For years, Alice had performed as a singer and dancer -- there's a picture of her, above, in a troupe of entertainers for some program lost in the mists of time. But in her later decades, she appeared with seniors entertainment troupes that played mostly to audiences in senior centers and nursing homes. She'd often say she never imagined herself as being part of the audience, in a wheelchair.
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Farewell Aunt Alice, at 106
The year 1907 sounds so distant. But it grew even more
so today as we buried my Aunt Alice, who died this week at the age of 106-plus.
Alice Ettlin Krupsaw was born on Feb. 28, 1907. Her parents
Louis and Ida Ettlin were Jewish immigrants from the Russian Ukraine who
largely achieved the American dream, although they never became American
citizens. Ida, my grandmother, mostly spoke and only read in Yiddish.
Louis Ettlin was a
tailor, working in department stores and for a time his own Baltimore shop at
the southeast corner of Calvert Street and North Avenue. Several relatives from
the old country also had tailoring businesses around the city.
In a memoir included in a book of her poems, paintings and
family photographs, published for Alice's centennial birthday, she recalled
early childhood years on Eagle Street, "Little Israel," in the city's southwestern corner and on
Monroe Street a few miles to the north -- a house more modern, since it had
electricity.
"And what a great time my brother Ben and I had running
into every room, pushing buttons just to see the lights go on," she wrote.
A house with electricity, papa's "Tin Lizzy" car
with a crank-operated starter, an ice box refrigerator that needed a 10-cent
block of ice to keep stuff cold. It was another world back then.
Yet she lived to see man set foot on the moon, and marveled
as recently as three weeks ago at how a great-nephew could take her picture
with his SmartPhone and immediately show her the image on its screen display.
She marveled at videos of herself singing that appeared as if by magic on my
laptop computer, and was delighted -- even if she could not fathom how it was
possible -- that thousands of people across the planet had also seen her, on
YouTube.
Alice attended high school and Strayer's secretarial school,
and was about 22 when she married Louis Krupsaw, a cook and former Marine who
later was to serve in the U.S. Army. They operated a delicatessen for a short
time in Baltimore, but no one can remember when or exactly where. I heard once
that it was on Gay Street. The only evidence is the rudimentary start of a
novel Alice tried to write in pencil -- on brown butcher paper.
Judging by the dates on photos, Alice and Lou moved to
Washington about 1950. He became a route delivery man for the old Washington
Daily News, and Alice began a series of jobs with federal government agencies
-- the mint, the printing office and Walter Reed Army Hospital. She enjoyed telling
about the time she delivered a set of President Dwight Eisenhower's X-rays to a
White House official, and of meeting First Lady Mamie Eisenhower.
Lou died in 1955, and was buried in Arlington National
Cemetery. He was just 56 years old, and they'd had no children. He left her with memories of their numerous
trips, to Florida, out west, and to Havana, Cuba. Pictures, most of them faded from
the passage of years, show her in the various locales, including riding
horseback with Lou. And there's souvenir photos from fancy restaurants, like
Club Cairo in Northwest Washington, where they celebrated a few of her
birthdays in the late 1940s.
Alice never remarried. And eventually she took a lesser
clerical position in the Baltimore suburbs at the Social Security
Administration headquarters -- close to the home of her parents, so she could
better help them in their declining years. She retired in 1975, and might have
become the oldest living retiree of the SSA. (The agency professed last year,
as we planned for Alice's 105th birthday, not to have such records.)
In 1977, she took painting classes at the Waxter Senior
Center in downtown Baltimore, and began turning out works on canvas that one
might classify as primitive art -- my favorite was a painting depicting two
young children pulling a sled down a snowy country lane toward a farmhouse. They
were some of the children she never had.
Alice made most of her own clothes. Her baby brother Sam,
now 94, recalls asking if she could make covers for his golf clubs. She
knitted them -- sort of like sock puppets, each with a whimsical head. Then she
thought about making smaller ones, as finger puppets about 3 to 4 inches long,
perfect for children to play with. And in the ensuing years she made countless
hundreds of them, each taking about an hour and a half to create. She donated
them to hospitals, schools and children's homes around the country and in
Israel -- and more golf club covers for charity sales.
She kept the thank-you letters and notes from the various
recipients, and the letter from Jerusalem informing her that she had been named
an honorary member of the Diskin Orphan Home of Israel. But my favorite from
her scrapbooks is dated Dec. 13, 1991, from a boy named Adam:
"Dear Alice," he wrote. "Thank you for the
finger puppet. I might make a puppet show. I named it Freddy. It is a he. I
have a gerbil named Freddy. My cat knocked it over."
She filled her apartment with dolls, human and otherwise,
and dressed them in clothes she made. They were also her children, and she
created an elaborate Jewish wedding scene for some of them.
Alice wrote scores of poems. She wrote them by hand, and
then typed them, over and over, for more than 30 years. Some of them are pretty good --
so good, I worried she copied them from somewhere. Google searches never turned
up a trace, however.
She had two reference books tucked in a worn-out satchel of
her writing -- an old dictionary, in which Alice had written words with their
definitions and synonyms inside the front and back covers, and a Gideon bible
with a stamp suggesting she obtained it in some manner from the Walter Reed
hospital. I joked with the cantor preparing for Alice's funeral that I was sure
she read only the Old Testament part.
Ten years ago, Alice lost a leg to a blood clot. She had to
move permanently into a nursing home, Milford Manor -- abruptly giving up her
apartment and the battered car that appeared from its many dings she had parked
mostly by Braille.
For years, Alice had performed as a singer and dancer -- there's a picture of her, above, in a troupe of entertainers for some program lost in the mists of time. But in her later decades, she appeared with seniors entertainment troupes that played mostly to audiences in senior centers and nursing homes. She'd often say she never imagined herself as being part of the audience, in a wheelchair.
For years, Alice had performed as a singer and dancer -- there's a picture of her, above, in a troupe of entertainers for some program lost in the mists of time. But in her later decades, she appeared with seniors entertainment troupes that played mostly to audiences in senior centers and nursing homes. She'd often say she never imagined herself as being part of the audience, in a wheelchair.
Ten years in a nursing home is, frankly, unimaginable. She
found herself surrounded by aging, helpless people who mostly were unable to
communicate or deep into dementia, but gradually she adapted and tried to make
the most of her situation. Her poetry began appearing in monthly editions of
the Milford Manor news bulletin. She enjoyed bingo, and slipping the nickels and
dimes she won to her great-great-nephew Jadon Axe for his college fund. She won a lot
of nickels and dimes, but not that many!
Alice had a mantra that she would chant to visitors and
nursing home aides, about how they should make every effort to fulfill their dreams,
while they had healthy minds and bodies. "Do it now," she would
implore them. "Do it now."
She would on occasion sing, as best she could, her favorite
song: "Enjoy Yourself (It's Later than You Think)" -- and on her 101st birthday, my wife Bonnie Schupp got
that on video. She put it on YouTube, and the number of viewers slowly grew. It
was at nearly 2,000 when CNN broadcast journalist Josh Levs included an excerpt
in his Saturday afternoon feature on viral videos.
As of today, it has had more than 10,100 views -- and you
can add to that count with this link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W5TBwJF0v1g
Alice on many occasions would marvel at having lived so
long. One of her regular visitors was my brother Larry, who died in 2009 at the
age of 70. "Poor Larry," she would say, and had a hard time
understanding the whys of death for those much younger than herself.
"Who wants to live like this?" she'd say as the
years of dependence in the nursing home mounted. "But what's the
alternative? I don't want to die."
On good days, Alice would wish to live another 50 years so
she could witness the technological marvels to come. On bad days, she had
trouble remembering names. She was convinced someone stole her battered old
hearing aid. It was an obsession.
She had friends among the employees and volunteers who did
their best to make life at Milford Manor bearable, and one close friend among
the residents at the other end of a long hall, Ethel Vanger. At a surprise
party for Alice's 104th birthday -- she had to be cajoled out of her room after
a small family gathering -- Ethel read a touching testimonial speech she had written for the occasion.
How quickly life turns. At Alice's 105th birthday, Ethel was wheeled into the room but stayed for just a few minutes.
She wanted to be at the bingo game. She seemed confused. Just days later, Ethel
died.
Alice's baby brother flew to Baltimore from Florida yesterday.
The only surviving sibling -- their brother Ben Ettlin, my father, having died
in 1989 -- Sam has lost others he loved over the years, including a daughter
and two wives to cancer. He told me a year ago his reason for living was now to
be there for Alice, to bury her before he goes. But since then, he moved from a
condo to a seniors apartment community near Fort Lauderdale, and has a new
girlfriend, so to speak. He's thinking of giving up his car, but apparently not giving up on
life.
Accompanying Sam were his son Dennis, a lawyer in the
Maryland suburbs of Washington, and daughter-in-law Patty; and there were nephew
Larry's widow Natalie, who has been Alice's most frequent visitor for a decade,
and son Greg, the only one of her three children living in Maryland; Bonnie and
me; and three young women who were among the caring people on the staff at Milford
Manor.
And there was Cantor Thom King of Beth El Congregation, who did not know
Alice -- save for our stories about her, and Bonnie's YouTube videos -- to
officiate and sing the prayers.
There were the funeral home director, and several workers
who had prepared the grave in a soggy, low-lying section of the cemetery between brother Ben and his wife
Rose, and parents Louis and Ida.
The lots had all been purchased decades ago,
for $5 each. Three of Rose's brothers are there, and elsewhere on the site are
other family members, including Rose's mother
Jennie Kaplan, who died of influenza in 1919. There's also Jennie's husband David Kaplan,
who died on Jan. 16, 1945, a year to the day before I was born and given his
name.
Chairs covered with green cloth were set up on the narrow
asphalt lane that rises through the midline of the cemetery. Bright sunshine
eased the chill of morning temperatures warming toward the 40s. The narrow
walkways and grass still wet from snowmelt and rain made the open lane the safest
spot for Alice's brief service.
Cantor King pinned a black ribbon on Sam's jacket, then cut
off a piece of the ribbon -- symbolic of the centuries-old ritual of mourners
rending their clothing in despair. Alice's brother, he explained, was the only
mourner obligated to observe the custom of prayers for the dead that will continue for him
back in Florida.
After the service and a sharing of remembrances of Alice by
several of us, the funeral director and cemetery workers began wheeling her
wooden casket -- plain save for its raised Star of David -- down the path. I
stepped over and placed my hand atop it, joined by my cousin Dennis, and we
walked with it as pallbearers.
As we stood by the stark grave, next to the excavated mound
of wet earth and clay that enveloped the resting place of Ben and Rose, the
workers lowered the casket.
Sam and the others walked down the path and lined up behind
us. First the cantor, then each of us, took shovel in hand to drop in the first
bits of earth.
It is the last gift
for the dead, and today for one who filled her life with meaning as best she
could.
To read Alice's memoir
and poems, and see more photos of her family and some of her paintings, you can
view her centennial birthday book, "An Even One Hundred," through
this YouTube link -- and using the "pause" button to stop each page:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h1oKUo72vbg&feature=youtu.be
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Helen Bentley and friends celebrate her 90th
Not many parties end with back-to-back singing of “Happy
Birthday” and “God Bless America", but those were the main sentiments Sunday
afternoon for one of the Baltimore area’s most celebrated public figures –
Helen Delich Bentley.
![]() |
| Helen Bentley (Photo by Bonnie Schupp) |
And in a “roast” leading up to the songs, many of Maryland’s
top politicians and business leaders gave voice to their love for (and yes,
even fear of) the 90-year-old former newspaper reporter, Federal Maritime Commission chairman and five-term
congresswoman.
Hundreds of invited guests from all aspects of her life --
including relatives, extended family, even her dentist – heard testimony from the
likes of congressional leaders and former governors on the influence Helen had
both on them and the city and state. The turnout filled the main hall of the waterfront
Baltimore Museum of Industry, which was decorated with photos showing scenes
from her life, including her husband, antique dealer Bill Bentley, who died a
decade ago.
Matter not that she is a Republican. No less a liberal
Democrat than the Baltimore area’s Elijah
Cummings, among the most senior African Americans in congress, called her “my
dear sister” who “helped me to dream bigger dreams.”
It was Helen, Cummings said, who first told him he was being
named chairman of the House subcommittee on Coast Guard and Maritime Affairs
and, more bluntly, to “take it.” This notwithstanding his tendency to get
seasick “even on small boats” and that “I can’t swim.” A day later, Nancy Pelosi
delivered the offer, with the admonition that “I want you to keep it a secret,” he said.
Nothing affecting the Port of Baltimore could be kept secret
from Helen Bentley, who began reporting on maritime affairs at The Baltimore Sun soon after her hiring
in 1945 and held the title of maritime editor when newly-inaugurated President
Richard Nixon changed the course of her life with an appointment to head the
maritime commission in 1969.
I intersected with Helen during the last year and a half of
her newspaper days, mostly as an editorial assistant and young reporter taking dictation over the
phone and through a static-faulted dictation recording device to which she
radioed or phoned in some of her stories from distant assignments –
interspersed with salty language when that primitive technology seemed to be uncooperative.
Legend has it that she could out-cuss
the most-hardened longshoremen.
As a longtime denizen of the city desk, including nearly a
quarter-century as a rewriteman and my final six years as night metro editor, I
had the bad habit of answering phones on the first ring, and knew many of the
regular callers simply by voice – Helen among them.
I rarely saw her, and that she even remembered who I was
over the years was flattering. But she seemed to remember people of all sorts, among
them The Sun’s longtime telephone
operator, the late Betty Cramer who, after leaving the newspaper because of
multiple sclerosis, received Christmas baskets every year, and other help, from
the congresswoman.
The printed invitation to her party was headed by its
honorary co-chairs, former Maryland Governors Marvin Mandel, a Democrat, and
Robert L. Ehrlich Jr., a Republican who, before his lone four-year term in that
job, had succeeded Helen in her House of Representatives seat. It was Ehrlich
who prompted the renaming of what is now the Helen Delich Bentley Port of
Baltimore, as part of its 300th anniversary celebration in 2006.
Mandel, now 93, spoke
briefly of Helen and some of the notable guests as “the people who made this
the great state it is.”
“I thought this was a memorial service, and then I saw her,”
joked Ehrlich, looking around at what he called “a room full of people who both
love her and fear her.” He also told of
Helen’s influence on his life – and his dating habits. He said she disapproved
of some of his girlfriends, but eventually found one she deemed right, and how he’d
bring her over to visit with Helen on a date. It was an odd threesome, but
Helen would put him to work moving heavy things around her house while she sat
and talked to the young lawyer friend, Kendel, who would eventually become his
wife and, during his term as governor, Maryland’s “first lady.”
The state’s senior U.S. senator, Barbara Mikulski, recalled
a time early in her political career when Helen Bentley was pushing for the deepening
of Baltimore’s harbor to accommodate
larger ships and disposing of the dredge spoil at tiny Hart and Miller Islands
off Baltimore County. Mikulski, with concerns that included fear of possible
toxic contaminants, was initially an opponent but said that Helen played a big
role in changing her mind.
The project was eventually approved, including a share of
federal money. The port channel was deepened, and the enlarged islands eventually
became a popular recreation area for boaters.
Former U.S. Sen. Paul Sarbanes noted that Baltimore, in
large measure because of Helen’s continued efforts, now is one of just two ports
in the nation that can receive the super-size container ships that soon will be
accommodated by a deepened and enlarged Panama Canal passageway.
House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer included Helen as among the
four former Republican members of congress present who had identified
themselves as members of the Maryland delegation – “not as Republican members
of the Maryland delegation” – in a lament that “we’re at a time where we have
real polarization, confrontation and gridlock in the Congress of the United
States.”
Hoyer also alluded to Helen’s championship of American
manufacturing, and how as a congresswoman (and no stranger to a sledgehammer) she
staged public bashings of Japanese-made electronics and even an automobile
outside the Capitol building. “I have here a letter from the Japanese ambassador
that, because we have a mixed crowd here, I won’t read,” Hoyer joked. (There
were children in the crowd.)
Democrat Dutch Ruppersberger said even in running against Helen
for her old seat when it was vacated by Ehrlich, “we always agreed to fight it
out fairly and squarely.”
“Helen and I had 11 debates. After it was over, we shook
hands.... She is an adviser to me in the House.”
But it was Cummings, the black Democrat, whose remarks about
Helen “as a mentor of mine” were the most emotional and, likely to some,
unexpected.
At his request, Cummings said, Helen became a board member
of the Baltimore Maritime Industries Academy Foundation, and for seven years
has attended its monthly meetings and visited its public high school program
that has introduced many teenagers – in particular, the congressman noted, African
American children -- to maritime skills and the world of the port.
“The kids love her, and she loves them,” he said, finishing
up his remarks by telling her, “I will go to my grave appreciating the impact
you’ve had on my life.”
Helen had the last word. A little stooped from the effects
of aging, and thus a few inches shorter than she used to be, Helen stood on a
low, carpeted riser behind the podium and told about why she wanted to have the
huge “birthday bash.”
As the daughter of Serbian immigrant parents and growing up
in Ruth, Nevada, she could not recall having had a birthday party. “You were given a kiss and a
piece of cake.”
She added: “I decided
I wanted to see all of this while I was still above ground.”
The invitation specified no gifts, but listed her favorite causes
for contributions, among them the museum, the state goodwill vessel Pride of
Baltimore, the Maritime Industries Academy Foundation, animal-protection groups,
the Bentley scholarship fund at the University of Baltimore, and the one we
chose, Wounded Warriors.
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