100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

August 22, 1947 - Image 15

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1947-08-22

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.



Page Fifteen

THE JEWISH - NEWS

Friday, August' 22, 1947

City Loses Beloved= Teacher
With Death of Jacob Rogvoy

Detroit lost one 'of its most prominent and beloved educators
in the death, Monday evening, of Jacob 13,- Rogvoy of 2470 Blaine. He
was.45 years old. He died of leukemia at University Hospital, Ann
Arbor.
Funeral services took place Tuesday afternoon from Kaufman
Funeral Home, Rabbis A. M.
Hershman and Morris Adler offi-
ciating. Burial was in Clover
Hill Park Cemetery.
Surviving him are his wife,
Rose Grace Rogvoy; a daughter,
Lois, 11; a brother, Tlfeodore, an
architect; two sisters, Rose Rog-
voy and Mrs. Frieda Kaufman
of Ann Arbt.r, and his mother,
Jehny. His father, Abraham Rog-
voy, vuh.. wag' among Detroit's
most active orthodox leaders and
who rendered important service
as secret:ry of the United He-
brew Schools and the Old Folks
Home, died in 1931 at the age
of 53.
A graduate of the old Central
High School, Jacob Rogvoy re•
ceived his degree from the Uni-
LATE JACOB B. ROGVOY
versity of Michigan in 1921 and
taught the following year at Cen-
tral High School in Kalamazoo,
Mich. He came to Detroit in 1923
and taught at Southeastern High
School until 1930.
He began teaching at Pershing
School in 1930, when he
Announce Fall Schedules High
was accorded the distinction of
For All Departments
being promoted to head of the
social studies department—the
At' Beth Yehudah
first Jew on record to be raised
Coinciding with the opening of to department head in the local
1_,
' Y §h"th high schools. He also was prin-
th e ,public
cipal of the Pershing High Sum-
Beth Yehudah will begin fall
School. He was sponsor of
classes in all departments Wed- the Pershing High Alumni Asso-
classes
nesday, Sept. 3. ciation, and the 10,000 Pershing
Enrollment for the Beth Ye- graduates held him in highest
hudah Day School (elementary esteem.
Rogycly taught at Shaarey Ze-
through 10th grade); afternoon
yeshivah classes for boys, and the dek Sunday School since 1924
for
Girls,
is
and
upon his retirement a year
Beth Jacob School
now being conducted at the ago was presented with a set of
Universal Jewish Encyclo-
Yeshivah office, Dexter f t Cont.:
- -
pedia by the congregation. He
land.
The day school offers full in- was the teacher of the 12th grade
structien in required secular sub- and was in charge of graduations.
From 1943 to 1946 he served in
i n
jests, as . w ell
ies. Elementary grades meet from a supervisory capacity at the
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Shaarey Zedek school.
An ardent Zionist, he was act-
Friday, and intermediate and
hi$h school classes meet from ive in the Zionist Organization
of Detroit and the League for
8:15 a.m. to 8110 p.m.
For those who attend the pub- Labor Palestine. In spite of fail-
lic schools, intensive Hebrew ed- ing health, he participated in the
ucation is offered in the after- Z-Day membership solicitations
noon classes meeting from 4 to two months ago, as a team with
Peril:, and they reached
6 p.m. and from 6 to 8 p.m. Mon- D Moe Per:,
days through Thursdays, and the record of enrolling the larg-
from 9 to 11 a. m. and 11 a. m. to est number of Detroiters in ZOD.
1 p.m. Sundays. Parallel classes
are conducted at the Beth Jacob
School for Girls.
AN, I NTER Effie.*
Yeshivah kindergarten and pre-
RECIPE FOR THE
kindergarten classes meet daily
from 10 a.m. to 2:15 p.m. and
JEWISH HOME
from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Monday
through Friday.
The Board of Directors of the
Wee lie NOM MAW 1147114 Re
Yeshivah will combine a business
meeting with a study session
Monday' evening. Aug. 25, at the
Yeshivah. The meeting will be
the first in a series at which
Rabbi Leib Bakst, Rosh Yeshivah,
will deliver a series of talks ex-
plaining the Ten Commandments.
His talk will be followed by open
discussion.

Yeshivah Classes
To Open Sept. 3

.

`Crossfire' Film Hits
At Anti-Semitism; Now
At the Palms Theater

Jewish DP Confesses
Mining of British Train

VIENNA (JTA) — American
Robert Young, Robert Mitchum military police in Austria believe
and Robert Ryan give powerful that they have uncovered Irgu-
characterizations in their starring
nist activities in Austria follow-
roles in RKO Radio's "Crossfire,"
ing the confession of a Polish
Jewish DP that he acted as "look-
our man -for four other Jews
who are alleged to have planted
a landmine which blew up a
British troop train in the Aus-
trian Alps last Tuesday.
The arrested man, Heinoch
Gossior, a camp policeman at a
DP center at Bad Gastein, near
Salzburg, was picked up several
hours before the explosion for
traveling on a train some 50 miles
from his home camp without a

Rabbi Jacob E. Segal will of-
ficiate at N. W. Hebrew Congre-
gation's . High Holiday services
and Cantor William Glueck of
New York will chant the liturgy,
Ira Kaufman, president, an-
nounced this week.
Samuel Bez and Max Haidy
are in charge of the membership
drive. Seating arrangements will
be made by Charles H. Charlip,
Morris Birndorf, Samuel Sim-
mer and William Shulman.
'The building, being erected by
Bryant & Detweiller, is nearing
completion. Maurice Karo is-
chairman of the building com-
mittee.

Exodus Refugees Declare
24-Hour Hunger Strike
PORT DE BOUC, France (JTA)
—The 4,400 Exodus refugees im-
prisoned aboard the British prison
ships in the harbor here called
a 24-hour hunger strike as a re-
sult of clashes with British troops
on all three vessels.

Hot Beef Sandwich
With Vegetables

Ingredients

111-oz. can •Condensed Vege-
table Soup Without Meat, un-
diluted
% cup, •Chili Sauce
Dash pepper
2 large, thin shoes roast beef
4 slices rye bread
Combine first 3 ingredients in
a sauce pan. Add beef. Cover. Heat
thoroughly. Place 1 slice of beef
on slice of bread. Top with another
slice of bread. Pour half of sauce
over this. Prepare the other-sand-
wich in the same way. (Serves 2)
•MsJc ilty Hems —Kolitcv and Parcvc—en.

tlonctI !by thr Linton of Ehthvilus, Icttitsh Cow
A► s.acv.
ittfisift‘o

pass. He named three of the four
other Jews involved in the inci-
dent and the military police be-
lieve that the others are linked
' to the Irgun.

Creamy - Smooth - Good!

Yes, it's ice cream at its best! The perfect

dessert for hot weather meals, Cunningham's

ice cream is cooling, taste satisfying and full

of nutrition value. Blended with the purest

ingredients, Cunningham's ice cream is

whipped to a smooth-as-velvet texture.

Try Cunningham's Ice Cream in the new

Black Raspberry flavor. Freshly frozen, it

comes to you direct from our own modern

ice cream plant.

n nbig b is m

BRUSSELS, (JTA) — Queen
Elizabeth of Belgium has ac-
cepted the role of sponsor of the
Belgian section of the Youth res-
cue organization.

NOW!

?
t41011 1 TEI

MURDER WITH-
OUT MOTIVE!
... Drama that

blisters the

screen!

A "Fleischig" Dish
For a Hungry Man!

In the evening, a hungry nisei
thoughts turn to meat. That's
been the rule for countless gen-
erations! Here's a grand recipe,
calculated to make a real hit with
your "hungry-man." It's 'a tasty
way to serve roast bed; a tempt-
sing dish that doesn't take to
much work either. It's

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Goss of 948
Woodlawn Ave., Ann Arbor, will
be honored on their 50th wed-
ding anniversary this Sunday,
with a reception given by their
children and grandchildren at the
Beth Israel Center in Ann Arbor.
Mr. and Mrs. Goss have four;-
children, Dr. Samuel, Anne and
Bertha, all of Detroit, and Mrs.
Clara Michaelson of Chicago.

Every Spoonful

SAM LEVENE

a sensational blast at one of the
greatest evils of our day, which
is now playing at the Palms thea-
ter. The picture is hard-hitting,
realistic, dramatic entertainment.
Based on a best selling book,
the story has a Washington lo-
cale and centers around the mur-
der of a Jewish ex-serviceman.
Unpremeditated and lacking in
motive, the crime presents the
police with a tough problem.
There is no dearth of suspects but
their stories only present a dense
mass of tangled, contradictory
evidence. The case is finally
cracked when the murderer, in
cooperating with the police, over-
reaches himself and falls into a
cunning trap.
Young has the role of a clever,
hard-working detective, Mitchum
is one of the suspects who tries
to draw the police away from his
war buddy, and Ryan, in his first
unsympathetic role, is a bigoted
ex-army sergeant An important
role in the supporting cast is
filled by Sam Levene, as the
murder victim.
The companion film is "Millie's
starring Gladys'
Daughter."
George and Paul Campbell.

N. W. Synagogue Engages

Cantor William Glueck

Couple Wed 50 Years
Celebrate in Ann Arbor

"Sere, rye killed. Bit
I get medals for it!"

"Men! I hew tee suck
about all of 'emir

"Hate like that is Ms
a leaded par

OM SOW
presents

■■■•••■■

'p

"He kill? Wky skald
1 i kill a stranger?"

ROBERT

ROBERT

YOUNG•MITCHUM

ROBERT

RYAN

in

GLORIA GRAIIAME-PAUL KELLY. SAM LEVENE
immtammummemmman......1..m.

•elb

open
10:45.
IL A-M-
A COLUMBIA PICTURE
Nunnewwwwoosonnewoommeasonmunmwwwwaimmannnenunennwma

W Men Leek At Her Twice . Because She's

v& "MILLIE'S DAUGHTER"

WITH

ON
PAUL CAMPBELL

?Mir
t ar NELS

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan