'The Wall' will live on at new Italian House
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Mark Kiskunas
JANESVILLE For Mark Kiskunas and his family, the Italian House Restaurant is the first and last stop of any visit to Janesville.
“My wife just knows that’s the way it’s going to be,” said Kiskunas, who grabs a Gondola sandwich on his arrival and loaves of bread on his departure.
Those culinary stops don’t happen often enough for Kiskunas, a 1992 Craig High School graduate who is now a bank executive in Myrtle Beach, S.C.
But Kiskunas’ presence is part of the daily routine at Italian House.
He was the first of hundreds of Craig students to sign his name to an interior brick wall in the restaurant, which owner Edmund Halabi announced last week is moving to the neighboring Hardees property at Randall Avenue and East Racine Street.
Actually, Kiskunas was a Craig grad when he signed the wall about seven years ago during a trip home. He ate there routinely as a Craig student and every chance thereafter.
Halabi remembers the start of the wall-signing tradition as if it were yesterday.
“Mark came in one morning and said he was going back to South Carolina,” Halabi said. “He wanted to know if I could make him a Gondola, and I said sure.
“He said he’d been eating here for so long that he must have at least paid for my roof. So he asked if he could sign the wall. He did, and it’s taken off from there among the die-hard fans, the kids who eat here every day.”
Halabi admits that his plans to move his popular Italian restaurant didn’t include “The Wall.”
But they do now, thanks to an outpouring of interest from customers.
Halabi told The Janesville Gazette last week of his plans to buy the vacant Hardees property. He will remodel for former fast-food restaurant and open later this summer.
The online version of the story posted at www.gazettextra.com triggered waves of support for Halabi and his restaurant. It also prompted questions about the future of the brick wall inside the store that students from neighboring Craig have signed for years.
“I didn’t have any plans for the wall at all,” Halabi said. “But it has obviously created some sort of huge emotional attachment.
“We’re working on it now.”
Halabi said hundreds of students have taken Kiskunas’ lead and signed their names to the panel-board wall.
Halabi said he’s working with his architect to see if the panels can be incorporated into the new restaurant’s ceiling.
He’s got other ideas, too, and new ones are coming in from customers.
While nothing’s set in mortar, it appears likely that “The Wall” will have a presence at the new Italian House, he said.
And that pleases its original signer, who said it’s an honor to be part of “The Wall.”
“I just wish I could get him to open a restaurant in South Carolina,” Kiskunas said.
May 23, 2008 at 9:56 a.m.
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88 grad- i believe your correct. That part of article didnt make since saying that he started around 92. I m grad of 89 and there are 88-89 signatures up there. Pretty sure I didnt go back to sign three year later. Sarah from 89 goofy one is up there and Eric Elliot etc. I am sure too that they didnt come back after graduation to sign. Article states "first of hundreds to sign wall" there were 4 years of classes that have signed before him.
May 22, 2008 at 8:21 p.m.
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all in all...it's just another brick in the wall!
I'm glad to hear it, even though I graduated long before the tradition or even the restaurant started...
Perhaps I'll grab a gold marker and make my own mark on the wall soon...
The gondolas cannot be imitated by anyone! There is no comparison!
May 22, 2008 at 7:55 p.m.
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I believe that there were 88' and 89' names signed on "the wall" before those folks or shortly after they graduated. That would make it about 20 years of signatures! Best of luck to such a generous, hard working and respectful man!
May 21, 2008 at 8:27 p.m.
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Edmund....so very happy for you and family. What a blessing and honor to be part of the story! I remember growing up on Clark Street and eating at the Hardee's almost everyday, that was until you opened, then was hooked for life. CONGRATS well deserved and need me a Gondola and some bread in a bad way. Golf and hotel on me my friend, get down to Myrtle Beach soon. Have plenty of great spots for Italian House II in SC.
May 21, 2008 at 5:36 p.m.
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footville...LOL!!!!
May 21, 2008 at 2 p.m.
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The owner of the Italian House Is a class act. What a wonderful person. I come in to eat and he treats me like a friend or good neighbor. More owners should take lessons from him on treating customers right. Thanks I will be there soon.
May 21, 2008 at 11:40 a.m.
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I think it would be cool to see some of the walls cut into sections and framed as art on the walls in the new place. just an idea
May 21, 2008 at 11:30 a.m.
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Glad to hear it! I just said to my husband that I was glad to see the Italian house moving to a bigger place but what a heart ache to see the wall being left behind. It was nice to read the walls and find friends names as we waited in line. Its nice to know that Edmund Halabi is a man with a REAL HEART and not just a heart for money!!!!
May 21, 2008 at 11:14 a.m.
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Alumni from far and wide will be delighted to hear the news. Too bad that a similar move couldn't have SOMEHOW been done with the venerable real brick wall that once graced the spiral stairway that led down to the original basement location of Madison's Paisan's. That wall was a place for leaving your name, announcements, memories, even keeping the long lines waiting to get into the cellar restaurant entertained!
May 21, 2008 at 10:39 a.m.
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Everyone at the House of Mercy appreciates the regular donations of Gondolas, and other goodies from the Italian House.
May 21, 2008 at 9:25 a.m.
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Yay! God Save the Wall! God Save the Wall!
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