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John Eldon Miller (March 2, 1929 – June 18, 2014) was an American politician and businessman.. Born in Melbourne, Arkansas, Miller received his bachelor's degree in chemistry from Arkansas State University.
Mayor of Melbourne [2] David Bornstein: Brunswick East: Labor: 1970–75 [2] Edward Cohen: East Melbourne: Independent 1861–65 1868–77 Mayor of Melbourne [2] Harold Cohen: Caulfield. MLC for Melbourne South. Nationalist. United Australia Party. 1929–35 1935–43 Minister in state government [2] Henry Cohen: MLC for Melbourne Province ...
In 1927, Norman Smorgon opened a kosher butcher shop [16] in Melbourne on 366 Lygon Street, Carlton. [3] [17] Carlton was the centre of a Yiddish community [18] that was growing with influxes of Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe. [19] For this Jewish community of up to 15 000 people, there were only 2 butcher shops in Melbourne supplying ...
Rabbi John Simon Levi AC (born 1934) is an Australian Progressive rabbi and author. Upon ordination in 1960, he began serving Melbourne's Temple Beth Israel.He became senior rabbi of the congregation from 1974 until 1997, when he became rabbi emeritus. [3]
The Melbourne Hebrew School was a Jewish day school established in 1855 under the auspices of the Melbourne Hebrew Congregation, providing general and also Hebrew studies until 1895. [ 24 ] In 1942, the first Jewish day school and kindergarten was formed in North Bondi, Sydney.
Mendel Balberyszski (1894–1966), Jewish community leader, historian of the destruction of the Vilna Ghetto in Lithuania.; Sir Redmond Barry (1813–1880), Acting Chief Justice who sentenced Ned Kelly to hang; instrumental in the foundation of the Royal Melbourne Hospital, the University of Melbourne, and the State Library of Victoria
It was established in Melbourne, Victoria in 1927 by prominent personalities, including Sir John Monash and Rabbi Israel Brodie, with Monash becoming its first president. [1] On 11 November 2018, the biennial conference of ZFA elected Jeremy Leibler as its president, succeeding Danny Lamm who did not stand after serving for four years.
She and her mother went to Melbourne, Australia in 1949 after living in a "displaced person's camp in Germany." [7] She attended the University of Melbourne, studying law and graduating in 1965. [4] Bassat started her own law practice in 1980. [7] During her time as president of JCCV she provided welcome support for LGBT Jews in Victoria. [8]