- Crosses of Crossed Colours (work by Pousseur)
Henri Pousseur: …Croisées des couleurs croisées (1970; Crosses of Crossed Colours), for female voice, pianos, tape recorders, and two radio receivers; Invitation à l’Utopie (1971); Liège à Paris (1977; “Paris Cork”); Le Seconde Apothéose de Rameau (1981; “The Second Deification of Rameau”), for chamber orchestra; and Traverser la forêt (1987; “Crossing the…
- Crossett (Arkansas, United States)
Crossett, city, Ashley county, southeastern Arkansas, U.S. It lies on pine-forested uplands near the Ouachita River, about 45 miles (70 km) east of El Dorado. Founded in 1899 by the Crossett Lumber Company (since 1962 part of the Georgia-Pacific Corporation), it remained a company-owned town until
- Crossfield (work by Tworkov)
Jack Tworkov: …work became literal in the Crossfield series (begun 1968); in these, Tworkov superimposed a network of ruled lines onto an overall field of widely spaced strokes “drawn” in paint.
- Crossfire (film by Dmytryk [1947])
Edward Dmytryk: Golden era: …best work, the noir landmark Crossfire (1947), which focused on anti-Semitism. The taut adaptation of Richard Brooks’s novel The Brick Foxhole featured Ryan as a violent bully whose impulsive murder of a Jewish civilian sets off a manhunt. Mitchum and Robert Young also starred in the drama, which received an…
- Crossfire (American television program)
Newt Gingrich: Later career: TV and books: …cohosting the political debate show Crossfire on CNN. The show was cancelled the following year, but he remained at CNN as a commentator until 2015, when he rejoined Fox News. In 2016 Gingrich served as an informal adviser on Donald Trump’s presidential campaign and was a vocal supporter of the…
- Crossfire Hurricane (film by Morgen [2012])
the Rolling Stones: Documentaries, later music, and awards: …release of the retrospective documentary Crossfire Hurricane.
- Crossing 2, The (film by Woo [2015])
John Woo: …with The Crossing (2014) and The Crossing 2 (2015). The two-part historical epic culminated in the 1949 sinking of the Taiping, a ship that transported individuals fleeing communist rule at the end of the Chinese Civil War. Woo later returned to action movies with the self-referential cop thriller Zhuibu (2017;…
- Crossing Brooklyn Ferry (poem by Whitman)
Crossing Brooklyn Ferry, poem by Walt Whitman, published as “Sun-Down Poem” in the second edition of Leaves of Grass in 1856 and revised and retitled in later editions. It is a sensitive, detailed record of the poet’s thoughts and observations about the continuity of nature and of brotherhood while
- Crossing Guard, The (film by Penn [1995])
Sean Penn: …Indian Runner (1991) and directing The Crossing Guard (1995). He earned his first Academy Award nomination for Dead Man Walking (1995), starring opposite Susan Sarandon as a death-row inmate. He appeared with his second wife—Robin Wright (married 1996; divorced 2010)—in She’s So Lovely (1997), for which he was named best…
- Crossing of Antarctica, The (book by Fuchs and Hillary)
Edmund Hillary: …and recorded this feat in The Crossing of Antarctica (1958; with Fuchs) and No Latitude for Error (1961). On his expedition of Antarctica in 1967, he was among those who scaled Mount Herschel (10,941 feet [3,335 meters]) for the first time. In 1977 he led the first jet boat expedition…
- Crossing Open Ground (essays by Lopez)
Barry Lopez: …works included the essay collections Crossing Open Ground (1988), About This Life (1998), and Embrace Fearlessly the Burning World (2022), the latter of which was published posthumously. In Horizon (2019) Lopez recounted his various travels. In addition, he authored books for young adults on natural history.
- crossing over (biology)
genetics: The discovery of linked genes: …and reunion, also known as crossing over). In 1916 another student of Morgan’s, Calvin Bridges, used fruit flies with an extra chromosome to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the only way to explain the abnormal inheritance of certain genes was if they were part of the extra chromosome. American geneticist…
- Crossing the Bar (poem by Tennyson)
Crossing the Bar, short poem by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, written in 1889 at age 80, three years before he died and published in the collection Demeter and Other Poems (1889). Describing a ferry trip to the Isle of Wight, it concerns his imminent death and his hopes for an afterlife. Tennyson
- Crossing the Bar (poetry by Stead)
C.K. Stead: In his second collection, Crossing the Bar (1972), he was moved by the Vietnam War to protest against the inhumanity and irresponsibility of people in power. His later poetry collections include Quesada: Poems 1972–1974 (1975), Paris (1984), Between (1988), Voices (1990), Straw into
- Crossing the Platte (painting by Whittredge)
Worthington Whittredge: …vast panoramic views such as Crossing the Platte (1870). His most characteristic works are poetic forest scenes featuring depths of feathery fern and mossy rock infused with leaf-filtered light—e.g., The Trout Pool (1870). Whittredge did not paint landscapes for nature’s sake alone but rather chose places he loved, giving his…
- Crossing the Sierra de Gredos (novel by Handke)
Peter Handke: …die Sierra de Gredos (2002; Crossing the Sierra de Gredos) details the pilgrimage and interior life of a woman crossing an Iberian mountain range. Handke’s later novels included Der grosse Fall (2011; The Great Fall), which follows an aging actor for a day, and Die Obstdiebin; oder, einfache Fahrt ins…
- crossing the T (naval formation)
naval warfare: The age of steam and big gun: …advantage if the fleet “crossed the T” of the enemy, that is, if its own column crossed in front of the enemy column at a right angle and with the ships at the head of the enemy column within range of its guns. From this position at the top…
- Crossing the Water (poetry by Plath)
Sylvia Plath: …of previously unpublished poems, including Crossing the Water (1971) and Winter Trees (1971), was welcomed by critics and the public alike. The Bell Jar was reissued in Great Britain under her own name in 1966, and it was published in the United States for the first time in 1971. Johnny…
- Crossing to Safety (novel by Stegner)
Wallace Stegner: …Star (1961), Recapitulation (1979), and Crossing to Safety (1987).
- crossing tower (architecture)
Donato Bramante: Lombard period: …and structural problems of the tiburio, or crossing tower, of the cathedral of Milan. From 1487 to 1490 a number of mutual exchanges can be documented. The only written evidence of Bramante’s ideas on architecture goes back to this time (1490) and consists of a report on the tiburio problem.…
- Crossing, The (film by Woo [2014])
John Woo: …turned to romantic drama with The Crossing (2014) and The Crossing 2 (2015). The two-part historical epic culminated in the 1949 sinking of the Taiping, a ship that transported individuals fleeing communist rule at the end of the Chinese Civil War. Woo later returned to action movies with the self-referential…
- Crossing, The (novel by McCarthy)
Cormac McCarthy: The second installment, The Crossing (1994), set before and during World War II, follows the picaresque adventures of brothers Billy and Boyd Parham and centres around three round-trip passages that Billy makes between southwestern New Mexico and Mexico. The trilogy concludes with Cities of the Plain (1998), which…
- Crossley Report (American radio rating system)
radio: Ratings systems: …a ratings system called the Crossley Report, for which several thousand people were polled by telephone and asked to recall the programs to which they had been listening. A refinement of this was created by another company, C.E. Hooper. The firm would make random telephone calls to people who lived…
- Crossley, Louise (Australian politician)
Global Greens Charter: …prepared by Australian Greens member Louise Crossley as an expansion of earlier joint green party statements drafted at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro and among regional affiliations of green parties.
- crossline halftone (printing)
photoengraving: The halftone process: …1869 an image with a crossline halftone was produced in the Canadian Illustrated News. Later, in 1882, a crossline halftone was produced using a single-direction screen, by making half the exposure with the screen in one position and half with the screen rotated a quarter turn. Two brothers, Max and…
- Crossman. R. H. S. (British politician and author)
Fabianism: … politicians and activists such as R.H.S. Crossman, Roy Jenkins, Ian Mikardo, Denis Healey, and Margaret Cole. The Fabian Society survived into the 21st century as a think tank for moderate British socialists.
- Crossomys moncktoni (rodent)
water rat: Natural history: The earless water rat (Crossomys moncktoni) inhabits mountains of eastern New Guinea, where it prefers cold, fast-flowing streams bordered by tropical forest or grass. The African water rat is also found along streams bordered by tropical forest. The 11 water rats of the Western Hemisphere are…
- crossopterygian (fish)
crossopterygian, (subclass Crossopterygii), any member of a group of primitive, lobe-finned, bony fishes believed to have given rise to the amphibians and all other land vertebrates. They appeared at the beginning of the Devonian Period (about 416 million years ago) but are now represented by only
- Crossopterygii (fish)
crossopterygian, (subclass Crossopterygii), any member of a group of primitive, lobe-finned, bony fishes believed to have given rise to the amphibians and all other land vertebrates. They appeared at the beginning of the Devonian Period (about 416 million years ago) but are now represented by only
- Crossosomataceae (plant family)
Crossosomatales: …group consists of the families Crossosomataceae, Stachyuraceae, Staphyleaceae, and Guamatelaceae, and the second includes Aphloiaceae, Geissolomataceae, Ixerbaceae, and Strasburgeriaceae. Most members of the order are woody shrubs or trees of the northern temperate region that contain copious amounts of crystals, with toothed leaf margins. Their flowers typically possess a perianth…
- Crossosomatales (plant order)
Crossosomatales, rockflower order of dicotyledonous flowering plants, belonging to the basal rosid group of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group II (APG II) botanical classification system (see angiosperm). The order is a heterogeneous assemblage of eight families, which can be broken down into two
- crossover network (electronics)
electromechanical transducer: Electromagnetic speakers: …passive electronic circuit called a crossover network is employed to direct the higher and lower frequencies to the appropriate loudspeaker. A larger or more efficient three-way system may add a midrange speaker, helping to create a more nearly linear response between woofer and tweeter.
- crossover SUV (automobile)
automobile: From station wagons to vans and sport utility vehicles: …introducing smaller, more carlike “crossovers,” a trend that intensified through the first decade of that century as the rising cost of gasoline dampened enthusiasm for full-size SUVs.
- crossover vehicle (automobile)
automobile: From station wagons to vans and sport utility vehicles: …introducing smaller, more carlike “crossovers,” a trend that intensified through the first decade of that century as the rising cost of gasoline dampened enthusiasm for full-size SUVs.
- Crossover, The (work by Alexander)
Kwame Alexander: … in 2015 for his novel The Crossover (2014), much of which he wrote in free verse.
- Crossroads (novel by Franzen)
Jonathan Franzen: Franzen returned to fiction with Crossroads (2021), which follows a family in 1970s suburban Chicago. The novel was the first in the projected A Key to All Mythologies series.
- Crossroads (Virginia, United States)
New Market, town, Shenandoah county, northwestern Virginia, U.S., in the Shenandoah Valley. Laid out in 1784 and early known as Crossroads, it was incorporated in 1796 and renamed for the famous English horseracing town. This small community gained a place in American Civil War history when
- Crossroads (film by Davis [2002])
Beverly Johnson: …to Be a Player (1997), Crossroads (2002), and Good Deeds (2012). Johnson also had roles in such television shows as Law & Order, Martin, Sabrina the Teenage Witch, and 3rd Rock from the Sun. In the 1980s she appeared in the music videos for Michael Jackson’s “Liberian Girl” and Bobby…
- Crossroads (song by Johnson)
Cream: …rendition of Robert Johnson’s “Crossroads” that featured an oft-imitated solo by Clapton that is considered by many to be one of the greatest guitar solos ever.
- Crossroads College (college, Rochester, Minnesota, United States)
Rochester: …Bible College (1913), now called Crossroads College, moved to Rochester from Minneapolis in 1971. A branch of the University of Minnesota was officially established in Rochester in 2006. University Center Rochester is a joint effort of the community college, Winona State University (1858), and Rochester Community and Technical College (1915).…
- Crossroads, Operation (United States military test)
Bikini: …Bikini became the site of Operation Crossroads, a vast military-scientific experiment to determine the impact of atomic bombs on naval vessels. The tests made it necessary to first relocate the atoll’s 166 native Micronesians to Rongerik and then to Kili island, about 500 miles (800 km) southeast of Bikini. The…
- crosstie (railroad track)
railroad: Sleepers (crossties): Timber has been used for railroad sleepers or ties almost from the beginning, and it is still the most common material for this purpose. The modern wood sleeper is treated with preservative chemical to improve its life. The cost of wood ties has risen…
- crosswind
airport: Operational requirements: …and take off without either crosswinds or tailwinds that would inhibit operations. At the smallest airports, light aircraft are unable to operate in crosswinds greater than 10 knots; at all airports, operation in tailwinds in excess of 10 knots is not recommended by aircraft manufacturers (10 knots, or nautical miles…
- crosswise spin (meteorology)
tornado: The mesocyclone: …vertical speed shear) produces “crosswise spin,” that is, rotation about a horizontal axis crosswise to the direction of wind flow. When air containing crosswise spin flows into an updraft, the spin is drawn upward, producing rotation about a vertical axis. The veering of wind direction with height (vertical direction…
- Crossword Book Awards (Indian literary awards)
Crossword Book Awards, any of a series of Indian literary awards established in 1998 by Indian book retailer Crossword, its stated aim being to create a prize equivalent to Western literary accolades such as the Booker Prize and the Pulitzer Prize. The Crossword was initially conceived as a single
- crossword puzzle (game)
crossword puzzle, popular form of word puzzle. A crossword puzzle consists of a diagram, usually rectangular, divided into blank (white) and cancelled (black, shaded, or crosshatched) squares. This diagram is accompanied by two lists of numbered definitions or clues, one for the horizontal and the
- crosswort (plant)
Rubiaceae: Major genera and species: …roots (alizarin); the roots of crosswort (Crucianella) contain a red dye once used in medicines.
- crotal (clapper)
crotal, percussion instrument consisting of two small metal plates or clappers that are struck together. The krotalon (Latin crotalum) of ancient Greece and Rome was a pair of finger cymbals—i.e., wooden or metal shells held in one hand and manipulated like castanets, though probably not as
- crotal (bell)
crotal: The term crotal may also refer to a closed bell containing loose pellets, similar in construction to a sleigh bell. This crotal produces a sound when it is shaken and the pellets strike the inner surface.
- Crotalaria (plant genus)
Fabales: Ecological and economic importance: …century, several African species of Crotalaria were brought to the United States for use as soil-improvement plants. Their poisonous qualities were discovered in connection with animal stock loss, and development was then halted, but several persist as common noxious weeds.
- Crotalaria juncea (plant)
sunn, (Crotalaria juncea), annual plant of the pea family (Fabaceae) and its fibre, one of the bast fibre group. Sunn is likely native to the Indian subcontinent, where it has been cultivated since prehistoric times. The sunn plant is not a true hemp. The fibre is made into cordage, fishing nets,
- Crotale (missile)
rocket and missile system: Surface-to-air: …wheeled vehicles, and the French Crotale, an SA-6 equivalent that used a combination of radar command guidance and infrared terminal homing. Both systems were widely exported. Less directly comparable to Soviet systems was the British Rapier, a short-range, semimobile system intended primarily for airfield defense. The Rapier missile was fired…
- crotales (clapper)
crotal, percussion instrument consisting of two small metal plates or clappers that are struck together. The krotalon (Latin crotalum) of ancient Greece and Rome was a pair of finger cymbals—i.e., wooden or metal shells held in one hand and manipulated like castanets, though probably not as
- Crotalinae (snake)
pit viper, any species of viper (subfamily Crotalinae) that has, in addition to two movable fangs, a heat-sensitive pit organ between each eye and nostril which together help it accurately aim its strike at its warm-blooded prey. Pit vipers are found from deserts to rainforests, primarily in the
- crotalum (musical instrument)
crotal: The krotalon (Latin crotalum) of ancient Greece and Rome was a pair of finger cymbals—i.e., wooden or metal shells held in one hand and manipulated like castanets, though probably not as rapidly. They were used to accompany dancing and were played almost exclusively by women. Cymbals…
- Crotalus (snake genus)
rattlesnake: …also belong to the genus Crotalus, including the small North American sidewinder (C. cerastes). The other three species belong to a more primitive genus, Sistrurus, which includes the North American massasauga (S. catenatus) and pygmy rattler (S. miliarius). These rattlesnakes have nine
- Crotalus adamanteus (reptile)
eastern diamondback rattlesnake, (Crotalus adamanteus), large venomous pit viper (subfamily Crotalinae, family Viperidae) inhabiting North American coastal plains from North Carolina south to the Florida Keys and west to the Mississippi River. The eastern diamondback is the largest rattlesnake and
- Crotalus atrox (reptile)
western diamondback rattlesnake, (Crotalus atrox), a large, venomous, aggressive, and highly dangerous pit viper inhabiting arid and semiarid scrublands in North America from southern California east to western Arkansas in the U.S. and south to northern Mexico. Its typical habitats are brushy
- Crotalus basiliscus (snake)
Mexican west coast rattlesnake, (Crotalus basiliscus), large, stout, highly venomous pit viper (subfamily Crotalinae, family Viperidae) of dry coastal lands and cactus forests from southern Sonora to Oaxaca in western Mexico. The Mexican west coast rattlesnake is not normally an aggressive snake,
- Crotalus cerastes (snake species)
sidewinder: The sidewinder (Crotalus cerastes) is a rattlesnake. This pit viper (subfamily Crotalinae) has small horns above each eye, possibly to keep sand from covering the eyes when the snake is buried. It is a nocturnal inhabitant of the southwestern United States and northwestern Mexico (see Sonoran…
- Crotalus durissus (snake)
rattlesnake: scutulatus), and the South American rattlesnake, or cascabel (C. durissus). Their venom attacks the nervous system more strongly than that of other rattlesnakes. The South American rattlesnake has the largest distribution of any rattlesnake; it ranges from Mexico to Argentina and is the only rattlesnake found throughout Central…
- Crotalus horridus (reptile)
timber rattlesnake, (Crotalus horridus), species of venomous North American snakes classified in the family Viperidae that inhabit low mountain ridges and upland woods in the eastern United States. Its range extends from New Hampshire along the Appalachian Mountains to northern Florida and, on its
- Crotalus horridus atricaudatus (reptile)
timber rattlesnake: Natural history: A southern variant called the canebrake rattlesnake, which is classified by a handful of taxonomies as the subspecies C. horridus atricaudatus, has the same body pattern with the addition of an orange, yellow, pinkish, brownish, or reddish stripe along the back and a dark diagonal stripe on the sides of…
- Crotalus molossus (snake)
black-tailed rattlesnake, (Crotalus molossus), North American pit viper (subfamily Crotalinae, family Viperidae) inhabiting rocky outcrops, canyons, and cliffs in the mountain ranges of Arizona southward to central Mexico and eastward into southwestern Texas. Although the bite of a black-tailed
- Crotalus scutulatus (snake)
rattlesnake: basiliscus), the Mojave rattlesnake (C. scutulatus), and the South American rattlesnake, or cascabel (C. durissus). Their venom attacks the nervous system more strongly than that of other rattlesnakes. The South American rattlesnake has the largest distribution of any rattlesnake; it ranges from Mexico to Argentina and is…
- crotamiton (drug)
scabies: Crotamiton, a prescription anti-itch medication, is another scabicidal lotion that can be applied to the entire body. Sulfur-containing ointments may also work, but they are not well accepted for cosmetic reasons. Ivermectin, taken orally, may be prescribed for individuals who do not respond to lotions…
- Crotaphytus (reptile)
collared lizard, (genus Crotaphytus), any of nine species of lizards belonging to the lizard subfamily Crotaphytinae (family Crotaphytidae) found in hilly areas of the central United States and northeastern Mexico westward to the Great Basin. The coloration and pattern of collared lizards varies
- Crotaphytus collaris (reptile)
collared lizard: The common collared lizard, C. collaris, reaches 35 cm (14 inches) long, and the tail alone accounts for two-thirds of the animal’s total length. Males are larger than females. In the eastern part of its range, the collared lizard is often referred to as “the mountain…
- Crothers, Bronson (American neurologist)
Bronson Crothers was an American pediatric neurologist who was a leader in public policy issues relating to children with disabilities. Crothers earned a bachelor’s degree from Harvard College in 1904 and a medical degree from Harvard Medical School in 1909. He received clinical training at
- Crothers, Rachel (American playwright)
Rachel Crothers was an American playwright whose works, which were highly successful commercially, reflected the position of women in American society more accurately than those of any other dramatist of her time. Crothers graduated from the Illinois State Normal School (now Illinois State
- Croton (Italy)
Crotone, port town, Calabria regione, southern Italy. It lies along the Gulf of Taranto, northwest of the Cape of Colonne, and east-northeast of Catanzaro. It was known as Cotrone from the Middle Ages until the Italian form of its early name was restored in 1928. The town was founded by Achaean
- Croton (plant genus)
Euphorbiaceae: Major genera and species: …the tropical and warm temperate Croton is characterized by distinctive pollen and stellate (starlike) or scalelike hairs. Croton tiglium produces croton oil, which is used as a strong purgative in some places. The sap of a group of South American species close to C. lechleri is called sangre de drago…
- croton (plant species)
croton, (Codiaeum variegatum), colourful-leaved plant of the spurge family (Euphorbiaceae) native to Malaysia and the Pacific and extensively cultivated. Numerous horticultural varieties of shrubs or small trees have been developed, and the plant is commonly grown outdoors in pots or as a
- Croton bug (insect)
cockroach: Family Ectobiidae: The German cockroach (Blattella germanica), a common household pest, is light brown with two dark stripes on the prothoracic region. The female produces an ootheca 3 days after mating and carries it for about 20 days. Three or more generations may occur yearly. Because it is…
- Croton Dam, Reservoir, and Aqueduct (New York, United States)
Croton Dam, Reservoir, and Aqueduct, part of the extensive water supply system for New York City. The reservoir, in northern Westchester county, New York, was the city’s first artificial source of water. The original dam on the Croton River, located 10 km (6 miles) upstream from that river’s
- croton oil (plant substance)
croton oil, poisonous viscous liquid obtained from the seeds of a small Asiatic tree, Croton tiglium, of the spurge family (Euphorbiaceae). The tree is native to or cultivated in India and the Indonesian Archipelago. Croton oil is pale yellow to brown and is transparent, with an acrid persistent
- Croton tiglium (plant)
croton: …of a different genus, is purging croton (Croton tiglium), a small tree; from its seeds, poisonous croton oil is extracted. It is native to Southeast Asia.
- Crotone (Italy)
Crotone, port town, Calabria regione, southern Italy. It lies along the Gulf of Taranto, northwest of the Cape of Colonne, and east-northeast of Catanzaro. It was known as Cotrone from the Middle Ages until the Italian form of its early name was restored in 1928. The town was founded by Achaean
- crotonic acid (chemical compound)
carboxylic acid: Unsaturated aliphatic acids: The trans isomer of crotonic acid is found in croton oil. The cis isomer does not occur in nature but has been synthesized in the laboratory. Angelic and tiglic acids are a pair of cis-trans isomers. Angelic acid is found as an ester in angelica root, whereas tiglic acid…
- crotonyl-ACP reductase (enzyme)
metabolism: Fatty acids: …[67], which is catalyzed by crotonyl-ACP reductase, are butyryl-S-ACP and NADP+.
- crotonyl-S-ACP (enzyme)
metabolism: Fatty acids: The products of [66] are crotonyl-S-ACP and water. The products of [67], which is catalyzed by crotonyl-ACP reductase, are butyryl-S-ACP and NADP+.
- Crotophaga (bird)
ani, any of three species of big-billed, glossy black birds of the genus Crotophaga of the cuckoo family (Cuculidae), of tropical America. These insect eaters forage on the ground in close and noisy flocks, often in fields with cattle. The bill is high-arched, bladelike, and hook-tipped; the tail
- Crotophaga ani (bird)
ani: The common, or smooth-billed, ani (C. ani), found from southern Florida to Argentina, is a bird 36 cm (14 inches) long that looks like a huge-beaked grackle. The great ani (C. major) is common in swamplands of South America, chiefly east of the Andes. The groove-billed…
- Crotophaga major (bird)
ani: The great ani (C. major) is common in swamplands of South America, chiefly east of the Andes. The groove-billed ani (C. sulcirostris), found from southern Texas to western Peru and northern Brazil, has several grooves in the upper mandible.
- Crotophaga sulcirostris (bird)
ani: The groove-billed ani (C. sulcirostris), found from southern Texas to western Peru and northern Brazil, has several grooves in the upper mandible.
- crottle (lichen)
Parmelia: …the species commonly known as crottle and skull lichen. Crottle, the largest foliose lichen, resembles crumpled leather and sometimes grows 90 to 120 centimetres in diameter. It is characterized by a black underside. The central portion may die out, leaving a toadstool-like fairy ring. It is used as a reddish…
- Crouch, Stanley (American journalist and critic)
Stanley Crouch was an American journalist and critic noted for his range of interests and for his outspoken essays on African American arts, politics, and culture. Crouch grew up in Los Angeles, where he attended two junior colleges and was an actor-playwright in the Studio Watts company (1965–67).
- Crouchback (English noble)
Edmund, 1st earl of Lancaster was the fourth (but second surviving) son of King Henry III of England and Eleanor of Provence, who founded the house of Lancaster. At the age of 10, Edmund was invested by Pope Innocent IV with the kingdom of Sicily (April 1255), as an expression of his conflict with
- Crouchback, Guy (fictional character)
Guy Crouchback, fictional character, the protagonist of Evelyn Waugh’s trilogy Sword of Honour (1965; published separately as Men at Arms [1952], Officers and Gentlemen [1955], and Unconditional Surrender [1961]). Crouchback is alienated from his Roman Catholic religion, his personal relationships,
- Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (film by Lee [2000])
Yo-Yo Ma: He also played on Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000), the sound track recording for the movie of the same name, and in 2003 collaborated with Latin American musicians on Obrigado Brazil. Another collaborative effort recorded with progressive bluegrass musicians produced the critically acclaimed The Goat Rodeo Sessions in 2011.…
- Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (film score by Tan Dun)
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, film score by Chinese composer Tan Dun for the 2000 Ang Lee film of the same name. The music for Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon blends Chinese harmonies and instruments with Western orchestra music, creating moods ranging from wistful romance to heroic triumph. The
- Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: Sword of Destiny (film by Yuen [2016])
Michelle Yeoh: Global fame and later movies: …qing ming bao jian (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: Sword of Destiny). The following year she appeared in the second installment of Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy franchise. Her high-profile projects continued with Crazy Rich Asians (2018), a rom-com based on Kevin Kwan’s best-selling novel. Hugely popular, the movie featured…
- Crouching Woman (work by Picasso)
Pablo Picasso: Blue Period of Pablo Picasso: …and castaways in 1902–03 (Crouching Woman [1902]; Blind Man’s Meal [1903]; Old Jew and a Boy [1903]). The subject of maternity (women were allowed to keep nursing children with them at the prison) also preoccupied Picasso at a time when he was searching for material that would best express…
- croud (musical instrument)
crwth, bowed Welsh lyre played from the European Middle Ages to about 1800. It was about the size of a violin. Though originally plucked, it was played with a bow from the 11th century, and a fingerboard was added behind the strings in the last part of the 13th century. Its original four strings
- croup (pathology)
croup, acute respiratory illness of young children characterized by a harsh cough, hoarseness, and difficulty breathing. The illness is caused by infection of the upper airway in the region of the larynx (voice box), with infection sometimes spreading into the lower airway to the trachea
- croupade (horsemanship)
horsemanship: Dressage: …the levade position; and the croupade, ballotade, and capriole, a variety of spectacular airs in which the horse jumps and lands again in the same spot.
- Crousaz, Jean-Pierre de (Swiss philosopher)
Jean-Pierre de Crousaz was a Swiss theologian, philosopher, and controversialist whose greatest importance lies in his letters to a wide range of correspondents revealing the intellectual climate of his time. He was professor in Lausanne from 1700 to 1724 (being twice rector of the university) and
- Crouse, Russel (American dramatist)
Lindsay and Crouse: …New York, New York) and Russel Crouse (b. February 20, 1893, Findlay, Ohio, U.S.—d. April 3, 1966, New York, New York) were notable both for their continual successes and for the way they complemented each other’s talents.
- crouth (musical instrument)
crwth, bowed Welsh lyre played from the European Middle Ages to about 1800. It was about the size of a violin. Though originally plucked, it was played with a bow from the 11th century, and a fingerboard was added behind the strings in the last part of the 13th century. Its original four strings
- crouton (food)
Caesar salad: …atop romaine lettuce leaves and croutons—in short, unchanged from his original scraped-together concoction.