- moons of Jupiter
Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system and has, as of 2023, 95 known moons. The four largest moons of Jupiter—Io, Callisto, Ganymede, and Europa—were the first objects in the solar system discovered with a telescope. Galileo discovered them in 1610, and they are now called the Galilean
- Moons of Jupiter, The (short stories by Munro)
Alice Munro: …Meaning to Tell You (1974), The Moons of Jupiter (1982), Friend of My Youth (1990), A Wilderness Station (1994), and The Love of a Good Woman (1998). The latter volume received both Canada’s esteemed Giller Prize (later the Scotiabank Giller Prize) and the National Book Critics Circle Award in the…
- moons of Neptune
Neptune is the planet in the solar system that is farthest from the Sun; it has 14 known moons. The largest by far is Triton, which is nearly the size of Earth’s Moon. Triton is the only large moon of the solar system that travels around its planet in retrograde fashion; that is, it orbits Neptune
- moons of Pluto
The dwarf planet Pluto is one of the largest members of the Kuiper belt, a collection of ice and rock debris revolving around the Sun beyond Neptune’s orbit. Pluto has five known moons. The largest, Charon, is half the size of Pluto. Charon’s period of revolution is exactly equal to the rotation
- moons of Saturn
Saturn has the most moons of any planet in the solar system, with more than 140 known as of 2023. Many of these are small satellites that orbit far from Saturn. The largest moons orbit close to the planet and were discovered telescopically before the 20th century. The largest moon, Titan, even has
- moons of Uranus
The planet Uranus has 27 known moons. Uranus’s five largest moons—Miranda, Ariel, Umbriel, Oberon, and Titania—range from about 240 to 800 km (150 to 500 miles) in radius. All were discovered telescopically from Earth, four of them before the 20th century. Ten small inner moons were found by
- moonseed (plant)
moonseed, any of three species of woody vines constituting the genus Menispermum of the family Menispermaceae (order Ranunculales). They occur in East Asia, eastern North America, and Mexico. The North American species, Canada moonseed, or yellow parilla (M. canadense), with lobed leaves and
- moonseed family (plant family)
Ranunculales: Menispermaceae, or the moonseed family, contains nearly 75 genera and 520 species, most of which are woody climbers in tropical forests, although some genera extend into temperate regions in North America and Japan. Menispermum canadense (Canada moonseed) and other members of the family have characteristic…
- moonshine (alcoholic beverage)
Moonshine is a term typically used to refer to illicitly distilled liquor. The word is derived from the notion of the liquor being made and distributed at night, under cover of darkness. Makers of moonshine are called moonshiners. Moonshine most commonly denotes clear, unaged whiskey that was made
- Moonshine conjecture (mathematics)
Richard Ewen Borcherds: …used to prove the so-called Moonshine conjectures. The Moonshine conjectures asserted a mysterious connection between certain families of modular functions and the representation theory of the largest sporadic simple group (the “Monster”). Borcherds’s work also drew on superstring theory and had profound implications for conformal field theory.
- Moonshine in the Trunk (album by Paisley)
Brad Paisley: Moonshine in the Trunk (2014) and Love and War (2017) were both solid country albums, the latter featuring duets with Mick Jagger and John Fogerty.
- moonstone (gemstone)
moonstone, gem-quality feldspar mineral, a mixed sodium and potassium aluminosilicate, (K,Na)AlSi3O8, that shows a silvery or bluish iridescence. Nearly all commercial moonstones come from Dumbara District, Sri Lanka, where they occur in gem gravels and in acid granulites and pegmatites. The term
- Moonstone, The (novel by Collins)
The Moonstone, one of the first English detective novels, written by Wilkie Collins and published in 1868. A debased Englishman steals the moonstone, a sacred gem, from India. It brings bad luck to each of its English possessors. When the gem disappears from a young Englishwoman’s room and three
- Moonstruck (film by Jewison [1987])
Norman Jewison: Later efforts included Moonstruck (1987), a romantic comedy starring Cher that won him a third Oscar nod, and Bogus (1996), a film about a boy and his imaginary friend, played by Gérard Depardieu. The Hurricane (1999) featured Denzel Washington as Rubin (“Hurricane”) Carter, a boxer wrongly accused of…
- Moontide (film by Mayo [1942])
Archie Mayo: Films of the 1940s: …over for Fritz Lang on Moontide (1942), a downbeat but affecting tale in which a suicidal waitress (Ida Lupino) is saved by a sailor (Jean Gabin), who is also struggling after being made to believe he killed a man during a drunken brawl. A more commercial project was Orchestra Wives…
- moor (grassland)
moor, tract of open country that may be either dry with heather and associated vegetation or wet with an acid peat vegetation. In the British Isles, “moorland” is often used to describe uncultivated hilly areas. If wet, a moor is generally synonymous with
- Moor (people)
Moor, in English usage, a Moroccan or, formerly, a member of the Muslim population of al-Andalus, now Spain and Portugal. Of mixed Arab, Spanish, and Amazigh (Berber) origins, the Moors created the Islamic Andalusian civilization and subsequently settled as refugees in the Maghreb (in the region of
- Moor’s Pavane, The (dance by Limón)
José Limón: His first major work, The Moor’s Pavane (1949; music by Henry Purcell), conveyed the jealousy, rage, and remorse of Shakespeare’s Othello within the framework of a stately court dance. Much of Limón’s choreography was developed from natural gesture and expressed, as he said, “human grandeur, dignity, and nobility” through…
- Moor, The (duke of Milan)
Ludovico Sforza was an Italian Renaissance regent (1480–94) and duke of Milan (1494–98), a ruthless prince and diplomatist and a patron of Leonardo da Vinci and other artists. Ludovico Sforza was the second son of Francesco Sforza, who had made himself duke of Milan. While still a child, he
- Moorcock, Michael (British author)
Michael Moorcock is a British science fiction and fantasy author who, as editor of the magazine New Worlds, led the New Wave movement in science fiction that expanded the boundaries of the genre. Moorcock’s career started in 1956 when, as a teenager, he began selling fiction to various British pulp
- Moorcock, Michael John (British author)
Michael Moorcock is a British science fiction and fantasy author who, as editor of the magazine New Worlds, led the New Wave movement in science fiction that expanded the boundaries of the genre. Moorcock’s career started in 1956 when, as a teenager, he began selling fiction to various British pulp
- Moorcroft, William (English traveler)
Karakoram Range: Study and exploration: …travelers such as the Englishmen William Moorcroft, George Trebeck, and Godfrey Thomas Vigne plotted the locations of major rivers, glaciers, and mountains. The extraordinary topography, along with protracted military tensions in the Karakorams between Russia and Britain and more recently between China, Pakistan, and India, prompted many expeditions in the…
- Moore (Oklahoma, United States)
Moore, city, Cleveland county, central Oklahoma, U.S., a southern suburb of Oklahoma City. First settled in 1887 and originally called Verbeck, it was renamed for a conductor of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway. Its population remained small until the 1960s, when planned urban and
- Moore (people)
Mossi, people of Burkina Faso and other parts of West Africa, especially Mali and Togo. They numbered some six million at the start of the 21st century. Their language, Moore, belongs to the Gur branch and is akin to that spoken by the Mamprusi and Dagomba of northern Ghana, from whom the Mossi
- Moore House (building, Yorktown, Virginia, United States)
Yorktown: Augustine Moore House (c. 1725), at the edge of the Revolutionary War battlefield (which surrounds the town), was where the “Articles of Capitulation” were drafted (October 18, 1781) prior to their signing the next day in a British redoubt. The reconstructed York County Courthouse (1633),…
- Moore language
Burkina Faso: Ethnic groups and languages: Moore, the language of the Mossi, is spoken by a great majority of the population, and Dyula is widely used in commerce.
- Mõõre language
Burkina Faso: Ethnic groups and languages: Moore, the language of the Mossi, is spoken by a great majority of the population, and Dyula is widely used in commerce.
- Moore School of Electrical Engineering (research institute, Pennsylvania, United States)
ENIAC: …and their colleagues at the Moore School of Electrical Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania led a government-funded project to build an all-electronic computer. Under contract to the army and under the direction of Herman Goldstine, work began in early 1943 on ENIAC. The next year, mathematician John von Neumann…
- Moore v. Harper (law case)
Moore v. Harper, legal case in which the U.S. Supreme Court rejected (6–3) the “independent state legislature theory,” which holds that state courts lack the authority to invalidate, on legal or constitutional grounds, state regulations pertaining to federal elections and to replace them with
- Moore’s Bluff (Alabama, United States)
Selma, city, seat (1866) of Dallas county, central Alabama, U.S. It lies on the Alabama River about 50 miles (80 km) west of Montgomery. The site was first recorded on a map in 1732 as Ecor Bienville; it was later called Moore’s Bluff, for a settler who arrived about 1815. It was renamed about 1819
- Moore’s Creek Bridge, Battle of (American Revolution [1776])
Battle of Moore’s Creek Bridge, (February 27, 1776), in the American Revolution, battle in which North Carolina Revolutionaries defeated a force of North Carolina loyalists, in part thwarting a British invasion of the southern colonies. General Donald McDonald, who had amassed some 1,600 Scottish
- Moore’s Hill Male and Female Collegiate Institute (university, Evansville, Indiana, United States)
University of Evansville, private, coeducational institution of higher learning in Evansville, Ind., U.S. It is affiliated with the United Methodist Church. The university consists of the colleges of arts and sciences, education and health sciences, and engineering and computer science and a school
- Moore’s Landing (Alabama, United States)
Selma, city, seat (1866) of Dallas county, central Alabama, U.S. It lies on the Alabama River about 50 miles (80 km) west of Montgomery. The site was first recorded on a map in 1732 as Ecor Bienville; it was later called Moore’s Bluff, for a settler who arrived about 1815. It was renamed about 1819
- Moore’s law (computer science)
Moore’s law, prediction made by American engineer Gordon Moore in 1965 that the number of transistors per silicon chip doubles every year. For a special issue of the journal Electronics, Moore was asked to predict developments over the next decade. Observing that the total number of components in
- Moore, Alan (British writer)
Alan Moore is a British writer whose works include some of the most influential books in comics history. Moore entered the publishing industry in the early 1970s, working as a writer and artist for a number of independent magazines. He broke into the mainstream with stories for Doctor Who Weekly
- Moore, Alecia Beth (American singer and songwriter)
Pink is an American singer and songwriter who is known for her rock-influenced pop songs, powerful voice, and gymnastics-filled concerts. Moore’s parents divorced when she was a child. She wanted to be a singer from an early age, and, while a young teenager, she began performing in Philadelphia
- Moore, Alfred (United States jurist)
Alfred Moore was an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1800–04). Moore’s father, Maurice Moore (1735–77), and uncle, James Moore (1737–77), were both prominent in the early American Revolutionary cause. Moore himself was admitted to the bar in 1775 but spent the next two years as a
- Moore, Alice Ruth (American author)
Alice Dunbar Nelson was a novelist, poet, essayist, and critic associated with the early period of the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and ’30s. The daughter of a Creole seaman and a black seamstress, Moore grew up in New Orleans, where she completed a two-year teacher-training program at Straight
- Moore, Arch (American politician)
Shelley Moore Capito: …West Virginia, the daughter of Arch Moore, a three-time governor of the state whose conviction for corruption ended his political career. After studying zoology at Duke University (B.S., 1975), she earned a master’s degree (1976) in education from the University of Virginia. For several years she worked as a career…
- Moore, Archie (American boxer)
Archie Moore was an American boxer, world light-heavyweight champion from Dec. 17, 1952, when he defeated Joey Maxim in 15 rounds in St. Louis, Mo., until 1962, when he lost recognition as champion for failing to meet Harold Johnson, the leading 175-lb (80-kg) challenger. A professional boxer from
- Moore, Bernard (British potter)
pottery: Pottery factories: …part of the 20th century, Bernard Moore experimented with Chinese glazes (see below China: Qing dynasty). He produced some successful flambé and sang de boeuf glazes on a stoneware body at his small factory in Stoke-upon-Trent. He worked in association with William Burton of the Pilkington pottery
- Moore, Bobby (British athlete)
Bobby Moore was an English football (soccer) player known as the "golden boy of English football" and captain of the national side that defeated West Germany 4–2 in the 1966 World Cup final at Wembley Stadium in London; it was England’s only World Cup championship and the high point of Moore’s
- Moore, Brian (Canadian author)
Brian Moore was an Irish novelist who immigrated to Canada and then to the United States. Known as a “writer’s writer,” he composed novels that were very different from each other in voice, setting, and incident but alike in their lucid, elegant, and vivid prose. Moore, who was reared as a Roman
- Moore, Carissa (American surfer)
Carissa Moore is considered one of the greatest female surfers of all time. She is a five-time world champion (2011, 2013, 2015, 2019, and 2021) and the winner of the first Olympic gold medal in women’s surfing. In 2024 Moore announced that she will step away from surfing after competing in the
- Moore, Carissa Kainani (American surfer)
Carissa Moore is considered one of the greatest female surfers of all time. She is a five-time world champion (2011, 2013, 2015, 2019, and 2021) and the winner of the first Olympic gold medal in women’s surfing. In 2024 Moore announced that she will step away from surfing after competing in the
- Moore, Carl Richard (American zoologist)
Carl Richard Moore was an American zoologist noted for his research on animal reproductive organs and internal secretions. Reared in a rural community in the Ozark Plateau of southern Missouri, he attended Drury College at nearby Springfield, where he earned his B.S. and M.S. degrees and served as
- Moore, Carrie Amelia (American temperance leader)
Carry Nation was an American temperance advocate famous for using a hatchet to demolish barrooms. Carry Moore as a child experienced poverty, her mother’s mental instability, and frequent bouts of ill health. Although she held a teaching certificate from a state normal school, her education was
- Moore, Charles (American yachtsman and conservationist)
Great Pacific Garbage Patch: …only after 1997, when yachtsman Charles Moore, returning home after participating in the biennial Transpacific Race, chose a route that took him through the North Pacific subtropical gyre. He found himself traversing a sea of plastics. When he returned to the area the following year, he discovered that the patch…
- Moore, Charles (American architect)
Western architecture: Postmodernism: Like Charles Moore’s Piazza d’Italia in New Orleans (1975–80) and Alumni Center at the University of California at Irvine (1983–85), these confident and colourful buildings were intended to reassure the public that it need no longer feel that its cultural identity is threatened by modern architecture.…
- Moore, Clement Clarke (American scholar and author)
Clement Clarke Moore was an American scholar of Hebrew and teacher, best known for having been credited with writing the poem “A Visit from St. Nicholas” (also known as “ ’Twas the Night Before Christmas”). The son of the Reverend Benjamin Moore, a president of Columbia College (later University),
- Moore, Colleen (American actress)
Colleen Moore was an American actress who epitomized the jazz-age flapper with her bobbed hair and short skirts in such silent motion pictures as Flaming Youth (1923), Naughty But Nice (1927), Synthetic Sin (1929), and Why Be Good? (1929). (Read Lillian Gish’s 1929 Britannica essay on silent film.)
- Moore, Demi (American actress)
Demi Moore is an American actress who became one of Hollywood’s leading ladies and highest-paid performers in the 1990s. Films such as Ghost (1990), A Few Good Men (1992), Indecent Proposal (1993), and The Scarlet Letter (1995) made her a star, but her many bold choices made her an often overlooked
- Moore, Don (American writer)
Flash Gordon: …illustrator Alex Raymond and writer Don Moore as a Sunday feature for King Features Syndicate. Intended to compete with the popular comic strip Buck Rogers (which it soon surpassed in popularity), the series concerned the intergalactic adventures of Flash Gordon, his girlfriend Dale Arden, and the scientist Dr. Hans Zarkov…
- Moore, Douglas Stuart (American composer)
Douglas Stuart Moore was an American composer best known for his folk operas dealing with American themes, the most successful being The Ballad of Baby Doe (1956). He studied composition with Horatio Parker at Yale and with Vincent d’Indy and Nadia Boulanger in Paris. From 1926 to 1962, he was on
- Moore, Dudley (British actor, comedian, and musician)
Dudley Moore was a British actor, comedian, and musician whose career ranged from jazz and classical musician and composer to satiric comedian to Hollywood movie star. Moore attended Magdalen College, Oxford, on a music scholarship, earning bachelor’s degrees in 1957 and 1958, and then toured as a
- Moore, Dudley Stuart John (British actor, comedian, and musician)
Dudley Moore was a British actor, comedian, and musician whose career ranged from jazz and classical musician and composer to satiric comedian to Hollywood movie star. Moore attended Magdalen College, Oxford, on a music scholarship, earning bachelor’s degrees in 1957 and 1958, and then toured as a
- Moore, Ely (American journalist and politician)
Ely Moore was an American journalist and politician who represented the interests of labour in the U.S. Congress. Although he studied medicine, Moore abandoned his practice after a few years to become a printer and newspaper editor. Elected in 1833 the first president of New York City’s federation
- Moore, Eugenie (American diplomat)
Helen Eugenie Moore Anderson was an American diplomat, the first woman to serve in the post of U.S. ambassador. Eugenie Moore attended Stephens College (Columbia, Missouri) in 1926–27, Simpson College (Indianola, Iowa) in 1927–28, and Carleton College (Northfield, Minnesota) in 1929–30; she took no
- Moore, Fort (fort, Georgia, United States)
Columbus: Fort Moore (formerly Fort Benning), just to the south, is the site of the U.S. Army Infantry School and the National Infantry Museum. Columbus State University was opened in 1958. Blues singer Ma Rainey and novelist Carson McCullers were natives of Columbus. Inc. 1828. Pop.…
- Moore, Francis (English author)
almanac: …is the Vox Stellarum of Francis Moore, which was first published in 1700. These early printed almanacs devoted as much space to astrology and prophecies and predictions of the future as they did to basic calendrical and astronomical data. With the development of Western science in the 17th and 18th…
- Moore, G E (British philosopher)
G. E. Moore was an influential British Realist philosopher and professor whose systematic approach to ethical problems and remarkably meticulous approach to philosophy made him an outstanding modern British thinker. Elected to a fellowship at Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1898, Moore remained
- Moore, George (Irish writer)
George Moore was an Irish novelist and man of letters. Considered an innovator in fiction in his day, he no longer seems as important as he once did. Moore came from a distinguished Catholic family of Irish landholders. When he was 21, he left Ireland for Paris to become a painter. Moore’s
- Moore, George Edward (British philosopher)
G. E. Moore was an influential British Realist philosopher and professor whose systematic approach to ethical problems and remarkably meticulous approach to philosophy made him an outstanding modern British thinker. Elected to a fellowship at Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1898, Moore remained
- Moore, George Foot (American scholar and theologian)
George Foot Moore was an American Old Testament scholar, theologian and Orientalist, whose knowledge and understanding of the rabbinical source literature was extraordinary among Christians. Graduated from Yale College in 1872 and from Union Theological Seminary in 1877, in 1878 Moore was ordained
- Moore, Gordon (American engineer and entrepreneur)
Gordon Moore was an American engineer and cofounder, with Robert Noyce, of Intel Corporation. Moore studied chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley (B.S., 1950), and in 1954 he received a Ph.D. in chemistry and physics from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Pasadena.
- Moore, Gordon E. (American engineer and entrepreneur)
Gordon Moore was an American engineer and cofounder, with Robert Noyce, of Intel Corporation. Moore studied chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley (B.S., 1950), and in 1954 he received a Ph.D. in chemistry and physics from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Pasadena.
- Moore, Grace (American singer)
Grace Moore was an American singer and actress who found great popular and critical success in both opera and motion pictures. Moore was educated in Tennessee public schools and briefly at Ward-Belmont College in Nashville. She then went to the Wilson-Greens School of Music in Chevy Chase,
- Moore, Henry (British artist)
Henry Moore was an English sculptor whose organically shaped, abstract, bronze and stone figures constitute the major 20th-century manifestation of the humanist tradition in sculpture. Much of his work is monumental, and he was particularly well-known for a series of reclining nudes. Moore was born
- Moore, J. H. (English navigator)
Nathaniel Bowditch: …a work by the Englishman J.H. Moore, he produced a revised edition in 1799. His additions became so numerous that in 1802 he published The New American Practical Navigator, based on Moore’s book, which was adopted by the U.S. Department of the Navy and went through some 60 editions.
- Moore, James (English racer)
cycling: Early history of the sport: The winner was James Moore, an 18-year-old expatriate Englishman from Paris. On November 7, 1869, the first city-to-city race was held between Paris and Rouen; again Moore was the winner, having covered the 135 km (84 miles) in 10 hours 25 minutes, including time spent walking his bicycle…
- Moore, James (Irish publisher)
Encyclopædia Britannica: Third edition: James Moore’s Dublin reprint (1791–97) was an exact reproduction of the third edition, with the addition of “Moore’s Dublin Edition” at the top of the title page and his imprint at the foot and with some minor changes in the title page wording.
- Moore, Jeremy (British general)
Falkland Islands War: The course of the conflict: Jeremy Moore, decided to make their initial landing near Port San Carlos, on the northern coast of East Falkland, and then mount an overland attack on Stanley. They calculated that this would avoid casualties to the British civilian population and to the British forces.
- Moore, John Bassett (American scholar)
John Bassett Moore was an American legal scholar known for his exhaustive codification of international law. His advice on matters pertaining to international adjudication was frequently sought by the U.S. government. Admitted to the Delaware bar in 1883, Moore in 1885 joined the U.S. Department of
- Moore, Johnny (American singer)
the Drifters: 1970), and Johnny Moore (b. 1934, Selma, Alabama—d. December 30, 1998, London, England). Principal members of the second incarnation included Ben E. King (original name Benjamin Earl Nelson; b. September 28, 1938, Henderson, North Carolina—d. April 30, 2015, Hackensack, New Jersey), Charlie Thomas, Elsbeary Hobbs, Rudy Lewis,…
- Moore, Julia A. (American poet)
Julia A. Moore was a Midwestern versifier whose maudlin, often unintentionally hilarious poetry was parodied by many. Moore was born into poverty in rural Michigan. She attended school through the third grade, when her mother’s illness forced her to assume many adult responsibilities. She began
- Moore, Julianne (American actress)
Julianne Moore is an American actress known for her exacting and sympathetic portrayals of women at odds with their surroundings, often in films that examined social issues. Smith was the eldest of three children; her American father was a military lawyer and judge, and her Scottish immigrant
- Moore, Marianne (American poet)
Marianne Moore was an American poet whose work distilled moral and intellectual insights from the close and accurate observation of objective detail. Moore graduated from Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania in 1909 as a biology major and then studied commercial subjects and taught them at the U.S.
- Moore, Marianne Craig (American poet)
Marianne Moore was an American poet whose work distilled moral and intellectual insights from the close and accurate observation of objective detail. Moore graduated from Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania in 1909 as a biology major and then studied commercial subjects and taught them at the U.S.
- Moore, Mary Grace Willie (American singer)
Grace Moore was an American singer and actress who found great popular and critical success in both opera and motion pictures. Moore was educated in Tennessee public schools and briefly at Ward-Belmont College in Nashville. She then went to the Wilson-Greens School of Music in Chevy Chase,
- Moore, Mary Tyler (American actress)
Mary Tyler Moore was an American actress best remembered for her roles in two highly successful television comedies in the 1960s and ’70s—The Dick Van Dyke Show and The Mary Tyler Moore Show—and for her influential television production company MTM. Following World War II, Moore’s family moved from
- Moore, Maya (American basketball player)
Minnesota Lynx: …the Lynx selected star forward Maya Moore of the University of Connecticut with the first overall pick. Moore joined guard Lindsay Whalen and guard-forward Seimone Augustus to form a standout trio for Minnesota. In the 2011 season the Lynx compiled a league-best 27–7 record and dropped only a single game…
- Moore, Michael (American filmmaker and author)
Michael Moore is an American filmmaker, author, and political activist, who is best known for a series of documentaries—often controversial—that address major political and social issues in the United States. Following his graduation from high school, Moore, as an 18-year-old member of the Flint
- Moore, Michael (American disc jockey)
Scott Shannon: An avid fan and student of Top 40 radio since childhood, Michael Moore fashioned his on-air name, Scott Shannon, as a tribute to two of his favourite announcers, Scott Muni and Tom Shannon. Beginning at a station in Mobile, Alabama, in 1969, he became the…
- Moore, Michael Francis (American filmmaker and author)
Michael Moore is an American filmmaker, author, and political activist, who is best known for a series of documentaries—often controversial—that address major political and social issues in the United States. Following his graduation from high school, Moore, as an 18-year-old member of the Flint
- Moore, Michael Kenneth (prime minister of New Zealand)
Mike Moore was a New Zealand politician who, while leader of the New Zealand Labour Party, served as the country’s prime minister from September 4 to October 27, 1990. Moore, who was educated at Bay of Islands College and Dilworth School, held various jobs, including that of social worker and
- Moore, Mike (prime minister of New Zealand)
Mike Moore was a New Zealand politician who, while leader of the New Zealand Labour Party, served as the country’s prime minister from September 4 to October 27, 1990. Moore, who was educated at Bay of Islands College and Dilworth School, held various jobs, including that of social worker and
- Moore, Newton (Australian politician)
Western Australia: Western Australia until the mid-20th century: …on Forrest’s policies, Liberal premier Newton Moore (1906–10) and his lieutenant James Mitchell pushed the farming frontier 200 miles (320 km) from the Avon valley (to the east of Perth) eastward to the 10-inch (250-mm) rainfall line. They were aided by recent advances in agricultural science as well as by…
- Moore, Nicholas (British poet)
Nicholas Moore was one of the “New Apocalypse” English poets of the 1940s who reacted against the preoccupation with social and political issues of the 1930s by turning toward romanticism. The son of G.E. Moore, classicist and Cambridge philosopher, he published an important literary review, Seven
- Moore, Pete (American musician)
Smokey Robinson and the Miracles: …members of the group were Warren (“Pete”) Moore (b. November 19, 1938, Detroit—d. November 19, 2017, Las Vegas, Nevada), Bobby Rogers (b. February 19, 1940, Detroit—d. March 3, 2013, Southfield, Michigan), Ronnie White (b. April 5, 1939, Detroit—d. August 26, 1995, Detroit), and Claudette Rogers (b. June 20, 1942, New…
- Moore, Raymond (American author)
homeschooling: Main theories, theorists, and methods: In the 1970s Americans Raymond Moore and his wife, Dorothy, also prominent education authors and devout Christians, advocated delaying academics for children, especially for boys, until they were developmentally ready for them. Like Holt, Moore found a more-receptive audience for his ideas among parents—and particularly Christian parents—than among school…
- Moore, Raymond Cecil (American paleontologist)
Raymond Cecil Moore was an American paleontologist known for his work on Paleozoic crinoids, bryozoans, and corals (invertebrate organisms existing 542 million to 251 million years ago). Moore was a member of the U.S. Geological Survey from 1913 until 1949, and he became a professor at the
- Moore, Robert Frederick Chelsea (British athlete)
Bobby Moore was an English football (soccer) player known as the "golden boy of English football" and captain of the national side that defeated West Germany 4–2 in the 1966 World Cup final at Wembley Stadium in London; it was England’s only World Cup championship and the high point of Moore’s
- Moore, Roger (British actor)
James Bond: …Sean Connery in the 1960s, Roger Moore in the ’70s and ’80s, and Pierce Brosnan in the ’90s, and Bond remained effectively ageless throughout those decades. However, as Daniel Craig took up the role with a new adaptation of Casino Royale (2006), the character’s history was formally restarted, establishing him…
- Moore, Roy (American jurist and politician)
Steve Bannon: Association with Trump: …Alabama Supreme Court chief justice Roy Moore in the Republican primary election to choose a successor for the U.S. Senate seat representing Alabama that had been vacated by Jeff Sessions when he became U.S. attorney general.
- Moore, Samuel (American music duo)
Sam and Dave, American vocal duo who were among the most popular performers of soul music in the late 1960s and whose gritty, gospel-drenched style typified the Memphis Sound. Samuel Moore (b. October 12, 1935, Miami, Florida, U.S.) and David Prater (b. May 9, 1937, Ocilla, Georgia—d. April 9,
- Moore, Shelley Wellons (United States senator)
Shelley Moore Capito is an American politician who was elected as a Republican to the U.S. Senate in 2014 and began representing West Virginia the following year. She was the first woman from the state to be elected senator. Capito previously served in the U.S. House of Representatives (2001–15).
- Moore, Sir John (British lieutenant general)
Sir John Moore was a British lieutenant general who led a famous retreat to La Coruña (December 1808–January 1809) during the Napoleonic Peninsular War. His actions became celebrated, criticized by some and praised by others (including the Duke of Wellington). The son of a physician and the stepson
- Moore, Stanford (American biochemist)
Stanford Moore was an American biochemist, who, with Christian B. Anfinsen and William H. Stein, received the 1972 Nobel Prize for Chemistry for their research on the molecular structures of proteins. Moore received his Ph.D. degree from the University of Wisconsin in 1938 and joined the staff of
- Moore, Thomas (Irish author and composer)
Thomas Moore was an Irish poet, satirist, composer, and political propagandist. He was a close friend of Lord Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley. The son of a Roman Catholic wine merchant, Moore graduated from Trinity College, Dublin, in 1799 and then studied law in London. His major poetic work, Irish
- Moore, Thurston (American musician)
Sonic Youth: …1956, Glen Cove, New York), Thurston Moore (b. July 25, 1958, Coral Gables, Florida), and Steve Shelley (b. June 23, 1962, Midland, Michigan).