- Gileya (Russian art and literary group)
David Davidovich Burlyuk: …the art and literary group Hylaea (Russian: Gileya), which, together with Aleksey Kruchyonykh, Mayakovsky, and Khlebnikov, published in 1912 the famous manifesto of Russian Futurism, Poshchochina obshchestvennomu vkusu (A Slap in the Face of Public Taste). In 1913–14 he took part in a “Futurist tour” of lectures and poetry readings…
- Gilford, Jack (American actor)
Cabaret: Original Broadway cast and production: …Haworth, Bert Convy, Lotte Lenya, Jack Gilford, Edward Winter, and Joel Grey as the depraved Master of Ceremonies (or Emcee), a role that he reprised to great acclaim in the 1972 film version of Cabaret. Grey’s performances earned him both a Tony Award (for best featured actor in a musical)…
- Gilgamesh (Mesopotamian mythology)
Gilgamesh, the best known of all ancient Mesopotamian heroes. Numerous tales in the Akkadian language have been told about Gilgamesh, and the whole collection has been described as an odyssey—the odyssey of a king who did not want to die. The fullest extant text of the Gilgamesh epic is on 12
- Gilgamesh and Agga of Kish (Sumerian epic)
Enmebaragesi: …according to the Sumerian epic Gilgamesh and Agga of Kish.
- Gilgamesh Epic (Mesopotamian literature)
Epic of Gilgamesh, ancient Mesopotamian odyssey recorded in the Akkadian language about Gilgamesh, the king of the Mesopotamian city-state Uruk (Erech). The fullest extant text of the Gilgamesh epic is on 12 incomplete Akkadian-language tablets found in the mid-19th century by the Turkish
- Gilgamesh, Epic of (Mesopotamian literature)
Epic of Gilgamesh, ancient Mesopotamian odyssey recorded in the Akkadian language about Gilgamesh, the king of the Mesopotamian city-state Uruk (Erech). The fullest extant text of the Gilgamesh epic is on 12 incomplete Akkadian-language tablets found in the mid-19th century by the Turkish
- Gilgel Gibe II (hydroelectric station, Ethiopia)
Omo River: …on the river is the Gilgel Gibe II hydroelectric station, which was inaugurated in 2010. The station, which draws water discharged from the Gilgel Gibe dam on the Gilgel Gibe River, has the capacity to produce more than 400 megawatts of electricity. An additional hydroelectric project, the Gilgel Gibe III,…
- Gilgel Gibe III (hydroelectric project, Ethiopia)
Omo River: An additional hydroelectric project, the Gilgel Gibe III, was under construction at the time of the inauguration. The Gilgel Gibe III project has generated controversy, as critics have argued that it will have a significant detrimental impact on the communities and environment downstream of the dam.
- Gilgit (Kashmir region, Indian subcontinent, Asia)
Gilgit, town in Gilgit-Baltistan, part of the Pakistani-administered sector of the Kashmir region, in the northern Indian subcontinent. It is situated in the Karakoram Range in a narrow valley on the Gilgit River at its confluence with the Hunza River and about 20 miles (32 km) upstream from its
- Gilgit River (river, Kashmir region, Indian subcontinent, Asia)
Gilgit River, river in the Gilgit-Baltistan area of the Pakistani-administered portion of the Kashmir region of the northwestern Indian subcontinent. The river rises from a high alpine glacier in the area where the Hindu Kush, Karakoram Range, and western (Punjab) Himalayas meet. Descending through
- gilgul (Judaism)
dybbuk: …of transmigration of souls (gilgul), which he saw as a means whereby souls could continue their task of self-perfection. His disciples went one step further with the notion of possession by a dybbuk. The Jewish scholar and folklorist S. Ansky contributed to worldwide interest in the dybbuk when his…
- Gilherme Guinle Steel Plant (factory, Volta Redonda, Brazil)
Volta Redonda: …National Steel Company constructed the Gilherme Guinle Steel Plant at Volta Redonda; for many years this was the largest steel complex in South America.
- Gilkyson, Tony (American musician)
X: …1955, Los Angeles, California) and Tony Gilkyson.
- gill (respiratory system)
gill, in biology, type of respiratory organ found in many aquatic animals, including a number of worms, nearly all mollusks and crustaceans, some insect larvae, all fishes, and a few amphibians. The gill consists of branched or feathery tissue richly supplied with blood vessels, especially near the
- gill (measurement)
gill, in measurement, unit of volume in the British Imperial and United States Customary systems. It is used almost exclusively for the measurement of liquids. Although its capacity has varied with time and location, in the United States it is defined as half a cup, or four U.S. fluid ounces, which
- gill arch (anatomy)
branchial arch, one of the bony or cartilaginous curved bars on either side of the pharynx (throat) that support the gills of fishes and amphibians; also, a corresponding rudimentary ridge in the embryo of higher vertebrates, which in some species may form real but transitory gill slits. In the
- gill filament (fish anatomy)
respiratory system: The gills: A pair of gill filaments projects from each arch; between the dorsal (upper) and ventral (lower) surfaces of the filaments, there is a series of secondary folds, the lamellae, where the gas exchange takes place. The blood vessels passing through the gill arches branch into the filaments and…
- gill fungi (order of fungi)
Agaricales, order of fungi in the class Agaricomycetes (phylum Basidiomycota, kingdom Fungi). One of the most diverse orders of the phylum Basidiomycota, Agaricales contains about 30 families, about 350 genera, and some 10,000 species. Traditionally, agarics were classified based on the presence of
- gill fungus (order of fungi)
Agaricales, order of fungi in the class Agaricomycetes (phylum Basidiomycota, kingdom Fungi). One of the most diverse orders of the phylum Basidiomycota, Agaricales contains about 30 families, about 350 genera, and some 10,000 species. Traditionally, agarics were classified based on the presence of
- gill lamella (anatomy)
bivalve: Food and feeding: …achieved by folding the platelike gill lamellae into plicae. Each lamella comprises vertical rows of filaments upon the outer head of which are complex arrays of cilia that create a flow of water through the gill, form a filtration barrier, and transport retained particles to food grooves in the dorsal…
- gill lamellae (anatomy)
bivalve: Food and feeding: …achieved by folding the platelike gill lamellae into plicae. Each lamella comprises vertical rows of filaments upon the outer head of which are complex arrays of cilia that create a flow of water through the gill, form a filtration barrier, and transport retained particles to food grooves in the dorsal…
- gill net
net: Drift nets—which include gill and trammel nets used at the surface and bottom-set nets used on the seabed—capture fish by entangling them. Gill and trammel nets are used principally to catch herring and salmon and are the most common drift nets. In commercial fishing, a long fleet of…
- gill pouch (anatomy)
respiratory system: Fishes: …cyclostomes (lampreys and hagfishes), the gill structures of which are in the form of pouches that connect internally with the pharynx (throat) and open outward through slits, either by a fusion of the excurrent gill ducts into a single tube (in Myxine) or individually by separate gill slits (in Petromyzon).…
- Gill Sans Serif (typeface)
Eric Gill: …he designed included Perpetua (1925), Gill Sans Serif (1927), Joanna (1930), and Bunyan, designed in 1934 but recut for machine use and renamed Pilgrim in 1953.
- gill septum (anatomy)
muscle: Jawed fishes: In bony fishes the gill septum of the hyoid arch is greatly modified to become a single, movable, bony covering for the whole gill chamber—the operculum. The individual gill septa are lost, and there is a great modification of the posterior branchial muscles, with many of the elements found…
- gill slit (anatomy)
chordate: General features: …through the mouth, using the gill slits as a kind of filter. The feeding apparatus in cephalochordates is similar. They have a well-developed musculature and can swim rapidly by undulating the body. Cephalochordates usually live partially buried in marine sand and gravel.
- Gill v. Whitford (United States law case)
Gill v. Whitford, legal case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on June 18, 2018, vacated and remanded a U.S. district court decision that had struck down a redistricting plan of the Wisconsin state legislature as an unconstitutional political, or partisan, gerrymander. The Court found unanimously
- Gill, André (French caricaturist)
André Gill was a French caricaturist who used a style of enlarged heads dwarfing undersized bodies, often copied by later cartoonists. After studying at the Academy of Fine Arts in Paris, Gill pursued a career as an illustrator, becoming famous for portrait caricatures of his illustrious
- Gill, Andy (British musician)
Gang of Four: June 8, 1955, London, England), Andy Gill (b. January 1, 1956, Manchester–d. February 1, 2020), Hugo Burnham (b. March 25, 1956, London), and Dave Allen (b. December 23, 1955, Kendal, Cumbria).
- Gill, Arthur Eric Rowton (British artist and printer)
Eric Gill was a British sculptor, engraver, typographic designer, and writer, especially known for his elegantly styled lettering and typefaces and the precise linear simplicity of his bas-reliefs. Gill spent two years in an art school in Chichester and in 1899 was articled to a London architect;
- Gill, Brendan (American writer)
Brendan Gill was an American critic and writer chiefly known for his work as critic of film, drama, and architecture for The New Yorker. Gill began writing for The New Yorker immediately after finishing college in 1936. His witty essays often appeared anonymously in the magazine’s “Talk of the
- Gill, Eric (British artist and printer)
Eric Gill was a British sculptor, engraver, typographic designer, and writer, especially known for his elegantly styled lettering and typefaces and the precise linear simplicity of his bas-reliefs. Gill spent two years in an art school in Chichester and in 1899 was articled to a London architect;
- Gill, Frank (American ornithologist)
bird: Annotated classification: …information compiled by American ornithologist Frank Gill (2002).
- Gill, Irving John (American architect)
Irving John Gill was an American architect important for introducing a severe, geometric style of architecture in California and for his pioneering work in developing new construction technology. Gill received no formal training in architecture, but in 1890 he became a draftsman in the office of
- Gill, John (American patriot)
John Gill was a patriot and publisher who was a leading advocate of American colonial independence from Britain. Gill was the grandson of a British officer who had come to the colonies from Dover, Eng. At an early age John Gill was apprenticed to a Boston printer, Samuel Kneeland. In partnership
- Gill, Laura Drake (American educator)
Laura Drake Gill was an American educator, remembered particularly for her role in establishing organized placement assistance for educated women. Gill was educated at Smith College. After graduating in 1881 she remained in Northampton, Massachusetts, as a faculty member of Miss Capen’s School for
- Gill, Sir David (Scottish astronomer)
Sir David Gill was a Scottish astronomer known for his measurements of solar and stellar parallax, showing the distances of the Sun and other stars from Earth, and for his early use of photography in mapping the heavens. To determine the parallaxes, he perfected the use of the heliometer, a
- Gill, Vince (American musician)
Michael McDonald: Career: …supporting musicians, including country singer Vince Gill and bluegrass singer Alison Krauss.
- gill-netter (fishing vessel)
commercial fishing: Gill-netters: Gill nets are used by all sizes of fishing boat up to 20 metres in length. There is no characteristic style, although this type of vessel often uses a steadying sail to keep heading into the wind. The nets may be set and hauled…
- Gillam, Bernhard (American cartoonist)
Bernhard Gillam was an American political cartoonist noted for his influential cartoons associated with the U.S. presidential campaigns of the late 19th century. With his parents Gillam immigrated to New York in 1866. He left school early and worked as a copyist in a lawyer’s office before studying
- Gillani, Yousaf Raza (prime minister of Pakistan)
Yousaf Raza Gilani is a Pakistani politician who was the prime minister of Pakistan (2008–12). Gilani was born into a prominent family of landowners from the Punjab province, many of whom were involved in politics, including his father, who was a provincial minister during the 1950s. After studying
- Gillani, Yusuf Raza (prime minister of Pakistan)
Yousaf Raza Gilani is a Pakistani politician who was the prime minister of Pakistan (2008–12). Gilani was born into a prominent family of landowners from the Punjab province, many of whom were involved in politics, including his father, who was a provincial minister during the 1950s. After studying
- Gillard, Julia (prime minister of Australia)
Julia Gillard is an Australian politician who served as leader of the Australian Labor Party (ALP; 2010–13) and as prime minister of Australia (2010–13). She was the first woman to hold either office. Gillard was born in Wales, but her family joined the wave of post-World War II emigration from
- Gillard, Julia Eileen (prime minister of Australia)
Julia Gillard is an Australian politician who served as leader of the Australian Labor Party (ALP; 2010–13) and as prime minister of Australia (2010–13). She was the first woman to hold either office. Gillard was born in Wales, but her family joined the wave of post-World War II emigration from
- Gillars, Mildred (American traitor)
Mildred Gillars was an American citizen who was a radio propagandist for the Nazi government during World War II. Gillars was an aspiring actress who played minor parts in some American theatrical touring companies. She attended Ohio Wesleyan University but left in 1922. In 1929 she traveled to
- Gillem, Alvan, Jr. (United States general)
Executive Order 9981: …a review board chaired by Gen. Alvan Gillem, Jr., advised that the U.S. Army’s policy should be to “eliminate, at the earliest practicable moment, any special consideration based on race.” While the Gillem Board did not specifically endorse integration, it did note that the army had already desegregated its hospitals…
- Gillen, Francis James (Australian anthropologist)
Francis James Gillen was an Australian anthropologist who did pioneering fieldwork among the Aborigines of central Australia. Gillen’s training in anthropology came not from a university but from close contact with Aborigines in his work for the Australian postal and telegraph service. He made
- Gilles (novel by Drieu la Rochelle)
French literature: Céline and Drieu: …fascism, to write expressly in Gilles (1939) the archetypal itinerary of the young French fascist, from defeat in the trenches of World War I, through failure and despair in the 1920s, to the decision to help overthrow the elected Republican government in Spain. Drieu’s example was followed by younger men,…
- Gilles (painting by Watteau)
Antoine Watteau: Period of his major works.: …his last works was “Gilles,” a portrait of a clown in white painted as a signboard for the Théâtre de la Foire. White as innocence (or imbecility) and roseate in complexion, “Gilles” is the image of the actor during intermission—the actor who offers himself every day to the laughter…
- Gilles le Muiset (French poet)
Gilles Li Muisis was a French poet and chronicler whose works are important sources for the history of France. Gilles entered the Benedictine abbey of Saint-Martin in Tournai in 1289. After being made prior of the abbey in 1329, he journeyed to Paris in 1330 to defend its interests against
- Gilles Li Muisis (French poet)
Gilles Li Muisis was a French poet and chronicler whose works are important sources for the history of France. Gilles entered the Benedictine abbey of Saint-Martin in Tournai in 1289. After being made prior of the abbey in 1329, he journeyed to Paris in 1330 to defend its interests against
- Gilles of Viterbo (humanist scholar)
Judaism: Modern Jewish mysticism: …Pico della Mirandola (1463–94) and Gilles of Viterbo (Egidio da Viterbo; c. 1465–1532) in Italy; Johannes Reuchlin (1455–1522) in Germany, who wrote one of the principal expositions of Kabbala in a language accessible to the learned non-Jewish public (De arte Cabbalistica, 1517); and the visionary Guillaume Postel (1510–81) in France.…
- Gillespie, Dizzy (American musician)
Dizzy Gillespie was an American jazz trumpeter, composer, and bandleader who was one of the seminal figures of the bebop movement. Gillespie’s father was a bricklayer and amateur bandleader who introduced his son to the basics of several instruments. After his father died in 1927, Gillespie taught
- Gillespie, Eliza Maria (American religious leader)
Mother Angela Gillespie was an American religious leader who guided her order in dramatically expanding higher education for women by founding numerous institutions throughout the United States. Eliza Maria Gillespie was educated at girls’ schools in her native town and, in 1836–38, in Somerset,
- Gillespie, George (Scottish minister and writer)
George Gillespie was a leader of the Church of Scotland and polemical writer, who laboured for the autonomy and preservation of his church. The son of a parish minister, Gillespie was educated at the University of St. Andrews. His first work, A Dispute Against the English Popish Ceremonies Obtruded
- Gillespie, John Birks (American musician)
Dizzy Gillespie was an American jazz trumpeter, composer, and bandleader who was one of the seminal figures of the bebop movement. Gillespie’s father was a bricklayer and amateur bandleader who introduced his son to the basics of several instruments. After his father died in 1927, Gillespie taught
- Gillespie, Mother Angela (American religious leader)
Mother Angela Gillespie was an American religious leader who guided her order in dramatically expanding higher education for women by founding numerous institutions throughout the United States. Eliza Maria Gillespie was educated at girls’ schools in her native town and, in 1836–38, in Somerset,
- Gillespie, Rowan (Irish sculptor)
Dublin: Evolution of the modern city: …cast by the Dublin sculptor Rowan Gillespie, commemorates the period. Emigration, a major element in Irish life throughout the 19th and 20th centuries, mounted after 1845, with England and the United States being the principal destinations of those leaving Dublin.
- Gillespie, Thomas (Scottish minister)
Thomas Gillespie was a Scottish Presbyterian minister who assisted in founding the Relief Church (Oct. 22, 1761), a Presbyterian group advocating the right of a congregation to approve its minister. Gillespie was ordained in 1741 and inducted to the parish of Carnock, Fife. In 1752 he was a victim
- Gillete, Harper Lee (American matador)
matador: Harper Lee Gillete, who performed in Mexico, is considered by many experts to have been the best American bullfighter. Although he received the alternativa in Mexico in 1910, he never fought in Spain.
- Gillette (Wyoming, United States)
Gillette, town, seat (1911) of Campbell county, northeastern Wyoming, U.S., midway between the Black Hills (east) and the Bighorn Mountains (west). It developed after the arrival in 1891 of the Burlington and Missouri River railroads and was named for Edward Gillette, a railroad construction
- Gillette, King Camp (American manufacturer)
King Camp Gillette was an American inventor and the first manufacturer of a razor with disposable blades. Gillette, reared in Chicago, was forced by his family’s loss of possessions in the fire of 1871 to go to work, so he became a traveling salesman of hardware. An employer noted his predilection
- Gillette, William Hooker (American playwright and actor)
William Hooker Gillette was an American playwright and actor noted for his portrayal of the title role in Sherlock Holmes, which he adapted for the stage from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s stories. Gillette quit college and in 1875 joined a stock company in New Orleans and made his first appearance at
- Gilley, Mickey (American musician)
Jimmy Swaggart: …rock and roll pioneer, and Mickey Gilley, a country music singer, inspired him to attempt a career in music. However, he continued to assist with his parents’ ministry, and in 1958 he became a full-time evangelist with his own ministry. In 1961 he was ordained by the Assemblies of God.
- Gilliam, Holly Michelle (American singer)
the Mamas and the Papas: …18, 2001, Los Angeles, California), Michelle Phillips (original name Holly Michelle Gilliam; b. June 4, 1944, Long Beach, California, U.S.), (“Mama”) Cass Elliot (original name Ellen Naomi Cohen; b. September 19, 1943, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.—d. July 29, 1974, London, England), and Dennis Doherty (b. November 29, 1941, Halifax, Nova Scotia,…
- Gilliam, Terrence Vance (American director)
Terry Gilliam is an American-born director, writer, comedian, and actor who first achieved fame as a member of the British comedy troupe Monty Python. While a student at Occidental College in Los Angeles, Gilliam began working on the student humour magazine Fang, eventually becoming its editor.
- Gilliam, Terry (American director)
Terry Gilliam is an American-born director, writer, comedian, and actor who first achieved fame as a member of the British comedy troupe Monty Python. While a student at Occidental College in Los Angeles, Gilliam began working on the student humour magazine Fang, eventually becoming its editor.
- Gilliatt, Penelope (British writer)
Penelope Gilliatt was an English writer of essays, short stories, screenplays, and novels. Her fiction is noted for its sensitive, sometimes wry look at the challenges and complexities of modern life in England and the United States. Gilliatt briefly attended Queen’s College, London, and Bennington
- Gilliatt, Penelope Ann Douglass (British writer)
Penelope Gilliatt was an English writer of essays, short stories, screenplays, and novels. Her fiction is noted for its sensitive, sometimes wry look at the challenges and complexities of modern life in England and the United States. Gilliatt briefly attended Queen’s College, London, and Bennington
- Gillibrand, Kirsten (United States senator)
Kirsten Gillibrand is an American politician who was appointed as a Democrat to the U.S. Senate from New York in 2009 and was elected to that body in 2010. She previously served in the U.S. House of Representatives (2007–09). Rutnik earned a bachelor’s degree magna cum laude from Dartmouth College
- Gillichthys mirabilis (fish)
goby: Many gobies, such as the longjaw mudsucker (Gillichthys mirabilis) of the eastern Pacific, inhabit burrows in sand or mud, and some share burrows with other animals. An example of the latter is the blind goby (Typhlogobius californiensis), a small, pink fish native to California that lives intertidally in burrows dug…
- Gillick, Liam (British artist)
Lawrence Weiner: Barbara Kruger, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, and Liam Gillick, with whom he collaborated. Among his many honours were two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts (1976, 1983) and a Guggenheim fellowship (1994).
- Gillie Callum (dance)
sword dance: The famed Scottish solo dance Gillie Callum, which is danced to a folk melody of the same name, is first mentioned only in the early 19th century. In its close relative, the English solo Bacca pipes jig, crossed clay pipes replace the swords. There are evidences that such dances formerly…
- Gilliéron, Jules (French linguist)
linguistics: Dialect atlases: …famous French linguistic atlas of Jules Gilliéron and Edmond Edmont was based on a completely different concept. Using a questionnaire of about 2,000 words and phrases that Gilliéron had composed, Edmont surveyed 639 points in the French-speaking area. The atlas, compiled under the direction of Gilliéron, was published in fascicles…
- Gillies, Clark (Canadian hockey player)
New York Islanders: …Bryan Trottier, and left wing Clark Gillies. That young group (all but Smith were no older than age 25 at the start of the 1979–80 season) played with postseason poise that belied their youth, losing just three games over the course of their first four Stanley Cup finals and defeating…
- Gillies, Harold Delf (British plastic surgeon)
history of medicine: World War I: …at about the same time Harold Gillies founded British plastic surgery in a hut at Sidcup, Kent. In 1917 Gillies popularized the pedicle type of skin graft (the type of graft in which skin and subcutaneous tissue are left temporarily attached for nourishment to the site from which the graft…
- gilliflower (plant)
gillyflower, any of several scented flowering plants, especially the carnation, or clove pink (Dianthus caryophyllus), stock (Matthiola incana), and wallflower (Cheiranthus cheiri). However, the gillyflower of Chaucer, Spenser, and Shakespeare was the carnation. Other plants that are types of
- Gilligan’s Island (American television series)
John Williams: From jazz pianist to film composer: …shows as Wagon Train and Gilligan’s Island.
- Gilligan, Carol (American psychologist)
Carol Gilligan is an American developmental psychologist best known for her research into the moral development of girls and women. Gilligan earned a bachelor’s degree in English literature at Swarthmore College (1958), a master’s degree in clinical psychology at Radcliffe College (1961), and a
- Gilligan, Kathleen (American politician)
Pat Roberts: …would later become father-in-law to Kathleen Sebelius, governor of Kansas in 2003–09 and U.S. secretary of health and human services in 2009–14). In 1969 Roberts married, and he and his wife, Franki, had three children.
- Gilligan, Vince (American screenwriter and producer)
Breaking Bad: …created by writer and producer Vince Gilligan. It aired 2008–13 on the American Movie Classics (AMC) cable network. The title is a colloquial expression from the South, meaning “to raise hell.” The show was a popular and critical success and a breakout series for many of its cast members, in…
- Gilliland, John L. (American glassmaker)
glassware: After the War of 1812: …Brooklyn Flint Glass Works of John L. Gilliland and Company and the Dorfinger Glass Works. Gilliland, a partner in the Blooming-dale Flint Glass Works, sold out in 1823 and founded his own works in Brooklyn, New York. In 1864 two members of the Houghton family acquired controlling interest, and in…
- Gillingham (England, United Kingdom)
Gillingham, town and port, unitary authority of Medway, geographic and historic county of Kent, southeastern England. It is on the River Medway and is one of the three main communities (along with Chatham and Rochester) that are often called the “Medway Towns.” Before the establishment of the royal
- Gillis W. Long Hansen’s Disease Center (building, Louisiana, United States)
leprosy: History: …became officially known as the Gillis W. Long Hansen’s Disease Center. The new name Hansen’s disease was part of a determined effort by health authorities to rid leprosy of its old social stigma and to focus attention on the fact that leprosy was finally becoming a treatable disease.
- Gillis, John Anthony (American musician)
Jack White is an American guitarist, singer, and songwriter who first gained fame with the White Stripes and later performed in other bands before launching a successful solo career. Gillis, the youngest of 10 children in a Polish Scottish family, grew up in Detroit. His father worked as a
- Gillis, Lester (American gangster)
Baby Face Nelson was an American gunman and bank robber noted for his vicious killings and youthful looks. From petty crime Nelson graduated into labour racketeering, working for Al Capone (1929–31) and other bootleg bosses; he was let go, however, proving too violent even for them. He then turned
- Gilliss, James Melville (American astronomer and naval officer)
James Melville Gilliss was a U.S. naval officer and astronomer who founded the Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C., the first U.S. observatory devoted entirely to research. Gilliss entered the U.S. Navy in 1827 and 10 years later was put in charge of the navy’s Depot of Charts and Instruments, in
- Gillmor, Dan (American journalist)
citizen journalism: …does that translate into journalism?” Dan Gillmor, founder and director of the Center for Citizen Media and author of the book We the Media: Grassroots Journalism by the People, for the People (2004), also rejected any single definition for the transformation in news that had begun in the late 1990s.…
- Gillooly, Edna Rae (American actress)
Ellen Burstyn is an American actress who is known for her understated charm and versatility. Gillooly was raised in Detroit, though she attended St. Mary’s Academy in Windsor, Ontario, Canada, for several years in the late 1930s. Both her mother and her stepfather were physically and verbally
- Gillot, Claude (French painter, engraver, and theatrical designer)
Claude Gillot was a French painter, engraver, and theatrical designer best known as the master of the great painter Antoine Watteau. Gillot directed scenery and costume design for both opera and theatre. An accomplished draftsman and a man of keen intelligence, he was in part responsible for the
- gillotage (printing)
photoengraving: Chemical etching—traditional and powderless processes: …of lines and dots, called gillotage, has found wide use among European engravers. The “powdering” process, most widely used in the United States, involves brushing a resinous powder (dragons’ blood) against the sides of partially etched lines and dots and fusing, with heat, to provide an etchant-resistant coating. Several repetitions…
- Gillott, Jacky (British novelist and broadcaster)
Jacky Gillott was a British novelist and broadcaster who was one of Britain’s first woman television reporters. After graduating from University College in London (now University College London), she joined a provincial newspaper before starting a new career with Independent Television News. She
- Gillott, Jacqueline Anne (British novelist and broadcaster)
Jacky Gillott was a British novelist and broadcaster who was one of Britain’s first woman television reporters. After graduating from University College in London (now University College London), she joined a provincial newspaper before starting a new career with Independent Television News. She
- Gillray, James (English caricaturist)
James Gillray was an English caricaturist chiefly remembered for lively political cartoons directed against George III of England and Napoleon I. Often scurrilous and violent in his criticism, he brought a highly dramatic sense of situation and analogy to cartooning. Gillray learned letter
- Gillum, Andrew (American politician)
Ron DeSantis: Governor of Florida and 2024 presidential run: …the conservative DeSantis against Democrat Andrew Gillum, a progressive who was attempting to become the state’s first African American governor. At times the race was marked by controversy as DeSantis and his supporters were accused of racism; DeSantis denied the allegations. Aided by Trump’s support, DeSantis narrowly defeated Gillum, 49.6…
- Gilly, David (German architect)
Western architecture: Germany: …were Carl Gotthard Langhans and David Gilly, who, with Heinrich Gentz, created a severe but inventive style in the 1790s that was indebted to Ledoux as well as to Johann Winckelmann’s call for a return to the spirit of ancient Greek architecture. The great early monument of the Berlin school…
- Gilly, Friedrich (German architect)
Western architecture: Germany: Friedrich Gilly built little, dying in 1800, but he left some remarkable designs that justify his central place in German Neoclassicism. His project for a monument to Frederick the Great (1797) consisted of a raised Greek Doric temple on a geometric substructure surrounded by obelisks…
- gillyflower (plant)
gillyflower, any of several scented flowering plants, especially the carnation, or clove pink (Dianthus caryophyllus), stock (Matthiola incana), and wallflower (Cheiranthus cheiri). However, the gillyflower of Chaucer, Spenser, and Shakespeare was the carnation. Other plants that are types of
- Gilman reagent (chemistry)
Gilman reagent, another name for organocopper compounds used for carbon-carbon bond formation in organic synthesis. Compounds of this type were first described in the 1930s by the American chemist Henry Gilman, for whom they are named. The most widely used organocopper compounds are the lithium
- Gilman, Alfred G. (American pharmacologist)
Alfred G. Gilman was an American pharmacologist who shared the 1994 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine with American biochemist Martin Rodbell for their separate research in discovering molecules called G proteins. These are intermediaries in the multistep pathway cells use to react to an