Helping older
members of our
community to
live with pride
and comfort
Older Adults Services and Programs
• Older Adult Care Management Support
• Mobile Mental Health Intervention
• Holocaust Survivors’ Services
• Spiritual Care
• Hoarding Support Program
• Transportation
For more information on
how JFCS can help you
or the older adults in your
life, call 866.JFCS.NOW.
Typewriter Continued from Page 17
jfcsphilly.org A few of Rogow’s typewriters have Hebrew letters on them.
A Healthy Tradition of Care and Wellness
Saunders House 610.658.5100
Bryn Mawr Terrace 610.525.8300
Short-Term Rehab • Skilled Nursing Care
Personal Care • Respite Care
Impressions Memory Care
at Bryn Mawr 484.380.5404
Dedicated program for early-to-mid-stage
memory loss
www.MainLineSCA.org Chai.
News for people
who know we don’t
mean spiced tea.
Every Thursday in the
JEWISH EXPONENT
and all the time online
@jewishexponent.com. For home delivery,
call 215.832.0710.
18 MAY 9, 2019
“Th ey’re not that easy to fi nd, and I get them every which way
you can imagine — short of robbing graves,” Rogow said. “I’m
not a hipster and I’m not a poet, but it’s important to me.”
Rogow’s love of typewriters was sparked at age 7, when she
played with one to pass the time while visiting Aunt Sadie and
Uncle Izzie’s house. Growing up in Los Angeles, Rogow attended
Wilshire Boulevard Temple, the city’s oldest Jewish congrega-
tion. She said the classes there, and the values instilled from her
Jewish home life, had a part in making her who she is today.
While she loved her teachers at the synagogue, she struggled
with the language class.
“I wasn’t a very good Hebrew student,” Rogow said. “And the
Hebrew teacher told my mother that I was the number one stu-
dent in the class — from the bottom. And my mother, who was a
master schoolteacher, had the good sense not to care.”
Rogow went on to graduate from the UCLA School of Th eater,
Film and Television with the intention of going into public aff airs
TV. But a job off er launched her career into the world of design-
ing museum exhibits, and she ran a business specializing in that
for 14 years called Rogow and Bernstein.
In 1991, she moved to Philadelphia with her son, Doug, to
serve as vice president for public programming at the Academy
of Natural Sciences. It was three years later that she moved into
the corner property in Mt. Airy.
Th e residence was a former apothecary, then Edelson’s Bakery
and later the home and studio of the artist Jimmy Lueders. It
became Rogow’s home and eventually the base of operations
for Moving Arts of Mt. Airy, a movement studio she started for
hosting classes to the community.
THE GOOD LIFE
JEWISHEXPONENT.COM