- STS-41-B (space shuttle mission)
Vance Brand: …the Challenger space shuttle (STS-41-B; February 3–11, 1984). Although this trip was plagued by several malfunctions and two communications satellites were misdirected, Bruce McCandless’s performance of the first space walk without a lifeline and the successful return of the shuttle to its home base were regarded as major accomplishments.…
- STS-41-C (space shuttle mission)
Robert Crippen: STS-41-C (Challenger, April 6–13, 1984) was the first mission in which a satellite, the malfunctioning Solar Maximum Mission, was repaired in Earth orbit. He then commanded STS-41-G (Challenger, October 5–13, 1984), which was the first spaceflight with a seven-person crew and during which astronaut Kathryn…
- STS-41-G (space shuttle mission)
Robert Crippen: He then commanded STS-41-G (Challenger, October 5–13, 1984), which was the first spaceflight with a seven-person crew and during which astronaut Kathryn Sullivan became the first American woman to walk in space.
- STS-41B (space shuttle mission)
Ronald McNair: …first spaceflight was on the STS-41B mission of the space shuttle Challenger (February 3–11, 1984). During that flight astronaut Bruce McCandless became the first person to perform a space walk without being tethered to a spacecraft. McNair operated the shuttle’s robotic arm to move a platform on which an astronaut…
- STS-42 (space shuttle mission)
Roberta Bondar: STS-42 mission, launching into space on January 22, 1992, and returning to Earth on January 30. During the eight-day mission, she and her six fellow astronauts conducted several life science and materials science experiments on Spacelab, focusing on the adaptability of the human nervous system…
- STS-45 (space shuttle mission)
Charles Bolden: On STS-45 (March 24–April 2, 1992), the space shuttle Atlantis carried the Atmospheric Laboratory for Applications and Science, a laboratory on a pallet housed in the space shuttle’s cargo bay that contained 12 experiments studying Earth’s atmosphere. STS-60 (February 3–11, 1994) was the first U.S. spaceflight…
- STS-47 (space shuttle mission)
Mae Jemison: In September 1992, STS-47 Spacelab J became the first successful joint U.S.-Japan space mission.
- STS-5 (space shuttle mission)
Vance Brand: …the fifth space shuttle flight (STS-5; November 11–16, 1982), on which the shuttle Columbia first launched two satellites into orbit. On his third space mission, Brand was commander of the Challenger space shuttle (STS-41-B; February 3–11, 1984). Although this trip was plagued by several malfunctions and two communications satellites were…
- STS-51G (space shuttle mission)
Sultan ibn Salman Al Saud: …a payload specialist for the STS-51G space shuttle mission. He embarked on an abbreviated training schedule, and on June 17, 1985, Sultan flew on the space shuttle Discovery as part of a seven-member international crew. During the seven-day mission, Sultan represented the Arab Satellite Communications Organization (ARABSAT) and took part…
- STS-51L (space shuttle mission)
Challenger disaster: …primary goal of shuttle mission 51-L was to launch the second Tracking and Data Relay Satellite (TDRS-B). It also carried the Spartan Halley spacecraft, a small satellite that was to be released by Challenger and picked up two days later after observing Halley’s Comet during its closest approach to the…
- STS-54 (space shuttle mission)
Susan Helms: …spaceflights, the first on the STS-54 mission (January 13–19, 1993) of the space shuttle Endeavour, which launched a Tracking and Data Relay Satellite. Her second spaceflight, STS-64 (September 9–20, 1994) on Discovery, carried an experiment that used lasers to measure aerosols in Earth’s
- STS-55 (space shuttle mission)
Jerry Ross: …the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory), STS-55 (1993, payload of the German Spacelab D-2), STS-74 (1995, the second docking of a space shuttle with the Russian space station Mir), STS-88 (1998, the first assembly mission for the International Space Station [ISS]), and
- STS-60 (space shuttle mission)
Charles Bolden: STS-60 (February 3–11, 1994) was the first U.S. spaceflight to have as part of its crew a Russian cosmonaut, mission specialist Sergey Krikalyov.
- STS-61-B (space shuttle mission)
Jerry Ross: …mission specialist on seven flights: STS-61-B (1985, deployment of three communications satellites), STS-27 (1988, deployment of a military reconnaissance satellite), STS-37 (1991, launch of the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory), STS-55 (1993, payload of the German Spacelab D-2), STS-74 (1995, the second docking of a
- STS-61A (space shuttle mission)
Wubbo Ockels: …as a payload specialist on STS-61A, a German D-1 Spacelab mission. With eight crew members, the mission was the largest to fly into space. The mission also was notable for being the first in which some mission operations were controlled from outside the United States, with the German Space Operations…
- STS-61C (space shuttle mission)
Charles Bolden: …as the pilot of the STS-61C mission (launched January 12, 1986) on the space shuttle Columbia. During the six-day flight, the seven-man crew launched a communications satellite. On his second spaceflight, he piloted STS-31 (April 24–29, 1990), on which the space shuttle Discovery deployed the Hubble Space Telescope.
- STS-64 (space shuttle mission)
Susan Helms: Her second spaceflight, STS-64 (September 9–20, 1994) on Discovery, carried an experiment that used lasers to measure aerosols in Earth’s atmosphere. The STS-78 mission of the space shuttle Columbia carried a pressurized Spacelab module in which the crew performed biological and
- STS-74 (space shuttle mission)
Jerry Ross: …of the German Spacelab D-2), STS-74 (1995, the second docking of a space shuttle with the Russian space station Mir), STS-88 (1998, the first assembly mission for the International Space Station [ISS]), and STS-110 (2002, another ISS assembly mission).
- STS-77 (space-shuttle mission)
Marc Garneau: On the 1996 STS-77 mission, Garneau once again was in charge of several Canadian experiments; on the STS-97 mission in 2000, which docked with the International Space Station (ISS), he operated the shuttle’s robotic arm to help deploy the first set of solar arrays for the ISS. In…
- STS-78 (space shuttle mission)
Pedro Duque: …alternate payload specialist for the STS-78 mission and served as a crew interface coordinator on the ground during that mission in June and July 1996. After further training at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, he qualified for assignments in space as a mission specialist. He flew into space for…
- STS-87 (space shuttle mission)
Leonid Kadenyuk: …space shuttle Columbia on the STS-87 mission, where he conducted experiments to observe the effect of weightlessness on plant growth and biomass. Kadenyuk was later appointed adviser to the Ukrainian president on aviation and aeronautics and in 2002 was elected to the Ukrainian parliament, where he served as vice-chairperson of…
- STS-88 (space shuttle mission)
Sergey Konstantinovich Krikalyov: …as a mission specialist aboard STS-88, during which the Endeavour space shuttle visited the International Space Station (ISS). The flight lasted 12 days. His fifth space mission was in 2000–01, when he served as flight engineer on Soyuz TM-31 as part of the first resident crew (Expedition 1) on the…
- STS-9 (space shuttle mission)
Owen Garriott: …was a mission specialist on STS-9, a 10-day flight of the space shuttle Columbia that carried Spacelab, a science laboratory built by the European Space Agency. Between the two space missions, Garriott worked for the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center in Houston, rising to the position of director of science…
- STS-95 (space shuttle mission)
Pedro Duque: the space shuttle Discovery on STS-95. The mission lasted nine days (October 29 to November 7) and was focused on the study of the Sun, as well as research on weightlessness. Duque was responsible for supervising and maintaining the ESA experimental modules and the scientific machinery on board.
- STS-96 (space shuttle mission)
Ellen Ochoa: …a member of the Discovery STS-96 crew that executed the first docking to the International Space Station (ISS). The ISS then consisted of only two modules, the Russian Zarya and the American Unity. Discovery carried supplies to the ISS to get it ready for astronauts to stay there. It also…
- STS-97 (space-shuttle mission)
Marc Garneau: …several Canadian experiments; on the STS-97 mission in 2000, which docked with the International Space Station (ISS), he operated the shuttle’s robotic arm to help deploy the first set of solar arrays for the ISS. In February 2001 he became executive vice president of the Canadian Space Agency (CSA), and…
- STSAT (South Korean satellite series)
Science and Technology Satellite (STSAT), any of a series of South Korean satellites, of which STSAT-2C was the first launched into orbit by South Korea. The first satellite in the series, STSAT-1, was launched by a Kosmos rocket from Plestek, Russia, on September 25, 2003. The second satellite in
- STSAT-1 (South Korean satellite)
Science and Technology Satellite: …first satellite in the series, STSAT-1, was launched by a Kosmos rocket from Plestek, Russia, on September 25, 2003.
- STSAT-2A (South Korean satellite)
Science and Technology Satellite: …second satellite in the series, STSAT-2A, would have been the first satellite launched into orbit by South Korea. STSAT-2A was launched on August 25, 2009, by the Korea Space Launch Vehicle-1 from the Naro Space Center, near Kohŭng (Goheung) in South Chŏlla (South Jeolla) province. One of the two payload…
- STSAT-2C (South Korean satellite)
Science and Technology Satellite: STSAT-2C, which launched successfully on January 30, 2013, was placed in a roughly 300-by-1,500-km (200-by-900-mile) orbit. It also carried a laser ranging apparatus, as well as two experiments designed to measure plasma and radiation near Earth. The satellite was expected to have a lifetime of…
- Stuart Highway (highway, Australia)
Adelaide River: …Adelaide River, located where the Stuart Highway and North Australia Railway cross the stream, is a tourist base for the Rum Jungle and Daly River districts.
- Stuart Little (children’s book by White)
Stuart Little, children’s book by E.B. White, published in 1945. The episodic story of the title character, a two-inch-tall boy who resembles a mouse, is noted for its understated humour, graceful wit, and ironic juxtaposition of fantasy and possibility. Despite his diminutive stature—his family is
- Stuart Little (film by Minkoff [1999])
Hugh Laurie: …films as Cousin Bette (1998), Stuart Little (1999), Flight of the Phoenix (2004), The Oranges (2011), and Tomorrowland (2015). Laurie later assumed the role of Mycroft Holmes, brother to Sherlock, in Holmes & Watson (2018), a comedic take on the classic Arthur Conan Doyle mysteries.
- Stuart Saves His Family (film by Ramis [1995])
Al Franken: …wrote and starred in a 1995 film featuring his Stuart Smalley character, and penned the screenplay for the dramatic film When a Man Loves a Woman (1994).
- Stuart style (visual arts)
Stuart style, visual arts produced during the reign of the British house of Stuart; that is, from 1603 to 1714 (excepting the interregnum of Oliver Cromwell). Although the Stuart period included a number of specific stylistic movements, such as Jacobean, Carolean, Restoration, William and Mary, and
- Stuart v. Laird (law case)
Judiciary Act of 1801: Repeal and the Judiciary Act of 1802: …did reach the court in Stuart v. Laird (1803), the court, in an opinion by Justice William Paterson, affirmed the constitutionality of the repeal. Thus, what had seemed so grave a question at the time passed quickly into obscurity.
- Stuart, Arabella (English noble)
Arabella Stuart was an English noblewoman whose status as a claimant to the throne of her first cousin King James I (James VI of Scotland) led to her tragic death. The daughter of James’s uncle Charles Stewart, Earl of Lennox, and great-granddaughter of King Henry VIII’s sister Margaret Tudor,
- Stuart, Charles Edward Louis Philip Casimir (British prince)
Charles Edward, the Young Pretender , also known as the Young Pretender, was the last serious Stuart claimant to the British throne and leader of the unsuccessful Jacobite rebellion of 1745–46. Charles’s grandfather was the exiled Roman Catholic king James II (ruled 1685–88), and his father, James
- Stuart, Charles, duke of Richmond and Lennox (English noble)
Frances Teresa Stuart, duchess of Richmond and Lennox: …by Charles Stuart, duke of Richmond and Lennox.
- Stuart, Don A. (American author and editor)
John W. Campbell was an American science-fiction writer, considered the father of modern science fiction. Campbell, who spent his childhood reading widely and experimenting with science, began writing science fiction while in college. His first published story, “When the Atoms Failed” (1930),
- Stuart, Frances Teresa, Duchess of Richmond and Lennox (English mistress)
Frances Teresa Stuart, duchess of Richmond and Lennox was a favourite mistress of Charles II of Great Britain. She also held the title of Duchess of Richmond and Lennox. The daughter of Walter Stuart (or Stewart), a physician in the household of Queen Henrietta Maria when in exile after the death
- Stuart, Gilbert (American painter)
Gilbert Stuart was an American painter who was one of the great portrait painters of his era and the creator of a distinctively American portrait style. Stuart grew up in Newport, Rhode Island, where he learned the rudiments of painting. In 1775 he went to London and entered the studio of the
- Stuart, Gilbert Charles (American painter)
Gilbert Stuart was an American painter who was one of the great portrait painters of his era and the creator of a distinctively American portrait style. Stuart grew up in Newport, Rhode Island, where he learned the rudiments of painting. In 1775 he went to London and entered the studio of the
- Stuart, Henry (British pretender)
Henry Stuart, cardinal duke of York was the last legitimate descendant of the deposed (1688) Stuart monarch James II of Great Britain. To the Jacobites—supporters of Stuart claims to the British throne—he was known as King Henry IX of Great Britain for the last 19 years of his life. Shortly after
- Stuart, Henry (British lord)
Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley was the cousin and second husband of Mary, Queen of Scots, father of King James I of Great Britain and Ireland (James VI of Scotland), and direct ancestor of all subsequent British sovereigns. Darnley was the son of Matthew Stewart, 4th earl of Lennox, whose pretension
- Stuart, Henry (English noble)
Henry Stuart, Duke of Gloucester was the Protestant brother of Charles II of England. The third son of Charles I, he visited his father the night before his execution and for three years thereafter was confined by the Commonwealth regime. In 1652 Oliver Cromwell gave him permission to go abroad,
- Stuart, house of (Scottish and English royal family)
house of Stuart, royal house of Scotland from 1371 and of England from 1603. It was interrupted in 1649 by the establishment of the Commonwealth but was restored in 1660. It ended in 1714, when the British crown passed to the house of Hanover. The first spelling of the family name was undoubtedly
- Stuart, James (British architect)
Western architecture: Great Britain: …Park, Worcestershire, by James (“Athenian”) Stuart and the return to England of the 30-year-old Robert Adam.
- Stuart, James Ewell Brown (Confederate officer)
Jeb Stuart was a Confederate cavalry officer whose reports of enemy troop movements were of particular value to the Southern command during the American Civil War (1861–65). An 1854 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy, West Point, N.Y., Stuart resigned his commission to share in the defense of
- Stuart, James Francis Edward (claimant to English and Scottish thrones)
James Edward, the Old Pretender , also known as the Old Pretender, was the son of the deposed Roman Catholic monarch James II of England and claimant to the English and Scottish thrones. Styled James III of England and James VIII of Scotland by his supporters, he made several halfhearted efforts to
- Stuart, Jeb (Confederate officer)
Jeb Stuart was a Confederate cavalry officer whose reports of enemy troop movements were of particular value to the Southern command during the American Civil War (1861–65). An 1854 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy, West Point, N.Y., Stuart resigned his commission to share in the defense of
- Stuart, John (prime minister of United Kingdom)
John Stuart, 3rd earl of Bute was a Scottish royal favourite who dominated King George III of Great Britain during the first five years of his reign. As prime minister (1762–63), he negotiated the peace ending the Seven Years’ War (1756–63) with France, but he failed to create a stable
- Stuart, John McDouall (Australian explorer)
Finke River: Visited (1860) by John McDouall Stuart, it was named by him after his patron, William Finke.
- Stuart, La Belle (English mistress)
Frances Teresa Stuart, duchess of Richmond and Lennox was a favourite mistress of Charles II of Great Britain. She also held the title of Duchess of Richmond and Lennox. The daughter of Walter Stuart (or Stewart), a physician in the household of Queen Henrietta Maria when in exile after the death
- Stuart, Maria Henriette (regent of The Netherlands)
Mary Of Orange was the eldest daughter of the English king Charles I and wife of the Dutch stadholder William II of Orange. The marriage to Prince William took place in London and in 1642 she crossed over to Holland. In 1647 her husband succeeded his father as stadholder, but three years later,
- Stuart, Maria Henriette (regent of The Netherlands)
Mary Of Orange was the eldest daughter of the English king Charles I and wife of the Dutch stadholder William II of Orange. The marriage to Prince William took place in London and in 1642 she crossed over to Holland. In 1647 her husband succeeded his father as stadholder, but three years later,
- Stuart, Mary (queen of Scotland)
Mary was the queen of Scotland (1542–67) and queen consort of France (1559–60). Her unwise marital and political actions provoked rebellion among the Scottish nobles, forcing her to flee to England, where she was eventually beheaded as a Roman Catholic threat to the English throne. Mary Stuart was
- Stuart, Mary Henrietta (regent of The Netherlands)
Mary Of Orange was the eldest daughter of the English king Charles I and wife of the Dutch stadholder William II of Orange. The marriage to Prince William took place in London and in 1642 she crossed over to Holland. In 1647 her husband succeeded his father as stadholder, but three years later,
- stub-tailed spadebill (bird)
spadebill: …white-throated, or stub-tailed, spadebill (Platyrinchus mystaceus), scarcely 10 centimetres (4 inches) long, is the most widespread species; it inhabits forest undergrowth from southern Mexico to Argentina in southern South America.
- Stubbenkammer (promontory, Germany)
Rügen: …feet (120 metres) at the Stubbenkammer promontory. The highest point is the Piekberg (528 feet [161 metres]) in Jasmund.
- stubble mulch tillage (agriculture)
agricultural technology: Mulch tillage: Mulch tillage has been mentioned already; in this system, crop residues are left on the surface, and subsurface tillage leaves them relatively undisturbed. In dryland areas, a maximum amount of mulch is left on the surface; in more humid regions, however, some of…
- Stubblefield, Clyde (American musician)
Clyde Stubblefield was an American drummer who was renowned for a 20-second hard-driving embellished drum solo in the 1970 James Brown single “Funky Drummer” that has been called the most sampled drum break in music. The hundreds of songs that made use of that break include “Bring the Noise” (1987)
- Stubbs, George (British painter)
George Stubbs was an outstanding English animal painter and anatomical draftsman. The son of a prosperous tanner, Stubbs was briefly apprenticed to a painter but was basically self-taught. His interest in anatomy, revealed at an early age, became one of the driving passions of his life. His
- Stubbs, Philip (English pamphleteer)
Philip Stubbs was a vigorous Puritan pamphleteer and propagandist for a purer life and straiter devotion whose Anatomie of Abuses (1583), his most popular work, consisted of a devastating attack on English habits in dress, food, drink, games, and especially sex. At first, Stubbs was inclined to
- Stubbs, William (British historian)
William Stubbs was an influential English historian who founded the systematic study of English medieval constitutional history. Stubbs was regius professor of history at the University of Oxford (1866–84), bishop of Chester (1884–88), and bishop of Oxford (1888–1901). His reputation in his day
- Stuber (film by Dowse [2019])
history of film: Australia, New Zealand, and Canada: …Tong (2004), What If (2013), Stuber (2019), and Coffee & Kareem (2020). Filmmaking in Quebec, which had gone through a strong period in the 1970s and ’80s, made a lesser impression in the 1990s. Denys Arcand, a key figure of the earlier period with such works as Le Déclin de…
- stuccowork (architecture)
stuccowork, in architecture, fine exterior or interior plasterwork used as three-dimensional ornamentation, as a smooth paintable surface, or as a wet ground for fresco painting. In modern parlance, the term is most often applied exclusively, especially in the United States, to the rougher plaster
- Stuck in the Middle (American television series)
Jenna Ortega: …Diaz in the Disney sitcom Stuck in the Middle. She starred as the middle child of seven siblings, who invents gadgets to deal with living in a large family. At the same time, Ortega voiced Princess Isabel in the Disney animated series Elena of Avalor (2016–20).
- Stuck, Franz von (German artist)
Wassily Kandinsky: Munich period: …Academy in the class of Franz von Stuck. Kandinsky emerged from the academy with a diploma in 1900 and, during the next few years, achieved moderate success as a competent professional artist in touch with modern trends. Starting from a base in 19th-century realism, he was influenced by Impressionism, by…
- Stuck, Hudson (American mountaineer)
Denali: ” On June 7, 1913, Hudson Stuck and Harry Karstens led a party to the South Peak, the true summit. A climbing party was first airlifted onto the mountain’s flanks in 1932; beginning in the 1950s, that became the standard way to attempt a summit climb, as it reduced the…
- Stückelberg de Breidenbach, Ernest C.G. (Swiss physicist)
relativistic mechanics: Relativistic space-time: …out by the Swiss physicist Ernest C.G. Stückelberg de Breidenbach and by the American physicist Richard Feynman that a meaning can be attached to world lines moving backward in time—i.e., for those for which ordinary time t decreases as proper time τ increases. Since, as shall be shown later, the…
- Stückofen (metallurgy)
iron processing: History: …into the 3-metre- (10-foot-) high Stückofen, which produced blooms so large they had to be removed through a front opening in the furnace.
- stud (construction)
carpentry: …framing the vertical members (studs) extend the full height of the building from foundation plate to rafter plate. The timber used in the framing is put to various uses. The studs usually measure 1.5 × 3.5 inches (4 × 9 cm; known as a “2 × 4”) and are…
- Stud Book Française (French studbook)
horse racing: Bloodlines and studbooks: In France the Stud Book Française (beginning in 1838) originally included two classifications: Orientale (Arab, Turk, and Barb) and Anglais (mixtures according to the English pattern), but these were later reduced to one class, chevaux de pur sang Anglais (“horses of pure English blood”). The American Stud Book…
- Stud Poker (card game)
poker: Stud poker: Each player receives one card facedown—his hole card—and one card faceup. The deal is then interrupted for a betting interval. There follow three rounds of dealing, each deal distributing one card faceup to each active player, with a betting interval after…
- Stud, The (novel by Collins)
Jackie Collins: Collins’s next effort, The Stud (1969; film 1978), chronicles the exploits of a licentious London nightclub manager and his nominally married female employer. She picked up their torrid saga in The Bitch (1979; film 1979). The film versions of The Stud and The Bitch were vehicles for her…
- stud-link chain
chain: …the coil chain is the stud-link chain, each of whose links has a bar or stud across its inside width. These studs add weight, keep the chain from fouling or kinking, and help prevent deformation; stud-link chains are preferred for use as anchor and cable chains on ships. (See Figure…
- studbook
studbook, official record of the pedigree of purebred animals, particularly horses and dogs, usually published by a national breed association or similar regulating organization. Most studbooks are patterned after the British General Stud Book for Thoroughbred horses, first published in 1791 by
- studded tire
tire: Snow tires: …regular tires; tire chains or studded tires are best for ice surfaces. Studded tires usually have about 100 studs tipped with tungsten carbide which contact the road as the tire rotates. Because of the damage they are said to cause road surfaces, they are prohibited in certain localities.
- Studebaker family (American vehicle manufacturers)
Studebaker family, U.S. automobile manufacturers whose firm became the world’s largest producer of horse-drawn vehicles and a leader in automobile manufacturing. In 1852 Clement Studebaker (1831–1901) started a blacksmith and wagon shop in South Bend, Ind., with his brother Henry (1826–1895). Later
- Studebaker, Clement (American manufacturer)
Clement Studebaker was an American manufacturer who founded a family firm that became the world’s largest producer of horse-drawn vehicles and a leader in automobile manufacturing. Studebaker started a blacksmith and wagon shop in South Bend in 1852 with his brother Henry. When John Mohler
- Studebaker–Packard Corporation (American firm)
automotive industry: The industry in the United States: A merger of Studebaker and Packard in 1954 was less successful. The new company stopped production in the United States in 1964 and in Canada two years later.
- Studenica (monastery, Serbia)
Kraljevo: The famous monastery of Studenica, designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1986, is about 15 miles (24 km) southwest of Kraljevo, under the shadow of Golija Mountain, amid beautiful scenery; one of the oldest and best-known Serbian medieval monasteries, it comprises three churches dating from the 12th to…
- student aid
student aid, form of assistance designed to help students pay for their education. In general, such awards are known as scholarships, fellowships, or loans; in European usage, a small scholarship is an exhibition, and a bursary is a sum granted to a needy student. Many awards are in the nature of
- student group (sociology)
anarchism: Contemporary anarchism: …new radicalism took root among students and the left in general in the United States, Europe, and Japan, embracing a general criticism of “elitist” power structures and the materialist values of modern industrial societies—both capitalist and communist. For these radicals, who rejected the traditional parties of the left as strongly…
- student loan (economics)
millennial: The most-educated generation: …requires students to take out loans, thus compounding the difficult economic situation many graduates faced during the recession. According to the Pew Research Center, millennials have a greater share of outstanding student debt and owe more than previous generations. The number of young adult households with student debt doubled between…
- Student loan limits: How much can I borrow, and what happens after that?
You can borrow to pay for your education, but there are limits.When it comes to paying for college, there’s a good chance you’ll need to use multiple strategies to cover the cost—and that may include taking loans to help you cover any shortfall. If you end up needing to borrow money to pay for a
- Student National Coordinating Committee (American organization)
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), American political organization that played a central role in the civil rights movement in the 1960s. Begun as an interracial group advocating nonviolence, it adopted greater militancy late in the decade, reflecting nationwide trends in Black
- Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (American organization)
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), American political organization that played a central role in the civil rights movement in the 1960s. Begun as an interracial group advocating nonviolence, it adopted greater militancy late in the decade, reflecting nationwide trends in Black
- Student Nurses, The (film by Rothman)
Roger Corman: New World Pictures: Its first film, The Student Nurses (1970), was shot in three weeks for $150,000 and grossed more than $1 million. Other New World releases included horror, blaxploitation, and women-in-prison films. The profits from these low-budget features allowed Corman to act as the American distributor for a number of…
- Student of Prague, The (film by Galeen)
history of film: Germany: …Der Student von Prag (The Student of Prague, 1926), which combines the Faust legend with a doppelgänger, or double, motif. In addition to winning international prestige for German films, Expressionism produced two directors who would become major figures in world cinema, Fritz Lang and F.W. Murnau.
- Student Prince, The (operetta by Romberg)
Sigmund Romberg: They include the operetta The Student Prince (1924; based on the German play Alt Heidelberg by Wilhelm Meyer-Förster), with the songs “Deep in My Heart” and “Drinking Song”; The Desert Song (1926), remembered for the title song and “One Alone”; and The New Moon (1928), with “Lover, Come Back…
- Student Volunteer Movement (Protestant group)
Christian fundamentalism: Origins: …was eventually institutionalized as the Student Volunteer Movement.
- Student von Prag, Der (film by Galeen)
history of film: Germany: …Der Student von Prag (The Student of Prague, 1926), which combines the Faust legend with a doppelgänger, or double, motif. In addition to winning international prestige for German films, Expressionism produced two directors who would become major figures in world cinema, Fritz Lang and F.W. Murnau.
- Student with a Pipe (work by Picasso)
Pablo Picasso: Collage: …much of his work (Student with a Pipe [1913]) and lead to the suggestion that one thing becomes transformed into another. Absinthe Glass (1914; six versions), for example, is in part sculpture (cast bronze), in part collage (a real silver sugar strainer is welded onto the top), and in…
- Student’s t distribution (statistics)
Student’s t-test: ) The t distribution is a family of curves in which the number of degrees of freedom (the number of independent observations in the sample minus one) specifies a particular curve. As the sample size (and thus the degrees of freedom) increases, the t distribution approaches the bell…
- Student’s t-statistic (statistics)
Student’s t-test: The test statistic t is then calculated. If the observed t-statistic is more extreme than the critical value determined by the appropriate reference distribution, the null hypothesis is rejected. The appropriate reference distribution for the t-statistic is the t distribution. The critical value depends on the significance…
- Student’s t-test (statistics)
Student’s t-test, in statistics, a method of testing hypotheses about the mean of a small sample drawn from a normally distributed population when the population standard deviation is unknown. In 1908 William Sealy Gosset, an Englishman publishing under the pseudonym Student, developed the t-test
- Students for a Democratic Society (American organization)
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), American student organization that flourished in the mid-to-late 1960s and was known for its activism against the Vietnam War. SDS, founded in 1959, had its origins in the student branch of the League for Industrial Democracy, a social democratic educational
- Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College (law case)
Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College, legal case in which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled (6–3) on June 29, 2023, that the admissions policies of Harvard University and the University of North Carolina (UNC), which incorporated the limited consideration of the