MEMORIES
CHARITY BBQ FESTIVAL
Continued from Page 15
- Sanctioned by the Kansas City BBQ Society -
August 26, 2018
12-5pm at Temple Beth Hillel-Beth El 1001 Remington Rd. Wynnewood, PA
FREE Shuttle Parking - Kaiserman JCC
Bringing Community Together!
Come help us support the Jewish Relief Agency
in fighting hunger in the Philadelphia area.

FRIEND FUN!
LY Artisan
Beer Gardens
Mechanical bull riding
PICKLE EATING
CONTEST Live
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FLICKR -
F A M I LY
A First-Time Trip to the Jersey Shore
Selah Maya Zighelboim, staff writer
GROWING UP IN Louisiana and Texas does not lend itself to
summers spent at the Jersey Shore.

And growing up in Central Texas, specifically Austin, where
I lived until six months ago, does not really lend itself to sum-
mers spent at any shore. Though Central Texas certainly has its
fair share of natural springs and a river we like to call a lake, the
closest actual beach is too far away for a day trip.

But this recent Memorial Day weekend, I spent a day and two
nights in Wildwood.

phillykosherbbq.com The Premier Team
“We Cover the Island”
Growing up in Central Texas,
specifically Austin, where I lived
until six months ago, does not
really lend itself to summers
spent at any shore.

SELAH MAYA ZIGHELBOIM
Angel & Jerome DiPentino
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JUNE 7, 2018
The evening of May 26, I arrived to the beach house in Wildwood,
where a group of about 10 were staying. After a slow morning
of drinking coffee, I headed to the beach, where I did yoga and
meditation. I also walked along the boardwalk and got pizza and
ice cream.

Late that afternoon, we returned to the beach house, where
we showered and noshed on chips and salsa and lots of different
fruit. We also had a barbecue that night and, as a significant con-
tingent of the crew appeared to be made up of vegetarians and
vegans, we ate grilled veggie burgers, eggplant, Brussels sprouts,
sweet potatoes and corn and drank margaritas.

That night and the next morning, it started to rain, so we
headed back to Philadelphia, concluding my first trip to the
shore, a quintessential experience crossed off the bucket list.

Now, I just need to recover from my sunburn — that’s not
me pictured above— which I can only assume makes my shore
experience all the more authentic.

THIS SUMMER
JEWISHEXPONENT.COM



Repurposed T-shirt Allows for Free Beach Time
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THOSE SILLY GREEN T-shirts were our tickets in.

When I finally quit my job as a ticket taker on the boardwalk
in Long Beach, N.Y., to, you know, start 11th grade, I thought I’d
never touch my green employee T-shirt again.

And why would I?
It elicited nothing more
than memories of long,
plodding days spent clipping
tickets and scrolling mind-
lessly through Facebook. If I
had cared to listen to my par-
ents’ persistent pleas to clean
my room, I would’ve perhaps
used the shirt as a rag.

Alas, as the next year
of high school came and
went, giving way to soaring
temperatures once more, I
stumbled upon a realization:
Those silly green T-shirts were our tickets to the beach.

Two of my friends worked that summer job with me, so we
had three shirts to pass around among our group of six or seven
friends. And they always worked. The employee shirts, you see,
got us past the strict ticket takers guarding the gate to the sand.

“We work here,” we’d say, strolling ahead with cocksure confidence.

Sure, it might not have been the most honest approach, but heck,
when you’re 16, and it costs $12 to go to the beach, and you have
days and days of summer to kill, what other option do you have?
WIKIMEDIA Joshua Needelman, staff writer
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Lucy Saves the Day
WHEN I WAS 6, I got lost on the
Ventnor beach. My parents and I
went to the shore every summer;
staying in the pink and white house
my grandparents bought years
before my birth was an adventure I
looked forward to all year long.

After carefully selecting the most
germane spot on the beach and securing it with our towels,
chairs and umbrella, my parents granted me the one thing I
wanted most: the freedom to run to the ocean.

Feeling the glacial waves of the sea wash over my feet was
euphoric and, like many jovial children, I began to spin. I spun
and swam for what felt like days, and when I had exhausted
myself looked up only to realize that my parents’ familiar faces
were nowhere in sight.

I started walking, panicked, in the hopes that I would stumble
upon my parents’ location. As I stared at the environment around
me, I noticed a large effigy of an elephant in the distance and it
became clear that I was not, à la Dorothy, in Ventnor anymore.

Prepared by my parents for situations such as this, I made my
way to Lucy the Elephant and asked an adult to use a phone. With-
in 15 minutes, I was reunited with my parents and all was well.

Though scary and disorienting as a young child, my experi-
ence that day serves as a pleasant reminder of how easy it is to
lose oneself at the beach. l
FLICKR Marni Folkman, summer intern
agotlieb@jewishexponent.com; 215-832-0797
JEWISHEXPONENT.COM THIS SUMMER
JUNE 7, 2018
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