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- List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
77: | [[1930]] — [[1932]]
113: | [[1919]] — [[1932]]
197: | [[1924]] — [[1932]] - November 4 (10686 bytes)
12: ...ate]] troops bombard a [[United States|Union]] supply base and destroy millions of dollars in material...
24: ...orders the [[United States Customs Service]] to implement the [[Neutrality Acts|Neutrality Act of 1939...
31: ...d as the [[Arno]] and [[Po]] rivers flood; 113 people die, 30,000 are rendered homeless, and countless...
51: *[[1883]] - [[Nikolaos Plastiras]], Greek general and politician (d. [[1953...
53: ...[1909]] - [[Skeeter Webb]], American [[baseball]] player (d. [[1986]]) - List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
1: {{List of people A}}
14: ==== People named Adam ====
32: ===== People named Adams =====
46: *[[Evangeline Adams|Adams, Evangeline]], (1868-1932), astrologer
61: *[[Michael Adams|Adams, Michael]], (1971-), chess player - List of people by name: Ai (1915 bytes)
1: {{List of people A}}
9: ...-1824), translator, political writer, librettist, playwright, member of the Acad魩e fran硩se
18: *[[Anouk Aim饼Aim饬 Anouk]], (born 1932), French actor
19: ...1959), [[basketball]] player, coach, [[baseball]] player - Hattie Caraway (2502 bytes)
11: ...ecial election of the people on [[January 12]], [[1932]] becoming the first woman elected to the [[Unite...
21: ...mployees Compensation Commission]] and to the [[Employees Compensation Appeals Board]]. - Eleanor Roosevelt (11183 bytes)
3: ... States|American]] [[human rights]] activist, [[diplomat]] and as the wife of [[President of the Unite...
9: ...However their marriage almost split over sexual explorations outside marriage by FDR (See [[Franklin D...
15: ...d a series of interviews with Mrs. Roosevelt in [[1932]]. For the rest of their lives they would be clos...
33: ...eful action based on sensitive discourse among people of diverse perspectives focusing on the varied n...
43: ...), for many years graced the mantle above the fireplace in her husband Franklin's presidential library... - Margaret Sanger (12025 bytes)
5: ... years in the affluent New York suburb of [[White Plains]]. In [[1902]], she married William Sanger. A...
9: ...m William Sanger. In 1916, Sanger opened a family planning and birth control clinic in the Brownsville...
15: ...he time, the largest private international family planning organization.
19: ...ion, which legalized birth control for married couples in the US. It was the apex of her fifty-year st...
24: ...sence of regulations requiring registration of people diagnosed with venereal diseases (which she cont... - Nina Hamnett (3501 bytes)
13: ...] was London's main Bohemian artistic centre. The place took its name from the popular Fitzroy Tavern ...
15: In [[1932]] Hamnett published ''Laughing Torso'', a tale of... - Ayn Rand (18001 bytes)
7: place_of_birth=[[Saint Petersburg]], [[Russia]] |
9: place_of_death=[[New York City]], [[New York]]
22: ...]] to [[Universal Studios]]. Rand then wrote the play, ''[[The Night of January 16th]]'' in [[1934]] ...
28: ...tlas Shrugged]]'' is often seen as Rand's most complete statement of Objectivist philosophy in any of ...
31: ...]], all of which she believed helped foster a crippling culture of resentment towards individual human... - Nathalie Sarraute (1197 bytes)
4: ...k called "Tropismes", published in [[1939]] and applauded by [[Jean-Paul Sartre]] and [[Max Jacob]]. I...
8: ==Works (An Incomplete Listing)==
12: * ''The Planetarium'', [[1959]] - Gertrude Stein (13569 bytes)
1: ...]] [[writer]], [[poet]], [[feminism|feminist]], [[playwright]], and catalyst in the development of mod...
12: ...[Paris]] with her brother Leo, who became an accomplished art critic.
15: ...er portrait), [[Henri Matisse]], [[Andre Derain]] plus other young painters.
17: ...ey returned to France and volunteered to drive supplies to French hospitals; they were later honored b...
23: ...liberal than not, with developed individualism coupled with democratic values based in pragmatism; thu... - Amelia Earhart (9225 bytes)
6: ...n, Kansas|Atchison]], [[Kansas]], Amelia loved to play with her younger sister, Muriel. This time that...
8: ...lane in 1924 and moved back East, where she was employed as a social worker in [[Boston, Massachusetts...
10: ...on, flying was the fixture of Earhart's life. She placed third at the Cleveland Women's Air Derby (nic...
14: ...Lockheed Vega]], intending to fly to [[Paris]], duplicating [[Charles Lindbergh]]'s solo flight. Howev...
16: ...," financed by [[Purdue University]], she started planning her round-the-world flight. - Amy Johnson (2606 bytes)
4: ...by, gaining a pilot's licence at the [[London Aeroplane Club]] in late [[1929]].
8: ... on [[May 24]] after flying 11,000 miles. Her aeroplane for this flight a [[De Havilland]] [[De Havill...
12: In [[July]] [[1932]], she set a solo record for the flight from Engl...
14: In [[1932]], she married the famous British pilot [[Jim Mol...
16: ...ales]], to the [[United States|USA]] in 1933. The plane ran out of fuel and crashed in [[Bridgeport, C... - 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 ...
12: .... She is said to have overheard Hitler laying out plans for Nazi commanders to join together in mass s...
16: ...in gliders. In 1952 '''Hanna Reitsch''' won third place in the world gliding championship in Spain (an... - Billie Holiday (6766 bytes)
7: ... [[Clarence Holiday]], a jazz guitarist who would play for [[Fletcher Henderson]], was fifteen. Billie...
14: ...an singing informally in numerous clubs. Around [[1932]] she was "discovered" by [[record producer]] [[J...
20: ...dy Day with the white gardenia in her hair. She explained the sense of overpowering drama that feature...
26: ...anis Joplin]] and [[Nina Simone]]. [[Diana Ross]] played her in a [[film|movie]] version of her [[auto...
28: .... She finally divorced Monroe in [[1957]] as she split with Guy. That [[March 28]], Billie married Lo... - Miriam Makeba (1140 bytes)
1: '''Miriam Makeba''' (born [[March 4]], [[1932]]) is a [[South Africa]]n singer. In [[1959]] she... - Bonnie and Clyde (17385 bytes)
5: Their exploits, along with those of other criminals such as ...
23: ...as state prison]] at [[Eastham Farm]] until early 1932. It was there, at Eastham Camp 1, that it appears...
25: ...he returned to Texas within weeks, embroiled in a plan to raid Eastham prison and free associate [[Ray...
27: ...]] jail, Bonnie returned to [[Dallas]] in June of 1932, and was soon back on the road with Clyde.
31: ...he selected him as one of the shooters. In August 1932, while Bonnie was visiting her mother, Clyde and ... - Leni Riefenstahl (8095 bytes)
7: She heard [[Adolf Hitler]] speak at a rally in [[1932]] and offered her services as a filmmaker, becaus...
15: ...k Jagger]] and his wife [[Bianca Jagger]] as a couple holding each other's hands after they got maried...
21: ... the propaganda in her early films repels many people, their aesthetics are nonetheless outstanding an...
23: ...aiming that "each and every one" of the [[Roma people]] which had been drawn from a [[concentration ca...
36: ...'[[Das Blaue Licht]]'' (''[[The Blue Light]]'', [[1932]]) - Tallulah Bankhead (6331 bytes)
10: ...]] stage, where she was to appear in over a dozen plays in the next eight years. Famous as an actress,...
14: ...her the "first choice among established stars" to play [[Scarlett O'Hara]].
16: ...e also wonders if the cynical Bankhead could have played "Fiddle-Dee-Dee" Scarlett with anything appro...
18: ...h's career stalled in unmemorable plays until she played Regina in [[Lillian Hellman]]'s [[The Little ...
26: ...y of [[pneumonia]] arising from [[influenza]], complicated further by [[emphysema]], in December 1968. - Ingrid Bergman (5216 bytes)
5: After completing a few pictures in Sweden and appearing in th...
9: ...e Orient Express]]'' ([[1975]]). In [[1978]] she played in [[Ingmar Bergman]]'s ''[[Autumn Sonata]]''...
13: ...art kept to be interred in the [[Norra begravningsplatsen]] in [[Stockholm]].
21: * [[Landskamp]] (1932)
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