You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Vols. for 1847/48-1872/73 include cases decided in the Teind Court; 1847/48-1858/59 include cases decided in the Court of Exchequer; 1850/51- included cases decided in the House of Lords; 1873/74- include cases decided in the Court of Justiciary.
Reprint of the original, first published in 1869.
The story of molecular biologist Elizabeth Blackburn and her groundbreaking research on telomeres and what it reveals about the resourceful opportunism that characterizes the best scientific thinking. Molecular biologist Elizabeth Blackburn—one of Time magazine's 100 “Most Influential People in the World” in 2007—made headlines in 2004 when she was dismissed from the President's Council on Bioethics after objecting to the council's call for a moratorium on stem cell research and protesting the suppression of relevant scientific evidence in its final report. But it is Blackburn's groundbreaking work on telomeric DNA, which launched the field of telomere research, that will have the mo...
George Gall Jr. (1766-1853), son of George Gall (ca. 1730-1778) and Marie Stults Poturve, was born in Berks County, Pennsylvania. He married (1) Susannah Nicholas in 1785 and (2) Catherine Roads in 1800 in Rockbridge County, Virginia. George Gall migrated to Ohio in 1809. Descendants lived in Virginia, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, West Virginia and elsewhere. James Williams went from Rockingham County, Virginia to Ohio in 1802. He married (1) Rebecca Wallace (2) Maria Elizabeth (Polly) Legg.