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Isaacs and at
Sir Isaac Isaacs and Sir Zelman Cowen were Jewish ; Bill Hayden is an avowed atheist and he made an affirmation rather than swear an oath at the beginning of his commission ; the remaining Governors-General have been at least nominally Christian.
* Rufus Isaacs, 1st Marquess of Reading, Liberal politician and lawyer, ashes buried at the nearby Jewish cemetery.
Carl Isaacs was executed on May 6, 2003 at Georgia Diagnostic and Classification State Prison in Jackson, by lethal injection.
In the programme The Making of " The World at War ", included in the DVD set, Jeremy Isaacs explains that priority was given to interviews with surviving aides and assistants rather than recognised figures.
Isaacs later expressed satisfaction with the content of the series, noting that if it had been unclassified knowledge at the time of production, he would have added references to British codebreaking efforts.
In September 1870, when Isaacs was just 15 years old, he passed his examination as a pupil teacher and taught at the school from then until 1873.
Isaacs was next employed as an assistant teacher at the Beechworth State School, the successor to the Common school.
While employed at the State School, Isaacs had his first experience of the Law, as an unsuccessful litigant in an 1875 County Court case.
Although Isaacs was seen as a Labor appointment, the Scullin government fell at the end of 1931, and the rest of Isaacs's term was during the United Australia Party government of Joseph Lyons.
Australian-born Sir Isaac Isaacs was the first governor-general to live at Government House for an entire term.
A private sitting room was built in 1933 at the request of Lady Isaacs over the south entrance porch, which looks south across the gardens to the Brindabella Ranges and the foothills of the Australian Alps beyond.
He entered the Government as Solicitor-General in 1910, and advanced in 1913 to Attorney-General, in both cases succeeding Rufus Isaacs ; he was the leader of the ( unsuccessful ) Cabinet rebels against Winston Churchill's 1914 naval estimates, and contemplated resigning in protest at the declaration of war in 1914 but in the end did not do so.
Second from right: Head of the WJC British Section Stella Isaacs, Marchioness of Reading | Stella Isaacs, the Marchioness of Reading In November 1944, at the War Emergency Conference held in Atlantic City, USA, the WJC elaborated a program for the post-war period, which included calls for reparations from Germany to Jews and the use of heirless Jewish property for Jewish rehabilitation.
The critically acclaimed 50th-anniversary stage revival directed by Harry Burton at Trafalgar Studios, London, from 2 February to 24 March 2007, starred Lee Evans as Gus and Jason Isaacs as Ben.
* 2007 – The Dumb Waiter, directed by Harry Burton and starring Lee Evans as Gus and Jason Isaacs as Ben, at the Trafalgar Studios, in London, from 2 February to 24 March 2007.
Their reading capped off the Harold Pinter Memorial Celebration being curated by Harry Burton ( who had directed Isaacs and Evans at Trafalgar Studios ).
The Protectionist Party ended up splitting, with the more liberal Protectionists, such as Isaac Isaacs and H. B. Higgins, supporting Labor while Deakin and his supporters merged with the Anti-Socialist Party to become the Commonwealth Liberal Party, who would form another minority government, before Fisher and Labor achieved Australia's first federal majority government, and the first Senate majority, at the 1910 election.
Following his more traditionally inclined brothers, who became respectively a doctor, a lawyer, and an accountant, Isaacs studied law at Bristol University ( 1982 – 85 ), but he became more actively involved in the drama society, eventually performing in over 30 plays and performing each summer at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, first with Bristol University and then, twice, with the National Student Drama Company.
Between 2 February and 24 March 2007, Isaacs played Ben, opposite Lee Evans ( Gus ), in the critically acclaimed 50th-anniversary production of Harold Pinter's The Dumb Waiter, at Trafalgar Studios, in London, his first theatre performance since appearing in The Force of Change ( 2000 ).
Isaacs and his partner, BBC documentary filmmaker Emma Hewitt, whom he began dating at the Central School, have lived together since 1988 and have two daughters: Lily and Ruby.
The Isaacs family lived until recently at Jaynes Court, Bisley, Gloucestershire.

Isaacs and After
After 1906, Sir Edmund increasingly clashed with Isaac Isaacs and H. B. Higgins, the two advanced liberals appointed to the court by Deakin.
After news of the 1851 Victorian gold rush reached England, Australia became a very popular destination and the Isaacs decided to emigrate.
After which he went to work for the economic development office for the State of Delaware Carper has been married twice, first in 1978, to Diane Beverly Isaacs, a former Miss Delaware, who had two children by a previous marriage.
After completing his training as an actor, Isaacs almost immediately began appearing on the stage and on television ; his film debut was in a minor role as a doctor in Mel Smith's The Tall Guy ( 1989 ).
After portraying a priest opposite Julianne Moore and Ralph Fiennes in Neil Jordan's acclaimed adaptation of Graham Greene's The End of the Affair ( 1999 ), Isaacs played the charismatic honourable priest opposite Kirsty Alley in the mini series The Last Don.
After leaving Channel 4, and failing to be appointed Director General of the BBC in 1987, Isaacs became General Director of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, a role he fulfilled until 1996.
After a long battle with lung cancer, Isaacs died on 25 October 2010 at his home in south London.
After the MP for Southwark North died in 1939, Isaacs was finally able to regain the seat.
After Isaacs left, there was a period of managerial instability, with three chief executives in three years.

Isaacs and North
McLaren was born to Pete McLaren, a Scottish engineer, and Emily Isaacs in post-World War II North London.
* Cunneen, Christopher ( 1983 ) King ’ s Men: Australia ’ s Governors-General from Hopetoun to Isaacs ( Allen & Unwin: North Sydney )
Kermode, born Mark Fairey in Barnet, North London, England, attended Haberdashers ' Aske's Boys ' School, an independent boys ' school in Elstree, a few years ahead of comedians Sacha Baron Cohen, Matt Lucas and David Baddiel and in the same year as actor Jason Isaacs.
In the 1924 election Isaacs lost his seat, but when in 1927 the sitting Labour MP for Southwark North resigned after leaving the party, he was the natural choice to be the new candidate.

Isaacs and Beach
They began with Isaacs ' 1985 album Private Beach Party, and had a massive hit with " Rumours " in 1988, which was followed by further popular singles including " Mind Yu Dis ", " Rough Neck ", " Too Good To Be True " and " Report to Me ".

Isaacs and South
* Isaacs J ( 1980 ) Australian Dreaming: 40, 000 Years of Aboriginal History, Lansdowne Press, Sydney, New South Wales, ISBN 0-7018-1330-X
The concept of a fish restaurant was introduced by Samuel Isaacs ( born 1856 in Whitechapel, London ; died 1939 in Brighton, Sussex ) who ran a thriving wholesale and retail fish business throughout London and the South of England in the latter part of the 19th century.
Rantzen's great-grandfather moved to a more comfortable neighbourhood with the help of his brother-in-law, Barney Barnato ( born Barnett Isaacs ), who had become extremely wealthy as a diamond merchant in South Africa.
Barney Barnato ( 21 February 1851 – 14 June 1897 ), born Barnet Isaacs, was a British Randlord, one of the entrepreneurs who gained control of diamond mining, and later gold mining, in South Africa from the 1870s.
* Isaacs J ( 1980 ) Australian Dreaming: 40, 000 Years of Aboriginal History, Lansdowne Press, Sydney, New South Wales, ISBN 0-7018-1330-X
Isaacs, the paper states, turned down the chance of a temporary move to the Lyceum Theatre almost next door to the opera house, pinning his hopes on a proposed new temporary building on London's South Bank.
Nathaniel Isaacs ( 1808 – 1872 ) was an English adventurer who played a part in the history of Natal, South Africa.
Lt Farewell, Fynn and Isaacs established the town of Port Natal, later renamed Durban, which became the second largest city in South Africa in modern times.

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