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- Timeline of United States history (1900-1929) (8003 bytes)
1: ...s history]] concerns events from '''[[1900]] to [[1929]]'''.
11: *[[1901]] - [[Theodore Roosevelt]] becomes [[President]]
16: *[[1902]] - First [[Rose Bowl (game)|Rose Bowl]] game played
26: *[[1904]] - [[Roosevelt Corollary]] to [[Monroe Doctrine]]
33: *[[1906]] - Theodore Roosevelt negotiates [[Treaty of Portsmouth]], receive...
Page text matches
- Mexico (27255 bytes)
2: ...westernmost country in [[Latin America]] and the most populous [[Spanish language|Spanish]]-speaking c...
10: native_name = Estados Unidos Mexicanos |
17: national_anthem = ''[[Mexicanos, al grito de guerra]]'' |
64: ...rts, sculpture, architecture, engraving, feather-mosiac work, the invention of the calendar, were due ...
68: ...e from Spain was declared, by [[Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla]], a Catholic priest in the small town of [[... - Luwian language (1607 bytes)
3: ... Luwian (and Hittite) groups are now believed by most academic specialists to have moved south into [[...
8: ...an. In ''Studies in memory of [[Warren Cowgill]] (1929–1985). Papers from the Fourth East Coast In... - Grapefruit (4275 bytes)
7: {{Taxobox_subclassis_entry | taxon = [[Rosidae]]}}
18: ...de the white grapefruit and the red, of which the 1929 US Ruby Red (of the Redblush variety) has a [[pat...
20: ...er closer to the first than the second. Further crosses have produced the [[tangelo]] (1905), the [[mi...
24: ...tacrolimus]], [[diazepam]] and [[cyclosporine|cyclosporine A]]. Grapefruit seed extract is a strong [...
30: ...elds.freeserve.co.uk/chelsea.htm World's Northernmost Fruiting Grapefruit?] in the [[Chelsea Physic Ga... - Timeline of the united states history 1990 to present (16426 bytes)
5: ...ke the House of Representatives as the Democrats lose 63 seats.
9:
21: ...Suspects Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev then led Boston police on a high-speed chase, killing one offi...
23:
24: ...recognize the legal standing of proponents of Proposition 8, which resulted in the re-legalization of ... - November 4 (10686 bytes)
8: * [[1612]] - [[Moscow]] China Town taken by [[Russia]]n troops under...
14: ...arty|Republican]] [[James G. Blaine]] in a very close contest to win the first of his two non-consecut...
22: * [[1924]] - [[Nellie Tayloe Ross]] of [[Wyoming]] elected as the first woman gove...
23: ...28]] - [[Arnold Rothstein]], [[New York City]]'s most notorious gambler, is shot dead over a [[poker]]...
24: ...esident [[Franklin Delano Roosevelt|Franklin D. Roosevelt]] orders the [[United States Customs Service... - List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
17: ...es Adam|Adam, Adolphe-Charles]], (1803-1856), composer
24: *[[Bojan Adamic|Adamic, Bojan]], (born 1912), composer and conductor.
55: ...ge Adams|Adams, John Coolidge]], (born 1947), composer
57: ...ther Adams|Adams, John Luther]], (born 1953), composer
78: *[[Amandus Adamson|Adamson, Amandus]], (1855-1929), Estonian sculptor - Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom (35966 bytes)
7: ...arbuda]], [[Australia]], the [[Bahamas]], [[Barbados]], [[Belize]], [[Canada]], [[Grenada]], [[Jamaica...
9: ...rd of Mann, has two-->; she has reigned in these positions since the death of her father, [[George VI ...
14: ... spelled "Lilybet") made the cover of ''Time'' in 1929, at age three.]]
15: ...fter her mother, while her two middle names are those of her paternal great-grandmother [[Alexandra of...
20: ...French]], as she has shown on several occasions, most recently during her [[2004]] state visit to [[Fr... - The Valiant Five (3833 bytes)
11: ...tish North America Act]], [[1867]], included the possibility of women becoming [[Senate of Canada|sena...
20: ... highest court at that time. On [[October 18]], [[1929]], the committee ruled that Canadian women were i... - Annie Besant (4275 bytes)
1: ...nie Besant''' activist, socialist and latterly theosophist]]
2: ...er 20]], [[1933]]) was a prominent [[Theosophy|Theosophist]], [[women's rights]] [[activist]], [[write...
5: Her conversion to Theosophy came after reading ''[[The Secret Doctrine]]'...
7: ...she devoted much of her energy not only to the Theosophical Society, but also to India's freedom and p...
9: ... Besant, who had been elected president of the Theosophical Society in [[1907]] upon the death of the ... - Millicent Fawcett (1226 bytes)
3: ...]], [[1929]]) was a British [[suffragist]] (as opposed to a [[suffragette]], who were usually militant...
5: ...of Women's Suffrage Societies (the [[NUWSS]]), a position she held from [[1897]] until [[1919]]. - Mary Pickford (7523 bytes)
9: ...he won an [[Academy Award for Best Actress]] in [[1929]], but retired from films four years later, after...
18: ...vered by [[David Wark Griffith]] at [[American Mutoscope and Biograph Company|Biograph]], worked for $...
29: ... alternatives, they settle on ''[[Rosita (movie)|Rosita]]'', in a performance that was praised by crit...
30: ...theatres this year, in Chicago and Detroit. The Los Angeles theatre is now known as the [[University ...
31: ...ning $1.4 million. Her performance earned her an Oscar. - Ayn Rand (18001 bytes)
4: ...known for her [[philosophy]] of [[Objectivist philosophy|Objectivism]]|
11: ...he [[archetype]] of the Randian [[hero]], a man whose ability and independence leads others to reject ...
12: #That man must choose his values and actions by reason;
14: ... seek values from others by physical force, or impose ideas on others by physical force.
19: ... which she claims to have been present when Ayn chose the name Rand from a typewriter. - Gertrude Stein (13569 bytes)
1: ...elopment of modern art and literature, who spent most of her life in [[France]].
3: [[Image:Homosexualitystein.jpg|thumb|right|Gertrude Stein and h...
7: ... [[Paris]] when she was three. After returning almost two years later, she was educated in [[Californi...
17: ...ance and volunteered to drive supplies to French hospitals; they were later honored by the French gove...
19: ...] and [[Georges Braque]]. She coined the term "[[Lost Generation]]" for some of these expatriate Ameri... - Amy Johnson (2606 bytes)
4: ...icence at the [[London Aeroplane Club]] in late [[1929]].
14: ...amous British pilot [[Jim Mollison]], who had proposed to her only 8 hours after they had met, during ...
20: ... water, a rescue attempt failed and her body was lost. - Virginia Woolf (9482 bytes)
9: ...ists of the twentieth century and one of the foremost [[Modernists]], though she disdained some artist...
11: ...emotional motives of characters, and the various possibilities of fractured narrative and chronology. ...
13: ...maginative and symbolic narrative encompassing almost entire English history.
15: ...best thing to do. You have given me the greatest possible happiness... I can't fight it any longer, I ...
22: In [[2002]], ''[[The Hours]]'', a film loosely based on Woolf's life and her novel ''[[Mrs. D... - Valentina Tereshkova (2387 bytes)
3: ... woman to fly in [[outer space|space]], aboard [[Vostok 6]] in [[1963]].
5: ... In [[1962]] she was selected to join the female cosmonaut corps. Out of more than four hundred applic...
7: ...to space. None of the other four in Tereshkova's cosmonaut group ever flew.
9: ...e was retired from the [[VVS|air force]] and the cosmonaut corps by presidential order.
11: ...ollapsed long before. Her second husband, Dr. Shaposhnikov died in [[1999]]. - Margaret Mead (11387 bytes)
5: ...eceived her Ph.D. from [[Columbia University]] in 1929. She set out in 1925 to do her field work in [[P...
7: ...rch she conducted as a graduate student, but her position as a pioneering anthropologist--one who wrot...
13: ...instructive to know that standards differ in the most unexpected ways.
28: After an initial flurry of discussion, most anthropologists concluded that the absolute trut...
33: ...ferent from say, Mt. Hagen. They were closer to those described by Mead. - Anna Maxwell (1551 bytes)
2: ...well''' [[March 14]], [[1851]] - [[January 2]], [[1929]], [[United States|US]] [[Army]] nurse nicknamed ...
6: ...at [[Columbia Presbyterian Hospital|Presbyterian Hospital]] in [[Manhattan]], [[New York]] from 1892-1...
12: ...Maxwell Hall ([[1928]]-[[1984]]) at Presbyterian Hospital was named for her. - Bessie Smith (7284 bytes)
2: ...) in [[Chattanooga, Tennessee]], [[USA]] was the most popular and successful [[blues]] singer of [[192...
5: ...d as a dancer, she landed her first job with the Moses Stokes company, a show that also included [[Ma ...
7: ...ts included some of the finest musicians around, most notably [[Louis Armstrong]], [[James P. Johnson...
9: ...d occasionally reverted to singing in clubs. In [[1929]], she appeared in a [[Broadway]] flop called ''P...
11: ...Buggy Ride" and "Gimme a Pigfoot", are among her most popular recordings. - Bonnie and Clyde (17385 bytes)
5: ... Dillinger]] and [[Ma Barker]], were notorious across the nation. They captivated the attention of the...
9: ...8212; once for over a year — and in January 1929, she told him they were through. Although he was ...
15: ...down "square" jobs during the period 1927 through 1929, he also cracked safes, burgled stores, and stole...
19: ...ent over how Bonnie and Clyde first met, but the most prevalent story is that it was through his frie...
39: ...ing down the driveway and into the street with almost surreal calm, trying to coax her runaway dog bac...
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