- Stolothrissa tanganicae (fish)
clupeiform: Reproduction: The eggs of the Tanganyika sardine (Stolothrissa tanganicae), a species that spawns at the surface in open areas of freshwater environments, hatch in 24 to 36 hours. The eggs constantly sink from the surface to a depth of 75 to 150 metres (250 to 500 feet) at a temperature…
- Stolp (Poland)
Słupsk, city, Pomorskie województwo (province), northern Poland. It lies along the Słupia River, 11 miles (18 km) from the Baltic coast. A manufacturing centre producing mainly furniture for export, it is situated on the Gdynia-Szczecin railway line. The Museum of Middle Pomerania is a notable
- Stoltenberg, Jens (prime minister of Norway and secretary-general of NATO)
Jens Stoltenberg is a Norwegian Labour Party politician who served as prime minister of Norway (2000–01, 2005–13) and secretary-general (2014– ) of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Stoltenberg, the son of politician and one-time foreign minister (1987–89) Thorvald Stoltenberg,
- Stoltenhoff (island, Atlantic Ocean)
Tristan da Cunha: Nightingale, Middle, and Stoltenhoff—are located within 25 miles (40 km) of one another, and the sixth, Gough, lies about 200 miles (320 km) south-southeast of the group. The territory is located approximately 1,300 miles (2,100 km) to the south of St. Helena. Inaccessible, Nightingale, Middle, and Stoltenhoff are…
- Stolypin land reform (Russian agricultural history)
Stolypin land reform, (1906–17), measures undertaken by the Russian government to allow peasants to own land individually. Its aim was to encourage industrious peasants to acquire their own land, and ultimately to create a class of prosperous, conservative, small farmers that would be a stabilizing
- Stolypin, Pyotr Arkadyevich (Russian statesman)
Pyotr Arkadyevich Stolypin was a conservative statesman who, after the Russian Revolution of 1905, initiated far-reaching agrarian reforms to improve the legal and economic status of the peasantry as well as the general economy and political stability of imperial Russia. Appointed governor of the
- Stolze, F. (German inventor)
gas-turbine engine: Origins: …an 1872 patent granted to F. Stolze of Germany. Dubbed the fire turbine, his machine consisted of a multistage, axial-flow air compressor that was mounted on the same shaft as a multistage, reaction turbine. Air from the compressor passed through a heat exchanger, where it was heated by the turbine…
- Stolze, Wilhelm (German stenographer)
shorthand: Modern symbol systems: Wilhelm Stolze invented his system at about the same time as Gabelsberger and along similar lines. In 1885 Ferdinand Schrey, a Berlin merchant, attempted to simplify the Gabelsberger system. Sometime later the Stolze and Schrey methods were merged and became the leading system in Germany…
- Stolze-Schrey shorthand (German shorthand system)
shorthand: Modern symbol systems: …system of importance was the Stolze-Schrey method. Wilhelm Stolze invented his system at about the same time as Gabelsberger and along similar lines. In 1885 Ferdinand Schrey, a Berlin merchant, attempted to simplify the Gabelsberger system. Sometime later the Stolze and Schrey methods were merged and became the leading system…
- Stölzel, Heinrich (German craftsman)
wind instrument: Trumpet-type aerophones: About 1815, either Heinrich Stölzel or Friedrich Blühmel, both of Berlin, invented the valved orchestral horn. When the valve was opened by depressing a key, it deflected the airstream into extra tubing, changing the effective length of the tube and lowering its pitch. The two valves of the…
- stoma (medicine)
speech: Substitutes for the larynx: …(breastbone), creating a permanent tracheal stoma (or aperture) through which the air enters and leaves the lungs. The oral cavity is reconnected directly to the esophagus. Having lost his pulmonary activator (air from the lungs) and laryngeal sound generator, such an alaryngeal patient is without a voice (aphonic) and becomes…
- stoma (plant anatomy)
stomate, any of the microscopic openings or pores in the epidermis of leaves and young stems. Stomata are generally more numerous on the underside of leaves. They provide for the exchange of gases between the outside air and the branched system of interconnecting air canals within the leaf. A
- stomach (anatomy)
stomach, saclike expansion of the digestive system, between the esophagus and the small intestine; it is located in the anterior portion of the abdominal cavity in most vertebrates. The stomach serves as a temporary receptacle for storage and mechanical distribution of food before it is passed into
- stomach cancer (pathology)
stomach cancer, a disease characterized by abnormal growth of cells in the stomach. The incidence of stomach cancer has decreased dramatically since the early 20th century in countries where refrigeration has replaced other methods of food preservation such as salting, smoking, and pickling.
- stomach oil (biology)
procellariiform: Stomach oil: Most tubinares, when handled or threatened, eject the oily contents of the stomach with some force. In some species, notably the cliff-nesting fulmars, this habit, a fear reaction that also serves to lighten the bird for flight, has been exploited as a defensive…
- stomach poison (chemistry)
insecticide: Modes of penetration: Stomach poisons have gradually been replaced by synthetic insecticides, which are less dangerous to humans and other mammals.
- stomach pump (medicine)
coma: …that may be treated by gastric lavage (stomach pump) in its early stages; alcohol combined with barbiturates is a common cause of coma in suicide attempts. Large doses of barbiturates alone will also produce coma by suppressing cerebral blood flow, thus causing anoxia. Gastric lavage soon after the drug is…
- stomach ulcer (pathology)
peptic ulcer: …men than in women, but stomach ulcers affect women more frequently. The symptoms of gastric and duodenal ulcer are similar and include a gnawing, burning ache and hungerlike pain in the mid-upper abdomen, usually experienced from one to three hours after meals and several hours after retiring.
- stomacher (garment)
stomacher, ornamental garment worn at the front of the upper body by men and women from the end of the 15th until the late 18th century. At the end of the 15th century, men’s jackets often had a V-opening allowing for a decorative front-piece, or stomacher, and women’s gowns were laced over an open
- stomacher brooch (ornament)
jewelry: 17th century: …form spread throughout Europe: the stomacher brooch, which covered a woman’s entire bodice, from neckline to waist. With its heavily bejeweled composition of scrolls, leaves, and pendants on a gold framework that followed the curves of the body, even extending under the armpits, this jewel usually contained no fewer than…
- stomachion (game)
puzzle: A history of puzzles: The Stomachion puzzle, also called Archimedes’ Box, was a dissection puzzle with a square divided into 14 pieces. It challenged readers to make as many different arrangements as possible. Thanks to computational geometry, it is now known that there are 17,152 solutions. Archimedes’ Box is considered…
- stomas (plant anatomy)
stomate, any of the microscopic openings or pores in the epidermis of leaves and young stems. Stomata are generally more numerous on the underside of leaves. They provide for the exchange of gases between the outside air and the branched system of interconnecting air canals within the leaf. A
- stomata (plant anatomy)
stomate, any of the microscopic openings or pores in the epidermis of leaves and young stems. Stomata are generally more numerous on the underside of leaves. They provide for the exchange of gases between the outside air and the branched system of interconnecting air canals within the leaf. A
- stomate (plant anatomy)
stomate, any of the microscopic openings or pores in the epidermis of leaves and young stems. Stomata are generally more numerous on the underside of leaves. They provide for the exchange of gases between the outside air and the branched system of interconnecting air canals within the leaf. A
- stomatogastric head ganglion (animal anatomy)
nervous system: Simple mollusks: …last ganglia, also called the stomatogastric head ganglia, innervate the pharynx, salivary glands, and a plexus on the esophagus and stomach. Other nerve cords—the pedal cords—leave the cerebral ganglia ventrally and terminate in a pair of pedal ganglia, which innervate the foot muscles. Another pair of nerve cords—the visceral cords—leave…
- stomatology (dental medicine)
dentistry: Other disciplines: Oral medicine, or stomatology, treats the variety of diseases that affect both the skin and the oral mucous membranes. Some of these diseases, such as pemphigus vulgaris, can develop their first manifestations in the mouth and can be life-threatening. Oral cancer also has a high mortality rate, partly…
- stomatopod (crustacean)
mantis shrimp, any member of the marine crustacean order Stomatopoda, especially members of the genus Squilla. Mantis shrimps are so called because the second pair of limbs are greatly enlarged and shaped like the large grasping forelimbs of the praying mantid, or mantis, an insect. They use these
- Stomatopoda (crustacean)
mantis shrimp, any member of the marine crustacean order Stomatopoda, especially members of the genus Squilla. Mantis shrimps are so called because the second pair of limbs are greatly enlarged and shaped like the large grasping forelimbs of the praying mantid, or mantis, an insect. They use these
- Stomiiformes (fish order)
fish: Annotated classification: Stenopterygii Order Stomiiformes Adipose fin present or absent, some species with both a dorsal and a ventral adipose fin; swim bladder without duct or absent entirely; maxilla the dominant bone of the upper jaw; some species with greatly enlarged, depressable teeth; anterior vertebrae sometimes unossified; light organs…
- Stommel, Henry Melson (American meteorologist and oceanographer)
Henry Melson Stommel was an American oceanographer and meteorologist. Stommel became internationally known during the 1950s for his theories on circulation patterns in the Atlantic Ocean. He suggested that the Earth’s rotation is responsible for the Gulf Stream along the coast of North America, and
- stomodaeum (anatomy)
cnidarian: Size range and diversity of structure: …have an internal pharynx, or stomodaeum, connecting the mouth to the coelenteron.
- stomotion (architecture)
Aegean civilizations: The Shaft Grave Period on the mainland (c. 1600–1450): …stones; a deep doorway, or stomion, covered over with one to three lintel blocks; and a circular chamber with a high vaulted or corbeled roof, the thalamos. When the facades are finely dressed with cut stones or recessed vertical panels, one may think of a Cretan connection; indeed, one of…
- Stomoxys calcitrans (insect)
stable fly, (Stomoxys calcitrans), a species of vicious bloodsucking fly in the family Muscidae (sometimes placed in the family Stomoxyidae) in the fly order, Diptera. Stable flies are usually found in open sunny areas, although they may enter a house during bad weather. Often known as biting
- Stompanato, Johnny (American gangster)
Lana Turner: …death Turner’s abusive gangster boyfriend, Johnny Stompanato. Turner’s account of her life, Lana—the Lady, the Legend, the Truth, was published in 1982.
- stompbox (electronic device)
effects pedal, electronic device, operated by foot, that enhances, distorts, or otherwise alters electrical signals that are transmitted through it and that originate with a musical instrument. Effects pedals are used to change the sound of the instrument, and there are numerous types. Most are
- Stomping the Blues (work by Murray)
Albert Murray: In Stomping the Blues (1976), Murray maintained that blues and jazz musical styles developed as affirmative responses to misery; he also explored the cultural significance of these music genres and other artistic genres in The Hero and the Blues (1973), The Blue Devils of Nada (1996),…
- Stone (film by Curran [2010])
Edward Norton: …Niro in the crime drama Stone (2010) and as a 1960s scoutmaster in Wes Anderson’s whimsical Moonrise Kingdom (2012). In the spy thriller The Bourne Legacy (2012), Norton played a nefarious former CIA agent. In 2014 he portrayed a police inspector in Anderson’s stylized caper The Grand Budapest Hotel and…
- stone (unit of weight)
stone, British unit of weight for dry products generally equivalent to 14 pounds avoirdupois (6.35 kg), though it varied from 4 to 32 pounds (1.814 to 14.515 kg) for various items over time. Originally any good-sized rock chosen as a local standard, the stone came to be widely used as a unit of
- stone (material)
art conservation and restoration: Stone sculpture: With examples dating back to the enormous prehistoric statues of Easter Island, many types of stone have been employed over the centuries in sculpture. Some of these stones yield more readily to the sculptor’s chisel (such as limestone, marble, and soapstone), while others,…
- Stone Age (anthropology)
Stone Age, prehistoric cultural stage, or level of human development, characterized by the creation and use of stone tools. The Stone Age, whose origin coincides with the discovery of the oldest known stone tools, which have been dated to some 3.3 million years ago, is usually divided into three
- Stone Age diet (human nutrition)
Paleo diet, dietary regime based on foods humans presumably would have consumed during the Paleolithic Period (2.6 million to 10,000 years ago). The Paleo diet focuses on meat (including wild game), fish, poultry, fruits, vegetables, eggs, seeds, and nuts. The diet excludes legumes, grains, most
- Stone and Kimball (American publishing company)
typography: Mechanical composition: …endpapers for his Everyman’s Library; Stone and Kimball of Chicago and Thomas Mosher of Maine, who issued small, readable editions of avant-garde writers with Art Nouveau bindings and decorated title pages; the Insel Verlag in Germany, with millions of inexpensive yet well-printed and designed pocket books—these and their many colleagues…
- Stone Angel, The (novel by Laurence)
Margaret Laurence: In The Stone Angel (1964), an ancient prairie woman tells her life struggles. A Jest of God (1966; made into the motion picture Rachel, Rachel in 1968) and The Fire Dwellers (1969) are about two sisters, a Manitoba schoolteacher and a Vancouver housewife, each trying to…
- stone bass (fish)
wreckfish, (Polyprion americanus), large, grayish fish of the family Polyprionidae (order Perciformes), found in the Mediterranean and in both sides of the Atlantic, generally in offshore waters. The wreckfish is deep-bodied, with a large head and jutting lower jaw, and attains a length and weight
- Stone Bridal Bed, The (novel by Mulisch)
Harry Mulisch: …novel Het stenen bruidsbed (1959; The Stone Bridal Bed), in which an American pilot involved in the bombing of Dresden returns to the city years later, won him an international audience. Twee vrouwen (1975; Two Women; filmed 1979) explored love between two women. Perhaps his most popular work is his…
- stone bubble (geology)
igneous rock: Small-scale structural features: Lithophysae, also known as stone bubbles, consist of concentric shells of finely crystalline alkali feldspar separated by empty spaces; thus, they resemble an onion or a newly blooming rose. Commonly associated with spherulites in glassy and partly crystalline volcanic rocks of salic composition, many lithophysae are about the size…
- stone canal (anatomy)
circulatory system: Echinodermata: …united via a duct (the stone canal) with a circular canal (ring canal) that circumvents the mouth. Long canals radiate from the water ring into each arm. Lateral canals branch alternately from the radial canals, each terminating in a muscular sac (or ampulla) and a tube foot (podium), which commonly…
- stone cell (plant anatomy)
pear: Physical description: …flesh, the so-called grit, or stone cells. In general, pear fruits are elongate, being narrow at the stem end and broader at the opposite end.
- stone centipede (arthropod)
centipede: The little stone centipedes (order Lithobiomorpha) are short-bodied. They, like the house centipedes, run with the body held straight and are the fastest moving centipedes.
- stone chest (funerary object or place)
cist, prehistoric European coffin containing a body or ashes, usually made of stone or a hollowed-out tree; also, a storage place for sacred objects. “Cist” has also been used in a more general sense to refer to the stone burial place itself, usually built in the form of a dolmen, with several
- stone chimes (musical instrument)
stone chimes, a set of struck sonorous stones. Such instruments have been found—and in some cases, are still used—in Southeast, East, and South Asia as well as in parts of Africa, South America, and Oceania. In the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church and the Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria, for
- stone china (pottery)
ironstone china, type of stoneware introduced in England early in the 19th century by Staffordshire potters who sought to develop a porcelain substitute that could be mass-produced. The result of their experiments was a dense, hard, durable stoneware that came to be known by several names—e.g.,
- stone curlew (bird)
thickknee, any of numerous shorebirds that constitute the family Burhinidae (order Charadriiformes). The bird is named for the thickened intertarsal joint of its long, yellowish or greenish legs; or, alternatively, for its size (about that of a curlew, 35 to 50 centimetres, or 14 to 20 inches) and
- Stone Desert, A (work by Wast)
Hugo Wast: …and Desierto de piedra (1925; A Stone Desert)—portray rural people in their struggle against nature and adversity and their ability to endure personal hardship. In such novels as La casa de los cuervos (1916; The House of Ravens), he told tales of adventure set against historical backgrounds. At times he…
- Stone Diaries, The (novel by Shields)
Canadian literature: Fiction: The Stone Diaries (1993), which won a Pulitzer Prize, begins in early 20th-century Manitoba and follows the life of Daisy from birth to death in a variety of voices and textual strategies, while in Unless (2002) a middle-aged professional woman confronts the nature of goodness…
- Stone for Danny Fisher, A (novel by Robbins)
Harold Robbins: …of the film industry, and A Stone for Danny Fisher (1952), a story about a Jewish boy’s struggle to succeed in Depression-era New York City. The latter work was widely interpreted as something of a roman à clef. It was the basis for the Elvis Presley vehicle King Creole (1958).
- Stone Forest (rock formation, China)
Kunming: The contemporary city: …of the city is the Shilin (“Stone Forest”) karst formation, consisting of rock caves, arches, and pavilions; a popular tourist destination, it and other karst areas in the region were collectively designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2007.
- stone fruit (plant anatomy)
drupe, in botany, simple fleshy fruit that usually contains a single seed, such as the cherry, peach, and olive. As a simple fruit, a drupe is derived from a single ovary of an individual flower. The outer layer of the ovary wall is a thin skin or peel, the middle layer is thick and usually fleshy
- Stone Guest, The (play by Pushkin)
The Stone Guest, blank verse drama by Aleksandr Pushkin, published posthumously in 1839 as Kamenny gost. The work is one of four acclaimed “little tragedies” completed by Pushkin in the fall of 1830. A highly intelligent poet and chronic seducer who thinks himself superior to almost everyone, Don
- Stone Knife, The (novel by Revueltas)
José Revueltas: …Human Mourning, also translated as The Stone Knife) is a powerful novel that uses flashbacks and interior monologues to present the plight of rural Mexicans from the pre-Columbian period up to the 1930s. In 1943 Revueltas was expelled from the Communist Party and took part in founding the Spartacus Leninist…
- stone marten (mammal)
marten: The stone marten, or beech marten (M. foina), inhabits wooded country in Eurasia from Spain eastward to northern China. It has grayish brown fur with a divided white throat bib. It weighs 1–2.5 kg (about 2–5.5 pounds), is 42–48 cm (16.5–19 inches) long, and stands 12…
- Stone Mattress (short stories by Atwood)
Margaret Atwood: Tips (1991), Moral Disorder (2006), Stone Mattress (2014), and Old Babes in the Wood: Stories (2023). In addition, she continues to write poetry. Her 16th collection, Dearly, was published in 2020. Atwood’s nonfiction includes Negotiating with the Dead: A Writer on Writing (2002), which grew out of a series of…
- Stone Mountain (mountain, Georgia, United States)
Decatur: Nearby Stone Mountain, which rises to more than 800 feet (245 metres) in an American Civil War memorial state park, constitutes the largest mass of exposed granite in North America. Carved on the side of the mountain are likenesses of the Confederate generals Robert E. Lee…
- Stone Mountain Park (park, Georgia, United States)
Georgia: Cultural life: Stone Mountain Park near Decatur (eastern suburb of Atlanta) is noted not only for its natural environment but for the massive Confederate memorial relief carved into the mountain’s open granite face. The mountainous north is dominated by Chattahoochee National Forest, which includes the Cohutta Wilderness…
- stone net (geology)
glacial landform: Permafrost, patterned ground, solifluction deposits, and pingos: …rings coalesce, they form polygonal stone nets. On steeper slopes, stone rings and stone nets are often stretched into stone stripes by slow downhill motion of the soggy active layer of the permafrost. In other areas, patterned ground is formed by vertical or subvertical polygonal cracks, which are initiated in…
- stone pine (tree species)
pine: …including black, white, Himalayan, and stone pines, and some are planted in reforestation projects or for windbreaks. Pine-leaf oil, used medicinally, is a distillation product of the leaves; charcoal, lampblack, and fuel gases are distillation by-products.
- Stone Poneys, the (American musical group)
Linda Ronstadt: …attention with a folk-oriented trio, the Stone Poneys, in California in the mid-1960s, Ronstadt embarked upon a solo career in 1968, introducing material by songwriters such as Neil Young and Jackson Browne and collaborating with top country-oriented rock musicians (including future members of the Eagles). Produced by Briton Peter Asher,…
- stone ring (geology)
glacial landform: Permafrost, patterned ground, solifluction deposits, and pingos: …the larger rocks are termed stone rings. When neighbouring stone rings coalesce, they form polygonal stone nets. On steeper slopes, stone rings and stone nets are often stretched into stone stripes by slow downhill motion of the soggy active layer of the permafrost. In other areas, patterned ground is formed…
- Stone Roots (poetry by Alexander)
Meena Alexander: …Name (1977), Without Place (1978), Stone Roots (1980), House of a Thousand Doors (1988), and The Storm: A Poem in Five Parts (1989). She also wrote a one-act play, In the Middle Earth (1977); a volume of criticism, Women in Romanticism (1989); a semiautobiographical novel set in Hyderabad, India, Nampally…
- Stone Temple (church, Quincy, Massachusetts, United States)
Alexander Parris: …works outside Boston is the Unitarian Church at Quincy, called the Stone Temple (1828), a severe and impressive building that shelters the burial vaults of Presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams.
- Stone Temple Pilots (American rock band)
Pavement: …the Smashing Pumpkins and the Stone Temple Pilots, while also slicking up the pop enough to get Pavement some MTV exposure with the “Cut Your Hair” music video. But instead of further pursuing what Malkmus called “gold soundz,” Pavement’s next album, Wowee Zowee! (1995), spurned the Lollapalooza (see rock festivals)
- stone thrower (cannon)
military technology: Terminology and classification: …category of ordnance was the pedreros, stone-throwing guns with barrels of as little as eight to 10 calibres that were used in siege and naval warfare.
- Stone Tombs I period (archaeological record)
Stone Age: Asian cultures: …300 bce in Transbaikalia, called Stone Tombs I, exhibits a transition to nomadism and mounted-warrior conditions. Cultural elements held in common with the Scythian steppe zone appear as far in the northeast as the Lena River. South–north and north–south movements are attested in the last centuries bce. The south–north movement…
- stone tool (archaeology)
Neolithic: It was characterized by stone tools shaped by polishing or grinding, dependence on domesticated plants or animals, settlement in permanent villages, and the appearance of such crafts as pottery and weaving. The Neolithic followed the Paleolithic Period,
- stone tool industry (archaeology)
stone tool industry, any of several assemblages of artifacts displaying humanity’s earliest technology, beginning more than 2 million years ago. These stone tools have survived in great quantities and now serve as the major means to determine the activities of hominids. Archaeologists have
- Stone v. Graham (law case)
Stone v. Graham, case in which the U.S. Supreme Court on November 17, 1980, ruled (5–4) that a Kentucky statute requiring school officials to post a copy of the Ten Commandments (purchased with private contributions) on a wall in every public classroom violated the First Amendment’s establishment
- Stone Virgin (novel by Unsworth)
English literature: Fiction: …prime and its decadence (Stone Virgin [1985]) and northern England in the 14th century (Morality Play [1995]). Patrick O’Brian attracted an ardent following with his series of meticulously researched novels about naval life during the Napoleonic era, a 20-book sequence starting with Master and Commander (1969) and ending with…
- Stone, Amelia (American social reformer)
Amelia Stone Quinton was an organizer of American Indian reform in the United States. Amelia Stone grew up in a deeply religious Baptist household. As a young woman, she worked as a teacher and did charitable work at almshouses and prisons. She joined the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)
- Stone, Barton W (American clergyman)
Barton W. Stone was a Protestant clergyman and a founder of the Disciples of Christ, a major U.S. religious denomination. Stone was ordained a Presbyterian minister in 1798, though he was more Arminian than Calvinist in his views and stressed primitive Christian thought and practice. He was
- Stone, Barton Warren (American clergyman)
Barton W. Stone was a Protestant clergyman and a founder of the Disciples of Christ, a major U.S. religious denomination. Stone was ordained a Presbyterian minister in 1798, though he was more Arminian than Calvinist in his views and stressed primitive Christian thought and practice. He was
- Stone, Biz (American entrepreneur)
Biz Stone is an American entrepreneur who, with Evan Williams and Jack Dorsey, founded (2006) Twitter, an online microblogging service. Stone attended two universities in Boston (Northeastern University and the University of Massachusetts) for one year each and then worked as a designer at the
- Stone, Christopher Isaac (American entrepreneur)
Biz Stone is an American entrepreneur who, with Evan Williams and Jack Dorsey, founded (2006) Twitter, an online microblogging service. Stone attended two universities in Boston (Northeastern University and the University of Massachusetts) for one year each and then worked as a designer at the
- Stone, Edward Durell (American architect)
Edward Durell Stone was an American architect who directed the design of a number of significant modern buildings. Stone studied art at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, in 1920–23 and architecture at Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 1927 he won a
- Stone, Emily Jean (American actress)
Emma Stone is an American actress known for her natural charm, husky voice, and adaptability to a wide range of roles. Stone received widespread acclaim for many of her performances, and her numerous awards include two Oscars for best actress: La La Land (2016) and Poor Things (2023). Stone gained
- Stone, Emma (American actress)
Emma Stone is an American actress known for her natural charm, husky voice, and adaptability to a wide range of roles. Stone received widespread acclaim for many of her performances, and her numerous awards include two Oscars for best actress: La La Land (2016) and Poor Things (2023). Stone gained
- Stone, Fred (American actor)
Fred Stone was a popular American stage actor and dancer known for his versatility. Stone was raised in Topeka, Kan., making his stage debut there at age 11, and soon joined his brother on tour with a number of small circuses. In the 1890s he teamed up with Dave Montgomery and together they toured
- Stone, Fred Andrew (American actor)
Fred Stone was a popular American stage actor and dancer known for his versatility. Stone was raised in Topeka, Kan., making his stage debut there at age 11, and soon joined his brother on tour with a number of small circuses. In the 1890s he teamed up with Dave Montgomery and together they toured
- Stone, Harlan Fiske (chief justice of United States Supreme Court)
Harlan Fiske Stone was an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1925–41) and the 12th chief justice of the United States (1941–46). Sometimes considered a liberal and occasionally espousing libertarian ideas, he believed primarily in judicial self-restraint: the efforts of government to meet
- Stone, I F (American journalist)
I. F. Stone was a spirited and unconventional American journalist whose newsletter, I.F. Stone’s Weekly (later I.F. Stone’s Bi-Weekly), captivated readers by the author’s unique blend of wit, erudition, humanitarianism, and pointed political commentary. Feinstein worked on newspapers while still in
- Stone, Irving (American author)
Irving Stone was an American writer of popular historical biographies. Stone first came to prominence with the publication of Lust for Life (1934), a vivid fictionalized biography of the painter Vincent Van Gogh. After receiving his B.A. in 1923 at the University of California, Berkeley, and his
- Stone, Isidor Feinstein (American journalist)
I. F. Stone was a spirited and unconventional American journalist whose newsletter, I.F. Stone’s Weekly (later I.F. Stone’s Bi-Weekly), captivated readers by the author’s unique blend of wit, erudition, humanitarianism, and pointed political commentary. Feinstein worked on newspapers while still in
- Stone, Julius (legal philosopher)
legal profession: The bench’s independence: …the 20th-century English legal philosopher Julius Stone observed, society of necessity has a government both of laws and of men, and the demand for legal autonomy is often seen in practice as a demand for freedom of the lawyers from undue political influence. The demand for autonomy has been expressed…
- Stone, Lucy (American suffragist)
Lucy Stone was an American pioneer in the women’s rights movement. Stone began to chafe at the restrictions placed on the female sex while she was still a girl. Her determination to attend college derived in part from her general desire to better herself and in part from a specific resolve, made as
- Stone, Marshall (American mathematician)
algebra: The structural approach dominates: …the work of the American Marshall Stone, who in the late 1930s defined Boolean algebras, bringing under a purely algebraic framework ideas stemming from logic, topology, and algebra itself.
- Stone, Matt (American screenwriter, actor, and producer)
Matt Stone is an American screenwriter, actor, and producer who was best known as the cocreator, with Trey Parker, of the subversive animated television series South Park (1997– ). Together with songwriter Robert Lopez, the pair also created the Broadway musical The Book of Mormon, which won
- Stone, Matthew Richard (American screenwriter, actor, and producer)
Matt Stone is an American screenwriter, actor, and producer who was best known as the cocreator, with Trey Parker, of the subversive animated television series South Park (1997– ). Together with songwriter Robert Lopez, the pair also created the Broadway musical The Book of Mormon, which won
- Stone, Melville E. (American editor)
Chicago Daily News: …a four-page, five-column daily by Melville E. Stone. Competition was fierce and money scarce, however, and in 1876 a financier, Victor F. Lawson, was persuaded to become the paper’s business manager. When Lawson took over full ownership in 1888, the Daily News had a circulation exceeding 200,000, the second highest…
- Stone, Milburn (American actor)
Gunsmoke: …a bordello; Doc Adams (Milburn Stone), the town’s adept physician; and Deputy Marshal Chester Goode (Dennis Weaver), Dillon’s loyal sidekick. When Weaver left the show in 1964, his character was replaced by Festus Haggen (Ken Curtis). Much of the series featured Dillon and his allies battling bandits, robbers, or…
- Stone, Nicholas, Sr. (English sculptor)
Nicholas Stone, Sr. was the most important English mason-sculptor of the early 17th century. Stone studied under Hendrick de Keyser in Amsterdam (1606–13) and was the master mason under Inigo Jones in the construction of the Banqueting House at Whitehall (1619–22). As a tomb sculptor, Stone was
- Stone, Oliver (American director, producer, and screenwriter)
Oliver Stone is an American film director, screenwriter, and producer known for his ambitious and often controversial movies. Stone, the son of a wealthy stockbroker, was raised in New York City. He briefly studied at Yale University before dropping out to teach English in South Vietnam. Upon his