- Paris Symphonies (symphonies by Haydn)
symphony: Haydn: The late Paris Symphonies (1785–86) and London Symphonies (1791–95) reflect the influence of Mozart and show Haydn at the height of his power. No two movements are alike; the “mosaic” of theme elements pervades even transition sections and codas; each instrument shares in the melodic development; minuets…
- Paris Symphony Orchestra (French orchestra)
Pierre Monteux: He founded and directed the Paris Symphony (1929–38) and then returned to the U.S. to take over the newly reorganized San Francisco Symphony (1936–52). In 1943 he established an annual summer school for student conductors at Hancock, Maine. From 1960 he was permanent conductor of the London Symphony.
- Paris Trout (film by Gyllenhaal [1991])
Dennis Hopper: … nomination for the television movie Paris Trout (1991), in which he played the bigoted title character. He appeared as a Serbian war criminal on the television series 24 in 2002, and he later portrayed a music producer in the series Crash (2008–09).
- Paris Underground (film by Ratoff [1945])
Gregory Ratoff: Films of the 1930s and ’40s: …Gershwin and Kurl Weill), whereas Paris Underground (1945) was a solid drama in which prisoner-of-war internees (Constance Bennett and Gracie Fields) help run a resistance movement.
- Paris ware (pottery)
Paris ware, faience (tin-glazed earthenware) and porcelain ware produced in the Paris region from the 16th century. The hard-paste–porcelain industry in Paris owed its existence to a breach in the Sèvres porcelain monopoly after 1766. The major factories were under the protection or ownership of
- Paris Was Yesterday, 1925-1939 (essays by Flanner)
Janet Flanner: (1965), Paris Journal, 1965–1971 (1971), Paris Was Yesterday, 1925–1939 (1972), London Was Yesterday, 1934–1939 (1975), and Janet Flanner’s World: Uncollected Writings 1932–1975 (1979). In addition to her collections of essays, Flanner wrote a novel, The Cubical City (1926, reprinted 1974), and translated Colette’s Chéri (1920) and Georgette Leblanc’s Ma vie…
- Paris Zoo (zoo, Paris, France)
Paris Zoo, zoological park, comprising the Menagerie of the Botanical Garden (Ménagerie du Jardin des Plantes) and the Zoological Park of Paris (Parc Zoologique de Paris), both services of the French National Museum of Natural History. In 1793 the Jardin des Plantes, which was originally a
- Paris, Banque Nationale de (French company)
BNP Paribas: …through the 1999 merger of Banque Nationale de Paris (BNP) and Paribas. Its headquarters are in Paris.
- Paris, Bruno-Paulin-Gaston (French philologist)
Gaston Paris was the greatest French philologist of his age. After a thorough education in German universities (notably under Friedrich Diez in Bonn) and at the École des Chartes in Paris, he succeeded his father as professor of French medieval literature at the Collège de France. He was one of the
- Paris, Charter of (international relations)
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe: …by the adoption of a Charter of Paris for a New Europe, which expanded the organization’s role and established permanent institutions. In 1991 Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania became members, and Russia assumed the seat held by the former Soviet Union. In 1992 the other republics formerly of the Soviet Union…
- Paris, Commune de (1871)
Commune of Paris, (1871), insurrection of Paris against the French government from March 18 to May 28, 1871. It occurred in the wake of France’s defeat in the Franco-German War and the collapse of Napoleon III’s Second Empire (1852–70). The National Assembly, which was elected in February 1871 to
- Paris, Commune of (1871)
Commune of Paris, (1871), insurrection of Paris against the French government from March 18 to May 28, 1871. It occurred in the wake of France’s defeat in the Franco-German War and the collapse of Napoleon III’s Second Empire (1852–70). The National Assembly, which was elected in February 1871 to
- Paris, Commune of (1792)
Pierre-Gaspard Chaumette: …he was procurator-general of the Paris Commune, in which capacity he improved conditions in the hospitals; organized decent burial for the poor; and forbade whipping in the schools, prostitution, obscene publications, and lotteries.
- Paris, Council of (French history)
Chlotar II: …wide-ranging edict, issued at the Council of Paris in October 614, intended to settle the problems arising from the long years of turmoil. He made contact with the Irish missionary and monastic reformer St. Columban and supported the monastery at Luxeuil that Columban had founded. Apart from some trouble in…
- Paris, Gaston (French philologist)
Gaston Paris was the greatest French philologist of his age. After a thorough education in German universities (notably under Friedrich Diez in Bonn) and at the École des Chartes in Paris, he succeeded his father as professor of French medieval literature at the Collège de France. He was one of the
- Paris, Jean de (French artist)
Jean Perréal was a painter, architect, and sculptor, and the most important portrait painter in France at the beginning of the 16th century. Perréal was a court painter to the Bourbons and later worked for Charles VIII, Louis XII, and Francis I of France. He traveled to Italy several times between
- Paris, Matthew (English artist and historian)
Matthew Paris was an English Benedictine monk and chronicler, known largely only through his voluminous and detailed writings, which constitute one of the most important sources of knowledge of events in Europe between 1235 and 1259. Paris was admitted a monk at the Abbey of St. Albans in England
- Paris, Montparnasse (photography by Gursky)
Andreas Gursky: …of that scale is his Paris, Montparnasse (1993)—a panoramic image of a large high-density apartment building that stands 7 feet high × 13 feet wide (about 2.1 × 4 metres). The head-on, slightly elevated perspective captures the building, some sky, and some ground, offering the viewer an entry point into…
- Paris, Observatoire de (observatory, Paris, France)
Paris Observatory, national astronomical observatory of France, under the direction of the Academy of Sciences. It was founded by Louis XIV at the instigation of J.-B. Colbert, and construction at the site in Paris began in 1667. Gian Domenico Cassini was the first of four generations of his family
- Paris, Pact of (France-United States [1928])
Kellogg-Briand Pact, (August 27, 1928), multilateral agreement attempting to eliminate war as an instrument of national policy. It was the most grandiose of a series of peacekeeping efforts after World War I. Hoping to tie the United States into a system of protective alliances directed against a
- Paris, Peace of (1796)
Italy: French invasion of Italy: According to the Peace of Paris (May 15, 1796), King Victor Amadeus III of Sardinia-Piedmont was forced to cede Savoy and Nice to France and to grant safe passage to the French armies. On the same day, Napoleon’s army drove the Austrians out of Milan, pursuing them into…
- Paris, Peace of (1783)
Peace of Paris, (1783), collection of treaties concluding the American Revolution and signed by representatives of Great Britain on one side and the United States, France, and Spain on the other. Preliminary articles (often called the Preliminary Treaty of Paris) were signed at Paris between
- Paris, Philippe d’Orléans, comte de (French pretender)
Philippe d’Orléans, count de Paris was a pretender to the French throne after the death of Louis-Philippe (1850). The death of his father, Ferdinand, Duke d’Orléans, son and heir of King Louis-Philippe, in 1842 made the young Philippe heir to the throne and the candidate of the Orleanists. The
- Paris, Philippe d’Orléans, comte de (French pretender)
Philippe d’Orléans, count de Paris was a pretender to the French throne after the death of Louis-Philippe (1850). The death of his father, Ferdinand, Duke d’Orléans, son and heir of King Louis-Philippe, in 1842 made the young Philippe heir to the throne and the candidate of the Orleanists. The
- paris, plaster of
plaster of paris, quick-setting gypsum plaster consisting of a fine white powder (calcium sulfate hemihydrate), which hardens when moistened and allowed to dry. Known since ancient times, plaster of paris is so called because of its preparation from the abundant gypsum found near Paris. Plaster of
- Paris, Siege of (French history [1870–1871])
Siege of Paris, major military engagement of the Franco-German (Prussian) War (1870–71), lasting from September 19, 1870 to January 28, 1871. After the defeat at the Battle of the Sedan, where French emperor Napoleon III surrendered, the new French Third Republic was not ready to accept German
- Paris, Siege of (French history [885–886])
Siege of Paris, Viking siege of Paris that lasted from November 885 to October 886. It was notable as the first occasion on which the Vikings dug themselves in for a long siege rather than conduct a hit-and-run raid or fight a battle. Their failure to capture the city, which was at the time the
- Paris, Texas (film by Wenders [1984])
Ry Cooder: …greatest impact in Wim Wenders’s Paris, Texas (1984), the vast panoramas of which provided the perfect visual counterpoint to Cooder’s moody, reverberating slide guitar.
- Paris, Treaties of (1919–1920)
Treaties of Paris, (1919–20), collectively the peace settlements concluding World War I and signed at sites around Paris. See Versailles, Treaty of (signed June 28, 1919); Saint-Germain, Treaty of (Sept. 10, 1919); Neuilly, Treaty of (Nov. 27, 1919); Trianon, Treaty of (June 4, 1920); and Sèvres,
- Paris, Treaties of (1814-1815)
Treaties of Paris, (1814–15), two treaties signed at Paris respectively in 1814 and 1815 that ended the Napoleonic Wars. The treaty signed on May 30, 1814, was between France on the one side and the Allies (Austria, Great Britain, Prussia, Russia, Sweden, and Portugal) on the other. (Spain made the
- Paris, Treaty of (1817)
house of Bourbon: The Bourbon sovereignties: The Treaty of Paris of 1817, however, prescribed that on Marie-Louise’s death Parma should revert to the Bourbons, who in 1847 renounced Lucca to the Habsburgs of Tuscany nine weeks before succeeding her.
- Paris, Treaty of (1814)
Germany: The Wars of Liberation: …of peace in the first Treaty of Paris (May 30) ended the Wars of Liberation except for the episode of the Hundred Days, when Napoleon briefly returned to power and was ultimately beaten at Waterloo. The western frontier of the German states was to remain essentially the same as at…
- Paris, Treaty of (1783)
Treaty of Paris, (1783), treaty between Great Britain and the United States concluding the American Revolution. See Paris, Peace
- Paris, Treaty of (1951)
international agreement: …first treaty was that of Paris, signed in 1951, establishing the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC); the second, the Rome treaty, signed in 1957, establishing the European Economic Community (EEC); the third, the Rome treaty of the same date establishing the European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom). A clause in…
- Paris, Treaty of (1946)
Austria: Restoration of sovereignty: During the Paris Peace Conference of 1946, an agreement had been signed guaranteeing the rights of the German-speaking population of Südtirol, a region that Italy had obtained after World War I. The Austrian government, claiming that the Italians had not lived up to their obligations, initiated bilateral…
- Paris, Treaty of (1898)
Treaty of Paris, (1898), treaty concluding the Spanish-American War. It was signed by representatives of Spain and the United States in Paris on Dec. 10, 1898 (see primary source document: Treaty of Paris). Armistice negotiations conducted in Washington, D.C., ended with the signing of a protocol
- Paris, Treaty of (1856)
Treaty of Paris, (1856), treaty signed on March 30, 1856, in Paris that ended the Crimean War. The treaty was signed between Russia on one side and France, Great Britain, Sardinia-Piedmont, and Turkey on the other. Because the western European powers had fought the war to protect Ottoman Turkey
- Paris, Treaty of (1815)
Ionian Islands: …islands were placed by the Treaty of Paris (1815) under the exclusive protection of Great Britain.
- Paris, Treaty of (1763)
Treaty of Paris, (1763), treaty concluding the Franco-British conflicts of the Seven Years’ War (called the French and Indian War in North America) and signed by representatives of Great Britain and Hanover on one side and France and Spain on the other, with Portugal expressly understood to be
- Paris, Treaty of (1661)
Jules, Cardinal Mazarin: Career as first minister of France.: …Lorraine to its duke (Treaty of Paris, Feb. 28, 1661). Thus, at his death, the former diplomat of the Holy See could rejoice at having “returned peace to Christendom.” He would have liked to have seen Europe take advantage of this peace by uniting in a crusade against the…
- Paris, Treaty of (1404)
Charles III: By the treaty of Paris (1404) Charles not only renounced the Navarrese claims to Champagne but also ceded Cherbourg (which he had recovered from the English in 1393) and the countship of Évreux to Charles VI of France in exchange for Nemours, which was raised from a…
- Paris, Treaty of (1327)
France: Foreign relations: By the Treaty of Paris (March 1327) France recovered Agenais and Bazadais and imposed a heavy indemnity on England, but a number of issues were left unresolved. Meanwhile, having married the emperor Henry VII’s daughter, Charles was tempted to negotiate for the vacant imperial title in 1324;…
- Paris, Treaty of (1259)
United Kingdom: The Hundred Years’ War to 1360: …and stemming ultimately from the Treaty of Paris of 1259. By establishing that the kings of England owed homage to the kings of France for Gascony the treaty had created an awkward relationship. The building of bastides (fortified towns) by each side contributed to friction, as did piracy by English…
- Paris, Treaty of (1229)
Albigenses: …civilization, ended, politically, in the Treaty of Paris (1229), which destroyed the independence of the princes of the south but did not extinguish the heresy, in spite of the wholesale massacres of heretics during the war. The Inquisition, however, operating unremittingly in the south at Toulouse, Albi, and other towns…
- Paris, University of (universities, France)
Universities of Paris I–XIII, universities founded in 1970 under France’s 1968 Orientation Act, reforming higher education. They replaced the former University of Paris, one of the archetypal European universities, founded about 1170. The medieval University of Paris grew out of the cathedral
- paris-mutuels (gambling system)
pari-mutuel, method of wagering introduced in France about 1870 by Parisian businessman Pierre Oller. It became one of the world’s most popular methods of betting on horse races. Most pari-mutuel systems are operated by the racetrack, although in France a national pari-mutuel system with offtrack
- Parise, Goffredo (Italian author)
Italian literature: Social commitment and the new realism: …nera (1950; “Black Flag”) and Goffredo Parise’s Prete bello (1954; “The Handsome Priest”; Eng. trans. The Priest Among the Pigeons). In contrast to the more topical appeal of these writings, the great virtue of Pavese’s narrative was the universality of its characters and themes. Among his finest works may be…
- parish (religion)
parish, in some Christian church polities, a geographic unit served by a pastor or priest. It is a subdivision of a diocese. In the New Testament, the Greek word paroikia means sojourning, or temporary, residence. In the very early church, the parish was the entire body of Christians in a city
- parish (British government unit)
United Kingdom: Local government: (Parishes are civil subdivisions, usually centred on a village or small town, that are distinct from church bodies.) They have the power to assess “precepts” (surcharges) on the local rates and a range of rights and duties, including maintenance of commons, recreational facilities, and environmental…
- parish (Louisiana government)
Louisiana: Constitutional framework: The parish (county), the municipality, and the special district are the units of local government. There are 64 parishes, with land areas that vary from roughly 180 square miles (466 square km) in Orleans parish near the city of New Orleans to more than 1,300 square…
- parish constable (British official)
constable: Under him were petty constables in each tithing, or village. The high and petty, or parish, constables remained the executive legal officers in counties until the County Police Acts of 1839 and 1840 allowed certain justices to establish a paid police force. In Scotland bodies of high constables,…
- parish library
library: 17th and 18th centuries and the great national libraries: …were established a number of parish libraries, attached to churches and chiefly intended for the use of the clergy (one of the earliest, at Grantham in Lincolnshire, was set up as early as 1598, and some of its original chained books are still to be seen there). They were sometimes…
- Parish Register, The (work by Crabbe)
George Crabbe: …together with a new work, The Parish Register, a poem of more than 2,000 lines in which he made use of a register of births, deaths, and marriages to create a compassionate depiction of the life of a rural community. Other works followed, including The Borough (1810), another long poem;…
- Parish, Robert (American basketball player)
Boston Celtics: …back to their college days), Robert Parish, Kevin McHale, and Dennis Johnson that advanced to the NBA finals five times in the 1980s and won championships in 1980–81, 1983–84, and 1985–86.
- parishad (ancient Indian assembly)
India: Political systems: …the sovereign general assembly, or parishad, to the meetings of which members were summoned by kettledrum. Precise rules governed the seating arrangement, the agenda, and the order of speaking and debate, which terminated in a decision. A distinction was maintained between the families represented and the others. The broad authority…
- Parishioner (e-book novel by Mosley [2012])
Walter Mosley: In Parishioner (2012), published as an e-book, Xavier (“Ecks”) Rule, a reformed criminal, is roped into solving a kidnapping that occurred nearly a quarter of a century before. Down the River unto the Sea (2018) centers on a New York City police investigator who tries to…
- Parisi, Giorgio (Italian physicist)
Giorgio Parisi is an Italian physicist who was awarded the 2021 Nobel Prize for Physics for his work on spin glasses, which proved widely applicable in the study of complex systems. He shared the prize with Japanese American meteorologist Syukuro Manabe and German oceanographer Klaus Hasselmann.
- Parisian Prowler, The (work by Baudelaire)
Charles Baudelaire: Prose poems: Baudelaire’s Petits poèmes en prose was published posthumously in 1869 and was later, as intended by the author, entitled Le Spleen de Paris (translated as The Parisian Prowler). He did not live long enough to bring these poems together in a single volume, but it is…
- Parisian school (music)
Notre-Dame school, during the late 12th and early 13th centuries, an important group of composers and singers working under the patronage of the great Cathedral of Notre-Dame in Paris. The Notre-Dame school is important to the history of music because it produced the earliest repertory of
- Parisian Woman, The (play by Willimon)
Uma Thurman: Career: …production of Beau Willimon’s play The Parisian Woman.
- Parisien Libéré, Le (French newspaper)
Le Parisien, morning daily newspaper published in Paris, one of the largest and most influential in France. Formerly called Le Parisien Libéré (“The Free Parisian”), it was established in Paris in 1944 as an organ of the French underground during the latter part of the German occupation in World
- Parisien, Le (French newspaper)
Le Parisien, morning daily newspaper published in Paris, one of the largest and most influential in France. Formerly called Le Parisien Libéré (“The Free Parisian”), it was established in Paris in 1944 as an organ of the French underground during the latter part of the German occupation in World
- Parisienne, La (work by Becque)
Henry-François Becque: La Parisienne (1885; Parisienne, 1943) scandalized the public by its treatment of the story of a married woman and her two lovers. Its importance, like that of Les Corbeaux, was not recognized until a decade after its appearance. In his last years, a withdrawn and…
- Parisiensus, Johannes (French artist)
Jean Perréal was a painter, architect, and sculptor, and the most important portrait painter in France at the beginning of the 16th century. Perréal was a court painter to the Bourbons and later worked for Charles VIII, Louis XII, and Francis I of France. He traveled to Italy several times between
- Parisii (people)
Paris: Foundation and early growth (c. 7600 bce to 12th century ce): …Gallic tribe known as the Parisii. The first recorded name for the settlement was Lutetia (Latin: “Midwater-Dwelling”). When the Romans arrived, the Parisii were sufficiently organized and wealthy to have their own gold coinage. Julius Caesar wrote in his Commentaries (52 bce) that the inhabitants burned their town rather than…
- Parisina’s Sleep (painting by Brown)
Ford Madox Brown: 1840) and Parisina’s Sleep (1842). Already concerned with the accurate representation of natural phenomena, he drew from corpses in University College Hospital in London when painting his Prisoner of Chillon (1843). During a visit to Italy in 1845, he met Peter von Cornelius, a member of the…
- parison (technology)
plastic: Blow molding: …a thermoplastic hollow tube, the parison, is formed by injection molding or extrusion. In heated form, the tube is sealed at one end and then blown up like a balloon. The expansion is carried out in a split mold with a cold surface; as the thermoplastic encounters the surface, it…
- paritta (Buddhist text)
Buddhism: Protective rites: …closely associated with texts called parittas, many of which are attributed directly to the Buddha. In Sri Lanka and the Theravada countries of Southeast Asia, parittas are traditionally chanted during large public rituals designed to avert collective, public danger. They are also very widely used in private rituals intended to…
- parity (mathematics)
perfect number: …obtained from it to be even, and in the 18th century the Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler showed that any even perfect number must be obtainable from Euclid’s formula. It is not known whether there are any odd perfect numbers.
- parity (economics)
parity, in economics, equality in price, rate of exchange, purchasing power, or wages. In international exchange, parity refers to the exchange rate between the currencies of two countries making the purchasing power of both currencies substantially equal. Theoretically, exchange rates of
- parity (particle physics)
parity, in physics, property important in the quantum-mechanical description of a physical system. In most cases it relates to the symmetry of the wave function representing a system of fundamental particles. A parity transformation replaces such a system with a type of mirror image. Stated
- Parity Amendment (Filipino history)
Bell Trade Act: …Filipinos objected to the so-called Parity Amendment, which required an amendment to the Philippine constitution allowing U.S. citizens equal rights with Filipinos in the exploitation of natural resources and operation of public utilities; nonetheless, some powerful Filipinos involved in these negotiations stood to benefit from the arrangement.
- parity check (information theory)
information theory: Error-correcting and error-detecting codes: …of error-detecting code is the parity code, which adds one bit to a block of bits so that the ones in the block always add up to either an odd or even number. For example, an odd parity code might replace the two-bit code words 00, 01, 10, and 11…
- parity, conservation of (physics)
parity: This conservation of parity implied that, for fundamental physical interactions, it is impossible to distinguish right from left and clockwise from counterclockwise. The laws of physics, it was thought, are indifferent to mirror reflection and could never predict a change in parity of a system. This…
- Parivāra (Buddhist text)
Vinaya Piṭaka: Parivāra (“Appendix”), a classified digest of the rules in the other Vinaya texts, apparently confined to the Theravāda school.
- parivincular ligament (mollusk anatomy)
bivalve: The shell: …typically develops either externally (parivincular) or internally (alivincular) but comprises outer lamellar, and inner fibrous, layers secreted by the mantle crest. The ligament type is generally characteristic of each bivalve group. The hinge plate with ligament also possesses interlocking teeth to enforce valve alignment and locking, when closed, to…
- Pariz un Viene (work by Levita)
Elijah Bokher Levita: He may also have written Pariz un Viene (printed in 1594; “Paris and Vienna”), about a poor knight seeking to marry a princess.
- Parizeau, Jacques (Canadian politician)
Pauline Marois: …of finance and future premier Jacques Parizeau, recruited her as a press agent for the first government of the Parti Québécois (PQ). In 1979 she became the chief of staff for the minister of the status of women.
- Parji language
Dravidian languages: Central Dravidian languages: Parji, spoken in the Bastar district of Madhya Pradesh, has borrowed extensively from Halbi, a dialect of Hindi. Parji is geographically contiguous to Ollari and Gadaba, which are spoken in the Koraput district of Orissa and the Srikakulam district of Andhra Pradesh, respectively. Ollari and…
- park
park, large area of ground set aside for recreation. The earliest parks were those of the Persian kings, who dedicated many square miles to the sport of hunting; by natural progression such reserves became artificially shaped by the creation of riding paths and shelters until the decorative
- Park Chung-Hee (president of South Korea)
Park Chung-Hee was a South Korean general and politician, president of the Republic of Korea (South Korea) from 1963 to his death. Widely regarded as the most influential South Korean leader of the 20th century, Park’s legacy remains deeply polarizing. His 18-year rule is closely associated with
- Park City (Utah, United States)
Park City, city, Summit county, northern Utah, U.S. Founded in 1869 as a mining district in the valley between the Wasatch Range and the Uinta Plateau some 30 miles (48 km) southeast of Salt Lake City, the small city enjoyed several booms during the 19th and early 20th centuries but faltered during
- Park Forest (Illinois, United States)
Park Forest, village, Cook and Will counties, northeastern Illinois, U.S. It is a residential suburb of Chicago, lying about 30 miles (50 km) south of the city. Developed as a planned community after World War II, Park Forest attracted widespread interest because its planners assumed responsibility
- Park Geun-Hye (president of South Korea)
Park Geun-Hye is a South Korean politician who served as president of South Korea (2013–17) and leader of the conservative Saenuri (“New Frontier”) Party. She was the first female president of South Korea. Park Geun-Hye had long been in the spotlight of Korean society as the daughter of Park
- Park In-Bee (South Korean golfer)
Park In-Bee is a South Korean golfer who in 2013 became the second player to win the first three major tournaments of the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) season: the Kraft Nabisco Championship, the LPGA Championship (later called the Women’s PGA Championship), and the U.S. Women’s Open.
- Park Jae-Sang (South Korean singer and rapper)
PSY is a South Korean singer and rapper. Originally known in his country as a controversial and satirical hip-hop artist, he achieved international fame in 2012 with the music video to his humorous pop song “Gangnam Style,” which became the first video to have more than one billion views on
- Park Myeong-Hoon (South Korean actor)
Parasite: Premise and plot: …that her husband, Geun-Se (Park Myeong-Hoon), has been living there for several years, unbeknownst to the Parks. This discovery plunges the Kims into conflict and threatens not only their scheme but their lives. Meanwhile, the Parks return home early from their trip, further complicating matters. The film’s climax comes…
- Park Range (mountains, Colorado-Wyoming, United States)
Park Range, segment of the Rocky Mountains, extending south-southeastward for about 200 miles (320 km) from Carbon county, Wyo., to northwestern Park county, Colo., U.S. The range lies to a large extent within Medicine Bow, Pike, Arapaho, Routt, and White River national forests and includes the
- park ranger (park management)
ranger: …1916 a force of national-park rangers whose functions were protection and conservation of forests and wildlife, enforcement of park regulations (for which they have police power), and assistance to visitors. Similar functions with respect to the national forests were assigned to the rangers of the Forest Service, established in…
- Park Ridge (Illinois, United States)
Park Ridge, city, Cook county, northeastern Illinois, U.S. A suburb of Chicago, it lies on the Des Plaines River, 17 miles (27 km) northwest of downtown. The area was first inhabited by Potawatomi Indians and used by French explorers as a portage. The site was settled in the early 1830s. In 1853
- Park So-Dam (South Korean actress)
- Park Street Church (church, Boston, Massachusetts, United States)
spire: …the exquisitely light spire of Park Street Church, Boston (1819), by Peter Banner.
- Park, David (American painter)
California: The arts: …has produced such painters as David Park, Elmer Bischoff, and Richard Diebenkorn. Los Angeles has been more successful as a marketplace for art, with a thriving colony of galleries along La Cienega Boulevard. Carmel, Big Sur, Ojai, and Sausalito have harbored communities of practitioners of diverse arts.
- Park, Keith (New Zealand military officer)
Trafford Leigh-Mallory: …the Number 11 Group commander, Keith Park (in charge of defending southern England), and with the head of Fighter Command, Hugh Dowding. In defending Britain against German air attacks, these two commanders stressed the timely, well-directed use of individual fighter squadrons to intercept German planes, whereas Leigh-Mallory advocated the use…
- Park, Maud Wood (American suffragist)
Maud Wood Park was an American suffragist whose lobbying skills and grasp of legislative politics were successfully deployed on behalf of woman suffrage and welfare issues involving women and children. Park attended St. Agnes School in Albany, New York, and after graduating in 1887 she taught
- Park, Mungo (Scottish explorer)
Mungo Park was a Scottish explorer of the Niger. Educated as a surgeon at the University of Edinburgh, Park was appointed a medical officer in 1792 on a vessel engaged in the East Indies trade. His subsequent studies of the plant and animal life of Sumatra won for him the backing of the African
- park, national
national park, an area set aside by a national government for the preservation of the natural environment. A national park may be set aside for purposes of public recreation and enjoyment or because of its historical or scientific interest. Most of the landscapes and their accompanying plants and
- Park, Nicholas Wulstan (British animator, writer, producer, and director)
Nick Park is a British animator and director of stop-motion films that often feature his characters Wallace and Gromit. Park demonstrated an early ability to draw, and by age 13 he was animating his cartoon creation Walter the Rat with his mother’s standard 8-mm movie camera. When he was 15, one of
- Park, Nick (British animator, writer, producer, and director)
Nick Park is a British animator and director of stop-motion films that often feature his characters Wallace and Gromit. Park demonstrated an early ability to draw, and by age 13 he was animating his cartoon creation Walter the Rat with his mother’s standard 8-mm movie camera. When he was 15, one of
- Park, Orlando (American entomologist)
Orlando Park was a U.S. entomologist known chiefly for his work on the biology and taxonomy of insects comprising the family Pselaphidae, a group of small, short-winged, mold beetles that commonly live in ant nests. Several years after acquiring his Ph.D. at the University of Chicago, Park joined