Israel's Brigade in Desert Maneuvers • JitireSft • re 1 - 1 +■ :f**- ;S e it Members of the Golani Infantry Brigade lie on the ground during maneuvers in the Judean Desert as Israeli forces go through an intensified training program. Maryland's Governor and Some Songs By DAVID SCHWARTZ (Copyright 1969, JTA, Inc.) Maryland has a Jewish governor, Marvin Mandel, succeeding Spiro Agnew, the new Vice President. Maryland is one of the smaller states, but there is something spe- cial about it. It is near Washington, where they make the laws of the country, but Maryland is not en- vious of Washington. It remembers the old saying, "I care not who writes the laws of the country, if I can write the songs." And Mary- land was responsible for the writ- ing of the "Star Spangled Banner." From a Jewish standpoint, Mary- land may boast of the creation of Hadassa. Henrietta Szold, who founded Hadassa, was a Balti- morean. There were a good many Jewish soldiers at Fort McHenry, the scene of the fighting which gave birth to the "Star Spangled Ban- ner." Francis Scott Key was the author of the national anthem. He was a lawyer. Key had his breakfast in the morning and left for his office. A friend saw him walking in a dif- ferent direction than the usual one. "Hi, Scott," he said, "where are you going?" "Oh," said Key, "I thought I would go down to Fort McHenry where the British and the Ameri- cans are fighting and write the `Star Spangled Banner.' " "The Star Spangled What?" said his friend. "You know," said Key, "Oh, say can you see by the dawn's early light." "Do you feel all right?" asked his friend. "Oh, you wouldn't understand," said Key, and he went on. * * * I have never seen this story about Key and his friend anywhere else, and I doubt that it is true. Actually, Key had been engaged as a lawyer to try to get the British military to release an American physician, Dr. Beans, whom they had taken in custody. Arriving at the British headquar- ters, Key watched the British bombardment of the fort and in- spired by the courageous American resistance, he took out an old en- velope and wrote the song. His sister-in-law thought it should be printed and the Baltimore Ameri- can published it. It was adapted to the tune of an old drinking song, "Anacreon in Heaven," and be- came popular all over the nation. Accident seems to always play a prominent part in such things. "Yankee Doodle" first became pop- ular during the Revolutionary War. The British played it following the battle of Lexington. It kidded the Americans about their simple ways, but the Americans liked it and adopted it as their own. It had been written more than 20 years before and probably if the Ameri- can Revolution had not occurred, it would not have been heard from. The author was said to be a phy- sician, a Dr. Shuckleberg, attached to the British force, who was said to have been something of a musi- cian. An early Anglo-Jewish editor maintained that Dr. Shuckleberg was a Jew. It is possible. Even in those early days, medicine was a favorite pursuit of Jews. In Mary- land itself, in its very earliest colonial days, there was a Jewish physician, Jacob Lombroso, who, by the way, seemed to have his troubles on account of his Jewish- ness. * * Naphtali Herz Imber had no con- scious intention of writing the Zion- ist anthem. It was first published in a collection of Imber's poems in 1886. Perhaps in his case as may be in Key's case, the unconscious was working. The unconscious said to Imber, "In 10 years or so, Theo- dor Herzl will appear and found the Zionist movement, so I had better get busy and write the "Ha- tikva." It won't do for Zionists to get together without being able to sing "Hatikva." A young woman wrote "Jerusa- lem, the Golden" for a contest. Then it was forgotten until the out- break of the Six-Day War made it popular among the soldiers. * * * A war also came to the rescue of a young Milwaukee Jewish song- writer named Harris. He had written popular songs on many themes, including one even on matzo balls. Then he wrote a sen- timental ballad: "Just break the news to mother And tell her how I love her." But the song was a flop until the Spanish-American War broke out and the young recruits for the bat- tle zones took it up and soon every- one was breaking the news to mother. In the First World War, someone nudged Irving Berlin. "That's re- veille, Irving, you got to get up." Berlin grabbed an old envelope. "I already have the chorus. I might as well complete the song." So Irving Berlin wrote "Oh, How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning." The moral, if there is any, seems to be: Keep an old envelope handy. Assimilated Jews Suffer Most in Poland PARIS (JTA) — A distinguished Jewish refugee from Poland re- ported at a symposium here this week that the Warsaw regime's anti-Semitic campaign was having its most serious effects on assimi- lated Jews, mostly staunch Com- munists, who never expected it and were bewildered to find them- selves ostracized. Michael Sylberberg, a writer, said the anti-Jewish drive in Po- land was "nursed as much by crude anti-Semitism as by the pro- Arab policies of the government, which a number of its members apply reluctantly, though some Polish intellectuals are disgusted." The speaker was one of several well-known Polish Jews who stop- ped off in Paris on their way to permanent settlement in other countries. The symposium was conducted by the World Jewish Congress. Sylberberg said the goal of the Polish government was to make Polish life "Judenrein" but with a few exceptions, notably some popular Jewish actors whose exile would be noted abroad. Another speaker, a historian, observed that in leaving Poland, "the Jews are also leaving be- hind priceless historical docu- ments not only of the recent ca- lamity, but of generations past; archival material accumulated over a thousand years." Meanwhile, two Polish Jews as- sociated with the Yiddish theater told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that they intended to re- turn to Poland following their vaca- tions in Paris. Jacob Rottbaum, a producer of the Wroclaw State Theater, said he was producing a play based on the works of Sholom Aleichem with a group of Jewish actors. He said he had been giving Yiddish recitals in his city and although the audience was steadily dimin- ishing, he had not been bothered by Polish authorities. Ruth Taru Kowalska, a well known Yiddish actress of the Jew- ish State Theater in Poland, said she was returning to Warsaw next week where the theater is playing a full season. Ida Kaminska, for- mer director of the Jewish State Theater, left Poland last year be- cause of the official anti-Semitic campaign and is presently in the United States. She has said she does not intend to return to Po- land. Criterion Club Plans Midwinter Outing Upland Hills, near Oxford, Mich., will be the site of a mid- winter outing Sunday, arranged by the Criterion Club for single adults. Guests will be welcome. A motorcade will leave 11 a.m. from the parking lot on Green- field and W. Seven Mile Rd. The day's fare will include a sleigh ride (or hayride), lunch at the camp lodge, dancing at the barn-loft, and a buffet dinner at Alban's, Birmingham. For information, call Jennie Marian, UN 4-4932. Center Single Adults to 'Lounge Around' Single adults of the Jewish Cen- ter (age 25-40) will feature danc- ing, singing, games and refresh- ments at its lounge night 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Allen Lounge. Gui- tar players are asked to bring their instruments. Admission will be free for members, and a nom- inal charge for guests. For information, call Ralph Sirotkin at the Center, 341-4200, Ext. 261. Slight Increase in Voters on Rolls for Fall Election JERUSALEM (ZINS)—Prepara- tions for the Knesset elections in November are already in full swing. There are currently 1,684,- 484 eligible voters in the country, compared with 1,639,996 in the pre- vious elections, only four years ago, an increase of 2.7 .per cent. Anti-Semitism in East Germany was discussed by Samuel Fiderer, who said it was officially inspir- ed. He disclosed that the famous author, Arnold Zweig, who died recently in East Germany, was interred in the Pantheon of. Com- munist leaders although his last request had been for burial in a Jewish cemetery. Fiderer said that a minyan of Jews from West Germany was per- mitted to recite kaddish. The sym- posium adopted a resolution ex- pressing appreciation for the stand most Frenchmen have taken against Gen. de Gaulle's pro-Arab policies and his recent embargo on military equipment and spare parts to Israel. Abraham Bern, a poet, and Mar- cel Orolitski, a communal worker, reported that hundreds of former active French-Jewish Communists left the party because of its anti- Israel stand following the June 1967 war and were now working for Israel. A group of prominent Ameri- cans, some of whoin have been frequently associated with left- wing causes, has sent an open letter to the Polish government condemning the revival of anti- Semitism in Poland, "inspired and abetted by some leaders of the same government that in the past had combatted it with the utmost vigor." novel "Savage Sleep," Albert Maltz, nov- elist and screen writer; Morris U. Schappes, historian and editor of the magazine "Jewish Currents"; Dr. Annette T. Rubinstein, author and critic; and Prof. Frederic Ewen, biographer of playwright Bertoit Brecht. The letter said: "We dare not, through silence, make ourselves accomplices in this heart-break- ing incredible catastrophe. We must urge with the utmost solemn- ity that the Polish government stop this self-destructive course while a remnant of Polish Jewry and of the government's socialist honor yet remain to be saved." of the recently-published THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, January 31, 1969-35 Larry Freedman Orchestra and Entertainment 647-23E7 CARICATURES at Bar Mitzvas and Parties by IRVING CHADWICK 398-0233 The letter was transmitted to Warsaw through the Polish Em- bassy in Washington D.C. and the Polish Mission to the United Na- tions. The signatories included 32 writ- ers, critics, university teachers, editors and actors, among them Ossie Davis, the Negro actor and For the HY Spot Of Your Affair Music by Hy Herman And His Orchestra (Hy playwright; Paul M. Sweezey, edi- tor of the Monthly Review; Max- well Geismar, author and critic; James Aronson, founder and for- mer editor of the National Guar- dian; Yuri Suhl, author of "They Fought Back," a documentary of Jewish resistance in Nazi- occupi- ed Europe; Millen Brand, author Utchenik) • Distinctive Ceremonies a Specialty! 342-9424 C Jitnian. . CUSTOM FURNITURE & CARPET CLEANING ON LOCATION Phone 549-7170 FOR LADIES ONLY.... SPECIAL OFFER! SERIES OF 10 SERIES OF 10 1 HOUR 1/2 HOUR MASSAGES MASSAGES 10" 15" FREE SAUNAS WITH EVERY SERIES EVERYTHING INCLUDED In The PAVILION OF BEAUTE GREEN-8 SHOPPING CENTER Phone 399-1040 Closed Mondays