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- Chicago Cubs (25972 bytes)
2: ...' are a [[Major League Baseball]] team based in [[Chicago]]. They are in the Central Division of the [[Nat...
5: ... club with young, inexperienced players. The ''[[Chicago Tribune]]'' tried to call the team the ''Spuds'' ...
6: ...k:''' [[Wrigley Field]], 1060 W. Addison Street, Chicago, IL 60613-4397.
18: ...s on the name and colors, and it happens that the Chicagos adopted white as their primary color. After a su...
20: ...ark, uniforms and other possessions. The club completed its schedule with borrowed uniforms, finishin... - Chicago White Sox (19057 bytes)
3: ...' are a [[Major League Baseball]] team based in [[Chicago, Illinois]]. They are in the Central Division of...
5: ... Moved to [[St. Paul, Minnesota]], then again to Chicago in 1900 when that league became the [[American Le...
7: :''Home ballpark:'' [[U.S. Cellular Field]], Chicago. (This park, originally known as New Comiskey Pa...
14: :''See also:'' [[List of Chicago White Sox people]]
17: ...e status, the St. Paul franchise was relocated to Chicago, to compete directly with the [[National League]]...
Page text matches
- History of China (45919 bytes)
2: ...eate the familiar image of Chinese culture and people today.
7: ...itation; however, any connection between these people and modern Chinese is speculative. The ''[[Homo ...
14: ...metimes said to be the ancestor of all Chinese people. Following this period Sima Qian relates that a ...
24: ...in early China is known to have been much more complicated. Hence, as some scholars of China suggest, ...
38: ... from Persian or Sanskrit origins for "Chinese People" which ultimately was derived from 秦 qín and ... - Timeline of the united states history 1990 to present (16426 bytes)
4: ...Deepwater Horizon oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico explodes, spilling millions of gallons of oil into the...
8: ... the South, Alabama being the hardest hit. 324 people are killed in the deadliest American natural dis...
11:
23: ...istory burns nearly 16,000 acres and kills two people.
40: ...rain after the country tested missiles in various places. - List of people by name: Ai (1915 bytes)
1: {{List of people A}}
9: ...-1824), translator, political writer, librettist, playwright, member of the Acad魩e fran硩se
19: ...1959), [[basketball]] player, coach, [[baseball]] player
28: *[[Joseph Aiuppa|Aiuppa, Joseph]], (1907-1997), Chicago [[mafia]] boss - Emma Goldman (12210 bytes)
3: ...n iconic "rebel woman" feminist. However, Goldman played a pivotal role in the development of anarchis...
6: ...n a factory as a corset maker. It was in that workplace that Goldman was introduced to revolutionary i...
18: ...read."'' (The statement is a summary of the principle of [[Eminent domain|expropriation]] advocated by...
21: ...r several weeks, they were released due to the complete lack of evidence to connect her and the others...
32: ...upport the [[Bolshevism|Bolshevik]]s despite the split between anarchists and statist communists at th... - Emma Abbott (633 bytes)
2: ...ared first in opera in [[London]] under Colonel Mapleson's direction at [[Covent Garden]], also singin... - Mary Cassatt (9047 bytes)
1: ...]]. ([[1893]]). Oil on canvas. [[Art Institute of Chicago]]. ]]
8: ... paid only for her basic needs but not her art supplies. She returned to Europe in [[1871]] when the a...
21: ...ed, and she moved away from impressionism to a simpler, straightforward approach. By [[1886]], she no ...
77: ...y Children Playing with a Cat 1908.jpg|''Children Playing with a Cat'' (1908) - Georgia O'Keeffe (2572 bytes)
6: ...Keeffe studied painting at the [[Art Institute of Chicago]] and the [[Art Students League of New York|Art S...
8: ... the drawings, Stieglitz began negotiations to display her work and she allowed him to exhibit some of...
10: ...r O'Keeffe to move to New York City and secured a place for her to live. Over the next few years O'Kee... - Mary Pickford (7523 bytes)
5: ...r King'', as Baby Gladys Smith. She subsequently played in many melodramas and became a popular child...
7: ...ecil B. DeMille]], who was also in the cast. The play was produced by [[David Belasco]], who insisted...
9: ...r who made a million dollar deal was [[Charlie Chaplin]]), and one of the few stars who were successfu...
11: ... became a secret message of their love; as the couple was driving and Fairbanks was discussing the rec...
13: ...r]]. However, Pickford's second marriage was also plagued with marital problems. Her stressful busines... - Ayn Rand (18001 bytes)
7: place_of_birth=[[Saint Petersburg]], [[Russia]] |
9: place_of_death=[[New York City]], [[New York]]
19: ...y-one. After a brief stay with her relatives in [[Chicago]], she resolved never to return to the [[Soviet U...
22: ...]] to [[Universal Studios]]. Rand then wrote the play, ''[[The Night of January 16th]]'' in [[1934]] ...
28: ...tlas Shrugged]]'' is often seen as Rand's most complete statement of Objectivist philosophy in any of ... - Bessie Coleman (4340 bytes)
1: ...irst [[African American]] woman to become an [[airplane]] pilot. She was also the first black license...
6: ...er home town, so she moved to [[Chicago, Illinois|Chicago]] where she joined two of her brothers when she w...
8: ...ceived financial backing from Binga, and from the Chicago Defender, who capitalized on her flamboyant perso...
10: ...ench flight school, and she learned while using a plane that had failed many times. Once, she saw a fe...
14: ...lifornia, she broke a leg and three ribs when her plane stalled and crashed on February 22, 1922. As ... - Mae Jemison (5527 bytes)
7: ...d her medical practice, working with CIGNA Health Plans of California.
9: ...[[1956]], in [[Decatur, Alabama]] and raised in [[Chicago, Illinois]].
11: ...hailand]] at a [[Cambodia]]n refugee camp. She completed her internship at [[Los Angeles County-USC Me...
13: ...in [[Houston, Texas]], to research, develop and implement advanced technologies suited to the social, ...
15: ... implementing advanced technologies that may be employed advantageously to the development of less ind... - Rosalind Franklin (9829 bytes)
8: ...ere not accepted as members of the University, simply as 'students of Girton and Newnham Colleges', t...
12: ...o similar research). Unfortunately, Randall had implied that Franklin alone would be working on DNA, a...
18: ... should have been working together. It has been implied by Wilkins himself that this situation may wel...
29: ...es/The Chicago Medical School, located in [[North Chicago, IL]], changed its name to Rosalind Franklin Univ... - Maria Goeppert-Mayer (4176 bytes)
3: ...rd Mayer]], the assistant of James Franck. The couple moved to the [[United States]], Mayer's home cou...
5: ...projects. In [[1946]] she became a professor in [[Chicago]] at Sarah Lawrence College. Here she developed a...
7: ...o couple together in what is called spin orbit coupling. This is like the Earth spinning on its axis a...
17: ... universities honour her too. The [[University of Chicago]] also presents an award each year to a young "ou...
19: She was an accomplished scientist. - Mahalia Jackson (2345 bytes)
1: ... singing in a [[Baptist]] church. She moved to [[Chicago]] in [[1927]] where she sang with [[The Johnson B... - Patti Smith (6059 bytes)
1: ...es (album)|Horses]]'', was a photo by [[Robert Mapplethorpe]].]]
2: ...ian]], [[singer]] and [[poet]]. She was born in [[Chicago]], [[Illinois]] and raised in [[New Jersey]], the...
4: ...ainting, writing and performing both poetry and a play, ''Cowboy Mouth'' (a collaboration with [[Sam S...
6: ... from Smith's friend and former lover [[Robert Mapplethorpe]] the band recorded a first single in [[19...
8: ...atest debuts. The cover photograph by [[Robert Mapplethorpe]], then her roommate, also became one of r... - Joan of Arc (27453 bytes)
2: ...[[United Kingdom]] and [[United States]]. Many people therefore regard Joan of Arc as a notable woman ...
7: ...-Burgundian in loyalty. France at that time was split by a factional rivalry which would allow the En...
12: ...ns where preparations were being made to bring supplies to the city of [[Orl顮s]], which had been und...
24: ...Duke of Burgundy. Negotiations with Burgundian diplomats began at Reims shortly after the coronation,...
40: ..."...in a loud voice the holy name of Jesus, and implored and invoked without ceasing the aid of the sa... - Marilyn Monroe (30186 bytes)
8: ...ven. The Bolenders were a religious couple who supplemented their meager income by being foster parent...
15: ...3.jpg|frame|right|Cover of the first issue of ''[[Playboy]]'']]
22: By 1952 Zanuck was nearly convinced and she played her first role as a leading lady in ''Don't B...
23: ...l, [[movie]] critics seemed to forget about the [[plot]] and focused on Marilyn and her unique connect...
25: ...ppeared in the first edition of his new magazine, Playboy in December 1953. It was a smash hit. And wh... - Lillian Russell (2418 bytes)
5: ...fe except that she had some musical training in [[Chicago]]. At the age of 18, she and her mother left for ... - Dorothy Hamill (1348 bytes)
1: ... skater]] who was born [[July 26]], [[1956]] at [[Chicago, Illinois]], here parents moved to [[Riverside]],... - 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...
15: ... The Year'' alongside [[Ronaldo]], who won ''Male Player of The Year'' honors.
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