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- List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
5: *[[Adachi Hatazo]], (1890-1947), Lieutenant general and Japanese commander in [[New Gui...
29: *[[Arthur Adamov|Adamov, Arthur]], (1908-1997), dramatist, author
83: *[[Fleur Adcock|Adcock, Fleur]], (born 1934), poet - List of people by name: Ah (925 bytes)
11: ...za Ghulam Ahmad|Ahmad, Mirza Ghulam]] ([[1839]]-[[1908]]), founder of [[Ahmadi]] sect - Constance Georgine, Countess Markiewicz (3360 bytes)
6: ... nationalist movement, joining [[Sinn F驮]] in [[1908]], and founding the militant nationalist boy scou... - Annie Besant (4275 bytes)
9: ... Theosophical Society over this in [[1906]]. In [[1908]] he was taken back into the fold through the age...
29: * Introduction to Yoga (1908) - Mary Cassatt (9047 bytes)
4: ...10 years old, she visited many of the capitals of Europe, including [[London]], [[Paris]], and [[Berli...
8: ...aintings in Italy, after which she traveled about Europe.
10: ...[[1872]], after studying in the major European museums, her style matured, and in Paris, she studied w...
20: ...([[1880]]). [[Mary Cassatt]]. Oil on canvas. [[Museum of Fine Arts, Boston]].]]
25: ...ntually donate their purchases to American art museums. Although instrumental in advising the American... - Ouida (1938 bytes)
1: ...[[January 7]], [[1839]] – [[January 25]], [[1908]]) was the ''[[pen name]]'' of the [[England|Engl...
5: ...ney well and died in poverty on [[January 25]], [[1908]], in [[Viareggio]], [[Italy]].
15: * ''Helianthus '' (1908) - Gertrude Stein (13569 bytes)
19: By the [[1920s]] her salon at ''27 Rue de Fleurus'', with walls covered by avant-garde paintings...
29: ...erican soldiers. She died of stomach cancer in [[Neuilly-sur-Seine]], Paris on [[July 29]], [[1946]] a...
73: *''[[The Making of Americans]]'' (written 1906-1908, published 1925) - Marina Tsvetaeva (21885 bytes)
8: ...II Museum, which is now known as the [[Pushkin Museum]] of Fine Arts. Tsvetaeva's mother, Maria Alexan...
14: In [[1908]], Tsvetaeva studied literary history at the [[So...
18: ...me year as her father's project, the [[Pushkin Museum]] of Fine Arts was ceremonially opened, attended...
20: ...my]], and Marina returned to Moscow hoping to be reunited with her husband. She was trapped in Moscow ...
26: ...svetaeva and Alya left the Soviet Union and were reunited with Efron in [[Berlin]]. In Berlin, she pub... - Suzanne Valadon (4068 bytes)
16: ...ne TheBath.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''The Bath''. ([[1908]]). [[Suzanne Valadon]]. Pastel. 60x49 cm. Grenob...
30: ...Pompidou]], in Paris and at the [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]], [[New York City]]. - Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (3312 bytes)
9: ...bly housed and equipped, the New hospital (in the Euston Road) being worked entirely by medical women,...
11: In 1908 she was elected mayor of [[Aldeburgh]], the first...
14: ... is an Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital on the Euston road in London -- this is the modern name of ... - Florence Nightingale (15657 bytes)
35: ...z. It was restored and transferred to the Army Museum in [[Aldershot]].
83: ...st woman to be awarded the [[Order of Merit]]. In 1908 she was given the Honorary Freedom of the [[City ...
85: ...inistration. There is a [[Florence Nightingale Museum]] in London.
96: *[[Florence Nightingale Museum]] - Aimee Semple McPherson (13395 bytes)
13: ...e two embarked on an evangelical tour, first to [[Europe]] and then to [[China]], where they arrived i...
29: ...lpit]] ministry were rare—those who wore makeup and jewelry in the pulpit, nonexistent. McPhers...
31: ...aith healing]] into her sermons, and keeping a museum of crutches, wheelchairs and so forth as demonst...
75: ...se by paying $5,000. While McPherson was away in Europe, she was incensed to discover Hutton was bill... - Bette Davis (6722 bytes)
3: '''Ruth Elizabeth Davis''' ([[April 5]], [[1908]] – [[October 6]], [[1989]]), better known ...
13: ...r]]'' ([[1942]]) co-star, [[Paul Henreid]], were reunited not as on-screen lovers, but rather with Hen...
23: ...s died, aged 81, on [[October 6]], [[1989]] in [[Neuilly-sur-Seine]], [[France]], following a long bat... - Rhododendron (3464 bytes)
25: ...Type: ''Rhododendron ferrugineum'' [[Carolus Linnaeus|L.]]
30: ...endrons in Kashmir by E. Molyneux; painted before 1908]]
34: ...es also occur in [[North America]] and a few in [[Europe]], and some tropical species occur as far sou... - Accordion (10069 bytes)
20: ...eds with these characteristics were first used in Europe around [[1800]] AD for organs. People used th...
22: ... China in the [[1800s]] brought this idea back to Europe. However, the [[sheng (instrument)|sheng]] us...
29: ...fferent patents were granted in Vienna and across Europe for accordion innovations, but it is impossib...
37: ...aking the first recordings of the instrument in [[1908]], making the first [[radio]] broadcast of the ac...
64: ...or classical music, and is very common in Eastern Europe whereas the C layout is common in the western... - Middle Kingdom of Egypt (5374 bytes)
5: ...Tenth dynasty]] in the 14th year of his reign to reunite Egypt, bringing an end to the [[First Interme...
10: ...emhat created his son Senuseret I co-regent. In [[1908 BC]] he was presumably murdered by his bodyguard ... - Conventional Egyptian chronology (10774 bytes)
20: ...ed by [http://www.petrie.ucl.ac.uk/ The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology].)
176: *Amenemhat I (Sehetepibre) 1937-1908 - President of the United States (42878 bytes)
56: ..., [[Lyndon Johnson]], was born on [[August 27]] [[1908]]. Three other Presidents who followed Johnson in...
256: *[[June 24]], [[1908]] - [[March 4]], [[1909]]: from the death of form...
317: **[[William Henry Harrison]], died of [[pneumonia]] in [[1841]] - Grover Cleveland (20963 bytes)
19: ...r><td>'''Date of Death:'''</td><td>[[June 24]], [[1908]]</td></tr>
29: ...'' ([[March 18]], [[1837]] – [[June 24]], [[1908]]) was the 22nd ([[1885]]–[[1889]]) and 24t...
62: ... preserved and is on display at the [[M�tter Museum]] in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]]...
67: ...eland declined to reenter politics, and died in [[1908]] from a heart attack. - Antarctica (14761 bytes)
8: ...ntarctica is the fifth largest continent, after [[Eurasia]], [[Africa]], [[North America]], and [[Sout...
41: ... overlaps Argentine and Chilean claims; claimed [[1908]] as [[British Antarctic Territory]], one of the ...
68: * [[Georg von Neumayer Station]], ({{coor dm|70|39|S|08|15|W|}}) ([...
99: ...: A Modern Sequel]] ends with the death of [[Odysseus]] in Antarctica.
122: ... fortifications, the carrying out of military manoeuvers, or the testing of any type of weapon. It per...
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