- Scrap Book (American magazine)
history of publishing: Reader’s Digest magazine: …world affairs; and Frank Munsey’s Scrap Book (1906–12), “a granary for the gleanings of literature.” The Literary Digest, in particular, with a circulation of more than 1,000,000 in the early 1920s, was something of an American institution. Its famous straw votes successfully predicted the result of the presidential elections after…
- scrap metal
scrap metal, used metals that are an important source of industrial metals and alloys, particularly in the production of steel, copper, lead, aluminum, and zinc. Smaller amounts of tin, nickel, magnesium, and precious metals are also recovered from scrap. Impurities consisting of such organic
- Scrap of Paper, A (play by Sardou)
Victorien Sardou: …Les Pattes de mouche (1860; A Scrap of Paper) is a model of the well-made play. He relied heavily on theatrical devices to create an illusion of life, and this largely accounts for his rapid decline in popularity. Madame Sans-Gêne, his last success, is still performed. His initial successes he…
- scraped-surface heat exchanger
food preservation: Commercial sterility: …solid particles are heated in scraped-surface heat exchangers. These heat exchangers use blades to continuously scrape the inside surface of the heating chamber. The scraping action protects highly viscous foods from being burned on the heating surface.
- scraper (zoology)
coleopteran: Sound production: …part of the body (a scraper) against another part (the file). These stridulating organs are generally present in both sexes and probably serve for mutual sex calling. Some beetles have a filelike area on the head that is rasped by the front margin of the prothorax. Among the cerambycids, sound…
- scraper (construction)
scraper, in engineering, machine for moving earth over short distances (up to about two miles) over relatively smooth areas. Either self-propelled or towed, it consists of a wagon with a gate having a bladed bottom. The blade scrapes up earth as the wagon pushes forward and forces the excavated
- scraper (musical instrument)
scraper, in music, percussion instrument consisting of a serrated surface that is rasped with a stick. Known since the Stone Age, it is often associated with magical powers and ritual, and it is widely distributed geographically. Scrapers are commonly made of bone, as the Aztec used in memorial
- scraper (printing)
printing: Rotogravure: …blade of soft steel, the scraper, or doctor blade, which moves slowly to and fro lengthwise. By rubbing against the cylinder with a precisely regulated degree of pressure, it causes the excess ink to drop off before the cylinder moves over the paper.
- scraper dredge (engineering)
dredge: The scraper dredge, also called a dragline, handles material with a scoop suspended from a swinging boom. The scoop is drawn forward by a line attached to the front, while a second line attached to the rear holds the scoop at the proper angle to slice…
- scraper tool (primitive hand tool)
hand tool: The Mousterian flake tools: …kinds of flakes, points and scrapers. The former are roughly triangular, with two trimmed or sharp edges meeting in a point, the base or butt of the triangle being thick and blunt. The side scrapers have a sharp edge in the long direction of the flake, with an opposite, thicker…
- scraperboard (art tool)
scratchboard, a technique used by commercial artists and illustrators to make drawings that can easily be reproduced and that closely resemble either wood engravings or woodcuts. Introduced in the 19th century, the process involves the use of a specially prepared board coated with a ground of chalk
- scrapie (sheep and goat disease)
scrapie, fatal neurodegenerative disease of sheep and goats. Scrapie has been endemic in British sheep, particularly the Suffolk breed, since the early 18th century. Since that time the disease has been detected in countries worldwide, with the exception of Australia and New Zealand, as well as in
- Scraptiidae (insect family)
coleopteran: Annotated classification: Family Scraptiidae About 200 species widely distributed; associated with rotten wood, fungi; example Scraptia. Family Stenotrachelidae Found in East Asia, North America. Family Tenebrionidae (darkling beetles) Varied group;
- Scratch My Back (album by Gabriel)
Peter Gabriel: He later released Scratch My Back (2010), on which he performed orchestrally arranged songs by musicians he admired; several of them in turn covered songs by Gabriel on And I’ll Scratch Yours (2013). Symphonic orchestration also adorned New Blood (2011), on which Gabriel himself reinterpreted selections from his…
- scratch reflex (physiology)
itching: Scratching may temporarily relieve itching by interrupting the rhythm of nerve impulses or by inflicting transitory damage to the nerves. Persistent scratching produces redness, papules, and crusting of the skin.
- scratch spin (ice skating)
figure skating: Spins: A scratch spin is done in an upright position, and, depending on which foot the skater is spinning on, the spin can be done on either a back inside or a back outside edge, with the toe pick occasionally scratching the surface of the ice for…
- scratchboard (art tool)
scratchboard, a technique used by commercial artists and illustrators to make drawings that can easily be reproduced and that closely resemble either wood engravings or woodcuts. Introduced in the 19th century, the process involves the use of a specially prepared board coated with a ground of chalk
- scratching (physiology)
itching: Scratching may temporarily relieve itching by interrupting the rhythm of nerve impulses or by inflicting transitory damage to the nerves. Persistent scratching produces redness, papules, and crusting of the skin.
- scratching (music)
Sugar Hill Records: “Rapper’s Delight”: …showcased the new sound of scratching (created by manually moving a record back and forth under the record player’s needle); and “The Message” (1982) by Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, a heartfelt account of life in the ghetto, showed the potential of hip-hop for conveying social comment.
- scrawled filefish (fish)
filefish: The scrawled filefish (Aluterus scriptus) of worldwide distribution may grow about 100 cm (40 inches) long, but most filefishes are considerably smaller. The members of this family are not generally considered good to eat.
- SCRD (American organization)
infant and toddler development: In 1933 the Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD) was established in the United States to apply new concepts in child development to improving the lives of the country’s children. The society initially focused on understanding how poverty and social deprivation affected development, with the aim of…
- Scream (film by Craven [1996])
Wes Craven: …repeat that earlier success until Scream (1996). A blockbuster hit, it was known for its dark wit and references to other horror movies as well as for a notable cast that included Drew Barrymore, Courteney Cox, Neve Campbell, and David Arquette. The film was followed by three sequels (1997, 2000,…
- Scream (film by Bettinelli-Olpin and Gillett [2022])
Jenna Ortega: …The Babysitter: Killer Queen (2020), Scream (2022), Studio 666 (2022), X (2022), American Carnage (2022), and Scream VI (2023). For her role as Tara Carpenter in Scream, Ortega won most frightened performance at the 2022 MTV Movie and TV Awards.
- Scream (album by Osbourne)
Ozzy Osbourne: Later music: He followed with Scream (2010), Ordinary Man (2020), and Patient Number 9 (2022). The latter won the Grammy for best rock album, and its single “Degradation Rules” (featuring Tony Iommi) was named best metal performance. In 2023 Osbourne canceled his upcoming concerts because he was “not physically capable”…
- Scream 2 (film by Craven [1997])
Wes Craven: …followed by three sequels (1997, 2000, and 2011) that had varying degrees of success at the box office.
- Scream 3 (film by Craven [2000])
Wes Craven: …followed by three sequels (1997, 2000, and 2011) that had varying degrees of success at the box office.
- Scream 4 (film by Craven [2011])
Wes Craven: …three sequels (1997, 2000, and 2011) that had varying degrees of success at the box office.
- Scream, The (painting by Edvard Munch)
The Scream, painting by Edvard Munch that became his most famous work. He completed two versions in 1893, another in 1895, and yet another likely in 1910. The Scream is one of the most familiar images in modern art and a canonical piece in the art nouveau style. It stemmed from a panic attack that
- screamer (bird family)
screamer, any of three species of South American waterfowl constituting the family Anhimidae (order Anseriformes). The group derives its name from its raucous, far-carrying cry. Screamers are birds 75 cm (30 inches) high that inhabit marshes, where they feed gregariously on water plants and make
- Screaming Meemie (rocket)
rocket and missile system: Barrage rockets: The 150-millimetre Nebelwerfer, a towed, six-tube launcher, was particularly respected by U.S. and British troops, to whom it was known as the “Screaming Meemie” or “Moaning Minnie” for the eerie sound made by the incoming rockets. Maximum range was more than 6,000 yards (5,500 metres).
- Screaming Trees (American rock group)
alternative rock: …bands such as Soundgarden and Screaming Trees did in fact echo their childhood memories of the Beatles and Led Zeppelin. Alternative rockers had intended to make music for themselves; in the end, the movement created the sound of a resentful and distressed generation.
- scree (landform)
valley: Hillslopes: Talus slopes are a type in which debris piles up to a characteristic angle of repose. When new debris is added to the slope, thereby locally increasing the angle, the slope adjusts by movement of the debris to reestablish the angle. Again, the result is…
- screech owl (bird)
screech owl, (genus Megascops), any of approximately 25 species of New World owls known for their shrill calls and classified in the family Strigidae. Screech owls possess a facial disk and ear tufts, and they are coloured in a concealing bark pattern. They are rather small owls, about 20–30 cm
- screen (basketball)
basketball: Screen, or pick: Legal action of a player who, without causing more than incidental contact, delays or prevents an opponent from reaching his desired position.
- screen (furniture)
furniture: Fabrics: Screens or room dividers were often covered with textiles, partly to afford protection against direct radiant heat and partly to create cozy corners in large rooms. Framed screens were often covered with pieces of tapestry, with other woven materials, or with gilt leather.
- screen (printing process)
photoengraving: The halftone process: …produced by photography through a screen of loosely woven fabric. The screen was placed some distance forward of the plane of the receiving photographic surface (film or plate) and had the effect of breaking the gray tones of the subject into dots of varying sizes, through a combination of geometric…
- Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (labor organization)
Ed Asner: …was elected president of the Screen Actors Guild (SAG) in 1981 and used his position, which he held until 1985, as a way to vocalize his political views. His most public agenda was his fight to hamper the U.S. government’s involvement in Central America, particularly in El Salvador, a position…
- screen and roll (basketball play)
John Stockton: …one of the most effective pick-and-roll combinations in NBA history. At 6 feet 1 inch (1.85 meters) tall, Stockton made up for his lack of height with his tenacious, high-energy play that was sometimes viewed as dirty by his opponents. A particularly energetic on-ball defender, he twice led the NBA…
- screen fan (clothing accessory)
fan: The rigid fan has a handle or stick with a rigid leaf, or mount. The folding fan is composed of sticks (the outer two called guards) held together at the handle end by a rivet or pin. On the sticks is mounted a leaf that is…
- screen grid (electronics)
Walter Schottky: He invented the screen-grid tube in 1915, and in 1919 he invented the tetrode, the first multigrid vacuum tube. In his book Thermodynamik (1929), he was one of the first to point out the existence of electron “holes” in the valence-band structure of semiconductors. In 1935 he noticed…
- screen memory (psychology)
Sigmund Freud: Screen memories: …he would later call a screen memory, or fantasy, hiding a primitive wish. That is, rather than stressing the corrupting initiative of adults in the etiology of neuroses, Freud concluded that the fantasies and yearnings of the child were at the root of later conflict.
- screen painting (art)
painting: Screen and fan painting: Folding screens and screen doors originated in China and Japan, probably during the 12th century (or possibly earlier), and screen painting continued as a traditional form into the 21st. They are in ink or gouache on plain or gilded paper and…
- Screen Plays Inc. (American company)
Stanley Kramer: Early life and production work: …the war, Kramer helped establish Screen Plays Inc., an independent production company. In 1948 its first motion picture, So This Is New York (directed by Richard Fleischer), was released. Kramer’s first success, Champion (directed by Mark Robson), followed in 1949. In dealing with the ruthlessness of an ambitious prizefighter and…
- screen printing (textile industry)
textile: Screen printing: Screen printing may be a hand operation or an automatic machine process. The cloth is first laid on a printing table, gummed in position or pinned to a back gray, and then the design is applied through a screen made of silk or…
- screen veil (beekeeping)
beekeeping: …them and had developed the screen veil as protection against stings. From the 17th to the 19th century, the key discoveries upon which modern beekeeping is founded were made. These included the mystery of the queen bee as the mother of nearly all the occupants of the hive, her curious…
- screen, focusing (optics)
technology of photography: Methods of focusing and framing: The ground-glass (now mostly grained plastic) screen is the most direct way of viewing the image for framing and for sharpness control. The screen localizes the image plane for observation. The image is also visible without a screen, but then the eye…
- screen, projection (optics)
projection screen, surface on which the image from an optical projector is shown. Many materials are suitable for screens, the principal requirement being a high degree of reflectivity. The three most common types of screen are the mat white, the glass bead, and the lenticular. Mat white is a
- screening (chemistry)
separation and purification: Filtration and screening: In filtration, a porous material is used to separate particles of different sizes. If the pore sizes are highly uniform, separation can be fairly sensitive to the size of the particles, but the method is most commonly used to effect gross separations, as of…
- screening (military)
naval warfare: The study of trends: …information denial was accomplished by screening—that is, by flinging out an opposing line of ships and aircraft. Modern ways to confound the enemy’s scouting effort are keeping radio silence and jamming his radars, both of which deny him information. Third, enemy C2 can be confused by deceptive signals or decoy…
- screening (security process)
security and protection system: Physical security.: Common synonyms are “screening” and “vetting.” The most common technique is the background investigation, which involves obtaining all relevant available data about a person’s past education, employment, and personal behaviour and making judgments concerning the individual’s likely future loyalty and honesty. Thus, the dossier and computerized national data…
- screeno (game of chance)
bingo: …1930s, a variant (often called screeno) was played in motion-picture theatres, with one night in the week designated bank night, when patrons received free bingo cards with their admission tickets; prizes amounted to hundreds of dollars in cash or merchandise.
- screenplay (filmmaking)
screenplay, written text that provides the basis for a film production. Screenplays usually include not only the dialogue spoken by the characters but also a shot-by-shot outline of the film’s action. Screenplays may be adapted from novels or stage plays or developed from original ideas suggested
- screenprinting (art)
stenciling: …fine print, it is called screenprinting (formerly serigraphy), and the product is called a screenprint.
- Screens, The (play by Genet)
Jean Genet: …Blacks), and Les Paravents (1961; The Screens), are large-scale, stylized dramas in the Expressionist manner, designed to shock and implicate an audience by revealing its hypocrisy and complicity. This “Theatre of Hatred” attempts to wrest the maximum dramatic power from a social or political situation without necessarily endorsing the political…
- screensaver (software)
After Dark: screensaver software created by the American software company Berkeley Systems from the late 1980s to the mid-1990s. The series later developed into a collection of games and gained a large cult following.
- screw (machine component)
screw, in machine construction, a usually circular cylindrical member with a continuous helical rib, used either as a fastener or as a force and motion modifier. Although the Pythagorean philosopher Archytas of Tarentum (5th century bc) is the alleged inventor of the screw, the exact date of its
- screw conveyor (mechanical device)
conveyor: Screw conveyors consist of revolving shafts with continuous or broken spiral flighting that operates inside a casing. Powered by an electric motor and suitable gearing, the screw conveyor usually operates in one direction only to move fine bulk material such as meal, seed, and coal.
- screw dislocation (crystallography)
electrochemical reaction: Electrocrystallization: Mechanisms associated with screw dislocations, or twinning edges, can provide for a continuous growth of crystals. The screw dislocation mechanism, shown in Figure 3B, is made possible by a specific fault often found in the crystal lattice that may be called a dislocation originating from a shift of…
- screw extruder (instrument)
traditional ceramics: Plastic forming: In a commercial screw-type extruder, a screw auger continuously forces the plastic feed material through an orifice or die, resulting in simple shapes such as cylindrical rods and pipes, rectangular solid and hollow bars, and long plates. These shapes can be cut upon extrusion into shorter pieces for…
- screw fastener (technology)
washer: …used in conjunction with a screw fastener such as a bolt and nut and that usually serves either to keep the screw from loosening or to distribute the load from the nut or bolt head over a larger area. For load distribution, thin flat rings of soft steel are usual.
- screw machine (lathe)
machine tool: Turret lathes: …may be classified as either bar machines or chucking machines. Bar machines formerly were called screw machines, and they may be either hand controlled or automatic. A bar machine is designed for machining small threaded parts, bushings, and other small parts that can be created from bar stock fed through…
- screw moss (plant)
screw moss, any member of the moss genus Tortula (subclass Bryidae), which form yellow-green or reddish brown cushions on walls, soil, rocks, trees, and sand dunes in the Northern Hemisphere. About 25 of the 144 species are native to North America; the best-known species in both North America and
- screw pine (plant)
pandanus, (genus Pandanus), any of some 600 tropical species of Old World trees and shrubs of the screw pine family (Pandanaceae). They grow along seacoasts and in marshy places and forests of tropical and subtropical regions, especially in Asia, Africa, and Oceania. Pandanus species typically have
- screw press (tool)
fat and oil processing: Pressing machines: The Romans developed a screw press, described by Pliny, for the production of olive oil. Centuries ago, the Chinese employed the same series of operations followed in modern pressing mills—namely, bruising or grinding the seeds in stone mills, heating the meal in open pans, and then pressing out the…
- screw propeller (nautical engineering)
John Ericsson: …in 1836 he patented a screw propeller, first used in 1837 on the Francis B. Ogden, built in London. Capt. Robert F. Stockton, of the U.S. Navy, ordered a small iron vessel, the Robert F. Stockton, to be fitted by Ericsson with engines and screw; it reached New York City…
- screw pump (device)
pump: Positive displacement pumps.: In a screw pump, a helical screw rotor revolves in a fixed casing that is shaped so that cavities formed at the intake move toward the discharge as the screw rotates. As a cavity forms, a partial vacuum is created, which draws fluid into the pump. This…
- screw thread (machine component)
screw: …the 1st century ad, wooden screws were used in wine and olive-oil presses, and cutters (taps) for cutting internal threads were in use.
- screw vise (carpentry)
hand tool: Workbench and vise: …rest was replaced by a screw vise, at first quite small. This vise was like a hinge; one leaf or jaw was fastened to the bench, and the other was pulled up to clamp the workpiece and was tightened by the use of a nut and bolt passing through the…
- screw-actuated lift (stage machinery)
stagecraft: Lifts: The other type, the screw-actuated lift, is either electrically or hydraulically driven and is coupled to a vertical screw through a nut in which the upper end of the screw is connected to a portion of the stage floor.
- screw-cutting lathe (tool)
lathe: On a screwcutting lathe the motion of the cutting tool is accurately related to the rotation of the spindle by means of a lead screw that drives the carriage on which the cutting tool is mounted.
- screw-pine order (plant order)
Pandanales, diverse order of the monocotyledon (monocot) group, whose 1,345 species range from large arborescent plants of rainforests and coastal areas in the tropics to twining herbs and lianas, as well as minute, saprophytic herbs of the forest floor. The order is made up of five families:
- screw-thread pitch gauge (measurement device)
gauge: …of grooves and corners, and screw-thread pitch gauges, which are blades with triangular serrations spaced to correspond with various pitches, or numbers of threads per inch or per centimetre.
- screw-type extruder (instrument)
traditional ceramics: Plastic forming: In a commercial screw-type extruder, a screw auger continuously forces the plastic feed material through an orifice or die, resulting in simple shapes such as cylindrical rods and pipes, rectangular solid and hollow bars, and long plates. These shapes can be cut upon extrusion into shorter pieces for…
- screwball (baseball)
baseball: The pitching repertoire: …thrown by Christy Mathewson), the screwball (thrown by Carl Hubbell), or some other name applied by the pitcher himself. In both curves and reverse curves, the ball reaches the batter at a slower rate of speed than the fastball, and the deception is almost as much a result of the…
- screwball comedy (entertainment)
Elliott Nugent: …some to be the first screwball comedy. It was set during the Depression and centres on spoiled siblings who must find jobs after their mother loses the family fortune; it starred Claudette Colbert and Mary Boland. Nugent’s other early films include the melodrama If I Were Free (1933), with Irene…
- screwdriver (alcoholic beverage)
vodka: Popular vodka drinks include the screwdriver, made with orange juice; the Bloody Mary, with tomato juice; vodka and tonic, a tall drink; and the vodka martini, with vodka substituted for gin.
- screwdriver (tool)
screwdriver, tool, usually hand-operated, for turning screws with slotted heads. For screws with one straight diametral slot cut across the head, standard screwdrivers with flat blade tips and in a variety of sizes are used. Special screws with cross-shaped slots in their heads require a special
- Screwfly Solution, The (novelette by Sheldon)
James Tiptree, Jr.: …her most notable stories: “The Screwfly Solution” (1977; Nebula Award winner for best novelette), in which an alien influence that fuses the urges toward sex and violence causes men to kill all women and children, and “Your Faces, O My Sisters! Your Faces Filled of Light!” (1976), about a…
- Screwtape Letters, The (novel by Lewis)
The Screwtape Letters, epistolary novel by C.S. Lewis, published serially in 1941 in the Guardian, a weekly religious newspaper. The chapters were published as a book in 1942 and extended in The Screwtape Letters and Screwtape Proposes a Toast in 1961. Written in defense of Christian faith, this
- screwworm (insect)
screwworm, Any of several North and South American blowfly species named for the screwlike appearance of the larva’s body, which is ringed with small spines. Screwworms attack livestock and other animals, including humans. The true screwworm (Cochliomyia hominivorax) and the secondary screwworm
- Scriabin, Aleksandr (Russian composer)
Aleksandr Scriabin was a Russian composer of piano and orchestral music noted for its unusual harmonies through which the composer sought to explore musical symbolism. Scriabin was trained as a soldier at the Moscow Cadet School from 1882 to 1889 but studied music at the same time and took piano
- Scriabin, Aleksandr Nikolayevich (Russian composer)
Aleksandr Scriabin was a Russian composer of piano and orchestral music noted for its unusual harmonies through which the composer sought to explore musical symbolism. Scriabin was trained as a soldier at the Moscow Cadet School from 1882 to 1889 but studied music at the same time and took piano
- Scribble, Scribble (essays by Ephron)
Nora Ephron: … (1970), Crazy Salad (1975), and Scribble, Scribble (1978)—and she began branching out into script writing.
- Scribbled in the Dark (poetry by Simic)
Charles Simic: Scribbled in the Dark was published in 2017. Simic received a Pulitzer Prize for poetry for The World Doesn’t End (1989). His other honours include the Wallace Stevens Award (2007) and the Frost Medal (2011).
- scribe (Judaism)
sofer, any of a group of Jewish scholars who interpreted and taught biblical law and ethics from about the 5th century bc to about 200 bc. Understood in this sense, the first of the soferim was the biblical prophet Ezra, even though the word previously designated an important administrator
- scribe (writing)
Ashurbanipal: Personality and significance of Ashurbanipal: At royal command, scribes searched out and collected or copied texts of every genre from temple libraries. These were added to the basic collection of tablets culled from Ashur, Calah, and Nineveh itself. The major group includes omen texts based on observations of events; on the behaviour and…
- Scribe, Augustin-Eugène (French dramatist)
Eugène Scribe was a French dramatist whose works dominated the Parisian stage for more than 30 years. Scribe began his career as a playwright by resurrecting the vaudeville, an obsolete form of short satirical comedy that used rhymed and sung couplets and featured musical interludes. He soon began
- Scribe, Eugène (French dramatist)
Eugène Scribe was a French dramatist whose works dominated the Parisian stage for more than 30 years. Scribe began his career as a playwright by resurrecting the vaudeville, an obsolete form of short satirical comedy that used rhymed and sung couplets and featured musical interludes. He soon began
- Scribes and Illuminators, Society of (English calligraphers)
calligraphy: Revival of calligraphy (19th and 20th centuries): …their students, had organized the Society of Scribes and Illuminators, “zealously directed toward the production of books and documents” by hand and the advancement of the crafts of member scribes, gilders, and illuminators. The program of this London-based professional group, which continued in the 21st century, was conducted by means…
- scribing (art)
map: Scribing: In the negative engraving or scribing process, guide copy is printed on several sheets of plastic coated with an opaque paint, usually yellow. The scriber follows copy on the respective plates by engraving through the coating. Because arc light can pass only through the…
- Scribleriad (work by Cambridge)
Richard Owen Cambridge: …essayist and author of the Scribleriad.
- Scriblerus Club (British literary club)
Scriblerus Club, 18th-century British literary club whose founding members were the brilliant Tory wits Alexander Pope, Jonathan Swift, John Gay, Thomas Parnell, and John Arbuthnot. Its purpose was to ridicule pretentious erudition and scholarly jargon through the person of a fictitious literary
- Scribner family (American publishers)
Scribner family, family of American publishers whose firm, founded in 1846 and named Charles Scribner’s Sons from 1878, issued books and several periodicals. Charles Scribner (b. Feb. 21, 1821, New York, N.Y.—d. Aug. 26, 1871, Lucerne, Switz.) established the firm in partnership with Isaac D. Baker
- Scribner’s Magazine (American magazine)
Edward Bok: …24) became advertising manager of Scribner’s Magazine. In 1886 he established the Bok Syndicate Press, for which he developed, as a regular newspaper feature, a full page of reading material for women. The striking success of the “Bok page” led to his elevation to the editorship of the Ladies’ Home…
- Scribner, Charles (American publisher)
Scribner family: Charles Scribner (b. Feb. 21, 1821, New York, N.Y.—d. Aug. 26, 1871, Lucerne, Switz.) established the firm in partnership with Isaac D. Baker (d. 1850) in New York City. The Baker and Scribner list initially comprised philosophical and theological (mainly Presbyterian) books. Near the end…
- scrim (fabric)
gauze: …used for flags and decorations; scrim, made of cotton and used for curtains; and tobacco cloth, used as shade covering for tobacco plants. The main differences between them are in the finishing (for example, cheesecloth that is bleached and stiffened may be called scrim) and in the quality of the…
- scrimmage (sports)
American football: Walter Camp and the creation of American football: …altogether in favour of a scrimmage, which awarded possession of the ball to one of the two teams. It was then put in play by heeling it out. (Snapping the ball with the hand became legal in 1890, though snapping with the foot continued as an option until 1913.) The…
- scrimshaw (sculpture)
scrimshaw, the decoration of bone or ivory objects, such as whale’s teeth or walrus tusks, with fanciful designs. The designs, executed by whale fishermen of American and Anglo-American origin, were carved with either a jackknife or a sail needle and then emphasized with black pigments, commonly
- Scripps Canyon (submarine canyon, Pacific Ocean)
Scripps Canyon, shallow submarine canyon in the Pacific off La Jolla, Calif.; it is the best studied of all submarine canyons by virtue of its proximity to Scripps Institution of Oceanography, for which it was named. The canyon’s shallow tributary valleys head very close to shore in water only 40
- Scripps College (college, Claremont, California, United States)
Claremont Colleges: …five undergraduate schools (Pomona College, Scripps College, Claremont McKenna College, Harvey Mudd College, and Pitzer College) and two graduate schools (Claremont Graduate University and the Keck Graduate Institute of Applied Life Sciences). The campuses are adjacent to one another, and many facilities are shared, including the consortium’s main library, the