• Guangzhou International Convention and Exhibition Center (convention complex, Guangzhou, China)

    Guangzhou: Other districts: …the first phase of the Guangzhou International Convention and Exhibition Center (Pazhou Complex) on Pazhou Island in the Pearl River. One of the largest such venues in the world, it hosts Guangzhou’s major trade shows (including the Guangzhou Trade Fair) and has spurred rapid development of Haizhu’s commerce and tourism-related…

  • Guangzhou Municipal People’s Council (government body, Guangzhou, China)

    Guangzhou: Government: The principal responsibilities of the Guangzhou Municipal People’s Congress, the major decision-making body, include issuing administrative orders, determining the budget, and implementing economic plans. A standing committee selected from its members recommends policy decisions and oversees the operation of municipal government. Executive authority rests with the People’s Government of Guangzhou…

  • Guangzong (emperor of Song dynasty)

    China: Relations with the Juchen: …brief reign of his son, Guangzong (reigned 1190–94), but it was broken again in 1205, during the reign of his grandson, Ningzong (reigned 1195–1224). The 40-year span of continuous peace dimmed the memory of difficulties in waging war. A new generation, nurtured by a flourishing Confucian education, tended to underestimate…

  • guanhua

    Mandarin language, the most widely spoken form of Chinese. Mandarin Chinese is spoken in all of China north of the Yangtze River and in much of the rest of the country and is the native language of two-thirds of the population. Mandarin Chinese is often divided into four subgroups: Northern

  • Guanhumara (legendary queen of Britain)

    Guinevere, wife of Arthur, legendary king of Britain, best known in Arthurian romance through the love that his knight Sir Lancelot bore for her. In early Welsh literature, one Gwenhwyvar was “the first lady of this island”; in Geoffrey of Monmouth’s inventive Historia regum Britanniae (early 12th

  • guanidine (organic compound)

    guanidine, an organic compound of formula HN=C(NH2)2. It was first prepared by Adolph Strecker in 1861 from guanine, which had been obtained from guano, and this is the origin of the name. The compound has been detected in small amounts in a variety of plant and animal products, but some of its

  • guanidine hydrochloride (drug)

    botulism: A chemical, guanidine hydrochloride, counteracts the action of C. botulinum toxin on nerve endings and has been used successfully in treatment, but it is itself a toxic substance that should be given only with great care. Paralyzed muscle can recover if the patient can be kept alive,…

  • Guaniguanico, Cordillera de (hills, Cuba)

    Cordillera de Guaniguanico, low range of hills in Pinar del Río province, western Cuba. It extends about 40 mi (64 km) northeast from Mantua and comprises the Sierra de los Órganos and the Sierra del Rosario, which rises 2,293 ft (699 m) at El Pan de Guajaibón. The Sierra del Rosario exhibits a

  • guanine (chemical compound)

    guanine, an organic compound belonging to the purine group, a class of compounds with a characteristic two-ringed structure, composed of carbon and nitrogen atoms, and occurring free or combined in such diverse natural sources as guano (the accumulated excrement and dead bodies of birds, bats, and

  • Guano (island, Pacific Ocean)

    Enderbury Atoll, one of the Phoenix Islands, part of Kiribati, in the west-central Pacific Ocean, about 1,650 miles (2,660 km) southwest of Hawaii. Its lagoon is shallow and brackish. The coral island has an area of 2.5 square miles (6.5 square km). The atoll was discovered (1823) by J.J. Coffin of

  • guano (excrement)

    guano, accumulated excrement and remains of birds, bats, and seals, valued as fertilizer. Bird guano comes mainly from islands off the coasts of Peru, Baja (Lower) California, and Africa heavily populated by cormorants, pelicans, and gannets. Bat guano is found in caves throughout the world. Seal

  • Guano Act (United States [1856])

    Flint Island: …States in 1856 under the Guano Act. Coconut palms (for copra) were planted in the 1870s and soon replaced most of the native flora. The export of guano ended by 1893. Flint Island became a part of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony in 1972 and was included in independent…

  • Guanoco Lake (lake, Venezuela)

    pitch lake: An example is Guanoco Lake (also known as Bermúdez Lake) in Venezuela, which covers more than 445 hectares (1,100 acres) and contains an estimated 6,000,000 tons of asphalt. It was used as a commercial source of asphalt from 1891 to 1935. Smaller deposits occur commonly where Paleogene and…

  • guanosine diphosphate (chemical compound)

    metabolism: Formation of coenzyme A, carbon dioxide, and reducing equivalent: …to ADP, directly or via guanosine diphosphate (GDP) [43].

  • guanosine triphosphate (chemical compound)

    guanine: Guanosine triphosphate (GTP) is used by the body to form the guanylic acid units in ribonucleic acids (RNA’s).

  • Guantanamera (song)

    Cuba: Music and dance: The Cuban folk anthem “Guantanamera,” which derives from a nostalgic poem by José Martí, is frequently heard throughout Latin America, as are the popular love songs “Habanera Tú” and “Siboney.” Composer-singers Pablo Milanés and Silvio Rodríguez, among the founders of the Nueva Trova movement, are acclaimed throughout Latin America…

  • Guantánamo (Cuba)

    Guantánamo, city, eastern Cuba. It lies in the mountains 21 miles (34 km) north of strategic Guantánamo Bay on the Caribbean Sea. Founded in 1819, the settlement was called Santa Catalina del Saltadero del Guaso until 1843. French refugees from Haiti aided in the colonization of the area, and many

  • Guantánamo Bay (bay, Cuba)

    Guantánamo Bay, inlet of the Caribbean Sea, indenting southeastern Cuba. A large and well-sheltered bay, it has a narrow entrance to a harbour approximately 6 miles (10 km) wide and 12 miles (19 km) long and capable of accommodating large vessels. Guantánamo Bay is served by the ports of Caimanera

  • Guantánamo Bay detention camp (United States detention facility, Cuba)

    Guantánamo Bay detention camp, U.S. detention facility on the Guantánamo Bay Naval Base, located on the coast of Guantánamo Bay in southeastern Cuba. Constructed in stages starting in 2002, the Guantánamo Bay detention camp (often called Gitmo, which is also a name for the naval base) was used to

  • guante (glove)

    jai alai: History: …was the introduction of the guante, a simple leather glove worn on the right hand, which in turn led to the use of a flat wooden bat, or pala. A cartoon for a tapestry by Goya in the Prado museum, Madrid, “Juego de Pelota” (1777–90), depicts such a bat in…

  • Guanting Reservoir (reservoir, China)

    Hai River system: Issuing from the Guanting Reservoir—which is itself fed by the Sanggan River—the Yongding flows into the North China Plain in the Beijing area and continues to Tianjin, where it flows into the Hai and hence into the Bo Hai. The Grand Canal joins the Yongding just north of…

  • Guanto, Giusto da (Netherlandish painter)

    Justus of Ghent was a Netherlandish painter who has been identified with Joos van Wassenhove, a master of the painters’ guild at Antwerp in 1460 and at Ghent in 1464. In Justus’s earliest known painting, the Crucifixion triptych (c. 1465), the attenuated, angular figures and the barren landscape

  • Guanwei (historical region, China)

    Manchuria, historical region of northeastern China. Strictly speaking, it consists of the modern provinces (sheng) of Liaoning (south), Jilin (central), and Heilongjiang (north). Often, however, the northeastern portion of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region also is included. Manchuria is bounded

  • Guanxiu (Chinese painter)

    Guanxiu was a Tang dynasty Chan (in Japanese, Zen) painter known for his paintings of lohans (arhats). The best known of the lohan paintings that are attributed to him are a series of 16 in the Tokyo National Museum. Guanxiu eventually settled in the Shu-Han capital of Chengdu. His family name of

  • Guanyin (bodhisattva)

    Avalokiteshvara, in Buddhism, and primarily in Mahayana (“Greater Vehicle”) Buddhism, the bodhisattva (“buddha-to-be”) of infinite compassion and mercy, possibly the most popular of all figures in Buddhist legend. Avalokiteshvara is beloved throughout the Buddhist world—not only in Mahayana

  • Guanyin

    Guanyin, in Chinese Buddhism, the bodhisattva of infinite compassion and mercy. See

  • Guanyin Hall (ancient hall, China)

    Chinese architecture: The Song (960–1279), Liao (907–1125), and Jin (1115–1234) dynasties: …century is exemplified in the Guanyin Hall of the Dule Temple at Jixian, Hebei province, built in 984 in Liao territory. A two-story structure with a mezzanine that projects to an outer balcony, the hall is effectively constructed of three tiers of supporting brackets. It houses a 16-metre- (52-foot-) high,…

  • Guanzhong (region, China)

    Shaanxi: The middle period: …because the area (known as Guanzhong—literally “Within the Passes”) was easily defended and was of crucial importance as a frontier with China’s neighbours. However, after the sack of Chang’an (882) and its abandonment (904), no dynasty ever again had its capital in the northwest, and the area rapidly declined in…

  • Guanzhuibian (work by Qian Zhongshu)

    Qian Zhongshu: …and the four-volume Guanzhuibian (1979; Limited Views, a partial translation). The latter work contains comparative studies in literature and culture in general, many of which involve several languages and a good number of authors and their creative or scholarly works, both ancient and modern. In 1986 a volume of revisions…

  • guanzi (musical instrument)

    guan, double-reed Chinese wind instrument, having a cylindrical body with seven frontal finger holes and one thumb hole. The northern version is made of wood, and the southern of bamboo. The instrument’s range is about two and one-half octaves. The length of the guan varies from 7 to about 13

  • Guanzi (Chinese text)

    Taoism: Guanzi and Huainanzi: …several Taoist chapters of the Guanzi (book of “Master Guan”), another text of uncertain date, emphasis is placed on “the art of the heart (mind)”; the heart governs the body as the chief governs the state. If the organs and senses submit to it, the heart can achieve a desirelessness…

  • Guap (archipelago, Micronesia)

    Yap Islands, archipelago of the western Caroline Islands, Federated States of Micronesia. The archipelago comprises the islands of Gagil-Tamil, Maap, Rumung, and Yap (also called Rull, Uap, or Yapa), within a coral reef. Yap, the largest island, has a central range of hills rising to Taabiywol (568

  • Guaporé River (river, South America)

    Guaporé River, river flowing through west central Brazil. The river rises in the Serra (mountains) dos Parecis in Mato Grosso state, Brazil, and loops southward, westward, and then north-northwestward past Mato Grosso city. After receiving the Rio Verde, it continues northwestward, forming the

  • Guaporé, Rio (river, South America)

    Guaporé River, river flowing through west central Brazil. The river rises in the Serra (mountains) dos Parecis in Mato Grosso state, Brazil, and loops southward, westward, and then north-northwestward past Mato Grosso city. After receiving the Rio Verde, it continues northwestward, forming the

  • Guaragna, Salvatore (American composer)

    Harry Warren was an American songwriter who, by his own estimate, produced 300 to 400 songs from 1922 through 1960, many for Hollywood films and Broadway musical productions. Warren received little public attention during his long life, despite three Academy Awards (for “Lullaby of Broadway” from

  • guarana (plant)

    guarana, (Paullinia cupana), woody, climbing plant, of the soapberry family (Sapindaceae), native to the Amazon Basin. It has a smooth, erect stem; large leaves with five oblong-oval leaflets; clusters of short-stalked flowers; and fruit about the size of a grape and usually containing one seed

  • Guaranda (Ecuador)

    Guaranda, city, central highland Ecuador, on a headstream of the Chimbo River in the Cordillera de Guaranda of the Andes Mountains. It is about 15 miles (24 km) southwest of Chimborazo, Ecuador’s highest peak. As an agricultural centre for the surrounding area, the city trades in cinchona (a source

  • Guaraní (people)

    Guaraní, South American Indian group living mainly in Paraguay and speaking a Tupian language also called Guaraní. Smaller groups live in Argentina, Bolivia, and Brazil. Modern Paraguay still claims a strong Guaraní heritage, and more Paraguayans speak and understand Guaraní than Spanish. Most of

  • Guaraní language

    South American Indian languages: Tupian: …franca, and the closely related Guaraní became the national language in Paraguay, being one of the few Indian languages that does not seem to yield under the influence of Spanish or Portuguese. At the time of discovery, Tupí-Guaraní tribes were moving everywhere south of the Amazon, subjugating other tribes; some…

  • Guarani, O (work by Alencar)

    Brazilian literature: Nationalism and Romanticism: …evident in his historical novel O guaraní (1857; “The Guaraní”). A historical work set in Brazil and modeled on the novels of James Fenimore Cooper and Sir Walter Scott, it focuses on the Guaraní as the hero of a mythical "medieval" colonial past. Alencar also wrote numerous regionalist and urban…

  • guarantee (law)

    guarantee, in law, a contract to answer for the payment of some debt, or the performance of some duty, in the event of the failure of another person who is primarily liable. The agreement is expressly conditioned upon a breach by the principal debtor. The debtor is not a party to the guarantee, and

  • Guarantee Photo Studio (American company)

    James VanDerZee: …wife, Gaynella Greenlee, launched the Guarantee Photo Studio in Harlem. His business boomed during World War I, and the portraits he shot from this period until 1945 have demanded the majority of critical attention. Among his many renowned subjects were poet Countee Cullen, dancer Bill (“Bojangles”) Robinson, and black-nationalist leader…

  • guaranteed income stream (labor)

    guaranteed wage plan: Known as the guaranteed income stream (GIS), this plan was designed to guarantee employees 50 percent of their hourly rate of pay until age 62. GIS programs were widely used during the economic slump of the early 1980s, when many labour settlements used it to provide income stability…

  • guaranteed minimum income (tax law)

    social security: Negative income tax: Partly because of the stigma attached to social assistance, the difficulty the potential beneficiaries have in understanding eligibility, and their reluctance to apply, it is often proposed that the information provided to the state from income tax returns should be used by…

  • Guaranteed Rate Field (ballpark, Chicago, Illinois, United States)

    Jerry Reinsdorf: …Comiskey Park (now known as Guaranteed Rate Field), which opened in 1991, was subsidized by taxpayers and contained a large number of premium-priced seats. Similarly, in 1994 Reinsdorf unveiled the new United Center to replace Chicago Stadium—another iconic Chicago sports arena—for the Bulls. Later that year, when players of Major…

  • guaranteed wage plan (business)

    guaranteed wage plan, system by which an employer ensures a minimum annual amount of employment or wages (or both) to employees who have been with the employer for a required minimum period of time. The United States has had more experience than other countries with such plans, which are meant to

  • Guarantees, Law of (Italy [1871])

    Law of Guarantees, (May 13, 1871), attempt by the Italian government to settle the question of its relationship with the pope, who had been deprived of his lands in central Italy in the process of national unification. The first section of the law sought to ensure the freedom of the pope to fulfill

  • guaranty and suretyship (law)

    guaranty and suretyship, in law, assumption of liability for the obligations of another. In modern usage the term guaranty has largely superseded suretyship. Legal historians identify suretyship with situations that are quite outside the modern connotations of the term. For example, they use the

  • Guaranty Building (building, Buffalo, New York, United States)

    Louis Sullivan: Work in association with Adler: The 16-story Guaranty (now Prudential) Building in Buffalo by Adler and Sullivan is similar except that its surface is sheathed in decorative terra-cotta instead of red brick. Both buildings are among the best of Adler and Sullivan’s work.

  • Guaratinguetá (Brazil)

    Guaratinguetá, city, eastern São Paulo estado (state), Brazil. It lies in the Mantiqueira Mountains at 1,785 feet (544 metres) above sea level at the confluence of the Guaratinguetá Stream and the Paraíba do Sul River, about 40 miles (65 km) from the Atlantic coast. Formerly called Freguesia de

  • Guarauno (people)

    Warao, nomadic South American Indians speaking a language of the Macro-Chibchan group and, in modern times, inhabiting the swampy Orinoco River delta in Venezuela and areas eastward to the Pomeroon River of Guyana. Some Warao also live in Suriname. The tribe was estimated to number about 20,000 in

  • guard (security system)

    security and protection system: Physical security.: Guard-force training, supervision, and motivation are other important aspects of the personnel-administration approach to security. The use of operational personnel to attain security objectives is still another. Examples include engineers, production workers, and clerical staff applying government security regulations for the safeguarding of classified information,…

  • guard band (electronics)

    telecommunication: Frequency-division multiplexing: …signals is separated by a guard band, which consists of an unused portion of the available frequency spectrum. Each user is assigned a given frequency band for all time.

  • guard cell (plant anatomy)

    angiosperm: Dermal tissue: …the epidermis are paired, chloroplast-containing guard cells, and between each pair is formed a small opening, or pore, called a stoma (plural: stomata). When the two guard cells are turgid (swollen with water), the stoma is open, and, when the two guard cells are flaccid, it is closed. This controls…

  • guard hair (anatomy)

    mammal: Skin and hair: Guard hairs protect the rest of the pelage from abrasion and frequently from moisture, and they usually lend a characteristic colour pattern. The thicker underfur is primarily insulative and may differ in colour from the guard hairs. The third common hair type is the vibrissa,…

  • Guard of Honor (work by Cozzens)

    James Gould Cozzens: …for fiction in 1949 for Guard of Honor and the Howells Medal of the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1960 for By Love Possessed. The latter was also Cozzens’ greatest popular success. His later works became increasingly convoluted in plot and style, especially his last novel, Morning Noon…

  • guard’s van

    railroad: Freight cars: …is virtually extinct is the caboose, or brake-van. With modern air-braking systems, the security of a very long train can be assured by fixing to its end car’s brake pipe a telemetry device that continually monitors pressure and automatically transmits its findings to the locomotive cab.

  • Guard, Dave (American musician)

    the Kingston Trio: The original members were Dave Guard (b. October 19, 1934, San Francisco, California, U.S.—d. March 22, 1991, Rollinsford, New Hampshire), Bob Shane (b. February 1, 1934, Hilo, Hawaii—d. January 26, 2020, Phoenix, Arizona), and Nick Reynolds (b. July 27, 1933, San Diego, California—d. October 1, 2008, San Diego). John…

  • Guarda (Switzerland)

    Switzerland: Rural communities: Some villages, such as Guarda in the lower Engadin and Grimentz in the Val d’Anniviers of Valais, are renowned for their picturesque beauty, and others, such as Crans-Montana on the slopes above the Rhône valley in Valais canton and Wengen in the Berner Oberland, have developed into famous resorts.…

  • Guarda (Portugal)

    Guarda, city and concelho (municipality), north-central Portugal. Lying on the northeast side of the Estrela Mountains (Serra da Estrela) at an elevation of 3,465 feet (1,056 metres), it is Portugal’s highest city. Founded in 1197, Guarda was given a royal charter by Sancho I and was to be a guard

  • Guarda Nacional Repúblicana (Portuguese police)

    Portugal: Security: …Segurança Pública; PSP) and the Republican National Guard (Guarda Nacional Republicana; GNR) are under the control of the Ministry of Internal Administration. The GNR includes the road police and has jurisdiction over rural areas. The PSP patrols urban areas and directs city traffic. The Fiscal Guard (Guarda Fiscal), which is…

  • Guardado, Facundo (Salvadoran politician and guerrilla leader)

    Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front: …selection was former guerrilla leader Facundo Guardado, who was supported mainly by the “renovators.” Guardado did not fare well, winning only 29 percent of the vote. In 2000 the FMLN won the largest number of seats in the National Assembly for the first time, but its 31 seats fell short…

  • guardagujas, El (work by Arreola)

    Juan José Arreola: “El guardagujas” (“The Switchman”) is Arreola’s most anthologized piece. It is without question his most representative. A stranded railroad traveler waits for months to board a train that never arrives, only to discover that schedules, routes, and even the landscapes seen from the windows of railroad cars…

  • Guardi, Francesco (Venetian painter)

    Francesco Guardi was one of the outstanding Venetian landscape painters of the Rococo period. Francesco and his brother Nicolò (1715–86) were trained under their elder brother, Giovanni Antonio Guardi. Their sister Cecilia married Giovanni Battista Tiepolo. By 1731 the brothers are recorded as

  • Guardi, Gianantonio (Venetian painter)

    Gianantonio Guardi was a painter of the 18th-century Venetian school. He was trained by his father Domenico Guardi (1678–1716). After his father’s death, Giovanni Antonio took over the studio. Here, he and his two brothers, Francesco and Niccolò, specialized in paintings of religious and genre

  • Guardi, Giovanni Antonio (Venetian painter)

    Gianantonio Guardi was a painter of the 18th-century Venetian school. He was trained by his father Domenico Guardi (1678–1716). After his father’s death, Giovanni Antonio took over the studio. Here, he and his two brothers, Francesco and Niccolò, specialized in paintings of religious and genre

  • Guardi, Giovanni Antonio (Venetian painter)

    Gianantonio Guardi was a painter of the 18th-century Venetian school. He was trained by his father Domenico Guardi (1678–1716). After his father’s death, Giovanni Antonio took over the studio. Here, he and his two brothers, Francesco and Niccolò, specialized in paintings of religious and genre

  • guardia alla luna, La (work by Bontempelli)

    Massimo Bontempelli: A particularly striking play is La guardia alla luna (performed 1916; “Watching for the Moon”), the story of a woman who blames the moon for her child’s death and climbs a mountain to try to kill it.

  • Guardia Civil (Spanish police)

    Civil Guard, national police force of Spain, organized along military lines and engaged primarily in maintaining order in rural areas and in patrolling the frontiers and the highways. Formerly (until 1986) commanded by a lieutenant general of the army, the Civil Guard is now headed by a civilian

  • guardia marina (naval rank)

    midshipman, title used in the Royal Navy from about 1660 for “young gentlemen” in training at sea to qualify for service as commissioned officers. Continental and U.S. navies adopted the title and system. The equivalent French title is aspirant, and the Spanish is guardia marina. In the early 21st

  • Guardia Nacional (military organization, Nicaragua)

    Nicaragua: The Somoza years: A Nicaraguan National Guard, trained by the U.S. Marines and commanded by Gen. Anastasio Somoza García, was now responsible for maintaining order in the country. In 1934 high-ranking officers led by Somoza met and agreed to the assassination of Sandino. Somoza then deposed Sacasa with the support…

  • Guardia Nobile (Vatican City police)

    Pontifical Gendarmerie: …Guard (Guardia Palatina d’Onore) and Noble Guard (Guardia Nobile).

  • Guardia Palatina d’Onore (Vatican City police)

    Pontifical Gendarmerie: …pope) and the largely ceremonial Palatine Honour Guard (Guardia Palatina d’Onore) and Noble Guard (Guardia Nobile).

  • Guardia Rural (Mexican federal police)

    Rurales: …1926 a new force, the Rural Defense Force (Guardia Rural), was created out of a number of volunteer forces that had developed after 1915 for local self-protection. Though this corps still exists as an army reserve, by the late 20th century it was being phased out, and its forces dropped…

  • Guardia Svizzera

    Swiss Guards, corps of Swiss soldiers responsible for the safety of the pope. Often called “the world’s smallest army,” they serve as personal escorts to the pontiff, including on his apostolic travels, and as watchmen for Vatican City and the pontifical villa of Castel Gandolfo. They also protect

  • Guardia, Ricardo Adolfo de la (president of Panama)

    Panama: World War II and mid-century intrigues: …army) in October 1941, and Ricardo Adolfo de la Guardia became president. After the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on December 7, 1941, Panama transferred the defense sites to the United States, and tens of thousands of U.S. troops were stationed there to guarantee the security of the canal.…

  • Guardia, Tomás (dictator of Costa Rica)

    Costa Rica: Independence of Costa Rica: Tomás Guardia, who dominated the country from 1870 until 1882. His government curtailed liberty and added to the debt, but it also brought increases in coffee and sugar exports as well as widespread construction of schools. A new constitution, adopted in 1871, remained in effect,…

  • guardian (law)

    guardian, person legally entrusted with supervision of another who is ineligible to manage his own affairs—usually a child. Guardians fulfill the state’s role as substitute parent. Those for whom guardianships are established are called wards. Guardianships for others than children are usually

  • guardian angel (religion)

    angel and demon: Benevolent beings: The view that there are guardian angels watching over children has been a significant belief in the popular piety of Roman Catholicism. Angels are also regarded as the conductors of the souls of the dead to the supraterrestrial world. In the procreation of humans, angels are believed to perform various…

  • Guardian Council (Iranian government)

    Council of Guardians, in Iranian government, a council empowered to vet legislation and oversee elections. The 12-member Council of Guardians is a body of jurists that acts in many ways as an upper legislative house. Half its members are specialists in Islamic canon law appointed by the country’s

  • Guardian of the Cause of God (Bahāʾī Faith)

    spiritual assembly: …by Shoghi Effendi Rabbani as Guardian of the Cause of God until his death in 1957; since 1963 it has been assumed by the highest spiritual assembly, the Universal House of Justice, a body elected by the national spiritual assemblies and possessing the sole right to institute new laws or…

  • guardian spirit

    guardian spirit, supernatural teacher, frequently depicted in animal form, who guides an individual in every important activity through advice and songs; the belief in guardian spirits is widely diffused among the North American Indians. In some traditions the guardian manifests itself in a dream

  • Guardian, The (film by Davis [2006])

    Ashton Kutcher: Stardom: …starred with Kevin Costner in The Guardian, playing a man training to be a rescue swimmer with the U.S. Coast Guard. Kutcher had a big hit with What Happens in Vegas (2008), a rom-com that also starred Cameron Diaz. In 2009 he appeared in the little-seen drama Personal Effects, about…

  • Guardian, The (American newspaper)

    William Monroe Trotter: …pages of his weekly newspaper, The Guardian, he criticized the pragmatism of Booker T. Washington, agitating for civil rights among blacks. Along with W.E.B. Du Bois and others, Trotter helped form the Niagara Movement and create the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), from which he later…

  • Guardian, The (British newspaper)

    The Guardian, influential daily newspaper published in London, generally considered one of the United Kingdom’s leading newspapers. The paper was founded in Manchester in 1821 as the weekly Manchester Guardian but became a daily after the British government lifted its Stamp Tax on newspapers in

  • Guardians of the Galaxy (film by Gunn [2014])

    Dave Bautista: Acting: …mercenary Drax the Destroyer in Guardians of the Galaxy, part of the Marvel franchise. Bautista would portray Drax in several other films, including two Guardians of the Galaxy sequels and a holiday special (2017, 2023, and 2022, respectively) and other Marvel films including Avengers: Infinity War (2018), Avengers:

  • Guardians of the Galaxy (fictional superhero team)

    Guardians of the Galaxy, American superhero team created for Marvel Comics by writer Arnold Drake and artist Gene Colan. The group debuted in Marvel Super-Heroes no. 18 (January 1969). The idea of comrades-in-arms struggling against tyranny has long been a mainstay of fiction and folklore. The

  • Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (film by Gunn [2017])

    Guardians of the Galaxy: …critical acclaim in 2014; a sequel followed in 2017. The Guardians traveled to Earth to join other members of the Marvel Cinematic Universe in the blockbusters Avengers: Infinity War (2018) and Avengers: Endgame (2019).

  • Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (film by Gunn [2023])

    Dave Bautista: Acting: …and a holiday special (2017, 2023, and 2022, respectively) and other Marvel films including Avengers: Infinity War (2018), Avengers: Endgame (2019), and Thor: Love and Thunder (2022). The literal-minded warrior character of Drax allowed Bautista to showcase his sense of comedic timing and became a fan favorite.

  • Guardians of the Peace (civic guard, Ireland)

    Ireland: Security of Ireland: The Guardians of the Peace (An Garda Síochána), established in 1922, is a nationwide force headed by a commissioner who is responsible to the minister for justice. A few hundred members of the force are assigned to detective duties; they are usually plainclothes officers and, when…

  • Guardians of the Secret (painting by Pollock)

    Jackson Pollock: Early life and work: 1942), and Guardians of the Secret (1943).

  • Guardineer, Fred (American writer and artist)

    Zatara and Zatanna: …created by writer and artist Fred Guardineer, Zatara was clearly inspired by Mandrake the Magician, the star of a long-running newspaper strip drawn by Lee Falk. Like Mandrake, Zatara was a stage magician who wore the traditional costume of top hat and tails. Zatara’s main distinguishing characteristic, however, was his…

  • Guarding Tess (film by Wilson [1994])

    Shirley MacLaine: …feisty former first lady in Guarding Tess (1994), and a wealthy woman surprised by her daughter-in-law’s mistaken identity in Mrs. Winterbourne (1996). In 2000 MacLaine directed her only feature film, Bruno (also released as The Dress Code), about a young boy struggling to express himself.

  • Guardiola Sala, Josep (Spanish football player and manager)

    Pep Guardiola is a Spanish professional football (soccer) manager. Formerly a player, he starred as a defensive midfielder for FC Barcelona (1990–2001) and later managed that team (2008–12) as well as other prominent clubs such as Bayern Munich (2013–16) and Manchester City FC (2016– ). He is known

  • Guardiola, Pep (Spanish football player and manager)

    Pep Guardiola is a Spanish professional football (soccer) manager. Formerly a player, he starred as a defensive midfielder for FC Barcelona (1990–2001) and later managed that team (2008–12) as well as other prominent clubs such as Bayern Munich (2013–16) and Manchester City FC (2016– ). He is known

  • Guare, John (American author)

    John Guare is an American playwright known for his innovative and often absurdist dramas. Guare, who at age 11 produced his first play for friends and family, was educated at Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. (B.A., 1960), and at Yale University (M.F.A., 1963). He then began staging short

  • Guarea (plant genus)

    Sapindales: Distribution and abundance: … (50 species) in Indo-Malaysia; and Guarea (50 species) in tropical America and tropical Africa.

  • Guarentigie, Legge delle (Italy [1871])

    Law of Guarantees, (May 13, 1871), attempt by the Italian government to settle the question of its relationship with the pope, who had been deprived of his lands in central Italy in the process of national unification. The first section of the law sought to ensure the freedom of the pope to fulfill

  • Guareschi, Giovanni (Italian journalist and novelist)

    Don Camillo: …short stories by Italian author Giovanni Guareschi. The character also figured in a series of successful French-language films (1950s and ’60s) starring the French comic actor Fernandel.

  • Guárico (state, Venezuela)

    Guárico, estado (state), north-central Venezuela. It is bounded north by the central highlands and south by the Orinoco River. Until the 1960s life in this state in the Llanos (plains) was dominated by cattle raising. With the completion of the Guárico River Reclamation Project near Calabozo,