• João o Bastardo (king of Portugal)

    John I was the king of Portugal from 1385 to 1433, who preserved his country’s independence from Castile and initiated Portugal’s overseas expansion. He was the founder of the Aviz, or Joanina (Johannine), dynasty. John was the illegitimate son of King Pedro I and Teresa Lourenço. At age six he was

  • João o Grande (king of Portugal)

    John I was the king of Portugal from 1385 to 1433, who preserved his country’s independence from Castile and initiated Portugal’s overseas expansion. He was the founder of the Aviz, or Joanina (Johannine), dynasty. John was the illegitimate son of King Pedro I and Teresa Lourenço. At age six he was

  • João o Piedoso (king of Portugal)

    John III was the king of Portugal from 1521 to 1557. His long reign saw the development of Portuguese seapower in the Indian Ocean, the occupation of the Brazilian coast, and the establishment of the Portuguese Inquisition and of the Society of Jesus. Shortly after succeeding his father, Manuel I,

  • João Pessoa (Brazil)

    João Pessoa, port city, capital of Paraíba estado (state), northeastern Brazil. It is situated at an elevation of 148 feet (45 metres) above sea level on the right bank of the Paraíba do Norte River, 11 miles (18 km) above its mouth, 75 miles (121 km) north of Recife, and about 100 miles [160 km]

  • João VI (king of Portugal)

    John VI was the prince regent of Portugal from 1799 to 1816 and king from 1816 to 1826. His reign saw the revolutionary struggle in France, the Napoleonic invasion of Portugal (during which he established his court in Brazil), and the implantation of representative government in both Portugal and

  • João, Dom (king of Portugal)

    John VI was the prince regent of Portugal from 1799 to 1816 and king from 1816 to 1826. His reign saw the revolutionary struggle in France, the Napoleonic invasion of Portugal (during which he established his court in Brazil), and the implantation of representative government in both Portugal and

  • Joaquim Nabuco Institute (institution, Recife, Brazil)

    Recife: The independent Joaquim Nabuco Institute of social researches, which is distinguished for its anthropological studies, is also located there. Besides the State Museum, there are museums of sugarcane and of popular art. There are many historic churches and public buildings, including the Governor’s Palace and the Santa…

  • Joaquín Rodríguez, José (president of Costa Rica)

    Costa Rica: Independence of Costa Rica: José Joaquín Rodríguez in what is considered the first entirely free and honest election in all of Central America.

  • Joaquin, Nick (Filipino author)

    Nick Joaquin was a Filipino novelist, poet, playwright, essayist, and biographer whose works present the diverse heritage of the Filipino people. Joaquin was awarded a scholarship to the Dominican monastery in Hong Kong after publication of his essay “La Naval de Manila” (1943), a description of

  • Joaquin, Nicomedes (Filipino author)

    Nick Joaquin was a Filipino novelist, poet, playwright, essayist, and biographer whose works present the diverse heritage of the Filipino people. Joaquin was awarded a scholarship to the Dominican monastery in Hong Kong after publication of his essay “La Naval de Manila” (1943), a description of

  • Joasaph II (patriarch of Constantinople)

    Christianity: The Reformation: …1559, when Melanchthon and Patriarch Joasaph II of Constantinople corresponded, with the intention of using the Augsburg Confession as the basis of dialogue between Lutheran and Eastern Orthodox Christians. On the eve of the French wars of religions (1561), Roman Catholics and Protestants conferred without success in the Colloquy of…

  • Job (biblical figure)

    Job, is a biblical figure who appears most prominently as the titular character of the Book of Job in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament). In that biblical text, Job is described as a righteous, god-fearing, and prosperous man. In a heavenly meeting God extols Job’s virtues, but Satan insists that Job

  • job (economics)

    Abundance and Unemployment: Our Future: …significant and rapid loss of jobs, from truck driver to anesthesiologist. Don’t get me wrong: it is not the magnitude of this change that worries me. I believe that people are continually losing their jobs to increasing technology and ultimately “upskilling” themselves (in partnership with technology) to become even better…

  • Job (poem by Eben Fardd)

    Eben Fardd: …at the Welshpool eisteddfod (1824); Job, which won at Liverpool (1840); and Maes Bosworth (“Bosworth Field”), which won at Llangollen (1858). In addition to his eisteddfodic compositions, he wrote many hymns, a collection of which was published in 1862. His complete works appeared under the title Gweithiau Barddonol Eben Fardd…

  • Job Corps (American education program)

    Job Corps, U.S. government residential education and job-training program for low-income at-risk young people. Funded by Congress and administered by the U.S. Department of Labor, Job Corps seeks to teach young people the academic and vocational skills they need to secure meaningful and lasting

  • job evaluation (labor economics)

    labour economics: Job evaluation: This term covers a range of procedures used to develop and maintain a consistent internal pay structure that is acceptable to the work force. Ranking methods use surveys of the work force’s preconceptions of fairness to arrive at a comprehensive pay structure. Analytic…

  • job interview (employment)
  • job interview mistakes

    an overview of the most common blunders job seekers make when interviewing for a

  • job interview questions

    an overview of commonly asked questions, and appropriate answers to such questions, during job

  • Job Market Signaling (work by Spence)

    A. Michael Spence: …his 1973 seminal paper “Job Market Signaling,” Spence demonstrated how a college degree signals a job seeker’s intelligence and ability to a prospective employer. Other examples of signaling included corporations giving large dividends to demonstrate profitability and manufacturers issuing guarantees to convey the high quality of a product.

  • job order costing (accounting)

    accounting: Cost finding: A second method, job-order costing, is used when individual production centres or departments work on a variety of products rather than just one during a typical time period. Two categories of factory cost are recognized under this method: prime costs and factory overhead costs. Prime costs are those…

  • Job Retention Project

    9to5, National Association of Working Women: …educational efforts, 9to5 established the Job Retention Project in 1987 to assist office workers in developing time-management, goal-setting, and problem-solving skills. In addition, the organization publishes fact sheets, newsletters, and books, such as The Job/Family Challenge: A 9to5 Guide (1995), by Ellen Bravo, that keep workers abreast of current issues.…

  • job scheduling (computing)

    computer science: Operating systems: , handling sequences of jobs that are compiled and executed one at a time without intervention by the user. Accompanying each job in a batch were instructions to the operating system (OS) detailing the resources needed by the job, such as the amount of CPU time required, the files…

  • job shop (industrial engineering)

    tool and die making: …machine shop was called a job shop, which meant that it had no product of its own but served large industrial facilities by fabricating tooling, machines, and machinepart replacements. Eventually, some machine shops began to specialize in tooling to the exclusion of other work.

  • job training (business)

    employee training, vocational instruction for employed persons. During and after World War II, in-service training by employers became a common practice. The rapid changeover in industry from peace to war led to training schemes for semiskilled workers, for workers transferred to new jobs, and for

  • Job’s tears (plant)

    Job’s tears, (Coix lacryma-jobi), cereal grass of the family Poaceae, native to tropical Asia. Job’s tears receives its name from the hard shiny tear-shaped structures that enclose the seed kernels; those beadlike pseudocarps are sometimes used for jewelry and rosaries. Forms of the plant are

  • Job, Saint (Russian Orthodox patriarch)

    Saint Job ; canonized Oct. 9, 1989) was the first Russian Orthodox patriarch of Moscow (1589–1605). Until Job’s election, the head of the Russian church had held the title metropolitan of Moscow and was, at least nominally, subordinate to the patriarch of Constantinople. Moscow, however, was eager

  • Job, The Book of (Old Testament)

    The Book of Job, book of Hebrew scripture that is often counted among the masterpieces of world literature. It is found in the third section of the biblical canon known as the Ketuvim (“Writings”). The book’s theme is the eternal problem of unmerited suffering, and it is named after its central

  • Job-hopping? Don’t forget to roll: 4 options for rolling over your 401(k)

    When you leave a job—whether by choice or not—rolling over your old 401(k) may be the last thing on your mind. Still, it’s an important step you shouldn’t overlook. The decisions you make about your 401(k) today could have a significant impact on your future and your ability to retire comfortably.

  • jobber (London Stock Exchange)

    security: Brokers and jobbers: Trading on the London Stock Exchange is carried on through a unique system of brokers and jobbers. A broker acts as an agent for his customers; a jobber, or dealer, transacts business on the floor of the exchange but does not deal with the…

  • jobber (business)

    marketing: Wholesalers: …into one of three groups: merchant wholesalers, brokers and agents, and manufacturers’ and retailers’ branches and offices.

  • Jobbik (political party, Hungary)

    Viktor Orbán: Fourth term as prime minister and the EU backlash: The right-wing Jobbik party, which had tacked to the centre for the election, finished second with 26 seats. The Socialist-led leftist coalition took 20 seats. Voters cast one ballot for a list of national candidates to fill 93 seats and another to elect 106 local representatives. There…

  • Jobe, Frank (American orthopedic surgeon)

    Tommy John surgery: Origins: …September 1974, by orthopedic surgeon Frank Jobe on pitcher Tommy John, who was playing for the Los Angeles Dodgers. At that time, elbow soreness and subsequent surgery often meant the end of a baseball pitcher’s career. When Jobe examined John’s throwing arm, he noticed that the UCL was simply absent.…

  • Jobim, Antônio Carlos (Brazilian songwriter, composer, and arranger)

    Antônio Carlos Jobim was a Brazilian songwriter, composer, and arranger who transformed the extroverted rhythms of the Brazilian samba into an intimate music, the bossa nova (“new trend”), which became internationally popular in the 1960s. “Tom” Jobim—as he was popularly known—first began playing

  • Jobim, Tom (Brazilian songwriter, composer, and arranger)

    Antônio Carlos Jobim was a Brazilian songwriter, composer, and arranger who transformed the extroverted rhythms of the Brazilian samba into an intimate music, the bossa nova (“new trend”), which became internationally popular in the 1960s. “Tom” Jobim—as he was popularly known—first began playing

  • Jobless claims and JOLTS: Piecing together the job market jigsaw

    Labor fuels the engines of economic production, and that’s precisely why the monthly Employment Situation Summary (aka the monthly jobs report) commands so much attention from investors and economists alike. In addition to serving as a barometer for the economy, it’s also one of the first major

  • Jobs (film by Stern [2013])

    Ashton Kutcher: Stardom: …several films, including the biopic Jobs (2013), in which he played Apple cofounder Steve Jobs. From 2016 to 2020, Kutcher portrayed a former Canadian professional football player in the Netflix sitcom The Ranch. Kutcher later starred opposite Reese Witherspoon in Your Place or Mine (2023), a rom-com about two best

  • Jobs, Steve (American businessman)

    Steve Jobs was the cofounder of Apple Computer, Inc. (now Apple Inc.), and a charismatic pioneer of the personal computer era. Jobs was raised by adoptive parents in Cupertino, California, located in what is now known as Silicon Valley. Though he was interested in engineering, his passions of youth

  • Jobs, Steven Paul (American businessman)

    Steve Jobs was the cofounder of Apple Computer, Inc. (now Apple Inc.), and a charismatic pioneer of the personal computer era. Jobs was raised by adoptive parents in Cupertino, California, located in what is now known as Silicon Valley. Though he was interested in engineering, his passions of youth

  • Jobson, Eddie (British musician)

    Roxy Music: …1951, Jarrow, Northumberland), and keyboardist Eddie Jobson (b. April 28, 1955, Billingham, Durham).

  • Jobst (king of Germany)

    Jobst was a margrave of Moravia and Brandenburg and for 15 weeks the German king (1410–11), who, by his political and military machinations in east-central Europe, played a powerful role in the political life of Germany. A member of the Luxembourg dynasty, Jobst was a nephew of the Holy Roman

  • Jocasta (Greek mythology)

    Martha Graham: Maturity of Martha Graham: …about the Greek legendary figure Jocasta, the whole dance-drama takes place in the instant when Jocasta learns that she has mated with Oedipus, her own son, and has borne him children. The work treats Jocasta rather than Oedipus as the tragic victim, and shows her reliving the events of her…

  • Jocasta (play by Gascoigne)

    George Gascoigne: Gascoigne’s Jocasta (performed in 1566) constituted the first Greek tragedy to be presented on the English stage. Translated into blank verse, with the collaboration of Francis Kinwelmersh, from Lodovico Dolce’s Giocasta, the work derives ultimately from Euripides’ Phoenissae. In comedy, Gascoigne’s Supposes (1566?), a prose translation…

  • Jocay (Ecuador)

    Manta, port city, western Ecuador, on Manta Bay. Originally known as Jocay (“Golden Doors”), it was inhabited by 3000 bce and was a Manta Indian capital by 1200 ce. Under Spanish rule it was renamed Manta and was reorganized by the conquistador Francisco Pancheco in 1535. In 1565 families from

  • Jocelyn (poem by Lamartine)

    Alphonse de Lamartine: Political career: …it appeared in 1836 as Jocelyn. It is the story of a young man who intended to take up the religious life but instead, when cast out of the seminary by the Revolution, falls in love with a young girl; recalled to the order by his dying bishop, he renounces…

  • Jochelson, Vladimir Ilich (Russian ethnologist)

    Vladimir Ilich Jochelson was a Russian ethnographer and linguist noted for his studies of Siberian peoples. Jochelson began his research while in exile in the Kamchatka region of eastern Siberia because of his activities with the revolutionary Narodnaya Volya (“People’s Will”) organization. He took

  • Jöcher, Christian Gottlieb (German scholar)

    encyclopaedia: Biography: …Scholarly Lexicon”) was compiled by Christian Gottlieb Jöcher, a German biographer, and issued by Gleditsch, the publisher of both Hübner and Marperger’s work and the opponent of Zedler’s encyclopaedia. Jöcher’s work was continued by the German philologist Johann Cristoph Adelung and others and is still of value today. The field…

  • Jöchi (Mongol prince)

    Jöchi was a Mongol prince, the eldest of Genghis Khan’s four sons and, until the final years of his life, a participant in his father’s military campaigns. Jöchi, like his brothers, received his own ulus (vassal kingdom to command), a yurt (a domain for his ulus), and an inju (personal domains to

  • Jōchō (Japanese sculptor)

    Jōchō was a great Japanese Buddhist sculptor who developed and perfected so-called kiyosehō, or joined-wood techniques. The son (or pupil) of a famous sculptor, Kōshō, Jōchō chiefly worked for Fujiwara Michinaga, de facto ruler of Japan at that time, and his clan. In 1022 he was awarded the

  • Jochum, Eugen (German conductor)

    Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra: …Bavarian state radio station, conductor Eugen Jochum organized the performing group in 1949, trained it to become a major orchestra, and took it to perform at the prestigious Edinburgh International Festival in 1957. Jochum continued to conduct the orchestra until 1960. In 1961 Raphael Kubelik became the orchestra’s second chief…

  • Jochumsson, Matthías (Icelandic author)

    Matthías Jochumsson was an Icelandic poet, translator, journalist, dramatist, and editor whose versatility, intellectual integrity, and rich humanity established him as a national figure. The son of a poor farmer, Jochumsson at age 30 was ordained by the Lutheran theological college in Reykjavík

  • Jocists (Roman Catholic organization)

    Young Christian Workers, Roman Catholic movement begun in Belgium in 1912 by Father (later Cardinal) Joseph Cardijn; it attempts to train workers to evangelize and to help them adjust to the work atmosphere in offices and factories. Organized on a national basis in 1925, Cardijn’s groups were

  • jockey (athlete)

    horse racing: Open field racing: …identified riders (in England called jockeys—if professional—from the second half of the 17th century and later in French racing), but their names were not at first officially recorded. Only the names of winning trainers and riders were at first recorded in the Racing Calendar, but by the late 1850s all…

  • jockey club (horse-racing organization)

    jockey club, organization involved with or regulating horse-racing activities, often on a national level. The Jockey Club of Britain is the oldest such club. It reigned as the supreme authority in control of horse racing and breeding in Britain from 1750 until 2006, when regulatory power shifted to

  • Jockey Club (club, New York City, New York, United States)

    horse racing: Jockey clubs and racing authorities: The (North American) Jockey Club, founded in 1894 in New York, at one time exercised wide but not complete control of American racing. It maintains The American Stud Book.

  • Jockey Club de Paris (French horse racing organization)

    jockey club: …conference is hosted by the Jockey-Club de Paris. Founded in 1834, the club became famous as the meeting place of France’s cultural elite. It also hosts Europe’s premier race for three-year-old Thoroughbreds, the Prix du Jockey Club. Inaugurated in 1836 and held annually in June, the race is often called…

  • Jockey Club of Britain (British horse racing organization)

    jockey club: The Jockey Club of Britain is the oldest such club. It reigned as the supreme authority in control of horse racing and breeding in Britain from 1750 until 2006, when regulatory power shifted to the Horseracing Regulatory Authority; it transferred to the British Horseracing Association in…

  • Jockey’s Ridge State Park (sand dune, North Carolina, United States)

    Nags Head: …sandy spit, notably at adjacent Jockey’s Ridge State Park; the park’s rolling sands and dunes, which reach some 135 feet (40 metres) or more above the sea, are the highest sand dunes on the East Coast and attract sand skiers and hang gliders. Kill Devil Hills, between Nags Head and…

  • Jocko Henderson

    For seven years beginning in the mid-1950s, Douglas (“Jocko”) Henderson commuted daily between Philadelphia, where he broadcast on WDAS, and New York City, where his two-hour late-evening Rocket Ship Show on WLIB was a particularly wild ride. “Hey, mommio, hey, daddio,” he announced, “this is your

  • Joconde, La (painting by Leonardo da Vinci)

    Mona Lisa, oil painting on a poplar wood panel by Leonardo da Vinci, probably the world’s most famous painting. It was painted sometime between 1503 and 1519, when Leonardo was living in Florence, and it now hangs in the Louvre Museum, Paris, where it remained an object of pilgrimage in the 21st

  • jocs florals (poetry)

    Spanish literature: Poetry: …the academy in Toulouse with jocs florals (“floral games,” or poetry congresses), including literary competitions. This royal encouragement continued under Martin I and Ferdinand I and helped to emancipate the literary style from foreign influences. As the century advanced, Valencia emerged as a new focus of literary activity: a school…

  • joculator (minstrel)

    dance: From amateur to professional: …for many centuries restricted to joculators, wandering bands of jugglers, dancers, poets, and musicians, who were generally regarded as social inferiors. The early ballets were performed almost exclusively by amateur dancers at court (though instructed by professional dancing masters) for whom dance was a means of demonstrating their own grace,…

  • Jodāi-e Nāder az Simin (film by Farhadi [2011])

    Asghar Farhadi: …Jodāi-e Nāder az Simin (2011; A Separation) and Forushande (2016; The Salesman), both of which won an Academy Award for best foreign-language film.

  • jōdai-yō (Japanese calligraphy)

    Fujiwara Yukinari: …the style of writing called jōdai-yō (“ancient style”).

  • Jodeci (music group)

    Missy Elliott: …break came in 1991 when Jodeci band member DeVante Swing signed Elliott’s group, Sista, to his Swing Mob Records label. Lack of funds prevented the release of Sista’s debut album, however, and the group subsequently broke up. Elliott teamed up with childhood friend Timbaland to cowrite and coproduce songs for…

  • Jodelle, Étienne (French author)

    Étienne Jodelle was a French dramatist and poet, one of the seven members of the literary circle known as La Pléiade, who applied the aesthetic principles of the group to drama. Jodelle aimed at creating a classical drama that in every respect would be different from the moralities and mysteries

  • Jodha, Rao (Indian ruler)

    Jodhpur: History: …was founded in 1459 by Rao Jodha, a Rajput (one of the warrior rulers of the historical region of Rajputana), and served as the capital of the princely state of Jodhpur. The princely state had been founded about 1212, reached the zenith of its power under the ruler Rao Maldeo…

  • Jodhaa Akbar (film by Gowariker [2008])

    Ashutosh Gowariker: Swades and Jodhaa Akbar: …he released the epic romance Jodhaa Akbar, set in the 16th century and starring Hrithik Roshan and Aishwarya Rai Bachchanas the titular characters—Mughal emperor Akbar and his Rajput bride Jodhaabai. The film was both a critical and commercial success.

  • Jodhpur (India)

    Jodhpur, city, central Rajasthan state, northwestern India. It is situated just northwest of the Luni River on a sterile tract of land covered with high sand hills. The region is sometimes referred to as Marwar (derived from maru-war [“region of death”] because of the area’s harsh desert

  • Jodl, Alfred (German general)

    Alfred Jodl was a German general who, as head of the armed forces operations staff, helped plan and conduct most of Germany’s military campaigns during World War II. Primarily a staff officer during and after World War I, Jodl served as head of the department of national defense in the war ministry

  • Jōdo (Japanese Buddhist sect)

    Jōdo, (Japanese: Way to the Pure Land), devotional sect of Japanese Buddhism stressing faith in the Buddha Amida and heavenly reward. See Pure Land

  • Jōdo Shinshū (Pure Land sect)

    Shin, (Japanese: “True Pure Land sect”), the largest of the popular Japanese Buddhist Pure Land sects. See Pure Land

  • Jodo-shu (Japanese Buddhist sect)

    Jōdo, (Japanese: Way to the Pure Land), devotional sect of Japanese Buddhism stressing faith in the Buddha Amida and heavenly reward. See Pure Land

  • Jodocks (king of Germany)

    Jobst was a margrave of Moravia and Brandenburg and for 15 weeks the German king (1410–11), who, by his political and military machinations in east-central Europe, played a powerful role in the political life of Germany. A member of the Luxembourg dynasty, Jobst was a nephew of the Holy Roman

  • Jodocus (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

  • Jodoin, Claude (Canadian labor leader)

    Canadian Labour Congress: Its first elected president, Claude Jodoin, came from the TLC. Officials of the CLC were then instrumental in forming the New Democratic Party in 1961.

  • Jodorowsky, Alejandro (French filmmaker)

    Alejandro Jodorowsky is a Chilean-born French filmmaker and author known for his surrealistic films, especially El Topo (1970) and The Holy Mountain (1973). Jodorowsky’s parents were Ukrainian Jewish immigrants. When he was eight years old, the family moved from Tocopilla to Santiago. He enrolled

  • Jodrell Bank Experimental Station (research station, Cheshire, England, United Kingdom)

    Jodrell Bank Observatory, location of one of the world’s largest fully steerable radio telescopes, which has a reflector that measures 76 metres (250 feet) in diameter. The telescope is located with other smaller radio telescopes at Jodrellbank (formerly Jodrell Bank), about 32 kilometres (20

  • Jodrell Bank Observatory (research station, Cheshire, England, United Kingdom)

    Jodrell Bank Observatory, location of one of the world’s largest fully steerable radio telescopes, which has a reflector that measures 76 metres (250 feet) in diameter. The telescope is located with other smaller radio telescopes at Jodrellbank (formerly Jodrell Bank), about 32 kilometres (20

  • Joe (film by Avildsen [1970])

    John G. Avildsen: …attention with the low-budget drama Joe (1970); it starred Peter Boyle as a virulent racist who reacts violently to the hippie counterculture that seems to be hemming him in. Joe captured the country’s polarized mood and became a surprise hit, but neither the low-budget Cry Uncle! (1971), starring Allen Garfield…

  • jōe (Japanese religious dress)

    shōzoku: Less formal are the jōe, a robe of white silk, and the varicoloured kariginu (which means “hunting garment,” attesting to the use made of it during the Heian period). Laypersons, too, may wear these garments during visits to shrines or participation in religious ceremonies.

  • Joe (film by Green [2013])

    Nicolas Cage: His atypically subdued work in Joe (2013), in which he played a former criminal who takes a protective interest in one of his young employees, was widely acclaimed. Cage then assumed the role of an airline pilot in Left Behind (2014), an adaptation of the first book (1995) of Tim…

  • Joe and Rika Mansueto Library at the University of Chicago (library, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, United States)

    Helmut Jahn: The Mansueto Library (2011) that he designed for the University of Chicago campus gave further evidence of his melding of design and engineering. The elliptical tear-shaped glass-and-steel structure provided a light-filled reading room that disguised several stories of underground book storage and a state-of-the-art robotic book-retrieval…

  • Joe Bell (film by Green [2020])

    Mark Wahlberg: …from 2020 included the biopic Joe Bell, in which he played a father who, after his bullied gay son died by suicide, undertakes a walk across the United States. In the sc-fi thriller Infinite (2021), Wahlberg was cast as a schizophrenic who discovers that his hallucinations are memories of past…

  • Joe Cool (American football player)

    Joe Montana is an American football player who was one of the greatest quarterbacks in the history of the National Football League (NFL). Montana led the San Francisco 49ers to four Super Bowl victories (1982, 1985, 1989, 1990) and was named the Super Bowl’s Most Valuable Player (MVP) three times.

  • Joe Gould’s Secret (film by Tucci [2000])

    Stanley Tucci: Work from the 2000s and personal life: …in and directing the film Joe Gould’s Secret (2000), based on The New Yorker’s feature writer Joseph Mitchell’s 1965 book of the same name. The film illustrates the peculiar figures living in early 20th-century Greenwich Village, New York, by focusing on a man who is writing an oral history of…

  • Joe Kidd (film by Sturges [1972])

    John Sturges: Later films: In 1972 Sturges directed Joe Kidd, which was arguably his best film since The Great Escape. The violent western, with a strong Elmore Leonard screenplay, starred Clint Eastwood as a former bounty hunter who agrees to help a landowner (Robert Duvall) track down the man leading a peasant revolt.…

  • Joe the Boss (American crime boss)

    Joe Masseria was a leading crime boss of New York City from the early 1920s until his murder in 1931. Emigrating from Sicily at age 16, Masseria associated with a band of Italian killers and Black Hand extortionists and committed burglaries and other petty crimes, but in 1920 he began to create the

  • Joe Turner’s Come and Gone (play by Wilson)

    Joe Turner’s Come and Gone, play in two acts by August Wilson, performed in 1986 and published in 1988. Set in 1911, it is the third in Wilson’s projected series of plays depicting African American life in each decade of the 20th century. The play is set in a Pittsburgh boardinghouse whose

  • Joe Versus the Volcano (film by Shanley [1990])

    Tom Hanks: …Ryan in the romantic comedy Joe Versus the Volcano (1990), Hanks reteamed with her in Sleepless in Seattle (1993) and You’ve Got Mail (1998), both directed by Nora Ephron. He portrayed the drunken manager of a women’s baseball team in the comedy A League of Their Own (1992) and delivered…

  • Joe-1 (atomic bomb)

    nuclear weapon: Atomic weapons: …(known in the West as Joe-1) with a yield of approximately 20 kilotons. A direct copy of the Fat Man bomb tested at Trinity and dropped on Nagasaki, Joe-1 was based on plans supplied by Fuchs and by Theodore A. Hall, the latter a second key spy at Los Alamos…

  • Joe-19 (thermonuclear bomb)

    nuclear weapon: Thermonuclear weapons: Known in the West as Joe-19 and RDS-37 in the Soviet Union, the thermonuclear bomb was dropped from a bomber at the Semipalatinsk (now Semey, Kazakhstan) test site. As recounted by Sakharov, this test “crowned years of effort [and] opened the way for a whole range of devices with remarkable…

  • Joe-4 (thermonuclear bomb)

    nuclear weapon: Thermonuclear weapons: …known in the West as Joe-4 and in the Soviet Union as RDS-6, was detonated on August 12, 1953, with a yield of 400 kilotons. Significantly, it was a deliverable thermonuclear bomb—a milestone that the United States would not reach until May 20, 1956—and also the first use of solid…

  • Jōei Formulary (Japanese administrative code)

    Jōei Shikimoku, (1232), in Japanese history, administrative code of the Kamakura shogunate (central military government) by which it pledged just and impartial administration of law to its vassal subjects. The shikimoku, or formulary (called Jōei because of its promulgation during the year so

  • Jōei Shikimoku (Japanese administrative code)

    Jōei Shikimoku, (1232), in Japanese history, administrative code of the Kamakura shogunate (central military government) by which it pledged just and impartial administration of law to its vassal subjects. The shikimoku, or formulary (called Jōei because of its promulgation during the year so

  • Joel (biblical figure)

    biblical literature: Joel: The Book of Joel, the second of the Twelve (Minor) Prophets, is a short work of only three chapters. The dates of Joel (whose name means “Yahweh is God”) are difficult to ascertain. Some scholars believe that the work comes from the Persian period…

  • Joel, Billy (American musician)

    Billy Joel is an American singer, pianist, and songwriter in the pop ballad tradition whose numerous hit songs in the 1970s and ’80s made him an enduring favorite on the concert circuit. Joel, whose father was a German Jewish immigrant, was raised in Hicksville, a middle-class suburb on Long

  • Joel, Book of (Old Testament)

    Book of Joel, second of 12 Old Testament books that bear the names of the Minor Prophets. The Jewish canon lumps all together as The Twelve and divides Joel into four chapters; Christian versions combine chapters 2 and 3. The book relates nothing about Joel except his name and that of his father.

  • Joel, William Martin (American musician)

    Billy Joel is an American singer, pianist, and songwriter in the pop ballad tradition whose numerous hit songs in the 1970s and ’80s made him an enduring favorite on the concert circuit. Joel, whose father was a German Jewish immigrant, was raised in Hicksville, a middle-class suburb on Long

  • Joenckema, Rembert van (Flemish physician and botanist)

    Rembert Dodoens was a Flemish physician and botanist whose Stirpium historiae pemptades sex sive libri XXX (1583) is considered one of the foremost botanical works of the late 16th century. Dodoens received a medical degree from the Catholic University of Leuven (Louvain) in 1535 and composed works