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- List of U.S. state capitals (5230 bytes)
141: | [[1920]] — [[1924]], [[1931]] — [[1934]] (office tower & wing...
159: | [[Rhode Island]]
160: | [[Providence, Rhode Island|Providence]]
193: | [[1919]] — [[1928]] (Legislative Building)
197: | [[1924]] — [[1932]] - List of explorers (24013 bytes)
30: ...]]?-[[1377]]?), [[Morocco|Moroccan]] [[Berber]] Muslim, visited [[Mecca]] several times, travelled to ...
34: *[[Moric Benovsky]], [[Slovakia|Slovak]]
53: ...ry]] [[Portuguese]] explorer of the [[Atlantic]] islands)
66: ... to the [[Indies]]; discovered various lands and islands and established a colony on [[Hispaniola]]
67: ...Pacific]], discovering or mapping many lands and islands - George H. W. Bush (1569 bytes)
9: | date of birth=[[12 June ]], [[1924]]
19: ...nited States]] ([[1989]]–[[1993]]). Previously, he had served as [[U.S.]] [[congressman]] from ... - November 4 (10686 bytes)
22: * [[1924]] - [[Nellie Tayloe Ross]] of [[Wyoming]] elected...
84: *[[1924]] - [[Gabriel Faur�]], French composer (b. [[18...
152: [[sl:4. november]] - 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
60: *[[Abe Kobo]], (1924-1993), Japanese author of ''The Woman In the Dune...
107: *[[Albert Abrams|Abrams, Albert]], (1863-1924), fraudulent doctor - 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... - Golda Meir (10143 bytes)
20: ...Histadrut]], the General Federation of Labor. By 1924, her husband tired of the kibbutz life and they l...
34: ...]] (Israeli Parliament) where she served continuously until [[1974]]. - Millicent Fawcett (1226 bytes)
7: ... British Empire|Dame of the British Empire]] in [[1924]], and her memory is still preserved in the name ...
9: ... and the mother of [[Philippa Fawcett]], who famously came above the [[senior wrangler]] in the [[Camb... - 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]]).
60: ...shed in the ''Woman Citizen'', [[February 23]], [[1924]]) - Georgia O'Keeffe (2572 bytes)
10: ...n love, and Stieglitz and his wife divorced. In [[1924]], O'Keeffe and Stieglitz married. - Ayn Rand (18001 bytes)
19: ... entered the State Institute for Cinema Arts in [[1924]] to study screenwriting; in late [[1925]], howev...
31: ...oism and individualism. Rand also had a strong dislike for [[mysticism]], [[religion]], and compulsor...
33: ...ong of Russia]]''. Rand argued that the movie grossly misrepresented the socioeconomic conditions in t... - Amelia Earhart (9225 bytes)
8: ...After her parents divorced, she sold the plane in 1924 and moved back East, where she was employed as a ...
22: ...hart's Lockheed Electra 10E and guide her to the island once she arrived in the vicinity.
34: ...wland, to [[Nikumaroro]] (then known as Gardner) Island in what is now [[Kiribati]], landed there, and...
40: ...0 square mile (2,600 km²) area near Howland Island for Earhart's plane. The ocean where Jourdan p... - Marina Tsvetaeva (21885 bytes)
26: ...e occasions himself. It was bound to end disastrously and it did. Her break-up with Rozdevitch in [[19...
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... - Maria Goeppert-Mayer (4176 bytes)
3: ...berg]], [[Paul Dirac]] and [[Wolfgang Pauli]]. In 1924 she passed the University's arbiter entrance exam... - Aimee Semple McPherson (13395 bytes)
23: ...r," a 1912 [[Packard]] touring car with religious slogans painted on the side; standing in the back se...
35: ...Foursquare Gospel-owned KFSG on [[February 6]], [[1924]], she also became the first woman to be granted ...
37: ...matic entrance riding a [[motorcycle]] down the aisle of Angelus Temple.
58: ...kidnappers would not sell McPherson into "[[white slavery]]." Kennedy later said she tossed the lette...
68: ... reached, and soon after the ''Examiner'' erroneously reported that district attorney Asa Keyes had dr... - Tallulah Bankhead (6331 bytes)
38: *I'm as pure as the driven slush.
78: *1924 [[Conchita]]
79: *1924 [[This Marriage]]
80: *1924 [[The Creaking Chair]] - Greta Garbo (9957 bytes)
10: ...ajor role in ''G? Berlings Saga'' ([[1924 in film|1924]]) (English: ''The Story of G? Berling''). He als...
19: ...30 in film|1930]]), which was publicized with the slogan "Garbo Talks." The movie was a huge success, ...
27: ...[[Ernst Lubitsch]], which was publicized with the slogan "Garbo Laughs."
58: * [[The Saga of Gosta Berling]] (1924) - Sonja Henie (2914 bytes)
4: ...er Olympics]], at the age of eleven. During the [[1924]] program, she skated over to the side of the rin...
12: ...he [[Henie-Onstad Art Centre]] at H?dden, near [[Oslo]].
14: ...] of [[leukemia]], on a flight from [[Paris]] to Oslo. Considered by most as the greatest female figur... - Suzanne Lenglen (11495 bytes)
3: ... [[1926]], winning 25 [[Grand Slam (tennis)|Grand Slam]] titles. A flamboyant, trendsetting athlete, s...
14: ...h;8, 4–6, 9–7 to take her first Grand Slam victory.
20: ...les championship every year with the exception of 1924. Health problems due to her asthma which had alre...
46: ... located next to the courts of [[Roland Garros]], slowly expanded and was recognised as a federal trai...
54: ...her with 21 titles. A full listing of her [[Grand Slam title]]s: - Locomotive (16705 bytes)
25: ... dynamometer car) reached 126 mph (203 km/h) on a slight downhill gradient down Stoke Bank on [[3 July...
43: ...und in rail yards. The first went into service in 1924. A decade later, the technology first began to be...
45: ...umber 43. The unpowered carriages were simultaneously reclassifed as individual coaches - the number o...
60: Diesel-hydraulic locomotives are slightly more efficient than diesel-electrics, but w...
82: ...hird-rail locomotives are operated by the [[Long Island Rail Road]] and [[Metro-North Railroad]] betwe...
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