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The Stone Guest The Stone Guest (Каменный гость in Cyrillic, Kamennyj gost' in transliteration) is a poetic drama by Aleksandr Pushkin based on the Spanish legend of Don Juan. The Stone Guest was written in 1830 as part of his four short plays known as the Little Tragedies.
The Stone Guest (Dargomyzhsky) The Stone Guest (Каменный гость in Cyrillic, Kamennyj gost' in transliteration) is an opera in three acts by Alexander Dargomyzhsky. The libretto was taken from Alexander Pushkin's like-named play (from his collection The Little Tragedies), with slight changes in wording and necessary interpolations.
The Stone Raft The Stone Raft (Portuguese: A Jangada de Pedra) is a novel by Nobel Prize in Literature-winning Portuguese writer José Saramago. It first appeared in Portuguese in 1986, and was translated into English in 1994.
The Stone Tape The Stone Tape is a television play written by Nigel Kneale, directed by Peter Sasdy and starring Michael Bryant, Jane Asher, Michael Bates and Iain Cuthbertson. It was broadcast by the BBC as a Christmas ghost story in 1972.
The Stone's Lament The Stone's Lament is a Big Finish Productions audio drama featuring Lisa Bowerman as Bernice Summerfield, a character from the spin-off media based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who.
The Stones (New Zealand band) The Stones - named cheekily after The Rolling Stones - were a band from Dunedin in New Zealand. One of the earliest bands to record on the Flying Nun label, they helped form the style of music known as the Dunedin Sound, along with label mates such as The Chills, The Verlaines and Sneaky Feelings, all of whom appeared alongside the Stones on the seminal Flying Nun release The Dunedin Double EP.
The Stones (TV series) The Stones was a short lived sitcom television series that starred Robert Klein, Judith Light, Lindsay Sloane and Jay Baruchel as the Stone family that are divorced but still live under the same house. The show premiered on CBS on March 17, 2004 and was canceled after 3 episodes due to low ratings.
The Stones I Throw "The Stones I Throw (Will Free All Men)" was the A-side to the 1965 single by Levon and the Hawks, released on Atco Records. Seemingly a comment by Robbie Robertson in favor of the American Civil Rights Movement, it is carried by Garth Hudson's organ, and is far less rooted in the heavy R&B stylings of the group's other three single sides.
The Stones of Blood The Stones of Blood is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in four weekly parts from October 28 to November 18, 1978. This was the 100th story of the series.
The Stones of Nomuru The Stones of Nomuru is a science fiction novel written by L. Sprague de Camp and Catherine Crook de Camp, a volume in the former's Viagens Interplanetarias series and the first in its subseries of stories set on the fictional planet Kukulkan.
The Stones of Venice (book) The Stones of Venice is John Ruskin's original three-volume masterpiece on Venetian art and architecture, first published from 1851-53. Intending to prove how the architecture in Venice exemplified the principles he discussed in his earlier work, The Seven Lamps of Architecture, Ruskin examines Venice's Byzantine, Gothic and Renaissance periods and provides a general history of the city as well.
The Stones of Venice (Doctor Who audio) The Stones of Venice is a Big Finish Productions audio drama based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. This audio drama was broadcast on BBC 7 in four weekly parts starting on 1 October 2005, and will be repeated on the same channel beginning on 22 October 2006.
The Stony Brook Statesman The Stony Brook Statesman is a student newspaper serving the State University of New York at Stony Brook in New York's Long Island. It was founded in the fall of 1957 as the Sucolian, for the "State University Campus On Long Island" at Oyster Bay, the university's name and location until 1962.
The Stoop The Stoop is the popular name for the home stadium of the London rugby union club Harlequins, which plays in the first level of English rugby union, the Guinness Premiership and Harlequins Rugby League, which plays in the first level of English Rugby League, the Super League. The ground's official name changed in July 2005 from Stoop Memorial Ground to Twickenham Stoop Stadium, but even Harlequins official website frequently uses the informal name.
The Stories of Ray Bradbury The Stories of Ray Bradbury (ISBN 0-394-51335-5) is, as the title suggests, an anthology containing 100 short stories by American writer Ray Bradbury and was first published by Knopf in 1980. The hundred stories, written from 1943 to 1980, were selected by the author himself.
The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov (in some British editions, The Collected Stories) is a posthumous collection of every known short story that Vladimir Nabokov ever wrote, with the exception of "The Enchanter". The thirteen stories not previously published in English are translated by the author's son, Dmitri Nabokov.
The Storm (band) The Storm is an American rock group, formed in the Bay Area of San Francisco during the early 1990s. The band featured three of Journey's former members (two of whom were founding members) - Gregg Rolie as keyboardist, Ross Valory on bass, and Steve Smith on drums.
The Storm (radio station) The Storm was a digital-only, modern rock music radio station broadcasting in parts of Central and Southern UK, and owned by GCap Media. It played music from bands such as Green Day, The Killers, Kaiser Chiefs, The Libertines, Garbage and Franz Ferdinand.
The Story Makers The Story Makers is a children's television programme broadcast on the BBC's pre-school digital television network, CBeebies. The Story Makers is set in a children’s library, and encourages literacy and creativity.
The Story of a Recluse There have been at least three works of fiction under this name. One, an unfinished tale by Robert Louis Stevenson, tells the story of Jamie Kirkwood, an Edinburgh minister's son who finds himself waking up in a room identical to his own in the house of a mysterious man called Manton Jamieson.
The Story of a Soldier "The Story of a Soldier" ("La Storia Di un Soldato" in Italian) is a song from Sergio Leone's 1966 Western The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly. Like the rest of the film's score, it was composed by Ennio Morricone, and it is the only song in the score accompanied by lyrics.
The Story of an African Farm The Story of an African Farm (published 1883 under the pseudonym Ralph Iron) was South African author Olive Schreiner's first novel. It was an immediate success and has become recognised as one of the first feminist novels.
The Story of Doctor Dolittle In The Story of Doctor Dolittle, Being the History of His Peculiar Life at Home and Astonishing Adventures in Foreign Parts (1920), the first of Hugh Lofting's Doctor Dolittle books, we are introduced to the doctor who gives up treating people after Polynesia, his parrot, teaches him animal languages. His fame in the animal kingdom spreads throughout the world and soon he sets off to cure a monkey epidemic in Africa, finding all sorts of exciting adventures on the way.
The Story of Mankind The Story of Mankind was written and illustrated by American journalist, professor, and author Hendrik Willem van Loon and published in 1921. In 1922, it was the first book to be awarded the Newbery Medal for an outstanding contribution to children's literature.
The Story of Mankind (1957 film) The Story of Mankind is a 1957 fantasy film, based on the nonfiction book The Story of Mankind by Hendrik Willem van Loon. It is notable mostly for its campiness, for featuring an ensemble of notable Hollywood performers in the last years of their careers.
The Story of Modern Science The Story of Modern Science is a ten-volume book series by Henry Smith Williams, published by Funk and Wagnalls Co. The books, published in 1923, explain in great detail the then-cutting-edge technology and scientific methods of the Modern Era.
The Story of My Life (Millencolin song) The Story of My Life is a single release by the Swedish punk rock group Millencolin from their second album Life on a Plate. It was released on September 20, 1995, and the b-sides were included in the 1999 compilation album The Melancholy Collection.
The Story of My Typewriter The Story of My Typewriter is a little book, by Paul Auster, mostly with pictures by the painter Sam Messer about the author's old Olympia typewriter. Auster bought the typewriter in 1972 from an old college friend who had owned it since 1962.
The Story of Our Lives The Story of Our Lives is the name of a maxi single by The Echoing Green, released in June of 2004 on A Different Drum. This single does not feature the original version of the song as found on the album The Winter of Our Discontent, but instead features an "Epic" version which includes an extended piano intro and outro by Jason Smith of Leiahdorus.
The Story of Philosophy The Story of Philosophy: the Lives and Opinions of the Greater Philosophers is a book by Will Durant that profiles several prominent Western philosophers and their ideas, beginning with Plato and on through Friedrich Nietzsche. Durant attempts to show the interconnection of their ideas and how one philosopher's ideas informed the next.
The Story of the Animated Drawing "The Story of the Animated Drawing" is an episode of the Disneyland television program. Originally aired in 1955, it shows Walt Disney explaining the history of animation throughout the ages, starting back in prehistoric days and working its way up to some primitive mechanical animation contraptions in the nineteenth century.
The Story of the Glittering Plain The Story of the Glittering Plain is an 1891 fantasy novel by William Morris, perhaps the first modern fantasy to unite an imaginary world with the element of the supernatural, and thus the precursor of much of present-day fantasy literature. His earlier fantasies The House of the Wolfings and The Roots of the Mountains were to some degree historical novels.
The Story of the Night The Story of the Night is a novel by Irish novelist Colm TĂłibĂ­n, set in Argentina in the 1980s where the main character, Richard, was born. Son of a British mother and a dead father, he must come to terms with the hidden story of his two countries now at war and his sexuality as he grows up.
The Story of the Olive The Story of the Olive was a 1914 American silent popular short film written by Caroline Frances Cooke starring Sydney Ayres, Perry Banks,Edith Borella, Caroline Cooke, Jack Richardson (actor) Vivian Rich and Harry von Meter
The Story of the Trapp Family Singers The Story of the Trapp Family Singers is a memoir written by Maria Augusta von Trapp, the nun-turned-baroness whose life was set to music in the musical The Sound of Music. The book was published in 1949 by Lippincott, Philadelphia.
The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle is a biographical musical comedy starring Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, Edna May Oliver and Walter Brennan. The 1939 movie is based on the stories "My Husband" and "My Memories of Vernon Castle", by Irene Castle.
The Story Of Modern Sheffield "The Story of Modern Sheffield" is the name of a documentary film made between 2004 and 2006, made by the duo Ol and Chris (known from Radio What and "The Ol and Chris Show"). The film, as the title implies, is about the city of Sheffield, South Yorkshire.
The Story So Far (DVD) The Story So Far is a DVD set featuring five videos, live footage, and backstage interviews with the band New Found Glory. Corey Feldman makes an appearance in the video for "Hit or Miss," the live footage is taken from various stages in their career, and the backstage footage is filmed by their web content manager.
The Story with Dick Gordon The Story with Dick Gordon is an interview program hosted by Dick Gordon, former host of The Connection. Produced by North Carolina Public Radio and distributed by American Public Media, the show is based largely on stories and interviews chosen by listener input, though it is not a call-in show.
The Storykeepers The Storykeepers is an animated Christian video series produced by Zondervan. It takes place in Rome around 64 AD, and tells the story of a group of Christians attempting to survive Nero's persecution of Christians and spread the stories of Jesus Christ.
The Strand (bicycle path) The South Bay bicycle path is a mixed-type bicycle route in Los Angeles County. The trail starts as a separate, paved Class 1 bicycle path going Southbound at Will Rogers State Beach (about Temescal Canyon and the Pacific Coast Highway) and ends in Torrance County Beach.
The Strand Arcade The Strand Arcade is a historic shopping arcade in the heart of the Sydney central business district. The Strand Arcade is located between Pitt Street Mall and George Street in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
The Strands Series The Strands Series is a series of books and short stories written by Gael Baudino between 1985 and 1994, though some stories written earlier were published in a collection in 1997. The majority of the plot occurs in a fictional land named Adria, which is very heavily based on Medieval Europe.
The Strange Death of Vincent Foster The Strange Death of Vincent Foster: An Investigation is a book written by conservative journalist Christopher Ruddy. Ruddy first wrote about the Foster story for The New York Post and for the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review owned by the conservative millionaire Richard Scaife.
The Strange Love of Martha Ivers The Strange Love of Martha Ivers is a black-and-white film noir motion picture released in the United States in 1946, starring Van Heflin, Barbara Stanwyck, Lizabeth Scott and Kirk Douglas. The movie is based on a short story, titled Love Lies Bleeding by playwright John Patrick (using the pseudonym Jack Patrick), produced and brought to the screen by Hal B.
The Strange One The Strange One is a 1957 film about a military academy in the South (of the United States). The film is based on a novel by Calder Willingham called End as a Man, and the film is sometimes called by that name.
The Strange World of Planet X (film) The Strange World of Planet X (1957) is a British science fiction horror film, and a cautionary tale about science. It was also known as Cosmic Monsters, The Crawling Terror, The Cosmic Monster, and The Crawling Horror.
The Strangerhood The Strangerhood is a comedy series created by Rooster Teeth Productions. The series is produced primarily by using the machinima technique of synchronizing video footage from computer and video games to pre-recorded dialogue and other audio.
The Strangers (comics) The Strangers is the title of a comic book series by Steve Englehart and originally drawn by Rick Hoberg, for Malibu Comics’ Ultraverse imprint. The Strangers consisted of a group of random passengers on a cable car who were struck by what they believed to be a bolt of lightning, but was actually a "jumpstart": one of the bursts of energy emitted by the Entity From the Moon, which transformed them into "Ultras".
The Strangeurs Chain Reaction also know as the Stranguers, was a band from Yonkers, New York. They had four singles and were most notable for having lead singer Steven Tallarico aka Steven Tyler as he would later come to be known.
The Strat Pack The Strat Pack: Live in Concert was a film by Joe Walsh, David Gilmour, Brian May and many more about the concert from the 50th Anniversary of the Fender Stratocaster guitar, released in 2005 and recorded on September 24, 2004.
The Stratagem and other Stories The Stratagem and other Stories was a small book of short stories written by Aleister Crowley (1875-1947), occult magician, poet and self-proclaimed prophet of a new anti-Christian era going under the name of The Beast 666.
The Strategic Counsel The Strategic Counsel is a Canadian company that provides several market research services, such as conducting opinion polls. Their polls are often cited by the media in Canada, and are currently used for all political polling by CTV and The Globe and Mail.
The Strawberry Statement The Strawberry Statement is a non-fiction book by James Simon Kunen, written when he was 19, which chronicled his experiences at Columbia University from 1966–1968, particularly the April 1968 protests and takeover of the office of the dean of Columbia by student protesters. The title comes from a speech made by Herbert Deane, a Columbia administrator, who deprecated student opinions about university administrative decisions as having no more importance than if the students had said they liked the taste of strawberries.
The Strawbs The Strawbs are a rock band founded in 1964 in England. Originally known as the Strawberry Hill Boys, they started out as a bluegrass band and eventually moved onto to other styles (folk rock, glam rock, progressive rock, AOR).
The Strawmen The Strawmen are an independent band from Sacramento, California, featuring guitarist David Leonhardt, bassist Mark Harmon and vocalist Bill Harmon. Before the Strawmen could record their debut album or play a live concert, two-thirds of the band was "absorbed" by The 77s.
The Street (Rivington) The Street is a historical property located on a bridleway of the same name, within the village of Rivington, Chorley, Lancashire. On the banks of the Upper Rivington reservoir, it is currently a dwelling consisting of six luxury apartments, although it is virtually a second rebuild of the property.
The Street Scene The Street Scene is a basic model for epic theater set forth by Bertolt Brecht. An example was picked from completely simple, 'natural' incidents such as could be seen on any street corner: an eyewitness demonstrating to a collection of people how a traffic accident took place.
The Street with No Name The Street with No Name (1948) is a black-and-white film noir. The movie, a follow up to The House on 92nd Street (1945), tells the story of an undercover FBI agent, Gene Cordell (Mark Stevens), who infiltrates a deadly crime gang.
The Streets of Ankh-Morpork The first of the Discworld Mapp series, despite the author's original long-held opinion that a fantasy world could not and should not be mapped. The Streets of Ankh-Morpork features an atlas of the fictional city of Ankh-Morpork, a rich, powerful, and sprawling city on the Discworld, a fantasy series by British author Terry Pratchett.
The Streets of Cairo, or the Poor Little Country Maid The Streets of Cairo, or the Poor Little Country Maid is a well-known melody. In the United States, it is best known as The Hootchy Kootchy Dance Alternate titles for children song using this melody include "The Girls in France", "The Southern Part of France.
The Strength of Donald McKenzie The Strength of Donald McKenzie was a 1916 American silent short film directed by and starring William Russell and Jack Prescott and starring Charlotte Burton, Harry Keenan, George Ahearn, Jack Prescott, Nell Franzen and Marguerite Nichols.
The Strike of Nonthought The Strike of Nonthought a rather ordinary philosophical standard of thought throughout the lives of the swordsman primarily during the Edo period (16th century) of Japan. This philosophy is primarily taught by Miyamoto Musashi, in which it is told that you should always make your mind into a mind that is striking, and your body into a body that is striking when you and your adversary are about to launch an attack.
The String Cheese Incident The String Cheese Incident, one of the bands involved in the jam movement of the mid-to-late 1990s, formed in Boulder, Colorado in 1993, originally playing local gigs at ski resorts in exchange for free lift tickets. The band is comprised of Michael Kang (acoustic/electric mandolin and violin), Michael Travis (drums and percussion), Bill Nershi (acoustic guitar, lap steel guitar, and electric slide guitar), Kyle Hollingsworth (piano, organ, Rhodes, and accordion), and Keith Moseley (bass guitar).
The String Quartet Tribute The String Quartet Tribute is a series of string quartet covers released by Vitamin Records by several different groups of musicians. They focus on one band per record, and perform classical versions of their songs, note for note generally.
The Stroj The STROJ is an experimental music group from Slovenia. Famous for their performances using only selfmade instruments built from found materials, such as parts of old machines, empty containers, construction pipes, various screws and more.
The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Inquiry into a Category of Bourgeois Society (in German Strukturwandel der Ă–ffentlichkeit. Untersuchungen zu einer Kategorie der bĂĽrgerlichen Gesellschaft ), by JĂĽrgen Habermas, was published in 1962.
The Structure of Liberty The Structure of Liberty is a book by legal theorist Randy Barnett which offers a libertarian theory of law and politics. Barnett calls his theory the liberal conception of justice, emphasizing the relationship between legal libertarianism and classical liberalism.
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (1962), by Thomas Kuhn, is an analysis of the history of science. Its publication was a landmark event in the sociology of knowledge, and popularized the terms paradigm and paradigm shift.
The Stryder The Stryder was a band hailing from Long Island, NY. The Band was formed by Peter Toh and Scottie Redix in 1999 after their previous project, Yearly, disbanded following the departure of bassist Eben D'amico who left to join Saves the Day.
The Stuckists Punk Victorian The Stuckists Punk Victorian was the first national gallery exhibition of Stuckist art. It was held at the Walker Art Gallery and Lady Lever Art Gallery in Liverpool from September 18 2004 to February 20 2005, and was part of the 2004 Liverpool Biennial.
The Student as Nigger The Student as Nigger is the title of an essay and subsequent book by American educator Jerry Farber. The essay first appeared in the Los Angeles Free Press in 1967 and is often cited as one of the first underground publications to receive widespread recognition.
The Student Activity Center The Student Activity Center is a soccer/football field in Laredo, Texas owned by the United Independent School District best known outside of South Texas as the home stadium for PDL franchise Laredo Heat. The stadium also serves as home to four area high schools.
The Student Life The Student Life is a student newspaper covering Pomona College and the other colleges of the Claremont Colleges, a consortium of liberal arts schools in Claremont, California. It is published weekly each Friday during the school year by the Associated Students of Pomona College.
The Student Prince The Student Prince is an operetta written by Sigmund Romberg (music) and Dorothy Donnelly (book and lyrics), based on Wilhelm Meyer-Förster's play Alt Heidelberg. The Student Prince was the most successful of Romberg's works, running for 608 performances.
The Student Room The Student Room, known from 2001 until 2004 as UK Learning, is a United Kingdom-based internet forum for school and university students. The site currently has over 90,000 members, as well as more than seven million posts.
The Stuff The Stuff is an 1985 science fiction/horror film written and directed by Larry Cohen and starring Michael Moriarty, Garrett Morris, Andrea Marcovicci, and Paul Sorvino. It is often read (and intentionally so) as a parody of big tobacco.
The Stunt People The Stunt People are a San Francisco based group of martial artists and filmmakers who make both shorts and feature-length movies. They are arguably the best known of their kind and have been mentioned on the Kung Fu Cinema website.
The Stupidest Angel The Stupidest Angel: A Heartwarming Tale of Christmas Terror is the eighth novel by Christopher Moore. Set during Christmas, it brings together several favorite characters from his previous books in the fictional town of Pine Cove, a recurring location in Moore's novels.
The Stupids (band) The Stupids were a skatepunk thrash group from Ipswich in the United Kingdom in the 1980s, and were thought of as one of the leading groups of this style in those days. They recorded 3 sessions for John Peel's BBC Radio 1 show and toured the USA (with NYC rockers Ludichrist) and Australia (with locals, the Hard Ons) as well as Europe and the UK.
The Submarine (shark) The Submarine is the name given to a particularly large and aggressive great white shark that is claimed to have dwelled in False Bay, near Cape Town, South Africa, during the 1970s and the 1980s. According to some, it is still there.
The Subservient Chicken The Subservient Chicken is a viral marketing promotion of Burger King's line of chicken sandwiches and their "Have it Your Way" campaign. It was created for Miami advertising agency Crispin Porter + Bogusky by The Barbarian Group.
The Suburbs The Suburbs, an alternative rock and roll/funk/new wave band that (true to their name) came out of the western suburbs of Minneapolis, Minnesota, recorded several major-label albums in the 1980s. Brought together in 1977 via introductions by Chris Osgood of the Suicide Commandos, the Suburbs maintained the same lineup throughout their existence.
The Suffering (song) "The Suffering" is the second single and 9th track from Coheed and Cambria's third studio album, Good Apollo I'm Burning Star IV Volume One: From Fear Through the Eyes of Madness. A video, directed by Artificial Army, has been released and is on regular rotation on MTV2 and FUSE, and irregular rotation on MTV.
The Suffrajets The Suffrajets are a British all girl four-piece rock band. Their steady rise to fame has come off the back of their frequent touring (despite set-backs such as tourbus crashes), the release of well-received singles such as "Hold These Eyes" and "Distinction" and a Channel 4 documentary entitled We Are The Suffrajets.
The Sugar Twins The Sugar Twins are an American garage rock band formed by twin sisters, Honey and Holly. Self-described as “fun and sexy original sugar pop rock,” the sisters are originally from Sugar Hill, New Hampshire.
The Sugarhill Gang The Sugarhill Gang is an American hip hop group, known mostly for thier biggest hit, "Rapper's Delight", the first hip hop single to become a Top 40 hit. The track uses the bass line from "Good Times" by CHIC as its foundation.
The Sugi Tap The Sugi Tap (pronounced sue-gee tap) is an alternative rock/power-pop band operating since May of 2005. The band primarily plays in Southern California venues, with the slightly altered Eve 6 line-up of Max on vocals and guitar, and Tony on drums, accompanied by backing musical tracks, with very sparse electronic elements.
The Suicide Machines The Suicide Machines (formerly known as "Jack Kevorkian & The Suicide Machines") were a Detroit-based ska-core group founded in 1991 by Jason Navarro and Dan Lukacinsky blending modern ska-punk music with a hardcore influence. The band released an independent album and appeared on several ska compilations before signing with Hollywood Records, a Disney subsidiary.
The Suite Life Of Zack and Cody Soundtrack The Suite Life Of Zack and Cody Soundtrack is the first ever soundtrack to the Disney Channel television show, The Suite Life of Zack and Cody. The soundtrack features artists such as Ashley Tisdale, Dylan & Cole Sprouse and Jesse McCartney.
The Sultan's Elephant The Sultan's Elephant is a show created by the Royal de Luxe theatre company, involving a huge moving mechanical elephant and other associated public art installations. In French it is called La visite du sultan des Indes sur son éléphant à voyager dans le temps (literally, "Visit From The Sultan Of The Indies On His Time-Traveling Elephant").
The Sultans Of Ping FC The Sultans Of Ping FC are an Irish band formed in 1988 by Niall O'Flaherty, Pat O'Connell, Paul Fennelly and Ger Lyons. It was not until another couple of line up changes later that the band came to the attention of the British music press, when the song "Where's Me Jumper" was released.
The Sum of All Fears (film) The Sum of All Fears is a 2002 film directed by Phil Alden Robinson, from a screenplay by Paul Attanasio and Tom Clancy, based on the book by the same name by Tom Clancy. It stars Ben Affleck and Morgan Freeman.
The Sum of All Men The Sum of All Men is the first novel in David Farland's tetralogy, The Runelords. First published in 1998, the novel has been printed under a number of names, including The Sum of All Men, The Runelords, and The Runelords: The Sum of All Men.
The Summer Collection: Greatest Hits The Summer Collection is a compilation album by Donna Summer released in 1985 by Mercury Records. Summer had made her name during the era of disco music the previous decade when she was signed to Casablanca Records.
The Summer Tic EP The Summer Tic EP (2006) is an EP that is being sold during the 2006 Warped Tour by Fueled by Ramen band Paramore. The name of the EP comes from a line in the song "Stuck On You," which is a cover of a song by Failure.
The Summerland The Summerland is the name given by Wiccans (and some Pagans) and other earth-based religions for their afterlife. The belief is that after one experiences life to its fullest and comes to know and understand every aspect and emotion of life (usually after many reincarnations), their deity will let them into the Summerland.
The Summit at Snoqualmie The Summit at Snoqualmie, located on Snoqualmie Pass, Washington, is a winter resort providing alpine skiing and snowboarding, Nordic skiing, and winter tubing owned by Booth Creek Ski Holdings Inc.. The Summit consists of four base areas that used to be individually owned and operated resorts.
The Summit Open Source Development Group The Summit Open Source Development Group is a non-profit organization that encourages the development of open-source software. Among its projects, the group hosts The Abusive Hosts Blocking List, as well as ports Linux/UNIX applications to Windows (such as ClamAV and ircII EPIC).
The Sun (Malaysia) The Sun (now branded as theSun) is Malaysia's first national free daily newspaper in tabloid form. Available from Mondays to Fridays except on public holiday, with a target audience of the white collar working community and the urban young.
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