy times. He's hoping to learn to bake as well.

Mr. Panka puts time in at the shop as "a supervisor." He was there on a recent Friday morning to tell Mr. Torkowsky he wasn't happy with the quality of some of the store's baked goods that he spotted on sale at a local gas station.

"I didn't like what I saw and I had to come in and tell him about it," Mr. Panka said.

As part of the sale of the bakery, Mr. Torkowsky and Mr. Hruska acquired the white binder that holds plastic-encased note cards bearing handwritten recipes for baked goods sold in the store. The plastic pages are smeared with dough and flour.

The new owners also got the decks of 12 commercial ovens that can bake 24 pans of pastries at one time.

The shop is now located across the street from the Homestead Post Office. But when it opened in 1963, it was across the street from the main gate to the U.S. Steel Homestead Works.

"The guys that were going into the mill, they made me," Mr. Panka said. "They ended up going home and telling their wives about me. We ended up with large crowds in here. I used to have three girls working in here in the mornings when the mills were really bustling."

As a young man, Mr. Panka learned the bricklaying trade, but decided instead to go into business for himself. He opened his shop initially as a doughnut shop. That was a success, "but it didn't seem to be enough."

His mother, Margaret, pulled out some of his great-grandmother's recipes and suggested that they start to offer some of those baked goods at the shop as well.

"We got the nut roll recipe and the cold dough cookies and the Paska and they became a very big hit," Mr. Panka said.

During Christmas and Easter seasons, patrons would line up on the sidewalk outside of the store and Mr. Panka would be so busy baking he would sleep in an apartment he kept in the shop building.

At one point, A&B Donuts had outlets in Duquesne and Homestead.

But the business hit a lean stretch in the years after the mill closed. Mr. Panka said he knew that however tough it was for him and his wife, also named Margaret, it was tougher for the laid-off steelworkers and their families.

"It was a struggle for us and other people in business. But it was a great struggle for the people who worked in the mill who had to get used to making $5-$6 an hour," he said. "There were suicides and divorces."

Things picked up again for the shop when the Waterfront shopping complex went in at the site of the former mill and a supermarket and drug store were built across the street.

"The people who were curious enough to see what the Waterfront was made of rode past here and stopped in," Mr. Panka said.

In recent years, he said, his customers have been a mixture of local Mon Valley folks and those passing though the area on their way to work or to shop.

Sundays, when the shop is open from 6 a.m. to 1 p.m., remain one of the busiest days, he said.

Mr. Panka's decision to close the shop at the end of the year was based solely on the fact that he was feeling physically unable to keep up with the demands of running the business. He had one knee replaced in 2007 and was facing another replacement in January.

He hung a sign on the shop in November letting customers know that his last day in business would be Dec. 31. Lines were out of the door that day.

"I couldn't believe how much we sold that day," he said.

Similar crowds appeared Aug. 5, the day the shop reopened.

"People were thrilled about it. They all wanted to know if it was the same recipes," Mr. Torkowsky said.

Business has been booming since the quiet reopening and Mr. Torkowsky said he is thinking about planning a grand reopening ceremony sometime in the near future. But for right now, he's busy keeping up with the demands of his two jobs.

"I was trying to see if they could cut a hole in the wall between the two buildings," he joked.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Festa Italiana

The tradition continues as the Italian Festival that thousands of people enjoyed at Station Square for years moves to Riverplex this year.

Set for Sept. 12-14, Festa Italiana returns with the traditional food and music. Visitors can try their hand at bocce, sample Italian delicacies and savory cookies, dance the tarantella, and purchase an authentic present from Italy.

An Italian Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Sept. 14 with Bishop Anthony G. Bosco, Bishop Emeritus.

Festival hours are 4 p.m. to 11 p.m. Friday, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday, and 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday.

For more information, go to www.sandcastlewaterpark.com or call (412) 462-6666, option 8


Specials & Discounts
Happy Hour Admission
Only $2
Friday 4 pm to 6 pm

College ID -Half Price Admission
Only $5
Friday 6 pm to 8 pm

You Said What?!?!

Do you know which common mistakes lead to the most employment lawsuits?

Find out when the University of Pittsburgh Small Business Development Center presents

You Said What?!?!

The things you say can hurt you!

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

8:00 AM- 10:30 AM

Pittsburgh Athletic Association, Oakland


Have you ever regretted something you said in the office? Join the University of Pittsburgh Small Business Development Center for tools, strategies and scenarios that will help you recognize lawsuits before they happen.

-Discuss most common pitfalls.

-Examine best practices for terminations.

-Review strategies for delicate situations.

-Learn to handle employees who respond angrily, even when you do everything right.


Every business owner, director and supervisor should be versed in these important skills. Join employment experts from Meyer, Unkovic & Scott LLP and Babst, Calland, Clements and Zomnir, P.C. for this critical workshop.


Registration is required and space is limited.

Register today at 412.648.1542 or ieeregistration@katz.pitt.edu.

Program fee of $35 includes breakfast, parking and program materials.

Registration deadline is Friday September 26, 2008.


Sponsored by Meyer, Unkovic & Scott LLP, PNC Bank, The Heinz Endowments, the PA DCED and the U.S. SBA.

PNC Legacy Trail Ride

On October 4, ride your bike on the same path George Washington traveled on his first trip to southwestern Pennsylvania more than 250 years ago. Sign up now to take part in the PNC Legacy Trail Ride celebrating the Great Allegheny Passage. Receive a commemorative button and blinky light, and pedal alongside thousands of others on this historic route from the Hot Metal Bridge to downtown Pittsburgh for the grand re-opening of Point State Park. Don’t miss this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to be a part of the Pittsburgh region’s history with your family and friends.

This unique community trail ride caps a week of activities beginning with Celebration Saturday. And the grand re-opening of Point State Park kicks off a two-month birthday party – Pittsburgh 250 Celebrates: A Festival of Light – combining history, music, art and culture in honor of the region’s 250th anniversary.

www.bike250.org

Steel Valley Chamber of Commerce Jewelry Bash

SV Chamber Jewelry Bash

Proceeds Benefit the S.V. Chamber of Commerce’s Scholarship Fund.
Saturday October 18, 2008
2:00 PM to 5:00 PM(Doors open at 1:30 PM)
Pittsburgh Elks Lodge #115800 Buttermilk Hollow Road.

Tickets
1 for $20.00
2 for $30.00(500 tickets with 2 numbers per ticket)

JEWELRY PRIZES & CASH PRIZES
every 10 minutes plus…additional jewelry will be raffled, 50/50, and plenty of door prizes!

Appetizers and Refreshments
ONE GRAND PRIZE TO BE AWARDED

Winner need not to be present to win

Prizes must be claimed within 30 days. Unsold tickets become property of the Steel Valley Chamber of Commerce

Monday, September 8, 2008

Grand opening of the Barack Obama & Joe Biden Campaign Headquarters


The grand opening of the Barack Obama & Joe Biden Campaign Headquarters located at 304 East Eighth Avenue, Homestead, PA is at 7:00 pm on Tuesday September 9, 2008.

It is located next door to the former Great American Federal Bank at Eighth & Anne Streets in Homestead, PA

Friday, September 5, 2008

Riverplex is the place for festivals

By Stacy Wolford
VALLEY INDEPENDENT
Thursday, September 4, 2008

Summer may be winding down, but the Riverplex amphitheatre and park is just starting to heat up.

Riverplex, located between Sandcastle Waterpark and The Waterfront in West Homestead, will host the Pittsburgh Irish Festival this weekend, the Festa Italiana Sept. 12 to 14 and the International Taste of Pittsburgh Sept. 19 and 20.

Located along the shores of the Monongahela River with tree-lined walkways and wooded areas, the 400,000-square-foot landscaped area features pavilions, tents and a children's playground.

Festival organizers found success hosting events there last year and decided to return.

Pittsburgh Irish Festival

The 18th annual Pittsburgh Irish Festival returns to Riverplex after a successful introduction there last year.

The festival will feature entertainment by Gaelic Storm (from "Titanic" fame), Glengarry Bhoys (Canada), POGEY (from Sidney Crosby's hometown of Halifax, Nova Scotia), Beoga (Ireland), Screaming Orphans (Ireland), Gadelle (Prince Edward Island, Canada) and more.

There will also be plenty of Irish food and drinks.

Children will get to learn to dance a jig, make an Irish craft, and hear an Irish folktale.

Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Sunday.

Festival hours are 4 p.m. to midnight Friday; 11 a.m. to midnight Saturday; and 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday.

For more information, go to www.pghirishfest.org or call (412) 422-1113.

Festa Italiana

The tradition continues as the Italian Festival that thousands of people enjoyed at Station Square for years moves to Riverplex this year.

Set for Sept. 12-14, Festa Italiana returns with the traditional food and music. Visitors can try their hand at bocce, sample Italian delicacies and savory cookies, dance the tarantella, and purchase an authentic present from Italy.

An Italian Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Sept. 14 with Bishop Anthony G. Bosco, Bishop Emeritus.

Festival hours are 4 p.m. to 11 p.m. Friday, 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday, and 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday.

For more information, go to www.sandcastlewaterpark.com or call (412) 462-6666, option 8.

International Taste

of Pittsburgh

The International Taste of Pittsburgh, set for Sept. 19 and 20, will celebrate the best of Pittsburgh's multicultural food, dance, music and heritage featuring Bulgaria, Carpatho-Rus, England, Germany, India, International, Ireland, Italy, Latin America, Polynesia, Russia, Ukraine and West Africa. More are expected to be announced.

Festival entertainers will be Grammy Award-winner Terrance Simien and the Zydeco Experience, Scott Blasey of The Clarks, Joe Grushecky, and The Elliotts.

Festival hours are 4 p.m. to midnight Friday; and 11 a.m. to midnight Saturday.

For more information, go to www.sandcastlewaterpark.com or call (412) 462-6666 option 8.

Prices for all three festivals are $8 for adults in advance or $10 at the gate.

Discounts are available for seniors, students with identification, active or retired military personnel and children, Children 3 and under are free.

Tickets can be purchased at the gate, in advance at www. sandcastlewaterpark.com, or at Sandcastle Guest Relations.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Men's Basketball League

A Men's Competitive Basketball League is scheduled to play on Wednesday nights, starting September 24, 2008 at The Athletic Club @ the Carnegie Library of Homestead.

Teams can join the 10-game league for $400 or individuals can sign-up for the Club team. Deadline for registration: September 19, 2008.

The Athletic Club @ the Carnegie Library of Homestead announces 7 weeks of Swimming Lessons for ALL ages and experience levels, starting on September 6, 2008.

Contact Director, Edward Child at (412)462-3444 x225 for more information or visit www.homesteadlibrary.org

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

West Homestead: A Legacy to Build On


POP CITY
September 2, 2008

Scratch the surface of the one square mile riverfront area called W. Homestead and you'll find what you find in every true Pittsburgh neighborhood: pride, history, sweat, tradition and, if you’re lucky, Eastern European delicacies.

In Mayor John Dindak and many others, you’ll also find a good story.

Dindak grew up just across the border in Homestead and like many here, spent decades working at U.S. Steel Homestead Works, a city in itself that once spanned more than 400 acres in West Homestead, Homestead, and Munhall and, in its heyday, employed more than 10,000. According to Dindak, most everyone worked at U.S. Steel or at Mesta Machine Co. which, at its peak, employed more than 4,000.

While those days are long gone, some fascinating historical sites remain, such as the Pump House and the Bost Building , home of the infamous and deadly steel strike. Your best bet: take a Rivers of Steel tour to deepen your appreciation of the once mighty steel industry.

While much has since been lost, much has been gained.

Now there is only one hotel in the area, the Courtyard Marriott, which is part of the Waterfront, a riverside development built on the site of the Homestead Works that provided a much need boost to the coffers of Homestead, Munhall and West Homestead. The Waterfront is now held up as an example nationwide of a brownfield site that underwent dramatic and successful transformation. (In June of 2004 Continental Real Estate valued the property at $300 million.)

It began in the 1980s when Ray Park, a salvager and liquidator of industrial sites, purchased the former U.S. Steel Homestead Works and Mesta Machine Co. properties. He started to develop the property and within a few years, Continental Real Estate came in bringing with it the retail and restaurants. The Waterfront is marked by the iconic stacks, a dozen towering and impressive brick structures that grace the entrance. They are the only thing left of the steelworks.

Striking a Balance
“The waterfront, as far as I am concerned, is a blessing. It brought the whole valley back alive,” says Dindak. With its dozens of stores and restaurants, including big box stores such as Costco and the Disneyesque Loew’s Theater, the Waterfront draws impressive crowds, especially on weekends. And in the summer? With Sandcastle, the popular water park down the street, with its Lazy River for rafting and steep water slides, Homestead/W. Homestead is quite the happening place.

Now West Homestead’s biggest conundrum is finding a balance between the old and the new, between the commercial success of the Waterfront and a community struggling to maintain its identity in its shadow.

And the Other Gold
Doyle Avenue alone is worth the drive just to view the last of the the turn-of-the- century mansions when industrialists and tycoons called the area home. First and perhaps most noticeable is Mesta Mansion, a sprawling structure built by the Mesta family, including George Mesta, who founded the Mesta Machine Co., now known as WHEMCO. The residence is now owned by Manoy and Stacy Chandran, who are restoring it.

The Bulgarian Macedonian National Educational and Cultural Center on West Eighth Avenue stands as a reminder to the Eastern Europeans who once flocked to this region in search of jobs.

“In the ‘40s, there were 33 Bulgarian bakeries in Allegheny County,” says Penka “Patricia” French, who grew up in West Homestead in the ‘30s.
French, now president of the board of directors of the BMNECC, says her father emigrated to Pittsburgh from Bulgaria in 1913 and worked in the coal mines and railroad.

At the time, the BMNECC served as a beneficial association for Bulgarian and Macedonian families. French took Bulgarian lessons there. and later went on to work four decades as a translator in the state Department. These days the center, with its murals and museum and smooth, wooden dance floor, serves as tourist attraction and is the site of weekly dances like Cajun and Salsa. (To see the Pop City story, click here.)

The BMNECC also is the site of Soup Sega, a weekly gathering of local chefs skilled in Bulgarian cuisine. Every Saturday morning, they gather to make traditional recipes for soups such as Potato Leek and Beef Barley and also stews like Gyuvech, a rich and tasty concoction of beef, carrots, cabbage, green beens and tomatoes. The good news is these soups are then sold to the public.

Plans for the Future
While many residents can tell stories of West Homestead and what it once was, many other residents just as easily talk of their plans for its future.
And while the Waterfront has thrived, the streets behind, which were once lined with independent stores that defined the communities, have struggled to maintain their identity.

Last year, leaders from the Western Pennsylvania Brownfields Center at Carnegie Mellon University approached Homestead and West Homestead boroughs about developing the area behind the Waterfront—the businesses and shops along Eighth Avenue.

“In Homestead and West Homestead, one of their biggest issues is the tie between the old community and the Waterfront,” explains Deborah Lange, executive director of the Brownfields Center, adding that hardly any of the consumers who come to the Waterfront, cross over into Sixth, Seventh and Eighth avenues.

And while the Waterfront and Sandcastle, which opened in 1989 on the site of the former railroad beds of U.S. Steel Homestead Works, bring residents into the borough, the majority of that pedestrian traffic and their money never make it beyond the boundaries of the Waterfront into the municipalities that lie beyond.

Brownfields initially began as an initiative of the Environmental Protection Agency. Led by Pennsylvania, the initiative began examining former industrial and manufacturing sites for possible contamination that might prevent it from being reintroduced into the local economy. Their task now includes examining economic and social issues as well as environmental ones.

Lange's staff organized a workshop that included experts in industrial revitalization throughout the region. Although a list of recommendations is still being finalized, it includes a suggested partnership that would allow Homestead, Munhall and West Homestead to secure and share a grant writer from the Environmental Protection Agency who would help secure funding for projects.

That equation will no doubt involve David Lewis, an architect, professor, philosopher, and redeveloper. , and opiner. Lewis, a West Homestead resident who lives in one of the sprawling mansions along Doyle Avenue, took time out of a Sunday morning to talk about his vision and hopes for the borough.

Part of it will inevitably involve helping the communities identify a sense of themselves, he says. For example, West Homestead should recognize its two distinct personalities, the historic district along the shore and the post-World War II suburbia, including Calhoun Village, in a hill above the borough.

Another change in the future of West Homestead is the Southside Trail that ends just short of the community along the Mon. Eventually, once a connection through the area is figured out, the in-the-works Steel Valley trail will connect the Southside Trail into McKeesport. And that will bring even more people into the area. With all this traffic, W. Homestead and the surrounding communities of Homestead and Munhall will be more determined than ever to figure out how to strike a balance: between old and new, Waterfront and Eighth Avenue, legacies of the past and legacies of the future.