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  1. List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
    72: | [[Frankfort, Kentucky|Frankfort]]
    77: | [[1930]] — [[1932]]
    113: | [[1919]] — [[1932]]
    197: | [[1924]] — [[1932]]
  2. November 4 (10686 bytes)
    17: *[[1899]] - [[Sigmund Freud]]'s ''[[The Interpretation of Dreams]]'' is pu...
    24: ... II]]: U.S. President [[Franklin Delano Roosevelt|Franklin D. Roosevelt]] orders the [[United States C...
    29: ... to be retrievable and she dies a few hours later from stress and overheating.
    48: *[[1765]] - [[Pierre Girard]], [[France|French]] mathematician (d. [[1836]])
    58: *[[1923]] - [[Freddy Heineken]], [[Netherlands|Dutch]] businessman...
  3. List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
    10: ...dair, John A. M.]], (1864-1938), U.S. Congressman from Indiana
    37: ...ms, Andrew]], (1736-1797), U.S. poloitical leader from Connecticut
    40: *[[Charles Francis Adams, Sr.|Adams, Charles Francis]] (1807-1886), grandson of John Adams, son o...
    41: *[[Charles Francis Adams, Jr.|Adams, Charles Francis, Jr.]] (1835-1915), son of above, Civil War ...
    42: *[[Charles Francis Adams (1866)|Adams, Charles Francis]] (1866-1954), son of above, Navy secretary
  4. List of people by name: Ai (1915 bytes)
    9: ...r, librettist, playwright, member of the Acad魩e fran硩se
    18: *[[Anouk Aim饼Aim饬 Anouk]], (born 1932), French actor
  5. Hattie Caraway (2502 bytes)
    11: ...ecial election of the people on [[January 12]], [[1932]] becoming the first woman elected to the [[Unite...
    17: ...llan]] and was victorious after receiving support from a successful coalition of veterans, women, and ...
    23: ...erally a supporter of [[Franklin Delano Roosevelt|Franklin D. Roosevelt]]'s economic recovery legislat...
  6. Eleanor Roosevelt (11183 bytes)
    3: ...moting the [[New Deal]] and visited troops at the frontlines during [[World War II]]. She was a [[Firs...
    5: ...tes of America|United Nations Association]] and [[Freedom House]]. She chaired the committee that draf...
    9: ...exual explorations outside marriage by FDR (See [[Franklin Delano Roosevelt|FDR]] for more information...
    11: ...rom the Johannes branch and Franklin is descended from the Jacobus branch.
    13: ...f the Democratic Party, which Alice viewed as an afront to Theodore Roosevelt's position as President....
  7. Margaret Sanger (12025 bytes)
    5: ...efore dying of [[tuberculosis]]. After graduating from [[Claverack College]] in [[Hudson, New York|Hud...
    9: ...aper advocating birth control. She also separated from William Sanger. In 1916, Sanger opened a family...
    15: ...egate of the Birth Control Federation of America. From 1952 to 1959, she served as president of the In...
    17: ...lable [[birth control pill]]. She toured Europe, Africa, and Asia, lecturing and helping to establish ...
    24: ...gh Sanger was greatly influenced by her father, a freethinker, her mother's death left her with a deep...
  8. Nina Hamnett (3501 bytes)
    3: ...t to the [[Montparnasse]] Quarter in [[Paris]], [[France]] to study at [[Marie Vassilieff]]'s Academy...
    5: ...ni, painter and Jew". In addition to making close friends with [[Amedeo Modigliani]], [[Pablo Picasso]...
    7: ...fter divorcing Kristian, she took up with another free spirit, composer [[E.J Moeran]].
    11: ...portrait of a very modest Nina Hamnett painted by Fry.
    13: ...s favourite hangout as well as that of her friend from her home town, [[Augustus John]], and later ano...
  9. Ayn Rand (18001 bytes)
    14: #That no one has the right to seek values from others by physical force, or impose ideas on ot...
    19: ...to have been present when Ayn chose the name Rand from a typewriter.
    22: ... the sale of her screenplay ''[[Red Pawn]]'' in [[1932]] to [[Universal Studios]]. Rand then wrote the ...
    24: ...]] by Scalara Films, [[Rome]], despite resistance from the [[Italy|Italian]] government under [[Benito...
    33: ... the infamous [[Red Scare]], Rand testified as a "friendly witness" before the [[House Committee on Un...
  10. Nathalie Sarraute (1197 bytes)
    2: ...1999]] in [[Paris, France]], was a lawyer and a [[Francophone]] writer of [[Russia]]n origin.
    4: ...e married Raymond Sarraute, a fellow lawyer. In [[1932]], she wrote her first book called "Tropismes", p...
    13: * ''The Golden Fruit'', [[1963]]
  11. Gertrude Stein (13569 bytes)
    1: ...t and literature, who spent most of her life in [[France]].
    7: ...r, she was educated in [[California]], graduating from [[Radcliffe College]] in 1897 followed by two y...
    11: In 1902 she moved to [[France]] during the height of artistic creativity ga...
    12: From 1903 to 1912 she lived in [[Paris]] with her br...
    13: ... her whole life, Stein was supported by a stipend from her brother Michael's business.
  12. Amelia Earhart (9225 bytes)
    6: ...is time that they spent together sheltered Amelia from her father and his [[alcoholism]]. Because of E...
    8: ... lessons from [[Neta Snook]]. With financial help from some of her family, in 1922 Earhart bought her ...
    10: ...gan to include George Putnam. The two developed a friendship during preparation for the Atlantic cross...
    14: ...Gold Medal of the [[National Geographic Society]] from President [[Herbert Hoover]].
    16: ...Oakland, California]]. Later that year she soloed from [[Los Angeles]] to [[Mexico City]] and back to ...
  13. Amy Johnson (2606 bytes)
    4: Having graduated with a BA Economics from the [[University of Sheffield]], Johnson went t...
    6: From this, she went on to qualify as the first Briti...
    8: ...n in [[1930]] when she was the first woman to fly from Britain to Australia. She left [[Croydon]] on [...
    10: ... [[July]] [[1931]], she set the record for flying from [[England]] to [[Japan]] in a [[De Havilland]] ...
    12: ...he flight from England to [[Cape Town]], [[South Africa]], also in a Puss Moth. She was later to regai...
  14. Hanna Reitsch (3751 bytes)
    4: ...and was in training to become a medical doctor in 1932 when she left that field to pursue a career as a ...
    6: ...[Ernst Udet]]. While under direct command of Karl Franke she soon became a major test pilot on the [[J...
    10: ...in order to be used during gliding tests, dropped from a [[Heinkel He 111]] bomber. Later it was sugge...
    16: After the war German citizens were forbidden from flying, except, after a few years, in gliders. ...
    20: From 1962 to 1966 Reitsch resided in [[Ghana]], wher...
  15. Billie Holiday (6766 bytes)
    9: ...own for money by threatening to tell his then-girlfriend that Holiday was his daughter.
    14: ...an singing informally in numerous clubs. Around [[1932]] she was "discovered" by [[record producer]] [[J...
    20: ...k entrance and forced to wait in a dark room away from the audience before appearing on stage. Once be...
    24: ...duced Holiday to the drug, but there is consensus from historians and contemporaneous sources that she...
    30: ...d [[Lester Young]]; both were less than two years from death.
  16. Miriam Makeba (1140 bytes)
    1: ...on Mandela]] finally made her come back to South Africa in [[1990]].
    5: ...op 100 Great South Africans (see [[List of South Africans]]).
    8: *[[Culture of South Africa]]
  17. Bonnie and Clyde (17385 bytes)
    15: ...rested in late 1926, after running when police confronted him over a rental car he'd failed to return ...
    19: ... most prevalent story is that it was through his friend Clarence Clay. Clarence's sister, Bonnie's si...
    23: ...ts]] said that it was Eastham where Clyde turned "from a schoolboy to a rattlesnake."
    25: ...s, embroiled in a plan to raid Eastham prison and free associate [[Raymond Hamilton]] and others. He r...
    27: ...]] jail, Bonnie returned to [[Dallas]] in June of 1932, and was soon back on the road with Clyde.
  18. Leni Riefenstahl (8095 bytes)
    1: [[Image:Leni_Riefenstahl.jpg|frame|Riefenstahl circa 1930]]
    7: ... [[1935]] as ''[[Tag der Freiheit]]'' (''[[Day of Freedom]]'') and is now available on [[DVD]]. It is ...
    13: ... World War II, she spent four years in a [[France|French]] [[detention camp]]. There were accusations ...
    21: Apart from her controversial propaganda movies, Riefenstah...
    23: ... one" of the [[Roma people]] which had been drawn from a [[concentration camp]] to appear in her film ...
  19. Tallulah Bankhead (6331 bytes)
    4: ...[John H. Bankhead]] ([[1842]]-[[1920]]) (Democrat from Alabama [[1907]]-[[1920]]).
    20: In 1944, [[Alfred Hitchcock]] cast her as journalist and cynic Co...
    24: ...falling star in the Sixties. Bankhead never faded from the public eye, but was increasingly a caricatu...
    26: ...ad died in New York City of [[pneumonia]] arising from [[influenza]], complicated further by [[emphyse...
    28: ...he was married only once, to actor [[John Emery]] from 1937-1941.
  20. Ingrid Bergman (5216 bytes)
    11: ...]], [[German language|German]], [[French language|French]], [[English language|English]] and [[Italian...
    21: * [[Landskamp]] (1932)
    67: * [[From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler]] (1973)

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