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- List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
13: | [[1923]] — [[1931]]
159: | [[Rhode Island]]
160: | [[Providence, Rhode Island|Providence]]
193: | [[1919]] — [[1928]] (Legislative Building) - Timeline of the united states history 1990 to present (16426 bytes)
44: ...ollars of damage. Irma also wrecks the Caribbean Islands.
45: ...hurricane, killing hundreds and knocking out the island's power.
53: - November 4 (10686 bytes)
58: *[[1923]] - [[Freddy Heineken]], [[Netherlands|Dutch]] bu...
152: [[sl:4. november]] - Burundi (13403 bytes)
53: ...ue of Nations]] mandate of [[Ruanda-Urundi]] in [[1923]], later a [[United Nations]] Trust Territory und...
91: ...%) and a minority of [[Protestant]]s (5%) and [[Muslim]]s (2%). The official languages are [[Kirundi ...
146: ...ecent political developments, with a Hutu-leaning slant. - List of people by name: Ab (7347 bytes)
44: *[[Abd-ar-rahman I]], (died 788), Muslim Spain ruler
47: *[[Abd-ar-rahman IV]], (circa 1017), Muslim Spain ruler
48: *[[Abd-ar-rahman V]], (1023-1024), Muslim Spain ruler
116: *[[Dannie Abse|Abse, Dannie]], (born 1923), British poet - List of people by name: Ac (3800 bytes)
52: *[[Milton Acorn|Acorn, Milton]], (1923-1986), poet - List of people by name: Ad (7741 bytes)
50: *[[Harold Adams|Adams, Harold]], (born 1923), author
90: *[[George Ade|Ade, George]] (1866-1944), ''[[The Slim Princess]]'' - Cleopatra VII of Egypt (8634 bytes)
11: ...ver, Ptolemy imperiled his own power by injudiciously meddling in the affairs of Rome. When [[Pompey]]...
15: ... she returned to Egypt, Ptolemy XIV died mysteriously. Cleopatra then made Caesarion her co-regent. Sh...
35: ... of E. R. Bevan's ''House of Ptolemy'', 1923) - Victoria of the United Kingdom (38571 bytes)
20: ...n Wettin''). Queen Victoria's papers record her dislike of the name. Though rarely publicly used, Wet...
27: ... of 1837]]), and in [[Jamaica]], the colonial legislature had protested British policies by refusing t...
41: ...ade her first journey by train, travelling from [[Slough railway station]] (near [[Windsor Castle]]) t...
46: ...]'s [[coup d'鴡t|coup]] in France without previously consulting the Prime Minister.
51: ...ntury's prime tourist locations. Her love of the island was matched by an initial Irish warmth for the... - Petra Kelly (3411 bytes)
12: ...ral and green politician [[Gert Bastian]] (born [[1923]]), who then killed himself. Researchers and all ... - Alexandra Kollontai (3203 bytes)
5: ...side with either faction. However, she came to dislike aspects of Bolshevism and opted to join the Me...
13: ... he sent Kollontai abroad as a [[diplomat]]. In [[1923]], she was appointed Soviet Ambassador to [[Norwa... - Constance Georgine, Countess Markiewicz (3360 bytes)
4: ...ily's ancestral home, Lissadell House in [[County Sligo]]. Constance and her sister, Eva Gore-Booth, ...
6: Constance studied art at the Slade School in [[London]] and then in [[Paris]], wh...
14: ...eral Election of 1922]] but was re-elected in the 1923 and June 1927 elections. She died in July 1927 a... - Margaret Sanger (12025 bytes)
7: ...stricken [[Lower East Side, Manhattan|East Side]] slums of [[Manhattan]]. That same year, she also sta...
13: ...also formed the National Committee on Federal Legislation for Birth Control and served as its presiden...
24: ...on of those with infectious diseases such as [[measles]]). - Mary Pickford (7523 bytes)
29: * [[1923 in film|1923]]: Pickford, wanted to work with a strong directo... - Marina Tsvetaeva (21885 bytes)
26: ...sly and it did. Her break-up with Rozdevitch in [[1923]] was almost certainly the inspiration for her gr...
28: ...t to artists and writers who had lived in [[Czechoslovakia]]. In addition, she tried to make whatever ...
34: ...estions and ended up reading them some French translations of her poetry. The police concluded that sh...
39: ...o her. Boris Pasternak found her bits of work translating poetry, but otherwise the established Soviet...
58: ...eulochki, published in 1923 in the collection Remeslo), and it is the first poem which may be deemed i... - Suzanne Valadon (4068 bytes)
6: ...ueRoom.jpg|thumb|300px|left|''The Blue Room''. ([[1923]]). [[Suzanne Valadon]].]]
8: ... ''Girl Braiding Her Hair''. Valadon haunted the sleazy bars of Paris and in [[1889]] Toulouse-Lautre... - Edna St. Vincent Millay (2636 bytes)
5: ...ned. She won the [[Pulitzer Prize for Poetry]] in 1923, for ''The Harp-Weaver, and Other Poems''.
7: In 1923, she also married 43-year-old widower of [[Inez M... - Ruth Benedict (3045 bytes)
7: ... of Philosophy|PhD]] and joining the faculty in [[1923]]. [[Margaret Mead]] was one of her students.
20: ...colonialism, nor accepting their supposedly obviously just place in a hierarchy that had Japanese at t... - Margaret Mead (11387 bytes)
5: ...mother. She graduated from [[Barnard College]] in 1923 and received her Ph.D. from [[Columbia University...
28: ...oorly written, unscientific, irresponsible, and misleading." (Freeman 1999, cited by Pinker 2002, p. 1...
33: ...hroughout Melanesia, and especially in the large island of [[New Guinea]]. Moreover, male anthropolog...
49: "In her research on [[Manus Island]] of New Guinea, she discovered that 'primitiv... - Lise Meitner (3907 bytes)
8: In [[1923]], she discovered the radiationless transition kn...
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