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- History of China (45919 bytes)
14: ...riod Sima Qian relates that a system of inherited rulership was established during the [[Xia Dynasty]]...
28: ... the Shang. The Zhou appeared to have begun their rule under a semi-feudal system. Nevertheless, power...
36: ...s soon as the Qin reign ended, the Qin imperial structure collapsed. The [[Qin Dynasty]] is well know...
44: ...n the midst of land acquisitions, invasions and struggles of [[consort clan]]s and [[eunuch]]s. The [[...
63: ...Northern Dynasties]], a sequence of local regimes ruling over regions north of [[Yangtze River|Yangtze... - List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
45: ..., (1978-2005), Puerto Rican who was convicted of drug dealing in the Laura Hernandez case
97: *[[Cl魥nt Ader|Ader, Cl魥nt]], (1841-1925), French engineer and inventor
110: *[[Adolf of Nassau-Weilburg]], (ruled 1292-1298), German emperor - Elisabeth Domitien (1229 bytes)
1: '''Elisabeth Domitien''' (born [[1925]] – died [[26 April]] [[2005]]) was prime m... - Margaret Thatcher (46377 bytes)
16: |[[13 October]] [[1925]]
27: ...Margaret Hilda Roberts''', (born [[13 October]] [[1925]]) is a [[Politics of the United Kingdom|British ...
52: ...first ballot and won the job on the second, in February 1975. She appointed Heath's preferred successo...
57: :"The Russians are bent on world dominance, and they are r...
73: ...red as a result of this policy it is nonetheless true that the goal of controlling inflation was achie... - Emma Goldman (12210 bytes)
3: ...nessed events of the [[Russian Revolution of 1917|Russian Revolution]]. She spent a number of years i...
6: ...cal repression]] after the [[assassination]] of [[Russian Tsar Alexander II|Alexander II]], she moved ...
24: On [[February 11]], [[1916]], she was [[arrest]]ed and impri...
29: ...ed for two years, after which she was deported to Russia. At her deportation hearing, [[J. Edgar Hoove...
32: ... and [[Louise Bryant]], both of whom were also in Russia at this time (during a period when it was imp... - Anna Akhmatova (2156 bytes)
1: ...na Andreevna Gorenko, one of the most significant Russian [[Acmeist poetry|Acmeist poets]].
9: ...khmatova maintained a long friendship with fellow Russian poetess [[Marina Tsvetaeva]], with several p...
11: ...ively silenced, unable to publish poetry, between 1925 and 1952 (except for an interval between [[1940]]...
13: ... as the [[Sheremetev Palace]] in [[St Petersburg, Russia|St Petersburg]]), where Akhmatova lived from ... - Isak Dinesen (2959 bytes)
5: ...orn into a [[Unitarian]] aristocratic family in [[Rungsted]], and was schooled in art at [[Copenhagen]...
7: ...returned to Denmark. The divorce was finalized in 1925. Karen Blixen remained in Kenya and continued to ...
11: She died in Rungsted, apparently from malnutrition. She had suf...
18: * ''The Revenge of Truth'' (1926, published in Denmark) - Ayn Rand (18001 bytes)
6: date_of_birth=[[February 2]], [[1905]] |
7: place_of_birth=[[Saint Petersburg]], [[Russia]] |
11: ...r novels ''[[The Fountainhead]]'' and ''[[Atlas Shrugged]]''. Her philosophy and her fiction both emph...
19: ...tives. She arrived in the [[United States]] in February [[1926]], at the age of twenty-one. After a br...
22: Initially, Rand struggled in [[Cinema of the United States|Hollywood]]... - Nathalie Sarraute (1197 bytes)
2: ...], was a lawyer and a [[Francophone]] writer of [[Russia]]n origin.
4: ...reatly affected her conception of the novel. In [[1925]], she married Raymond Sarraute, a fellow lawyer....
13: * ''The Golden Fruit'', [[1963]] - Gertrude Stein (13569 bytes)
1: '''Gertrude Stein''' ([[February 3]], [[1874]] - [[July 27]], [[1946]]) was an ...
3: [[Image:Homosexualitystein.jpg|thumb|right|Gertrude Stein and her lover [[Alice B. Toklas]]]]
9: ...n_by_picasso.jpg|thumb|left|326px|Portrait of Gertrude Stein by [[Pablo Picasso]], 1906]]
13: ...Toklas]] in 1907; Alice moved in with Leo and Gertrude in 1909. During her whole life, Stein was suppo...
19: By the [[1920s]] her salon at ''27 Rue de Fleurus'', with walls covered by avant-garde paintings, ... - Marina Tsvetaeva (21885 bytes)
3: ...[[1892]] – [[August 31]], [[1941]]) was a [[Russia]]n [[poet]] and [[writer]].
5: ...ctory schools of [[Acmeist poetry|Acmeism]] and [[Russian Symbolist poetry|symbolism]].
8: ...hly literate woman. She was also volatile and a (frustrated) concert pianist, with some [[Poland|Polis...
12: ... the impressionable Marina. The children began to run wild. This state of affairs was allowed to conti...
14: ...ing within Russian poetry: the flowering of the [[Russian Symbolist movement]], and this movement was ... - Virginia Woolf (9482 bytes)
13: ... the lighthouse; also, one of the themes is the struggle in the creative process that beset painter Li...
34: *''[[Mrs. Dalloway]]'' ([[1925]])
48: *''The Common Reader'' ([[1925]]) - Margaret Mead (11387 bytes)
5: ... 1954. Following the example of her instructor [[Ruth Benedict]], Mead concentrated her studies on pr...
13: ...te ethical standards is not universal. It is instructive to know that standards differ in the most un...
28: ...most anthropologists concluded that the absolute truth would probably never be known. Many, however, ...
43: "Among the Mundugumor, the opposite was true: both men and women were warlike in temperament....
55: ...one other culture should sharpen our ability to scrutinize more steadily, to appreciate more lovingly,... - Josephine Baker (5957 bytes)
7: On [[October 2]], [[1925]], she opened in [[Paris]] at the Th颴re [[Champ...
17: ...her career was on a downturn and she was near bankruptcy until she was bailed out and given an apartme... - Aimee Semple McPherson (13395 bytes)
25: ...oin her on her religious travels, he soon became frustrated with the situation, and by 1918 had filed ...
27: ...he Foursquare Gospel church. She supervised construction of a large, domed church building in the [[E...
31: ...ling]] into her sermons, and keeping a museum of crutches, wheelchairs and so forth as demonstrations ...
35: ...e opening of Foursquare Gospel-owned KFSG on [[February 6]], [[1924]], she also became the first woman...
41: ...1.5 million Angelus Temple opened its doors, construction was already entirely paid for through privat... - Lucille Ball (12427 bytes)
4: ...ised by her working mother and grandparents. In [[1925]], after a romance with a local bad boy (Johnny),...
9: ...as drafted to the [[Army]] in [[1942]], Ball was crushed (He sustained a knee injury and performed in ...
62: ...n the course of which the [[sheriff]] and his two Rubenesque daughters are tied up with a handy piece ... - Tallulah Bankhead (6331 bytes)
10: ... actress, she was famous, too, for her drinking, drug taking, and many affairs with men and women. By ...
16: ...est for [[Gone with the Wind]] put her out of the running for good -- Selznick decided that she was to...
22: ...edy Hour in 1957 as "The Neighbor Next Door" -- drunk, according to [[Lucille Ball]] -- is a cult fav...
81: *1925 [[Fallen Angels]]
82: *1925 [[The Green Hat]] - Greta Garbo (9957 bytes)
12: When Stiller went to the [[United States]] in [[1925]] to work for [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer]], he insiste...
35: ...brance of Things Past]]," but this never came to fruition. She withdrew from the entertainment world c...
38: ...place in history and would gain in value. On [[February 9]], [[1951]], she became a [[naturalized citi...
42: ...me frugality, and was a very wealthy woman. It is rumored that she wrote an [[autobiography]] just bef...
59: * [[The Joyless Street]] (1925) - Suzanne Lenglen (11495 bytes)
10: ...], was only open to members of French clubs until 1925.) She lost to reigning champion [[Marguerite Broq...
20: ...on the French Championships ([[French Open]] from 1925) six times.
24: ... Open]] championships. That year, to raise reconstruction funds for the regions of France that had bee...
26: ...uch that she entered the tournament despite being run down and suffering from what later was diagnosed...
34: ... consider to be her most memorable match. In a February [[1926 in sports|1926]] tournament at the Carl... - Parathyroid gland (1913 bytes)
9: ...s part in the control of [[calcium]] and [[phosphorus]] [[homeostasis]], as well as bone physiology. W...
14: ... Since hyperparathyroidism was first described in 1925, the symptoms have become known as "[[moan]]s, [[...
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