LS • A trite tly Con fi den t ial By PHINEAS J. BIRON By PHINEAS J. BIRON Washington Pipeline: The controversial civil rights bill which will finally be passed will be meaningless according to those in the know. . . . The amendment which is sure to be tagged on to me bill will make a sad joke of the Attor- ney General's authority to in- tervene in local. matters of dis- crimination. . . In other words, our Department of Jus- tice will have to be "invited" by the local authorities (such as local schoolboards), to enter any civil rights dispute, except in voting cases. . . . All of which adds up to interminable delays in any Federal attempt to enforce the Supreme Court decision . . Both major po- litical parties have placed po- litical expediency ahead of democratic principles. . . . - The Lake Michigan Scrolls: When archaeologists of the future poke around a cemetery near what is now Arlington Heights (a suburb of Chicago), they may announce a signifi, cant discovery—the Lake Mich- igan Scrolls. . . . At a cere- mony held last week 30 parch- ment scrolls were buried in the new Shalom Memorial Park Cemetery. . . . The scrolls , were placed in clay urns protected by waterproof plastic bags, sealed in wooden boxes. . . The "difference" between the Lake Michigan and Dead Sea Scrolls covers a wide area. . . But if the now modern scrolls were to be "discovered" in about 2,000 years, they would prob- ably arouse as great a sensa- tion as the finding of the now famous Dead Sea Scrolls. It Actually Happened: When Margaret (Truman) In a Lighter Van BY S _ HIN FEY SAMACH An AJP Feature Berle's Daughter — 'A Sinner' Leonard Lyons tells this story in his column, "The Lyons Den," in the New York Post: "Milton Berle's 11-year-old daughter, Vicki, told him she'd attended Billy Graham's meet- ing at Madison Square Garden. `And, Daddy,' the youngster added, 'I went up on the stage, too" ... 'Alone?' asked Berle .. `No, said Vicki. 'There were 200 otherS on the stage with me' . . . Berle asked what she was doing on the stage. The child said: 'He asked for sinners —and I came up'." * * * Gershwin. Episodes In the same column, Lyons relates these episodes about George Gershwin: "This week George Gersh- , win's friends marked the 20th anniversary of the clay that death cut short the most bril- liant career in modern Ameri- can music. George White told of hiring Gershwin as a rehearsal-pianist, and then sign- ing him to write the second `Scandals' at $75 a-. Week. Andre Kostelanetz told of asking Gershwin how many tunes he wrote each day, and the com- poser replied: `Oh, about 15. That way I get the bad ones out of my system.' " 'Rhapsody In Blue' was in- troduced on the -West Coast by Tosha Toloes, soloist for the Hollywood Bowl orchestra, who wrote me: 'I rushed to. N ew York to meet Gershwin, to have him teach me the Rhap- sody. I'd- never played jazz. Gershwin was delighted, but said he couldn't teach me be- cause he wasn't a teacher. I told him all he needed to do was walk around, listen, and if it didn't sound right, to hol- 4111111111=11111111111111 For Your ■ . Social Events CARD PARTIES LUNCHEONS BUY DELICIOUS HAMILTON ... CHICKEN PIES • • • MEAT PIES .. . FRUIT TARTS Delivered Piping Hot Phone TW 3-3400 THESE PRODUCTS ALSO SOLD IN THE STORES- HAMI LTON MEAT PIE CO. 3401 E. McNichols Rd. 11111111111111111.111111111r ler. He did that.' "Gershwin once asked Ravel, in Paris, to give him lessons in serious compositions. `No,' said the French composer, 'it's better to be a first-class Gersh- Win than a second-class Ravel.' He also asked Igor Stravinsky for lessons, and Stravinsky said: `No, you teach me.' "IrVing Caesar, who has. a new Coral album, 'And Then I Wrote,' played and lost heavily in an all-night poker game, and determined to break even. Gershwin was composing a song in the next room. Caesar would leave the game only to join Gershwin at the piano and supply a line for a melody, then return to the game until the composer needed another line, `If I'd have been a winner in that poker game,' said Caesar later, `I'd never have gotten my name as a lyricist on Gersh- win's Swanee.' "During the 'Porgy and Bess' rehearsals Rouben Mamoulian, the director, spoke of a 'fugue.' The composer challenged - him to define it, and Mambulian said: 'A fugue is a musical composition in which an origi- nal theme is repeated and initiated.' Gershwin told him: `No. Fugue is a musical theme which keeps coming in and in and in, while customers keep going out and out and out.' "He admired Oscar Levant's talent and said it was latent only because Levant wouldn't practice enough. 'The differ- ence,' Levant replied, 'is not in our practicing. It's just that you're a genius and I am not.' One night Oscar stayed late after a Gershwin party, ig- noring the hints that it was time to go home. Gershwin yawned, put on pajamas, but Levant stayed. At 5 a.m. Gersh- win brought Oscar's hat and coat into the kitchen, where Levant was munching a sand- wich, and told his last guest of the night: 'Oscar, I'll pardon you for eating and running.' "Sonja Levine, the screen- writer who knew him well, tells of the day Gershwin, in the midst of rehearsing a new show, was told distressing news: the lady he was wooing had just eloped. 'Well, I'm certainly glad I'm in the middle of rehearsals,' said Gershwin. 'Otherwise I'd be terribly upset.' "His brother, Ira, said that when George needed money quickly, his agent, Archie Sel- wyn, reported difficulty in get- ting him a Hollywood job: 'They all say you've become high- brow—concert pieces, and now an opera, 'Porgy and Bess.' At Selwyn's suggestion Gershwin wrote him a letter to show to RKO: 'Dear Archy, I have written hit popular songs be- fore, and I'll write them again. I am not a highbrow.' With this proof in hand, RKO signed him." Daniel gave birth to a son a few months agb, she received a message from two rabbis who asked for the honor tos send a mohel to perform the circum- cision of the grandson of Presi- dent Harry Truman. . . . Mar- garet, with her usual tact, re- plied in friendly fashion, ex- plaining- that her son's brish had been arranged for with the surgeon of the hospital and that she regretted very much the rabbinical message had been received too late. Jewish Architecture: The current issue of Com- mentary carries an interesting article on Jews in modern architecture. . . . The editors point out that almost immedi- ately after emancipation, Jews rose to prothinence in the arts, sciences and professions, but for various reasons it was not until the last decade or so— with the boom in synagogue building—that the question of what could be called Jewish architecture began to be raised in earnest. . . . Percival Good- -man has designed several of the new synagogues (among them Temple Beth-El, Provi- dence, R.I.; Congregation Beth- El, New London, Conn.; and the Temple of Aaron, St. Paul, Minn Among the tradi- tionalists there are many who assert that Goodman's archi- tectural conceptions- are not Jewish although quite original . . . Now, while in Chicago, we learned that the young, brilliant architect Zalman Al- per, has designed a Jewisla ) . cemetery chapel (now under construction) which is shaped like a Magen David. Hollywood's Participation in Israel's Anniversary: Under the chairmanship of Barney Balaban, head of Para- mount, a committee Of distin- guished motion picture per- sonalities is studying plans to align the American movie in- dustry With Israel's Tenth An- niversary Festival next year. .. . A delegation will be leav- ing within the' next few weeks for the Jewish State to survey the situation and after the re- port is in, appropriate action will begin. . . . Which reminds us that Dore Schary is seri- ously considering a picture baser* on the recent book, "Hundred Hours to Suez." A Gift Of Gratitude THE HAGUE (JTA)—Nathan Strauss, American Jewish phil- anthropist, contributed $10,000 for the restoration of a student hostel in Delft in gratitude for the aid which the Dutch people gave to Jews during the- Nazi occupation. The hostel will be used by students attending Hol- land's Technical University. Polish Probe Uncovers Fear of Country's Jews VIENNA, (JTA) — Insecur- ity and-fear reign among Polish Jews as a result of widespread anti-Semitism, Gerard Skok, a member of the Polish Sejm (Parliament), has charged in testimony before a Sejm com- mittee. A report received here from Warsaw said that Skok called punishment of anti - Semitism "too mild." He related that of some 50 known incidents of an- ti-Semitism the perpetrators of only 10 were brought to court and that in half of these cases the court meted out insignifi- cant sentences. Insecurity has increased, the deputy charged, since Polish families were installed in -the apartments of Jews even before the Jews emigrated from the country. In a review of the sta- tus of Jews left in Poland, the deputy said that 52 per cent I were manual laborers, 20 per cent work in state-controlled in- dustries and institutions and 12 per cent are craftsmen. • We Arin,ourice the Opening OF HOLLAND CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC 18109 JAMES COUZENS Near Schaefer and Curtis UN 4-0327 Dr. Frank L. Holland and Dr. Beverly A. 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