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- List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
37: | [[1933]] - List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
1: {{List of people A}}
14: ==== People named Adam ====
25: *[[Karol Adamiecki|Adamiecki, Karol]], (1866-1933), Polish engineer and economist
32: ===== People named Adams =====
61: *[[Michael Adams|Adams, Michael]], (1971-), chess player - List of people by name: Ai (1915 bytes)
1: {{List of people A}}
8: *[[Danny Aiello|Aiello, Danny]], (born 1933), US actor
9: ...-1824), translator, political writer, librettist, playwright, member of the Acad魩e fran硩se
19: ...1959), [[basketball]] player, coach, [[baseball]] player - Eleanor Roosevelt (11183 bytes)
3: ...erving [[First Lady of the United States]] from [[1933]]-[[1945]]. An active First Lady, she traveled ar...
9: ...However their marriage almost split over sexual explorations outside marriage by FDR (See [[Franklin D...
16: ...ence in which Mrs. Roosevelt wrote to Hickok in [[1933]], "''My Pictures are nearly all up & I have you ...
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... - Annie Besant (4275 bytes)
2: ...'' ([[October 1]], [[1847]] - [[September 20]], [[1933]]) was a prominent [[Theosophy|Theosophist]], [[w...
17: Annie Besant died in [[1933]] and was survived by her daughter, [[Mabel Besan...
22: ...iage, As It Was, As It Is, And As It Should Be: A Plea For Reform (1878) - Mary Pickford (7523 bytes)
5: ...r King'', as Baby Gladys Smith. She subsequently played in many melodramas and became a popular child...
7: ...ecil B. DeMille]], who was also in the cast. The play was produced by [[David Belasco]], who insisted...
9: ...r who made a million dollar deal was [[Charlie Chaplin]]), and one of the few stars who were successfu...
11: ... became a secret message of their love; as the couple was driving and Fairbanks was discussing the rec...
13: ...r]]. However, Pickford's second marriage was also plagued with marital problems. Her stressful busines... - 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... - 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...
16: ...ales]], to the [[United States|USA]] in 1933. The plane ran out of fuel and crashed in [[Bridgeport, C... - Edna St. Vincent Millay (2636 bytes)
1: ... [[October 19]], [[1950]]) was a lyrical poet and playwright and the first woman to receive the [[Puli...
7: ...terlitz, New York, at a farmhouse they called Steepletop. The marriage was an [[open marriage|open]] o... - Virginia Woolf (9482 bytes)
7: ...he [[Bloomsbury group]]. While nowhere near a simple recapitulation of the coterie's ideals, Woolf's ...
9: ...[[1905]], initially for the ''[[Times Literary Supplement]]''. In [[1912]] she married [[Leonard Woolf...
13: ...e atmosphere closer to the prose poem than to the plot-centred novel. Her last and most ambitious work...
45: *''Flush'' ([[1933]])
50: *''The Second Common Reader'' ([[1933]]) - Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin (1937 bytes)
3: ...er of Merit medal of Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, displayed in the Royal Society, London]]
5: ... achievement took her 34 years, having started in 1933.
7: ...r work in crystallography and in [[1976]] the [[Copley Medal]] from the [[Royal Society]]. In [[1965]... - Emmy Noether (2715 bytes)
10: ... Noether was forced to flee [[Nazi]] Germany in [[1933]] and joined the faculty at [[Bryn Mawr]] in the ... - Virginia Apgar (394 bytes)
1: ...th. She graduated from [[Columbia University]] in 1933. - Billie Holiday (6766 bytes)
7: ... [[Clarence Holiday]], a jazz guitarist who would play for [[Fletcher Henderson]], was fifteen. Billie...
14: ...-ever recording was "Your Mother's Son-In-Law" ([[1933]]).
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... - Bessie Smith (7284 bytes)
11: ... an almost inaudible guest visit. Hammond was not pleased with the result, preferring to have Bessie b...
17: ...ax's perpetuation of the myth is all the more inexplicable when one considers a letter received by his...
19: ...eath without medical attention, while her friends pled with the hospital authorities to admit her. And...
25: A more recent play featuring 14 of the songs Smith made famous, ''...
27: ...scovered that Bessie's grave remained unmarked, Joplin offered to pay for a stone and ended up sharing... - Bonnie and Clyde (17385 bytes)
5: Their exploits, along with those of other criminals such as ...
25: ...he returned to Texas within weeks, embroiled in a plan to raid Eastham prison and free associate [[Ray...
27: ...passable roads, stealing cars and swapping stolen plates regularly. Though Clyde's astounding driving ...
35: ...bined with the large number of guns, cars, and people that floated through it, history books can only ...
37: == Joplin == - Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (8386 bytes)
7: ...mb), which closed after dissatisfied customers complained of fraudulent activities.
9: ...she emigrated to [[New York City]]. Impressing people with her apparent [[psychic]] abilities she was ...
21: ...sm]], [[Bright's disease]] of the kidneys, and complications from [[influenza]], Madame Helena Petrovn...
59: ...sky and The Secret Doctrine'' by [[Max Heindel]] (1933; from Max Heindel writings & with introduction by... - Aimee Semple McPherson (13395 bytes)
1: ...px|Photograph of McPherson]]<BR><small>''Aimee Semple McPherson (1890-1944)''</small></center></div>
3: ...1944]]), also known as '''"Sister Aimee"''' or simply "Sister," was an [[evangelist]] and media sensat...
7: ...d a scandal in their small town, prompting the couple to elope to [[Michigan]].)
9: ...been orphaned at an early age, and raised by a couple who worked with the [[Salvation Army]]. As a res...
11: ...mage:Semples.jpeg]]<small><br>Robert and Aimee Semple, 1910</small></div> - Elise Rivet (1599 bytes)
3: ...sters, "Notre Dame de Compassion" in [[Lyon]]. In 1933 she became "M貥 Marie Elisabeth de l'Eucharistie...
7: ...e honored her with her portrait on a [[List of people on stamps of France|postage stamp]] and a street... - Marina Raskova (5055 bytes)
5: ...gnificantly in the eyes of the Soviet Union which placed its aviators among those of celebrity status,...
7: ...Komsmolosk]] (in the Far East). When finally completed, the flight took 26 hours and 29 minutes, ove...
9: ... be near the landing spot, was unable to find the plane for 10 days, having no water and almost no foo...
11: ...ictions on women serving in combat roles, their applications tended to be blocked, run through red tap...
15: ... was the [[Polikarpov Po-2]], a very outdated [[biplane]]. The [[Germany|Germans]] were the ones howe...
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