- McGwire, Mark (American baseball player)
Mark McGwire is an American professional baseball player, considered one of the most powerful hitters in the history of the game. In 1998 he set a major league record for most home runs in a season (70), breaking Roger Maris’s mark of 61. See Researcher’s Note: Baseball’s problematic single-season
- McGwire, Mark David (American baseball player)
Mark McGwire is an American professional baseball player, considered one of the most powerful hitters in the history of the game. In 1998 he set a major league record for most home runs in a season (70), breaking Roger Maris’s mark of 61. See Researcher’s Note: Baseball’s problematic single-season
- McHale’s Navy (American television program)
Sidney Lanfield: Television work: …work was for Wagon Train, McHale’s Navy, and The Addams Family; for each of the latter two programs, he directed some 50 episodes. Lanfield retired from directing in 1967.
- McHale, Kevin (American basketball player and executive)
Boston Celtics: …their college days), Robert Parish, Kevin McHale, and Dennis Johnson that advanced to the NBA finals five times in the 1980s and won championships in 1980–81, 1983–84, and 1985–86.
- McHarg, Ian (American landscape architect)
GIS: … (1967), the American landscape architect Ian McHarg described the use of map overlays as a tool for urban and environmental planning. This system of overlays is a crucial element of GIS, which uses digital map layers rather than the transparent plastic sheets of McHarg’s day.
- MCHC (pathology)
blood disease: Anemia: …of this is hemoglobin (mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, or MCHC, normally is 32 to 36 percent). If determined accurately, the MCV and the MCHC are useful indexes of the nature of an anemia. Accurate diagnosis is essential before treatment is attempted because, just as the causes differ widely, the…
- McHenry, Fort (fort, Baltimore, Maryland, United States)
Fort McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine: …Shrine, site of the star-shaped fort that successfully defended Baltimore, Md., U.S., from a British attack during the War of 1812. This event was the inspiration for Francis Scott Key’s poem “The Star-Spangled Banner.”
- McHenry, Robert (American author and editor)
Robert McHenry is an American encyclopaedist, editor, and author who was vice president and editor in chief of Encyclopædia Britannica from 1992 to 1997, during its difficult transition from a print product sold door-to-door to an electronic database delivered on the Internet. McHenry was educated
- McHenry, Robert Dale (American author and editor)
Robert McHenry is an American encyclopaedist, editor, and author who was vice president and editor in chief of Encyclopædia Britannica from 1992 to 1997, during its difficult transition from a print product sold door-to-door to an electronic database delivered on the Internet. McHenry was educated
- Mchinji (town, Malawi)
Mchinji, town in west-central Malawi. The town was originally a settlement around the colonial defense post of Fort Manning and now serves as an agricultural centre and a customs and immigration station on the Zambia border. The district in which it is situated consists of undulating grassland
- MCHR (American organization)
Medical Committee for Human Rights (MCHR), group of health care activists whose work in the late 1960s and early 1970s drew attention to inequities in health care in the United States. The MCHR was a part of the larger civil rights movement in the United States. It was formed in the summer of 1964,
- McHugh, James Francis (American songwriter)
Jimmy McHugh was a U.S. song composer. McHugh became a Tin Pan Alley song plugger and began writing songs for Broadway and Cotton Club revues. His extensive work for Broadway and Hollywood included collaborations with Frank Loesser, Johnny Mercer, and especially Dorothy Fields, with whom he wrote
- McHugh, Jimmy (American songwriter)
Jimmy McHugh was a U.S. song composer. McHugh became a Tin Pan Alley song plugger and began writing songs for Broadway and Cotton Club revues. His extensive work for Broadway and Hollywood included collaborations with Frank Loesser, Johnny Mercer, and especially Dorothy Fields, with whom he wrote
- Mchunu, Sipho (South African musician)
Johnny Clegg: …subsequently developed a friendship with Sipho Mchunu, a Zulu migrant worker and street musician in Johannesburg. From Mchunu, Clegg learned the Zulu language and traditional music, as well as the vibrant dance styles that later became a regular feature of his performances. Clegg and Mchunu performed as a duo for…
- MCI (pathology)
Alzheimer disease: Stages of the disease: …stages of Alzheimer disease: preclinical, mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and Alzheimer dementia. For clinical diagnosis the two most relevant stages are MCI and dementia. Recognition of the preclinical stage acknowledges that the Alzheimer disease process begins before symptoms are apparent and anticipates advances in diagnostic testing that may eventually enable…
- MCI Communications Corporation (American company)
Vinton Cerf: …become a vice president at MCI Communications Corporation (WorldCom, Inc., from 1998 to 2003). While at MCI he led the effort to develop and deploy MCI Mail, the first commercial e-mail service that was connected to the Internet. In 1986 Cerf became a vice president at the Corporation for National…
- McIlhenny’s four-eyed opossum (marsupial)
four-eyed opossum: McIlhenny’s four-eyed opossum (P. mcilhennyi) is restricted to the western Amazon basin of Peru and Brazil and occurs together with the gray four-eyed opossum. The southeastern four-eyed opossum (P. frenatus) is known from southeastern Brazil south to Paraguay and Argentina. Olrog’s four-eyed opossum (P. olrogi)…
- McIlhenny’s four-eyed opossum (marsupial)
four-eyed opossum: McIlhenny’s four-eyed opossum (P. mcilhennyi) is restricted to the western Amazon basin of Peru and Brazil and occurs together with the gray four-eyed opossum. The southeastern four-eyed opossum (P. frenatus) is known from southeastern Brazil south to Paraguay and Argentina. Olrog’s four-eyed opossum (P. olrogi)…
- McIlroy, Rory (Northern Irish golfer)
Rory McIlroy Northern Irish professional golfer whose meteoric rise made headlines in the sport. By age 23 he had already won two of golf’s four major championships—the U.S. Open in 2011 and the Professional Golfers’ Association of America (PGA) Championship in 2012—and risen to the rank of number
- McInnes, Colin (British author)
Colin MacInnes was a British novelist and essayist who, writing in the 1950s, was among the first observers to chronicle both the Black immigrant experience in England and the advent of the teenager and youth culture, most notably in his trilogy of London novels, City of Spades (1957), Absolute
- McInnes, Gavin (Canadian writer and political commentator)
Proud Boys: Gavin McInnes and creation of the Proud Boys: …Proud Boys were created by Gavin McInnes, a Canadian writer and provocateur who had cofounded the magazine Voice of Montreal (later VICE) in 1994. McInnes was the most visible face of VICE as it expanded from a “zine” chronicling Montreal music and street fashion to an international media presence. McInnes…
- McInnes, Thomas Robert Edward (Canadian writer)
Tom MacInnes was a Canadian writer whose works range from vigorous, slangy recollections of the Yukon gold rush, Lonesome Bar (1909), to a translation of and commentary on Lao-tzu’s philosophy, irreverently titled The Teaching of the Old Boy (1927). His collected poems include Complete Poems (1923)
- McIntire, Samuel (American architect and craftsman)
Samuel McIntire was a U.S. architect and craftsman known as “the architect of Salem.” A versatile craftsman, McIntire designed and produced furniture and interior woodwork in addition to his domestic architecture, in which he was influenced by the American architect Charles Bulfinch. The house
- McIntosh, Robbie (British musician)
the Pretenders: Later members included guitarists Robbie McIntosh (b. October 25, 1957, Sutton, Surrey, England), Adam Seymour, and James Walbourne and bassists Malcolm Foster (b. January 13, 1956, Gosport, Hampshire, England) and Nick Wilkinson (b. 1971, Suffolk, England).
- McIntosh, Winston Hubert (Jamaican singer and songwriter)
Peter Tosh was a Jamaican singer-songwriter and a founding member of the Wailers, a popular reggae band of the 1960s and early 1970s. Tosh, Bob Marley, and Bunny Wailer formed the Wailers in 1963 in the Kingston ghetto of Trench Town. In addition to his rich baritone, Tosh brought to the Wailers
- McIntyre, Mount (mountain, New York, United States)
Adirondack Mountains: …metres), and Algonquin Peak of Mount McIntyre at 5,114 feet (1,559 metres). Although the peaks are primarily rounded in shape, several of the higher ones, including Whiteface Mountain (4,867 feet [1,483 metres]), reveal bare rock walls in vertical escarpments.
- McJunkin, George (American ranch foreman)
Native American: The Clovis and Folsom cultures: In 1908 George McJunkin, ranch foreman and former slave, reported that the bones of an extinct form of giant bison (Bison antiquus) were eroding out of a wash near Folsom, New Mexico; an ancient spear point was later found embedded in the animal’s skeleton. In 1929 teenager…
- McKagan, Duff (American musician)
Guns N’ Roses: …23, 1965, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England), Duff McKagan (original name Michael McKagan; b. February 5, 1964, Seattle, Washington, U.S.), Izzy Stradlin (original name Jeff Isbell; b. April 8, 1962, Lafayette, Indiana), Steve Adler (b. January 22, 1965, Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.), Matt Sorum (b. November 19, 1960, Long Beach, California, U.S.), Dizzy…
- McKagan, Michael (American musician)
Guns N’ Roses: …23, 1965, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England), Duff McKagan (original name Michael McKagan; b. February 5, 1964, Seattle, Washington, U.S.), Izzy Stradlin (original name Jeff Isbell; b. April 8, 1962, Lafayette, Indiana), Steve Adler (b. January 22, 1965, Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.), Matt Sorum (b. November 19, 1960, Long Beach, California, U.S.), Dizzy…
- McKane, Kathleen (British tennis player)
Kitty Godfree was a British tennis player, a dominant figure in women’s tennis in the 1920s. She won two singles titles at the All-England Championships at Wimbledon, five doubles titles in Grand Slam events, and five Olympic medals, including a gold in women’s doubles at the 1920 Olympics in
- McKay’s bunting (bird)
bunting: The whitest North American songbird, McKay’s bunting (P. hyperboreus), nests on the remote Bering Sea islands of St. Matthew and Hall.
- McKay, Adam (American director, producer, and writer)
Adam McKay is an American writer, director, producer, and occasional performer who forged a career as one of the most prominent and successful practitioners of modern comedy, appreciated for his finely tuned sense of the absurd and his taste for puncturing inflated egos. He is perhaps best known
- McKay, Claude (American writer)
Claude McKay was a Jamaican-born American poet and novelist who was one of the leading voices of the Harlem Renaissance. His book Home to Harlem (1928) was the most popular novel written by a Black American author to that time. Before moving to the United States in 1912, he wrote two volumes of
- McKay, David O (American religious leader)
David O. McKay was a U.S. religious leader, the ninth president (1951–70) of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons). He served as a missionary in Scotland (1897–99) and then returned to Utah to become instructor and principal (1899–1908) of the Weber State Academy, now Weber
- McKay, David Oman (American religious leader)
David O. McKay was a U.S. religious leader, the ninth president (1951–70) of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons). He served as a missionary in Scotland (1897–99) and then returned to Utah to become instructor and principal (1899–1908) of the Weber State Academy, now Weber
- McKay, David S. (American astrobiologist and geologist)
David S. McKay was an American astrobiologist and geologist best known for claiming to have found evidence of microscopic life on a Martian meteorite. McKay was raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma, the son of an accountant for an oil company. He received a bachelor’s degree (1958) in geology from Rice
- McKay, David Stewart (American astrobiologist and geologist)
David S. McKay was an American astrobiologist and geologist best known for claiming to have found evidence of microscopic life on a Martian meteorite. McKay was raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma, the son of an accountant for an oil company. He received a bachelor’s degree (1958) in geology from Rice
- McKay, Donald (American naval architect)
Donald McKay was a Canadian-born naval architect and builder of the largest and fastest of the clipper ships. After emigrating to New York City in 1827, he worked as an apprentice to the ship carpenter Isaac Webb. In 1845 he established a shipyard at East Boston, Mass.; there he designed and built
- McKay, Frederick (American dentist)
dentistry: Advances in dentistry in the 20th century: Frederick McKay, a young American dentist practicing in Colorado, observed a condition of mottling of his patients’ teeth, in which there was an almost total absence of decay. Following years of research, McKay and others were able to show that this was due to the…
- McKay, Heather (Australian athlete)
squash rackets: History: …American and Australian titles; and Heather McKay (née Blundell), the Australian who won the British women’s championship from 1961–62 to 1976–77, as well as other championships.
- McKay, Jim (American sportscaster and journalist)
Munich massacre: Massacre at Fürstenfeldbruck: …surrounded the airfield, and sportscaster Jim McKay, who was anchoring Olympic coverage for the U.S. network ABC, provided television viewers with preliminary updates. At midnight, a German official announced that all the hostages had been freed and all the terrorists had been killed, a report that proved to be tragically…
- McKaye, Ian (American musician)
Washington, D.C.: Music: …notably through the contributions of Ian McKaye, first as a member of Minor Threat and later as the driving force behind both the band Fugazi and Dishcord Records. Still another D.C. native who began his career in Washington but established himself elsewhere was Henry Rollins, vocalist for the seminal hardcore…
- McKean (atoll, Pacific Ocean)
Phoenix Islands: Rawaki (Phoenix), Manra (Sydney), McKean, Nikumaroro (Gardner), Birnie, Orona (Hull), Kanton (Canton), and Enderbury atolls. They have a total land area of approximately 11 square miles (29 square km). All are low, sandy atolls that were discovered in the 19th century by American whaling ships.
- McKean (county, Pennsylvania, United States)
McKean, county, northern Pennsylvania, U.S., bounded to the north by New York state. It consists of a mountainous region on the Allegheny Plateau that is drained largely by the Allegheny River and such tributaries as Kinzua, Marvin, Potato, and Allegheny Portage creeks. Parklands include Kinzua
- McKean, Dave (British illustrator)
Neil Gaiman: …time that he met artist Dave McKean, and the two collaborated on the graphic novel Violent Cases (1987). The work established them as rising stars in the comic world, and soon the two were noticed by publishers on both sides of the Atlantic. They submitted story and art treatments to…
- McKean, Michael (American actor)
Rob Reiner: Success as a film director: Michael McKean, who starred as the members of a dissipated heavy metal band. Reiner himself played Marty DiBergi, the director of the documentary. The stars improvised much of the dialogue, and their deadpan humour established the film as a cult classic. His next outing, Stand…
- McKeesport (Pennsylvania, United States)
McKeesport, city, Allegheny county, southwestern Pennsylvania, U.S. It is situated at the junction of the Monongahela and Youghiogheny rivers, 14 miles (23 km) southeast of Pittsburgh. First settled about 1769 by David McKee, a ferry operator, the town was laid out in 1795 by his son John. In 1794
- McKellar, Danica (American actress and author)
Danica McKellar is an American actress, mathematician, and author who first garnered attention for her role on the television series The Wonder Years (1988–93) and later promoted math education, especially for girls. From about age seven McKellar lived in Los Angeles, where she studied at the Diane
- McKellar, Don (Canadian actor and director)
Sarah Polley: …Planet of Junior Brown (1997), Don McKellar’s Last Night (1998), and David Cronenberg’s eXistenZ (1999). She seemed poised for stardom in the United States after her work in Doug Liman’s Go (1999) and Audrey Wells’s Guinevere (1999) earned her rave reviews and major industry buzz. Yet she eschewed mainstream fame…
- McKellen, Ian (British actor)
Ian McKellen is a British actor of great versatility, noted for his work with the Royal Shakespeare Company and for his eclectic filmography. McKellen attended St. Catharine’s College, Cambridge, where as a student actor he was often directed by John Barton, later of the Royal Shakespeare Company.
- McKellen, Sir Ian Murray (British actor)
Ian McKellen is a British actor of great versatility, noted for his work with the Royal Shakespeare Company and for his eclectic filmography. McKellen attended St. Catharine’s College, Cambridge, where as a student actor he was often directed by John Barton, later of the Royal Shakespeare Company.
- McKenna, Joseph (United States jurist)
Joseph McKenna was a U.S. Supreme Court justice from 1898 to 1925. McKenna grew up in California and was admitted to the state bar in 1865. A Republican, he served as Solano county district attorney (1866–70) and in the California state legislature (1875–76). Despite the prevailing anti-Roman
- McKenna, Reginald (British statesman)
Reginald McKenna was a British statesman who, as first lord of the Admiralty, initiated in 1909 a battleship construction program that gave Great Britain a considerable advantage over Germany in capital-ship strength at the beginning of World War I. In 1905, after serving for 10 years in the House
- McKenna, Siobhan (Irish actress)
Siobhan McKenna was a versatile Irish actress best known for her portrayals of such impassioned characters as Shaw’s Saint Joan and Pegeen Mike, the lusty innkeeper in John Millington Synge’s most famous play, The Playboy of the Western World. A member of an amateur Gaelic theatre group, McKenna
- McKenzie, Ben (American actor)
The O.C.: Ryan Atwood (played by Ben McKenzie) came from a dysfunctional, low-income family in Chino, California. When his mother kicked him out of the house, Ryan was taken in by Sandy and Kirsten Cohen (Peter Gallagher and Kelly Rowan, respectively), a wealthy couple with impressive careers and a teenage son,…
- McKenzie, Daniel P. (British geologist)
plate tectonics: Determination of plate thickness: …but along very similar lines, Dan P. McKenzie and Robert L. Parker of Britain and W. Jason Morgan of the United States resolved these issues. McKenzie and Parker showed with a geometric analysis that, if the moving slabs of crust were thick enough to be regarded as rigid and thus…
- McKenzie, Robert (British political scientist)
Robert McKenzie was a Canadian-born British political scientist and television commentator on electoral politics. In the latter role, McKenzie popularized to the British public the word psephology (the study of votes) and the idea of “swing” votes, using a device he called a “swingometer” to show
- McKenzie, Sir John (New Zealand statesman)
Sir John McKenzie was a New Zealand statesman who, as minister of lands (1891–1900), sponsored legislation that provided land and credit to small farmers and helped to break up large estates. McKenzie’s deep antagonism toward land monopolists was rooted in his boyhood in Scotland, where he
- McKenzie, Susan (American molecular biologist)
Susan L. Lindquist was an American molecular biologist who made key discoveries concerning protein folding and who was among the first to discover that in yeast, inherited traits can be passed to offspring via misfolded proteins known as prions. Lindquist received a bachelor’s degree (1971) in
- McKenzie, Thomasin (New Zealand actress)
Taika Waititi: …befriends a Jewish girl (Thomasin McKenzie) whom his mother (Scarlett Johansson) has hidden in the attic. The dark comedy was nominated for the Academy Award for best picture, and Waititi won the Oscar for best adapted screenplay. In addition, he directed the last episode of the first season of…
- McKenzie, Vashti Murphy (American bishop)
African Methodist Episcopal Church: …elected its first female bishop, Vashti Murphy McKenzie, in 2000. In 2012 the AME Church entered into full communion with the United Methodist Church and several other predominantly African American churches, including the African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church. The AME Church is Methodist in church government, and it holds a…
- McKeon, Emma (Australian swimmer)
Emma McKeon is the most successful Australian athlete in Olympic history, the winner of 11 medals. At the 2020 Games in Tokyo—which were postponed until 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic—she made history by becoming the first female swimmer and the first Australian to win seven medals at a
- McKeon, Emma Jennifer (Australian swimmer)
Emma McKeon is the most successful Australian athlete in Olympic history, the winner of 11 medals. At the 2020 Games in Tokyo—which were postponed until 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic—she made history by becoming the first female swimmer and the first Australian to win seven medals at a
- McKeon, Simon (Australian philanthropist and investment banker)
Simon McKeon is an Australian philanthropist and investment banker who was named Australian of the Year in 2011 in recognition of his involvement in a variety of charitable organizations. McKeon studied at the University of Melbourne, where he earned bachelor’s degrees in commerce (1976) and law
- McKeown, Ciaran (journalist and activist)
Betty Williams: …who, with Máiread Maguire and Ciaran McKeown, founded the Peace People, a grassroots movement dedicated to ending the sectarian strife in Northern Ireland. For her work, Williams shared with Maguire the 1976 Nobel Prize for Peace.
- McKernan, Ron (American musician)
Grateful Dead: …1947, San Francisco), keyboard player Ron (“Pigpen”) McKernan (b. September 8, 1945, San Bruno, California—d. March 8, 1973, San Francisco), bassist Phil Lesh (b. March 15, 1940, Berkeley, California), and drummer Bill Kreutzmann (also called Bill Sommers; b. May 7, 1946, Palo Alto, California). Later members included drummer Mickey Hart…
- McKibben, Bill (environmentalist)
Humility—How to Save the Planet: …to take on the challenges of our time.
- McKim, Charles Follen (American architect)
Charles Follen McKim was an American architect who was of primary importance in the American Neoclassical revival. McKim was educated at Harvard University and at the École des Beaux-Arts (“School of Fine Arts”) in Paris. He was trained as a draftsman by the architect Henry Hobson Richardson while
- McKim, Mead, & White (American architectural company)
Baths of Caracalla: …20th century the architectural firm McKim, Mead & White incorporated elements from the baths—especially from the ceilings—into their design of the first Pennsylvania Station in New York City (built 1910, demolished 1964).
- McKim, Ruby (American quilter)
Ruby McKim was one of the 20th century’s most innovative American quilt designers. Educated at the New York School of Fine and Applied Arts (now Parsons School of Design) in New York City, she later taught art classes for the Kansas City school system. Her first published quilt pattern, for the
- McKimson, Robert (American animator)
Bugs Bunny: Robert McKimson drew the model sheet for the character, Freleng developed Bugs’s personality, Avery and Jones made further refinements, and Blanc infused him with his familiar wisecracking Brooklynese delivery. Embryonic versions of the character appeared in Warner cartoons as early as 1938, but not until…
- McKinley Tariff Act (United States [1890])
United States: The McKinley tariff: This was accomplished in the McKinley Tariff Act of October 1890, passed by Congress one month before the midterm elections of that year. The tariff was designed to appeal to the farmers because some agricultural products were added to the protected list. A few items, notably sugar, were placed on…
- McKinley, Ida (American first lady)
Ida McKinley was the American first lady (1897–1901), the wife of William McKinley, 25th president of the United States. Ida Saxton was the middle child of James A. Saxton, a wealthy banker and businessman, and Catherine Dewalt Saxton. After attending local public schools, she enrolled at several
- McKinley, John (United States jurist)
John McKinley was an American politician and associate justice of the United States Supreme Court (1837–52). After practicing law briefly in Kentucky, where he grew up, McKinley settled in Huntsville, Alabama, then a centre of planting and political interests, in 1818. In 1820 he was elected to the
- McKinley, Mount (mountain, Alaska, United States)
Denali, highest peak in North America. It is located near the centre of the Alaska Range, with two summits rising above the Denali Fault, in south-central Alaska, U.S. Denali’s official elevation figure of 20,310 feet (6,190 metres), established by the United States Geological Survey in September
- McKinley, William (president of United States)
William McKinley was the 25th president of the United States (1897–1901). Under McKinley’s leadership, the United States went to war against Spain in 1898 and thereby acquired a global empire, which included Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines. McKinley was the son of William McKinley, a manager
- McKinney (Texas, United States)
McKinney, city, seat (1848) of Collin county, northeastern Texas, U.S., near the East Fork of the Trinity River. Platted in 1848, it was named for Collin McKinney, one of the signers of the Texas Declaration of Independence, whose home, formerly 17 miles (27 km) north, was moved in 1936 to Finch
- McKinney, Cynthia (American politician)
Cynthia McKinney is an American politician who was a Democratic member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1993–2003, 2005–2007) and was the Green Party nominee for the 2008 U.S. presidential election. For coverage of the 2008 election, see United States Presidential Election of 2008. McKinney
- McKinney, Cynthia Ann (American politician)
Cynthia McKinney is an American politician who was a Democratic member of the U.S. House of Representatives (1993–2003, 2005–2007) and was the Green Party nominee for the 2008 U.S. presidential election. For coverage of the 2008 election, see United States Presidential Election of 2008. McKinney
- McKinney, William (American musician)
jazz: Other notables of the 1920s: Both Ellington and Henderson considered McKinney’s Cotton Pickers, a Detroit-based band, their only serious rival. The distinctiveness of the Cotton Pickers’ work during the band’s heyday is attributable primarily to the remarkable leadership and the composing and arranging talents of John Nesbitt, whose work was mistakenly credited to Redman for…
- McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act (United States [1987])
homelessness: Helping the homeless: …to address homelessness was the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act of 1987. It provided basic services for the homeless, with an emphasis on emergency services. From the early 2000s the government focused on finding transitional or permanent housing for the homeless. It also funded programs aimed at preventing homelessness among youth.…
- McKinnon, Kate (American actress)
Kate McKinnon is an American actress and comedian known for her off-the-wall character work and spot-on impressions. She is best known for her time on the sketch comedy show Saturday Night Live (SNL; 1975– ), which she appeared on for a decade. Kathryn McKinnon Berthold was born and raised in Sea
- McKittrick Summit (mountain peak, California, United States)
Temblor Range: …3,500 feet (1,100 metres), with McKittrick Summit (4,332 feet [1,320 metres]) the highest. Oil fields lie to the east of the range, and to the west is Los Padres National Forest. Temblor Range lies adjacent to the San Andreas Fault. Early Spanish explorers are believed to have experienced an earthquake…
- McKnight, Sheldon (American publisher)
Detroit Free Press: Founded by Sheldon McKnight, The Democratic Free Press and Michigan Intelligencer was first published in 1831 when Detroit was a small frontier town. The first daily newspaper in Michigan, the Free Press championed statehood for the then territory and was one of the first American newspapers to…
- McKusick, Victor (American physician and genome researcher)
Victor McKusick was an American physician and genome researcher who pioneered the field of medical genetics. McKusick was raised on a dairy farm in Maine. He attended Tufts University (1940–43) in Medford, Mass., before transferring to Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (M.D., 1946) in
- McKusick, Victor Almon (American physician and genome researcher)
Victor McKusick was an American physician and genome researcher who pioneered the field of medical genetics. McKusick was raised on a dairy farm in Maine. He attended Tufts University (1940–43) in Medford, Mass., before transferring to Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (M.D., 1946) in
- McLachlan, Alexander (Canadian poet)
Alexander McLachlan was a Scottish-born poet, called by some the Burns of Canada for his Scots dialect poetry, much of which deals with the homesickness of Scots immigrants. McLachlan was the foremost among a number of such Scottish bards, whose themes of nostalgia for Scotland appear to be
- McLachlan, Sarah (Canadian singer and songwriter)
Sarah McLachlan is a Canadian singer and songwriter who was known for her introspective music. She cofounded (1997) and headlined Lilith Fair, a concert tour featuring female performers almost exclusively. McLachlan received classical training in guitar, piano, and voice. Rebelling against a
- McLachlin, Beverley (Canadian jurist)
Beverley McLachlin is a Canadian jurist who was the 17th chief justice of the Supreme Court of Canada (2000–17) and the first woman to hold the post. She had joined the court in 1989. McLachlin, who was raised on a farm in Alberta, studied at the University of Alberta, from which she earned a B.A.
- McLagan, Ian (British musician)
Rod Stewart: the band—also comprising Ronnie Lane, Ian McLagan, and Kenney Jones—played bluesy rock that appealed to Stewart’s long-standing interest in rhythm and blues. During the early 1970s the raucous Faces were among Britain’s most popular live performers, and their album A Nod’s as Good as a Wink…to a Blind Horse (1971)…
- McLaglen, Victor (American actor)
Gunga Din: …by Cary Grant), MacChesney (Victor McLaglen), and Ballantine (Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.)—in 19th-century colonial India. The sergeants are sent on an important mission to investigate an outpost that has had its telegraph lines cut. Among their group is an Indian water carrier named Gunga Din (Sam Jaffe), who dreams of…
- McLain, Denny (American baseball player)
Detroit Tigers: …Tigers team that featured pitchers Denny McLain (winner of the Cy Young Award and 31 games, the highest single-season win total in baseball since 1931) and Mickey Lolich, along with Kaline and sluggers Norm Cash and Willie Horton, won 103 games and ran away with the AL pennant before beating…
- McLane, Louis (United States public official)
The Rise of Andrew Jackson: The Bank Veto: …new secretary of the treasury, Louis McLane, who was positively disposed to the BUS, as was the new secretary of state, Edward Livingston. McLane even took the lead in trying to satisfy Jackson’s objections to the BUS with a compromise he worked out with Nicholas Biddle. Apprehensive that the bank’s…
- McLaren, Bruce (New Zealand automobile racer)
Bruce McLaren was a New Zealand-born automobile racing driver, the youngest to win an international Grand Prix contest for Formula I cars (the U.S. race in 1959, when he was 22), also noted as a designer of racing vehicles. From 1959 to 1965 McLaren drove for Charles Cooper, a British racing car
- McLaren, Dame Anne (English geneticist)
Dame Anne McLaren was an English geneticist who pioneered fundamental advances in mammalian genetics and embryology that contributed to a greater understanding of reproductive biology and paved the way for advances in in vitro fertilization and other fertility treatments. McLaren was raised in
- McLaren, Dame Anne Laura Dorinthea (English geneticist)
Dame Anne McLaren was an English geneticist who pioneered fundamental advances in mammalian genetics and embryology that contributed to a greater understanding of reproductive biology and paved the way for advances in in vitro fertilization and other fertility treatments. McLaren was raised in
- McLaren, Daniel (American clown)
Dan Rice was an American clown who was one of the most highly acclaimed clowns in the history of the circus. Rice was renowned for an act that included singing, dancing, witty banter with the audience, feats of strength, trick riding, and exhibitions of trained wild animals. He was a jockey as a
- McLaren, Jack (Australian author)
Australian literature: Nationalism and expansion: Jack McLaren in My Crowded Solitude (1926) was another who encountered timelessness for a time. And C.E.W. Bean found the same slow rhythms of experience out on the great Western plains (On the Wool Track [1910]) and down the Darling River (The Dreadnought of the…
- McLaren, Malcolm (British impresario and musician)
Malcolm McLaren was a British rock impresario and musician who, as the colourfully provocative manager of the punk band the Sex Pistols, helped birth punk culture. McLaren attended a number of art schools in England, where he was drawn to the subversive Marxist-rooted philosophy of the Situationist
- McLaren, Malcolm Robert Andrew (British impresario and musician)
Malcolm McLaren was a British rock impresario and musician who, as the colourfully provocative manager of the punk band the Sex Pistols, helped birth punk culture. McLaren attended a number of art schools in England, where he was drawn to the subversive Marxist-rooted philosophy of the Situationist