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PA AAUW

 

2007-08 Meetings & Special Events 

                                      

 

Board Meeting, Thursday, January 10, 2008 (Sunrise Assisted Living formerly New Seasons)

Board Meeting, Saturday, February 9, 2008  10am (Prior to branch meeting)

Board Meeting / Dinner, Thursday, March 6, 2008 (Morgan's)

Board Meeting, Thursday, April 3, 2008

AAUW–ALLENTOWN ANNUAL BOOK SALE October 11-15, 2008 

Troxell Middle School, Cedar Crest Blvd   HOURS: Oct 11, 2008 8am-4pm; Oct 12 11am-4pm;
Oct 13, 14*, 15** 10am-8pm  (*half-price day; **bag day)  On opening day, Oct 11, during
8-10am, $10 donation adults/$3 children
   — Click here to read more >>

 

2007-08 Programs

Speaker / Program Title Date & Time Location

Ready Set Green to Go

An interactive and informative discussion on eco-friendly travel

Facilitators:                                            Nancy Ziegler & Linda Friscia-Oppé

January 17, 2008 Thursday          noon

Lehigh County Government Center (Room 43b)

Allentown

Maternal Profiling in Pennsylvania: The ongoing struggle for equality in the workplace

Kiki Peppard

 

February 9, 2008 Saturday          noon

 

Cedar Crest College Allentown

Interbranch Lunch

Gateway to Equity Awards                    (four recipients will speak on their accomplishments)

March 8, 2008   11:30am         Best Western         Bethlehem
Financially Fit for Life:  Raising awareness on pay equity for women

Judy Mawhinney & Fran Rothstein

April 24, 2008 7:00PM             Luther Crest           Allentown
Annual Banquet

Fashion through the Ages

May 13, 2008 5:30PM

                Mango's              Allentown

AAUW-Allentown BOOK SALE!

October 11-15, 2008

times listed above

Troxell Middle School  Allentown

 

AAUW–Allentown Annual Book Sale

Commenced in 1959, the Book Sale is the branch's premier annual event.  Profits go to Community Awards for women whose education has been interrupted.  Profits have been $20K and more for many years.  This five-day sale is now held at the former Troxell Jr. High School on Cedar Crest Boulevard.  Set-ups and sorting begin in August for the sale which is scheduled for the Saturday before Columbus Day in October.  Many different work shifts, along with fun times, are available both before and during the event.

The following article appeared in The Morning Call  August 17, 2006 (local section B)

AAUW book sale is a win-win-win-win situation

by Margie Peterson

One of the great things about books is that unlike, say, shirts, each is just as good (or bad) for the 10th person who uses it as for the first. 

The engaging characters and bitingly funny insights into academia in Richard Russo’s “Straight Man” are as spot-on with a few spaghetti stains on the pages as they are brand spanking new.  This is, of course, why public libraries are popular but you don’t see a lot of shirt-lending institutions.

So for readers who aren’t Rockefellers, there can be few better places to be Oct. 7-11 than at the mammoth used books sale run by the Allentown chapter of the nonprofit American Association of University Women.  The fundraiser, held at the Troxell building at 2219 N. Cedar Crest Blvd, offers as many as 56,000 books for sale, organizers told me. 

To get an idea of how big that is, the Emmaus Public Library’s shelves currently hold about 90,000 books, videos, CDs and periodicals.  (The library also has its own terrific book sale at the end of April at the Lower Macungie Middle School).

Last year, the Allentown AAUW raised $32,000, which went to scholarships, largely for women attending area colleges.

The AAUW – which has bins for book donations at South Mall and the YMCA & YWCA of Allentown – started accepting books at Troxell on Aug 1 during the heat wave.  When I stopped by that day, the old un-air-conditioned school was a pizza oven.  Tow of the sale organizers, Mary Crusius and Annette Bonstedt, were working away, but Crusius gave me a tour.

I pointed out to Crusius, a retired educator, that she could be keeping cool in a pool somewhere rather than getting paid zilch to sit in a former girls locker room separating mysteries from biographies. 

At the time and in a later interview, she explained what keeps her and other volunteers coming back year after year to run the annual sale, which began in 1959.  The scholarships go to women who have had their educations interrupted, she said.  Some are striving to earn degrees after a divorce or an abusive relationship. “Most of them are the sole support of two or three children”, Crusius said.  “They are so appreciative of what we give them”. 

We have seen a need, and that’s what keeps us going”, she said.

And going and going.  Volunteer Pat Walkup said she brought her 2-year old son the first year she started volunteering at the sale.  He’s now 25. 

The day before I stopped by, teens from KidsPeace spent the morning carrying and setting up tables for the volunteers.  KidsPeace kids have been helping with setting up and taking down after the sale for three years, and Crusius and Walkup said they are always polite and hugely helpful.  As a reward for their labor, the teens can choose books for free from the leftovers. 

Meta Cadugan, a KidsPeace teacher at the Washington School who accompanies them, said the teens who have helped in the past, ask to go back. “They feel good about themselves, being able to help other people”, she said.  “At the end, they will actually thank [the women] for letting them come.”

After offering leftover books to the KidsPeace kids, the group sells the remainders to a Maryland book buyer.  Any books too dilapidated for they buyer are recycled.

These women say that, in addition to the scholarships, they are driven by their love of reading and their desire to encourage it.  “You can go anywhere you want to with books,” Walkup said.

Students get scholarships, teens get the satisfaction of helping others, thousands of people get to go anywhere they want to with books, and nothing is wasted.  It’s hard to imagine a better fundraiser.

 

 

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