- Young, Marguerite (American author)
Marguerite Young was an American writer best known for Miss MacIntosh, My Darling (1965), a mammoth, many-layered novel of illusion and reality. Educated at Indiana University and Butler University, Indianapolis (B.A., 1930), Young also studied at the University of Chicago (M.A., 1936) and did
- Young, Marguerite Vivian (American author)
Marguerite Young was an American writer best known for Miss MacIntosh, My Darling (1965), a mammoth, many-layered novel of illusion and reality. Educated at Indiana University and Butler University, Indianapolis (B.A., 1930), Young also studied at the University of Chicago (M.A., 1936) and did
- Young, Mavis Leslie De Trafford (Canadian-born author)
Mavis Gallant was a Canadian-born writer of essays, novels, plays, and especially short stories, almost all of which were published initially in The New Yorker magazine. In unsentimental prose and with trenchant wit she delineated the isolation, detachment, and fear that afflict rootless North
- Young, Michael W. (American geneticist)
Michael W. Young is an American geneticist who contributed to the discovery of molecular mechanisms that regulate circadian rhythm, the 24-hour period of biological activity in humans and other organisms. Young’s elucidation of the relationships between genes and behavior in the fruit fly
- Young, Murat Bernard (American cartoonist)
Chic Young was a U.S. cartoonist who created the comic strip “Blondie,” which, by the 1960s, was syndicated in more than 1,500 newspapers throughout the world. Young was born into an artistic family and worked at several jobs, including one as a stenographer in a railroad office, for a number of
- Young, Nedrick (American writer and actor)
The Defiant Ones: …was cowritten by blacklisted writer Nedrick Young under the pseudonym Nathan E. Douglas.
- Young, Neil (Canadian musician and filmmaker)
Neil Young is a Canadian guitarist, singer, and songwriter best known for his idiosyncratic output and eclectic sweep, from solo folkie to grungy guitar-rocker. Young grew up in Winnipeg, Manitoba, with his mother after her divorce from his father, a well-known Canadian sportswriter. Having
- Young, Owen D. (American lawyer, businessman, and diplomat)
Owen D. Young was a U.S. lawyer and businessman best known for his efforts to solve reparations issues after World War I. Educated at St. Lawrence University and Boston University Law School, Young practiced law in Boston until 1912 and then became general counsel for the General Electric Company,
- Young, Paul Thomas (American psychologist)
illusion: Auditory phenomena: …was described in 1928 by Paul Thomas Young, an American psychologist, who tested the process of sound localization (the direction from which sound seems to come). He constructed a pseudophone, an instrument made of two ear trumpets, one leading from the right side of the head to the left ear…
- Young, Robert (American actor)
Robert Young was an American actor who costarred in numerous movies but was best remembered for his later portrayal of benevolent authority figures when he starred in the title roles of the television classics Father Knows Best and Marcus Welby, M.D. When Young was 10 years old, his family moved to
- Young, Roland (American actor)
The Philadelphia Story: Cast:
- Young, Sean (American actress)
Blade Runner: Premise and summary: There he meets Rachael (Sean Young), who serves as assistant to the CEO, and Tyrell suggests that Deckard test her. Deckard discovers that Rachael is a replicant who has been given false memories so that she will not know that she is a replicant. Rachael comes to his apartment…
- Young, Steve (American football player)
Steve Young is an American gridiron football player who is considered one of the most accurate quarterbacks in National Football League (NFL) history. Young was raised in Connecticut, where he was all-state in football and baseball at Greenwich High School. He was the great-great-great-grandson of
- Young, Terence (British director)
Zoltan Korda: …the Nile (1955; codirected with Terence Young), a remake of The Four Feathers; although it recycles footage from the 1939 version, the inclusion of Christopher Lee and Laurence Harvey in the cast helped justify the new version. Korda retired afterward because of an extended illness, and he died six years…
- Young, Thomas (British physician and physicist)
Thomas Young was an English physician and physicist who established the principle of interference of light and thus resurrected the century-old wave theory of light. He was also an Egyptologist who helped decipher the Rosetta Stone. In 1799 Young set up a medical practice in London. His primary
- Young, Todd (American politician)
Todd Young is an American politician who was elected to the U.S. Senate as a Republican in 2016 and began representing Indiana in that body the following year. He previously was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives (2011–17). Young was born in Pennsylvania but moved to suburban
- Young, Victor (American composer)
For Whom the Bell Tolls: Production notes and credits:
- Young, Wanda (American singer)
the Marvelettes: …26, 2011, Sherman Oaks, California), Wanda Young (b. August 9, 1943, Detroit, Michigan, U.S.—d. December 15, 2021, Garden City), Georgeanna Tillman (b. February 6, 1943, Detroit—d. January 6, 1980, Detroit), Katherine Anderson (b. January 16, 1944, Ann Arbor, Michigan, U.S.), and Wyanetta Cowart (b. 1944, Detroit).
- Young, Whitney (American civil-rights activist)
Whitney Young was an American civil rights leader who, as head of the National Urban League from 1961 to 1971, spearheaded the drive for equal opportunity for Black people in U.S. industry and government service. Through his advocacy of a “Domestic Marshall Plan”—providing significant financial aid
- Young, Whitney Moore, Jr. (American civil-rights activist)
Whitney Young was an American civil rights leader who, as head of the National Urban League from 1961 to 1971, spearheaded the drive for equal opportunity for Black people in U.S. industry and government service. Through his advocacy of a “Domestic Marshall Plan”—providing significant financial aid
- Young-Helmholtz three-colour theory
human eye: Young-Helmholtz theory: It was the phenomena of colour mixing that led Thomas Young in 1802 to postulate that there are three photoreceptors, each one especially sensitive to one part of the spectrum; these photoreceptors were thought to convey messages to the brain, and, depending on…
- Youngblood (film by Markle [1986])
Keanu Reeves: …as a hockey player in Youngblood (1986), set in the world of junior hockey in Canada. Later that year he gained notice for his portrayal of a disaffected teen in the bleak drama River’s Edge and as the son of an alcoholic father (Andy Griffith) in the TV movie Under…
- Youngblood (novel by Killens)
John Oliver Killens: …published the Pulitzer Prize-nominated novel Youngblood, for which he is best known. The story focuses on the Youngbloods, an African American family that faces the struggle of living in the South under Jim Crow law in the first decades of the 20th century. The inspiration for the characters and their…
- Younger (American television series)
Sutton Foster: …a small-town ballet teacher, and Younger (2015–21), a comedy about a 40-year-old divorcée who decides to pretend that she is 26. In 2021 Foster published the book Hooked: How Crafting Saved My Life (written with Liz Welch), in which she discussed how various hobbies helped her cope with stress and…
- Younger Brothers (American criminals)
Younger Brothers, four Midwestern American outlaws of the post-Civil War era—Thomas Coleman (“Cole”; 1844–1916), John (1846–74); James (“Jim”; 1850–1902), and Robert (“Bob”; 1853–89)—who were often allied with Jesse James. As youngsters in Lee’s Summit, Mo., the Youngers were witness to the bloody
- Younger Dryas (climatology)
Younger Dryas, cool period between roughly 12,900 and 11,600 years ago that disrupted the prevailing warming trend occurring in the Northern Hemisphere at the end of the Pleistocene Epoch (which lasted from 2.6 million to 11,700 years ago). The Younger Dryas was characterized by cooler average
- Younger Dryas climate interval (climatology)
Younger Dryas, cool period between roughly 12,900 and 11,600 years ago that disrupted the prevailing warming trend occurring in the Northern Hemisphere at the end of the Pleistocene Epoch (which lasted from 2.6 million to 11,700 years ago). The Younger Dryas was characterized by cooler average
- Younger Dryas stadial (climatology)
Younger Dryas, cool period between roughly 12,900 and 11,600 years ago that disrupted the prevailing warming trend occurring in the Northern Hemisphere at the end of the Pleistocene Epoch (which lasted from 2.6 million to 11,700 years ago). The Younger Dryas was characterized by cooler average
- Younger Edda (work by Snorri Sturluson)
elf: In the Prose, or Younger, Edda, elves were classified as light elves (who were fair) and dark elves (who were darker than pitch); these classifications are roughly equivalent to the Scottish seelie court and unseelie court. The notable characteristics of elves were mischief and volatility. They were…
- Younger Generation, The (film by Capra [1929])
Frank Capra: Early life and work: The Younger Generation (1929) was a part-sound drama about a man who leaves his family on New York’s Lower East Side to seek the good life on Park Avenue. Capra’s first all-talkie was the comedic murder mystery The Donovan Affair (1929). Flight (also released in…
- Younger Now (album by Cyrus)
Miley Cyrus: Bangerz, Plastic Hearts, and Endless Summer Vacation: Younger Now (2017) featured a number of ballads and country-infused songs, one of which was a duet with Dolly Parton (who is also her godmother). Cyrus’s seventh studio album, the rock-infused Plastic Hearts (2020), further highlighted her versatility.
- Younger Reuss (historical principality, Germany)
Reuss: …Middle Reuss (extinct 1616), and Younger Reuss. Elder Reuss had its capital, Greiz, and other possessions in Oberland; Younger Reuss possessed Unterland, with the capital at Gera, and half of Oberland.
- Younger, Bob (American criminal)
Younger Brothers: …(1846–74); James (“Jim”; 1850–1902), and Robert (“Bob”; 1853–89)—who were often allied with Jesse James.
- Younger, Cole (American criminal)
Jesse James and Frank James: …Confederate guerrillas, becoming friends with Cole Younger, a fellow member. Jesse followed suit by joining “Bloody” Bill Anderson’s guerrilla band. At the end of the war, the bands surrendered, but Jesse was reportedly shot and severely wounded by Federal soldiers while under a flag of truce. He and Frank, joined…
- Younger, James (American criminal)
Younger Brothers: Coleman (“Cole”; 1844–1916), John (1846–74); James (“Jim”; 1850–1902), and Robert (“Bob”; 1853–89)—who were often allied with Jesse James.
- Younger, Jim (American criminal)
Younger Brothers: Coleman (“Cole”; 1844–1916), John (1846–74); James (“Jim”; 1850–1902), and Robert (“Bob”; 1853–89)—who were often allied with Jesse James.
- Younger, John (American criminal)
Younger Brothers: …War era—Thomas Coleman (“Cole”; 1844–1916), John (1846–74); James (“Jim”; 1850–1902), and Robert (“Bob”; 1853–89)—who were often allied with Jesse James.
- Younger, Robert (American criminal)
Younger Brothers: …(1846–74); James (“Jim”; 1850–1902), and Robert (“Bob”; 1853–89)—who were often allied with Jesse James.
- Younger, Thomas Coleman (American criminal)
Jesse James and Frank James: …Confederate guerrillas, becoming friends with Cole Younger, a fellow member. Jesse followed suit by joining “Bloody” Bill Anderson’s guerrilla band. At the end of the war, the bands surrendered, but Jesse was reportedly shot and severely wounded by Federal soldiers while under a flag of truce. He and Frank, joined…
- Younghusband, Sir Francis Edward (British army officer)
Sir Francis Edward Younghusband was a British army officer and explorer whose travels, mainly in northern India and Tibet, yielded major contributions to geographical research. He also forced the conclusion of the Anglo-Tibetan Treaty (September 6, 1904) that gained Britain long-sought trade
- Youngstown (Ohio, United States)
Youngstown, city, Mahoning and Trumbull counties, seat (1876) of Mahoning county, northeastern Ohio, U.S. It lies along the Mahoning River, near the Pennsylvania border, and is equidistant (65 miles [105 km]) from Cleveland (northwest) and Pittsburgh (southeast). Youngstown is the heart of a
- Youngstown (song by Springsteen)
Rust Belt: How the Belt rusted: …his Rust Belt anthem “Youngstown,” Bruce Springsteen movingly evokes the prideful heartbreak and disillusioned sense of abandonment that resulted from the transformation of that Ohio city and scores like it. Billy Joel paints a similar portrait of industrial upheaval in eastern Pennsylvania in another popular song, “Allentown.”
- Youngstown College (university, Youngstown, Ohio, United States)
Youngstown State University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning in Youngstown, Ohio, U.S. It comprises colleges of business administration; science, technology, engineering, and mathematics; liberal arts and social sciences; education; fine and performing arts; and health and
- Youngstown Institute of Technology (university, Youngstown, Ohio, United States)
Youngstown State University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning in Youngstown, Ohio, U.S. It comprises colleges of business administration; science, technology, engineering, and mathematics; liberal arts and social sciences; education; fine and performing arts; and health and
- Youngstown State University (university, Youngstown, Ohio, United States)
Youngstown State University, public, coeducational institution of higher learning in Youngstown, Ohio, U.S. It comprises colleges of business administration; science, technology, engineering, and mathematics; liberal arts and social sciences; education; fine and performing arts; and health and
- Youngville (Alabama, United States)
Alexander City, city, Tallapoosa county, east-central Alabama, U.S., 75 miles (120 km) southeast of Birmingham. Early settlement began in 1836, and gold was discovered in the area in the early 1840s. It was known as Youngsville until 1873, when it was named for General Edward Porter Alexander,
- Younis, Waqar (Pakistani cricketer)
cricket: Bowling: …by bowlers Wasim Akram and Waqar Younnus. If a bowler is able to deliver at speeds of greater than 85 mph (135 kph), he can achieve reverse swing, meaning that without altering the grip on the ball or the motion of delivery, the bowler can cause the ball to swing…
- Younnus, Waqar (Pakistani cricketer)
cricket: Bowling: …by bowlers Wasim Akram and Waqar Younnus. If a bowler is able to deliver at speeds of greater than 85 mph (135 kph), he can achieve reverse swing, meaning that without altering the grip on the ball or the motion of delivery, the bowler can cause the ball to swing…
- Yount, George (American settler)
Napa: American settler George Yount, who arrived in 1835, received a land grant from Californio military commander, politician, and rancher Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo, for whom the Bay Area city of Vallejo is named. Yount trained his indigenous laborers to till soil and shear sheep, while they taught him…
- Yount, Robin (American baseball player)
Milwaukee Brewers: …future Hall of Fame shortstop Robin Yount in 1974 heralded the beginning of a slow turnaround for the Brewers, which was further bolstered in 1978 by the debut of another future Hall of Famer, infielder–designated hitter Paul Molitor. The Brewers ran off three consecutive winning seasons before claiming their first…
- Your Body Is a Battleground (work by Kruger)
Barbara Kruger: In her 1989 work Untitled (Your Body Is a Battleground), for example, she employed an oversized black-and-white image of a female model’s face and divided it vertically into positive and negative halves. Placed across the image is the statement “Your body is a battleground,” by which she called into…
- Your Body Is a Wonderland (song by Mayer)
John Mayer: …“No Such Thing” and “Your Body Is a Wonderland” both became hits, and the latter earned Mayer a Grammy Award for best male pop vocal performance. Mayer’s next studio release, Heavier Things (2003), topped the Billboard album chart and featured the hit “Daughters,” which was honoured with two Grammy…
- Your Cheatin’ Heart (song by Williams)
Hank Williams: …including “Cold, Cold Heart,” “Your Cheatin’ Heart,” “Hey, Good Lookin’,” “Jambalaya (On the Bayou),” and “I’ll Never Get Out of This World Alive.” His extraordinary “Lost Highway” peaked at number 12.
- Your employer’s 401(k) plan is an easy way to save for retirement
Plant it and watch it grow.Whether you’ve just landed your first job or you’re just starting your retirement savings journey, contributing to an employer 401(k) plan is one of the simplest and most effective ways to build your nest egg. There are several reasons to consider participating in your
- Your guide to opening and using a bank account
There’s a first time for everything.One way to keep your money safe and make it easier to manage your personal finances is to open a bank account. However, there are different types of accounts, each with its own rules, purposes, and interest rates. Here’s a breakdown of various bank accounts and
- Your guide to payday loans, title loans, and other predatory loans
Don’t get trapped in debt.When you’re in a tight financial spot, you might be looking for a bit of help with your money. A small loan for two or three weeks seems like the perfect solution—especially if you don’t have to worry about a credit check. But such temporary fixes often fall into the
- Your guide to setting a monthly budget
The budget you’ll actually stick to.Creating a monthly budget. It’s one of the first steps in getting your personal finances on track. But many see it as too daunting a task, while others see it as a bunch of busywork that isn’t worth the trouble. They think, “If I make it through the month and
- Your guide to small business retirement plans
Get the best bang for your benefit bucks.You’re a small business owner, looking to hire more help. But you wonder: Do you need to offer a retirement plan to your employees? Depending on the size of your business and your state’s requirements, you may not have to, but it could still be helpful to
- Your guide to student loan forgiveness types
Potential paths to a clean slate.Student loan debt amounts to nearly $2 trillion in the United States, with almost 43 million Americans holding federal student loan debt. After the Biden student loan forgiveness plan was ruled unconstitutional in June 2023, followed by a post-pandemic resumption of
- Your Highness (film by Green [2011])
Natalie Portman: Black Swan and Thor series: …in the bawdy period comedy Your Highness (2011). Portman then appeared as an unfaithful wife in Terrence Malick’s Hollywood parable Knight of Cups (2015) and as a hard-bitten pioneer in the vengeance tale Jane Got a Gun (2016).
- Your Honor (American television limited series)
Bryan Cranston: He later starred in Your Honor (2020–23), about a judge who goes to great lengths to protect his son, who killed someone in a hit-and-run accident.
- Your household balance sheet: Keeping track of what you own and what you owe
Think of it as a net worth calculator.The balance sheet. That’s the realm of accountants, stock analysts, and C-suite executives, right? Actually, if you have your own household budget and some assets in your name, the balance sheet is just as relevant to your personal finances as it is to the
- Your Party (political party, Japan)
Your Party, centre-right political party in Japan. It was established in August 2009 by Watanabe Yoshimi—formerly of the Liberal-Democratic Party (LDP), who had resigned from the LDP early that year over policy disagreements with the prime minister, Asō Tarō—and several other members, most of whom
- Your Place or Mine (film by McKenna [2023])
Reese Witherspoon: …Kutcher in the romantic comedy Your Place or Mine (2023).
- Your Radio Playhouse (American radio and television program)
Ira Glass: …later adapted for television) called This American Life.
- Your rainbow panorama (art installation by Eliasson)
Olafur Eliasson: The permanent installation Your rainbow panorama was constructed atop the ARoS Aarhus Kunstmuseum in Denmark in 2011. Comprising a circular walkway encased in coloured glass, the piece, as its name suggests, offered patrons panoramic views through a spectrum of colours. Eliasson also collaborated with Henning Larsen Architects to…
- Your retirement income: How required minimum distribution (RMD) rules work
The ABCs of RMDs.A required minimum distribution (RMD) is the amount the government requires you to withdraw each year from certain retirement accounts—such as your 401(k) or IRA—once you reach a certain age. The basic idea of an RMD may sound straightforward, but there are a number of factors that
- Your Show of Shows (American television program)
Jerry Bock: …Holofcener on songs for television’s Your Show of Shows and the musical Mr. Wonderful (1956). With the composer-lyricist Sheldon Harnick he had his greatest successes: Fiorello! (1959, Pulitzer Prize) and Fiddler on the Roof (1964). Bock and Harnick’s other musicals included The Body Beautiful (1958), Tenderloin (1960), the admired She…
- Your Song (song by John and Taupin)
Elton John: His first American hit, “Your Song,” in 1970, was a love ballad that combined the introspective mood of the era’s singer-songwriters with a more traditional pop craftsmanship. John’s early 1970s recordings paid homage to country rock and folk rock models such as the Band and Crosby, Stills and Nash.
- Your Strange Certainty Still Kept (art installation by Eliasson)
Olafur Eliasson: In Your Strange Certainty Still Kept (1996), droplets of water were frozen in midair through the use of a perforated hose and strobe lights. Ventilator (1997) incorporated a menacing electric fan swinging from a ceiling. In Room for One Colour (1997), he flooded a room with…
- Yourcenar, Marguerite (French author)
Marguerite Yourcenar was a novelist, essayist, and short-story writer who became the first woman to be elected to the Académie Française (French Academy), an exclusive literary institution with a membership limited to 40. Crayencour was educated at home in French Flanders and spent much of her
- Yours Truly (album by Grande)
Ariana Grande: Her debut album, Yours Truly, appeared two years later, and it included the popular single “The Way,” a collaboration with rapper Mac Miller. The album debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart and was widely praised. With her R&B-infused pop music and impressive vocal range, Grande…
- yourt (dairy food)
yogurt, semifluid fermented milk food having a smooth texture and mildly sour flavour because of its lactic acid content. Yogurt may be made from the milk of cows, sheep, goats, or water buffalo. Cow’s milk is used in the United States and north-central Europe; sheep’s and goat’s milk are preferred
- Yousaf, Humza (first minister of Scotland)
Humza Yousaf is a Scottish politician who in 2023 became the leader of the Scottish National Party (SNP) and the sixth first minister of Scotland when he replaced the long-serving Nicola Sturgeon. Yousaf, who is of Pakistani heritage, is the second Muslim to lead a major British political party and
- Yousaf, Humza Haroon (first minister of Scotland)
Humza Yousaf is a Scottish politician who in 2023 became the leader of the Scottish National Party (SNP) and the sixth first minister of Scotland when he replaced the long-serving Nicola Sturgeon. Yousaf, who is of Pakistani heritage, is the second Muslim to lead a major British political party and
- Yousafzai, Malala (Pakistani activist)
Malala Yousafzai is a Pakistani activist who, while a teenager, spoke out publicly against the prohibition on the education of girls that was imposed by the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP; sometimes called Pakistani Taliban). She gained global attention when she survived an assassination attempt at
- Yousef, Ramzi Ahmed (Kuwaiti-born terrorist)
Ramzi Ahmed Yousef is a Kuwaiti-born militant who masterminded the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. He was part of some of the most ambitious terrorist conspiracies discovered to date, including a thwarted plot to blow up 11 airliners over the Pacific Ocean. Born in Kuwait to Pakistani and
- Yousen (Chinese poet)
Xu Zhimo was a Chinese poet who strove to loosen Chinese poetry from its traditional forms and to reshape it under the influences of Western poetry and the vernacular Chinese language. After graduating from Peking University, Xu went to the United States in 1918 to study economics and political
- Youskevitch, Igor (American ballet dancer)
Alicia Alonso: …guest dancer, often with partner Igor Youskevitch. In 1948 she cofounded (with her husband and his brother, Alberto) the Alicia Alonso Ballet Company in Cuba, through which she became known for her artistry as a choreographer, which ranged from variations on classic works such as Swan Lake to the comic…
- Youssoufi, Abderrahmane (prime minister of Morocco)
Morocco: Hassan’s last years: …house, and in March 1998 Abderrahmane Youssoufi (ʿAbd al-Raḥmān Yūsufī), a leader of the Socialist Union of Popular Forces, was appointed as prime minister. Under pressure from human rights organizations, Hassan also directed a vigorous cleanup campaign that led to the ousting and even execution of corrupt officials as well…
- youth
rock: Rock and youth culture: But by the mid-1960s youth had become an ideological category that referred to a particular kind of hedonism, individualism, and modernism. Whereas youth once referred to high-school students, it came to include college students. Moreover, rock became multifunctional—dance and party music on the one hand, a matter of serious…
- Youth (work by Tolstoy)
Leo Tolstoy: First publications of Leo Tolstoy: (1854; Boyhood) and Yunost (1857; Youth). A number of stories centre on a single semiautobiographical character, Dmitry Nekhlyudov, who later reappeared as the hero of Tolstoy’s novel Resurrection. In “Lyutsern” (1857; “Lucerne”), Tolstoy uses the diary form first to relate an incident, then to reflect on its timeless meaning, and…
- Youth (short story by Conrad)
Joseph Conrad: Life at sea: …alterations, as the short story “Youth,” a remarkable tale of a young officer’s first command.
- Youth (film by Sorrentino [2015])
Michael Caine: …performance as a composer in Youth (2015), director Paolo Sorrentino’s paean to aging artists. He followed with a remake (2017) of the 1970s film Going in Style, playing a retiree planning a bank heist with his fellow pensioners. He had a similar role in King of Thieves (2018), based on…
- Youth (portrait by Giorgione)
Giorgione: Influence and significance: Nevertheless, the portrait of a Youth (c. 1504) is universally considered to be by Giorgione. The indescribably subtle expression of serenity and the immobile features, added to the chiseled effect of the silhouette and modeling, combine to make the Youth an unforgettable expression of Renaissance man. The same sort of…
- Youth Aliyah (international movement)
Henrietta Szold: …she was director of the Youth Aliyah, an agency created to rescue Jewish children from Nazi Germany and bring them to Palestine. Late in life she founded Lemaan ha-Yeled, an institution dedicated to child welfare and research; after her death it was renamed Mosad Szold (The Szold Foundation). Szold died…
- Youth and the Bright Medusa (short stories by Cather)
Youth and the Bright Medusa, collection of eight short stories about artists and the arts by Willa Cather, published in 1920. Four of the stories were reprinted from Cather’s first published collection of fiction, The Troll Garden (1905). The stories include “Flavia and Her Artists,” in which an
- youth court (law)
juvenile court, special court handling problems of delinquent, neglected, or abused children. The juvenile court fulfills the government’s role as substitute parent, and, where no juvenile court exists, other courts must assume the function. Two types of cases are processed by a juvenile court:
- youth gang (crime)
gang, a group of persons, usually youths, who share a common identity and who generally engage in criminal behaviour. In contrast to the criminal behaviour of other youths, the activities of gangs are characterized by some level of organization and continuity over time. There is no consensus on the
- youth hostel (hotel)
youth hostel, supervised shelter providing inexpensive overnight lodging, particularly for young people. Hostels range from simple accommodations in a farm house to hotels able to house several hundred guests for days at a time. They are located in many parts of the world, usually in scenic areas,
- Youth International Party (American political organization)
Chicago Seven: …Jerry Rubin, cofounders of the Youth International Party (Yippies); Tom Hayden, cofounder of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS); Black Panther Chairman Bobby Seale, the only African American of the group; David Dellinger and Rennie Davis of the National
- Youth Olympic Games
Jacques Rogge: In 2007 he added the Youth Olympics to the Olympic calendar; the inaugural event was held in Singapore in 2010.
- Youth Pledge (Indonesian history)
Indonesia: The rise of nationalism: …youth organizations issued the historic Youth Pledge (Sumpah Pemuda), whereby they vowed to recognize only one Indonesian motherland, one Indonesian people, and one Indonesian language. It was a landmark event in the country’s history and also is considered the founding moment of the Indonesian language.
- Youth Without Youth (film by Coppola [2007])
Osvaldo Golijov: … (2000) and Francis Ford Coppola’s Youth Without Youth (2007).
- Youth’s Companion (American magazine)
history of publishing: General periodicals: …Post (1821–1969; revived 1971) and Youth’s Companion (1827–1929). The latter, published in Boston, was typically wholesome in content, intended to “warn against the ways of transgression” and to encourage “virtue and piety.”
- Youth, Isle of (island and municipality, Cuba)
Isla de la Juventud, island and municipio especial (special municipality) of Cuba, in the Caribbean Sea. It is bounded to the northwest by the Canal de los Indios and on the north and northeast by the Gulf of Batabanó, which separate it from the mainland of western Cuba. A 1904 treaty recognizing
- Youth, Union of (group of artists)
Mikhail Vasilyevich Matyushin: …the group known as the Union of Youth, which was mainly made up of former members of Triangle. Though the couple was soon to leave the group because of differences in their aesthetic views, Guro and Matyushin remained in close contact and participated in Union of Youth exhibitions, the last…
- YouTube (Web site)
YouTube, social media platform and website for sharing videos. It was registered on February 14, 2005, by Steve Chen, Chad Hurley, and Jawed Karim, three former employees of the American e-commerce company PayPal. They had the idea that ordinary people would enjoy sharing their “home videos.” The
- Youwang (emperor of Zhou dynasty)
China: The Zhou feudal system: …line was again broken when Youwang was killed by invading tribes. The nobles apparently were split at that time, because the break gave rise to two courts, headed by two princes, each of whom had the support of part of the nobility. One of the pretenders, Pingwang, survived the other…
- Youzhou (historical city, China)
Beijing: The early empires: …when it became known as Youzhou. By the middle of the Tang, measures were being taken to prevent the nomadic Tangut tribes of Tibet, such as the Xi Xia, and the Khitans (a Turco-Mongolian people from Manchuria) from raiding the borderlands and the local capital. The position of Youzhou consequently…