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- List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
53: | [[1905]] — [[1913]], [[1919]] — [[1920]] (wings added)
141: | [[1920]] — [[1924]], [[1931]] — [[1934]] (of... - List of explorers (24013 bytes)
6: ...[[15th century]] [[Portuguese]] explorer of the [[African]] coast)
7: ...[[15th century]] [[Portuguese]] explorer of the [[African]] coast)
9: *[[Afonso de Albuquerque]] ([[16th century]] [[Portugue...
24: *[[William Baffin]], ([[1584]]-[[1622]])
25: *[[Samuel Baker]], Africa - November 4 (10686 bytes)
7: ...], [[Spain]] captures [[Antwerp (city)|Antwerp]] (after three days the city was nearly destroyed).
38: * [[1995]] - After attending a peace rally in [[Tel Aviv]]'s King...
49: ...ak]], [[Russia|Russian]] military commander (d. [[1920]])
110: [[af:4 November]] - List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
63: *[[Richard Adams (author)|Adams, Richard]], (born 1920), British novelist - Annie Besant (4275 bytes)
5: Her conversion to Theosophy came after reading ''[[The Secret Doctrine]]'' by [[H.P. ...
7: ... [[India]] for the first time (in [[1893]]). Thereafter she devoted much of her energy not only to the...
13: Soon after Besant's inheritance of the presidency, in [[1...
31: * The Doctrine of the Heart (1920) - Margaret Sanger (12025 bytes)
5: ...ed as a [[nurse]] and worked for ten years in the affluent New York suburb of [[White Plains]]. In [[1...
13: ...as its president of until its dissolution in 1937 after birth control under medical supervision was le...
17: ...ilable [[birth control pill]]. She toured Europe, Africa, and Asia, lecturing and helping to establish...
19: ...n [[Tucson, Arizona]] at age 87 only a few months after the landmark [[Griswold v. Connecticut]] decis...
21: ...anger's books include ''Woman and the New Race'' (1920), ''Happiness in Marriage'' (1926), and an autobi... - Clarice Lispector (1743 bytes)
1: '''Clarice Lispector''' ([[December 10]] [[1920]] - [[December 9]] [[1977]]) was a [[Brazil|Brazi... - Mary Pickford (7523 bytes)
9: ...[1929]], but retired from films four years later, after a series of disappointing roles and the public...
13: ...ful business schedule and Fairbanks' extramarital affair with another woman led to a divorce in [[Janu...
29: ...nced [[Ernst Lubitsch]] to direct her next film. After considering alternatives, they settle on ''[[R...
38: ...fe, Pickford suffered from alcoholism, which also afflicted her first husband and both of her parents.... - Amelia Earhart (9225 bytes)
8: ...ght her first [[airplane]], a [[Kinner Airstar]]. After her parents divorced, she sold the plane in 19...
10: One afternoon in April, 1928, she got a phone call while...
20: ... and after numerous stops in [[South America]], [[Africa]], the [[Indian subcontinent]], and [[Southea...
24: ...five nautical miles (9 km) over scattered clouds. After several hours of frustrating attempts at two-w...
34: ...IGHAR - The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery) suggests they may have flown along a s... - Marina Tsvetaeva (21885 bytes)
10: ...ver her. She, for her part, had had a tragic love affair before her marriage, and had not forgotten it...
12: ...na. The children began to run wild. This state of affairs was allowed to continue until June [[1904]] ...
14: ...[[Maximilian Voloshin]], whom Tsvetaeva described after his death in 'A Living Word About a Living Man...
18: ...'. At around the same time, she also conducted an affair with the [[lesbian]] poet [[Sofia Parnok]], w...
20: ...axe-like words: ''bourgeois, Junkers, leeches''". After the [[Russian Revolution of 1917|1917 Revoluti... - Edna St. Vincent Millay (2636 bytes)
1: ...entional and Bohemian lifestyle and her many love affairs with both men and women.
3: ... was awarded a scholarship to [[Vassar College]]. After her graduation in 1917, she moved to New York ...
13: Her best known poem might be "First Fig" (1920): - Bessie Coleman (4340 bytes)
1: ...[1892]] - [[April 30]], [[1926]]) was the first [[African American]] woman to become an [[airplane]] p...
6: ... by commenting that French women were better than African-American women because French women were pil...
10: ... to [[Paris, France|Paris]] on [[November 20]], [[1920]]. She could not gain admission to American flig...
14: ...lacks. Her ultimate aim ws to improve the lot of Africcan Americans by opening a flight school they w...
16: ...friends and family did not consider the aircraft safe and implored her not to fly it. Coleman did not... - Rosalind Franklin (9829 bytes)
2: '''Rosalind Elsie Franklin''' ([[July 25]], [[1920]] - [[April 16]], [[1958]]) was a British [[physi...
5: ... in [[London]] in the [[United Kingdom]], into an affluent and influential Anglo-Jewish family. Her gr...
8: ...l and how to use them most efficiently, a problem affecting the war. Her work helped spark the idea of...
9: ...structure of carbons. Indeed on several occasions after accepting a position at King's, but before lea...
15: ... presentations, James Watson was present. Shortly afterwards [[Francis Crick]] and Watson put together... - Bessie Smith (7284 bytes)
2: ...most popular and successful [[blues]] singer of [[1920s]] and [[30s]], and a huge influence on the singe...
5: ... [[1913]], at [[Atlanta]]'s "81" Theatre and by [[1920]] she had gained a reputation in the South and al...
13: ...moned an ambulance. She was taken to Clarksdale's Afro-Hospital and her arm was amputated, but she nev...
17: ...red ambulance....She died some eight or ten hours after admission to the hospital. We gave her every m... - Joan of Arc (27453 bytes)
2: ...fn|5}} as found by an [[#Retrial|earlier appeal]] after her death. Her posthumous reception history is...
7: ...e infant [[Henry VI of England]] the nominal king after [[1422]].
16: ...ged city of Orl顮s]] on [[April 29]], [[1429]]. After several English fortifications were taken from...
24: ... with Burgundian diplomats began at Reims shortly after the coronation, resulting in a 15-day truce wh...
36: ...as her guards, for which reason she clung to the safety provided by the "laces and points" on her male... - Tallulah Bankhead (6331 bytes)
4: ...842]]-[[1920]]) (Democrat from Alabama [[1907]]-[[1920]]).
10: ...ous, too, for her drinking, drug taking, and many affairs with men and women. By the end of the decade... - Greta Garbo (9957 bytes)
1: [[Image:GretaGarbo1920s.jpg|thumb|Garbo in the 1920s]]
5: ...ildren born to Karl Alfred Gustafsson ([[1871]]-[[1920]]) and Anna Lovisa Johnasson ([[1872]]-[[1944]])....
8: ...for the movie ''Peter The Tramp'' ([[1920 in film|1920]]).
12: ...ned to [[Sweden]] in [[1928]], where he died soon after.
17: ...[Mercedes de Acosta]]. She also had an on-and-off affair with the primarily homosexual British photogr... - Suzanne Lenglen (11495 bytes)
1: [[Image:SuzanneLenglen1920.jpg|thumb|right|Suzanne Lenglen, sometimes labell...
10: Only four years after her first tennis strokes, Lenglen played in th...
14: ... [[Wimbledon Championships]] were again organised after a four year hiatus. Lenglen entered the tourna...
18: ...h [[Elisabeth d'Ayen]]), and won the bronze medal after their opponents withdrew.
20: ...rced her to withdraw after the fourth round. From 1920 to 1926 she won the French Championships ([[Frenc... - Painting (4567 bytes)
48: *[[Spray paint]] ([[Graffiti]])
70: *[[Graffiti]]
100: *[[Amedeo Modigliani]], ([[1884]]-[[1920]]), Italian sculptor and painter - Concertina (3686 bytes)
1: ...ight|English concertina made by Wheatstone around 1920]]
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