Horton researched and prepared the plaintiffs' position in the landmark school finance case Horton v. Meskill on behalf of his son Barnaby, the lead plaintiff.
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Clinton Thompson Horton (October 31, 1876 in Petrolia, Butler County, Pennsylvania – January 25, 1953) was an American lawyer and politician from New York.
The anthropologist Robin Horton, who taught at several Nigerian universities, considered the traditional knowledge of indigenous peoples as incorporated within conceptual world views that bear certain similarities to, and differences from, the modern scientific worldview.
Frank O. Horton (1882–1948), United States Representative from Wyoming
During the Spanish-American War he served as a private in Company C, Fiftieth Iowa Regiment in 1898; he moved to Saddlestring, Wyoming in 1905 and engaged in livestock raising.
Heather Marie (Burge) Quella (born November 11, 1971 in Fairfax, CA) is a former professional basketball player and is the twin sister of Heidi (Burge) Horton.
John Gilbert and Michael Horton were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Film Editing for those episodes.
Aerodrome No. 5, the first Langley heavier-than-air craft to fly, is on display at the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. Aerodrome No. 6 is located at Wesley W. Posvar Hall, University of Pittsburgh, and was restored in part by the Pitt engineering students.
In 2006, Brunstetter was appointed to fill a vacancy in the NC Senate resulting from the death of Senator Ham Horton.
In the spring of 1855, the German Reeds presented the first performance of "Miss P. Horton's Illustrative Gatherings," musical theatre performances usually consisting of one or two brief comic operas designed for a minimal number of characters and performed with either the piano and harmonium or a small ensemble of musicians.
Robert E. Horton (1875–1945), American ecologist and soil scientist
Horton's sister-in-law is renowned Nigerian sculptor Sokari Douglas Camp.
She was raised by her brother-in-law, the anthropologist Robin Horton.
The company was bought out by a syndicate that included The New Zealand Herald and New Zealand Listener publisher Wilson & Horton and United States radio company Clear Channel Communications; Wilson & Horton was then purchased by Ireland-based media conglomerate Independent News & Media, and onsold to Independent's Australian subsidiary APN.
Robin Horton, "African Traditional Thought and Western Science."
In 2000 Pitt's Forbes Quadrangle building, on the site of the former Forbes Field, was renamed Wesley W. Posvar Hall in his honor.