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  1. Grover Cleveland (20963 bytes)
    3: <caption><font size="+1">'''Grover Cleveland'''</font></caption>
    4: ...er" colspan=2>[[Image:Grover Cleveland.jpg|Grover Cleveland]]</td></tr>
    21: ...</td><td>[[Rose Cleveland]] (sister)<br>[[Frances Cleveland]] (wife)</td></tr>
    29: '''Stephen Grover Cleveland''' ([[March 18]], [[1837]] &ndash; [[June 24]], [...
    31: Cleveland was a hard worker and was scrupulously honest at ...

Page text matches

  1. November 4 (10686 bytes)
    14: ...nited States Democratic Party|Democrat]] [[Grover Cleveland]] defeats [[United States Republican Party|Republ...
    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]])
  2. 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 ...
  3. Jackie Cochran (7825 bytes)
    4: ...nt) and Ira Pittman, a poor mill worker who moved from town to town in search of work. As a child, Bes...
    8: After a friend offered her a ride in an airplane, a thrilled...
    10: ..., and association with the wealthy elite, she was frequently interviewed by the press and she made up ...
    16: ... is the only woman to ever receive the Gold Medal from the [[Federation Aeronautique Internationale]]....
    18: ...She was also the first woman to land and take off from an [[aircraft carrier]].
  4. President of the United States (42878 bytes)
    5: ...t was sometimes referred to as "the leader of the free world," a phrase that is still invoked today, m...
    14: ...ciety. Prominent public officials that are barred from the presidency because they were not born U.S. ...
    25: ... concerned with winning [[swing state]]s, through frequent visits and [[mass media]] advertising drive...
    29: ...titution of the United States." Only presidents [[Franklin Pierce]] and [[Herbert Hoover]] have chosen...
    38: ... the office due to death, resignation, or removal from office (by [[impeachment]] and conviction). Th...
  5. Chester A. Arthur (12210 bytes)
    8: | succeeded=[[Grover Cleveland]]
    20: ... times a day. He was called "Chet" by family and friends. Interestingly, Chester Arthur pronounced h...
    22: Arthur suffered from [[Bright's Disease]] and died of a [[cerebral h...
    27: ...Vermont|Fairfield]] in [[Franklin County, Vermont|Franklin County]], [[Vermont]] on October 5, 1829 (a...
    29: He attended the public schools and was graduated from [[Union College]], [[Schenectady, New York]], i...
  6. Grover Cleveland (20963 bytes)
    3: <caption><font size="+1">'''Grover Cleveland'''</font></caption>
    4: ...er" colspan=2>[[Image:Grover Cleveland.jpg|Grover Cleveland]]</td></tr>
    21: ...</td><td>[[Rose Cleveland]] (sister)<br>[[Frances Cleveland]] (wife)</td></tr>
    29: '''Stephen Grover Cleveland''' ([[March 18]], [[1837]] &ndash; [[June 24]], [...
    31: Cleveland was a hard worker and was scrupulously honest at ...
  7. Babe Ruth (55357 bytes)
    10: ...Babe Ruth, full-length portrait, standing, facing front, holding up bat, in baseball uniform, on field...
    12: ...itcher. Brother Matthias promptly switched George from catcher to pitcher to teach him a lesson. But, ...
    15: ...rs, placed a team in Baltimore, across the street from minor league Orioles, and the competition hit O...
    23: ...weakened by the sale of [[Tris Speaker]] to the [[Cleveland Indians]]. After a slightly shaky spring, he woul...
    25: ...9 his physique had changed from the tall athletic frame of 1916 to a rotund shape with which he was us...
  8. Florida (24937 bytes)
    43: ... of the United States of America. Florida seceded from the Union on [[January 10]], [[1861]] and was o...
    64: ...nasa.florida.750pix.jpg|right|thumb|Florida taken from NASA Shuttle Mission STS-95 on 31st October 199...
    72: ...ces, September 2nd.jpg|left|thumb|138px|Hurricane Frances near peak strength.]]
    76: .... These thunderstorms which are caused by airflow from the [[Gulf of Mexico]] seemingly "pop up" in th...
    80: ...ey|Charley]] ([[August 13]]), [[Hurricane Frances|Frances]] ([[September 4]]-[[September 5|5]]), [[Hur...
  9. Idaho (13962 bytes)
    48: ...rst organized town in Idaho was [[Franklin, Idaho|Franklin]], settled in [[1860]] by [[Mormon]] pionee...
    50: ... was abated by moving the [[University of Idaho]] from its planned location in Eagle Rock (near [[Idah...
    54: ...Anne Frank and many other writers extolling human freedom and equality.
    63: ...s. Idaho has a [[bicameral]] legislature, elected from 35 legislative districts, each represented by o...
    83: ...]]. [[Shoshone Falls]] plunges down rugged cliffs from a height greater than that of [[Niagara Falls]]...
  10. Missouri (16086 bytes)
    54: ...cennial census. The Senate consists of 34 members from districts divided such that the population of e...
    65: ...main behind from a glacier that once had extended from the north to the Missouri River.
    67: ...] [[igneous]] [[Saint Francois Mountain Range|St. Francois Mountains]].
    97: *11.2% [[African American|Black]]
    103: ...n]] (10.5%), [[England|English]] (9.5%), [[France|French]] (3.5%).
  11. Tennessee (19096 bytes)
    39: ...ed "Tanasqui" in [[1567]] while travelling inland from [[South Carolina]]. European settlers later enc...
    48: ...9]], nearly 17,000 Cherokees were forced to march from Eastern Tennessee to [[Indian Territory]] west ...
    50: ...ennessee was the last Confederate state to secede from the Union when it did so on [[June 8]], [[1861]...
    52: Tennessee was the only state that seceded from the Union that did not have a military governor...
    72: ...see Governors]], [[U.S. Congressional Delegations from Tennessee]]''
  12. South Dakota (14035 bytes)
    41: ...[[Montana]]. It is one of the six states of the [[Frontier Strip]].
    82: ...the U.S. failed to stop white miners and settlers from entering the region. [[Sitting Bull]] and [[Cr...
    116: ...]] [[1889]] during the Administration of [[Grover Cleveland]].
    125: the papers and obscure from him which he was signing
    130: ...est point between the [[Rocky Mountains]] and the French [[Alps]]. More than 70,000 people hike to its...
  13. North Dakota (14827 bytes)
    44: ...nited States]] to be explored and settled. The [[French-Canadian]] trader [[La Vé²¥ndrye]] was the fi...
    46: ...Clark]], they were at least somewhat aware of the French, then Spanish claims to their territory.
    57: ... elects two House Representatives and one Senator from each of 47 districts apportioned by population....
    61: ...ly complex. Each of the 53 counties has a court, from which appeals are sent directly to the [[North ...
    65: ...ota Governors]], [[List of United States Senators from North Dakota]]''
  14. New Jersey (35646 bytes)
    41: ...]] (the land that would become New Jersey) to two friends who had been loyal through the [[English Civ...
    43: ...lish Crown and gave sanctuary to the King. It was from the Royal Square in St. Helier that [[Charles I...
    45: ...was in the Hudson River region and came primarily from New England. The first permanent English settl...
    63: ... However, by the close of the Civil War, several African-Americans in New Jersey were still in bondage...
    70: ... two [[United States Senate|U.S. Senators]] are [[Frank R. Lautenberg]] (Democrat) and [[Jon Corzine]]...
  15. Timeline of United States history (1860-1899) (10289 bytes)
    3: ...meline of United States history]] concerns events from '''[[1860]] to [[1899]]'''.
    15: ...[1861]] - [[Kansas]] admitted to the Union as a [[free state]]
    36: *[[1865]] - [[Freedman's Bureau]]
    45: *[[1867]] - [[Alaska Purchase]] from Russia
    55: ...Wyoming]] becomes first state to grant [[woman suffrage]]
  16. History of the United States (1865-1918) (52094 bytes)
    7: ... attacks on civilian targets and destruction of infrastructure, followed by exploitive economic polici...
    9: ...nforce the civil rights of the formerly enslaved African-Americans in the South.
    15: ...tion|fifteenth]], which extended the franchise to freed citizens. The fourteenth amendment was oppose...
    21: ...id ultimately provide an institutional basis for African-American political mobilization and organizat...
    30: ...feared warriors. The Apaches built their economy from attacking, looting and kidnapping Hispanic farm...
  17. Ohio (19444 bytes)
    42: ...ries]]. During the [[18th century]], the [[France|French]] set up a system of trading posts to control...
    44: ...e [[Treaty of Paris (1763)|Treaty of Paris]], the French ceded control of Ohio and the old Northwest t...
    46: ...ited the [[American colonies|American colonists]] from settling in Ohio Country. British control of th...
    48: ...lished slavery in the coming two generations, the free states would be known as Northern States. The N...
    74: ...distinctive regional dialect set this section off from the rest of the state and, unfortunately, creat...
  18. Mississippi (15114 bytes)
    40: ... western boundary. The name itself probably comes from [[Native American]] words with various spelling...
    46: ...d territory|organized]] on [[April 7]], [[1798]], from territory ceded by [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georg...
    48: ...10]], [[1817]]. It was the second state to secede from the Union as one of the [[Confederate States of...
    56: ... record of single-party dominance. For 116 years, from 1876 to 1992 Mississippians only elected [[Unit...
    67: ...he ten Judges of the Court of Appeals are elected from five districts (two Judges per district) for ei...
  19. Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (16156 bytes)
    11: ...ccur when healthy animals consume tainted tissues from others with the disease. In the brain these pro...
    14: ...nd bone meal]], a high-protein substance obtained from the remnants of butchered animals, including co...
    18: ...r, 148 occurred in the [[United Kingdom]], 6 in [[France]], and one in Italy. Three cases of vCJD occu...
    21: ...dic" CJD may have actually contracted the disease from tainted beef. So far nothing is known about the...
    26: ... were some licensed surgical sutures derived from French bovine material."'' Concerns were also raised...
  20. Skyscraper (12706 bytes)
    11: ...ss that are laterally supported by these skeletal frames. Special consideration must also be given for...
    13: [[Image:FrankfurtMain.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Frankfurt with its skyscrapers]]
    18: ...]] in [[Chicago]], the world's tallest skyscraper from [[1974]] to [[2004]]. Retained Highest pinnacle...
    19: ...occupiable floor. Also, the list does not include free-standing buildings that are not classified as h...
    111: |35||[[Key Tower]]||[[Cleveland]]||289&nbsp;m||947&nbsp;ft||57||1991 ||

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