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Anne Northup, U.S. Representative from Louisville, 1997–2007; member of the Consumer Products Safety Commission; sister of Mary T. Meagher; Zach Payne, member of the Indiana House of Representatives; Clarence M. Pendleton, Jr., Chairman of the United States Commission on Civil Rights, from 1981 until his death in 1988; born in Louisville in ...
David L. Armstrong, 75, American politician, Mayor of Louisville (1999–2003). [263] Ajmer Singh Aulakh, 74, Indian playwright, cancer. [264] Aleksey Batalov, 88, Russian actor (The Cranes Are Flying, The Lady with the Dog, Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears), complications from a fall. [265]
The following is a list of notable deaths in April 2008.. Entries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence:
Louisville, Kentucky: Inactive [249] [250] Kappa Psi: October 18, 1947 Evans Business College: Concord, North Carolina: Inactive [251] [252] [p] Kappa Omega: Inactive Lambda Alpha: Williamsport School of Commerce: Williamsport, Pennsylvania: Inactive [253] [254] Lambda Beta: Inactive Lambda Gamma: Before December 1964 Alverson-Draughon College ...
William Frederick Henry Beck was born in Little Falls, Minnesota. He was the son of Paul Friedrich Gustav Beck (1869-1950) and Mary Marie Josephine (Butschke) Beck (1873-1964). His father was a Lutheran minister. He graduated from Concordia College in Moorhead, Minnesota, in 1924, Concordia Seminary in Clayton, Missouri in 1927.
Union Monument in Louisville: Union Monument in Louisville: July 17, 1997 : 701 Baxter Ave. Irish Hill: Cave Hill Cemetery, junction of Payne St. and Lexington Rd. 31: David Wilson House: David Wilson House: March 26, 1987
Moshe Ber Beck, or Moshe Dov Beck (Yiddish: משה בער בעק; May 17, 1934 – April 15, 2021), [2] was a Hungarian-born American rabbi and anti-Zionist campaigner. He was the leader of one of the Neturei Karta branches in the United States.
On May 20, 1875, the Louisville Courier Journal declared that it was Breckinridge who was "truly representative of the rebellion as an actual force and its underlying causes." [211] He was viewed poorly in the North. The premature New York Times 1863 obituary labelled "him one of the basest and wickedest of traitors." [153]