- Gardner, John (American author)
John Gardner was an American novelist and poet whose philosophical fiction reveals his characters’ inner conflicts. Gardner attended Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri (A.B., 1955), and the University of Iowa (M.A., 1956; Ph.D., 1958) and then taught at various colleges and universities
- Gardner, John Champlin, Jr. (American author)
John Gardner was an American novelist and poet whose philosophical fiction reveals his characters’ inner conflicts. Gardner attended Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri (A.B., 1955), and the University of Iowa (M.A., 1956; Ph.D., 1958) and then taught at various colleges and universities
- Gardner, Percy (British archaeologist)
Percy Gardner was an English archaeologist who was noted for his contributions to the study of Greek numismatics. Gardner was a prolific writer and lecturer on numismatics, Greek art, and religious subjects, as well as a gifted teacher. He was educated at Christ’s College, Cambridge, and while a
- Gardner, Rulon (American wrestler)
Aleksandr Karelin: …final round by American wrestler Rulon Gardner. With his fourth Olympic medal a silver, Karelin retired from the sport.
- Gardner, Tom (American entrepreneur)
David and Tom Gardner: … at Chapel Hill in 1988; Tom attended Brown University (B.A., 1990) and did graduate work in linguistics and geography at the University of Montana. Although they had long been interested in money management (they began investing at age 18), they resisted the lure of Wall Street and instead became its…
- Gardnerella (bacteria)
vaginitis: …is the cause of candidiasis; Gardnerella bacteria; and Trichomonas vaginalis, a protozoan. The last two types of vaginal infections are usually transmitted through sexual contact. Candidiasis can also occur during pregnancy and can cause infant thrush in children born to infected mothers. Treatment of these infectious forms of vaginitis is
- Gardons, S. S. (American poet)
W.D. Snodgrass was an American poet whose early work is distinguished by a careful attention to form and by a relentless yet delicate examination of personal experiences. Snodgrass was educated at Geneva College, Beaver Falls, Pa., and the University of Iowa. He taught at Cornell University
- Gare du Nord (railway station, Paris, France)
Western architecture: France: His Gare du Nord, Paris (1861–65), showed brilliantly how a language ultimately inspired by the triumphal arches of ancient Rome could lend an appropriate monumental emphasis to a major metropolitan railway terminus. In Saint-Vincent-de-Paul, Paris (1830–46), a church with a giant portico leading to an aisled…
- Gare Saint-Lazare (painting by Manet)
Western painting: Impressionism: …hoping for academic success; his Gare Saint-Lazare (1873), influenced by the Impressionist palette, was accepted at the Salon. Modeling himself on Pissarro, Cézanne sublimated the turbulent emotions of his earlier work in pictures that were studied directly and closely from nature; he followed the method for the rest of his…
- garefowl (extinct bird)
great auk, (Pinguinus impennis), flightless seabird extinct since 1844. Great auks belonged to the family Alcidae (order Charadriiformes). They bred in colonies on rocky islands off North Atlantic coasts (St. Kilda, the Faroe Islands, Iceland, and Funk Island off Newfoundland); subfossil remains
- Garfield (comic strip by Davis)
Garfield, American newspaper comic strip featuring a fat, lazy cat with a dry sense of humour. Garfield became the most widely syndicated comic strip of its era. Garfield is a round-bodied, orange and black tabby cat who frequently stands on two feet and communicates via cartoon “thought bubbles”
- Garfield, Andrew (American-born English actor)
Andrew Garfield is an American-born English screen and stage actor, known for giving his roles a unique vulnerability and emotional depth. Garfield began his acting career onstage and gained international celebrity with roles in such films as The Social Network (2010) and The Amazing Spider-Man
- Garfield, Henry (American singer and writer)
Henry Rollins is an American singer, poet, monologuist, and publisher whose tenure as the lead vocalist of Los Angeles hardcore group Black Flag made him one of the most recognizable faces in the 1980s punk scene. Rollins was an avid fan of hardcore music, and, as a teenager, he performed with a
- Garfield, James A. (president of United States)
James A. Garfield was the 20th president of the United States (March 4–September 19, 1881). He had the second shortest tenure in U.S. presidential history. When he was shot and incapacitated, serious constitutional questions arose concerning who should properly perform the functions of the
- Garfield, James Abram (president of United States)
James A. Garfield was the 20th president of the United States (March 4–September 19, 1881). He had the second shortest tenure in U.S. presidential history. When he was shot and incapacitated, serious constitutional questions arose concerning who should properly perform the functions of the
- Garfield, John (American actor)
John Garfield was an American film and stage actor who is best known for his intense portrayals of rebels and antiheroes. Garfield grew up in the poor Jewish section of New York City’s Lower East Side. Street-gang involvement and numerous fistfights landed him in a reform school during his teen
- Garfield, Jules (American actor)
John Garfield was an American film and stage actor who is best known for his intense portrayals of rebels and antiheroes. Garfield grew up in the poor Jewish section of New York City’s Lower East Side. Street-gang involvement and numerous fistfights landed him in a reform school during his teen
- Garfield, Leon (British author)
children’s literature: Historical fiction: Leon Garfield, though not working with historical characters, created strange picaresque tales that gave children a thrilling, often chilling insight into the 18th-century England of Smollett and Fielding.
- Garfield, Lucretia (American first lady)
Lucretia Garfield was an American first lady (March 4–September 19, 1881), the wife of James A. Garfield, 20th president of the United States. Although first lady for only a few months, she was one of the most interesting women to have held that job, and some of her early achievements and choices
- Garfinkel, Zorach (American sculptor)
William Zorach was a traditionalist sculptor of simple, figurative subjects who was a leading figure in the early 20th-century revival of direct carving, whereby the sculptor seeks an image directly from the material to be carved, relying on neither the inspiration of models nor the aid of
- Garfinkle, Jacob Julius (American actor)
John Garfield was an American film and stage actor who is best known for his intense portrayals of rebels and antiheroes. Garfield grew up in the poor Jewish section of New York City’s Lower East Side. Street-gang involvement and numerous fistfights landed him in a reform school during his teen
- Garfinkle, Zorach (American sculptor)
William Zorach was a traditionalist sculptor of simple, figurative subjects who was a leading figure in the early 20th-century revival of direct carving, whereby the sculptor seeks an image directly from the material to be carved, relying on neither the inspiration of models nor the aid of
- garfish (fish)
gar, any of seven species of large North American fishes of the genera Atractosteus and Lepisosteus, in the family Lepisosteidae. Gars, which are related to the bowfin in the infraclass Holostei, are confined chiefly to fresh water, though some of the species descend to brackish or even salt water.
- garfish (fish, Belone species)
garfish, European species of needlefish
- Garfunkel, Art (American singer and actor)
Art Garfunkel is an American singer and actor who partnered with singer-songwriter Paul Simon to form one of the most popular duos in the history of popular music, Simon and Garfunkel. Garfunkel’s remarkable lyrical tenor and high harmonies were as pivotal to the duo’s success as Simon’s
- Garfunkel, Arthur Ira (American singer and actor)
Art Garfunkel is an American singer and actor who partnered with singer-songwriter Paul Simon to form one of the most popular duos in the history of popular music, Simon and Garfunkel. Garfunkel’s remarkable lyrical tenor and high harmonies were as pivotal to the duo’s success as Simon’s
- Gargallo y Catalán, Pablo (Spanish sculptor)
Pablo Gargallo was a Spanish sculptor who was among the first artists to work in iron. He introduced Pablo Picasso to metal sculpture. After studying drawing and sculpture in Barcelona, Gargallo won a scholarship in 1903 to continue his studies in Paris; he was forced to return to Barcelona shortly
- Gargallo, Pablo (Spanish sculptor)
Pablo Gargallo was a Spanish sculptor who was among the first artists to work in iron. He introduced Pablo Picasso to metal sculpture. After studying drawing and sculpture in Barcelona, Gargallo won a scholarship in 1903 to continue his studies in Paris; he was forced to return to Barcelona shortly
- garganey (bird)
Lake Chad: Animal life: …region is famous—such as the garganeys, shovelers, fulvous tree ducks, Egyptian geese, pink-backed pelicans, marabou storks, glossy ibises, and African spoonbills. Included among the amphibians and reptiles are Nile crocodiles, rock pythons, and spitting cobras. The Chad basin remains an important fishery, with more than 40 species of commercial importance.…
- Gargano (promontory, Italy)
Gargano, mountainous promontory jutting into the Adriatic Sea from the east coast of Italy, in Foggia province, Puglia (Apulia) region. Called the “spur” of the Italian “boot” (peninsula), it is 40 miles (65 km) long and 25 miles (40 km) at its widest, with an area of 778 square miles (2,015 square
- Gargano Promontory (promontory, Italy)
Gargano, mountainous promontory jutting into the Adriatic Sea from the east coast of Italy, in Foggia province, Puglia (Apulia) region. Called the “spur” of the Italian “boot” (peninsula), it is 40 miles (65 km) long and 25 miles (40 km) at its widest, with an area of 778 square miles (2,015 square
- Garganta del Diablo (gorge, South America)
Garganta del Diablo, spectacular cataract on the Río Iguazú (Rio Iguaçu) at the border of Argentina and Brazil. The water roars down a descent of 269 feet (82
- Garganta do Diablo (gorge, South America)
Garganta del Diablo, spectacular cataract on the Río Iguazú (Rio Iguaçu) at the border of Argentina and Brazil. The water roars down a descent of 269 feet (82
- Gargantua and Pantagruel (work by Rabelais)
Gargantua and Pantagruel, collective title of five comic novels by François Rabelais, published between 1532 and 1564. The novels present the comic and satiric story of the giant Gargantua and his son Pantagruel, and various companions, whose travels and adventures are a vehicle for ridicule of the
- Gargas (cave, France)
Gargas, cave in the French Pyrenees that contains important examples of Late Paleolithic mural art, paintings, and engravings, most of them probably dating from the Gravettian Period (about 27,000 to 22,000 years ago). The cave’s decoration was discovered in 1906. Many “macaroni,” or finger
- Gargasaṃmhitā (Indian literature)
astrology: Astral omens in Egypt, Greece, India, and China: …earliest version of the as-yet-unpublished Gargasamhita (“Compositions of Garga”) of about the 1st century ad. The original Mesopotamian material was modified so as to fit into the Indian conception of society, including the system of the four castes and the duty of the upper castes to perform the samskaras (sanctifying…
- Gargery, Joe (fictional character)
Joe Gargery, fictional character, the simple, kindhearted, and loyal blacksmith who is married to the hero Pip’s mean-spirited sister in the novel Great Expectations (1861) by Charles
- gargoyle (architecture)
gargoyle, in architecture, waterspout designed to drain water from the parapet gutter. Originally the term referred only to the carved lions of classical cornices or to terra-cotta spouts, such as those found in the Roman structures at Pompeii. The word later became restricted mainly to the
- gargoylism (pathology)
Hurler’s syndrome, one of several rare genetic disorders involving a defect in the metabolism of mucopolysaccharides, the class of polysaccharides that bind water to unite cells and to lubricate joints. Onset of the syndrome is in infancy or early childhood, and the disease occurs with equal
- Garh Gazali (forest, Bangladesh)
Madhupur Jungle, forest extending approximately 60 miles (100 km) north-south in east-central Bangladesh. It is a slightly elevated area of older alluvium between the Meghna and Jamuna (Brahmaputra) rivers. A large part of the area has been cleared and is now intensively farmed. The most common
- Garh Gazau (forest, Bangladesh)
Madhupur Jungle, forest extending approximately 60 miles (100 km) north-south in east-central Bangladesh. It is a slightly elevated area of older alluvium between the Meghna and Jamuna (Brahmaputra) rivers. A large part of the area has been cleared and is now intensively farmed. The most common
- garhapatya (Indian religion)
Roman religion: The earliest divinities: …its correspondence with the Indian garhapatya, “house-father’s fire,” suggest an origin prior to the time of the differentiation of the Indo-European-speaking peoples. The cultic site just outside the area of the primitive Palatine settlement indicates that there had been a form of fire worship even earlier than Vesta’s (dedicated to…
- Garian (Libya)
Gharyān, town, in the Tripolitania region of northwestern Libya. It lies at the foot of the plateau Jabal Nafūsah, 50 miles (80 km) south of Tripoli, and was a major centre of Italian colonization in the early 1910s. After the Turko-Italian war (1911–12) and the defeat of Turkey, the Gebel, Berber,
- garibaldi (fish)
damselfish: …aruanus) of the Indo-Pacific; the garibaldi (Hypsypops rubicundus), a bright orange California fish about 30 cm long; the beau gregory (Eupomacentrus leucostictus), a blue-and-yellow Atlantic species; and the sergeant major (Abudefduf saxatilis), a black-banded, bluish and yellow fish of the tropical Atlantic.
- Garibaldi, Giuseppe (Italian revolutionary)
Giuseppe Garibaldi was an Italian patriot and soldier of the Risorgimento, a republican who, through his conquest of Sicily and Naples with his guerrilla Redshirts, contributed to the achievement of Italian unification under the royal house of Savoy. Garibaldi’s family was one of fishermen and
- Garibaldi, Mount (mountain, Canada)
Mount Garibaldi, peak in southern British Columbia, Canada, in the Coast Mountains east of the Cheakamus River. Glacier-capped, it is 8,787 ft (2,678 m) high and is the focus of Garibaldi Provincial Park (area 760 sq mi [1,968 sq km]), established in 1927 and now a popular year-round recreational
- Garibashvili, Irakli (prime minister of Georgia)
Georgia: Georgian Dream government: He personally selected his successor, Irakli Garibashvili, who resigned in 2015 without explanation. The next prime minister, Giorgi Kvirikashvili, served until 2018, when he resigned after falling out with Ivanishvili (who had become party chairman just months before). Kvirikashvili was replaced by Mamuka Bakhtadze.
- Garībnāmeh (work by Aşik Paşa)
Aşık Paşa: …most famous work is the Gharībnāmeh, a long didactic, mystical poem written in over 11,000 mas̄navī (rhymed couplets) and divided into 10 chapters, each with 10 subsections. Each of the chapters is associated with a subject in relation to its number. For example, the fifth chapter deals with the five…
- Gariep Dam (dam, South Africa)
Orange River: Physiography: From the Gariep (formerly Hendrik Verwoerd) Dam the Orange swings to the northwest to its confluence with the Vaal River. The Vaal, which rises in Eastern Transvaal province, flows west through the major population and industrial core of South Africa before turning south and joining the Orange…
- Gariep Reservoir (reservoir, South Africa)
Orange River: Physiography: …at the head of the Gariep (formerly Hendrik Verwoerd) Reservoir.
- Gariep River (river, Africa)
Orange River, river in southern Africa, one of the longest rivers on the continent and one of the longest south of the Tropic of Capricorn. After rising in the Lesotho Highlands, less than 125 miles (200 kilometres) from the Indian Ocean, the river flows to the Atlantic Ocean in a generally
- Garifuna (people)
Latin American dance: Central America, Colombia, and Venezuela: …is the punta of the Garifuna—a cultural group of mixed Amerindian and African origin—found on the Atlantic coast of Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, and Nicaragua. Punta is a social dance of joy and festivity, as well as an emblem of cultural survival. In its festive aspect, punta allows dancers to interact…
- Garifuna Collective (Belizean musical group)
Andy Vivien Palacio: …that was known as the Garifuna Collective, Palacio produced several influential albums, notably Paranda (1999) and Wátina (2007). He was awarded Belize’s Order of Meritorious Service in September 2007, and two months later he was named a UNESCO Artist for Peace.
- Garífuna language
Garífuna language, an Arawakan language spoken by approximately 190,000 people in Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua, and also by many who have emigrated to the United States. The language’s presence in Central America is relatively recent. African slaves mingled with the Caribs of Saint
- Garig Gunak Barlu National Park (national park, Northern Territory, Australia)
Cobourg Peninsula: It is now Garig Gunak Barlu National Park, administered jointly by the traditional Aboriginal owners and the Northern Territory government.
- garigue (plant)
maquis: Garigue, or garrigue, is a related plant community associated with southern France and with poor limestone soils throughout the Mediterranean region.
- garimpeireo (mining)
Brazil: Mining and quarrying: …where tens of thousands of garimpeiros swarmed during gold rushes in the 1980s and ’90s. Minas Gerais, Bahia, and Espírito Santo are the major sources of Brazil’s enormous range of gems—topazes, amethysts, opals, aquamarines, tourmalines, emeralds, and others—that make Brazil a world leader in precious and semiprecious stones.
- Garinagu (people)
Latin American dance: Central America, Colombia, and Venezuela: …is the punta of the Garifuna—a cultural group of mixed Amerindian and African origin—found on the Atlantic coast of Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, and Nicaragua. Punta is a social dance of joy and festivity, as well as an emblem of cultural survival. In its festive aspect, punta allows dancers to interact…
- Garip movement (Turkish literature)
Turkish literature: Modern Turkish literature: …and Melih Cevdet Anday—initiated the Garip (“Strange”) movement with publication of a volume of poetry by the same name. In it they emphasized simplified language, folkloric poetic forms, and themes of alienation in the modern urban environment. Later, Anday broke with this style, treating philosophical and aesthetic issues in his…
- Garis, Howard R. (American author)
Howard R. Garis was an American author, creator of the Uncle Wiggily series of children’s stories. Garis began his career as a newspaperman with the Newark Evening News in 1896. Shortly after, he began writing a daily bedtime story about Uncle Wiggily—a rabbit hero—and his friends. He averaged a
- Garis, Howard Roger (American author)
Howard R. Garis was an American author, creator of the Uncle Wiggily series of children’s stories. Garis began his career as a newspaperman with the Newark Evening News in 1896. Shortly after, he began writing a daily bedtime story about Uncle Wiggily—a rabbit hero—and his friends. He averaged a
- Garissa (Kenya)
Garissa, town, east-central Kenya. The town is a market centre situated on the Tana River, and its industries process food, beverages, and tobacco products; manufactures include plastic containers. It is located about 215 miles (350 km) east of Nairobi and is linked by road with Nairobi, Mombasa,
- garland (floral decoration)
garland, a band, or chain, of flowers, foliage, and leaves; it may be joined at the ends to form a circle (wreath), worn on the head (chaplet), or draped in loops (festoon or swag). Garlands have been a part of religious ritual and tradition from ancient times: the Egyptians placed garlands of
- Garland (Texas, United States)
Garland, city, Dallas county, northern Texas, U.S. Adjacent to Dallas (west), it was founded in 1887, when two rival railroad communities, Duck Creek and Embree, were consolidated by an act of the U.S. Congress and named for Attorney General Augustus H. Garland. In May 1927 a tornado destroyed much
- garland crabapple (tree)
crabapple: Major species: …species are the garland, or sweet crab (M. coronaria), Oregon crabapple (M. fusca), prairie crabapple (M. ioensis), and southern crabapple (M. angustifolia).
- garland flower (plant)
ginger lily, (genus Hedychium), genus of about 70 species in the ginger family (Zingiberaceae), found mostly in tropical and subtropical regions of Asia and Africa. Several are cultivated as ornamentals, and the flowers of many Hedychium species are used for garlands and other decorations. The
- garland flower (plant, Daphne cneorum)
Daphne: The garland flower (D. cneorum) is a hardy evergreen trailing shrub, or ground cover, with pink, sweet-scented flowers. Popular greenhouse subjects include the several varieties of winter daphne (D. odora), which have very fragrant white to purplish flowers in crowded clusters. D. indica, with red blossoms,…
- Garland Sutra (Buddhist text)
Avatamsaka-sutra, voluminous Mahayana Buddhist text that some consider the most sublime revelation of the Buddha’s teachings. Scholars value the text for its revelations about the evolution of thought from early Buddhism to fully developed Mahayana. The sutra speaks of the deeds of the Buddha and
- Garland the Computist (medieval logician)
history of logic: St. Anselm and Peter Abelard: 730–804) and Garland the Computist (flourished c. 1040). But it was not until late in the 11th century that serious interest in logic revived. St. Anselm of Canterbury (1033–1109) discussed semantical questions in his De grammatico and investigated the notions of possibility and necessity in surviving fragments,…
- Garland, Beverly (American actress)
D.O.A.: Cast: Assorted Referencesdiscussed in biography
- Garland, Ex parte (law case)
Salmon P. Chase: Missouri and Ex parte Garland (both 1867), state and federal loyalty oaths prerequisite to the practice of learned professions. In various cases in 1872–73 (near the end of his life), in a court whose majority narrowly construed the postwar Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution, he…
- Garland, Hamlin (American writer)
Hamlin Garland was an American author perhaps best remembered for his short stories and his autobiographical “Middle Border” series of narratives. As his farming family moved progressively westward from Wisconsin to Iowa and then to the Dakotas, Garland rebelled against the vicissitudes of
- Garland, Hannibal Hamlin (American writer)
Hamlin Garland was an American author perhaps best remembered for his short stories and his autobiographical “Middle Border” series of narratives. As his farming family moved progressively westward from Wisconsin to Iowa and then to the Dakotas, Garland rebelled against the vicissitudes of
- Garland, Judy (American singer and actress)
Judy Garland was an American singer and actress whose exceptional talents and vulnerabilities combined to make her one of the most enduringly popular Hollywood icons of the 20th century. Frances Gumm was the daughter of former vaudevillians Frank Gumm and Ethel Gumm, who operated the New Grand
- Garland, Merrick (American jurist)
Merrick Garland is an American lawyer, judge, and government official who served as U.S. attorney general (2021– ) in the administration of Pres. Joe Biden. Garland previously was a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (1997–2021; chief judge, 2013–20). Garland
- Garland, Merrick Brian (American jurist)
Merrick Garland is an American lawyer, judge, and government official who served as U.S. attorney general (2021– ) in the administration of Pres. Joe Biden. Garland previously was a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (1997–2021; chief judge, 2013–20). Garland
- garlic (plant)
garlic, (Allium sativum), perennial plant of the amaryllis family (Amaryllidaceae), grown for its flavourful bulbs. The plant is native to central Asia but grows wild in Italy and southern France and is a classic ingredient in many national cuisines. The bulbs have a powerful onionlike aroma and
- Garlic Ballads, The (novel by Mo Yan)
Mo Yan: …Tiantang suantai zhi ge (The Garlic Ballads) was published, followed in 1995 by the collection Mo Yan wenji (“Collected Works of Mo Yan”). Of the stories contained in the latter book, Mo himself was most satisfied with Jiuguo (1992; The Republic of Wine). The novel Fengru feitun (1995; Big…
- garlic fruit (tree)
Garcinia: Garlic fruit, or bitter garcinia (G. spicata), is planted as an ornamental in tropical salt-spray oceanfront areas. Orange dyes (gamboge) are extracted from the bark of G. xanthochymus and G. cowa. A number of species are listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List of
- Garlock, John Harry (American surgeon)
history of medicine: Anesthesia and thoracic surgery: …generally poor until, in 1944, John Garlock of New York showed that it is possible to excise the esophagus and to bring the stomach up through the chest and join it to the pharynx. Lengths of colon were also used as grafts to bridge the gap.
- garment (clothing)
dress, clothing and accessories for the human body. The variety of dress is immense. The style that a particular individual selects is often linked to that person’s sex, age, socioeconomic status, culture, geographic area, and historical era. This article considers the chronological development of
- garment industry
clothing and footwear industry, factories and mills producing outerwear, underwear, headwear, footwear, belts, purses, luggage, gloves, scarfs, ties, and household soft goods such as drapes, linens, and slipcovers. The same raw materials and equipment are used to fashion these different end
- Garment Jungle, The (film by Sherman [1957])
Robert Aldrich: Early work: Aldrich had almost completed The Garment Jungle (1957) when he was fired from the production for refusing to tone down the script’s frank portrayal of New York’s crime-infested garment industry; Vincent Sherman finished the drama. Aldrich next directed the World War II films The Angry Hills (1959), with Robert…
- Garmisch (Germany)
Garmisch-Partenkirchen: …the two ancient villages of Garmisch and Partenkirchen, was chartered in 1935 and retains much of its rural character.
- Garmisch-Partenkirchen (Germany)
Garmisch-Partenkirchen, market town, Bavaria Land (state), southern Germany. It lies at the junction of the deep Loisach and Partnach valleys, in the Bavarian Alps at the foot of the Zugspitze (9,718 feet [2,962 metres]), which is the highest mountain in Germany. The town, a union of the two
- Garmisch-Partenkirchen 1936 Olympic Winter Games
Garmisch-Partenkirchen 1936 Olympic Winter Games, athletic festival held in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Ger., that took place Feb. 6–16, 1936. The Garmish-Partenkirchen Games were the fourth occurrence of the Winter Olympic Games. The 1936 Winter Olympics, held in a Bavarian resort, were opened by
- garmsīr (region, Iran)
Fārs: …divides into two regions: the garmsīr and the sardsīr. The sparsely settled garmsīr (hot climate) region lies at elevations up to 2,500 feet (750 m). It is humid on the coastal plain bordering the Persian Gulf; this area supports the cultivation of fruit, cereals (rice, corn [maize]), vegetables, and tobacco.…
- Garneau, François-Xavier (Canadian writer)
François-Xavier Garneau was the first outstanding French-Canadian historian, known as the father of Canadian historiography. The son of a carriage maker, Garneau left school at the age of 14 and entered the court clerk’s office and two years later a notary’s firm, becoming a notary himself in 1830.
- Garneau, Hector de Saint-Denys (Canadian poet)
Hector de Saint-Denys Garneau was a poet who was the cofounder of the important French Canadian literary journal La Relève (1934; “The Relief”). His intense and introspective verse, filled with images of death and despair, set him apart from the prevailing regionalism of Canadian literature and
- Garneau, Marc (Canadian astronaut)
Marc Garneau is a Canadian naval officer, astronaut, and politician who was the first Canadian citizen to go into space (1984). Garneau received a B.S. in engineering physics from the Royal Military College in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, in 1970 and a doctorate in electrical engineering from
- Garner, Alan (British author)
Alan Garner is an English writer whose works, noted for their idiosyncratic style, are rooted in the myth and legend of the British Isles. Garner attended local schools before spending two years in the Royal Artillery and studying at Magdalen College, Oxford. His first book, The Weirdstone of
- Garner, Cactus Jack (vice president of United States)
John Nance Garner was the 32nd vice president of the United States (1933–41) in the Democratic administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. He maintained his conservatism despite his prominent position in Roosevelt’s New Deal administration. Garner was the son of farmers John Nance Garner III
- Garner, Eric (American citizen)
American civil rights movement: Black Lives Matter and Shelby County v. Holder: …Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner in Staten Island, New York, in 2014, as well as that of Freddie Gray in Baltimore in 2015, prompted widespread protest. The fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed Black teenager, in Sanford, Florida, in February 2012, by George Zimmerman, a neighbourhood watch…
- Garner, Erroll (American musician)
Erroll Garner was an American pianist and composer, one of the most virtuosic and popular pianists in jazz. Garner was influenced by Fats Waller and was entirely self-taught. He substituted for Art Tatum in the latter’s trio in 1945 and subsequently formed his own three-piece group, achieving
- Garner, Erroll Louis (American musician)
Erroll Garner was an American pianist and composer, one of the most virtuosic and popular pianists in jazz. Garner was influenced by Fats Waller and was entirely self-taught. He substituted for Art Tatum in the latter’s trio in 1945 and subsequently formed his own three-piece group, achieving
- Garner, James (American actor)
James Garner was an American actor who was noted for his portrayal of good-natured characters and reluctant heroes. He was perhaps best known for his roles in the television series Maverick and The Rockford Files. After serving in the U.S. Army during the Korean War, Garner pursued an acting
- Garner, Jennifer (American actress)
Jennifer Garner is an American actress known for her starring role as CIA double agent Sydney Bristow on the television series Alias (2001–06) as well as for often playing mothers and action heroes. Her standout performances from film include 13 Going on 30 (2004), Juno (2007), and Dallas Buyers
- Garner, Joel (West Indian cricketer)
Joel Garner is a West Indian cricketer who was one of the game’s dominant bowlers in the 1970s and ’80s. Garner grew up in Barbados. He made his Test (international two-innings, five-day match) debut for the West Indies in 1977 and became an integral part of the outstanding West Indian cricket
- Garner, John Nance (vice president of United States)
John Nance Garner was the 32nd vice president of the United States (1933–41) in the Democratic administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. He maintained his conservatism despite his prominent position in Roosevelt’s New Deal administration. Garner was the son of farmers John Nance Garner III
- Garner, Peggy Ann (American actress)
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn: Reception: …Hollywood movie in 1945, starring Peggy Ann Garner as Francie, Dorothy McGuire as Katie, and James Dunn as Johnny. The film, directed by Elia Kazan, was nominated for an Academy Award for best screenplay, and Dunn won an Oscar for best supporting actor. The novel was also adapted into a…