After a lengthy effort, artifacts from collections in Lithuania and New York that document Yiddish culture in Eastern Europe before World War II will be accessible to scholars and others.
brown in yiddish. we ve got to remember at that stage you weren t earning much money. no, i was broke then. she was paying for most things. yeah, the show of shows was off the air and when i met her i told her, you don t want to be serious with me, because i m broke. i m eating hotdogs for dinner. i said i have no money, you don t want to know me. she said, i ll take a chance. i ll take a chance. they continue to sing sweet georgia brown in yiddish. cheering and applause. i have a couple more for you. i don t care, you are finished.
of the pool, i didn t want to let my suitcases go, and the coat was.you know? i didn t know whether i would ever get to the top of the pool again, and i would go,. and he would spot me and finally he would get me up, so it was a matter of keeping them amused. thejewish mountains, you went there, really, they went there, really, for the food. they went there to die, because the food was cholesterol, it is all it was. lunch would fill them up to hear, they would eat. speaks yiddish. all yiddish words for doughy substances filled with yeast covered with creams, sometimes they would have lots of raw vegetables covered with one gallon of sour cream and they would eat that, then they would have sour cream for lunch, for desert, and that would be their lunch. and then ten gallons of hot tea and a glass of sour cream. and after that, they would sit and