TSS Community Garage Sale – Sunday, May 19th

Stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff – stuff . It’s overwhelming! Now is the time to get control of your house again, and get rid of your extra stuff that is taking over your home. Donate it to the TSS garage sale. We can pick up for you. We will price it and sell it. You get the tax deduction for donating to a charitable organization. WOW!!!

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With your help this fundraiser will be a great success.

 

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TSS Community Garage Sale – Sunday May 19th!

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Drop off on Saturday,May 18th, 8 AM-Noon

Community Garage Sale is on Sunday, May 19th, 9 AM-3 PM

For questions – contact Jett Sarachek (jettusara@aol.com) or Liz Kamp (ekamp@rcn.com)

 

Location: Liz Kamp’s home (actually her garage)

1905 Duffield Ct.

Allentown 18103

 

Pricing by Debi Nelson

Lifting and shlepping by TSS Brotherhood

‘Leftovers’ will be donated to a charitable organization, or can be picked up after the sale.

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Esther was Here, and Lookin’ GOOOOD!

Click the Picture for More Purim Pictures in our gallery! Get a look at these beauties! Here are our Esthers at the TSS Purim Party!

Is this a shayna punim, or what!?

Is this a shayna punim, or what!?

 

 

 

 

 

Max Shmookler to Teach Adult Ed Series on Migration – First Class on November 11 due to Super-Storm!

Max Shmookler will be teaching a series of 3 Adult Education classes November 11 and 18 at the JCC, and December 9 at the Shmookler’s home from 3:00-4:30 PM. Please RSVP to Marcia Berkow at mhberkow@gmail.com if you plan to attend.

 

Max Shmookler

Migration in post-War American fiction:

This course would explore the ways in which immigrants’ experiences coming to the United States were represented through fiction in the period between the WWII and the Vietnam War, with a particular focus on the experiences of Japanese in the internment camps, Jewish refugees in NYC, the barring of immigrants from Communist countries in the wake of the Korean War, the forced return of Mexican migrants through “Operation Wetback” (and yes, remarkably, that’s what it was called), and the first wave of Cuban exiles after Castro’s coup in 1959. Each meeting would explore one of these historical events through a short story or an excerpt from a novel, as well as accessible supplementary media–including short video and audio clips, images from the period (I think of Ansel Adam’s little known propaganda photographs of the Manzanar relocation camp for Japanese, for example), a work of relevant visual art, etc. I’ve found fiction to be a rich platform for discussions of complex themes in immigration, themes of race, class and the development of immigrant rights, as well as more intimate questions of memory, belonging, and loss that form the emotional undertow of the immigration debate.

 

Migration readings

 

 

 

A Terrific Congregational Meeting!

      

Check out our new photos in our photo gallery!  

Click on the picture to go to the gallery.

While you visit the  gallery, view the pictures from the Yoga Shabbat with our own Yogi Jett!