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- Flag of New Jersey (1068 bytes)
1: ...[Image:NewJersey_flag.jpg|thumb|right|Flag of New Jersey.Image provided by[http://classroomclipart.com Cla...
2: ...tal Army|New Jersey Continental Line]] be dark ([[Jersey]]) blue, with buff facings. Buff-colored facings...
5: ...://www.nj.gov/njfacts/flag.htm Minutes of the New Jersey General Assembly for March 11, 1896] - New Jersey (35646 bytes)
2: Name = New Jersey |
3: Fullname = State of New Jersey |
4: Flag = New Jersey state flag.png |
5: Flaglink = [[Flag of New Jersey]] |
6: Seal = New Jersey state seal.png | - Trenton, New Jersey (12026 bytes)
1: {{Template:US City infobox|
3: state = New Jersey|
10: county = [[Mercer County, New Jersey|Mercer County]] |
25: ...It is the [[county seat]] of [[Mercer County, New Jersey|Mercer County]]. The City of Trenton is governed ...
27: ...affiliate of the [[Philadelphia Flyers]]. The New Jersey State Prison, which has two maximum security unit... - Culture of Jersey (13844 bytes)
1: ... Bailiwick of [[Jersey]]. This has been shaped by Jersey's indigenous [[Normans|Norman]] language and trad...
4: [[Image:Black Dog pub sign Bouley Jersey.jpg|thumb|right|Bilingual pub sign in English and...
7: ... increased apace with the migration of English people into the island since the end of the [[Napoleoni...
13: The characteristic accent of Jersey English is rapidly being lost due to the influenc...
17: [[Literature]] in Jersey may be divided into [[J�rriais literature|liter... - New Jersey State Map (247 bytes)
1: == Printable New Jersey State Map ==
2: [[Image:NewJersey_map_BW.jpg|center|thumb|250px|Image provided by [...
3: .../NewJersey_state_mapBW.pdf Download Printable New Jersey Map] - New Jersey State Facts (253 bytes)
2: [[Image:new_jersey_facts.jpg|center|thumb|250px|Image provided by [h...
3: [http://academickids.com/pdf/state_facts/new_jersey_facts.pdf Download Printable State Facts Handout]
Page text matches
- List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
123: | [[New Jersey]]
124: | [[Trenton, New Jersey|Trenton]] - Middle Colonies (4101 bytes)
1: ...e states of [[New York]], [[Pennsylvania]], [[New Jersey]], [[Delaware]] and sometimes [[Maryland]]. Today...
3: ...their homes. Many streets were paved, and many people had their shops and homes in the same building. ...
5: ... mixed with spices, milk, and sugar which many people thought improved the taste.
7: ...Dutch form of dress. [[Quakers]] wore neat and simple clothing as their [[religion]] taught them. Many...
9: ... and many other professions. A number of other people worked at industries related to [[metal]]: [[bl... - 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. - Clara Barton (9023 bytes)
6: ...er many questions, and each sibling taught her complementary skills. When Clara started school at age ...
12: ...to teach in a private school in [[Bordentown, New Jersey]], Barton recognized the community's need for fre...
21: ...] bureaucracy in vain to bring her own medical supplies to the battlefields. Finally, in July 1862, sh...
23: In [[1865]], President [[Abraham Lincoln]] placed her in charge of the search for the missing m...
35: ... less than a mile from her birthplace in a family plot in Oxford, Massachusetts. - Dorothea Dix (5868 bytes)
8: ... take an interest in the mentally ill is more complex and more interesting than this legend. Survivin...
10: ...us and having staked so much on her career, it is plausible to see her becoming depressed as she perce...
16: In [[Rhode Island]], in [[1843]], for example, she was invited by the [[humanitarian]] [[Thoma...
18: ...as a genteel lady walking through dirty, stinking places and courageously befriending raving lunatics....
20: ...rmination to do things her way, this was not a completely successful venture. After the War, although ... - Patti Smith (6059 bytes)
1: ...es (album)|Horses]]'', was a photo by [[Robert Mapplethorpe]].]]
2: ... in [[Chicago]], [[Illinois]] and raised in [[New Jersey]], the daughter of an [[Atheism|atheist]] father ...
4: ...ainting, writing and performing both poetry and a play, ''Cowboy Mouth'' (a collaboration with [[Sam S...
6: ...ceived in an early job in an assembly line in New Jersey, with the flipside a version of the rock standard...
8: ...atest debuts. The cover photograph by [[Robert Mapplethorpe]], then her roommate, also became one of r... - Meryl Streep (12114 bytes)
5: ...|USA]], and raised in nearby [[Bernardsville, New Jersey|Bernardsville]], Streep majored in [[drama]] at [...
7: ...d. From [[1984]] to [[1990]], Streep won six [[People's Choice Award]]s for Favorite Motion Picture Ac...
9: ...ence. In the [[1990s]], therefore, Streep took to playing roles with greater variety, including farce ...
11: ...[Music of the Heart]]'', for which she learned to play the [[violin]].
13: ...nd in [[2004]] took on two largely comedic roles, playing the character originated by [[Angela Lansbur... - Mia Hamm (6476 bytes)
1: ...arge fan base in the [[United States]], where she played for 17 years as a member of the [[United Stat...
3: ...an All-American and [[Atlantic Coast Conference]] player of the year for the last three years of her c...
7: ...iven to her by [[ESPN]], one of them for ''soccer player of the year'' and the other two for ''Female ...
9: ...Hamm and the rest of the US women's national team played for the gold medal in the [[1996 Summer Olymp...
11: ...g the FIFA Women's World Cup. Chastain's take-the-jersey-off celebration after the win became an instant l... - Violet (plant) (3474 bytes)
2: ...te, and yellow pansies]] | caption = 5-petaled purple, white,<br>and yellow pansies}}
3: {{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = lightgreen}}
4: {{Taxobox_regnum_entry | taxon = [[Plant]]ae}}
5: {{Taxobox_divisio_entry | taxon = [[Flowering plant|Magnoliophyta]]}}
10: {{Taxobox_end_placement}} - Silk (8683 bytes)
5: ...igh demand for the fabric, silk was one of the staples of international [[trade]] prior to [[industria...
11: ...cloth produced was used in imperial robes or in diplomacy, as gifts to foreign dignitaries. The remai...
19: ...rry silkworm (''Bombyx mori''). The term "wild" implies that these silkworms are not capable of being ...
23: There is ample evidence that small quantities of wild silk were...
33: ...gan with European-born workers in [[Paterson, New Jersey]], and the city became a US silk centre, although... - Culture (23440 bytes)
6: ...ntries as more civilized than others, and some people as more cultured than others. Thus some cultural...
8: ... the indigenous music traditions of aboriginal peoples of [[Australia]].
10: ...different culture"; but class as "uncultured". People lacking "culture" often seemed more "natural", a...
12: ... (philosophy)|authentic]] unblemished lives, uncomplicated and uncorrupted by the highly-stratified [[...
14: ...ties produced for, and consumed by, non-élite people or the [[proletariat|masses]]. (Note that some c... - Clarinet (18825 bytes)
4: ...f some student instruments, composite material or plastic [[resin]]. The instrument uses a single [[re...
6: A person who plays the clarinet is called a [[clarinetist]].
11: ... there are few restrictions to what it is able to play.
17: ...f Orchestration'' (4th ed.), pp. 86–91. New Jersey: Prentice Hall, Inc. (ISBN 0139003665)
20: ... (music)|reed]] which is held in the mouth by the player. Vibrating the reed produces the instrument's... - George Washington (29551 bytes)
11: | place of birth=[[Westmoreland County, Virginia|Westm...
14: | place of death=[[Mount Vernon (plantation)|Mount Vernon]], [[Virginia]]
21: ...[republic]]an [[democracy]] that served as an example around the world.
24: ...n his birth year. His birthplace was Pope's Creek Plantation, south of [[Colonial Beach, Virginia|Colo...
26: ... eventually inherited the estate, [[Mount Vernon (plantation)|Mount Vernon]] in [[Fairfax County, Virg... - James Madison (15187 bytes)
10: | place of birth=[[Port Conway, Virginia]]
13: | place of death=[[Montpelier]], [[Virginia]]
18: ...d is traditionally regarded as the ''[[List of people known as the father or mother of something|Fathe...
21: ... University]] (it was called the ''College of New Jersey'' at the time), finishing its four-year course in...
23: ...leaders of the time to call for a convention to replace the ineffective [[Articles of Confederation]].... - George M. Dallas (3858 bytes)
5: ...adelphia]], and graduated from the College of New Jersey (now [[Princeton University]]) in [[1810]]. He w...
7: ...n Van Buren]] as Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Russia from [[1837]] to [[1839]],...
9: ...as was appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to [[United Kingdom|Britain]] by Pre... - Grover Cleveland (20963 bytes)
18: ...</td><td>[[Caldwell, New Jersey|Caldwell]], [[New Jersey]]</td></tr>
20: ...td><td>[[Princeton, New Jersey|Princeton]], [[New Jersey]]</td></tr>
34: Cleveland was born in [[Caldwell, New Jersey]] to the Rev. Richard Cleveland and Anne Neal. H...
46: ...lf admitted that, as President, his greatest accomplishment was blocking others' bad ideas. He vigoro...
56: ...ess failures, farm mortgage foreclosures, and unemployment. He obtained repeal of the mildly inflation... - Europe (23835 bytes)
18: ...hs]] marked the start of a period of discovery, exploration, and increase in scientific knowledge. In ...
44: ...heart lies the [[North German Plain]]. An arc of uplands also exists along the northwestern seaboard, ...
46: ... counted as part of Europe, while the latter are upland areas that were once joined to the mainland un...
53: ...civilisations for millennia, Europe's animals and plants have been profoundly affected by the presence...
55: ...at caused incalculable disruption to the original plant and animal ecosystems. - United Kingdom (37269 bytes)
54: ...[[European Union]] and [[NATO]]. Usually known simply as the '''United Kingdom''' or the '''UK''', it ...
64: ...) has been proposed, but is little used outside diplomatic circles.
69: ...land was on the brink of economic ruin and was deeply unpopular with the broader Scottish population.
71: ...nd]]. This was also an unpopular decision, taking place just after the unsuccessful United Irishmen Re...
74: ...he 20th century saw the UK's strength seriously depleted in two World Wars. The second half witnessed ... - Flag of New Jersey (1068 bytes)
1: ...[Image:NewJersey_flag.jpg|thumb|right|Flag of New Jersey.Image provided by[http://classroomclipart.com Cla...
2: ...tal Army|New Jersey Continental Line]] be dark ([[Jersey]]) blue, with buff facings. Buff-colored facings...
5: ...://www.nj.gov/njfacts/flag.htm Minutes of the New Jersey General Assembly for March 11, 1896] - Football (soccer) (22343 bytes)
5: ...layers allowed to handle the ball in the field of play.
7: ...e from other sports known as "[[football]]". <!-- Please see above polite suggestions before changing ...
9: ...on television. A very large number of people also play football at an amateur level.
11: ...rica]] — football evokes great passions and plays an important role in the life of individual fa...
15: ...ll with their hands or arms during play. Although players mainly use their feet to move the ball aroun...
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