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Horner Family
Horner is an English and German surname that derives from the traditional occupation ''horner'', meaning horn-worker or horn-maker, or even horn-blower. People * Alison Horner (born 1966), British businesswoman * Arthur Horner (other), several people * Benjamin Bean Horner (1893–1971), American architect and photographer * Billy Horner (born 1942), English footballer and manager * Bob Horner (born 1957), American baseball player * Brigitta Horner (1632–1640), German child witch; see Witchcraft accusations against children * Charlotte Nichols Saunders Horner (1823–1906), American botanist * Chris Horner (born 1971), American bicyclist * Christian Horner (born 1973), team principal of the Red Bull Racing Formula One team * Christopher C. Horner, American attorney and author * Chuck Horner (born 1936), American General * Constance Horner (born 1942), American public official and businesswoman * Craig Horner (born 1983), Australian actor * Cynthia Horner, American w ...
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Alison Horner
Alison Jane Horner (born June 1966) is a British businesswoman, and, until it was sold in 2020, was the CEO of the Asian arm of the Tesco supermarket chain. Early life Alison Jane Horner was born in June 1966. She earned a bachelor's degree in chemistry from the University of Manchester, and an MBA from Alliance Manchester Business School, Manchester Business School. Career Tesco Horner joined Tesco as a personnel manager in 1999 and was on Tesco's executive committee from 2011. In October 2013, Horner became a founding member of ''The Guardians Women in Leadership network. in 2015, she became a member of Alliance Manchester Business School's advisory board. Horner was Tesco' chief people officer (chief human resources officer) of Tesco until May 2018, when she was promoted to be chief executive of Tesco's Asia business in Malaysia and Thailand, until it was sold in late 2020. She was set to step down in February 2021 after 22 years with Tesco. Carillion non-executive role Ho ...
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Geri Horner
Geraldine Estelle Halliwell-Horner (''née'' Halliwell; born 6 August 1972) is an English singer, songwriter, television personality, author, and actress. She rose to fame in the mid-1990s as a member of the pop group the Spice Girls, in which she was nicknamed Ginger Spice. With over 100 million records sold worldwide, the Spice Girls are the best-selling female group of all time. Their slogan "girl power" was most closely associated with Halliwell and her Union Jack dress from the 1997 Brit Awards also became an enduring symbol. Halliwell left the Spice Girls in 1998, citing exhaustion and creative differences, but rejoined when they reunited for a greatest hits album (2007) and two concert tours: the Return of the Spice Girls (2007–2008) and Spice World (2019). After leaving the Spice Girls, Halliwell pursued a career as a solo artist, signing a recording contract with EMI. She released her debut album, '' Schizophonic'' (1999), which produced the UK number-one single ...
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Red Horner
George Reginald "Red" Horner (May 28, 1909 – April 27, 2005) was a Canadian ice hockey defenceman for the Toronto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey League from 1928 to 1940. He was the Leafs captain from 1938 until his retirement. He helped the Leafs win their third Stanley Cup in 1932. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1965. Born in Lynden, Ontario, Horner spent all of his time playing in Toronto, Ontario. As a junior player, he played for the Toronto Marlboros of the Ontario Hockey League. In his NHL career, he had the role of enforcer and retired with 42 goals, 110 assists and 1,264 penalty minutes in 490 regular season games. His election to the Hockey Hall of Fame has been considered rather controversial, as until his final two seasons was not considered the best defenseman on his team, let alone in the NHL. His contemporaries for most of his career were the Hall of Famers King Clancy and Hap Day, who were the best defensemen on his team. It seems to re ...
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Phil Horner
Philip Matthew Horner (born 10 November 1966) is an English former professional footballer. He is now a qualified physiotherapist and works at his former playing club Blackpool. Career Horner was born in Leeds, West Yorkshire. He began his career with Leicester City in 1983, but he only made ten league appearances in five years at Filbert Street and spent a short spell on loan at Rotherham United in the 1985–86 season. In 1988, he joined Halifax Town, then managed by Billy Ayre. Horner followed Ayre to Blackpool when the latter became manager of the Tangerines in 1990. In six years at Bloomfield Road he made 187 league appearances, scoring 22 goals. He joined non-League Southport on loan in the 1995–96 season. After finishing his professional playing career at Bloomfield Road, Horner returned to Southport on a permanent basis while he studied for a Bachelor of Science degree in physiotherapy. He finished his playing career with Lancaster City in the 1999–2000 season ...
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Penelope Horner
Penelope "Penny" Horner (born 20 June 1939) is a British former film and television actress. Life and career Penelope Horner began her acting career in 1956 in the British film comedy '' A Touch of the Sun''. Other small roles followed in films such as ''A King in New York'' and ''The Nun's Story''. In 1961, she played the Anne Rider in the Edgar Wallace film '' The Daffodil Mystery'' as well as Julie Denver in '' Locker Sixty-Nine'' in 1962. During the 1960s and 1970s she became a regular face in some of the popular spy adventure series of the day, including '' The Saint'', '' The Avengers'' and ''The Persuaders!''. She starred alongside Jack Palance in the 1974 television adaptation of ''Dracula'' directed by Dan Curtis. In the 1980s, she appeared as Sarah Hallam in the second and third season of the BBC soap opera ''Triangle''. She retired in 1986. Penelope married 2 times : * David Korda (1962 - 1973) * Rex Berry (1981 - ?) Partial filmography Feature films *1959: '' ...
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Norman Gerald Horner
Norman Gerald Horner (1882–1954) was a physician, surgeon, and medical editor. Biography After education at Tonbridge School, N. Gerald Horner matriculated in October 1899 at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, graduating there B.A. in 1902, M.B. and B.Chir. in 1910, M.A. in 1919, and M.D in 1922. At St Bartholomew's Hospital, he qualified M.R.C.S. and L.R.C.P. in 1906. After qualification, he was, for a brief time, a house surgeon at the Westminster Hospital and then was appointed a house physician to St Bartholomew's Hospital. He was from 1911 to 1915 an assistant editor at ''The Lancet'' under the editorship of Sir Samuel Squire Sprigge. Horner served from 1914 to 1919 as a captain in the RAMC and during WW I was in France for two years. On the editorial staff of the British Medical Journal, he was from 1917 to 1928 an assistant editor (under Sir Dawson Williams) and from 1928 to 1946 editor-in-chief, as successor to Williams, who died in 1928. Horner retired in 1946 a ...
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Leonard Horner
Leonard Horner FRSE FRS FGS (17 January 1785 – 5 March 1864) was a Scottish merchant, geologist and educational reformer. He was the younger brother of Francis Horner. Horner was a founder of the School of Arts of Edinburgh, now Heriot-Watt University and one of the founders of the Edinburgh Academy. A 'radical educational reformer' he was involved in the establishment of University College School. As a commissioner on the Royal Commission on the Employment of Children in Factories, Horner arguably did more to improve the working conditions of women and children in North England than any other person in the 19th century. Early life and education His father, John Horner, was a linen merchant in Edinburgh, and partner in the firm of Inglis & Horner. Leonard, the third and youngest son, attended the High School and entered the University of Edinburgh in 1799. There in the course of the next four years he studied chemistry and mineralogy, and gained a love of geology from '' ...
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John Horner (other)
John Horner may refer to: * John Henry Horner, also known as ''Cactus Jack'' (1927–2004), Canadian rancher, politician, and former cabinet minister * John M. Horner (1821–1907), founder of Union City, California * John S. Horner (1802–1883), American politician * Sir John Francis Fortescue Horner (1842–1927), British barrister * John Horner (British politician) (1911–1997), British firefighter, trade unionist and politician * John Horner (organist) (1899–1973), organist, choirmaster and music teacher in South Australia * John Horner (police officer), American chief of police of Los Angeles in 1885 * John R. Horner (born 1946), American paleontologist * John Horner (Rector of Lincoln College, Oxford) (1792–?), Oxford college head * John Horner, a fictional character in ''The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle "The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle" is one of 56 short Sherlock Holmes stories written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the seventh story of twelve in the ...
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John Henry Horner
John Henry "Jack" Horner (July 20, 1927 – November 18, 2004) was a Canadian rancher, politician, and Cabinet minister. Life and career Nicknamed "Cactus Jack", Horner was born in Saskatchewan, the fifth child in a family of six boys and three girls. His mother's uncle had been a prisoner of Louis Riel's provisional government. His father, Ralph Horner, was a failed Conservative candidate who was appointed to the board of directors of Canadian National Railways by the government of R. B. Bennett in 1931, and then to the Senate of Canada in 1933. Jack Horner moved to Alberta at the age of 18 to manage a ranch purchased by his father and then bought his own ranch in 1947. He was first elected to the House of Commons of Canada in the 1958 federal election from the rural central Alberta riding of Acadia as a member of the Progressive Conservative Party, defeating a 23-year Social Credit incumbent. Horner was part of the largest majority government in Canadian history. Al ...
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Johann Friedrich Horner
Johann Friedrich Horner (27 March 1831 – 20 December 1886) was an ophthalmologist based at the University of Zurich, Switzerland. Biography Horner was born in Zurich. After receiving his medical degree from the University of Zurich in 1854, he continued his studies in Vienna, where he learned ophthalmoscopy from Eduard Jäger von Jaxtthal (1818–1884), and in Berlin, where he served as an assistant to ophthalmologist Albrecht von Graefe (1828–1870). It was during this time that Horner decided to become an ophthalmologist himself. He returned to Zurich in 1856, and later opened his own eye clinic named "Hottinghof". Horner became a full professor of ophthalmology in 1873. After his death in 1886, his position at the University of Zurich was filled by Otto Haab (1850–1931). Horner's syndrome, a disorder of the sympathetic nervous system, was named after him following his description of the condition in 1869. His name is also associated with "Horner's muscle", the lacr ...
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Johann Caspar Horner
Johann Caspar Horner (Zürich, 12 March 1774 – Zürich, 3 November 1834) was a Swiss physicist, mathematician and astronomer. Life At the beginning, he wanted to be a priest, but later he went to Göttingen, where he learnt astronomy. Then he traveled throughout the world for three years on behalf of the Russians. After the journey he took two years in Saint Petersburg with the cataloging the items he had found. He discovered a method for approaching the roots of equation with unknown factor in a higher power. His findings were published under the titles ''Über die Curven zweiten Grades'' and ''Die fünf regelmässigen Körper''. He wrote some other works also on the field of astronomy. In 1805, Johann Caspar Horner visited Japan with the Prussian Georg Heinrich von Langsdorff, as a scientist to the Krusenstern mission that also brought the Russian ambassador Nikolai Rezanov to Japan. Horner made a hot air balloon out of Japanese paper (washi), and made a demonstration in ...
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Jocelyn Horner
Jocelyn Horner (1902 – January 1973) was a British sculptor and teacher. Biography Horner was born at Green Hayes in Halifax, West Yorkshire, where she spent most of her life. She attended Halifax High School and Grovelly Manor in Bournemouth. In 1920 she enrolled at the Leeds School of Art to train as a sculptor and was a student alongside both Barbara Hepworth and Henry Moore. While still a student she began a series of animal studies and children's portraits. During World War II she worked as a home teacher for blind people in Halifax and also served as a Red Cross nurse. When the War ended she returned to Leeds as a student and in the early 1950s took a number of part-time teaching posts. Horner taught modelling and wood carving at Percival Whitley College and also taught at Halifax Art College. In the 1960s Horner's work, which was greatly influenced by that of Jacob Epstein was exhibited both locally in Yorkshire and at national venues. She won the Leeds Gold Medal for ...
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