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What's Happening in Brookmont

4/02 Ashdown Home Improvement
7/15 National Night OUt
4/17 Household Hazardous Waste Day
4/17 Clean as a Whistle Campaign
3/13 Cookbooks and Flower bulbs for Sale
9/26 Whistlestop Festival
9/25 BNA Cookbooks
8/01 NNO Dance out Crime
3/08 Coffee with the Mayor
11/18 City Council Meeting (Important)


What Happened Today In History?
Today is May 9, 2008

1850:
Louis-Joseph Gay-Lussac, French physicist and chemist, died

1873:
Howard Carter, British Egyptologist, was born

1901:
Cleves Earl Moore no-hits Chic White Sox 9 inn but loses in 10th 4-2

1908:
Dirk Fock becomes governor of Suriname

1911:
Fire breaks out at Empire Theater in Edinburgh Scotland

1913:
17th amendment provides for election of senators by popular vote

1914:
Pres Wilson proclaims Mothers Day

1915:
German and French fight Battle of Artois

1916:
British-France Sykes-Picot meet over division of Turkey

1925:
Cornerstone for Hebrew University, Jerusalem laid

1926:
Richard Byrd and Floyd Bennett make 1st flight over North Pole

1927:
Canberra replaces Melbourne as the capital of Australia

1929:
WJW-AM in Cleveland Ohio begins radio transmissions

1930:
56th Preakness

1931:
57th Preakness

1932:
WOC-AM in Davenport Iowa merges with WHO to become WHO-WOC

1933:
Spanish anarchists call for general strike

1934:
Bradman out for a Cricket duck against Cambridge University!

1936:
Italy takes Addis Abba, annexing Absynnia (Ethiopia)

1937:
Reds beat Phillies 21-10 (Ernie Lombardi goes 6 for 6)

1939:
Catholic church beatified the 1st Native American, Kateri Tekakwitha

1941:
English Army breaks German spy codes

1942:
68th Preakness

1943:
Rotschild-Haddassh University Hospital opens

1944:
Russians recapture Crimea by taking Sevastopol

1945:
Victory celebration at Red Square

1946:
King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy abdicates, replaced by Umberto

1949:
Prince Rainier III becomes leader of Monaco

1950:
Norman Dello Jocos premieres in Bronxville

1951:
Air raid on Chinese positions at Yalu River

Yahoo! News: Top Stories
Military adds armor to Iraq vehicles as roadside bombs surge (AP)

In this Jan. 18, 2008 file photo, workers at the Naval Weapon Station, in Charleston, S.C., prepare Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles, or MRAPs, for departure to Iraq and Afghanistan. The MRAP is a type of armored vehicle designed to survive attacks from IEDs and ambushes.   (AP Photo/Steven Senne)AP - The U.S. military is reinforcing the sides of its topline mine-resistant vehicles to shore up what could be weak points as troops see a spike in armor-piercing roadside bombings across Iraq, The Associated Press has learned.


Obama picks up 9 superdelegates, union endorsement (AP)

US Democratic presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) faces supporters at his North Carolina and Indiana primary election night rally in Raleigh, North Carolina May 6, 2008. (Jason Reed/Reuters)AP - Barack Obama all but erased Hillary Rodham Clinton's once-imposing lead among national convention superdelegates on Friday and won fresh labor backing as elements of the Democratic Party began coalescing around the Illinois senator for the fall campaign.


Records show Sharpton owes overdue taxes, other penalties (AP)

In this March 24, 2005 file photo, Rev. Al Sharpton walks to the Federal Communications Commission office  in Washington. Sharpton has emerged over the past decade as New York City's most prominent civil rights leader. Government records reviewed by The Associated Press indicate that Sharpton and his business entities owe nearly $1.5 million in overdue taxes and associated penalties, mostly dating from the years leading up to his run for president in 2004. (AP Photo/Haraz Ghanbari, File)AP - Big corporations give him money. Presidential candidates seek his endorsement. He has influential friends in Congress and the governor's mansion. The Rev. Al Sharpton has emerged over the past decade as perhaps the nation's most prominent civil rights leader, a status that was demonstrated again this week when he led protests against police brutality that briefly shut down six of Manhattan's major bridges and tunnels.


Aid on the way to devastated Myanmar but so is heavy rain (AP)

Myanmar residents walk past houses destroyed by Cyclone Nargis in Bogalay, Myanmar, on  Friday May 9, 2008.  The U.N. blasted Myanmar's military government Friday, saying its refusal to let in foreign aid workers to help victims of the devastating cyclone was 'unprecedented' in the history of humanitarian work. (AP Photo)AP - More aid is on the way to cyclone-ravaged Myanmar — but so is the heavy rain. A week after Cyclone Nargis flattened low-lying villages and killed whole families at a time, the military junta finally agreed Friday to allow a U.S. cargo plane to bring in food and other supplies to the isolated country. Myanmar gave the green light after confiscating other shipments, prompting the U.N. to order a temporary freeze in shipments.


Dig for human remains to begin at ranch where Manson hid (AP)

In this Friday, Feb. 22, 2008 file photo,  a Life magazine showing Charles Manson on the cover is left on a table in the abandoned Barker Ranch house in the Panamint Mountains west of Death Valley National Park, Calif. National Park Service officials say Barker Ranch where Manson was arrested will be closed for a second time this year to search for possible human remains.  (AP Photo/Gary Kazanjian)AP - The sheriff of the remote region where Charles Manson hid after a killing spree in the summer of 1969 said Friday that he will allow researchers to begin digging into the sandy soil in search of possible human remains.


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