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Law on Associated Labour ... lazzaroni
Law on Associated Labour
(from the article "Serbia") ...worker self-management in factories and institutions was adopted. This program, which sought to address problems ...
law report
in common law, published record of a judicial decision that is cited by lawyers and ...
Law Society
(from the article "solicitor") The official organization of solicitors is the Law Society, a voluntary group, incorporated by Parliament. ...
Law XII
(from the article "Austria") ...the discussion. On Feb. 17, 1867, Francis Joseph restored the Hungarian constitution. A ministry responsible ...
Law, Bernard Cardinal
When 2002 began, Boston's Bernard Cardinal Law was the senior Roman Catholic cardinal in the ... [1 Related Articles]
Law, Bonar
prime minister of Great Britain from Oct. 23, 1922, to May 20, 1923, the first ... [5 Related Articles]
Law, Crime, and Law Enforcement
[41 Related Articles]
Law, Crime, and Law Enforcement
[14 Related Articles]
Law, John
Scottish monetary reformer and originator of the "Mississippi scheme" for the development of French territories ... [3 Related Articles]
law, philosophy of
the formulation of concepts and theories to aid in understanding the nature of law, the ... [13 Related Articles]
law, rule of
(from the article "libertarianism") Libertarians consider the rule of law to be a crucial underpinning of a free society. ...
Law, William
English author of influential works on Christian ethics and mysticism. [1 Related Articles]
Law-Racovita Base
(from the article "Antarctica") In January 2006, members of the Australian National Antarctic Program welcomed representatives of the Romanian ...
Lawa River
(from the article "Maroni River") ...on the east from Suriname on the west. Its upper course is known as the ...
Lawamon
early Middle English poet, author of the romance-chronicle the Brut (c. 1200), ... [1 Related Articles]
Lawarai Pass
(from the article "Hindu Kush") ...(22,447 feet [6,842 metres]) and Buni Zom (21,499 feet [6,553 metres])-which strikes southward from the ...
Lawes, Henry
English composer noted for his continuo songs. [1 Related Articles]
Lawes, Lewis Edward
U.S. penologist whose introduction of novel penal administrative policies helped to emphasize a rehabilitative role ...
Lawes, Sir John Bennet, 1st Baronet
English agronomist who founded the artificial fertilizer industry and Rothamsted Experimental Station, the oldest agricultural ... [1 Related Articles]
Lawes, William
English composer, prominent during the early Baroque period, noted for his highly original instrumental music.
Lawler, Ray
actor, producer, and playwright whose Summer of the Seventeenth Doll is credited with changing the ... [1 Related Articles]
Lawless, Lucy, and Sorbo, Kevin
Playing ancient warriors on the television shows "Hercules: The Legendary Journeys" and its spin-off, "Xena: ...
Lawless, Lucy, and Sorbo, Kevin
Playing ancient warriors on the television shows "Hercules: The Legendary Journeys" and its spin-off, "Xena: ...
Lawlor, Si
(from the article "yacht") ...transatlantic voyage was made in a 6-metre boat by Alfred Johnson in 1876 to commemorate ...
lawn
(from the article "lawn") fine-textured turf (q.v.) of grass that is kept mowed.landscape architecture
Lawrance, Charles Lanier
American aeronautical engineer who designed the first successful air-cooled aircraft engine, used on many historic ...
Lawrence
city, seat (1855) of Douglas county, eastern Kansas, U.S. It lies on the Kansas River. ... [4 Related Articles]
Lawrence
city, Essex county, northeastern Massachusetts, U.S. It lies along the Merrimack River, 26 miles (42 ...
Lawrence
county, western Pennsylvania, U.S., bordered to the west by Ohio. It consists of a hilly ...
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
(from the article "dubnium") In 1970 a group of investigators at the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory of the University of ...
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
(from the article "laser") Extremely high temperatures and pressures are needed to force atomic nuclei to fuse together, releasing ...
Lawrence of Brindisi, Saint
doctor of the church and one of the leading polemicists of the Counter-Reformation in Germany. [1 Related Articles]
Lawrence v. Texas
(from the article "Law, Crime, and Law Enforcement") ...option should be limited, especially when applied to juvenile defendants. This was the second time ...
Lawrence, Abbott
American merchant and philanthropist who was a major developer of the New England textile industry. ...
Lawrence, Amos
(from the article "Harding, Chester") ...and sophistication, his casual charm and candour made him a favourite in many fashionable circles. ...
Lawrence, Carmen Mary
When Carmen Lawrence joined the Australian Cabinet as minister of health on March 25, 1994, ... [1 Related Articles]
Lawrence, D.H.
English author of novels, short stories, poems, plays, essays, travel books, and letters. His novels ... [7 Related Articles]
Lawrence, David
(from the article "U.S. News & World Report") ...news magazine published in Washington, D.C., one of the most influential of its kind and ...
Lawrence, Ernest Orlando
American physicist, winner of the 1939 Nobel Prize for Physics for his invention of ... [5 Related Articles]
Lawrence, Gertrude
English actress noted for her performances in Noel Coward's sophisticated comedies and in musicals.
Lawrence, Jacob
American painter whose works portray scenes of black life and history with vivid, stylized realism. [1 Related Articles]
Lawrence, James
U.S. naval officer of the War of 1812 whose dying words, "Don't give up the ...
Lawrence, Jerome
American playwright and director (b. July 14, 1915, Cleveland, Ohio-d. Feb. 29, 2004, Malibu, Calif.), ... [1 Related Articles]
Lawrence, John
(from the article "India") ...to the Sikhs. There was little commercial exploitation of the state, and the Sikhs found ...
Lawrence, John Laird Mair Lawrence, 1st Baron
British viceroy and governor-general of India whose institution in the Punjab of extensive economic, social, ...
Lawrence, Mary Wells
American businesswoman whose successful work in advertising was marked by creativity and humour.
Lawrence, Sack of
(from the article "Bleeding Kansas") ...the intervention of the Governor prevented violence in the Wakarusa War, launched in December 1855 ...
Lawrence, Saint
one of the most venerated Roman martyrs, celebrated for his Christian valour.
Lawrence, Sir Henry Montgomery
English soldier and administrator who applied a keen sense of Indian politics in helping to ...
Lawrence, Sir Thomas
painter and draftsman who was the most fashionable English portrait painter of the late 18th ... [1 Related Articles]
Lawrence, Stringer
British army captain whose transformation of irregular troops into an effective fighting force earned him ...
Lawrence, T E
British archaeological scholar, military strategist, and author best known for his legendary war activities in ... [10 Related Articles]
lawrencium
(Lr), synthetic chemical element, the 14th member of the actinoid series of the periodic table, ... [2 Related Articles]
Lawrin
(from the article "The Kentucky Derby") In 1914 Jones began breeding and training horses in the U.S. Midwest. In 1932, he ...
Lawson cypress
(from the article "false cypress") The largest species of false cypress, the Lawson cypress, Port Orford cedar, or ginger pine ...
Lawson, Ernest
(from the article "Eight, The") ...in 1908, but who established one of the main currents in 20th-century American painting. The ...
Lawson, Fremont
newspaper editor and publisher, one of the first in the United States to assign correspondents ... [1 Related Articles]
Lawson, Henry
Australian writer of short stories and balladlike verse noted for his realistic portrayals of bush ... [3 Related Articles]
Lawson, John Howard
U.S. playwright, screenwriter, and member of the "Hollywood Ten," who was jailed (1948-49) and blacklisted ... [1 Related Articles]
Lawson, Thomas W.
(from the article "muckraker") ...politics in The Shame of the Cities (1904). Brand Whitlock, who wrote The Turn of ...
Lawson, Yank
(JOHN RHEA LAUSEN), U.S. jazz trumpeter (b. May 3, 1911--d. Feb. 18, 1995).
Lawton
city, seat (1907) of Comanche county, southwestern Oklahoma, U.S., on the Cache Creek. Originally part ...
Lawton, Thomas
("TOMMY"), British association football (soccer) player who was a commanding centre forward just before and ...
Lawvere, F. W.
(from the article "mathematics, foundations of") ...and uniform way, but it soon became clear that categories had an important role to ...
lawyer
one trained and licensed to prepare, manage, and either prosecute or defend a court action ... [5 Related Articles]
Lawz, Mount Al-
(from the article "Arabian Desert") ...corner in Yemen, where Mount Al-Nabi Shu'ayb reaches the desert's highest elevation, 12,336 feet (3,760 ...
lax vowel
(from the article "vowel") ...so that the pharynx is expanded. Tense and lax are less clearly defined terms. Tense ...
Lax, Peter
Hungarian-born American mathematician awarded the 2005 Abel Prize "for his groundbreaking contributions to the theory ...
Laxa River
(from the article "Myvatn") shallow lake, northern Iceland, 30 miles (48 km) east of Akureyri, drained by the Laxa ...
Laxalt, Paul
(from the article "Las Vegas") ...open to both blacks and whites. The rest of the city's casinos voluntarily desegregated in ...
laxative
any drug used in the treatment of constipation to promote the evacuation of feces. Laxatives ... [4 Related Articles]
Laxdaela saga
one of the Icelanders' sagas. The tale, written about 1245 by an anonymous author (possibly ... [1 Related Articles]
Laxfordian Orogenic Belt
(from the article "Europe") ...of southwestern Sweden between Oslo and Goteborg. On its northern side it has been reactivated ...
Laxist
(from the article "Franciscan") ...was followed strictly. Three parties gradually appeared: the Zealots, who insisted on a literal observance ...
Laxman, Adam
(from the article "Japan") While Sadanobu was senior councillor, a Russian envoy, Adam Laxman, landed at Nemuro in 1792 ...
Laxness, Halldor
Icelandic novelist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1955. He is considered ... [2 Related Articles]
lay
in medieval French literature, a short romance, usually written in octosyllabic verse, that dealt with ... [2 Related Articles]
lay judge
(from the article "court") In most civil-law countries, judges at all levels are professionally trained in the law, but ...
lay literacy
(from the article "writing") As an alternative to simply identifying levels of literacy with years of schooling, some scholars ...
lay magistrates
(from the article "crime") ...of different functions, including determining the mode of trial, trying the case if summary trial ...
Lay, Elzy
western American outlaw, a member of the Wild Bunch (q.v.) and the favourite friend and ... [1 Related Articles]
Lay, Horatio Nelson
British diplomat who organized the Maritime Customs Bureau for the Chinese government in 1855. [1 Related Articles]
Lay, Kenneth
American businessman (b. April 15, 1942, Tyrone, Mo.-d. July 5, 2006, Aspen, Colo.), rose from ... [1 Related Articles]
Lay-Osborn flotilla
fleet of ships bought for China in the mid-19th century by a British consular official, ...
lay-over flight
(from the article "airport") Some airports have a very high percentage of passengers who are either transiting the airport ...
laya-yoga
(from the article "Hinduism") Some Tantrists employ laya-yoga ("reintegration by mergence"), in which the female nature-energy ...
layali
(from the article "Islamic arts") The repertoire in common use comprises a wide variety of forms. One category includes unmeasured ...
Layard, Sir Austen Henry
English archaeologist whose excavations greatly increased knowledge of the ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia. [2 Related Articles]
Layari River
(from the article "Karachi") ...from 5 to 120 feet (1.5 to 37 metres) above sea level, on which the ...
layback spin
(from the article "figure skating") ...or the back inside edge of the blade. A sit spin is done in sitting ...
Layden, Elmer
(from the article "Four Horsemen") ...sportswriter Grantland Rice to the backfield of the University of Notre Dame's undefeated gridiron football ...
Laye, Camara
one of the first African writers from south of the Sahara to achieve an international ... [1 Related Articles]
Laye, Evelyn
(ELSIE EVELYN LAY), British actress and singer who had a nearly 80-year career and between ...
Layens, Mathieu de
(from the article "Leuven") The three-story town hall is one of the richest and most detailed examples of pointed ...
Layer Cake
(from the article "Sakharov, Andrey Dmitriyevich") ...chemical high explosive. The scheme-analogous to American physicist Edward Teller's "Alarm Clock" design-was called
layer cloud
(from the article "climate") Four principal classes are recognized when clouds are classified according to the kind of air ...
layering
(from the article "propagation") ...layering, cutting, and grafting. Bulbs and other underground rootlike structures, such as tubers and corms, ...
laying
(from the article "rope") The rope-laying operations require machines similar to strand-forming machinery. The strands, on bobbins, are pulled ...
laying house
in animal husbandry, a building or enclosure for maintaining laying flocks of domestic fowl, usually ...
laysan albatross
(from the article "albatross") The laysan albatross (D. immutabilis), with a wingspread to about 200 cm, has a white ...
Laysan teal
(from the article "mallard") ...a subspecies of mallard. Mallards will mate with them-in fact, black duck females prefer mallard ...
Layton, Irving
Romanian-born poet, who treated the Jewish Canadian experience with rebellious vigour. [2 Related Articles]
Layton, Jack
Canadian politician who became leader of the New Democratic Party (NDP) in 2003. [3 Related Articles]
layup
(from the article "basketball") One of the main field shots is the layup, in which the shooter, while close ...
Laz
(from the article "Caucasian peoples") The Caucasian peoples are subdivided, like the Caucasian languages, into two northern branches and a ...
Laz language
unwritten language spoken along the coast of the Black Sea in Georgia and in the ... [4 Related Articles]
Lazar Hrebeljanovic
(from the article "Kosovo, Battle of") (June 15, 1389), battle fought at Kosovo Polje ("Field of the Blackbirds"), Serbia, between the ...
Lazar, Beryl
(from the article "Religion") ...J. Reese resigned in May as editor of the Jesuit magazine America after his publishing ...
lazaretto
(from the article "quarantine") ...was later extended to 40 days, quarantina. The choice of this period is said to ...
Lazarev, Pyotr Petrovich
Soviet physicist and biophysicist known for his physicochemical theory of the movement of ions and ...
Lazaro Cardenas Dam
(from the article "Nazas River") ...Laguna District, where it reaches the now-dry Mayran Lagoon. Its total length is approximately 180 ...
Lazarsfeld, Paul Felix
Austrian-born American sociologist whose studies of the mass media's influence on society became classics in ... [1 Related Articles]
Lazarus
("God Has Helped"), either of two figures mentioned in the New Testament.
Lazarus
("God Has Helped"), either of two figures mentioned in the New Testament. [1 Related Articles]
Lazarus, Emma
American poet and essayist best known for her sonnet "The New Colossus," written to the ... [1 Related Articles]
Lazarus, Fred, Jr.
American merchandiser who parlayed his family's small but successful department store into a $1.3 billion ...
Lazarus, Herman
(from the article "Newhouse family") ...Irving Newhouse (b. May 24, 1895, New York, N.Y., U.S.-d. Aug. 29, 1979, New York ...
Lazarus, Moritz
Jewish philosopher and psychologist, a leading opponent of anti-Semitism in his time and a founder ... [1 Related Articles]
Lazear, Jesse William
American physician and member of the commission that proved that the infectious agent of yellow ... [1 Related Articles]
Lazio
regione, west-central Italy, fronting the Tyrrhenian Sea and comprising the provinces of Roma, Frosinone, Latina, ... [2 Related Articles]
Lazninski, Tomasz
(from the article "Zamoyski Family") The family settled in the 15th century at Laznin in the Mazovia area of Poland. ...
lazulite
phosphate mineral, a basic magnesium and aluminum phosphate [MgAl2 (PO4)2(OH)2], that often occurs as blue, ...
lazurite
(from the article "lazurite") blue variety of the mineral sodalite (q.v.) that is responsible for the colour of lapis ...
lazy eye
(from the article "amblyopia") ...this outcome is usually avoidable or reversible during early childhood by promptly correcting the underlying ...
Lazzarini, Gregorio
(from the article "Tiepolo, Giovanni Battista") Tiepolo's father, who had been engaged in the shipping business, died in 1697, leaving his ...
lazzaroni
(from the article "Naples") ...Italy (1798), the royal family withdrew in panic to Palermo aboard Admiral Horatio Nelson's British ...
Syndication Syndication © 2006, Encyclopædia Universalis France S.A. Tous droits de propriété industrielle et intellectuelle réservés.