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  1. List of people by name: Ab (7347 bytes)
    15: *[[Frank Abbandando|Abbandando, Frank]], (1910-1942), Mafia hitman
    34: *[[Dimebag Darrell|Abbott, Darrell]], (1966-2004), US musician
    114: ...], (circa 1000 BC), Biblical figure, third son of David
    115: *[[Absalon]], (circa 1128-1201), Danish archbishop
    116: *[[Dannie Abse|Abse, Dannie]], (born 1923), British poet
  2. List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
    3: ==Ada==
    4: === Adac - Adal ===
    5: *[[Adachi Hatazo]], (1890-1947), Lieutenant general and ...
    6: *[[Adachi Kagemori]], (died 1248), Japanese warrior
    7: *[[Adachi Morinaga]], (1135-1200), Japanese warrior
  3. Marie Antoinette (40871 bytes)
    2: ...er]] [[1755]] ? executed [[16 October]] [[1793]]) Daughter of [[Maria Theresa of Austria]], wife of [[...
    4: ...-Antoinette was the fifteenth child (the youngest daughter; she had a brother one year younger) of the...
    9: ... he would like the hand of the Empress's youngest daughter in marriage - Marie-Antoinette (much to the...
    15: ...ria-Antonia should be sent to France to marry the dauphin.
    17: ...rteen. The Empress's parting words to her sobbing daughter was, "Farewell, my dearest child. Do so muc...
  4. Madeleine Albright (7085 bytes)
    18: | '''Date of Birth:'''
    78: ...bright|Joseph Albright]], with whom she had three daughters. They divorced in [[1982]].
    82: ... brooch resembling a snake when she met with [[Saddam Hussein]].
    86: ... her retirement, Albright published a memoir, ''Madam Secretary'' ([[2003]]) ISBN 0786868430.
  5. Mary Robinson (21825 bytes)
    3: ...|1990 presidential election]] becoming, as a candidate of the [[Irish Labour Party|Labour Party]], the...
    17: <tr><td>'''Other candidates:'''</td><td>[[Fianna Fᩬ]]: Brian Lenihan, TD...
    23: ...]], [[County Mayo]] in [[1944]], Robinson was the daughter of two medical doctors. The Hiberno-Norman ...
    31: ...ich she was first elected, as an independent candidate, in 1969. From this body she campaigned on a wi...
    32: *Joint Committee on EC Secondary Legislation (1973- 89)
  6. Emma Goldman (12210 bytes)
    3: '''Emma Goldman''' ([[June 27]], [[1869]] &ndash; [[May 14]], [[1940]]) was a [[Lithuania]]n-bor...
    21: ...chist sympathizer, had shot the President several days before. The authorities' attempt to associate h...
    29: ...ecting the hearing, called her ''"one of the most dangerous anarchists in America."''
    32: ...ends with Communists and New Yorkers [[John Reed (journalist)|John Reed]] and [[Louise Bryant]], both of whom ...
    59: * <blockquote>"If I can't dance, it's not my revolution" - widely attributed, ...
  7. Elizabeth Cady Stanton (4406 bytes)
    1: ...|200px|thumb|right|Elizabeth Cady Stanton and her daughter Harriot.]]
    2: ...beth Cady Stanton''' ([[November 12]], [[1815]] &ndash; [[October 26]], [[1902]]) was a social activis...
    6: ...Starting in [[1881]], Stanton, Anthony and [[Matilda Joslyn Gage]] published the first of three volume...
    14: ...nce and abolition movements. Henry Stanton was a journalist, an antislavery orator, and, after their marriage...
  8. Gloria Steinem (3728 bytes)
    2: ...[[1934]]) is a [[US]] [[feminism|feminist]] and [[journalist]] and a spokeswoman for women's rights. She is th...
    9: ...ed to the U.S., she was unable to find a job as a journalist because editors wanted male reporters. After two ...
    23: ...&mdash;on [[September 3]], [[2000]] she married [[David Bale]], father of actor [[Christian Bale]]. Ho...
    31: * ''Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions'' (1983)
  9. Zora Neale Hurston (4470 bytes)
    2: ...''Zora Neale Hurston''' ([[January 7]], [[1891]]&ndash;[[January 28]], [[1960]]) was an [[African-Amer...
    5: ...ulga, Alabama]] and grew up in [[Eatonville, Florida]]. She studied [[anthropology]] at [[Barnard Coll...
    11: ... you dare! Ah'll wash yo' tub uh 'gator guts and dat quick."
    13: ...l capture of the actual language and idiom of the day.
    22: ...1954), arguing in a letter to the [[Orlando, Florida|Orlando]] ''Sentinel'' that desegregation was pre...
  10. Dorothea Dix (5868 bytes)
    2: ...July 17]], [[1887]]) (not to be confused with the journalist [[Dorothy Dix]]) was a tireless social activist w...
    12: ... family-like asylum removed from the pressures of daily life. When she returned to the United states s...
  11. Tori Amos (27672 bytes)
    3: ...s probably best known to the wider public for a [[dance]] [[remix]] of "[[Professional Widow]]", her s...
    10: ...nd her difficulty with playing from sheet music &ndash; with Caton, [[Matt Sorum]] (later of [[the Cul...
    13: ...se]], [[Will MacGregor]], [[Carlo Nuccio]], and [[Dan Nebenzal]], the record ended up full of raw, emo...
    33: ...rgirl Hotel'', but like that album featured overt dance music influences and a relatively subdued pian...
    50: ===''Welcome to Sunny Florida''===
  12. Ulrike Meinhof (1853 bytes)
    3: ...n]] radical leftist militant who started out as a journalist. She was one of the founders of the [[Red Army Fa...
  13. Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (8386 bytes)
    2: ...), better known as '''Helena Blavatsky''' or '''Madame Blavatsky''' was the founder of [[Theosophy]].
    5: ...aine]] (then part of the [[Russian Empire]]), the daughter of [[Colonel|Col.]] Peter Alexeivich von Ha...
    11: ...cott]]; he was a lawyer, agricultural expert, and journalist who covered the [[Spiritualist]] phenomena. Soon ...
    15: ...inspiration from [[Hinduism]] and [[Buddhism]]. Madame Blavatsky claimed that all religions were both ...
    21: ...by Theosophists, and it is called White [[Lotus]] Day.
  14. Hannah Szenes (4490 bytes)
    7: ...family in [[Hungary]]. Her father, B鬡 Szenes, a journalist and playwright, died when she was six years old. ...
    17: ... guilty. She kept diary entries up until her last day, November 7, 1944. Her remains were brought to [...
    68: :''In the dare game I stood on a number,''
    71: ::(*) (maybe danced, skipped or diddled?)
  15. Krystyna Skarbek (11133 bytes)
    7: ...'s oldest noble families, and Stefania Goldfeder, daughter of a wealthy assimilated Jewish banker. Kr...
    9: ...ntually convinced by her acquaintances, including journalist Frederick Voigt. She left for [[Hungary]], where...
    13: ...an Witkowski]], who would be killed in [[1942]] &mdash; it is unclear by whom or for what reason. Sev...
    15: ...ngary]], to charm transit visas through French-mandated [[Syria]] from the pro-[[Vichy]] [[France|Fren...
    17: ...] &mdash; to be, from [[1943]], head of [[SOE]] &mdash; in a letter of [[June 17]], [[1941]], to Polis...
  16. Tallulah Bankhead (6331 bytes)
    4: ...emocrat from Alabama [[1931]]-[[1946]]), and granddaughter of Senator [[John H. Bankhead]] ([[1842]]-[...
    14: Nevertheless, [[David O. Selznick]] called her the "first choice amo...
    20: In 1944, [[Alfred Hitchcock]] cast her as journalist and cynic Constance Porter in [[Lifeboat (movie)|...
    24: ...-a-day consumption of [[bourbon whiskey|Old Grand Dad]] -- continued unabated. And behavior that was e...
    61: *[[A Royal Scandal]] (1945)
  17. Marilyn Monroe (30186 bytes)
    2: '''Marilyn Monroe''' ([[June 1]], [[1926]] &ndash; [[August 5]], [[1962]]) was an [[United States...
    6: ... her true biological father. The most likely candidate for a while seemed to be [[Charles Stanley Giff...
    8: ...r cruelly, corrected her. After Marilyn's death, Ida claimed that she and Wayne had seriously consider...
    10: ...t never hugged or kissed her, or even smiled. One day, Gladys announced that she had bought a house fo...
    12: ...herty, who would become her first husband. The Goddard family was moving to the [[East Coast of the Un...
  18. Fanny Blankers-Koen (14562 bytes)
    1: ...[[1948 Summer Olympics]]. Left of her is silver medallist [[Maureen Gardner]], while 3rd place finishe...
    3: ...ete]]. She is most famous for winning four gold medals at the [[1948 Summer Olympics]] in [[London]]. ...
    15: ...e 4 נ100&nbsp;m [[relay]], both held on the same day. In the high jump, she took sixth place (shared ...
    17: ...d]]s), and she also won her first international medals. At the European Championships in [[Vienna]], s...
    23: ...ally thought women should not compete in sports &ndash; not an unusual opinion at the time. However, h...
  19. Martina Navratilova (16246 bytes)
    9: ...rst professional singles title in [[Orlando, Florida]] in [[1974]].
    11: ...ingly labelled the “Great Wide Hope” by the [[journalist]] [[Bud Collins]]), but her determination to reac...
    33: ...t title came on August 21, [[2005]], at the [[Canada Masters|Rogers Cup]] in [[Toronto]], where she wo...
    63: 1983 Australian Open Kathy Jordan 6-2, 7-6
    164: ...mbledon''', Avon Championships, Oakland, Houston, Dallas, Chicago, Richmond, Atlanta, Phoenix, Brighto...
  20. John Quincy Adams (11783 bytes)
    1: {{Infobox President | name=John Quincy Adams
    5: | date1=[[March 4]], [[1825]]
    6: | date2=[[March 4]], [[1829]]
    9: | date of birth=[[July 11]], [[1767]]
    12: | date of death=[[February 23]], [[1848]]

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