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Joseph Bastianich (born September 17, 1968) is an American restaurateur, author and television personality. He, along with his mother and business partner Lidia Bastianich, co-owns thirty restaurants in four countries, including Osteria Mozza in Los Angeles, which the owners expanded in 2010.
Moberly's airport is named for him. Moberly is the home of novelist Elizabeth Seifert Gasparotti and birthplace of writer Jack Conroy. G.W. P. Hunt, first Governor of Arizona, was born in Huntsville. Hancock L. Jackson, interim Gov. of Mo., 1857; Lt. Gov., 1857–61, and the biochemist Victor C. Vaughn, were natives of Randolph County.
The large mural in the dining room of Jasper’s Italian Restaurant shows generations of owners and chefs. Jasper’s Italian Restaurant. Location: 1201 W. 103rd St. Year founded: 1954.
Notable buildings include the former Moberly Post Office (1915), Moberly Masonic Lodge, No. 344/Israel Shrine #13 (1929), Fourth Street Theatre (1913), and Carnegie Library (1903). [ 2 ] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2012.
The following are approximate tallies of current listings by county. These counts are based on entries in the National Register Information Database as of March 13, 2009 [2] and new weekly listings posted since then on the National Register of Historic Places web site. [3]
Joe's was founded in 1975 by Pino "Joe" Pozzuoli, an Italian immigrant originally from Naples, Italy. The restaurant briefly closed in 2005, but has since reopened. [1] Joe's Pizza offers traditional New York slice-style pizza.
1980-2013 — Joseph "Uncle Joe" Cammarata — became semi-retired in the 2000s, died in 2013 Fernando M. "Nondo" Bartolotta is the only known remaining member, born in 1957. In 1984, he and Michael Bauer were arrested for conspiring to steal $300,000 from a Venture store, where Bauer worked as an assistant manager. [ 15 ]
It was renamed Mama Campisi's in 1982, and continued under that name until 2005, when it was closed down. It was reopened in 2006 by Lance and Andrea Ervin and it eventually became the center of an episode of Restaurant: Impossible. [2] It was also featured on an episode of the Travel Channel's Man v. Food, hosted by Casey Webb, in December 2017.