- Law, Bernard Francis (American prelate)
Bernard Cardinal Law was an American prelate who was head (1984–2002) of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of Boston before he resigned in disgrace after it was revealed that he had protected sexually abusive priests for years. Law’s father was a U.S. Army colonel and his mother a concert pianist. He
- Law, Bonar (prime minister of United Kingdom)
Bonar Law was the prime minister of Great Britain from October 23, 1922, to May 20, 1923, the first holder of that office to come from a British overseas possession. He was the leader of the Conservative Party during the periods 1911–21 and 1922–23. The son of a Presbyterian minister of Ulster
- law, court of (law)
court, a person or body of persons having judicial authority to hear and resolve disputes in civil, criminal, ecclesiastical, or military cases. The word court, which originally meant simply an enclosed place, also denotes the chamber, hall, building, or other place where judicial proceedings are
- Law, Denis (Scottish football player)
Manchester United: George Best, and Denis Law. In 1968 this team became the first English club to win the European Cup (now known as the Champions League) with a 4–1 victory over Benfica of Portugal in the final.
- law, divine
Benedict de Spinoza: Tractatus Theologico-Politicus: …emerges in his discussion of divine law and scripture. According to Spinoza, divine law is necessary and eternal; it cannot be changed by any human or divine action. Hence, miracles, which by definition are violations of divinely created laws of nature, are impossible. Alleged miracles must have a rational, scientific…
- Law, Edward, earl of Ellenborough (British governor of India)
Edward Law, earl of Ellenborough was a British governor-general of India (1842–44), who also served four times as president of the Board of Control for India and was first lord of the British Admiralty. He was recalled from India for being out of control and later resigned another office under
- Law, John (Scottish economist)
John Law was a Scottish monetary reformer and originator of the “Mississippi scheme” for the development of French territories in America. Law studied mathematics, commerce, and political economy in London. After killing an adversary in a duel, he fled to Amsterdam, where he studied banking
- Law, Jude (British actor)
Angelina Jolie: Film roles: …starred opposite Gwyneth Paltrow and Jude Law in Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow, a sci-fi thriller set in 1930s New York City. Both films were box-office disappointments, but Jolie scored a hit with Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), in which she played an assassin pretending to be a…
- Law, Legislation and Liberty (work by Hayek)
F.A. Hayek: Life and major works: …what would become the three-part Law, Legislation and Liberty (1973–79), a critique of efforts to redistribute incomes in the name of “social justice.” Later in the 1970s Hayek’s monograph The Denationalization of Money was published by the Institute of Economic Affairs in London, one of the many classical liberal think…
- Law, Liberty and Morality (work by Hart)
H.L.A. Hart: Later work: …1963, with the publication of Law, Liberty, and Morality. He wrote in the liberal tradition of English philosopher and economist John Stuart Mill in arguing that homosexual intercourse between consenting adults should not be legally proscribed. Invoking and defending Mill’s “harm principle,” which maintains that no activity can legitimately be…
- law, philosophy of
philosophy of law, branch of philosophy that investigates the nature of law, especially in its relation to human values, attitudes, practices, and political communities. Traditionally, philosophy of law proceeds by articulating and defending propositions about law that are general and
- law, pure theory of
Hans Kelsen: …of positivism known as the “pure theory” of law.
- law, rule of (political philosophy)
rule of law, the mechanism, process, institution, practice, or norm that supports the equality of all citizens before the law, secures a nonarbitrary form of government, and more generally prevents the arbitrary use of power. Arbitrariness is typical of various forms of despotism, absolutism,
- law, wager of (law)
compurgation, in early English law, method of settling issues of fact by appeal to a type of character witness. Compurgation was practiced until the 16th century in criminal matters and into the 19th century in civil matters. The essence of the procedure lay in oath making. The party responsible
- law, wheel of the (Buddhism)
religious symbolism and iconography: Concepts of symbolization: , the dharmachakra, or wheel of the law, of Buddhism). Other nonreligious types of symbols achieved increasing significance in the 19th and 20th centuries, especially those dealing with human beings’ relationship to and conceptualization of the material world. Rational, scientific-technical symbols have assumed an ever increasing importance…
- Law, William (British author)
William Law was an English author of influential works on Christian ethics and mysticism. He entered Emmanuel College, Cambridge, in 1705 and in 1711 was elected a fellow there and was ordained. Upon the accession of George I in 1714, however, he was dismissed from Cambridge as a nonjuror (refusing
- Lawa (people)
Wa, peoples of the upland areas of eastern Myanmar (Burma) and southwestern Yunnan province of China. They speak a variety of Austroasiatic languages related to those spoken by upland-dwelling groups in northern Thailand and Laos. At the beginning of the 21st century, the Wa numbered approximately
- Lawa River (river, South America)
Maroni River: …gold mining, is called the Lawa, or Aoua. Shallow-draft vessels can penetrate 60 miles (100 km) upstream from the river’s mouth; beyond that point there are many waterfalls and rapids. The river’s chief tributary is the Tapanahoni, in Suriname, from the southwest.
- Lawamon (English poet)
Lawamon was an early Middle English poet, author of the romance-chronicle the Brut (c. 1200), one of the most notable English poems of the 12th century. It is the first work in English to treat of the “matter of Britain”—i.e., the legends surrounding Arthur and the knights of the Round Table—and
- Lawarai Pass (mountain pass, Asia)
Hindu Kush: Physiography: …region, then continues to the Lawarai Pass (12,100 feet [3,688 metres]) and beyond to the Kābul River. If this chain is considered part of the Hindu Kush, then the outlying mountains of the Swat Kohistan region of Pakistan to the south also form part of the complex.
- Lawdy Mama (painting by Hendricks)
Barkley L. Hendricks: Early career: …his most famous early works, Lawdy Mama (1969), features a woman in an Afro hairstyle and reminds many who see it of Black activist Angela Davis. But true to Hendricks’s commitment to paint the people in his life, the inspiration and model for this work was actually his cousin.
- Lawdy Miss Clawdy (song by Price)
Lloyd Price: …recording of his composition “Lawdy Miss Clawdy” (with Fats Domino on piano) topped the rhythm-and-blues charts in 1952 and was later a hit for Elvis Presley. “Personality” (1959) remains one of the most delightful of all New Orleans rhythm-and-blues hits, and his cover of the traditional ballad “Stagolee,” which…
- Lawes, Henry (English composer)
Henry Lawes was an English composer noted for his continuo songs. Henry Lawes became a gentleman of the Chapel Royal in 1626 and a royal musician for lutes and voices in 1631. In 1634 he may have written the music for Thomas Carew’s masque Coelum Britannicum, and he did write music for John
- Lawes, Lewis Edward (American penologist)
Lewis Edward Lawes was a U.S. penologist whose introduction of novel penal administrative policies helped to emphasize a rehabilitative role for prisons. Assuming the office of warden of Sing Sing State Prison (now Ossining Correctional Facility), Ossining, N.Y., in 1920, Lawes instituted such
- Lawes, Sir John Bennet, 1st Baronet (English agronomist)
Sir John Bennet Lawes, 1st Baronet was an English agronomist who founded the artificial fertilizer industry and Rothamsted Experimental Station, the oldest agricultural research station in the world. Lawes inherited his father’s estate, Rothamsted, in 1822. In 1842, after long experimentation with
- Lawes, William (English composer)
William Lawes was an English composer, prominent during the early Baroque period, noted for his highly original instrumental music. The brother of the composer Henry Lawes, he entered the household of the earl of Hertford about 1612 and in 1635 became a musician to Charles I. Lawes fought with the
- Lawford, Peter (American actor)
Rose Kennedy: …for her marriage to actor Peter Lawford.
- Lawgiver, The (novel by Wouk)
Herman Wouk: …Hole in Texas (2004) and The Lawgiver (2012). The memoir Sailor and Fiddler: Reflections of a 100-Year-old Author was published in 2015.
- Lawler, Ray (Australian dramatist)
Ray Lawler is an actor, producer, and playwright whose Summer of the Seventeenth Doll is credited with changing the direction of modern Australian drama. Lawler left school at 13 and worked in a variety of jobs before joining the National Theatre Company in Melbourne as an actor, writer, and
- Lawler, Raymond Evenor (Australian dramatist)
Ray Lawler is an actor, producer, and playwright whose Summer of the Seventeenth Doll is credited with changing the direction of modern Australian drama. Lawler left school at 13 and worked in a variety of jobs before joining the National Theatre Company in Melbourne as an actor, writer, and
- Lawless (film by Hillcoat [2012])
Jessica Chastain: Chastain’s credits in 2012 included Lawless, about Depression-era bootleggers in rural Virginia, and Kathryn Bigelow’s thriller Zero Dark Thirty, in which the actress played a CIA analyst who helps find Osama bin Laden, mastermind of the September 11 attacks; for her work in the latter, she garnered another Oscar nod.
- Lawless Breed, The (film by Walsh [1953])
Raoul Walsh: Last films: The Lawless Breed (1953) had Rock Hudson in an early starring role as legendary gunman John Wesley Hardin, but Sea Devils (1953), filmed in England, used Hudson less well as a Channel Islands smuggler in about 1800 who gets mixed up with a spy (Yvonne…
- Lawless, Lucy (New Zealand-born actress)
Lucy Lawless is a New Zealand-born actress who became famous for her portrayal of the title character in the popular television show Xena: Warrior Princess (1995–2001). As a youth, Lawless performed in school productions, and in college she studied opera singing. However, she later dropped her
- Lawlor, Si (American sailor)
yacht: Transatlantic racing and global circumnavigation: …won by the American sailor Si Lawlor. A series of single-handed races, sponsored by the London Observer, began in 1960 and was held quadrennially thereafter. It was in these races that Francis Chichester (later Sir Francis Chichester) attracted attention. Interest in sailing around the world was greatly stimulated by his…
- lawn (garden)
lawn, fine-textured turf (q.v.) of grass that is kept
- lawn bowls (sport)
bowls, outdoor game in which a ball (known as a bowl) is rolled toward a smaller stationary ball, called a jack. The object is to roll one’s bowls so that they come to rest nearer to the jack than those of an opponent; this is sometimes achieved by knocking aside an opponent’s bowl or the jack. A
- Lawn Dogs (film by Duigan [1997])
Sam Rockwell: …in such independent films as Lawn Dogs (1997) and Safe Men (1998), and he appeared in a small part in a minor Woody Allen movie (Celebrity, 1998). Rockwell then landed a supporting role as a vile murderer in the mainstream movie The Green Mile (1999).
- lawn moth (insect)
pyralid moth: …of these species are called snout moths because their larvae are characterized by elongated snoutlike mouthparts. The larval stage of the European corn borer (Pyrausta nubilalis; also called Ostrinia nubilalis) is the most important insect pest of maize throughout the world. It also infests other plants, including hemp, potatoes, and…
- lawn tennis (sport)
tennis, game in which two opposing players (singles) or pairs of players (doubles) use tautly strung rackets to hit a ball of specified size, weight, and bounce over a net on a rectangular court. Points are awarded to a player or team whenever the opponent fails to correctly return the ball within
- lawn-leaf (plant genus)
Dichondra, any of several species of low, creeping plants of the morning glory family (Convolvulaceae) that are used in warm climates as grass substitutes. The plants are from 2 12 to 8 cm (1 to 3 inches) high and spread by runners. D. carolinensis, native to southeastern North America, is so
- Lawnsville (West Virginia, United States)
Logan, city, seat (1826) of Logan county, southwestern West Virginia, U.S. It lies along the Guyandotte River, about 40 miles (64 km) southwest of Charleston, near the Kentucky border. Laid out in 1824 and known as Lawnsville, it was chartered in 1852 and renamed Aracoma for the eldest daughter of
- Lawrance, Charles Lanier (American aeronautical engineer)
Charles Lanier Lawrance was an American aeronautical engineer who designed the first successful air-cooled aircraft engine, used on many historic early flights. After attending Yale University Lawrance joined a new automobile firm that was later ruined by the financial panic of 1907. He then went
- Lawrence (county, Pennsylvania, United States)
Lawrence, county, western Pennsylvania, U.S., bordered to the west by Ohio. It consists of a hilly region on the Allegheny Plateau that is drained by the Shenango, Mahoning, and Beaver rivers. McConnell’s Mill State Park is located along Slippery Rock Creek. New Castle, the county seat, was
- Lawrence (antipope)
Laurentius was an antipope in 498 and from 501 to about 505/507, whose disputed papal election gave his name to the Laurentian schism, a split in the Roman Catholic Church. Late in the 5th century, the Roman church’s relations with the Eastern church in Constantinople became badly strained. Pope
- Lawrence (Kansas, United States)
Lawrence, city, seat (1855) of Douglas county, eastern Kansas, U.S. It lies on the Kansas River. It was founded in 1854 by antislavery radicals who had come to Kansas under the auspices of the New England Emigrant Aid Company to outvote proslavery settlers and thus make Kansas a “free” state. The
- Lawrence (Massachusetts, United States)
Lawrence, city, Essex county, northeastern Massachusetts, U.S. It lies along the Merrimack River, 26 miles (42 km) north of Boston. The site at Bodwell’s Falls (the source of abundant waterpower) was promoted for industry in 1845 by the Essex Company, formed by a group of Boston financiers that
- Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (laboratory, Berkeley, California, United States)
Steven Chu: …Berkeley as director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, an institution with a long history of research in atomic and nuclear physics that is now part of the system of national laboratories supported by the U.S. Department of Energy. There he encouraged research into renewable energy, particularly the use of…
- Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (laboratory, Berkeley, California, United States)
Steven Chu: …Berkeley as director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, an institution with a long history of research in atomic and nuclear physics that is now part of the system of national laboratories supported by the U.S. Department of Energy. There he encouraged research into renewable energy, particularly the use of…
- Lawrence College (university, Appleton, Wisconsin, United States)
Wisconsin: Education: Lawrence University (Appleton; 1847), and Beloit (Beloit; 1846), Carroll (Waukesha; 1846), Ripon (Ripon; 1851), and St. Norbert (De Pere; 1898) colleges. Frank Lloyd Wright’s school of architecture at his Taliesin family farm near Spring Green still attracts students and experienced architects.
- Lawrence Kohlberg’s stages of moral development (psychology)
Lawrence Kohlberg’s stages of moral development, a comprehensive stage theory of moral development based on Jean Piaget’s theory of moral judgment for children (1932) and developed by Lawrence Kohlberg in 1958. Cognitive in nature, Kohlberg’s theory focuses on the thinking process that occurs when
- Lawrence Lemieux: An Easy Decision
Lawrence Lemieux grew up sailing on the lakes of western Canada. He grew to be so adept that, in his teens and twenties, he won many competitions throughout North America. Skilled and self-assured, the 33-year-old Lemieux easily earned a place on Canada’s 1988 Olympic team, racing in the Finn class
- Lawrence Livermore Laboratory (laboratory, Livermore, California, United States)
laser: High-energy lasers: …the 1960s physicists at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California calculated that intense laser pulses could produce those conditions by heating and compressing tiny pellets containing mixtures of hydrogen isotopes. They suggested using these “microimplosions” both to generate energy for civilian use and to simulate the implosion of a…
- Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (laboratory, Livermore, California, United States)
laser: High-energy lasers: …the 1960s physicists at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California calculated that intense laser pulses could produce those conditions by heating and compressing tiny pellets containing mixtures of hydrogen isotopes. They suggested using these “microimplosions” both to generate energy for civilian use and to simulate the implosion of a…
- Lawrence of Arabia (British scholar and military officer)
T.E. Lawrence was a British archaeological scholar, military strategist, and author best known for his legendary war activities in the Middle East during World War I and for his account of those activities in The Seven Pillars of Wisdom (1926). Lawrence was the son of Sir Thomas Chapman and Sara
- Lawrence of Arabia (work by Aldington)
Richard Aldington: Lawrence of Arabia (1955), one of his last books, was an uncompromising attack on T.E. Lawrence. Late in life Aldington became a best-seller in the U.S.S.R., where he celebrated his 70th birthday. A Passionate Pilgrim: Letters to Alan Bird from Richard Aldington, 1949–1962 was published…
- Lawrence of Arabia (film by Lean [1962])
Lawrence of Arabia, British historical film, released in 1962, that became one of the most celebrated epics in the history of cinema. The movie, which presents a portrait of the complicated soldier and author T.E. Lawrence, won seven Academy Awards, including those for best picture and best
- Lawrence of Brindisi, St. (Christian saint)
St. Lawrence of Brindisi ; canonized 1881; feast day July 21) was a doctor of the church and one of the leading polemicists of the Counter-Reformation in Germany. He joined the Capuchin Friars Minor, a strict offshoot of the Franciscans, at Verona, Italy, in 1575, taking the name Lorenzo
- Lawrence of Canterbury, St. (archbishop of Canterbury)
St. Lawrence of Canterbury ; feast day February 3) was the second archbishop of Canterbury. He was a missionary who played a large part in establishing the Anglo-Saxon church. In 597 Pope Gregory I the Great assigned Lawrence, who was then probably a Benedictine friar, to the first Anglo-Saxon
- Lawrence of the Punjab and of Grately, John Laird Mair Lawrence, 1st Baron (British colonial official)
John Laird Mair Lawrence, 1st Baron Lawrence was a British viceroy and governor-general of India whose institution in the Punjab of extensive economic, social, and political reforms earned him the sobriquet “Saviour of the Punjab.” In 1830 Lawrence traveled to Calcutta (now Kolkata) with his
- Lawrence Radiation Laboratory (laboratory, Livermore, California, United States)
laser: High-energy lasers: …the 1960s physicists at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California calculated that intense laser pulses could produce those conditions by heating and compressing tiny pellets containing mixtures of hydrogen isotopes. They suggested using these “microimplosions” both to generate energy for civilian use and to simulate the implosion of a…
- Lawrence Radiation Laboratory (laboratory, Berkeley, California, United States)
Steven Chu: …Berkeley as director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, an institution with a long history of research in atomic and nuclear physics that is now part of the system of national laboratories supported by the U.S. Department of Energy. There he encouraged research into renewable energy, particularly the use of…
- Lawrence University (university, Appleton, Wisconsin, United States)
Wisconsin: Education: Lawrence University (Appleton; 1847), and Beloit (Beloit; 1846), Carroll (Waukesha; 1846), Ripon (Ripon; 1851), and St. Norbert (De Pere; 1898) colleges. Frank Lloyd Wright’s school of architecture at his Taliesin family farm near Spring Green still attracts students and experienced architects.
- Lawrence University (university, Lawrence, Kansas, United States)
University of Kansas, public, coeducational institution of higher learning with a main campus in Lawrence, Kan., U.S. Its Medical Center campus is in Kansas City, and there is also a medical campus in Wichita. The university includes the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and 12 schools offering
- Lawrence v. Texas (law case)
Lawrence v. Texas, legal case in which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled (6–3) on June 26, 2003, that a Texas state law criminalizing certain intimate sexual conduct between two consenting adults of the same sex was unconstitutional. The sodomy laws in a dozen other states were thereby invalidated. The
- Lawrence Welk Show, The (American television program)
Television in the United States: The late 1960s and early ’70s: the relevance movement: …same week, one could watch The Lawrence Welk Show (ABC, 1955–71), a 15-year-old musical variety program that featured a legendary polka band, and Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In (NBC, 1968–73), an irreverent new comedy-variety show plugged into the 1960s counterculture. The 1970–71 season was the last season for a number of…
- Lawrence, Abbott (American merchant)
Abbott Lawrence was an American merchant and philanthropist who was a major developer of the New England textile industry. He led in founding the town of Lawrence, Mass., named in his honour, and built several mills there, making it a textile centre. Lawrence joined his brother, Amos Lawrence
- Lawrence, Amos (American philanthropist)
Chester Harding: …1826, include his likeness of Amos Lawrence (c. 1845).
- Lawrence, Andrea Mead (American skier)
Andrea Mead Lawrence was the first American Alpine skier to win two gold medals in a single Winter Olympics. Her Olympic victories, coupled with her U.S. championship titles in the downhill, slalom, and Alpine combined in 1950, 1952, and 1955 and the giant slalom in 1953, earned her a place in the
- Lawrence, Carmen (Australian politician)
Carmen Lawrence is an Australian politician who rose to prominence as premier of Western Australia (1990–93) and served in the cabinet of Prime Minister Paul Keating. Lawrence was born to a wheat-farming family. She studied psychology at the University of Western Australia, graduating in 1968. She
- Lawrence, Carmen Mary (Australian politician)
Carmen Lawrence is an Australian politician who rose to prominence as premier of Western Australia (1990–93) and served in the cabinet of Prime Minister Paul Keating. Lawrence was born to a wheat-farming family. She studied psychology at the University of Western Australia, graduating in 1968. She
- Lawrence, D.H. (English writer)
D.H. Lawrence was an English author of novels, short stories, poems, plays, essays, travel books, and letters. His novels Sons and Lovers (1913), The Rainbow (1915), and Women in Love (1920) made him one of the most influential English writers of the 20th century. Lawrence was the fourth child of a
- Lawrence, David (American editor)
U.S. News & World Report: …weekly magazine by the journalist David Lawrence as the United States News. It won general note for its thorough coverage of major news events in Washington, D.C., and the United States, often carrying the complete text of major speeches and documents emanating from the capital. In 1945 Lawrence founded World…
- Lawrence, David Herbert (English writer)
D.H. Lawrence was an English author of novels, short stories, poems, plays, essays, travel books, and letters. His novels Sons and Lovers (1913), The Rainbow (1915), and Women in Love (1920) made him one of the most influential English writers of the 20th century. Lawrence was the fourth child of a
- Lawrence, Ernest Orlando (American physicist)
Ernest Orlando Lawrence was an American physicist, winner of the 1939 Nobel Prize for Physics for his invention of the cyclotron, the first particle accelerator to achieve high energies. Lawrence earned a Ph.D. at Yale University in 1925. An assistant professor of physics at Yale (1927–28), he went
- Lawrence, Frederick William (British statesman)
Frederick William Pethick-Lawrence, Baron Pethick-Lawrence was a British politician who was a leader of the woman suffrage movement in Great Britain during the first two decades of the 20th century; he later served (1945–47) as secretary of state for India and Burma (now Myanmar). In 1901 Lawrence
- Lawrence, Gertrude (British actress)
Gertrude Lawrence was an English actress noted for her performances in Noël Coward’s sophisticated comedies and in musicals. Lawrence was the daughter of music hall performers, and from an early age she was trained to follow their career. She made her stage debut in December 1908 in a pantomime
- Lawrence, Jacob (American painter)
Jacob Lawrence was an American painter of the 20th century whose works, frequently done in series using tempera or gouache on paper or cardboard, portray scenes of Black life and history with vivid stylized realism. Lawrence was the son of Southern migrants. After his parents separated, he and his
- Lawrence, James (United States naval officer)
James Lawrence was a U.S. naval officer of the War of 1812 whose dying words, “Don’t give up the ship,” became one of the U.S. Navy’s most cherished traditions. Lawrence entered the navy as a midshipman (1798) and fought against the Barbary pirates. He was first lieutenant to Lieutenant Stephen
- Lawrence, Jennifer (American actress)
Jennifer Lawrence is an American actress who is known for her versatility on-screen and her accessible, honest off-screen persona. At the age of 22, she won the Academy Award for best actress for her performance in Silver Linings Playbook (2012). Lawrence knew from an early age that she wanted to
- Lawrence, Jennifer Shrader (American actress)
Jennifer Lawrence is an American actress who is known for her versatility on-screen and her accessible, honest off-screen persona. At the age of 22, she won the Academy Award for best actress for her performance in Silver Linings Playbook (2012). Lawrence knew from an early age that she wanted to
- Lawrence, John Laird Mair Lawrence, 1st Baron (British colonial official)
John Laird Mair Lawrence, 1st Baron Lawrence was a British viceroy and governor-general of India whose institution in the Punjab of extensive economic, social, and political reforms earned him the sobriquet “Saviour of the Punjab.” In 1830 Lawrence traveled to Calcutta (now Kolkata) with his
- Lawrence, Martin (American comedian)
Martin Lawrence is a star who was featured in the hit television sitcom Martin from 1992 to 1997. He parlayed his success on the small screen into an active film career. He is also credited with popularizing the greeting “wassup?” Lawrence was born in West Germany (now Germany), where his father, a
- Lawrence, Martin Fitzgerald (American comedian)
Martin Lawrence is a star who was featured in the hit television sitcom Martin from 1992 to 1997. He parlayed his success on the small screen into an active film career. He is also credited with popularizing the greeting “wassup?” Lawrence was born in West Germany (now Germany), where his father, a
- Lawrence, Mary Wells (American businesswoman)
Mary Wells Lawrence was an American businesswoman who made a mark in advertising during an age when men dominated the field. She cofounded the Wells Rich Greene (WRG) advertising agency, which became noted for its campaigns for Alka Seltzer (“Plop, Plop, Fizz, Fizz”), the Ford Motor Company
- Lawrence, Robert (American astronaut)
Robert Henry Lawrence, Jr. was a U.S. Air Force major who was the first African American astronaut in the U.S. space program. However, he died in a fighter jet crash before getting the opportunity to fly in space. Lawrence was born and raised in Chicago. As a child, he was a chess enthusiast and
- Lawrence, Robert Henry, Jr. (American astronaut)
Robert Henry Lawrence, Jr. was a U.S. Air Force major who was the first African American astronaut in the U.S. space program. However, he died in a fighter jet crash before getting the opportunity to fly in space. Lawrence was born and raised in Chicago. As a child, he was a chess enthusiast and
- Lawrence, Sack of (United States history)
Bleeding Kansas: …became a fact with the Sack of Lawrence (May 21, 1856), in which a proslavery mob swarmed into the town of Lawrence and wrecked and burned the hotel and newspaper office in an effort to wipe out the “hotbed of abolitionism.” The day after the attack on Lawrence, the conflict…
- Lawrence, Saint (Christian saint)
Saint Lawrence ; feast day August 10) was one of the most venerated Roman martyrs, celebrated for his Christian valour. He is the patron saint of the poor and of cooks. Lawrence was among the seven deacons of the Roman church serving Pope Sixtus II, whose martyrdom preceded Lawrence’s by a few
- Lawrence, Sir Henry Montgomery (British colonial official)
Sir Henry Montgomery Lawrence was an English soldier and administrator who helped to consolidate British rule in the Punjab region. After joining the Bengal artillery in 1823, Lawrence served at the capture of Arakan in the First Anglo-Burmese War (1824–26). He studied the Urdu, Hindi, and Persian
- Lawrence, Sir Thomas (British artist)
Sir Thomas Lawrence was a painter and draftsman who was the most fashionable English portrait painter of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. He was the son of an innkeeper who owned the Black Bear at Devizes, where the young Lawrence won a reputation as a prodigy for his profile portraits in
- Lawrence, Steve (American singer and actor)
Burt Bacharach: …1950s he wrote arrangements for Steve Lawrence and Vic Damone and later toured with Marlene Dietrich. In the late 1950s he began his long association with David, which would produce many hits especially for singer Dionne Warwick, including “Walk On By,” “I Say a Little Prayer,” and “
- Lawrence, Stringer (British officer)
Stringer Lawrence was a British army captain whose transformation of irregular troops into an effective fighting force earned him credit as the real founder of the Indian army under British rule. During 20 years of army service, Lawrence rose from ensign to captain and served at Gibraltar, in
- Lawrence, T.E. (British scholar and military officer)
T.E. Lawrence was a British archaeological scholar, military strategist, and author best known for his legendary war activities in the Middle East during World War I and for his account of those activities in The Seven Pillars of Wisdom (1926). Lawrence was the son of Sir Thomas Chapman and Sara
- Lawrence, Teófilo Stevenson (Cuban boxer)
Teófilo Stevenson was a Cuban heavyweight boxer who became the first fighter to win three Olympic gold medals in one weight class and one of only two to win three World Amateur Boxing titles. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) The 6-ft 3-in (1.9-m) Stevenson shocked the boxing
- Lawrence, Thomas Edward (British scholar and military officer)
T.E. Lawrence was a British archaeological scholar, military strategist, and author best known for his legendary war activities in the Middle East during World War I and for his account of those activities in The Seven Pillars of Wisdom (1926). Lawrence was the son of Sir Thomas Chapman and Sara
- Lawrence, Vicki (American actress and comedian)
The Carol Burnett Show: …included Lyle Waggoner (until 1974), Vicki Lawrence, Harvey Korman, and Tim Conway (first as a guest star, then as a regular after 1975). These entertainers combined the spontaneity and energy of live performance (including question-and-answer segments with the studio audience) with meticulous attention to detail and the advantages of two…
- lawrencium (chemical element)
lawrencium (Lr), synthetic chemical element, the 14th member of the actinoid series of the periodic table, atomic number 103. Not occurring in nature, lawrencium (probably as the isotope lawrencium-257) was first produced (1961) by chemists Albert Ghiorso, T. Sikkeland, A.E. Larsh, and R.M. Latimer
- lawrencium-256 (isotope)
lawrencium: …Research in Dubna discovered (1965) lawrencium-256 (26-second half-life), which the Berkeley group later used in a study with approximately 1,500 atoms to show that lawrencium behaves more like the tripositive elements in the actinoid series than like predominantly dipositive nobelium (atomic number 102). The longest-lasting isotope, lawrencium-262, has a half-life…
- Lawrie Todd (work by Galt)
John Galt: And in the novel Lawrie Todd the hard life of a Canadian settler is depicted with imaginative power.
- Lawrie, Paul (Scottish golfer)
British Open: History: …first major tournament triumph, including Paul Lawrie in 1999, David Duval in 2001, Ben Curtis in 2003, and Padraig Harrington in 2007.