- Want to be an activist investor? As a shareholder, start with proxy voting
It’s your chance to vote your views and your conscience.Want to have a say in how a public company is managed? If you’re a shareholder, vote by proxy. Proxy voting is a key part of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing, and these shareholder votes are your chance to channel your
- Want to limit your downside risk? Introducing the protective put strategy
Collision insurance for your stock holdings.Do you own stocks—or a portfolio of stocks—and you’re worried about a potential meltdown in the short term? Or are you a short-term trader looking to ride the upside, but you want to limit your downside risk? In general, you have two choices. (Three, if
- Wantage (England, United Kingdom)
Wantage, town (parish), Vale of White Horse district, administrative county of Oxfordshire, historic county of Berkshire, south-central England. It is an old market town and the birthplace of the Anglo-Saxon king Alfred the Great (871–899), whose statue stands in the marketplace. The town is a
- Wanted (film by Bekmambetov [2008])
Angelina Jolie: Film roles: …it with Beowulf (2007) and Wanted (2008). Her immersion into the role of a mother whose son is kidnapped and later replaced by a different child in Clint Eastwood’s Changeling (2008) resulted in another Oscar nomination.
- Wanted (film by Deva [2009])
Salman Khan: Career and movies: …by the record-breaking hit film Wanted, an action thriller which, though criticized for a weak plot and poor dialogue, provided Khan with a strong comeback from the lackluster box-office performances of his mid-2000s films. Khan next landed the starring role of a police officer in the beloved Dabangg action franchise,…
- Wanted: Dead or Alive (American television program)
Steve McQueen: …hunter on the television series Wanted: Dead or Alive, which ran until 1961.
- Wanting (novel by Flanagan)
Richard Flanagan: …aim at media-driven hysteria, and Wanting (2008) was a complex 19th-century tale set in Tasmania and England involving an Aboriginal girl and novelist Charles Dickens.
- Wanting Seed, The (novel by Burgess)
Anthony Burgess: …Burgess he wrote the novels The Wanting Seed (1962), an antiutopian view of an overpopulated world, and Honey for the Bears (1963). As Joseph Kell he wrote One Hand Clapping (1961) and Inside Mr. Enderby (1963).
- wantok (sociology)
Papua New Guinea: Daily life and social customs: …bonds and obligations of the wantok system can provide support for those struggling in new locations but also create heavy demands on the more affluent people who feel obliged to support their kin. The demands of wantoks are often held to be a root cause of corruption. Increasingly there are…
- Wantzel, Pierre Laurent (French mathematician)
mathematics: Apollonius: …(notably by the French mathematician Pierre Laurent Wantzel in 1837).
- Wanxian (former city, Chongqing, China)
Wanzhou, former city, northeastern Chongqing shi (municipality), central China. It has been a district of Chongqing since the municipality was established in 1997. The district is an important port along the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang), being situated at the western end of the river’s renowned
- Wanyan Min (Juchen leader)
Taizu was the leader of the nomadic Juchen (Chinese: Nüzhen, or Ruzhen) tribes who occupied north and east Manchuria. He founded the Jin, or Juchen, dynasty (1115–1234) and conquered all of North China. The Juchen were originally vassals of the Mongol-speaking Khitan tribes who had occupied part of
- Wanyika (people)
Manyika, one of the cluster of Shona-speaking peoples inhabiting extreme eastern Zimbabwe and adjacent areas of interior Mozambique south of the Púnguè River. The Manyika have existed as an ethnic group discrete from other Shona groups only since the 1930s. Historically, the Manyika recognized a
- Wanzhou (former city, Chongqing, China)
Wanzhou, former city, northeastern Chongqing shi (municipality), central China. It has been a district of Chongqing since the municipality was established in 1997. The district is an important port along the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang), being situated at the western end of the river’s renowned
- WAP (recording by Cardi B)
Megan Thee Stallion: Hot Girl Summer, Savage, and other successes: …Cardi B’s hit single “WAP,” which reached number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, and she released her debut studio album, Good News, which made it to number 2 on the Billboard album chart.
- WAP (technology)
WAP, an open, universal standard that emerged in the late 1990s for the delivery of the Internet and other value-added services to wireless networks and mobile communication devices such as mobile phones and personal digital assistants (PDAs). WAP specifications encouraged the creation of wireless
- WAP (cosmology)
anthropic principle: Forms of the anthropic principle: The weak anthropic principle (WAP) is the truism that the universe must be found to possess those properties necessary for the existence of observers. The WAP is not a theory of physics. Rather, it is a methodological principle. It is therefore not appropriate to ask if…
- WAPDA (Pakistani organization)
Indus River: Irrigation of the Indus River: …of the 1960 treaty, the Pakistan Water and Power Development Authority built several linking canals and barrages to divert water from its western rivers to areas in the east lacking water. The biggest of those canals is the Chashma-Jhelum link joining the Indus River with the Jhelum River, with a…
- wapentake (English government)
wapentake, an administrative division of the English counties of York, Lincoln, Leicester, Nottingham, Derby, and Rutland, first clearly referred to in 962/963 and corresponding to the “hundred” in other parts of England. The term wapentake is of Scandinavian origin and meant the taking of weapons;
- Wapielnia (mountain, Poland)
Roztocze: … (1,280 feet [390 metres]) and Wapielnia (1,263 feet [385 metres]). The range provides a number of scenic views and is composed of forested terrain indented with deep gorges and streams overflowing slabs of limestone. A few small towns are located in the region. In 1974 a national park was founded…
- wapiti (mammal)
elk, (Cervus elaphus canadensis), the largest and most advanced subspecies of red deer (Cervus elaphus), found in North America and in high mountains of Central Asia. It is a member of the deer family, Cervidae (order Artiodactyla). Recent genetic studies suggest that the “red deer” may be three
- Wapner, Joseph (American jurist and television personality)
Joseph Wapner was an American jurist and TV personality who presided (1981–93) over The People’s Court, an immensely popular syndicated TV show in which plaintiffs and defendants from California small claims court argued their cases and accepted the judge’s ruling. Wapner earned (1941) a bachelor’s
- Wapner, Joseph Albert (American jurist and television personality)
Joseph Wapner was an American jurist and TV personality who presided (1981–93) over The People’s Court, an immensely popular syndicated TV show in which plaintiffs and defendants from California small claims court argued their cases and accepted the judge’s ruling. Wapner earned (1941) a bachelor’s
- Wappapello Dam (dam, Missouri, United States)
Saint Francis River: …the river is impounded by Wappapello Dam (built in 1941). Heavy rainfall in the Ozarks, which make up 70 percent of the river’s drainage basin of 8,400 sq mi (21,800 sq km), runs off rapidly and despite the dam still causes floods in the lower basin. In 1960, as part…
- Wapping-Rotherhithe Tunnel (tunnel, River Thames, London, England, United Kingdom)
Thames Tunnel, tunnel designed by Marc Isambard Brunel and built under the River Thames in London. Drilled from Rotherhithe (in the borough of Southwark) to Wapping (now in Tower Hamlets), it was the first subaqueous tunnel in the world and was for many years the largest soft-ground tunnel. To
- Wappinger (people)
Wappinger, confederacy of Algonquian-speaking Indians in eastern North America. Early in the 17th century the Wappinger lived along the east bank of the Hudson River from Manhattan Island to what is now Poughkeepsie and eastward to the lower Connecticut River valley. Traditionally, the Wappinger
- Wappo (people)
Yuki: …the redwood coast; and the Wappo, who occupied an enclave among the Pomo, some 40 miles (65 km) southward in the Russian River valley.
- Wapshot Chronicle, The (novel by Cheever)
The Wapshot Chronicle, novel by John Cheever, published in 1957 and granted a National Book Award in 1958. Based in part on Cheever’s adolescence in New England, the novel takes place in a small Massachusetts fishing village and relates the breakdown of both the Wapshot family and the town. Part
- Waptailmim (people)
Yakama, North American Indian tribe that lived along the Columbia, Yakima, and Wenatchee rivers in what is now the south-central region of the U.S. state of Washington. As with many other Sahaptin-speaking Plateau Indians, the Yakama were primarily salmon fishers before colonization. In the early
- waqf (Islam)
waqf, in Islamic law, a charitable endowment held in trust. In the formal process of establishing a waqf, the donor (waqīf) dedicates the assets (mawqūf) for a specific charitable purpose. Islamic jurists differ on the legal ownership of the assets once the endowment has been completed: many
- Waqf and Muslim Affairs, Council of (government agency, Jordan)
Jerusalem: Muslims: …under the jurisdiction of the Council of Waqf and Muslim Affairs in Amman, Jordan. Since 1995 the Palestinian Authority (PA) has come to exercise effective control over all Muslim institutions, religious courts, and appointments to religious office in East Jerusalem.
- Wāqidī, al- (Arabian historian)
al-Wāqidī was an Arab historian, author of the Kitāb al-maghāzī, a well-known work on the military campaigns (al-maghāzī) of the Prophet Muhammad. As a youth al-Wāqidī is said to have been such an authority on the sacred cities of Mecca and Medina that he was guide to the ʿAbbāsid caliph Hārūn
- Waqifiyah (Islamic sect)
Seveners, in Islām, minority subsect within the Ismāʿīlīte (q.v.) sect of
- Waqt (film by Chopra [1965])
Yash Chopra: His next effort, the popular Waqt (1965; “Time”), was India’s first film to feature several major actors, including Sunil Dutt, Raaj Kumar, Sadhana, and Shashi Kapoor, and it started a trend. Indeed, Chopra’s films provided a springboard for many actors—including Amitabh Bachchan (Deewaar and Trishul [1978; “Trident”]) and
- war
war, in the popular sense, a conflict between political groups involving hostilities of considerable duration and magnitude. In the usage of social science, certain qualifications are added. Sociologists usually apply the term to such conflicts only if they are initiated and conducted in accordance
- WAR (baseball)
sabermetrics: Bill James and the advent of sabermetrics: …succeeded by various versions of Wins Above Replacement (WAR), which was predicated on the identification of the value of a theoretical “replacement player” (a player readily available, whether from a team’s bench or its farm system). Eventually WAR would become ever more sophisticated, with the different versions propagated on different…
- War (work by Renn)
Ludwig Renn: …best known for Krieg (1928; War), a novel based on his World War I battle experiences, the narrator and principal character of which was named Ludwig Renn. The stark simplicity of the novel emphasizes the uncompromising brutality of combat.
- War (album by U2)
Bono: …broke through in 1983 with War and had even greater success with The Unforgettable Fire in 1984. The next year, the band was approached by Jack Healy, head of Amnesty International USA, and was asked to join the “Conspiracy of Hope” tour to bring attention to human rights violations and…
- War Academy (military academy, Berlin, Germany)
military, naval, and air academies: …the system was the venerable War Academy, or Kriegs Akademie, at Berlin, founded in 1810 and offering the highest advanced education for commissioned officers. A great complex of technical and auxiliary schools, such as for cavalry and engineering, filled in the system. After World War I the entire complex was…
- War Admiral (racehorse)
War Admiral, (foaled 1934), American racehorse (Thoroughbred) who in 1937 became the fourth winner of the American Triple Crown—the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness Stakes, and the Belmont Stakes. His dramatic 1938 race against Seabiscuit, the leading money winner of 1937 and a fan favourite, captured
- War Against Cliché, The (essays by Amis)
Martin Amis: Nabokov, and Other Excursions (1993), The War Against Cliché (2001), and The Rub of Time: Bellow, Nabokov, Hitchens, Travolta, Trump. Essays and Reportage, 1994-2016 (2017). Experience (2000), an autobiography that often focuses on his father, was acclaimed for an emotional depth and profundity that some reviewers had found lacking in…
- War All the Time (poetry by Bukowski)
Charles Bukowski: …a Dog from Hell (1977), War All the Time (1984), and You Get So Alone at Times That It Just Makes Sense (1986). Though he had begun his career as one of the ultimate “cult authors,” his work was so popular and influential that by the time of his death…
- war and defense economics (economics)
war finance, fiscal and monetary methods that are used in meeting the costs of war, including taxation, compulsory loans, voluntary domestic loans, foreign loans, and the creation of money. War finance is a branch of defense economics. (Read Milton Friedman’s Britannica entry on money.) Government
- War and Peace (film by Vidor [1956])
King Vidor: Later films: three-and-a-half-hour version of Leo Tolstoy’s War and Peace failed to find an audience when it was released in 1956, a victim of uneven acting—although Audrey Hepburn gave a notable performance, a visibly uncomfortable Fonda was miscast—and eight screenwriters (one of whom was Vidor). Even so, Vidor received an Academy Award…
- War and Peace (film by Bondarchuk [1967])
- War and Peace (opera by Prokofiev)
Sergey Prokofiev: Soviet period of Sergey Prokofiev: …based on Leo Tolstoy’s novel War and Peace. He was fascinated by the parallels between 1812, when Russia crushed Napoleon’s invasion, and the then-current situation. The first version of the opera was completed by the summer of 1942, but subsequently the work was fundamentally revised, a task that occupied more…
- War and Peace (novel by Tolstoy)
War and Peace, historical novel by Leo Tolstoy, originally published as Voyna i mir in 1865–69. This panoramic study of early 19th-century Russian society, noted for its mastery of realistic detail and variety of psychological analysis, is generally regarded as a masterwork of Russian literature
- War and Politics (work by Brodie)
Bernard Brodie: In 1973 Brodie also published War and Politics, a volume on the relations between military affairs and statecraft. In it he examined the history of World War I, World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War and looked at the changing attitudes toward war, theories on its causes,…
- War and Remembrance (American television miniseries)
Television in the United States: The era of the miniseries: War and Remembrance (ABC, 1988–89), at 30 hours the longest miniseries to date, signaled a significant waning of the genre when it failed to generate ratings to justify its expense.
- War Babies (novella by Busch)
Frederick Busch: In the novella War Babies (1989), Busch returned to the subject of family relationships with the story of a man who attempts to rid himself of feelings of guilt over his now-dead father’s imprisonment for treason. His later works include the novels Closing Arguments (1991), Long Way from…
- War Between the States (United States history)
American Civil War, four-year war (1861–65) between the United States and 11 Southern states that seceded from the Union and formed the Confederate States of America. The secession of the Southern states (in chronological order, South Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana,
- War Between the Tates, The (novel by Lurie)
Alison Lurie: One of her best-known books, The War Between the Tates (1974; film 1977), concerns the manner in which the wife of a professor at mythical Corinth University deals with her husband’s infidelity. Foreign Affairs (1984; film 1993), winner of the 1985 Pulitzer Prize for fiction, describes the separate, unexpected sexual…
- War College (college, France)
Ferdinand Foch: Rise in the military hierarchy: In 1885 he entered the War College for the first of three periods there over the next 25 years. He returned as a major in 1895 to teach general tactics, soon becoming a full professor. In 1908, when he was a brigadier general, Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau appointed him head…
- war college (educational institution)
war college, any one of five U.S. institutions of higher education that offer professional military education to senior officers in the U.S armed services, U.S. Department of Defense civilian employees, and foreign military officials. Four of the institutions—the U.S. Naval War College (NWC), the
- War Communism (Soviet history)
War Communism, in the history of the Soviet Union, economic policy applied by the Bolsheviks during the period of the Russian Civil War (1918–20). More exactly, the policy of War Communism lasted from June 1918 to March 1921. The policy’s chief features were the expropriation of private business
- War Correspondent (film by Wellman [1945])
William Wellman: Films of the 1940s: Wellman then directed The Story of G.I. Joe (1945), which is regarded by many critics as one of the best motion pictures about World War II. Robert Mitchum earned an Academy Award nomination for best actor for his portrayal of a battle-weary infantry captain, and Burgess Meredith gave…
- war crime (international law)
war crime, in international law, serious violation of the laws or customs of war as defined by international customary law and international treaties. The term war crime has been difficult to define with precision, and its usage has evolved constantly, particularly since the end of World War I. The
- War Crimes (short stories by Carey)
Peter Carey: title, Exotic Pleasures) and War Crimes (1979), exhibit many grotesque and macabre elements. His novels Bliss (1981; filmed 1985), Illywhacker (1985), and Oscar and Lucinda (1988; filmed 1997) are more realistic, though Carey used black humour throughout all three. The later novels are based on the history of Australia,…
- War Crimes Act (United Kingdom [1991])
House of Lords: …lacking the Lords’ support—including the War Crimes Act of 1991, which enabled Britain to prosecute alleged war criminals who became British citizens or residents of Britain. A principal effect of the act has thus been to discourage the House of Lords from opposing bills strongly supported by the House of…
- war dance (ritual dance)
dance: Defining according to function: …as descendants of the tribal war and hunting dances that have also been integral to many cultures. War dances, often using weapons and fighting movements, were used throughout history as a way of training soldiers and preparing them emotionally and spiritually for battle. Many hunting tribes performed dances in which…
- War Dances (work by Alexie)
Sherman Alexie: …including the PEN/Faulkner Award for War Dances (2009; another mix of prose and poetry) and the 2010 Lifetime Achievement Award from the Native Writers’ Circle of the Americas.
- War Democrat (American political faction)
War Democrat, in the history of the United States, any of the Northern Democrats who supported the continued prosecution of the American Civil War. The great majority of Northern Democrats stayed loyal to the Union after the South seceded. So-called Peace Democrats (or “Copperheads” in pejorative
- War Dogs (film by Phillips [2016])
Ana de Armas: Early Hollywood roles: …in the comedy crime film War Dogs (2016), in Overdrive (2017), and in Blade Runner 2049 (2017), the last of which was a sequel to the 1982 film Blade Runner, starring Harrison Ford.
- War Eagle (Sioux chief)
Sioux City: …wives and their father, Chief War Eagle, who aided the European pioneers in the area. War Eagle’s grave is in a park on a bluff overlooking the river with a view of the three states. Incorporated in 1857, the community was renamed for the chief’s tribe. It grew with the…
- War Emblem (racehorse)
War Emblem, (foaled 1999), American racehorse (Thoroughbred) who in 2002 won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes but lost at the Belmont Stakes, ending his bid for the coveted Triple Crown of American horse racing. War Emblem was part of a last-minute business deal that took place just
- war engine (ancient warfare)
military technology: Mechanical artillery: …in 399 bce directed his engineers to construct military engines in preparation for war with Carthage. Dionysius’s engineers surely drew on existing practice. The earliest of the Greek engines was the gastrophetes, or “belly shooter.” In effect a large crossbow, it received its name because the user braced the stock…
- War Fever (work by Ballard)
J.G. Ballard: His short-story collection War Fever (1990) contains humorously nihilistic meditations on such topics as compulsory sex and the oblivious attitudes of a media-saturated society.
- war fever (pathology)
typhus: Epidemic typhus: Epidemic typhus has also been called camp fever, jail fever, and war fever, names that suggest overcrowding, underwashing, and lowered standards of living. It is caused by the bacterium Rickettsia prowazekii and is conveyed from person to person by the body louse, Pediculus humanus humanus.…
- war finance (economics)
war finance, fiscal and monetary methods that are used in meeting the costs of war, including taxation, compulsory loans, voluntary domestic loans, foreign loans, and the creation of money. War finance is a branch of defense economics. (Read Milton Friedman’s Britannica entry on money.) Government
- War Hawk (United States history)
War Hawk, in U.S. history, any of the expansionists primarily composed of young Southerners and Westerners elected to the U.S. Congress in 1810, whose territorial ambitions in the Northwest and Florida inspired them to agitate for war with Great Britain. The War Hawks, who included such future
- War Horse (film by Spielberg [2011])
Steven Spielberg: The 2010s and beyond: …2011 Spielberg helmed another adaptation, War Horse. The drama was based on a popular Broadway play, which itself was developed from a 1982 children’s novel by Michael Morpurgo. The story opens shortly before the start of World War I, when a horse named Joey is sold to a cavalry officer…
- War Horse (play by Stafford)
Marianne Elliott: …Michael Morpurgo’s 1982 children’s novel War Horse, which she codirected with Tom Morris. The production, which featured life-sized horse puppets, premiered in October 2007 at the NT’s South Bank location, and in 2008 Elliott earned one of the play’s six Laurence Olivier nominations. In March 2009 War Horse transferred to…
- War Horse, The (poetry by Boland)
Eavan Boland: …published outside Ireland, reprinted both The War Horse (1975), which contains controlled, conventionally styled poems about suburban life and political tension, and In Her Own Image (1980), featuring terse poetic narratives about women. The poems of Night Feed (1982) link her spiritual maturation to her new state of motherhood. The…
- War Hunt (film by Sanders [1962])
Sydney Pollack: Early work in television and film: …in his first feature film, War Hunt (1962). The Korean War drama featured Robert Redford, and Pollack would later collaborate with Redford on a number of notable movies.
- War in New Zealand, The (work by Fox)
Sir William Fox: …defended his government’s actions in The War in New Zealand (1860; rev. ed., 1866). Although he acted as premier (1869–72), the colonial treasurer, Julius Vogel, held the real power. In his parliamentary career, Fox was most effective as head of the opposition rather than in leading the government. He resigned…
- War Industry Committee (Russian history)
Russia: War and the fall of the monarchy: Unofficial War Industry Committees were established in major cities and some provinces to bring together representatives of local authorities, cooperatives, merchants, industrialists, and workers for mutual consultation on economic priorities. These were supplemented in the summer of 1915 by government-sponsored Special Councils in the fields of…
- War Information, Office of (United States agency)
Elmer Davis: Appointed to head the Office of War Information in 1942, Davis won respect for his handling of official news and propaganda, although his liberal stance, especially his opposition to military censorship, generated controversy. In 1945 he resumed his career as a news broadcaster with the American Broadcasting Company until…
- War is Over, The (film by Resnais [1966])
Alain Resnais: …political figures, however, as in La Guerre est finie (1966; “The War Is Over”), his scrupulosity and tragic humanism are so much in evidence that his work transcends partisan feelings.
- War Labor Disputes Act (United States [1943])
Smith-Connally Anti-Strike Act, (June 25, 1943), measure enacted by the U.S. Congress, over President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s veto, giving the president power to seize and operate privately owned war plants when an actual or threatened strike or lockout interfered with war production. Subsequent
- War Lord, The (film by Schaffner [1965])
Franklin J. Schaffner: Schaffner next directed The War Lord (1965), a medieval drama starring Charlton Heston and Richard Boone. Less popular was The Double Man (1967), an espionage drama with Yul Brynner in a dual role as an American and an East German spy.
- War Machine (film by Michôd [2017])
Brad Pitt: Films from the late 1990s and beyond: …portrayed a four-star general in War Machine, a military satire that was released on Netflix.
- war mask
mask: Therapeutic uses: A war mask will have a malevolent expression or hideously fantastic features to instill fear in the enemy. The ancient Greeks and Romans used battle shields with grotesque masks (such as Gorgon masks) or attached terrifying masks to their armour, as did Chinese warriors. Grimacing menpō,…
- War Measures Act (Canada [1970])
Canada: Quebec separatism: …intervention, prompting enactment of the War Measures Act, which suspended the usual civil liberties. Subsequently some 500 people were arrested, and troops were moved into Quebec. The Canadian public generally approved of the act, but few convictions followed, except of those accused of the murder of Laporte.
- War Memoirs (work by Lloyd George)
David Lloyd George: Later years and assessment: …himself thereafter to writing his War Memoirs (1933–36) and The Truth About the Peace Treaties (1938). In 1940 Winston Churchill invited him to join his War Cabinet, but Lloyd George declined, ostensibly on grounds of age and health. Just two months before his death, he was elevated to the peerage…
- War Mobilization, Office of (United States government)
United States: War production: …mobilization, and in 1943 an Office of War Mobilization was established to supervise the host of defense agencies that had sprung up in Washington, D.C. Gradually, a priorities system was devised to supply defense plants with raw materials; a synthetic rubber industry was developed from scratch; rationing conserved scarce resources;…
- War of Attrition (Egyptian-Israeli history)
War of Attrition, inconclusive war (1969–70) chiefly between Egypt and Israel. The conflict, launched by Egypt, was meant to wear down Israel by means of a long engagement and so provide Egypt with the opportunity to dislodge Israeli forces from the Sinai Peninsula, which Israel had seized from
- War of the End of the World, The (work by Vargas Llosa)
Mario Vargas Llosa: …del fin del mundo (1981; The War of the End of the World), an account of the 19th-century political conflicts in Brazil, became a best seller in Spanish-speaking countries. Three of his plays—La señorita de Tacna (1981; The Young Lady of Tacna), Kathie y el hipopotamo (1983; Kathie and the…
- War of the Roses, The (film by DeVito [1989])
Danny DeVito: Career: …such as the satirical comedy The War of the Roses (1989), the crime biopic Hoffa (1992), and the dark comedy Throw Momma from the Train (1987). In 1992 DeVito, along with Perlman and American producer Michael Shamberg, cofounded the production company Jersey Films, which produced movies such as the fantasy…
- War of the Saints, The (novel by Amado)
Jorge Amado: …O sumiço da santa (1993; The War of the Saints). Amado published his memoirs, Navegaçãu de cabotagem (“Coastal Navigation”), in 1992.
- War of the Sons of Light Against the Sons of Darkness, The (Hebrew document)
The War of the Sons of Light Against the Sons of Darkness, a Dead Sea Scroll, and one of the most important documents of the Essene sect of Jews that established a community at Qumrān in the Judaean desert during the first half of the 2nd century bc. The Essenes thought themselves to be the holy
- War of the Worlds (radio drama by Welles [1938])
Orson Welles: Theatre and radio in the 1930s: Wells’s The War of the Worlds; the performance on October 30, using the format of a simulated news broadcast narrated by Welles, announced an attack on New Jersey by invaders from Mars. (However, contemporary reports that the program caused a nationwide panic were exaggerated.)
- War of the Worlds (film by Spielberg [2005])
Tom Cruise: He reteamed with Spielberg on War of the Worlds (2005), a visually impressive adaptation of the H.G. Wells novel of the same name. In 2008 Cruise earned laughs as an abrasive movie executive in the comedy Tropic Thunder, and he portrayed the historical figure Col. Claus von Stauffenberg, a German…
- War of the Worlds, The (film by Haskin [1953])
George Pal: …Collide (1951), and Byron Haskin’s The War of the Worlds (1953). The films all won Oscars for special effects, with Pal’s production company receiving the award for Destination Moon. Accepting a deal to produce and design films for MGM, Pal made his feature-film directing debut with tom thumb (1958), a…
- War of the Worlds, The (novel by Wells)
The War of the Worlds, science fiction novel by H.G. Wells, first published serially by Pearson’s Magazine in the U.K. and by The Cosmopolitan magazine in the U.S. in 1897. The novel details a catastrophic conflict between humans and extraterrestrial “Martians.” It is considered a landmark work of
- War of Time (work by Carpentier)
Alejo Carpentier: …volume Guerra del tiempo (1958; War of Time). Carpentier’s second novel, and the first to enjoy wide acclaim, was El reino de este mundo (1950; The Kingdom of This World); it is about the Haitian revolution. In the prologue to this work, Carpentier expounds on magic realism, which he defines…
- War on Drugs (United States history)
War on Drugs, the effort in the United States since the 1970s to combat illegal drug use by greatly increasing penalties, enforcement, and incarceration for drug offenders. The War on Drugs began in June 1971 when U.S. Pres. Richard Nixon declared drug abuse to be “public enemy number one” and
- War on Peace: The End of Diplomacy and the Decline of American Influence (work by Farrow)
Ronan Farrow: Farrow published War on Peace: The End of Diplomacy and the Decline of American Influence (2018), which draws on his State Department experience. The best-selling Catch and Kill: Lies, Spies, and Conspiracy to Protect Predators (2019) details his investigative work for NBC and The New Yorker on…
- War on Poverty (United States history)
War on Poverty, expansive social welfare legislation introduced in the 1960s by the administration of U.S. Pres. Lyndon B. Johnson and intended to help end poverty in the United States. It was part of a larger legislative reform program, known as the Great Society, that Johnson hoped would make the
- war on terrorism (United States history)
war on terrorism, term used to describe the American-led global counterterrorism campaign launched in response to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. In its scope, expenditure, and impact on international relations, the war on terrorism was comparable to the Cold War; it was intended to
- War Paint (musical theater)
Patti LuPone: …a prisoner seeking parole, and War Paint (2017), a musical about rival cosmetic magnates Elizabeth Arden and Helena Rubinstein. LuPone later appeared in the London production of Company (2018–19), a revival of a Stephen Sondheim musical in which the gender of most of the characters was switched. For her performance,…