Samuel Bonom

Samuel Bonom (March 7, 1912 – December 15, 1962) was an American lawyer and politician from New York.

Life

He was born on March 7, 1912, in Brooklyn, New York City. He attended Thomas Jefferson High School, New York University and Fordham Law School. He married Clarice Juliet Goldberg (1910-1998), and they had two children.[1] He practiced law in New York City, and was an Assistant D.A. of Kings County.

Bonom was elected on February 7, 1956, to the New York State Assembly (Kings Co., 2nd D.), to fill the vacancy caused by the death of J. Sidney Levine.[2] Bonom was re-elected three times, and remained in the State Assembly until his death in 1962, sitting in the 170th, 171st, 172nd and 173rd New York State Legislatures. In November 1962, he was re-elected, but died on December 15, 1962,[3] before the next Legislature convened.

Sources

  1. New York Red Book (1961–1962; pg. 147)
  2. TOMPKINS BEATS DUFFY IN QUEENS; ...Democrats Win in Bronx, Brooklyn Election in the New York Times on February 8, 1956 (subscription required)
  3. Public Papers of the Governor (1963; pg. 443)
New York State Assembly
Preceded by
J. Sidney Levine
New York State Assembly
Kings County, 2nd District

1956–1962
Succeeded by
Noah Goldstein
gollark: > This work is based upon the amazing reverse engineering efforts of Sebastian Macke based upon an old text-to-speech (TTS) program called SAM (Software Automated Mouth) originally released in 1982 for the Commodore 64. The result is a small C library that we have adopted and adapted for the micro:bit. You can find out more from his homepage. Much of the information in this document was gleaned from the original user’s manual which can be found here.
gollark: Though 32KB's enough for something like a second of MP3.
gollark: It can output arbitrary audio.
gollark: ... probably 32KB of storage total?
gollark: I suppose with a speaker hooked up it could be... made to randomly make annoying beeping noises, or something.
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