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

Monday, December 1, 2008

Storytelling: Hearts of Steel Valley High -- A very special gift for Michael

Pittsburgh Post Gazette
Monday, December 01, 2008
By Elizabeth Spiker

I have been telling this story to a few people for years now. I'd like to share it with everyone because, quite simply, it will make you believe in people. We could all use a story like that.

A few years ago, I was teaching English at Steel Valley High School. For those who don't know, it's a small school district serving Munhall, Homestead and West Homestead. Steelers quarterback Charlie Batch is one of Steel Valley's most famous alums. The kids all walk. There are no buses from the school district. The kids are a mixed bag of black, white and Asian and come from varying economic backgrounds. While no one I ever taught came from a "wealthy" family, I did teach many poor students for whom school was often a safe haven from their home lives.

When I would tell people my livelihood, they would often say, "My, I couldn't ever teach school! Kids today are just awful." Or, "Surrounded by teenagers all day? No thanks!"

Well, somebody has to do it. We can't just send them out there like a pack of wolves every day to fend for themselves. And, as I'm about to tell you, spending your day with young people has perks that no "grown-up" job can offer.

It was the day before Christmas break and everyone was keyed up. You could feel it in the halls. Some were happy to be off for two weeks, and some were not because two weeks at home was something they'd be better off without. Despite what you see on TV, not everyone has a Merry Christmas.

That year, there was a senior named Michael in our school. He had multiple problems, both mental and physical, and came from a disadvantaged economic background. But Michael was as sweet as the day is long. Always happy. Always up. And his classmates loved him.

Now, when I say classmates, I mean all of them: the cheerleaders, the jocks, the bookish, the artsy-craftsy types. Steel Valley students can be a tough crowd, but they do have their moments. As an English teacher, I'm a geek about the language. But I have to say that the dictionaries are wrong by making the first definition of "love" a noun. Love is a verb. And this is why.

Michael had wanted a jacket for Christmas. A Steelers jacket. His own coat was ripped and torn, yet he wore it every day, proudly. He didn't have much in the way of material things, but you could see he had more than most of us in the areas that matter.

Well, the students in Jill Fleming-Salopek's English class took up a collection, unbeknownst to Michael. Soon, it wasn't just that class, but other classes as well. On that day, we gathered in Ms. Fleming-Salopek's room. It was standing room only.

When Michael came in, he was told by some of the students that Santa had come early and that he'd dropped off his present at the school so Michael would be sure to get it. He was so happy. Jumping up and down. Just like we all are (or were) when we didn't care about what others thought or how we looked. When we were just our true, uncomplicated selves.

When they gave him the coat, there wasn't a dry eye in the room. Big, thick-necked football players to quiet, unassuming scholars. It was a moment I'll never forget as a teacher or as a human being.

Kids today. Sometimes we should look at their lesson plans.
Elizabeth Spiker lives in Bethel Park (lizspiker@verizon.net).

Sunday, November 30, 2008

PEARL HARBOR REMEMBRANCE

VFW POST 914 "Intrepid"

PEARL HARBOR
REMEMBRANCE

The public is welcome and encouraged to attend a Pearl Harbor remembrance ceremony Sunday Dec. 7 inside the Corporate Air hanger at the Allegheny County Airport in West Mifflin. Sponsored by Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 914 since 1991, the event is co-sponsored by the American Merchant Marine Veterans of the Mon Valley.

Ceremonies will begin at 12:55 p.m., or 7:55 a.m. in Hawaii - the same time bombing began 67 years ago. Featured speakers and attendees will include former president of Pittsburgh City Council and District Magistrate Gene Ricciardi and Representative Bill Kortz of the 38th Legislative District. Also present will be other area leaders and participation by many local veterans’ service organizations. As in years past, Pearl Harbor survivors will be in attendance, including VFW Post 914’s sole remaining Pearl Harbor survivor, Bernard Ordos, 89, of West Mifflin.

Live music of patriotic songs will be performed by the award-winning West Mifflin Area High School Titan Thunder Band. The West Mifflin Area High School's Air Force Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps Honor Guard will also participate.

Light refreshments will be served before and after the ceremony. Donations to benefit veterans and troops serving overseas in Iraq and Afghanistan will be accepted.



Edward “Gus”Fetzko Replenishment Blood Drive

Edward "Gus" Fetzko has been battling cancer and has been receiving treatments and has had numerous transfusions of blood products at UPMC Hillman Cancer Center.

This special blood drive has been planned to replenish the blood that "Gus" has used and to help others who are in need of blood transfusions.

Edward “Gus”Fetzko Replenishment Blood Drive

Monday, December 8, 2008

1:00 pm to 7:00 pm
Munhall Borough Building
(1900 West Main Street, Munhall, PA 15120)


To schedule your life saving appointment,
please log on to www.centralbloodbank.org and
enter Gus’s replenishment # ZRTN0447 or contact Jeanine Minucci at 412-209-7245 or jminucci@itxm.org


Saturday, November 29, 2008

Homestead Town

The story of the Glory Boom Town - Homestead, PA.

Volunteers, food, money needed at Homestead's Rainbow Kitchen

More people hungry, less food available, organizer says

Wednesday, November 26, 2008
By Margaret Smykla

Rainbow Kitchen Community Services receives most of its food from the Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank, where it is a member agency.

But to completely stock its popular breakfast program, food pantries and Kids Cafe, the Homestead kitchen also must rely on donations.

In tough economic times, however, people are less willing -- or able --to give even though the number of those seeking assistance grows.

"There is less food available, yet more people needing it, so we have to stretch what we have,'' said Donna Little, executive director.

Rainbow Kitchen is a nonprofit that seeks donations year-round to help low-income individuals and families.

Its next effort will be the annual Thanksgiving dinner tomorrow, which is open to everyone. It will be held from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Rainbow Kitchen, 135 East Ninth Ave., Homestead.

The meal of turkey, stuffing, sweet potatoes, broccoli casserole and more will be prepared and served by the boys basketball team at The Neighborhood Academy, a college-preparatory high school for low-income students.

Last year's Thanksgiving dinner drew about 100 diners.

Rainbow Kitchen was founded in 1984 in response to the closing of the local steel mills, which displaced hundreds of families in the Steel Valley.

Its beneficiaries are single parents of young children who are unable to make ends meet; the unemployed and under-employed; needy seniors on a low fixed income; latch-key children in need of a hot meal; and the ill or disabled who are in chronic need.

"We're not just a soup kitchen,'' Ms. Little said.

Programs include a recently completed winter coat drive, tax assistance, case management services, anti-hunger initiatives, medical assistance, transportation and a holiday gift distribution. It also serves as host site for educational and informational presentations.

For the holiday gift distribution, toys are being collected at St. Therese of Lisieux Church in Munhall.

Aid also can be given by staging a nonperishable food drive or for collections of paper products, Ms. Little said.

Volunteers willing to give of their time and talents are invaluable to the organization, she said. And, money is always needed.

"We are really, really grateful to accept cash donations," she said.

Monetary donations can be sent to Rainbow Kitchen, 135 East Ninth Ave., Homestead, 15120. For more information on how you can help, visit www.rainbowkitchen.org.

We Need A Little Christmas Now!

Friday, November 28, 2008

West Homestead Light Up Night


Light up Night will be on Friday, December 5th at the Municipal Building.

Festivities begin at 7:15 pm. Light up will be at 7:30 pm.

Come and join us in Celebrating the Holiday Season

Carols - Hot Chocolate - Cookies

And, of course, Santa Claus!

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

WHVFD Lottery Calendars


The West Homestead Volunteer Fire Department is selling 2009 Lottery Calendars for $25.00. If you would like to purchase a calendar, please call 412-461-4799 and leave a message on the answering machine.

The West Homestead Fire Department is also selling Entertainment Books for $20.00. They are available at the West Homestead Borough Office.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Munhall Neighborhood Watch Meetings


Home Security Training

The Munhall Neighborhood Watch along With the Munhall Police Department will be holding meetings to discuss how to make your home less of a target for criminals by making your home more secure.

These trainings will help to identify where your home may be vulnerable and offers some tips on making them more secure. With the economy as it is we need to ensure that we take away a criminals opportunity when we are able.


Dec. 4th - 6:30pm
Munhall VFC#1 1300 Martha St.

Dec. 9th - 6:30pm
Munhall Borough Bldg 1900 West St.

Dec. 13th - 6:30pm
Homestead Park United Methodist Church

Dec. 15th - 6:30pm
Messiah Lutheran Church Main St.

If you are unable to attend or are in need of more information please Email munhallcrimewatch@comcast.net

or call 412-464-7300

Dan Boehme
Crime Prevention Officer
Munhall Police Department
412-464-7300

Salvation Army Christmas Assistance

The 2008 Salvation Army Christmas Assistance Sign Up
is being held:

Thursdays and Fridays
December, 4-5
December, 11-12
10 am to 12 Noon
1 pm to 3 pm

Steel Valley Worship and Service Center
104 E. 9th Ave.
Homestead, PA 15120
For residents of 15120, 15122, 15217 and 15227 only.

Please bring these items:

Photo ID
Proof of Residency
Birth Certificates for children 13 & under
Social Security card for everyone in the household
Proof of income including food stamps

For more info Call: 412-461-2460
The Salvation Army Steel Valley/Homestead Corps
Worship and Service Center
104 East. 9th. ave
Homestead Pa. 15120

Captains Keith & Katherine Jache,
Steel Valley Commanding Officers

Waterfront Promotions

Waterfront Gift Card Promotion
From December 7th to December 14th purchase $250 in Waterfront Gift Cards and receive a FREE $20 Waterfront Gift Card.

Gift Cards are available for purchase in the Waterfront Management Office behind Hollister in Town Center.
Hours:
Monday - Friday 8:30am - 7:00pm
Saturday 10:00am - 7:00pm
Sunday 11:00am - 6:00pm

Saturday December 13th
3WS Choir Competition
Town Center will be hosting the 3WS Christmas Choir Competition from 1:00pm - 3:00pm.
Stop by to watch five chosen choirs compete for a $500 Grand Prize.
Panera Bread will be handing out cookies and hot chocolate for everyone.

FOX 53 Holidays Greetings

The FOX 53 cameras will also be in Town Center from 1:00pm - 3:00pm on Saturday December 13, 2008 to record your family's holiday greetings to be aired on Christmas Eve!

All kids will receive a free gift from The Waterfront and parents can enter-to-win a $500 Waterfront Shopping Spree.



Weekends in December
Bring your family to The Waterfront to hear out roaming Victorian Carolers and take a ride in the Horse-Drawn Carriage.

The Waterfront
Developers Diversified Realty
149 West Bridge Street
Homestead, PA 15120
Phone: 412.461.7820
www.waterfrontpgh.com

Friday, November 21, 2008

Steel Valley competes on KDKA's Hometown High Q

Our Steel Valley Team of students will compete on KDKA's Hometown High Q. The show will air Saturday November 22, 2008 at 11:00 A.M. on KDKA-TV.

Steel Valley students are Cody Brand, Nicole Salapa and Michael Terrick.

The show will be repeated Saturday, November 29 at 11:30 A.M.

Young Life Grapefruit and Orange Sale

Young Life is selling Texas Ruby Red Grapefruit and Navel Oranges.The donation for each 20 pound box is $18 and $19. A mixed box is also $19.00. Fruit can be picked up on Saturday, Dec. 6th at the Lamb of God Church, 10th & Ann Street, Homestead.

Orders can be placed by calling 412 462-1619. Young Life will deliver for an additional $2.00.

Young Life is a faith based organization that reaches out to adolescents through volunteers, staff, club meetings and camps by building meaningful relationships.

Ray Saunders
Steel Valley Young Life
412-462-1619

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Pets Love the Howl-idays, Too!

Pets love participating in the holiday fun too!

Petco at The Waterfront is hosting a special opportunity for four-legged family members to visit with Santa. The Pictures with Santa event will provide shoppers a fun take-home photo of their pet with Santa for $5 which will be donated to homeless animals.

Dates: December 6th, 13th and 14th from 11am - 4pm.

PETCO
590 East Waterfront Drive
Homestead, PA 15120
412-461-1229

Monday, November 17, 2008

Improv - Waterfront

Steel Valley inducts six into school district's hall of fame

By MICHAEL DIVITTORIO , Daily News Staff Writer
November 17, 2008

The Steel Valley Hall of Fame Class of 2008 has been inducted.

It was a grand celebration indeed at St. John Cathedral Center at 210 Greentree Road in Munhall Friday night. Officials and well-known residents of Homestead, West Homestead and Munhall turned out in droves to recognize six individuals and one family for their outstanding achievements at Steel Valley's first induction.

"It's all about the ones that made a difference," Steelers quarterback and opening speaker Charlie Batch said. "Those are the ones that are here today."

"We have home run hitters in this first inaugural class," said longtime library supporter and Friday night's master of ceremonies Darrell Hess as he compared the inductees to those in the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame.

The hall of fame is a collaboration of nonprofit organizations the Best of the Batch Foundation, the Carnegie Library of Homestead and the I-TEAM - Ironmen Technology, Enrichment, Academics & Mentoring.

The effort was to honor current and former Steel Valley residents who have outstanding accomplishments in the arts, sciences, business, sports and community service, and to show what those from the Steel Valley can accomplish.

"This is living proof today that these kids can go out there and be whoever they want to be," Batch said. "Whether that's a professional football player or a chairman of a billion-dollar company. This is living proof because you have people here that are doing this."

The 2008 Steel Valley Hall of Fame inductees are:

* Jack Butler, a long-time Munhall resident and former Pittsburgh Steeler, who was named one of the 33 all-time greatest players in the 75-year history of the Steelers.

* David Lewis, a native of South Africa and an internationally renowned architect who now calls West Homestead his home, he has been involved heavily in the preservation of the region's historical resources.

* George A. Nama, a Munhall native and artist, who is celebrated worldwide for his sculptures, etchings and sketches.

* Cumberland Posey, owner/manager and player for one of the Negro Baseball League's greatest teams, the Homestead Grays, who also was a former Steel Valley school director and was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2006.

* Tamara Tunie, a Steel Valley High School and Carnegie Mellon University graduate who stars on Broadway and can be seen on Law and Order: Special Victims Unit and is a Tony Award-winning co-producer.

* Dr. Lynn Yanyo, a graduate of Steel Valley High School and Carnegie Mellon University who has a doctorate in polymer science and engineering and holds eight U.S. patents.

* The Campbell family, well known in the Steel Valley area for academic and athletic achievement and revered for philanthropy.

Accepting the induction on behalf of the late Posey was his great nephew Dr. Evan Baker, and Linda Tunie accepted the induction on behalf of her sister.

"This is just another thing that will give them the incentive to achieve," Bill Campbell said of the impact the hall of fame will have on Steel Valley students. "This is the best thing that's ever happened to me. This is what we ought to be about. These are people in our community, people we're proud of."

Bill Campbell is the son of William V. Campbell Sr., for whom Steel Valley's field is named. He accepted the award on behalf of his family members, who have donated more than $6 million to the school district through the years.

"I just want to thank you very much. I appreciate it," Nama said.

Lewis told the story of how he came to the Steel Valley area and preached a message of unity as part of his acceptance speech.

"We have to get over the things that divide us," he said. "We are a divided community. I am fighting mad about this."

The hall of fame is located in the newly renovated Abraham Reading Room at the library. A reception was held there prior to the banquet at the cathedral center.

Campbell and Batch, as well as Steel Valley graduate and former San Francisco 49ers running back Adam Walker and Steel Valley graduate and University of Minnesota wide receiver Melvin Anderson spoke to 11th- and 12th-graders Friday afternoon at the high school as part of the event.

High school Principal Leo Schlanger said the assembly and its speakers had a tremendous impact on students.

"You could hear a pin drop," he said. "They (speakers) never forgot where they came from."

I-TEAM President Eddie Wehrer credited the success of Friday's events to the Steel Valley Hall of Fame organization committee and others involved.

"There was a committee of people that made this a reality," he said. "Anything that looks nice, I had nothing to do with."

Steel Valley Hall of Fame Awards were created by Edward Kachurik's Glass Art

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Free Thanksgiving Dinners

Tuesday November 25, 2008

Salvation Army
6:00 pm
104 E. 9th Ave.
Homestead, PA 15120
(412) 462-2460


Thursday November 27, 2008

Homestead Park United Methodist Church
4 pm to 6 pm
4231 Shady Ave.
Munhall, Pa 15120
(412) 462-9030

Homestead United Presbyterian Church
4:30 pm to 6:30 pm
9th and Ann St.
Homestead, Pa 15120
(412) 462-5037 / (412) 462-4994

Free financing workshop planned

Heraldstandard.com
11/16/08

Business Builders, a business consulting firm that specializes in helping small business obtain financing, is hosting a free workshop at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Dave and Busters at the Waterfront in Homestead. Many small and mid-sized business owners will attend the workshop to share business ideas and free appetizers provided by the firm.

The free workshop will provide insight on the steps necessary to complete a successful business plan, including how to forecast start-up costs, identify customer base and develop marketing strategy. The workshop will also define the three keys necessary to improve the credit worthiness of a business entrepreneur. The credit analysis information enables existing businesses to repair damaged credit, improve terms on business loans or apply for credit for start-up or expansion costs.

To register for this seminar or for more information about other seminars offered by Business Builders, call Derek Banas at 412-848-3229 or e-mail him at derekbanas@mybusinessbuilders.net. To learn more about Business Builders, visit its Web site at www.mybusinessbuilders.net.

West Homestead embraces industrial heritage

By Mary Ann Thomas
FOR THE TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Sunday, November 16, 2008

When West Homestead Mayor John Dindak surveys the Waterfront complex, teeming with shops, movie theaters and waterslides, he remembers that this is where he lived, where he worked and where he lost almost everything.

Many of the landmarks of Dindak's life mirror the town where he has been mayor for 37 years.

As visitors continue to flock to the Waterfront, which sprawls over hundreds of acres in parts of West Homestead, Homestead and Munhall, other intrepid souls are sampling the towns' ethnic and industrial roots.

The Bulgarian Macedonian National Educational and Cultural Center on West Eighth Street in West Homestead and the Carnegie Library Music Hall of Homestead in nearby Munhall have survived amid shuttered mills and lost jobs.

Local businesses that are not part of the Waterfront continue to vie for visibility, hoping to attract patrons from the thousands of motorists passing through town most days.

West Homestead is a town where Victoria's Secret is followed by Vernon's Welding in the business directory.

Industrial history

An icon of industrial might, U.S. Steel's Homestead Works was one of the largest mills in the country, blanketing a large swath of shoreline along the Monongahela River.

When the steel industry prospered, West Homestead, which sits between Homestead and Munhall, bustled with stores, bars, churches and mansions on the hill overlooking smokestacks and thousands of workers.

The borough of West Homestead grew up at one end of the Homestead Works steel plant, which began operation in 1881 and was sold to Carnegie Steel in 1883, and Mesta Machines, which set up shop nearby in 1898 to produce machines for steel-making. The town was incorporated in 1901, the same year that Carnegie Steel was sold to U.S. Steel.

Employing thousands of immigrant workers, the steel industry became a hotbed of labor unrest and ill-fated attempts for better wages and safer conditions at the turn of the century. The town became famous for the 1892 Battle of Homestead, during which some workers lost their jobs and their lives.

When workers turned down a wage offer from mill management, they were locked out, and the mill brought in hired guns via barge from the Pinkerton Detective Agency to settle the dispute. Combat ensued for several hours, and the workers managed to contain the Pinkertons, who eventually surrendered on the barge.

But the governor sent in the National Guard, which met no resistance. And the mill started hiring workers to replace the regular employees.

The Homestead Works, along with the Edgar Thomson Works across the river in Braddock, the Clairton Works and other mills made U.S. Steel the largest steel manufacturer in the world. In its heyday, the Homestead Works employed more than 10,000; Mesta, more than 4,000.

Russian leader Nikita Khrushchev visited Mesta Machines to witness the region's industrial might during his 1959 visit to the United States.

And England's Prince Charles dropped by in 1988 to view the ruins.

Steel collapse

When the steel industry collapsed during the 1980s, and more than 5,000 workers, including Dindak, lost their jobs, an exodus followed. The Homestead Works closed in 1986. And companies that sprouted up next to the mill, such as Mesta, also died.

So few stayed behind that Dindak had to shut down Little League.

"Everybody left, and there weren't enough kids to play," he says.

When Dindak visits The Waterfront, he remembers where he worked for several decades with U.S. Steel.

"I was heartbroken for a while," he said. "We lost everything: our homes, our jobs, our people. I was only 56 years old when they threw me out. I was able to get a little pension and benefits. It was pretty devastating with four kids. But we survived, ate a lot of jumbo and potatoes.

"I don't know how we survived. We became a ghost town" Dindak says.

The town was so broke that, in 1984, Dindak persuaded public workers and others to pitch in $2 a week to play the Pennsylvania Lottery.

The borough employees said that they didn't want raises, Dindak says. They wanted to keep their jobs. Roads and equipment were deteriorating.

That act of desperation attracted the national media, which portrayed the borough as a despondent town with no jobs, money or sophistication -- just Pittsburgh accents.

"I bet I got 1,000 letters from people around the country with money to play the lottery," Dindak says.

The town didn't hit the jackpot, but it came close. At the end of the gambit, the borough ended up about $700 ahead, he said.

Even in its poverty, the town roared.

And a developer listened.

Redevelopment success

Had someone said the word "waterfront" two decades ago, few people would have thought of West Homestead.

With industry hogging the riverfront, nobody noticed the scenery. Companies that went out of business left behind deteriorating buildings and, often, chemical contamination.

Saddled with an impossibly large industrial plot of several hundred acres, the municipalities that shared it saw the potential to grow a tax base.

In 1988, Cleveland-based Park Corp. bought Mesta Machines through bankruptcy, then bought the U.S. Steel property.

"(Owner) Ray Park told me that he was going to develop the land for a developer, and he leveled everything," Dindak remembers.

Park sold the land to Columbus-based developer Continental Real Estate.

"Frank Kass, the chairman of Continental, was a great guy. He used to come in on a helicopter every two weeks. We'd get a pitcher of cold beer at a local bar and talk. This guy had a vision.

"Without Continental and Frank Kass, we would not be where we are at today," Dindak says. "You wouldn't believe the problems we had with the three boroughs; they all had different ordinances, different building codes, etc."

The first stores at the Waterfront opened in 1999. The complex has continued to expand since.

It was happenstance that the Waterfront retained its signature row of red-brick smokestacks.

According to Dindak, Kass was in the process of tearing them down when the producer of the Hollywood film "Jimmy Hoffa" requested that they remain standing.

"Right after, Kass said, 'Why not dress them up and leave them up.' "

Kass refurbished the stacks, which stand like sentries at the Waterfront entrance, proudly displaying the area's industrial heritage.

The other West Homestead

People no long flee West Homestead's main drag, Eighth Avenue. They make it a destination.

A recent PennDOT survey tracked 30,000 vehicles a day motoring from the Homestead Grays Bridge to the Glenwood Bridge in Hazelwood.

"I don't complain about traffic," Dindak says.

The town's small businesses include family-owned stores, such as K&E Automotive, that have been around for decades, according to John Karafa Jr. of West Homestead and president of Steel Valley Chamber of Commerce.

Me Lyng restaurant, a print shop, a hardware store and other small businesses offer a mix of goods and services away from the big-box stores.

"But you've got some dilapidated storefronts on Eighth Avenue," Karafa says. "Something doesn't work out, and it gets boarded up."

Given the draw of the Waterfront, Karafa doesn't think it's unreasonable to hope for revitalization reminiscent of the South Side along Eighth Avenue.

"There needs to be more planning," he says. "The businesses, local and county politicians, police and fire departments all have to be on the same page to help the business people."

The Rivers of Steel heritage group in Homestead has been offering sold-out tours of the area as part of the "Babushkas and Hard Hats" tour, which are scheduled to resume in the spring.

Jan Dofner, director of communications at Rivers of Steel, describes West Homestead and its Mon Valley neighbors as "a phoenix rising from the ashes."

The watchword is "location" for riverfront sites like West Homestead.

"There's a reason these mills took that land," she says. "They are located on prime flat land along the river."

One of the stops on the tour is an old ethnic club called the Bulgarian Macedonian National Educational and Cultural Center, which offers a history lesson about the town's immigrant past and an authentic Bulgarian lunch featuring two soups, Bulgarian bread, yogurt, feta cheese, a salad and apple strudel.

With its ethnic dances, Soup Sega featuring 15 homemade soups available on Saturdays, and weekend events such as salsa and Cajun dancing, the club is revitalized, according to president Pat French, 78, a West Homestead native and Mt. Lebanon resident.

This year, the club has attracted abut 4,000 visitors from 42 states and 15 countries, she says.

And Dofner credits the Bulgarian club for being a beacon of cultural preservation.

"They're an incredible model for heritage development," she says.

"The Bulgarian club is entrepreneurial," Dofner says. "They walk the tightrope between staying authentic and marketing themselves commercially."

"We like to talk about the Bulgarians and other immigrants from this area such as the Slovaks, Hungarians, Croatians. We all spoke different languages," French says.

Consequently, they all had different clubs.

The Bulgarian club survived because it opened its doors to other ethnic groups, French says.

"Back then, there were a lot of long young people who wanted to dance with us, and they weren't Bulgarian, so we opened up our membership."

The club still has an active dance group.

French's nephew, Nick Jordanoff, 44, a borough native and a former dance instructor at the club, uses the kitchen as a base for his catering business, Hazelnut Catering.

He recently whipped up salmon filets with caramelized onions and fresh spinach with a caper, lemon and dill mayonnaise, all topped with Swiss cheese, to please the palates of Grateful Dead alum Bob Weir and his band Rat Dog, who performed Nov. 1 at the Carnegie Library Music Hall of Homestead.

"I spent my entire life in this place," say Jordanoff, a Robinson resident and former owner of the Old Europe Restaurant in the South Side.

"When I got out of the (restaurant) business, this was a natural place for me to work out of."

People ask French why she still volunteers at the club.

"I grew up here," she says. "My thing is, this is our legacy. Our parents came as immigrants and became great Americans. You have to remember your culture. That's what makes you who you are."

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Luxury bus service offers non-stop, wireless travel to Harrisburg and beyond

A new ground transportation service between Pittsburgh and Harrisburg hopes to put some pizzazz back into Pennsylvania travel.

The Steel City Flyer, a business class bus service featuring perks like wi-fi, movies, reserved seating, and an attendant, will begin operation on Nov. 24th, just in time for the Thanksgiving holiday. The three businessmen behind the concept see connecting with rail lines as a perfect response to the lack of US Airways flights.

“Business class buses currently run up and down the east coast but nobody is running with the idea of hooking it up with Amtrak,” says George DeBolt, owner of DeBolt Unlimited Travel in Homestead. DeBolt partnered with longtime friends Robert A. Pietrandrea, president of Railroad Development Corp., and Henry Posner, chairman of RDC. “The challenge is to create a service that’s attractive enough to get people out of their cars—like the golden days of air travel.”

A one-way ticket costs $69 for the three and one-half hour trip to the Harrisburg Transportation Center. Passengers can connect with rail services to New York, Trenton and Philadelphia and joint fares and ticketing options will be announced soon. If the intermodal model is successful, other markets may be added.

“The Flyer is the most fuel efficient mode of travel,” DeBolt adds. “We’re reducing congestion on the road and for every gallon of diesel fuel, we get 280 passenger miles, far more than a plane, train or car.”

Writer: Deb Smit, Pop City
Source: George DeBolt, Steel City Flyer

Image courtesy Steel City Flyer

Workshop for First-Time Homebuyers

The Mon Valley Initiative, a nonprofit that helps people become homeowners, will host a free workshop for first-time homebuyers from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Dec. 13 at 305 E. Eighth Ave.

Topics covered include budgeting to buy a home, shopping for a loan, closing procedures and home maintenance. Those who attend can schedule appointments with counselors certified by the Housing and Urban Development Department, and they will have the opportunity to schedule appointments with the Mon Valley Initiative's housing counselor and get information on the local housing market and new home construction. A buffet lunch will be provided.

To register, call Mike Mauer at 412-464-4000, ext. 4008, or visit www.monvalleyinitiative.com.

Bulgarian Folk Ensemble

The Bulgarian Folk Ensemble called Otets Paissii will perform at 7 p.m. Saturday November 15, 2008 at the Carnegie Library of Homestead Music Hall, 510 10th Ave.

This year's concert will include new Rhodope Mountain songs, dynamic Shope dances, plus special guest artists Lyuti Chushki (Hot Peppers), a group of professional musicians from Bulgaria and the Washington, D.C., area.

A Balkan dance, Vecherinka, will follow at 9 p.m. at the Bulgarian Cultural Center, 449-451 W. Eighth Ave., West Homestead.

Tickets for the concert cost $10 for adults, $5 for seniors and students. To buy tickets, call 412-461-6188.

Free Thanksgiving Dinner


Honeysuckle White Thanksgiving Dinner
Tuesday, November 25, 2008

6:00 PM

Salvation Army
Steel Valley Worship and Service Center
104 E. 9th Ave.
Homestead, PA 15120

Captains Keith & Katherine Jache,
Steel Valley Commanding Officers
(412) 461-2460

ALL WELCOME!


Bar Louie Fundraiser