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  1. List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
    35: | [[Delaware]]
    36: | [[Dover, Delaware|Dover]]
    56: | [[Springfield, Illinois|Springfield]]
    101: | [[1901]] — [[1903]]
    108: | [[Helena, Montana|Helena]]
  2. List of explorers (24013 bytes)
    1: ...plorers]], [[astronaut]], [[conquistador]], [[travelogue]], the [[History of Science and Technology]] ...
    14: *[[Charles Albanel]] (1616-1696), Canada
    22: *[[Pêro de Barcelos]] ([[15th century]]/[[16th century]] [[Portugue...
    25: *[[Samuel Baker]], Africa
    30: ...er]] Muslim, visited [[Mecca]] several times, travelled to [[Central Asia]], [[East Africa]], [[China]...
  3. Burundi (13403 bytes)
    3: ...tries in Africa and in the world. Its small size belies the magnitude of the problems it faces in seek...
    13: ...and [[French language|French]]. [[Swahili]] is widely spoken.|
    38: established_dates = From [[Belgium]] <br> [[July 1]], [[1962]] |
    53: ...later a [[United Nations]] Trust Territory under Belgian administrative authority following [[World Wa...
    54: ...Burundi from Rwanda in 17th century; other, more reliable sources, suggest that Ntare came from Buha, ...
  4. List of people by name: Ac (3800 bytes)
    8: *[[Marcel Achard|Achard, Marcel]], (1899-1974), playwrighter and scriptwriter
    29: *[[Nate Ackerman|Ackerman, Nathanael Leedon]] (born 1978)
    32: ... Wilhelm Ackermann|Ackermann, Ernst Christian Wilhelm]] (1761-1835)
    36: *[[Jacob Fidelis Ackermann|Ackermann, Jacob Fidelis]] (1765-1815)
    47: *[[Wilhelm Ackermann|Ackermann, Wilhelm]], (1896-1962), mathematician
  5. List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
    19: *[[Melchior Adam|Adam, Melchior]], (died 1622), German divine and biographer...
    27: *[[Adamnan]], (625-704), Irish religious leader
    38: *[[Ansel Adams|Adams, Ansel]], (1902-1984), photographer
    46: *[[Evangeline Adams|Adams, Evangeline]], (1868-1932), astrologer
    61: *[[Michael Adams|Adams, Michael]], (1971-), chess player
  6. Alexandra Kollontai (3203 bytes)
    1: ...m [[1914]] on as a [[Bolshevik]]. She was effectively exiled by [[Stalin]], who sent her abroad as a d...
    5: ... the [[Bolshevik]]s under [[Vladimir Lenin]] in [[1903]], Kollontai did not side with either faction. H...
    7: ...ized later for [[socialist feminism]]. The Zhenodtel was eventually closed by [[Stalin]] in [[1930]].
    11: ...Kollontai was more or less totally politically sidelined.
    13: ...[[Sweden]]. She was also a member of the Soviet delegation to the [[League of Nations]]. She died in...
  7. Constance Georgine, Countess Markiewicz (3360 bytes)
    2: ...kiewicz''' ([[1868]]&ndash;July 1927), was an [[Ireland|Irish]] politician and [[nationalist]].
    4: ...he [[Anglo-Irish]] family's ancestral home, Lissadell House in [[County Sligo]]. Constance and her si...
    6: ...simir Markiewicz. They settled in [[Dublin]] in [[1903]], where she became involved in radical politics ...
    8: ...e was commuted to life imprisonment, and she was released under the amnesty of [[1917]].
    10: ...] in the [[House of Commons of Southern Ireland]] elections of 1921.
  8. Golda Meir (10143 bytes)
    1: ...Golda Meir was the fourth [[Prime Minister of Israel]]]]
    2: ...ia]] when he was a teenager; he moved back to Israel after graduate school and was never a U.S. citize...
    6: ...hayna. Her father left for the United States in [[1903]], and the rest of the family followed in [[1906]...
    12: ...ool for work and to marry an older man. Golda rebelled and ran away. She went to Denver, where her o...
    16: ...d began planning to emigrate to the [[Land of Israel]], then [[British Mandate of Palestine]]. The cou...
  9. Emmeline Pankhurst (1950 bytes)
    1: [[Image:Emmeline_Pankhurst.jpg|frame|Emmeline Pankhurst]]
    3: ...truggle for votes for women in the period immediately preceding [[World War I]].
    5: ... by her daughters, [[Christabel Pankhurst|Christabel]] and [[Sylvia Pankhurst|Sylvia]], both of whom w...
  10. Gertrude Stein (13569 bytes)
    1: ...eminist]], [[playwright]], and catalyst in the development of modern art and literature, who spent mos...
    12: From 1903 to 1912 she lived in [[Paris]] with her brother L...
    13: ... was supported by a stipend from her brother Michael's business.
    19: ...rge circle of friends and tirelessly promoted herself. Her judgments in literature and art were highly...
    21: ...ving the two "wives" to chat. Alice was four foot eleven inches tall, and Gertrude was five foot one i...
  11. Amy Johnson (2606 bytes)
    2: '''Amy Johnson''' ([[July 1]], [[1903]] &ndash; [[January 5]], [[1941]]) was a famous E...
    4: ...ith a BA Economics from the [[University of Sheffield]], Johnson went to work in [[London]] as secreta...
    8: She became well-known in [[1930]] when she was the first woman t...
    16: ...ited States|USA]] in 1933. The plane ran out of fuel and crashed in [[Bridgeport, Connecticut]].
  12. Marie Curie (5862 bytes)
    2: ... early field of [[radiology]] and a two-time [[Nobel laureate]]. She founded the [[Curie Institute|Cur...
    5: .... Eventually, with the monetary assistance of her elder sister, she moved to [[Paris]] and studied [[c...
    9: ...April 20]], [[1902]]) and then two new [[chemical element]]s. The first they named [[polonium]] after ...
    11: ...l]]". She was the first woman to be awarded a Nobel Prize.
    13: ...dy of the nature and compounds of this remarkable element". In an unusual move, Curie intentionally di...
  13. Glass (26176 bytes)
    1: ...imple example is when [[Sucrose|table sugar]] is melted and cooled rapidly by dumping the liquid sugar...
    9: ... properties can be modified, or even changed entirely, with the addition of other compounds or [[heat ...
    20: ...ion). Ordinary glass does not allow light at a wavelength of lower than 400 [[nanometre|nm]], also kno...
    22: ...ls by [[laser]] emission from within the glass itself.
    24: ...in [[integrated circuit]]s, due to the smooth and electrically neutral interface it forms with [[silic...
  14. Thomas Jefferson (31127 bytes)
    10: | place of birth=Shadwell, [[Virginia]]
    14: | wife= None; wife [[Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson|Martha]] died before he took office
    20: .... President [[John F. Kennedy]] welcomed 49 [[Nobel Prize]] winners to the [[White House]] in [[1962]...
    25: ... and civil culture. The [[Continental Congress]] delegated task of writing the Declaration which inclu...
    27: ...]; it included automatic [[door]]s, the first swivel [[chair]], and other convenient devices invented ...
  15. Alexandria (28378 bytes)
    1: ...gypt)|Canopus]]. It has a population of approximately 3,341,000.
    3: ...tatus as the country's capital was ended, and it fell into a long decline, which by the late [[Ottoman...
    5: ...f-the-art [[library]], designed by [[Christoph Kapellar]], was inaugurated in [[2001]]]]
    15: ...om [[641]] until [[1798]] when Napoleon arrived (yellow).
    19: ...yptian grain, which fed the [[Hellenistic Greece|Hellenistic]] and [[Roman Empire|Roman]] world.
  16. Age of the Earth (20052 bytes)
    1: ...t and the predictions from different accretion models vary between several millions up to about one hu...
    4: ...ation/v24/i1/belief.asp Old-earth or young-earth belief]).
    9: ... Century]] that the Earth had been created separately from the rest of the universe, several hundred t...
    15: ...th]] pointed out that if two layers of rock at widely differing locations contained similar fossils, t...
    17: ...construct a history of the Earth, though their timelines were inexact as they did not know how long it...
  17. Panama (10077 bytes)
    2: {| border=1 align=right cellpadding=4 cellspacing=0 width=300 style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em; b...
    6: {| border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"
    35: | From [[Colombia]]<br>[[November 3]], [[1903]]
    46: | '''[[Top-level domain|Internet TLD]]'''
    55: ...dependent Republic. The new republic was immediately recognized by the United States, and within thre...
  18. Cuba (25106 bytes)
    10: ...ble were expanded to cover all Cubans.After some delay, a [[Constitution]] of Soviet inspiration was a...
    12: ...ba was an international embarrasment to the newly elected Kennedy administration, and subsequently led...
    14: ...U.S. Eventually the U.S. stopped the flow of vessels heading south and Cuba ended the exodus.
    16: ...ts throughout [[Latin America]] ([[Nicaragua]], [[El Salvador]], [[Guatemala]], [[Colombia]] and [[Chi...
    18: ...acco]], [[sugar]], [[citrus]]), [[mining]] ([[nickel]]), and [[tourism]].
  19. Al Fayyum (5562 bytes)
    5: ...er desert oases: its fields are watered by a channel of the [[Nile]], the [[Bahr Yussef]], as it drain...
    7: ...whose surface level is 140 ft (43 m) below sea-level. The lake covers about 78 mile&sup2; (200&nbsp;km...
    9: ...d in the province. The Fayum also possesses an excellent breed of [[sheep]]. Lake Kerun abounds in [[f...
    14: ... as reported by classic [[geographer]]s and [[traveller]]s" ([http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05329b.h...
    16: ... three centuries AD, the people of the Fayyum and elsewhere in Roman Egypt not only embalmed their dea...
  20. Timeline of invention (28171 bytes)
    3: ... is ambiguity, the date of the first practical, fielded version of the invention is used here.
    7: ...nguage]] (controversial - this is the earliest likely)
    54: * [[Spoke|Spoked]] wheel [[chariot]] in the [[Ancient Near East|Middle Eas...
    56: * [[Bell]]s in [[History of China|China]]
    77: * [[3rd century|200s]]: [[Wheelbarrow]]: [[Zhuge Liang]]

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