X-Nico

3 unusual facts about Horwitz


Horwitz

William Horwitz, Scientist Emeritus, formerly an analytical chemist at the Food and Drug Administration, USA

J. E. Macdonnell

Mettle At Woomera was re-released in paperback as Weapon Raid by Horwitz in 1979, using the name J. E. Macdonnell.

Macdonnell began writing full-time for Horwitz in 1956, writing an average of a dozen books a year.


Brian Horwitz

At Crespi Carmelite High School in Encino, California, Horwitz was Mission League MVP, All-Valley, and first team All-CIF Division I as a senior, batting .415.

Channa Horwitz

Horwitz was born in Boyle Heights, Los Angeles, on May 21, 1932; her father was an electrician and inventor.

Confederates in the Attic

In response, in 1998 the Southern Legal Resource Center sued Horwitz on Martin's behalf, with encouragement from the Sons of Confederate Veterans.

Elinor Lander Horwitz

Horwitz is the mother of Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Tony Horwitz and the mother-in-law of journalist and author Geraldine Brooks.

Finding Chandra

Horwitz and Higham shared the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting for their examination of the deaths of children in the D.C. foster care system.

Higham and Horwitz present a thoroughly researched narrative of Chandra's case and the factors that complicated it—an affair between the victim and Congressman Gary Condit, missteps by DC law enforcement, and relentless scrutiny from national media.

Gary Cummiskey

He is the editor of Dye Hard Press, which since 1994 has published writers such as Gail Dendy, Arja Salafranca, Alan Finlay, Philip Zhuwao, Roy Blumenthal, Gus Ferguson, Kobus Moolman and Allan Kolski Horwitz.

Jeremy Howard

Curly Howard (Jerome Lester "Jerry" Horwitz, 1903–1952), American comedian and vaudevillian actor

Jerome Horwitz

While some believe Horwitz was referenced in the Captain Underpants books, the Jerome Horwitz Elementary School in the children's book series was in fact named after Curly Howard from the Three Stooges.

Ken Maynard

Maynard's funeral is described in detail in James Horwitz's book They Went Thataway.

Steven Horwitz

In 1989, Horwitz joined the economics department of St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York, where he continues to be employed at present.

Horwitz currently resides in Canton, New York with his wife Jody and his two children Andrew and Rachel.

Tony Horwitz

Horwitz was born Anthony Lander Horwitz in Washington, DC, the son of Norman Harold Horwitz and Elinor Lander Horwitz, a writer of young adult and adult books.

Tyler Hinman

Hinman, along with fellow puzzlemaker Jeremy Horwitz, received national attention when they fulfilled a wish of San Francisco Giants pitcher Brian Wilson by including his name in a puzzle for the Times.

William Horwitz

Horwitz worked for the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for 57 years until his retirement in 2000 and was head of the Association of Official Analytical Chemists for 24 years.

William Horwitz (1918-September 27, 2006 Olney, Maryland) was an analytical chemist who is notable for formulating a description of the relationship between the variability of chemical measurements and the concentration of the analyte.


see also