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Carl Greenberg : ウィキペディア英語版 | Carl Greenberg
Carl Greenberg (August 19, 1908 – November 4, 1984) was an American newspaper reporter who began as a police reporter; most of his career he was a reporter covering California and U.S. national politics. He worked for the ''Los Angeles Examiner'' until it closed in 1962; later he worked for ''The Los Angeles Times'' and became its political editor. ==Personal life== Greenberg's parents were Yiddish- and Russian-speaking Jewish immigrants from Novogradvolynsk, today in Ukraine, who had emigrated in the 1890s to Boston, where he was born.〔(FTJP database at JewishGen )〕〔http://www.ancestors-genealogy.com/greenberg/〕 The family, including Greenberg's younger brother, Herbert, moved in the 1920s from Boston to Venice, California.〔Fourteenth Census of the United States – 1920, Boston, Sup. dist. 6, Enum. dist. 425, Ward 16, sheet 4a (5–6 Jan. 1920); Fifteenth Census of the United States – 1930, Los Angeles, Assembly dist. 57, Block. no. 460, Supervisor's dist. 15, Enum. dist. 19-108, sheet 4a (3 April 1930).〕 Greenberg graduated from Los Angeles High School in 1926 and subsequently attended the University of California, Los Angeles. He married Gladys Bilansky 12 July 1930 and had a son, Howard, born in 1935. Coincidentally, Bilansky's father had also emigrated from Novogradvolynsk.〔 During World War II Carl served as a coxswain in the United States Coast Guard Reserve.〔''Who Was Who in America,'' vol. 8 (Marquis, 1982-1985).〕 He resided in Park La Brea during the late 1950s and early 1960s and in Culver City at the time of his retirement in 1973 until his death. He is entombed at Hillside Memorial Park Cemetery in Culver City.
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