Search results
|
Showing below up to 20 results starting with #61.
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).
No article title matches
Page text matches
- World Series (40101 bytes)
1: ...e winner was determined through a [[best-of-nine playoff]]) and is awarded the [[World Series Trophy]]...
3: ... World Series]], completed on [[September 11]], [[1918]].
5: The first two games of the series are played in one team's home ballpark, the next three in...
7: ...shares; today only the teams finishing in second place in their division but not earning a [[wild card...
9: ...]n champions against champions in the Japanese or Latin American leagues have, so far, not succeeded. - Chicago Cubs (25972 bytes)
5: ...d and rebuilt the club with young, inexperienced players. The ''[[Chicago Tribune]]'' tried to call t...
8: ...ircle. Sometimes a smaller "ubs" will follow the large "C", or the team will make use of a cartoon be...
11: ...1886]], [[1906]], [[1907]], [[1908]], [[1910]], [[1918]], [[1929]], [[1932]], [[1935]], [[1938]], [[1945...
18: ...rofessional teams in [[1870]], each with the singular goal of defeating the Red Stockings. A number o...
22: ...gs]], and first baseman [[Cap Anson]] of the [[Philadelphia Athletics]]. While this was going on, beh... - Chicago White Sox (19057 bytes)
7: :''Home ballpark:'' [[U.S. Cellular Field]], Chicago. (This park, originally known ...
8: :''Uniform colors:'' black, white and gray
17: ...League in [[1900 in sports|1900]], a year before claiming major league status, the St. Paul franchise ...
19: ...National League, including pitcher and manager [[Clark Griffith]], who paced the White Sox to the AL's...
22: ... upset over the Cubs who had won a record 116 regular-season games. The Sox, dubbed the "Hitless Wond... - Cincinnati Reds (19835 bytes)
8: :'''Uniform colors:''' Red and white, trim Black
21: ...as expelled from the league later, in part for violating league rules by serving beer to fans at games...
23: ...ew team simply signed many of the AA team's star players. The Red Stockings wandered through the remai...
27: ===From opening of Redland Field to the Great Depression===
29: ...s began to come out of the second division. The [[1918]] team finished 4th, and then new manager [[Pat M... - St. Louis Cardinals (18903 bytes)
9: ...1966]]-[[2005]]), Busch Stadum (III) with [[BP Village]] -(Also to be known as "Busch Stadium") from [...
17: ...[[1967]], [[1982]]. The Cardinals (with the [[Oakland Athletics]]) are second only to the [[New York ...
18: ...ason series against the Cardinals, Houston was declared the division champion and St. Louis received a...
24: ...2]] where they enjoyed a four-year dynasty under flamboyant owner [[Chris von der Ahe]]. Initially the...
30: The Cardinals languished for some 40 years after their mid-1880s t... - List of chemists (10401 bytes)
16: *[[Claude Louis Berthollet]], (1748-1822), French chemis...
18: *[[Joseph Black]], (1728-1799), chemist
20: *[[Johannes Nicolaus Br?d]], (1879-1947), Danish chemist
29: *[[Wallace Carothers]] (1896-1937), American chemist
43: *[[Davorin Dolar]], (born 1921), chemist - Alexander Graham Bell (18688 bytes)
7: place_of_birth=[[Edinburgh]], [[Scotland]] |
10: place_of_death=[[Baddeck, Nova Scotia|Baddeck]], [[No...
15: ...xander Bell''' in [[Edinburgh]], [[Scotland]], he later adopted the middle name Graham out of admirati...
17: ...f mutes, by means of their eyesight, how to articulate words, and also how to read what other persons ...
19: ... College at [[Bath, England]]. While still in Scotland he is said to have turned his attention to the ... - Henry Ford (16324 bytes)
2: ... with contributing to the creation of a [[middle class]] in [[United States|American]] society. He was...
6: ... Mary Ford, immigrants from [[County Cork]], [[Ireland]]. He was the eldest of six children. As a chi...
8: ...rvice their steam engines. Upon his marriage to Clara Bryant in [[1888]] Ford supported himself by fa...
12: ...y was reorganized as [[Cadillac (automobile)|Cadillac]].
15: ...Lake St. Clair in 39.4 seconds, which was a new [[land speed record]]. Convinced by this success, the ... - Airline (29546 bytes)
1: ...Picture provided by [http://classroomclipart.com Classroom Clip Art]]]
7: ...rnational airlines operating many hundreds of airplanes in various types. Airline services can be cate...
9: .... Nevertheless, some patterns have emerged in the last 50 years of experience:
11: ..., for-profit public companies. This occurs as regulators permit greater freedom, in steps that are usu...
15: ...t in all regions, but certainly areas where deregulation provided more competition and greater pricing... - List of sculptors (9151 bytes)
23: *[[Ernst Barlach]]
33: *[[Treffle Berthlaume]] (1803 - 1884)
35: *[[John Blakeley]] (1946 - )
45: *[[Michelangelo Buonarroti]] (1475 - 1564)
61: *[[Rene Paul Chambellan]] (1893 - 1955) - Czech Republic (13856 bytes)
1: ...9; border: 1px #aaaaaa solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 95%;"
6: ...fef align="center" width="120px" | [[image:Czech_flag.png|100px]]
9: | align="center" width="120px" | ([[Flag of the Czech Republic|In Detail]])
13: ...>''National [[motto]]: Truth prevails<br>([[Czech language|Czech]]: Pravda v�amp;#283;z�'</small>
17: | '''[[Official language]]''' - Dwight D. Eisenhower (37513 bytes)
10: | place of birth=[[Denison, Texas]]
13: | place of death=[[Washington, D.C.]]
30: ...1922]] at [[Camp Meade]], [[Maryland]] and other places. He was promoted to Captain in [[1917]] and Ma...
34: ...en served as chief military aide to General [[Douglas MacArthur]], Army Chief of Staff, until [[1935]]...
38: ...]], and then succeeded Gerow as Chief of the War Plans Division. Then he was appointed Assistant Chief... - Harry S. Truman (30022 bytes)
12: | place of birth=[[Lamar, Missouri|Lamar]], [[Missouri]]
15: | place of death=[[Kansas City, Missouri|Kansas City]],...
35: ...d>'''Place of Birth:'''</td><td>[[Lamar, Missouri|Lamar]], [[Missouri]]</td></tr>
37: <tr><td>'''Place of Death:'''</td><td>[[Kansas City, Missouri|Ka...
38: ...tr><td>'''[[First Lady of the United States|First Lady]]:'''</td><td>[[Bess Truman]]</td></tr> - Herbert Hoover (27123 bytes)
10: | place of birth=[[West Branch, Iowa]]
13: | place of death=[[New York City]], [[New York]]
19: '''Herbert Clark Hoover''' ([[August 10]], [[1874]] – [[Oc...
26: ...reported. As an office boy in his uncle's Oregon Land Company he mastered bookkeeping and typing, whi...
30: ...lected student body treasurer on the "Barbarian" slate, then wiped out a student-government debt of $2... - Franklin D. Roosevelt (74009 bytes)
1: {{Infobox President | name=Franklin Delano Roosevelt
10: | place of birth=[[Hyde Park, New York|Hyde Park]], [[N...
13: | place of death=[[Warm Springs, Georgia]]
16: ...vicepresident=[[John N. Garner]]<br>[[Henry A. Wallace]]<br>[[Harry S. Truman]]
18: ...nd privilege, he overcame a crippling illness to place himself at the head of the forces of reform. Hi... - Calvin Coolidge (18374 bytes)
11: <tr><td>'''Place of Birth:'''</td><td>[[Plymouth, Vermont|Plymou...
13: <tr><td>'''Place of Death:'''</td><td>[[Northampton, Massachuset...
14: ...tr><td>'''[[First Lady of the United States|First Lady]]:'''</td><td>[[Grace Coolidge]]</td></tr>
25: ...chusetts]], graduating in [[1895]]. He practiced law in [[Northampton, Massachusetts]], and was a mem...
27: ...tp://ap.grolier.com/article?assetid=0071560-0&templatename=/article/article.html] - Adolf Hitler (51456 bytes)
6: place_of_birth = [[Braunau am Inn]], [[Austria-Hungar...
9: place_of_death = [[Berlin]], [[Germany]]
20: ...n more strictly than was usual for that time and place.
22: ...n a Hitler, however, and was ironically closely related to Hiedler through his mother's family, too.
25: ...ved frequently, from [[Braunau]] to [[Passau]], [[Lambach]], [[Leonding]] and next to [[Linz]]. Young ... - Benjamin Franklin (22881 bytes)
1: ...n Image provided by [http://classroomclipart.com Classroom Clip Art]]]
2: ..., [[journalist]], [[publisher]], [[author]], [[philanthropist]], [[Abolitionism|abolitionist]], [[publ...
4: ...tning rod]], [[swimfin]]s, improvements to the [[glass harmonica]], and possibly [[bifocals]].
9: ...ber 23]], [[1657]] the son of Thomas Franklin, a blacksmith and farmer, and Jane White. His mother, Ab...
13: ... the second half of 1683, the Franklins left [[England]] for [[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston]], [[Massa... - Roald Amundsen (8034 bytes)
3: ...[1928]]) was a [[Norway|Norwegian]] explorer of polar regions. He led the Antarctic expedition of [[19...
6: ...pired by [[Fridtjof Nansen]]'s crossing of [[Greenland]] in [[1888]] he decided on a life of explorati...
10: ...h;[[1899]]) as second mate. Led by [[Adrien de Gerlache]], their ship the [[Belgica]] became the first...
12: ...two winters exploring over land and ice from the place today called [[Gjoa Haven, Nunavut|Gjoa Haven]]...
14: ...906]]. Due to water as shallow as 3 feet (1 m), a larger ship could never have used the route. - March 17 (9666 bytes)
6: ...defeats the [[Pompey|Pompeian]] forces of [[Titus Labienus]] and [[Gnaeus Pompeius|Pompey the Younger]...
8: ...is Jolliet]] begin their exploration of the Great Lakes and the Mississippi river.
10: ...ton, Massachusetts]] after [[George Washington]] places [[artillery]] overlooking the city.
13: *[[1861]] - The Kingdom of [[Italy]] is proclaimed.
18: *[[1921]] - The [[Second Republic of Poland]] adopts the [[March Constitution]].
View (previous 20) (next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500).