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  1. Mexico (27255 bytes)
    2: ...[[Latin America]] and the most populous [[Spanish language|Spanish]]-speaking country in the world.
    12: image_flag = Mexico flag large.png |
    16: ([[Spanish language|Spanish]]: ''Effective suffrage, no reelect...
    18: official_languages = [[Spanish Language|Spanish]] |
    20: latd=19|latm=03|latNS=N|longd=99|longm=22|longEW=W|
  2. List of people by name: Af (1105 bytes)
    4: ...Viktor G. Afanasyev|Afanasyev, Viktor G.]], (1922-1994), Russian editor
  3. Marguerite de Valois (5364 bytes)
    4: ...lois]] at the Royal Chⴥau in [[Saint-Germain-en-Laye]] and nicknamed '''Margot''' by her brothers, s...
    6: ...d. Marguerite was made to marry Henri de Bourbon (later Henri de Navarre and eventually [[Henry IV of ...
    8: ...husband, she did not answer; so King Charles IX, placed a hand on his sister's head, compelling her to...
    10: ...mew's Day, Catherine de' Medici orchestrated the slaughter by French Catholics of thousands of Hugueno...
    12: ...d and Queen Marguerite fled to the castle of [[Carlat]]. In [[1586]], she was imprisoned by Henri III ...
  4. Rush Limbaugh (21665 bytes)
    6: ...imbaugh started out in radio as a teenager in the late [[1960s]] in his hometown of [[Cape Girardeau, ...
    8: ... made him eligible for the [[draft]], but he was classified 1-Y due to an undisclosed medical problem ...
    10: ... as a claim to use a "golden microphone". (This claim is now a reality as Limbaugh does use a golden ...
    16: ...] (and his current flagship station, WABC) in the late [[1980s]] and eventually became syndicated on [...
    18: ...e program has for over 15 years been the most popular talk radio show in the United States. The show ...
  5. Gro Harlem Brundtland (3306 bytes)
    1: ...:Gro Harlem Brundtland.jpg|thumb|Gro Harlem Brundtland]]
    3: '''Gro Harlem Brundtland''' (born [[April 20]], [[1939]]) is a [[Norway|...
    7: ...g]], who had been a prominent member of the Brundtland Commission - and for [[Agenda 21]].
    9: ...igned as leader of the [[Det norske Arbeiderparti|Labour Party]] in [[1992]].
    11: ...ute respiratory syndrome|SARS]]. Gro Harlem Brundtland was succeeded, on [[July 21]], [[2003]], by [[J...
  6. Maria Cantwell (9094 bytes)
    7: ... county commissioner, city councilman, state legislator, and Chief of Staff for U.S. Representative [[...
    9: ...attle suburb [[Mountlake Terrace, Washington|Mountlake Terrace]] because it reminded her of Indianapol...
    13: ...d its passage. She also worked on legislation regulating nursing homes.
    15: ... defeat her in the Republican landslide year of [[1994]].
    19: ...ll vowed to leave politics. Political ally [[Rob Glaser]] offered her a job as vice president of [[Rea...
  7. Petra Kelly (3411 bytes)
    16: ...he words of her friend, the [[Tenzin Gyatso|Dalai Lama]]: "Petra Kelly was a committed and dedicated p...
    25: ...a K. Kelly, Parallax Press, Berkeley, California, 1994 (ISBN 0938077627)
  8. Alexandra Kollontai (3203 bytes)
    5: ...[[Julius Martov]] and the [[Bolshevik]]s under [[Vladimir Lenin]] in [[1903]], Kollontai did not side ...
    7: ... place by the Revolution. She was well recognized later for [[socialist feminism]]. The Zhenodtel was ...
    9: [[Image:AlexandraKollantaiLarge.jpeg|200px|left]]
    13: ...ecoming the world's first female Ambassador. She later served as Ambassador to [[Mexico]] and [[Swede...
    17: Kollontai was the subject of the 1994 TV film, ''A Wave of Passion: The Life of Alexand...
  9. Condoleezza Rice (23116 bytes)
    2: |+ style="font-size:larger;"|
    18: |'''Place of Birth'''
    19: |[[Birmingham, Alabama]]
    29: ...mination by a vote of 85-13, and she was sworn in later that day.
    34: ... father and her uncle were the principals of two black high schools in town. Rice's father, John Wesle...
  10. Mary Robinson (21825 bytes)
    3: ...oming, as a candidate of the [[Irish Labour Party|Labour Party]], the first elected president in the o...
    7: ... size="+1">'''MARY ROBINSON<br><i>President of Ireland</i>'''</font></caption>
    16: <tr><td>'''Nominated by:'''</td><td>Labour, Workers Party</td></tr>
    23: ...rs of the [[Anglicanism|Anglican]] [[Church of Ireland]] while others were [[Roman Catholic Church|Rom...
    25: ...be a prestigious appointment made to accomplished lawyers. Subsequent holders of the title have includ...
  11. Debbie Stabenow (3609 bytes)
    3: ...ator [[Spencer Abraham]] (whom [[George W. Bush]] later named [[United States Secretary of Energy|Secr...
    5: ...e also served in the State Senate from [[1991]]-[[1994]]. She was elected to the [[United States House o...
    9: ...state legislature). No former Michigan state legislator had served in the U.S. Senate since [[1894]], ...
    11: ...ts' agenda and priorities. Reid was elected to replace Minority Leader [[Tom Daschle]], who lost a re-...
    15: ...ressional Delegations from Michigan|U.S Senator (Class 1) from Michigan]] | years=2001- | after=Incumb...
  12. Rosa Parks (8331 bytes)
    4: Rosa Parks was born in [[Tuskegee, Alabama]], daughter of James and Loeona McCauley. She...
    6: ...nch of the [[NAACP]]. She also attended the [[Highlander Folk School]], an education center for worker...
    8: ...d convicted for [[disorderly conduct]] and for violating a local ordinance.
    10: ...s of public buses stood idle for months until the law legalizing segregation in public buses was lifte...
    16: ==Debated aspects of Parks' story and its place in the civil rights movement==
  13. Gloria Steinem (3728 bytes)
    8: ...es and became politically active, working for [[Adlai Stevenson]]'s campaign. She graduated in [[1956]...
    9: ...her infamous undercover expose in working as a [[Playboy bunny]].
    12: ...is time she toured the country with the brilliant lawyer [[Florynce Rae Kennedy | Florynce Rae ("Flo")...
    16: In [[1974]] Steinem founded the [[Coalition of Labor Union Women]]. In [[1977]] she participated in...
    21: ...e to many young women who recognize the role she played in changing the outcome of their lives. Althou...
  14. Isabel Allende (3632 bytes)
    3: [[Image:Isabelallende_writer.gif|thumb|Isabel Allende]]
    4: ... 35 million copies and translated in 27 different languages.
    8: The family later moved to [[Bolivia]] and then to [[Lebanon]]. ...
    10: ...gium]], and elsewhere in Europe. Her daughter Paula was born in 1963. In 1966, Allende returned to ...
    12: ...en's stories, "La abuela Panchita" and "Lauchas y Lauchones," as well as a collection of articles, ''C...
  15. Margaret Atwood (6318 bytes)
    2: ...ollege]] in [[Toronto]]. After living in various places in North America and around the world, she ret...
    10: ...ion of ''The Handmaid's Tale'', ''La servante 飡rlate'', was included in the French version of the co...
    12: ...as said in interviews that the device will be available by [[2006]].
    21: :''[[Lady Oracle]]'' ([[1976]])
    24: ...]'' ([[1985]]) - winner of the 1987 [[Arthur C. Clarke Award]]
  16. Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin (1937 bytes)
    1: ...t|OM]] ([[May 12]], [[1910]]&ndash;[[July 29]], [[1994]]) was a British [[scientist]], born Dorothy Mary...
    3: ...r of Merit medal of Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, displayed in the Royal Society, London]]
    5: ... virus]], [[vitamin B12]], and [[insulin]]. This latter achievement took her 34 years, having started...
    11: ...nour of Professor Dorothy Hodgkin''. Oxford: The Clarendon Press.
    14: *Dodson, Guy (Structure 2: 891-893, 1994)
  17. Sofia Gubaidulina (8325 bytes)
    1: ...6;&#1091;&#1083;&#1080;&#1085;&#1072;''', [[Tatar language|Tatar]] '''Sofia ij&#287;䴠q&#305;z&#305; ...
    3: ...took further studies at the Conservatory with Nikolay Peyko until 1959, and then with Shebalin until 1...
    5: ...g her studies in [[Soviet]] Russia, her music was labeled "irresponsible" for its exploration of alter...
    7: ...up with fellow composers Victor Suslin and Vyacheslav Artyomov.
    9: ...'[[Offertorium (Gubaidulina)|Offertorium]]''. She later composed a homage to [[T. S. Eliot]], using th...
  18. Joni Mitchell (9996 bytes)
    3: ...st highly respected [[singer-songwriter]]s of the late [[20th century]].
    5: ... her voice, which was especially prominent in her later albums.
    9: ... [[Woodstock Festival|music festival]], which was later a hit for both [[Crosby, Stills and Nash]] and...
    11: ...ll strong on her next two albums made for her new label Asylum. ''[[For the Roses]]'' (1972), whose t...
    13: ...e Rolling Thunder Revue tour headlined by [[Bob Dylan]].
  19. Patti Smith (6059 bytes)
    4: ...ngs during this period in connection with [[Allen Lanier]] of the [[Blue ֹster Cult]], who recorded s...
    6: ...h guitarist and rock archivist [[Lenny Kaye]] and later with a full band comprising Kaye, Ivan Kral ([...
    8: ...he newly christened Patti Smith Group, punk's popularity grew and the second album ''[[Radio Ethiopia]...
    13: ...ul, with "Frederick" only gaining minor radio airplay.
    17: ...ver of [[Prince]]'s "When Doves Cry" and titled ''Land'' was released in 2002.
  20. Lucinda Williams (4182 bytes)
    4: ...d an affinity for music at an early age, and was playing guitar at 12.
    6: By her early 20s, Williams was playing publicly in [[Austin, Texas]] and [[Houston, ...
    8: ...usic insiders, including [[Tom Petty]], who would later cover the song.
    10: ...eceived the Grammy Award for Best Country Song in 1994.
    12: Williams had garnered considerable critical acclaim, but her commercial success was moderate. [[Emm...

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