| | - 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
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- 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 ...
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