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Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Jack -Rosenberg (nee Sylvia Shear), Clark Street, a so�, Eddy, on July 4, at the Royal Victoria Hospital. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. E. Shear, Clark Street; and Mr< and Mrs. I. Rosenberg, Waverley Street, who are the godparents. Mr. Shear, grandfather, held the baby during the ceremony.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. J. Goldstein (nee Bertha Porter), Waverley Street, a son, Earl Stanley, on June 14, at the Jewish General Hospital; grandson of Mr. and Mrs. S. Porter, Waverley Street; and of Mr. and Mrs. H. Goldstein, Villeoeuve Street West Godparents are Mr. and Mrs. H. Singer, uncle and aunt, Clark Street J. Sackman, St Urbain Street, great-uncle, held the baby during the ceremony.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Seymour Pemcer (nee Pauline Landy), Bloomfield Avenue, a daughter, Eileen Rosalynda, on June 29, at the Jewish General Hospital; granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. Landy, Duluth Street East; and of Mr. and Mrs. J. Pencer, Jeanne Mance Street; great-granddaughter of Mrs. D. Pencer, Henri Julien Avenue.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. David Mankofsky (nee Helen Morantz), Esplanade Avenue, a daughter, Frances Maureen, on June 1, at the Jewish General Hospital; granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. Morantz, Esplanade Avenue; and of Mr. and Mrs. M. Mankofsky, St. Urbain Street.
pWititt" ^iW^i^vm^
Decarie J^ia^fjrd* Mr. Caait, the grandfathers held the baby during the ceremony.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Louis Cooperberg (nee Rose Shikes), Wtllowdale Avenue, a son, Ham-y Neil, brother of Arlene and Sharon, on Jury 7, at the Jewish General Hbspital; grandson of Mrs. Elisabeth Shikes; and of Mrs. Ida Cooperberg, both of Brooklyn,
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JULY 21, 1950 P'
j> � .,_ v.-
BIRTHS
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Zeits (nee Rose Caron), Coolbrook Avenue, a daughter, Laura, on June 18, at the Jewish 'General Hospital; granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. Caron, Champagneur Avenue; and of Mr. and Mrs. S. Zeitz, Jeanne Mance Street.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. A. Rudy (nee Miriam Salsky), St. Urbain Street, a daughter, Minda Sue, on June 27, at the Jewish General Hospital; granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Modcha Salsky, St Urbain Street; and of Louis Rudy, Duluth Street East, and the late Mrs. Rudy.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. WoUcove (nee Boee Letovsky),
on Jury S,-Hospital; grandson of Mr. . and Mrs. Robert Looker, Cote bt. Luc Road.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rother (nee Ruth Alexander), de Bullion Street, a son, Stephfen Martin, brother of Eric Alexander, on June 20, at the Jewish General Hospital; grandson of Mr. and Mrs. E. Alexander, Esplanade Avenue; and of Mrs. R. Rodier, St. Joseph Boulevard West, and the late I. Rodier. Godparents are Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Feldman, uncle and aunt. Esplanade Avenue. H. Cohen, Esplanade Avenue, held the baby during the ceremony.
Bom, to Mr. and Mrs. M. Isaacs (nee Bella Krauze), Kent Avenue, a son, Mark Hirsh, brother of Deborah Ruth, can June 27, nt the Jewish General Hospital; grandson of Hyman Krauze, St. Urbain Street Godparents are Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Isaacson, uncle and aunt, Park Avenue. Rubin Gar-maise, great-uncle, Royal Avenue, held the baby during the ceremony.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Lester Finkelstein (nee Ruth Schneider), Stuart Avenue, a son, Allan Lewis, on July 4, at the Jewish General Hospital; grandson of Mrs. L. Finkelstein, Querbes Avenue, and the late Mr. Finkelstein; and of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Schneider, Jeanne Mance Street Godparents are Mr. and Mrs. Philip Seal, cousins, Darlington Avenue. Mr. Schneider, grandfather, held the baby during the ceremony.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Mac Leib-son (nee Ann Blanshay), Melrose Avenue, a son, Michael Leonard, brother of David, on June 11, at the Royal Victoria Hospital.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Nadler (nee Rae Braker), Edward Charles Street, a son, Eric, on June 26, at the Jewish General Hospital; grandson of Mr. and Mrs. M. Braker, Edward Charles Street; and of the late Mr. and Mrs. A. Nadler. Godparents are Mr. and Mrs. H. Sklar, uncle and aunt Van Home Avenue. Alec Adelman, uncle, Bernard Avenue West, held the baby daring the
Ur^es U.S. Jews To Give D.P. Assurances
Nearly 50,000 Jewish refugees have been resettled in the United States in the two years since the original Displaced Persons Act went into effect on June 30, 1948, it was reported by Walter H. Bieringer, president of United Service for New Americans, in a statement hailing President Truman for his signing of new legislation which extends the scope and provision of the Act and makes it
3>erative through June 30, 1951. nited Service for New Americans, an agency of the United Jewish Appeal, provides reception, resettlement and other assistance to displaced Jews admitted to this country.
Mr. Bieringer said that in addition to the 36,569 DP's admitted under the Act itself, 11,985 refugees arriving on regular quotas were resettled in America. The early trend towards resettlement of refugees in large cities, particularly in ports of entry along the East Coast, was reversed during the past two years. The refugees who have been aided by U.S.N.A. since July 1, 1948, have been resettled in 367 communities in 47 states and the District of Columbia.
The liberalization of DP legislation will affect approximately 20,000 displaced Jews. These are in addition to 25,000 already scheduled to arrive during 1950. He estimated that the movement of
Hutcjiison Street; great-granddaughter of Mrs. K. Gold, Jeanne Mance Street.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Irving Bregman (nee Cecily Singer), La-combe Avenue, a son, Alvan Mark, on July 8, at the Jewish General Hospital. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Morris Singer, Barclay Avenue; and Mr. and M.*s. Julius Bregman, McEachran Avenue. Godparents are Mrs. Z. Godlovitch, aunt, Stuart Avenue; and E. Wal-fish, cousin, Kent Avenue. Mr. Bregman, grandfather, held the baby during the ceremony.
FUNDS USED
gran^ul^df If ri and Mrs, M. Letovsky, Papineau Avenue; and of Mr. and Mrs. S. Wolkove, Jeanne Mance Street
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bloomfield (nee Ann Klein), Park Avenue, a son, Harvey Bernard, brother of Joyce, at the Royal Victoria Hospital, on June 25.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Finkel (nee Rose Goldblatt), Elm Avenue, a daughter, Nina Valerie,
Bom, to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Burg (nee Mary Barsky), McLynn Avenue, a son, Laurence Michael, on June 28, at the Royal Victoria Hospital; grandson of Mr. and Mrs. R. Barsky, Brighton Avenue; and of Mrs. p. Burg, Van Home Avenue, and the late R. Burg, of New York.
to Mr. and Mrs. David Tendier (nee Sarah Kasnoff), Cavendish Avenue, a daughter, Donna Gail, sister of Sheldon Bertram, on June 23, at Herbert Reddy Memorial Hospital; granddaughter of Mrs. J. Kasnoff, Park Avenue, and the late Mr. Kasnoff; and of Mr. and Mrs. P. Tendier, Esplanade Avenue.
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Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Man-asseh Miller (nee Rose Nutik), Earnscliffe Avenue, a son, David Haskel, on June 27, at Herbert Reddy Memorial Hospital; grandson of Mr. and Mrs. O. Nutik, Sherbrooke Street West; and of M ax Miller, Kensington Avenue, and the late Mrs. Miller. Godparents are Mr. and Mrs. Boas Miller, uncle and aunt, Majcil Avenue. Mr. Nutik, grandfather, held the baby during the ceremony.
Bom, to Dr. and Mrs. Hyman Surchin (nee Meta Levin), Draper Avenue, a daughter, Eleanor Hadassah, sister of Anne Leba, at the Jewish General Hospital, on June 28; granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Levin, Belmont Avenue; and of Mrs. Clara Surchin, Maplewood Avenue; great-granddaughter of H. W. Freed-man, Kensington Avenue.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Rosenfeld (nee Pauline " Israel), Esplanade Avenue, a daughter, Linda Sharon, on June 27, at the Royal Victoria Hospital; granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Israel, Esplanade Avenue; and the late Mr. and Mrs. Mendel Rosenfeld, of Hungary.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Saul Chait (nee Evelyn Lipsin), Cote St Luc Road, a son, Barry, on June 30, at the Royal Victoria Hospital; grandson of. Jars. P. Lipsin, Fair-mount Street West, and the late B. Lipsin; and of Mr. and Mrs. M. Chait Jeanne Mance Street; great-grandson of Mr. and Mrs. R. Ralph, de l'Epee Avenue. God-
~Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Louis Tabachnik (nee Rose Solomon), Kent Avenue, a daughter, Vickie, July 4, at the Jewish General Hospital. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. S. Solomon, Waverley Street; and of Mr. and Mrs. L. Tabachnik, St. Urbain Street.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. N. Schneiderman (nee Fanny Schoel), Stuart Avenue, a daughter, Lily, sister of Morris and Howard, on July 4, at the Jewish General Hospital; granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. Schoel, Rockland Avenue; and of Mrs. R. Rubin, Esplanade Avenue.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Maldoff (nee Betty Yoasem), West-bury Avenue, a son, Eric Michael, on July 4, at the Royal Victoria Hospital; grandson of Mrs. F. H. Yossem, Cote St. Luc Road; and of Mr. and Mrs. C. d. Maldoff, Hartland Avenue.
(Continued from Page One)
ity, emigration from other North African and European countries has been "postponed." With reduced budgets, however, and with deadlines for emigration in various countries, these postponements
Schwarts said.
Dr. Schwartz, who is fifty-one, has been head of the J.D.C.'s overseas operations since 1939, has administered the spending of $350,000,000 and has been in every European country except Russia. He has made twenty-three round trips across the Atlantic.
Dr. Schwartz said that before the end of July he will go to Israel to discuss with the Israeli government and the Jewish Agency the best methods of meeting the immigration problem posed by lack of funds for transportation. The J.D.C, he said, spends an average of $105 to transport and feed en route each immigrant on the trip to Israel.
The lack of funds, Dr. Schwartz said, in addition to limiting the travel to Israel, will mean a cut in services to needy Jews in Europe and North Africa, reports the New York Herald Tribune. Among the steps already taken, he said, were:
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Bom, to Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Goodman (nee Bernice Percher), de l'Epee Avenue, a daughter, Esther Helen, on July 6, at the Jewish General Hospital; granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Issie Percher, de l'Epee Avenue; and of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Goodman,
Montreal Classified
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Jewish dp'b from Europe to the United States would be completed during the latter part of 1961. Completion of this operation rests with the Jewish communities throughout the United States which must provide assurances of jobs and homes for the DP's before they can be cleared for admission to the United States. Such jobs and homes must not displace Americans.
The United Service president said since June 80, 1948, his agency has filed with the Displaced Persons Commission "assurances" covering 34,871 individuals. He explained that many of the refugees admitted so far under the DP Act could not have come'-unless so-called "community assurances" had been obtained for them through U.S.N.A. Under this plan, communities in various parts of the country agree, sight unseen, to receive and assist a certain number of newcomers who have no relatives or friends in this country.
U.S.N.A. assistance to the incoming DP's begins the moment they reach the dock or airport. In the past two years, port and dock workers of the resettlement agency, assisted by volunteers from the National Council of Jewish Women, have met 1,188 refugees conveyances � ships, planes, and trains � including 155 DP ships arriving in New York, Boston, Mass., and New Orleans, Louisiana. Reporting that the great majority of the more than 48,000 Jewish refugees brought in have become self-supporting and integrated into American life, Mr. Bieringer cited as "a typical case," Meilach Winick, 49, of 64-13 24th Avenue, Brook-tyiii; who' etate vrtth his faintly on tie first DP ship to arrive in the United States under the DP Act,
In Hungary, with 160,000 Jews, relief has been limited to persons over sixty and orphan children; medical facilities financed by the J.D.C. in various countries have been drastically curtailed and job training for young persons throughout Europe has been sharply reduced.
"The question of keeping the gates of Israel open rests squarely on American Jews," he said. "I want to emphasize that immigration is not just a matter of increasing Israel's population. It is a matter of saving lives."
Resorts � New York
the General Black, which docked in New York on. October 31, 1948.
Mr. Winick, who was a manufacturer in his native city of Radom, Poland, before the war, was imprisoned in the notorious Dachau camp together with hi3 older son, Manfred, who was then ten years old. Mrs. Winick was placed in another concentration camp, while their other son, Theodore, who was six, was hidden in the home of Christian neighbors. At the end of the war, the family was reunited in the Landsberg DP camp in Germany, one of the few families to survive intact. With the assistance of the United Service for New Americans, the Winicks were enabled to come to the United States and were resettled in New York, because they have relatives in the city.
Today, Mr. Winick works in a hat factory; Manfred, now 20, is studying engineering at City College at night and working in a television manufacturing plant and Teddy, 16, is a student at Abraham Lincoln High School in Brooklyn. Teddy belongs to the "Sultans." a neighborhood social and athletic group, plays baseball after school, and, in the words of his father, is a "real American." Admitting that he had some difficulties at first, Teddy says; "The teachers and everybody helped me and now I'm O.K."
While lauding passage of the new DP Act, Mr. Bieringer stressed that the new law will not in itself guarantee that the Jewish DP's can begin new lives in the United States. For that reason United Service for New Americans has appealed to Jewish com- j muntties throughout the country to 'Vt provide the necessary assurances. 4
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