Roger T. Forster, theologian and leader of Ichthus Christian Fellowship
Roger Moore | Roger Corman | Roger Federer | Roger Daltrey | Who Framed Roger Rabbit | Roger Waters | Roger Maris | Roger McGuinn | Beaumont-le-Roger | Roger Zelazny | Roger Ebert | Roger Clemens | Roger Smith | Roger Miller | Roger Tory Peterson | Roger Vadim | Roger Sanchez | Roger Blench | Roger Williams | Roger & Me | Robert Forster | Roger Taylor | Roger Staubach | Roger Heim | Roger Goodell | Roger Douglas | Georg Forster | Roger Williams (theologian) | Roger Sherman | Roger Mayweather |
She wrote the score for the television production of Howards End while living in Rooks Nest House near Stevenage, where E.M. Forster had lived as a child, and which was the setting for the novel.
Figsbury Ring features prominently in E. M. Forster's 1907 novel, The Longest Journey, renamed the Cadbury Rings (the surrounding area is called Cadford).
An open letter requesting urgent funds was published in the 18 September 1948 issue of Socialist Leader and was signed by Benjamin Britten, E. M. Forster, Augustus John, Orwell, Read and Osbert Sitwell.
George H. Forster (1838–1888), American lawyer and politician from New York
It appears that the principal frescoes in the Cappella San Felice were the work of Altichiero; and of those in the Cappella San Giorgio, which were recovered from oblivion in 1837 by Dr. E. Förster, the part to be assigned to Altichiero has given rise to much dispute; but it is thought by some authorities that Avanzo executed the principal portion.
Thirteen Ways of Looking at the Novel (2005), is a non-fiction meditation on the history and the nature of the novel, somewhat in the tradition of E. M. Forster's seminal Aspects of the Novel, that roams from eleventh century Japan's Murasaki Shikibu's The Tale of Genji to 21st-century American women's literature.
He also did a brief stint at Bennett Jones LLP where he represented Monsanto in Monsanto v. Schmeiser.
He has been referenced in the books Locating Home: India's Hyderabadis Abroad by Karen Isaksen Leonard, published by Stanford University Press (2007) and by E. M. Forster in his classic book A Passage To India published by Penguin Classics.
Nowhere does Justice Hughes state that those cases stand for the broad proposition that each claim in a patent represents a separate invention.