- Macklin, Charles (Irish actor and playwright)
Charles Macklin was an Irish actor and playwright whose distinguished though turbulent career spanned most of the 18th century. Macklin first appeared as an actor at Bristol and in 1725 went to Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London. A man of violent nature, he was a pioneer against the stilted declamation
- Macklin, Wicked Charlie (Irish actor and playwright)
Charles Macklin was an Irish actor and playwright whose distinguished though turbulent career spanned most of the 18th century. Macklin first appeared as an actor at Bristol and in 1725 went to Lincoln’s Inn Fields, London. A man of violent nature, he was a pioneer against the stilted declamation
- Mackmurdo, Arthur Heygate (British architect)
Arthur Heygate Mackmurdo was an English architect, designer, and a pioneer of the English Arts and Crafts movement. After studying at the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art, Oxford, and traveling with John Ruskin to Italy, Mackmurdo set up practice in London. Known best for his plans for the
- MacLachlan, Kyle (American actor)
Dune: Publication and adaptations: …by David Lynch (1984), with Kyle MacLachlan (in his film debut) as Paul. A television miniseries aired in 2000, followed by another miniseries (2003) that covered the events in the second and third Dune books.
- Maclagan, W. D. (archbishop of York)
Frederick Temple: …with the archbishop of York, W.D. Maclagan, he issued an emphatic rebuttal to Pope Leo XIII’s bull denying the validity of Anglican priestly orders. The two archbishops spoke together again in 1899 in a pronouncement that processional lights and the use of incense were illegal practices in Anglican liturgics. Frederick…
- MacLaine, Shirley (American actress)
Shirley MacLaine is an outspoken American actress and dancer known for her deft portrayals of charmingly eccentric characters and for her interest in mysticism and reincarnation. Beaty’s mother was a drama teacher, and her younger brother, Warren Beatty (he later changed the spelling of the
- MacLane, Mary (Canadian-born American writer and feminist)
Mary MacLane was a Canadian-born American writer and pioneering feminist whose frank autobiographical account of her life—written at age 19 and published as The Story of Mary MacLane—by Herself in 1902—became an instant best seller and made her a celebrity for two decades. Called the “Wild Woman of
- MacLane, Mary Elizabeth (Canadian-born American writer and feminist)
Mary MacLane was a Canadian-born American writer and pioneering feminist whose frank autobiographical account of her life—written at age 19 and published as The Story of Mary MacLane—by Herself in 1902—became an instant best seller and made her a celebrity for two decades. Called the “Wild Woman of
- MacLaren, Archibald (Scottish gymnast)
physical culture: Humanism and national revivals: In 1858 an enterprising Scot, Archibald MacLaren, opened a well-equipped gymnasium at the University of Oxford, and in 1860 he trained 12 sergeants who then implemented his training regimen for the British Army. Another inspirational influence for Britons was the Muscular Christianity movement, a reconciliation of Western religious doctrines with…
- Maclaren, Charles (Scottish journalist and editor)
Charles Maclaren was a Scottish journalist, editor of the 6th edition (1820–23) of the Encyclopædia Britannica and cofounder and editor of The Scotsman (1817), Scotland’s first independent Liberal paper. He also performed editorial services for the 4th, 5th, and 7th editions of the Britannica. With
- Maclaren, Ian (Scottish author)
Kailyard school: …A Window in Thrums (1889), Ian Maclaren (pseudonym of John Watson), and S.R. Crockett were widely read throughout Scotland, England, and the United States and inspired many imitators. The natural and unsophisticated style and parochial viewpoint quickly degenerated into mawkish sentimentality, which provoked a hostile reaction among contemporary Scottish realists…
- Maclaurin, Colin (Scottish mathematician)
Colin Maclaurin was a Scottish mathematician who developed and extended Sir Isaac Newton’s work in calculus, geometry, and gravitation. A child prodigy, he entered the University of Glasgow at age 11. At the age of 19 he was elected a professor of mathematics at Marischal College, Aberdeen, and two
- macle (mineral)
chiastolite, a variety of the mineral andalusite
- Maclean’s (Canadian magazine)
Maclean’s, weekly newsmagazine, published in Toronto, whose thorough coverage of Canada’s national affairs and of North American and world news from a Canadian perspective has made it that country’s leading magazine. It was founded in 1905 in a large-page format, presenting feature articles and
- MacLean, Allan D. (United States military officer)
Battle of the Chosin Reservoir: Advancing to Chosin: Allan D. MacLean and known as Task Force MacLean, numbered 3,200 Americans and Koreans. It replaced the Marines east of the reservoir on November 25. Smith used this operational pause to strengthen the defenses of Hagaru-ri and build a rough airfield for emergency resupply and…
- Maclean, Donald (British diplomat and spy)
Donald Maclean was a British diplomat who spied for the Soviet Union in World War II and early in the Cold War period. At the University of Cambridge in the 1930s, Maclean was part of a group of relatively privileged young men, among them Guy Burgess, who all shared a fashionable disdain for
- Maclean, George (president of Cape Coast)
George Maclean was a Scottish-born council president of Cape Coast, West Africa, who laid the groundwork for British rule of the Gold Coast. An officer of the Royal African Colonial Corps, Maclean served in Sierra Leone and the Gold Coast in 1826–28, and from 1830 to 1844 he was chief administrator
- Maclean, Norman (American author and teacher)
Montana: Cultural life: …Kittredge, Rick Bass, Deirdre McNamer, Norman Maclean, Richard Hugo, David Quammen, Jim Harrison, Thomas McGuane, and James Welch.
- Maclear’s Beacon (stone-cairn beacon, South Africa)
Table Mountain: The highest point is Maclear’s Beacon (3,563 feet), which is named for a stone-cairn trigonometrical beacon placed on the northeastern face by Sir Thomas Maclear in the 19th century.
- MacLeary, Donald (Scottish dancer)
Donald MacLeary is a Scottish premier danseur noted for his strong finesse and natural romanticism. MacLeary was trained at the Royal Ballet School, London, and joined the company in 1954. He was promoted in the next year to soloist, becoming in 1959 the youngest premier danseur of the Royal
- MacLeary, Donald Whyte (Scottish dancer)
Donald MacLeary is a Scottish premier danseur noted for his strong finesse and natural romanticism. MacLeary was trained at the Royal Ballet School, London, and joined the company in 1954. He was promoted in the next year to soloist, becoming in 1959 the youngest premier danseur of the Royal
- Macleay, Alexander (Australian naturalist and diplomat)
museum: The spread of the European model: …an amateur naturalist and diplomat, Alexander Macleay, was responsible for the initiatives that led to the opening in 1829 of what was to become the Australian Museum in Sydney.
- Macleaya (plant)
poppy: Other poppies: …to southwestern North America; the plume poppies, members of the Asian genus Macleaya, grown for their interestingly lobed giant leaves and 2-metre- (6.6-foot-) tall flower spikes; plants of the genus Bocconia, mild-climate woody shrubs native to tropical America, prized for their large cut leaves; the snow poppy (Eomecon chionantha), a…
- MacLeish, Archibald (American author, educator, and public official)
Archibald MacLeish was an American poet, playwright, teacher, and public official whose concern for liberal democracy figured in much of his work, although his most memorable lyrics are of a more private nature. MacLeish attended Yale University, where he was active in literature and football. He
- MacLennan, Hugh (Canadian author)
Hugh MacLennan was a Canadian novelist and essayist whose books offer an incisive social and psychological critique of modern Canadian life. A Rhodes scholar at Oxford, MacLennan received a Ph.D. from Princeton (1935) and taught Latin and history at Lower Canada College, Montreal (1935–45). He was
- MacLeod, Alistair (Canadian author and educator)
Alistair MacLeod was a Canadian author renowned for his mastery of the short-story genre. MacLeod’s parents were natives of Cape Breton Island in northeastern Nova Scotia, and, when MacLeod was 10 years old, he and his family returned there. He worked as a miner and a logger before earning a
- MacLeod, Colin M. (American biologist)
Maclyn McCarty: …who, with Oswald Avery and Colin M. MacLeod, provided the first experimental evidence that the genetic material of living cells is composed of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA).
- MacLeod, Gavin (American actor)
The Mary Tyler Moore Show: …gruff boss; Murray Slaughter (Gavin MacLeod), the pessimistic copywriter; Ted Baxter (Ted Knight), the haughty, shallow anchorman; and (from 1973 to 1977) Sue Ann Nivens (Betty White), the man-chasing host of WJM’s “Happy Homemaker” segment. Rhoda Morgenstern (Valerie Harper), Mary’s best friend, and Phyllis Lindstrom (Cloris Leachman), Mary’s superficial…
- MacLeod, George (Scottish minister)
Iona Community: …was founded in 1938 by George MacLeod.
- Macleod, J.J.R. (Scottish physiologist)
J.J.R. Macleod was a Scottish physiologist noted as a teacher and for his work on carbohydrate metabolism. Together with Sir Frederick Banting, with whom he shared the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1923, and Charles H. Best, he achieved renown as one of the discoverers of insulin.
- MacLeod, John Alexander Joseph (Canadian author and educator)
Alistair MacLeod was a Canadian author renowned for his mastery of the short-story genre. MacLeod’s parents were natives of Cape Breton Island in northeastern Nova Scotia, and, when MacLeod was 10 years old, he and his family returned there. He worked as a miner and a logger before earning a
- MacLeod, John James Rickard (Scottish physiologist)
J.J.R. Macleod was a Scottish physiologist noted as a teacher and for his work on carbohydrate metabolism. Together with Sir Frederick Banting, with whom he shared the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1923, and Charles H. Best, he achieved renown as one of the discoverers of insulin.
- MacLeod, Margaretha Geertruida (Dutch dancer and spy)
Mata Hari was a Dutch dancer and courtesan whose name has become a synonym for the seductive female spy. She was shot by the French on charges of spying for Germany during World War I. The nature and extent of her espionage activities remain uncertain, and her guilt is widely contested. Margaretha
- Macleod, Mary (Scottish poet)
Mary Macleod was a Scottish Gaelic poet who is a major representative of the emergent 17th-century poetical school, which gradually supplanted the classical Gaelic bards. Macleod’s poetry is written in simple, natural rhythms and incorporates much of the imagery of the bardic poets. It mainly deals
- Macleod, Norman (Scottish minister)
Norman Macleod was an influential liberal Presbyterian minister of the Church of Scotland who took advantage of the controversy over church reform during 1833–43 to implement policies advocated by the Free Church of Scotland (which seceded in 1843) while yet remaining within the mother church. He
- MacLiammóir, Micheál (actor, scenic designer, and playwright)
Micheál MacLiammóir was an English-born actor, scenic designer, and playwright whose nearly 300 productions in Gaelic and English at the Gate Theatre in Dublin enriched the Irish Renaissance by internationalizing the generally parochial Irish theatre. Willmore made his debut on the London stage in
- MacLise, Angus (American musician)
the Velvet Underground: July 18, 1988, Ibiza, Spain), Angus MacLise, and Doug Yule.
- Maclise, Daniel (Irish painter)
Daniel Maclise was an Irish historical painter whose fame rests chiefly on a series of lithograph portraits of contemporary celebrities and on two vast frescoes that he painted in the Royal Gallery in the House of Lords. At the age of 16 he left the employ of a local bank to enter the Cork school
- Maclou (Welsh monk)
Saint-Malo: Saint-Malo was named for Maclou, or Malo, a Welsh monk who fled to Brittany, making his headquarters on the island, in the 6th century and probably became the first bishop of Aleth (Saint-Servan). The island was not substantially inhabited until the 8th century, when the population of the surrounding…
- Maclura pomifera (tree)
Osage orange, (Maclura pomifera), thorny tree or shrub native to the south-central United States, the only species of its genus in the family Moraceae. The Osage orange is often trained as a hedge; when planted in rows along a boundary, it forms an effective spiny barrier. The tree also serves as a
- Maclure, William (American geologist)
New Harmony: He was aided by William Maclure, a Scottish-born geologist, businessman, and philanthropist who was a proponent of Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi’s pedagogical methods and sought to establish them at the community. Maclure agreed to finance the schools, recruiting several dozen distinguished scholars and educators (the so-called “boatload of knowledge”) and…
- Maclurites (fossil snail genus)
Maclurites, extinct genus of Ordovician gastropods (snails) found as fossils and useful for stratigraphic correlations (the Ordovician Period lasted from about 488 million to 444 million years ago). The shell is distinctively coiled and easily recognized. Maclurites also had an operculum, or second
- MacMahon, Marie-Edme-Patrice-Maurice, comte de (president of France)
Patrice de Mac-Mahon was a marshal of France and the second president of the Third French Republic. During his presidency, the Third Republic took shape, the new constitutional laws of 1875 were adopted, and important precedents were established affecting the relationship between executive and
- Macmillan & Co. (British publishing house)
Macmillan Publishers Ltd., British publishing house that is one of the largest in the world, producing textbooks, works of science and literature, and high-quality periodicals. It was founded in 1843 as a bookstore by Daniel Macmillan (b. Sept. 13, 1813, Isle of Arran, Buteshire, Scot.—d. June 27,
- Macmillan of Ovenden, Maurice Harold Macmillan, 1st Earl of Stockton, Viscount (prime minister of United Kingdom)
Harold Macmillan was a British politician who was prime minister from January 1957 to October 1963. The son of an American-born mother and the grandson of a founder of the London publishing house of Macmillan & Co., he was educated at Balliol College, Oxford. He distinguished himself in combat
- Macmillan Publishers Ltd. (British publishing house)
Macmillan Publishers Ltd., British publishing house that is one of the largest in the world, producing textbooks, works of science and literature, and high-quality periodicals. It was founded in 1843 as a bookstore by Daniel Macmillan (b. Sept. 13, 1813, Isle of Arran, Buteshire, Scot.—d. June 27,
- MacMillan, Alexander (Scottish publisher)
Macmillan Publishers Ltd.: ) and his brother Alexander Macmillan (b. Oct. 3, 1818, Irvine, Ayrshire, Scot.—d. Jan. 26, 1896, London, Eng.?).
- MacMillan, Daniel (Scottish publisher)
Macmillan Publishers Ltd.: …1843 as a bookstore by Daniel Macmillan (b. Sept. 13, 1813, Isle of Arran, Buteshire, Scot.—d. June 27, 1857, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, Eng.) and his brother Alexander Macmillan (b. Oct. 3, 1818, Irvine, Ayrshire, Scot.—d. Jan. 26, 1896, London, Eng.?).
- MacMillan, David W.C. (Scottish-born chemist)
David W.C. MacMillan is a Scottish-American organic chemist who developed asymmetric organocatalysis, in which a small, organic, carbon-based molecule is used as a catalyst to drive the production of a specific enantiomer (one form of a molecule that has two possible forms as mirror images of one
- MacMillan, David William Cross (Scottish-born chemist)
David W.C. MacMillan is a Scottish-American organic chemist who developed asymmetric organocatalysis, in which a small, organic, carbon-based molecule is used as a catalyst to drive the production of a specific enantiomer (one form of a molecule that has two possible forms as mirror images of one
- Macmillan, Harold (prime minister of United Kingdom)
Harold Macmillan was a British politician who was prime minister from January 1957 to October 1963. The son of an American-born mother and the grandson of a founder of the London publishing house of Macmillan & Co., he was educated at Balliol College, Oxford. He distinguished himself in combat
- Macmillan, John (Scottish minister)
Cameronian: …left them, but in 1706 John Macmillan became their minister and carried out an active itinerant ministry. The name Macmillanite came to supersede Cameronian. Under his leadership Macmillanites set up a presbytery in 1743 at Braehead, called the Reformed Presbytery. They grew in Scotland and had considerable effect on Scottish…
- Macmillan, Kirkpatrick (Scottish inventor)
bicycle: Treadles and pedals: powered velocipedes: Kirkpatrick Macmillan, a blacksmith of Dumfriesshire, is most often associated with these. He is said to have traveled 40 miles (64 km) to Glasgow in 1842, although documentation is problematic. Gavin Dalzell of Lesmahagow probably built a similar two-wheeled machine in the mid-1840s and is…
- Macmillan, Sir Frederick (British publisher)
history of publishing: Price regulation: …of Frederick (later Sir Frederick) Macmillan. The principle has since been generally adopted, although only to a limited extent in the United States. At roughly the same time, the founding of the Society of Authors (1884) in England and the Authors’ League (1912) in the United States helped to standardize…
- MacMillan, Sir Kenneth (British choreographer)
Sir Kenneth MacMillan was a British ballet choreographer who created more than 40 ballets during his career and helped revive the tradition of full-length ballets in Britain. In 1945 MacMillan was awarded a scholarship to Sadler’s Wells Ballet School in London and one year later made his debut in
- Macmillanite (Scottish religious group)
Cameronian, any of the Scottish Covenanters who followed Richard Cameron in adhering to the perpetual obligation of the two Scottish covenants of 1638 and 1643 as set out in the Queensferry Paper (1680), pledging maintenance of the chosen form of church government and worship. After Cameron’s
- MacMurchada, Diarmaid (king of Ireland)
Dermot Macmurrough was an Irish king of Leinster whose appeal to the English for help in settling an internal dispute led to the Anglo-Norman invasion and conquest of Ireland by England. After succeeding to the throne of his father, Enna, in 1126, Dermot faced a number of rivals who disputed his
- MacMurray, Fred (American actor)
Fred MacMurray was an American film and television actor. The son of a professional violinist, MacMurray learned a number of musical instruments, including violin, baritone horn, and saxophone, and in 1926 began a career as saxophonist-singer-comedian in dance bands and vaudeville, chiefly in
- MacMurray, Frederick Martin (American actor)
Fred MacMurray was an American film and television actor. The son of a professional violinist, MacMurray learned a number of musical instruments, including violin, baritone horn, and saxophone, and in 1926 began a career as saxophonist-singer-comedian in dance bands and vaudeville, chiefly in
- MacNab, The (painting by Raeburn)
Sir Henry Raeburn: 1794–95), which foreshadowed The MacNab (c. 1803–13), in which tonalities became darker and lighting more contrasted. In 1812 he was elected president of the Edinburgh Society of Artists, becoming a Royal Academician in 1815. He was knighted in 1822 and shortly thereafter was appointed His Majesty’s Limner for Scotland.
- Macnaghten, Sir William Hay, Baronet (British diplomat)
Sir William Hay Macnaghten, Baronet was a British interventionist agent in Afghanistan during the First Anglo-Afghan War (1839–42). He was created a baronet in 1840. Macnaghten went to India in 1809, where he served as an administrator and a diplomat in Madras and Bengal, acquired a knowledge of
- Macnamara, Jean (Australian scientist)
polio: The age of the vaccine: researchers, Frank Macfarlane Burnet and Jean Macnamara, using immunologic techniques, were able to identify the different serotypes of the poliovirus. (Burnet was to receive a Nobel Prize in 1960.)
- MacNeice, Louis (British poet)
Louis MacNeice was a British poet and playwright, a member, with W.H. Auden, C. Day-Lewis, and Stephen Spender, of a group whose low-keyed, unpoetic, socially committed, and topical verse was the “new poetry” of the 1930s. After studying at the University of Oxford (1926–30), MacNeice became a
- MacNeil, Hermon A. (American sculptor)
Augusta Savage: The American sculptor Hermon A. MacNeil was the only member of the committee to denounce the decision, and he invited Savage to study with him in an attempt to make amends. Also in 1923 Savage married for the third and final time, but her husband, Robert L. Poston,…
- MacNeil, Robert (American journalist)
Jim Lehrer: In 1973 Lehrer paired with Robert MacNeil to provide live coverage of congressional hearings on the Watergate scandal for PBS. Their successful partnership was renewed when, in 1975, Lehrer became a correspondent for the Robert MacNeil Report on WNET in New York City. Lehrer’s role expanded, and the show was…
- MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour, The (American television program)
Charlayne Hunter-Gault: …program grew into the 60-minute MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour in 1983, she became its national correspondent and reported on topics that included racism, Vietnam veterans, life under apartheid, drug abuse, and human rights issues. In 1997 Hunter-Gault left PBS to become the Africa bureau chief for National Public Radio (NPR), and in…
- MacNeil/Lehrer Report (American television program)
Charlayne Hunter-Gault: …program grew into the 60-minute MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour in 1983, she became its national correspondent and reported on topics that included racism, Vietnam veterans, life under apartheid, drug abuse, and human rights issues. In 1997 Hunter-Gault left PBS to become the Africa bureau chief for National Public Radio (NPR), and in…
- MacNeill, Eoin (Irish political leader)
Easter Rising: Eoin MacNeill, the leader of the Irish Volunteers, therefore canceled mobilization orders for the insurgents, but Pearse and Clarke went ahead with about 1,560 Irish Volunteers and a 200-man contingent of the Citizen Army. On April 24 their forces seized the Dublin General Post Office…
- MacNeish’s conjecture (mathematics)
combinatorics: Orthogonal Latin squares: MacNeish’s conjecture, if true, would imply the truth of Euler’s but not conversely. The U.S. mathematician E.T. Parker in 1958 disproved the conjecture of MacNeish. This left open the question of Euler’s conjecture. Bose and the Indian mathematician S.S. Shrikhande in 1959–60 obtained the first…
- MacNelly, Jeff (American cartoonist)
Jeff MacNelly was an American cartoonist best known for his widely syndicated comic strip Shoe (1977), in which all the characters were birds. MacNelly attended the University of North Carolina, but he dropped out after four years. He worked for the Richmond News Leader from 1970 to 1982 and for
- MacNelly, Jeffrey Kenneth (American cartoonist)
Jeff MacNelly was an American cartoonist best known for his widely syndicated comic strip Shoe (1977), in which all the characters were birds. MacNelly attended the University of North Carolina, but he dropped out after four years. He worked for the Richmond News Leader from 1970 to 1982 and for
- Macocha Abyss (gorge, Czech Republic)
Macocha Gorge, gorge in Jihomoravský kraj (region), Czech Republic. It is the best-known and most frequently visited feature in the Moravian Karst region and contains a labyrinth of caves and galleries and a number of magnificent stalagmites and stalactites. The gorge reaches a maximum depth of 420
- Macocha Gorge (gorge, Czech Republic)
Macocha Gorge, gorge in Jihomoravský kraj (region), Czech Republic. It is the best-known and most frequently visited feature in the Moravian Karst region and contains a labyrinth of caves and galleries and a number of magnificent stalagmites and stalactites. The gorge reaches a maximum depth of 420
- Macodes petola (plant)
jewel orchid: marmorata, Ludisia discolor, and Macodes petola are found in Southeast Asia and the Pacific and feature spikes of small white flowers. These species have wide green or brownish green leaves with red or gold veins borne near the base of the plant.
- Macomb (Illinois, United States)
Macomb, city, seat (1830) of McDonough county, western Illinois, U.S. It lies along the East Fork La Moine River, about 65 miles (105 km) southwest of Peoria. Settled in 1829 by John Baker, a Baptist minister, and originally called Washington, it was renamed the following year for General Alexander
- Macomb, Alexander (United States general)
Macomb: …the following year for General Alexander Macomb, an officer in the War of 1812. The city is the seat of Western Illinois University (founded 1899). The local economy is based on the university, light manufacturing (pottery, porcelain products, and roller bearings), and agriculture (corn [maize] and soybeans). Popular local events…
- Macomber Affair, The (film by Korda [1947])
Zoltan Korda: …then directed Gregory Peck in The Macomber Affair (1947), a tense drama about a love triangle that ends in murder. Although a number of changes were made to satisfy censors, it remains one of the better screen adaptations of an Ernest Hemingway story. Also notable is the suspenseful A Woman’s…
- Macomber, Mary Lizzie (American artist)
Mary Lizzie Macomber was an American artist remembered for her highly symbolic, dreamlike paintings. Macomber studied drawing with a local artist from about 1880 to 1883, then at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston for a year, until ill health cut short her studies. After her recovery
- Macon (Georgia, United States)
Macon, city, seat (1823) of Bibb county, central Georgia, U.S., on the Ocmulgee River at the fall line. Its incorporated area extends into Jones county to the northeast. The original settlement, Newtown, developed around Fort Hawkins (1806). In 1822 a town was laid out across the river and named
- Mâcon (France)
Mâcon, town, Saône-et-Loire département, Burgundy région, east-central France, north of Lyon. On the right bank of the Saône River, it is skirted by France’s main highway, the Autoroute du Sud, and by the Mâcon-Geneva highway, the principal route from the Loire region to Geneva. It is also a
- Macon (county, Alabama, United States)
Tuskegee syphilis study: …were all impoverished sharecroppers from Macon county. The original study was scheduled to last only six to nine months.
- Mâcon, Council of (Christianity)
church year: Advent: …other Frankish churches by the Council of Mâcon in 581.
- Macon, Dave (American musician)
Dave Macon was a U.S. country music singer and banjo player. He grew up in Nashville, where his parents ran a hotel that catered to traveling performers. He was in the mule business for 20 years; after the trucking industry put him out of business, he became a professional musician. Performing as
- Macon, David Harrison (American musician)
Dave Macon was a U.S. country music singer and banjo player. He grew up in Nashville, where his parents ran a hotel that catered to traveling performers. He was in the mule business for 20 years; after the trucking industry put him out of business, he became a professional musician. Performing as
- Macon, Nathaniel (American politician)
Nathaniel Macon was a U.S. Congressional leader for 37 years, remembered chiefly for his negative views on almost every issue of the day, particularly those concerned with centralizing the government. Yet his integrity and absence of selfish motives served to strengthen his influence and to make
- Maçon, Robert Le (chancellor of France)
Robert Le Maçon was the chancellor of France, a leading adviser of Charles VII of France, and a supporter of Joan of Arc. After being ennobled in 1401, Le Maçon was a counselor to Louis II, duke of Anjou and titular king of Naples, from 1407. Appointed chancellor (1414) to Queen Isabella, wife of
- Macon, Uncle Dave (American musician)
Dave Macon was a U.S. country music singer and banjo player. He grew up in Nashville, where his parents ran a hotel that catered to traveling performers. He was in the mule business for 20 years; after the trucking industry put him out of business, he became a professional musician. Performing as
- Maconde (people)
Makonde, Bantu-speaking people living in northeastern Mozambique and southeastern Tanzania. Their economy rests primarily on swidden (slash-and-burn) agriculture, supplemented by hunting; corn (maize), sorghum, and cassava are the major crops. Many Makonde have migrated to other parts of the East
- Maconochie, Alexander (British penologist)
prison: Emergence of the penitentiary: Alexander Maconochie at Norfolk Island, an English penal colony east of Australia. Instead of serving fixed sentences, prisoners were required to earn credits, or “marks,” in amounts proportional to the seriousness of their offenses. Credits were accumulated through good conduct, hard work, and study, and…
- Macoraba (Saudi Arabia)
Mecca, city, western Saudi Arabia, located in the Ṣirāt Mountains, inland from the Red Sea coast. It is the holiest of Muslim cities. Muhammad, the founder of Islam, was born in Mecca, and it is toward this religious centre that Muslims turn five times daily in prayer (see qiblah). All devout and
- macOS (operating system)
macOS, operating system (OS) developed by the American computer company Apple Inc. The OS was introduced in 1984 to run the company’s Macintosh line of personal computers (PCs). The Macintosh heralded the era of graphical user interface (GUI) systems, and it inspired Microsoft Corporation to
- MacPaint (computer program)
graphic design: The digital revolution: …Macintosh computer, such as the MacPaint™ program by computer programmer Bill Atkinson and graphic designer Susan Kare, had a revolutionary human interface. Tool icons controlled by a mouse or graphics tablet enabled designers and artists to use computer graphics in an intuitive manner. The Postscript™ page-description language from Adobe Systems,…
- Macphail, Agnes Campbell (Canadian politician)
Agnes Campbell Macphail was a Canadian politician. Originally a schoolteacher, she entered politics to represent the farmers in her region. In 1921, the first year women could vote in national elections in Canada, she was elected to the Canadian House of Commons as its first female member; she
- MacPherson (Ontario, Canada)
Kapuskasing, town, Cochrane district, east-central Ontario, Canada. It lies along the Kapuskasing River. Known as MacPherson until 1917, when it received its present Indian name, the town originated in 1914 as a station on the National Transcontinental line (now the Canadian National Railway) 80
- MacPherson v. Buick Motor Company (law case)
Benjamin Nathan Cardozo: In MacPherson v. Buick Motor Company (1916), Cardozo announced a doctrine that was later adopted elsewhere in the United States and Great Britain: an implied warranty of safety exists between a manufacturer and a private purchaser, despite intermediate ownership of the product by a retail dealer.…
- Macpherson, James (Scottish poet)
James Macpherson was a Scottish poet whose initiation of the Ossianic controversy has obscured his genuine contributions to Gaelic studies. Macpherson’s first book of poems, The Highlander (1758), was undistinguished; but after collecting Gaelic manuscripts and having orally transmitted Gaelic
- Macpherson, Jay (Canadian poet)
Jay Macpherson was an English-born Canadian lyric poet whose work, often classed as part of the “mythopoeic school,” expressed serious religious and philosophical themes in symbolic verse that was often lyrical or comic. Macpherson immigrated with part of her family to Canada in 1940. She received
- Macpherson, Jean Jay (Canadian poet)
Jay Macpherson was an English-born Canadian lyric poet whose work, often classed as part of the “mythopoeic school,” expressed serious religious and philosophical themes in symbolic verse that was often lyrical or comic. Macpherson immigrated with part of her family to Canada in 1940. She received
- Macpherson, Sir David (Canadian politician and railroad builder)
Sir David Macpherson was a Scottish-born politician and railway builder who served as the Canadian minister of the interior from 1883 to 1885. Macpherson emigrated in 1835 from Scotland to Montreal, where he amassed a large fortune in shipping. He moved to Toronto in 1853 and obtained a contract to
- Macpherson, Sir David Lewis (Canadian politician and railroad builder)
Sir David Macpherson was a Scottish-born politician and railway builder who served as the Canadian minister of the interior from 1883 to 1885. Macpherson emigrated in 1835 from Scotland to Montreal, where he amassed a large fortune in shipping. He moved to Toronto in 1853 and obtained a contract to