- Whitney, Anne (American sculptor)
Anne Whitney was an American sculptor whose life-size statues and portrait busts frequently addressed abolitionist and feminist concerns. During the 1850s Whitney began to write poetry and experiment with sculpture. By 1855 she had advanced to making portrait busts, and in 1859, the year she
- Whitney, Asa (American merchant)
railroad: The transcontinental railroad: …the New York City merchant Asa Whitney in 1844. At that time the United States did not hold outright possession of land west of the Rockies, though it exercised joint occupation of the Oregon Country until 1846, when under a treaty with Britain it gained possession of the Pacific coast…
- Whitney, Caspar (American journalist)
Walter Camp: …1889 through 1897, Camp and Caspar Whitney collaborated in choosing the annual All-America football team, an idea that seems to have originated with Whitney. From 1898 through 1924, the teams were announced in the magazine Collier’s under the name of Camp alone. On his death he was succeeded as All-America…
- Whitney, Charlotte Anita (American activist)
Charlotte Anita Whitney was an American suffragist and political radical who was prominent in the founding and early activities of the Communist Party in the United States. Whitney was the daughter of a lawyer and a niece of Supreme Court justice Stephen J. Field and of financier Cyrus W. Field. In
- Whitney, Cornelius Vanderbilt (American businessman)
Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney was an American businessman who turned inherited wealth and a variety of interests into significant achievements in business and public service. Whitney was born into two of the most prominent families in the United States. His mother was the sculptor Gertrude
- Whitney, Eli (American inventor and manufacturer)
Eli Whitney was an American inventor, mechanical engineer, and manufacturer. He is best remembered as the inventor of the cotton gin but most importantly for developing the concept of mass production of interchangeable parts. Whitney’s father was a respected farmer who served as a justice of the
- Whitney, Gertrude Vanderbilt (American sculptor)
Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney was an American sculptor and art patron, founder of the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City. Gertrude Vanderbilt was a great-granddaughter of Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt, founder of one of America’s great fortunes. From her early years she was interested
- Whitney, Jock (American sportsman and businessman)
John Hay Whitney was an American multimillionaire and sportsman who had a multifaceted career as a publisher, financier, philanthropist, and horse breeder. Whitney was born into a prominent family; his maternal grandfather was U.S. Secretary of State John Hay, and his father’s side included some of
- Whitney, John Hay (American sportsman and businessman)
John Hay Whitney was an American multimillionaire and sportsman who had a multifaceted career as a publisher, financier, philanthropist, and horse breeder. Whitney was born into a prominent family; his maternal grandfather was U.S. Secretary of State John Hay, and his father’s side included some of
- Whitney, Mary Watson (American astronomer)
Mary Watson Whitney was an American astronomer who built Vassar College’s research program in astronomy into one of the nation’s finest. Whitney graduated from public high school in 1863 and entered Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York, with advanced standing in 1865. She immediately came under
- Whitney, Mount (mountain, California, United States)
Mount Whitney, highest peak (14,494 feet [4,418 metres] above sea level) in the 48 conterminous U.S. states. It is the culminating summit of the Sierra Nevada. In eastern California on the Inyo-Tulare county line, the peak is at the eastern border of Sequoia National Park, immediately west of the
- Whitney, Phyllis Ayame (American author)
Phyllis Ayame Whitney was an American author who wrote for both juvenile and adult audiences—largely mysteries and maturation stories for the former and romantic mysteries for the latter. Whitney’s father was in business in Japan, and she grew up in the Far East. At the age of 15, Whitney and her
- Whitney, William C. (United States naval secretary)
William C. Whitney was the U.S. secretary of the navy (1885–89) who played a major role in the post-Civil War rebuilding of the navy. Admitted to the bar in 1865, Whitney practiced law in New York City and became active in local Democratic Party affairs. An opponent of Tammany Hall (the city
- Whitney, William Collins (United States naval secretary)
William C. Whitney was the U.S. secretary of the navy (1885–89) who played a major role in the post-Civil War rebuilding of the navy. Admitted to the bar in 1865, Whitney practiced law in New York City and became active in local Democratic Party affairs. An opponent of Tammany Hall (the city
- Whitney, William Dwight (American linguist)
William Dwight Whitney was an American linguist and one of the foremost Sanskrit scholars of his time, noted especially for his classic work, Sanskrit Grammar (1879). As a professor of Sanskrit (1854–94) and comparative language studies (1869–94) at Yale University, Whitney conducted extensive
- Whitney, Willis Rodney (American chemist)
Willis Rodney Whitney was an American chemist and founder of the General Electric Company’s research laboratory, where he directed pioneering work in electrical technology and was credited with setting the pattern for industrial scientific laboratory research in the United States. Whitney studied
- Whitson, Peggy (American biochemist and astronaut)
Peggy Whitson is an American biochemist and astronaut, who was the first female commander of the International Space Station (ISS) and who holds the record among American astronauts and among women for spending the most time in space, nearly 666 days. Whitson received a B.S. in biology and
- Whitson, Peggy Annette (American biochemist and astronaut)
Peggy Whitson is an American biochemist and astronaut, who was the first female commander of the International Space Station (ISS) and who holds the record among American astronauts and among women for spending the most time in space, nearly 666 days. Whitson received a B.S. in biology and
- Whitstable (England, United Kingdom)
Whitstable, town, city (district) of Canterbury, administrative and historic county of Kent, southeastern England. It is situated east of the Isle of Sheppey on the River Thames estuary shore, about 4 miles (6 km) west of Herne Bay. From Roman times it was known for the oysters gathered from the
- Whitsunday (Christianity)
Pentecost, (Pentecost from Greek pentecostē, “50th day”), major festival in the Christian church, celebrated on the Sunday that falls on the 50th day of Easter. It commemorates the descent of the Holy Spirit on the Apostles and other disciples following the Crucifixion, Resurrection, and Ascension
- Whitsunday Island (island, Queensland, Australia)
Whitsunday Island, largest of the Cumberland Islands, lying 6 miles (10 km) off the northeastern coast of Queensland, Australia, in the Coral Sea. An inshore, coral-fringed continental island, it measures 12 by 8 miles (19 by 13 km), has an area of 42 square miles (109 square km), and rises from
- Whitsunday, Mount (mountain, Queensland, Australia)
Whitsunday Island: …cliffs of volcanic rock to Mount Whitsunday, 1,426 feet (435 metres). The island lies between the coral formations of the Great Barrier Reef and the Whitsunday Passage, which is 20 miles (32 km) long and a minimum of 2 miles (3 km) wide. Both the island and the passage, which…
- Whittaker, Charles E. (United States jurist)
Charles E. Whittaker was an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court (1957–62). Whittaker was admitted to the bar in 1923 and received his law degree the following year. In 1930 he became a partner in a Kansas City law firm, where he specialized in corporation law. In 1954 he was
- Whittaker, Charles Evans (United States jurist)
Charles E. Whittaker was an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court (1957–62). Whittaker was admitted to the bar in 1923 and received his law degree the following year. In 1930 he became a partner in a Kansas City law firm, where he specialized in corporation law. In 1954 he was
- Whittaker, Jodie (British actress)
Doctor Who: …be portrayed by a woman, Jodie Whittaker; the first episode starring Whittaker aired the following year. Doctor Who also engendered numerous spin-offs across different media, including the TV series Torchwood (2006–11) and The Sarah Jane Adventures (2007–11).
- Whittaker, Robert H. (American biologist)
life: Classification and microbiota: Copeland and Robert H. Whittaker, has now thoroughly abandoned the two-kingdom plant-versus-animal dichotomy. Haeckel proposed three kingdoms when he established “Protista” for microorganisms. Copeland classified the microorganisms into the Monerans (prokaryotes) and the Protoctista (which included fungi with the rest of the eukaryotic microorganisms). His four-kingdom scheme…
- Whittaker, Sir Edmund Taylor (British mathematician)
Sir Edmund Taylor Whittaker was an English mathematician who made pioneering contributions to the area of special functions, which is of particular interest in mathematical physics. Whittaker became a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1896. After being elected a fellow of the Royal Society
- Whittelsey, Abigail Goodrich (American editor)
Abigail Goodrich Whittelsey was an American editor whose mission in her magazine work was to provide information and instruction on the role of mothers. Abigail Goodrich was the daughter of a clergyman and was an elder sister of Samuel Griswold Goodrich, later famous as Peter Parley, author of
- Whittemore, Edward Reed, II (American teacher and poet)
Reed Whittemore was an American teacher and poet noted for his free-flowing ironic verse. Whittemore cofounded the literary magazine Furioso while he was a student at Yale University (B.A., 1941). He served in the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II and afterward revived and edited Furioso and
- Whittemore, Reed (American teacher and poet)
Reed Whittemore was an American teacher and poet noted for his free-flowing ironic verse. Whittemore cofounded the literary magazine Furioso while he was a student at Yale University (B.A., 1941). He served in the U.S. Army Air Forces during World War II and afterward revived and edited Furioso and
- Whitten Brown, Sir Arthur (British aviator)
Sir Arthur Whitten Brown was a British aviator who, with Capt. John W. Alcock, made the first nonstop airplane crossing of the Atlantic. (Read Orville Wright’s 1929 biography of his brother, Wilbur.) Brown was trained as an engineer and became a pilot in the Royal Air Force during World War I. As
- Whitten v. Georgia (law case)
Eighth Amendment: …a century later, however, in Whitten v. Georgia (1872), the Supreme Court put limits on what was constitutionally permissible, holding that the “cruel and unusual” clause was “intended to prohibit the barbarities of quartering, hanging in chains, castration, etc.” Similarly, in In re Kemmler (1890), when the electric chair was…
- Whittier (California, United States)
Whittier, city, Los Angeles county, southern California, U.S. It lies at the foot of the Puente Hills, about 12 miles (19 km) southeast of the city centre of Los Angeles. Part of the Rancho Paso de Bartolo Viejo land grant, the site was chosen in 1887 by Aquila H. Pickering for a Quaker community
- Whittier, John Greenleaf (American author)
John Greenleaf Whittier was an American poet and abolitionist who, in the latter part of his life, shared with Henry Wadsworth Longfellow the distinction of being a household name in both England and the United States. Born on a farm into a Quaker family, Whittier had only a limited formal
- Whittier, Pollyanna (fictional character)
Pollyanna, fictional character, the orphaned but ever-optimistic heroine of Eleanor Hodgman Porter’s novel Pollyanna
- Whittingham, M. Stanley (British American chemist)
M. Stanley Whittingham is a British-born American chemist who won the 2019 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work in developing lithium-ion batteries. He shared the prize with American chemist John Goodenough and Japanese chemist Yoshino Akira. Whittingham received a bachelor’s degree (1964), a
- Whittingham, William (English theologian)
biblical literature: The Geneva Bible: …almost certainly be identified as William Whittingham, the brother-in-law of Calvin’s wife, and his assistants Anthony Gilby and Thomas Sampson. The Geneva Bible was not printed in England until 1576, but it was allowed to be imported without hindrance. The accession of Elizabeth in 1558 put an end to the…
- Whittington, Dick (English merchant and politician)
Dick Whittington was an English merchant and lord mayor of London who became a well-known figure in legend and traditional pantomime. Whittington, who was the son of a knight of Gloucestershire, opened a mercer’s shop in London that supplied velvets and damasks to such notables as Henry Bolingbroke
- Whittington, Richard (English merchant and politician)
Dick Whittington was an English merchant and lord mayor of London who became a well-known figure in legend and traditional pantomime. Whittington, who was the son of a knight of Gloucestershire, opened a mercer’s shop in London that supplied velvets and damasks to such notables as Henry Bolingbroke
- Whittle, Sir Frank (British inventor and aviator)
Sir Frank Whittle was an English aviation engineer and pilot who invented the jet engine. The son of a mechanic, Whittle entered the Royal Air Force (RAF) as a boy apprentice and soon qualified as a pilot at the RAF College in Cranwell. He was posted to a fighter squadron in 1928 and served as a
- Whittlesey, Derwent S. (American geographer)
historical geography: …intervals of historic time—initiated by Derwent S. Whittlesey and Carl O. Sauer. The establishment of the Journal of Historical Geography (1975) and historical-geography research groups by the Institute of British Geographers (1973) and the Association of American Geographers (1979) served to vindicate the historical approach in geography.
- Whittredge, Thomas Worthington (American painter)
Worthington Whittredge was an American landscape painter associated with the Hudson River school. Whittredge, originally a house painter, took up portraiture and landscape painting about 1838. Beginning in 1849, he spent about five years in Düsseldorf, Germany, where he posed for Emanuel Leutze,
- Whittredge, Worthington (American painter)
Worthington Whittredge was an American landscape painter associated with the Hudson River school. Whittredge, originally a house painter, took up portraiture and landscape painting about 1838. Beginning in 1849, he spent about five years in Düsseldorf, Germany, where he posed for Emanuel Leutze,
- Whitty, Thomas (British weaver)
Axminster carpet: …1755 by the cloth weaver Thomas Whitty. Resembling somewhat the Savonnerie carpets produced in France, Axminster carpets were symmetrically knotted by hand in wool on woolen warps and had a weft of flax or hemp. Like the French carpets, they often featured Renaissance architectural or floral patterns; others mimicked Oriental…
- Whitworth College (college, Spokane, Washington, United States)
Spokane: Whitworth College (1890), and several community colleges serve the city. Spokane is a gateway to the resorts of Mount Spokane (5,881 feet [1,793 metres]) and the Colville and Kaniksu national forests. Inc. 1881. Pop. (2010) 208,916; Spokane Metro Area, 471,221; (2020) 228,989; Spokane–Spokane Valley Metro…
- Whitworth, Kathrynne Ann (American golfer)
Kathy Whitworth was an American athlete who was one of the great players of women’s professional golf. Whitworth grew up in Jal, New Mexico, where she began playing golf at the age of 15. After graduating from high school in 1957, she attended Odessa (Texas) Junior College for a semester. Whitworth
- Whitworth, Kathy (American golfer)
Kathy Whitworth was an American athlete who was one of the great players of women’s professional golf. Whitworth grew up in Jal, New Mexico, where she began playing golf at the age of 15. After graduating from high school in 1957, she attended Odessa (Texas) Junior College for a semester. Whitworth
- Whitworth, Sir Joseph, Baronet (British engineer)
Sir Joseph Whitworth, Baronet was an English mechanical engineer who won international recognition as a machine toolmaker. After working as a mechanic for various Manchester machine manufacturers, Whitworth went to London in 1825 and at Maudslay & Company devised a scraping technique for making a
- WHO (album by the Who)
the Who: …year, issued the well-received album WHO. The Who was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1990 and received Kennedy Center Honors in 2008.
- WHO (UN public health agency)
World Health Organization (WHO), specialized agency of the United Nations (UN) established in 1948 to further international cooperation for improved public health conditions. Although it inherited specific tasks relating to epidemic control, quarantine measures, and drug standardization from the
- Who Are We Now? (poetry by Ferlinghetti)
Lawrence Ferlinghetti: … (1965), Tyrannus Nix? (1969), and Who Are We Now? (1976) suggest. Retrospective collections of his poems were published as Endless Life (1981) and These Are My Rivers (1995). In 1988 Ferlinghetti published a short novel, Love in the Days of Rage, about a romance during the student revolution in France…
- Who Are You (album by the Who)
Pete Townshend: The Who: …by Numbers in 1975 and Who Are You in 1978. Moon died of an accidental drug overdose in 1978 and was replaced by drummer Kenney Jones. Although Townshend sought to honour Moon’s memory by remaining in the Who after his death, the band broke up in 1982.
- Who Asked You? (novel by McMillan)
Terry McMillan: Later works and career: …sequel to Waiting to Exhale; Who Asked You? (2013); and I Almost Forgot About You (2016). McMillan edited Breaking Ice: An Anthology of Contemporary African-American Fiction (1990) and has taught at the universities of Wyoming and Arizona and at Stanford University. She also wrote the nonfiction work It’s OK if…
- Who by Numbers, The (album by the Who)
Pete Townshend: The Who: …its run with the albums The Who by Numbers in 1975 and Who Are You in 1978. Moon died of an accidental drug overdose in 1978 and was replaced by drummer Kenney Jones. Although Townshend sought to honour Moon’s memory by remaining in the Who after his death, the band…
- Who Came First (album by Townshend)
the Who: …issued his first solo album, Who Came First, in 1972; and Daltrey offered his, Daltrey, in 1973. Still, the Who continued apace, releasing Townshend’s second magnum rock opera, Quadrophenia, in 1973, The Who by Numbers in 1975, and Who Are You in 1978.
- Who Do You Think You Are? (short stories by Munro)
Alice Munro: …her collections—the other two being Who Do You Think You Are? (1978; also published as The Beggar Maid: Stories of Flo and Rose) and The Progress of Love (1986)—awarded the annual Governor General’s Literary Award for fiction. Lives of Girls and Women (1971) was conceived as a novel but developed…
- Who Framed Roger Rabbit (film by Zemeckis [1988])
Bugs Bunny: …reappeared in the feature films Who Framed Roger Rabbit? (1988), Space Jam (1996), and Space Jam: A New Legacy (2021). His likeness is marketed extensively on commercial products.
- Who Gathered and Whispered Behind Me (poetry by Goldbarth)
Albert Goldbarth: … (1979), Ink, Blood, Semen (1980), Who Gathered and Whispered Behind Me (1981), Arts & Sciences (1986), Popular Culture (1990), The Gods (1993), Adventures in Ancient Egypt (1996), Beyond (1998), Saving Lives (2001), Everyday People
- Who Goes There? (story by Campbell)
Howard Hawks: Films of the 1950s of Howard Hawks: Campbell’s classic science-fiction story “Who Goes There?” bears all the hallmarks of a Hawks film (not least in its overlapping dialogue). It marked Hawks’s only foray into that genre, but it has been recognized by many cineasts as one of the best science-fiction films of the 1950s. The Big…
- Who Governs?: Democracy and Power in an American City (work by Dahl)
Robert A. Dahl: In his best-known work, Who Governs?: Democracy and Power in an American City (1961), a study of power dynamics in New Haven, Connecticut, Dahl argued that political power in the United States is pluralistic. He thus rebutted power-elite theorists such as C. Wright Mills and Floyd Hunter, who had…
- Who Has Seen the Wind? (novel by Mitchell)
Canadian literature: Modern period, 1900–60: …and My House (1941) by Sinclair Ross, Who Has Seen the Wind (1947) by W.O. Mitchell, and The Mountain and the Valley (1952) by Ernest Buckler, set in Nova Scotia’s Annapolis valley. These novels strain the bonds of conventional narrative structures as they shift from social realism toward lyricism. In…
- Who has won the most NCAA men’s basketball championships?
Since 1939 the NCAA has been crowning a men’s basketball champion. It is one of the most coveted titles in college sports, and the championship tournament has become must-see TV in the United States. The first winner was Oregon, which defeated Ohio State in a closely contested game, 46–43. Since
- Who has won the most NCAA women’s basketball championships?
In 1982 the first NCAA women’s basketball champion was crowned, as Louisiana Tech defeated Cheyney State College (now Cheyney University of Pennsylvania), 76–62. The title came more than 40 years after the first men’s championship was awarded, and it was widely seen as a turning point in women’s
- Who Is America? (American television series)
Sacha Baron Cohen: …then debuted the television series Who Is America? in 2018, once again creating several outlandish characters to interview unsuspecting politicians and celebrities to reveal their prejudices. The next year the comedian assumed a more serious role when he was cast as Israeli operative Eli Cohen in the TV series The…
- Who Needs Pictures (album by Paisley)
Brad Paisley: …before releasing his debut record, Who Needs Pictures, in 1999. The album sold more than one million copies, fueled in part by the ballad “He Didn’t Have to Be,” an affectionate tribute to stepfathers that was Paisley’s first number one hit on the Billboard country singles chart. That same year…
- Who Sell Out, The (album by the Who)
the Who: Until the 1967 release of The Who Sell Out, a sardonic concept album presented as a pirate radio broadcast, the Who were primarily a singles group. They were, however, more successful in this regard in Britain (eight top ten hits between 1965 and 1967) than in the United States (“I…
- Who Shot Lester Monroe? (film by Hall, Hall, and Carter [2009])
Tom T. Hall: …the comic all-star bluegrass film Who Shot Lester Monroe? (2009), featuring the Halls and their friends. Hall was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame (2008) and the Songwriters Hall of Fame (2019).
- Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? (American game show)
American Broadcasting Company: Focus on television: …with prime-time series such as Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (1999–2002, 2009), Lost (2004–10), Desperate Housewives (2004–12), Grey’s Anatomy (2005– ), and Dancing with the Stars (2005– ), along with long-running daytime dramas such as One Life to Live
- Who Was Oswald Fish? (novel by Wilson)
A.N. Wilson: …the sometimes outrageous comedy of Who Was Oswald Fish? (1981) and Scandal (1983) to the black comedy of The Healing Art (1980), Wise Virgin (1982), The Vicar of Sorrows (1993), and My Name Is Legion (2004). His other novels included works set in the past, such as Gentleman in England…
- Who Was That Lady? (film by Sidney [1960])
George Sidney: Later work: …films was the light comedy Who Was That Lady? (1960), which featured the amusing team of Dean Martin and Tony Curtis. Bye Bye Birdie (1963) was a lively version of the Broadway blockbuster that was inspired by Elvis Presley’s army induction; it starred Ann-Margret and Dick Van Dyke.
- Who were the Von Erich wrestling family?
If you’re brainstorming family-friendly activities for your next reunion, kicking and punching are likely not the first options that come to mind. One American family, however, might think otherwise. From the 1950s to the early 1990s the Von Erich family—a father and five of his sons—were a
- Who You Think I Am (film by Nebbou [2019])
Juliette Binoche: …Celle que vous croyez (2019; Who You Think I Am), in which a middle-aged professor pretends to be a younger woman on social media; and La bonne épouse (2020; How to Be a Good Wife), a satire about the patriarchy in 1960s France. In 2022 she appeared in several movies,…
- Who’ll Stop the Rain (song by Fogerty)
Creedence Clearwater Revival: …Moon Rising” (1969) and “Who’ll Stop the Rain” (1970) evoked the Vietnam War and civil discord without explicitly referring to those events; “Fortunate Son” (1969) was a furious blast at wealth and status. From the beginning of 1969 until the end of 1970, Creedence ruled the American pop charts.…
- Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (film by Nichols [1966])
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, American dramatic film, released in 1966, that was an adaptation of Edward Albee’s shocking play of the same name. The acclaimed movie—which marked Mike Nichols’s film directorial debut—won 5 of the 13 Academy Awards it was nominated for; each of the four main
- Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (play by Albee)
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, play in three acts by Edward Albee, published, produced, and debuted on Broadway in 1962. The action takes place in the living room of a middle-aged couple, George and Martha, who have come home from a faculty party drunk and quarrelsome. When Nick, a young biology
- Who’s Been Sleeping in My Bed? (film by Mann [1963])
Carol Burnett: …number of motion pictures, including Who’s Been Sleeping in My Bed? (1963), Pete ’n’ Tillie (1972), The Four Seasons (1981), and Annie (1982). She displayed her dramatic skill in the television movie Friendly Fire (1979), for which she received an Emmy nomination. Aside from her work on The Carol Burnett…
- Who’s Minding the Store? (film by Tashlin [1963])
Frank Tashlin: Films of the 1960s: Lewis also starred in Who’s Minding the Store? (1963), this time as an inept department-store clerk with a crush on an elevator operator (Jill St. John). Danny Kaye had the lead in The Man from the Diners’ Club (1963), which was based on a screenplay by William Peter Blatty,…
- Who’s Next (album by the Who)
Pete Townshend: The Who: …with the critically acclaimed album Who’s Next (1971), which included the rock anthems “Won’t Get Fooled Again” and “Baba O’Riley,” and the double-album rock opera Quadrophenia (1973), featuring the tracks “The Real Me” and “Love, Reign o’er Me.” Townshend released his first solo album, Who Came First, in 1972, opening…
- Who’s Sorry Now (recording by Francis)
Connie Francis: However, “Who’s Sorry Now,” a 1920s standard that she had recorded in 1957 as a rock ballad, became a hit the following year after it was championed by Dick Clark on his American Bandstand television show.
- Who’s That Knocking at My Door? (film by Scorsese)
Martin Scorsese: Early life and work: Scorsese’s first theatrical film, Who’s That Knocking at My Door (1967), was an intimate portrayal of life in the streets of Little Italy. Harvey Keitel (who went on to do several more films with Scorsese throughout his career) starred as Scorsese’s alter ego, a streetwise but sensitive Italian American…
- Who’s Who
Who’s Who, any of numerous biographical dictionaries that give brief and pertinent information about prominent living persons who are distinguished in a particular field or by official position or public standing and who have, in most cases, supplied data about themselves through publisher
- Who’s Who in America (biographical dictionary)
Who’s Who in America, biographical dictionary that provides brief and pertinent information about prominent living persons in the United States. Most of the material is self-reported, supplied through publisher questionnaires. In 1849 the world’s first Who’s Who was published in London. It was a
- Who’s Who in America: A Biographical Dictionary of Notable Living Men and Women (biographical dictionary)
Who’s Who in America, biographical dictionary that provides brief and pertinent information about prominent living persons in the United States. Most of the material is self-reported, supplied through publisher questionnaires. In 1849 the world’s first Who’s Who was published in London. It was a
- Who’s won the most NASCAR Cup Series championships?
Since 1949 NASCAR has been crowning a season champion, using a scoring system that awards drivers points in each race in the Cup Series. While a number of drivers have won multiple championships, three are in a league (or lane) of their own: Richard Petty, Dale Earnhardt, and Jimmie Johnson. Each
- Who’s won the most Oscars?
First presented in 1929, the Academy Awards are among the most prestigious prizes in the film industry. Competition is fierce, and a number of individuals have won multiple awards. With 22 Oscars, producer Walt Disney holds the record for the most wins; he was also the recipient of four special or
- Who’s won the most Stanley Cups?
First awarded in 1893, the Stanley Cup is the oldest trophy in North American professional sports. It was originally given to “the championship hockey club of the Dominion of Canada,” but since 1926 it has been presented to the winner of the NHL’s championship series. Which team has hoisted the
- Who’s won the most Super Bowls?
The biggest game in the NFL is the Super Bowl, and the biggest prize is the Vince Lombardi Trophy, which is given to the winners. Two teams have hoisted the trophy a record-setting six times: the New England Patriots and Pittsburgh Steelers. Close behind are the Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco
- Who, the (British rock group)
the Who, British rock group that was among the most popular and influential bands of the 1960s and ’70s and that originated the rock opera. The principal members were Pete Townshend (b. May 19, 1945, London, England), Roger Daltrey (b. March 1, 1944, London), John Entwistle (b. October 9, 1944,
- WHOI (research centre, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, United States)
Barnstable: …is the home of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and the Marine Biological Laboratory. In November 1620, before landing at Plymouth, the Pilgrims sheltered at what is now Provincetown, where they signed the Mayflower Compact. The main Indian inhabitants were the Nausets and Wampanoags. Mashpee is the
- Whole Art of the Stage, The (work by Aubignac)
François Hédelin, abbé d’Aubignac: …La Pratique du théâtre (1657; The Whole Art of the Stage, 1684), was commissioned by Richelieu and is based on the idea that the action on stage must have credibility (vraisemblance) in the eyes of the audience. Aubignac proposed, among other things, that the whole play should take place as…
- whole blood (biology)
blood transfusion: Transfusion procedures and blood storage: …its use in specialized forms:
- Whole Booke of Psalmes Faithfully Translated into English Metre, The (work by Ravenscroft)
Bay Psalm Book, (1640), perhaps the oldest book now in existence that was published in British North America. It was prepared by Puritan leaders of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Printed in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on a press set up by Stephen Day, it included a dissertation on the lawfulness and
- Whole Booke of Psalmes Faithfully Translated into English Metre, The (work by Ravenscroft)
Bay Psalm Book, (1640), perhaps the oldest book now in existence that was published in British North America. It was prepared by Puritan leaders of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Printed in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on a press set up by Stephen Day, it included a dissertation on the lawfulness and
- Whole Booke of Psalms (work by Ravenscroft)
Bay Psalm Book, (1640), perhaps the oldest book now in existence that was published in British North America. It was prepared by Puritan leaders of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Printed in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on a press set up by Stephen Day, it included a dissertation on the lawfulness and
- whole copra (coconut product)
copra: Whole copra, also called ball or edible copra, is produced by the less common drying of the intact, whole nut kernel.
- Whole Duty of Man According to the Law of Nature, The (work by Pufendorf)
Samuel, baron von Pufendorf: Career in Sweden: …an excerpt from it, titled The Whole Duty of Man According to the Law of Nature, in which Pufendorf departed from the traditional approach of the medieval theologians to natural law and based it on man’s existence as a social being (socialitas). He argued that every individual has a right…
- Whole Earth ‘Lectronic Link, The (Internet community)
The WELL, long-standing Internet community that features message-board-style discussions on a wide variety of topics. Founded by Americans Stewart Brand and Larry Brilliant, The WELL’s origins trace back to 1985, when it began as a dial-up bulletin board system (BBS) located in San Francisco. Since
- Whole Earth Catalog, The (American publication)
Internet: The WELL: …as an extension of his Whole Earth Catalog, the WELL was one of the first electronic communities organized around forums dedicated to particular subjects such as parenting and Grateful Dead concerts. The latter were an especially popular topic of online conversation, but it was in the parenting forum where a…
- Whole Foods Market (American supermarket chain)
Whole Foods Market, the largest American chain of supermarkets that specializes in natural and organic foods. It operates stores in the United States and also in Canada and the United Kingdom. Corporate headquarters are in Austin, Texas. In 2017 Whole Foods was acquired by Amazon.com. The first
- whole genome sequencing (genetics)
whole genome sequencing, the act of deducing the complete nucleic acid sequence of the genetic code, or genome, of an organism or organelle (specifically, the mitochondrion or chloroplast). The first whole genome sequencing efforts, carried out in 1976 and 1977, focused respectively on the