- rush-leaved strelitzia (plant)
Strelitziaceae: Genera and species: The rush-leaved strelitzia, or narrow-leaved bird-of-paradise, (S. juncea) has long needlelike leaves and is somewhat frost resistant.
- Rushan Range (mountain range, Tajikistan)
Pamirs: Physiography: …ranges of the Pamirs, called Rushan on the west and Bazar-dara, or Northern Alichur, on the east. Still farther south are the Southern Alichur Range and, to the west of the latter, the Shugnan Range. The extreme southwestern Pamirs are occupied by the Shakhdarin Range, composed of north-south (Ishkashim Range)…
- Rushcliffe (district, England, United Kingdom)
Rushcliffe, borough (district), administrative and historic county of Nottinghamshire, central England, immediately southeast of the city of Nottingham. Rushcliffe is a rural agricultural area of open rolling uplands (wolds) and flat plains. The wolds in the south rise to between 200 and 300 feet
- Rushdie, Salman (British-American writer)
Salman Rushdie is an Indian-born British-American writer whose allegorical novels examine historical and philosophical issues by means of surreal characters, brooding humor, and an effusive and melodramatic prose style. Because of his treatment of sensitive religious and political subjects,
- Rushdie, Sir Ahmed Salman (British-American writer)
Salman Rushdie is an Indian-born British-American writer whose allegorical novels examine historical and philosophical issues by means of surreal characters, brooding humor, and an effusive and melodramatic prose style. Because of his treatment of sensitive religious and political subjects,
- Rushes (novel by Rechy)
John Rechy: His other novels included Rushes (1979), Bodies and Souls (1983), Marilyn’s Daughter (1988), Our Lady of Babylon (1996), The Coming of the Night (1999), The Life and Adventures of Lyle Clemens (2003), After the Blue Hour (2017), and
- rushes (motion pictures)
motion-picture technology: Picture editing: Before a day’s work, or rushes, are viewed it is usual to synchronize those takes that were shot with dialogue or other major sounds. Principal sound is transferred from quarter-inch to sprocketed magnetic tape of the same gauge as the film (i.e., 16-mm or 35-mm) so that once the start…
- Rushing to Paradise (novel by Ballard)
J.G. Ballard: Rushing to Paradise (1994) concerns an environmentalist so rabidly committed to her cause that she becomes homicidal, and Cocaine Nights (1996) centres on an island community whose cultured lifestyle is supported by crime. Ballard deploys events of extraordinary violence in the plots of Super-Cannes (2000),…
- Rushing, James Andrew (American singer)
Jimmy Rushing was an American blues and jazz singer who was best known for performing with the Count Basie Orchestra. Rushing was born into a musical family in the early 1900s (sources differ on his birth year). He joined Count Basie’s first group in 1935, gaining exposure through many recordings,
- Rushing, Jimmy (American singer)
Jimmy Rushing was an American blues and jazz singer who was best known for performing with the Count Basie Orchestra. Rushing was born into a musical family in the early 1900s (sources differ on his birth year). He joined Count Basie’s first group in 1935, gaining exposure through many recordings,
- rushlight (lighting)
rushlight, stem of a rush, stripped of most of its tough outer fibre to expose the pith, which is then dipped in melted fat and used as a taper for illumination. The rushlight is dipped only once or a few times and remains too thin and soft to stand in a candlestick (many dippings produce a
- Rushmoor (district, England, United Kingdom)
Rushmoor, borough (district), administrative and historic county of Hampshire, southern England. Occupying part of the extreme northeastern corner of the county, Rushmoor is situated at the southern edge of the River Thames basin, and its rural areas are sandy heathland. The chalk uplands of the
- Rushmore (film by Anderson [1998])
Wes Anderson: Anderson and Wilson next wrote Rushmore (1998), which starred Jason Schwartzman as an indefatigable prep-school student and Bill Murray as his wealthy benefactor and sometime foe. Anderson’s third collaboration with Wilson, The Royal Tenenbaums (2001), was a darkly comic exploration of the dysfunctional adulthoods of a family of child
- Rushmore, Mount (mountain, South Dakota, United States)
Mount Rushmore National Memorial: …on the southeast side of Mount Rushmore. The mountain itself, at an elevation of 5,725 feet (1,745 metres), was named in 1885 for Charles E. Rushmore, a New York lawyer. The memorial, which covers 2 square miles (5 square km), was designated in 1925 and dedicated in 1927. The U.S.…
- Rushworth, John (English historian)
John Rushworth was an English historian whose Historical Collections of Private Passages of State, 7 vol. (1659–1701; 8 vol., 1721), covering the period from 1618 to 1649, remains a valuable source of information on events leading up to and during the English Civil Wars. Rushworth studied law,
- Rusicade (Algeria)
Skikda, town, Mediterranean Sea port, northeastern Algeria, situated on the Gulf of Stora. Founded by French Marshal Sylvain-Charles Valée in 1838 as the port of Constantine, it has an artificial harbour. Skikda occupies the site of ancient Rusicade, port of 4th-century Cirta, and has the largest
- Rusizi River (river, Africa)
Ruzizi River, river, southern outflow of Lake Kivu in east-central Africa along the Democratic Republic of the Congo–Rwanda–Burundi border. It emerges from the lake just east of Bukavu, Dem. Rep. of the Congo, and flows about 100 miles (160 km) generally south to Lake Tanganyika. There are gorges
- Rusk, David Dean (United States secretary of state)
Dean Rusk was the U.S. secretary of state during the John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson administrations who became a target of antiwar hostility as he consistently defended the United States’ participation in the Vietnam War. After graduating from Davidson College in 1931, Rusk earned his master’s
- Rusk, Dean (United States secretary of state)
Dean Rusk was the U.S. secretary of state during the John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson administrations who became a target of antiwar hostility as he consistently defended the United States’ participation in the Vietnam War. After graduating from Davidson College in 1931, Rusk earned his master’s
- Rusk, Howard (American physician)
Howard Rusk was an American physiatrist who is considered the founder of comprehensive rehabilitation medicine in the United States. Rusk earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Missouri (1923) and a medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania (1925). He trained as an internist in
- Rusk, Howard Archibald (American physician)
Howard Rusk was an American physiatrist who is considered the founder of comprehensive rehabilitation medicine in the United States. Rusk earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Missouri (1923) and a medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania (1925). He trained as an internist in
- Ruska, Ernst (German engineer)
Ernst Ruska was a German electrical engineer who invented the electron microscope. He was awarded half of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1986 (the other half was divided between Heinrich Rohrer and Gerd Binnig). Ruska studied at the Technical University of Munich during 1925–27 and then enrolled at
- Ruska, Ernst August Friedrich (German engineer)
Ernst Ruska was a German electrical engineer who invented the electron microscope. He was awarded half of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1986 (the other half was divided between Heinrich Rohrer and Gerd Binnig). Ruska studied at the Technical University of Munich during 1925–27 and then enrolled at
- Ruska, Kathleen Jean Mary (Australian author)
Oodgeroo Noonuccal was an Australian Aboriginal writer and political activist, considered the first of the modern-day Aboriginal protest writers. Her first volume of poetry, We Are Going (1964), is the first book by an Aboriginal woman to be published. Raised on Stradbroke Island (Minjerribah), off
- Ruskin, John (English writer and artist)
John Ruskin was an English critic of art, architecture, and society who was a gifted painter, a distinctive prose stylist, and an important example of the Victorian Sage, or Prophet: a writer of polemical prose who seeks to cause widespread cultural and social change. Ruskin was born into the
- Ruskyi (people)
Rusyn, any of several East Slavic peoples (modern-day Belarusians, Ukrainians, and Carpatho-Rusyns) and their languages. The name Rusyn is derived from Rus (Ruthenia), the name of the territory that they inhabited. The name Ruthenian derives from the Latin Ruthenus (singular), a term found in
- Ruslan and Ludmila (poem by Pushkin)
Ruslan and Lyudmila, romantic narrative poem by Aleksandr Pushkin, published in Russian in 1820 as Ruslan i Lyudmila. The mock-heroic folk epic was influenced by the style of Ludovico Ariosto and Voltaire. The hero of the poem, Ruslan, is modeled on the traditional Russian epic hero. He faces many
- Ruslan and Lyudmila (opera by Glinka)
Mikhail Glinka: …in 1842 his second opera, Ruslan and Lyudmila, was produced. The exotic subject and boldly original music of Ruslan won neither favour nor popular acclaim, although Franz Liszt was struck by the novelty of the music.
- Ruslan and Lyudmila (poem by Pushkin)
Ruslan and Lyudmila, romantic narrative poem by Aleksandr Pushkin, published in Russian in 1820 as Ruslan i Lyudmila. The mock-heroic folk epic was influenced by the style of Ludovico Ariosto and Voltaire. The hero of the poem, Ruslan, is modeled on the traditional Russian epic hero. He faces many
- Ruslan i Lyudmila (poem by Pushkin)
Ruslan and Lyudmila, romantic narrative poem by Aleksandr Pushkin, published in Russian in 1820 as Ruslan i Lyudmila. The mock-heroic folk epic was influenced by the style of Ludovico Ariosto and Voltaire. The hero of the poem, Ruslan, is modeled on the traditional Russian epic hero. He faces many
- Rusnak (people)
Rusyn, any of several East Slavic peoples (modern-day Belarusians, Ukrainians, and Carpatho-Rusyns) and their languages. The name Rusyn is derived from Rus (Ruthenia), the name of the territory that they inhabited. The name Ruthenian derives from the Latin Ruthenus (singular), a term found in
- Rusnok, Jiří (prime minister of Czech Republic)
Czech Republic: History of the Czech Republic: …and appointed former finance minister Jiří Rusnok to serve as prime minister in a caretaker capacity, pending the scheduling of early elections.
- Ruspina (Tunisia)
Monastir, city in eastern Tunisia. It lies at the tip of a small peninsula protruding into the Mediterranean Sea between the Gulf of Hammamet and the Bay of Al-Munastīr. The ruins of Ruspinum, a Phoenician and Roman settlement, are 3 miles (5 km) to the west of the city. Monastir is now a port and,
- Ruspinum (Tunisia)
Monastir, city in eastern Tunisia. It lies at the tip of a small peninsula protruding into the Mediterranean Sea between the Gulf of Hammamet and the Bay of Al-Munastīr. The ruins of Ruspinum, a Phoenician and Roman settlement, are 3 miles (5 km) to the west of the city. Monastir is now a port and,
- Russe (Bulgaria)
Ruse, city of northern Bulgaria, on the Danube River near the mouth of the Rusenski Lom. Bulgaria’s principal river port and a transportation hub for road and rail, Ruse has regular shipping services on the Danube and an airport. Upstream is the Friendship Bridge, built in 1954, carrying road and
- Rüsselbecher (glass)
glassware: The Roman Empire: …of the elaborate and fantastic Rüsselbecher (“elephant’s trunk, or claw beaker”) on which two superimposed rows of hollow, trunklike protrusions curve down to rejoin the wall of the vessel above a small button foot.
- Russell (New Zealand)
Russell, community, northeastern North Island, New Zealand. It is located on the southeastern shore of the Bay of Islands. Under its original name of Okiato, the town was chosen (1840) by Lieutenant Governor William Hobson to be the first capital of New Zealand. It was subsequently renamed in
- Russell Cave National Monument (monument, Alabama, United States)
Russell Cave National Monument, portion of a limestone cavern in northeastern Alabama, U.S., 6 miles (10 km) northwest of Bridgeport and just south of the Alabama-Tennessee border. The cave and site area (0.5 square mile [1.3 square km]) were given to the National Park Service by the National
- Russell family (British family)
Russell family, a famous English Whig family, the senior line of which has held the title of duke of Bedford since 1694. Originating in Dorset, the family first became prominent under the Tudor sovereigns, John Russell (died 1555) being created earl of Bedford for his part in suppressing a
- Russell of Kingston Russell, Bertrand Arthur William Russell, 3rd Earl, Viscount Amberley of Amberley and of Ardsalla (British logician and philosopher)
Bertrand Russell was a British philosopher, logician, and social reformer, a founding figure in the analytic movement in Anglo-American philosophy, and recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1950. Russell’s contributions to logic, epistemology, and the philosophy of mathematics established
- Russell of Kingston Russell, John Russell, 1st Earl, Viscount Amberley of Amberley and of Ardsalla (prime minister of United Kingdom)
John Russell, 1st Earl Russell was the prime minister of Great Britain (1846–52, 1865–66), an aristocratic liberal and leader of the fight for passage of the Reform Bill of 1832. Russell was the third son of John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford. (As the younger son of a peer, he was known for most of
- Russell Sage Foundation (American philanthropic organization)
Margaret Olivia Slocum Sage: …causes, is continued by the Russell Sage Foundation, which she established.
- Russell’s Magazine (American publication)
Paul Hamilton Hayne: …was coeditor of the influential Russell’s Magazine, launched under the leadership of William Gilmore Simms, during its three years of publication (1857–60). During the Civil War he contributed verse supporting the Southern cause—notably “The Battle of Charleston Harbor”—to the Southern Illustrated News of Richmond. After the war, his home having…
- Russell’s paradox (logic)
Russell’s paradox, statement in set theory, devised by the English mathematician-philosopher Bertrand Russell, that demonstrated a flaw in earlier efforts to axiomatize the subject. Russell found the paradox in 1901 and communicated it in a letter to the German mathematician-logician Gottlob Frege
- Russell’s viper (reptile)
Russell’s viper, (Daboia russelii), abundant, highly venomous terrestrial snake of the family Viperidae. It is found from India to Taiwan and Java, most often in open country. It is a major cause of snakebite deaths within its range because it often exists in farmlands where human contact and
- Russell, Bertrand (British logician and philosopher)
Bertrand Russell was a British philosopher, logician, and social reformer, a founding figure in the analytic movement in Anglo-American philosophy, and recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1950. Russell’s contributions to logic, epistemology, and the philosophy of mathematics established
- Russell, Bill (American basketball player)
Bill Russell was an American basketball player who was the first outstanding defensive centre in the history of the National Basketball Association (NBA) and one of the sport’s greatest icons. He won 11 NBA titles in the 13 seasons that he played with the Boston Celtics, and he became the first
- Russell, Charles (British jurist)
Charles Russell, Baron Russell was the lord chief justice of England from June 1894 until his death. A formidable courtroom advocate, he became widely admired as a strong but moderate judge. Russell practiced law in Ireland from 1854 and in England (usually at Liverpool) from 1859. In 1872 he was
- Russell, Charles Edward (American writer)
muckraker: Charles Edward Russell led the reform writers with exposés ranging from The Greatest Trust in the World (1905) to The Uprising of the Many (1907), the latter of which reported on methods being tried to extend democracy in other countries. Lincoln Steffens wrote about corrupt…
- Russell, Charles Ellsworth (American musician)
Pee Wee Russell was an American jazz clarinetist who, with his unpredictable style, was the first post-swing-era modernist on that instrument. Reluctantly trained in violin as a child, Russell also tried piano and drums before settling on the clarinet, on which he became a distinctive stylist.
- Russell, Charles Russell, Baron (British jurist)
Charles Russell, Baron Russell was the lord chief justice of England from June 1894 until his death. A formidable courtroom advocate, he became widely admired as a strong but moderate judge. Russell practiced law in Ireland from 1854 and in England (usually at Liverpool) from 1859. In 1872 he was
- Russell, Charles Taze (American religious leader)
Charles Taze Russell was the founder of the International Bible Students Association, forerunner of the Jehovah’s Witnesses. By the time he was 20, Russell had left both Presbyterianism and Congregationalism because he could not reconcile the idea of an eternal hell with God’s mercy. He had drifted
- Russell, David O. (American director and screenwriter)
David O. Russell is an American film director and screenwriter whose career spans from quirky, offbeat early films to award-winning ensemble pieces. Russell graduated from Amherst College in 1981 and began working as a progressive political activist in Boston. He started making films as a means of
- Russell, David Owen (American director and screenwriter)
David O. Russell is an American film director and screenwriter whose career spans from quirky, offbeat early films to award-winning ensemble pieces. Russell graduated from Amherst College in 1981 and began working as a progressive political activist in Boston. He started making films as a means of
- Russell, Ellen (American ethnologist)
Ellen Russell Emerson was an American ethnologist, noted for her extensive examinations of Native American cultures, especially in comparison with other world cultures. Ellen Russell was educated at the Mount Vernon Seminary in Boston and in 1862 married Edwin R. Emerson. From a childhood meeting
- Russell, Eric Frank (American author)
Tower of Hanoi: …science fiction story by American Eric Frank Russell, in which the protagonist is allowed to play one “game” from Earth before being executed on an alien planet.
- Russell, Ernestine Jane Geraldine (American actress and singer)
Jane Russell was an American actress and singer who was known for her voluptuous figure and sexualized on-screen persona. Russell’s family moved to California when she was young. Her mother, who had been an actress, encouraged Jane to explore interests in acting and music, and she studied briefly
- Russell, Francis, 2nd earl of Bedford (British noble)
Francis Russell, 2nd earl of Bedford was a Protestant supporter of Queen Elizabeth I of England. Only son of the 1st earl, he took his seat in the House of Lords as Lord Russell in 1552. Russell was in sympathy with the Protestant reformers, whose opinions he shared, and was imprisoned during the
- Russell, Francis, 4th earl of Bedford (British noble)
Francis Russell, 4th earl of Bedford was the 4th earl of Bedford, the only son of William, Lord Russell of Thornhaugh, who became earl of Bedford by the death of his cousin Edward, the 3rd earl, in May 1627. When the quarrel broke out between Charles I and Parliament in 1628, Bedford supported the
- Russell, Francis, 5th duke of Bedford (British politician)
Francis Russell, 5th duke of Bedford was the 5th duke of Bedford, the eldest son of Francis Russell, marquess of Tavistock, the eldest son of the 4th duke; he succeeded his grandfather as duke of Bedford in 1771. Regarding Charles James Fox as his political leader, he joined the Whigs in the House
- Russell, Gail (American actress)
Lewis Allen: …Macardle’s novel) was enhanced by Gail Russell’s compelling performance as the haunted girl and by an evocative score that yielded the standard “Stella by Starlight.” Russell was joined by Diana Lynn and Dorothy Gish in Our Hearts Were Young and Gay (1944), a dramatization of actress and screenwriter Cornelia Otis…
- Russell, George William (Irish poet)
AE was an Irish poet, artist, and mystic who became a leading figure in the Irish literary renaissance of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The name AE (or Æ) is the pseudonym of George William Russell, who took it from a proofreader’s query to him about his earlier pseudonym, “AEon.” Russell
- Russell, Henry Kenneth Alfred (British film director)
Ken Russell was a British motion-picture director whose use of shock and sensationalism earned him both praise and reprehension from critics. The son of a shoe-store owner, Russell became a cadet at the Nautical College at Pangbourne and subsequently joined the British Merchant Navy. After training
- Russell, Henry Norris (American astronomer)
Henry Norris Russell was an American astronomer—one of the most influential during the first half of the 20th century—who played a major role in the establishment of modern theoretical astrophysics by making physics the core of astrophysical practice. Bearing his name is the Hertzsprung-Russell
- Russell, Jane (American actress and singer)
Jane Russell was an American actress and singer who was known for her voluptuous figure and sexualized on-screen persona. Russell’s family moved to California when she was young. Her mother, who had been an actress, encouraged Jane to explore interests in acting and music, and she studied briefly
- Russell, John (English artist, astronomer, and scholar)
John Russell was a pastel artist, amateur astronomer, and literary scholar, whose brilliantly coloured chalk portraits were highly appreciated in 18th-century England. His works were considered on a par with those of Sir Joshua Reynolds. An evangelical Methodist, he often voiced his religious views
- Russell, John Robert, 13th Duke of Bedford (British noble)
John Robert Russell, 13th duke of Bedford was the elder son of the 12th duke (Hastings William Sackville Russell), succeeding to the title in 1953. Faced with paying heavy death duties on his father’s estate, including Woburn Abbey, the 13th duke developed to the full the commercial possibilities
- Russell, John Russell, 1st Earl, Viscount Amberley of Amberley and of Ardsalla (prime minister of United Kingdom)
John Russell, 1st Earl Russell was the prime minister of Great Britain (1846–52, 1865–66), an aristocratic liberal and leader of the fight for passage of the Reform Bill of 1832. Russell was the third son of John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford. (As the younger son of a peer, he was known for most of
- Russell, John Scott (British engineer)
John Scott Russell was a British civil engineer best known for researches in ship design. He designed the first seagoing battleship built entirely of iron. A graduate of the University of Glasgow (at age 16), Russell became professor of natural philosophy in 1832 at the University of Edinburgh,
- Russell, John, 1st earl of Bedford (British noble)
John Russell, 1st earl of Bedford was the founder of the wealth and greatness of the house of Russell. He was a favourite of England’s Henry VIII and was created earl of Bedford during the reign of Edward VI. He was with Henry VIII at the Field of Cloth of Gold in 1520 and, returning to military
- Russell, John, 4th duke of Bedford (British noble)
John Russell, 4th duke of Bedford was the leader of the “Bedford Whigs,” a major parliamentary force in the third quarter of the 18th century in England. Brother of the 3rd Duke (Wriothesley Russell), he joined the opposition to Sir Robert Walpole and in November 1744 became first lord of the
- Russell, Jonathan (American politician)
John Quincy Adams: Break with the Federalists of John Quincy Adams: …men, with Henry Clay and Jonathan Russell, began negotiations with English commissioners that resulted in the signing of the Treaty of Ghent on December 24 of that year. Adams then visited Paris, where he witnessed the return of Napoleon from Elba, and next went to London, where, with Clay and…
- Russell, Julius (American actor and comedian)
Nipsey Russell was an American actor and comedian known for the clever impromptu verses that he created for his television appearances. Russell was raised in Atlanta, where he began performing as a child in a singing and dancing troupe. He served in the army as a medic during World War II and later
- Russell, Ken (British film director)
Ken Russell was a British motion-picture director whose use of shock and sensationalism earned him both praise and reprehension from critics. The son of a shoe-store owner, Russell became a cadet at the Nautical College at Pangbourne and subsequently joined the British Merchant Navy. After training
- Russell, Keri (American actress)
Keri Russell is an American actress who first gained fame with the TV series Felicity (1998–2002) and who later starred in the spy thriller The Americans (2013–18) and the political drama The Diplomat (2023– ). Russell is one of three children born to Stephanie Russell (née Stephens), a homemaker,
- Russell, Keri Lynn (American actress)
Keri Russell is an American actress who first gained fame with the TV series Felicity (1998–2002) and who later starred in the spy thriller The Americans (2013–18) and the political drama The Diplomat (2023– ). Russell is one of three children born to Stephanie Russell (née Stephens), a homemaker,
- Russell, Kurt (American actor)
Kurt Russell is an American actor who became a child star in the 1960s, appearing in a number of Disney films, and then transitioned to a successful career as a leading man, perhaps best known for his action dramas. When Russell was four, his family moved from Massachusetts to California. There his
- Russell, Kurt Vogel (American actor)
Kurt Russell is an American actor who became a child star in the 1960s, appearing in a number of Disney films, and then transitioned to a successful career as a leading man, perhaps best known for his action dramas. When Russell was four, his family moved from Massachusetts to California. There his
- Russell, Leon (American songwriter, producer, and musician)
Elton John: … (2010; a duet album with Leon Russell), and Wonderful Crazy Night (2016). He also contributed sound tracks to the animated movies The Road to El Dorado (2000) and Gnomeo & Juliet (2011). In 2018 John embarked on what he announced as his final tour, dubbed Farewell Yellow Brick Road and…
- Russell, Lillian (American actress)
Lillian Russell was an American singer and actress in light comedies who represented the feminine ideal of her generation. She was as famous for her flamboyant personal life as for her beauty and voice. Born Helen Leonard, she attended convent and private schools in Chicago. About 1877 or 1878 she
- Russell, Lord John (prime minister of United Kingdom)
John Russell, 1st Earl Russell was the prime minister of Great Britain (1846–52, 1865–66), an aristocratic liberal and leader of the fight for passage of the Reform Bill of 1832. Russell was the third son of John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford. (As the younger son of a peer, he was known for most of
- Russell, Majors and Waddell (American company)
Russell, Majors and Waddell, business partnership formed by William Hepburn Russell, Alexander Majors, and William Bradford Waddell that operated the most prominent freight, mail, and passenger transportation company in the United States in the mid-19th century and, most famously, established the
- Russell, Morgan (American artist)
Morgan Russell was an American painter who was an early proponent of abstraction. After studying under Robert Henri in New York City, Russell moved to Paris in 1906 and lived there for 40 years. In 1913–14 he and Stanton Macdonald-Wright established Synchromism (q.v.) as an avant-garde movement,
- Russell, Nipsey (American actor and comedian)
Nipsey Russell was an American actor and comedian known for the clever impromptu verses that he created for his television appearances. Russell was raised in Atlanta, where he began performing as a child in a singing and dancing troupe. He served in the army as a medic during World War II and later
- Russell, Pee Wee (American musician)
Pee Wee Russell was an American jazz clarinetist who, with his unpredictable style, was the first post-swing-era modernist on that instrument. Reluctantly trained in violin as a child, Russell also tried piano and drums before settling on the clarinet, on which he became a distinctive stylist.
- Russell, Richard B. (United States senator)
Sam Nunn: Richard Russell. His most noteworthy legislative achievements include drafting the 1986 Department of Defense Reorganization Act and, with Sen. Richard Lugar, the 1991 Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction Program. The former resulted in the most-significant defense reorganization since the National Security Act of 1947, and the…
- Russell, Richard Joel (American geologist)
Richard Joel Russell was a geologist known for his studies of coastal morphology. He was a professor of geology at Texas Technological College (Lubbock) from 1926 until 1928, when he joined the faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agriculture and Mechanical College (Baton Rouge), where he
- Russell, Rosalind (American actress)
Rosalind Russell was an American actress who was best remembered for her film and stage portrayals of witty, assertive, independent women. Russell attended the American Academy of Dramatic Arts and made her Broadway debut in 1930 in the Theatre Guild’s Garrick Gaieties. Four years later she was
- Russell, Theresa (American actress)
Bob Rafelson: Films of the late 1980s and beyond: It starred Theresa Russell as a female Bluebeard who slays her husbands one after the other for their money; Debra Winger played the dogged investigator who catches on to the scam but finds herself oddly attracted to her suspect. Reviews of the film were mixed: some critics…
- Russell, Thomas (Irish leader)
Society of United Irishmen: …Tone, James Napper Tandy, and Thomas Russell to achieve Roman Catholic emancipation and (with Protestant cooperation) parliamentary reform. British attempts to suppress the society caused its reorganization as an underground movement dedicated to securing complete Irish independence. In April 1794 the society opened negotiations with Revolutionary France for military aid,…
- Russell, William (British noble)
William Russell, 1st duke and 5th earl of Bedford was the eldest son of the 4th earl, who fought first on the side of Parliament and then on the side of Charles I during the English Civil War. In general, he played a minor part in politics. His son Lord William Russell (1639–83) was involved in the
- Russell, William Felton (American basketball player)
Bill Russell was an American basketball player who was the first outstanding defensive centre in the history of the National Basketball Association (NBA) and one of the sport’s greatest icons. He won 11 NBA titles in the 13 seasons that he played with the Boston Celtics, and he became the first
- Russell, William Hepburn (American businessman)
William Hepburn Russell was an American businessman and co-proprietor of Russell, Majors and Waddell, the most prominent freight, mail, and passenger transportation company in the United States in the mid-19th century. The company founded and operated the Pony Express (1860–61). Russell’s family
- Russell, William Howard (British journalist)
history of publishing: Foundations of modern journalism: William Howard Russell, a reporter for the London Times during the Crimean War (1853–56), became famous as one of the first war correspondents, and his writings inspired Florence Nightingale to take up her mission to Crimea. More than 150 war correspondents reported on the American
- Russell, William Russell, Lord (English politician)
William Russell, Lord Russell was an English Whig politician executed for allegedly plotting to murder King Charles II and his Roman Catholic brother James, Duke of York. Because the charges against Russell were never conclusively proved, he was lauded as a martyr by the Whigs, who claimed that he
- Russell-Saunders coupling (physics)
spectroscopy: Total orbital angular momentum and total spin angular momentum: …the assignment is called the L-S coupling, or Russell-Saunders coupling (after the astronomer Henry Norris Russell and the physicist Frederick A. Saunders, both of the United States).
- Russell-Silver syndrome (pathology)
genomic imprinting: Imprinting and fetal development: Additionally, in Silver-Russell syndrome (or Russell-Silver syndrome), a maternal uniparental disomy (both copies of a chromosome or partial chromosome are inherited from one parent), growth restriction is present. Similar effects are found in other cases of disordered imprinting. Preeclampsia, for example, in which disordered imprinting has been…
- Russellites (religion)
Jehovah’s Witness, member of a millennialist denomination that developed within the larger 19th-century Adventist movement in the United States and has since spread worldwide. The Jehovah’s Witnesses are an outgrowth of the International Bible Students Association, which was founded in 1872 in
- Russert, Tim (American journalist)
Tim Russert was an American journalist who, as moderator (1991–2008) of the television program Meet the Press, was one of the most influential political commentators of his day. Russert studied political science at John Carroll University (B.A., 1972) in Ohio before earning a law degree from
- Russert, Timothy John, Jr. (American journalist)
Tim Russert was an American journalist who, as moderator (1991–2008) of the television program Meet the Press, was one of the most influential political commentators of his day. Russert studied political science at John Carroll University (B.A., 1972) in Ohio before earning a law degree from