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Jones, Samuel

Sarah E. Morgan, Paul J. Jones, Samuel J. Tucker and Jeffrey S. Wiggins, The University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, MS... [Pg.2427]

Hill, Christopher. "Science and magic in seventeenth-century England." In Culture, ideology and politics essays for Eric Hobsbawm, eds. R. Samuel and Gareth Stedman Jones, 176-193., 1983. [Pg.244]

Hywel-Jones NL, Samuels GJ. Three species of Hypocrella with large stromata pathogenic on scale insects. Mycologia 90 36-46, 1998. [Pg.128]

Roy Pierce-Jones is a Senior Lectmer in Drama at the University of Worcester. He has pubhshed articles on screen adaptations and Shakespeare in performance. He is cmrently corrqrleting articles on Samuel Beckett, Harold Pinter and John Osborne, and has recently written on the polemical plays of Dario Fo. [Pg.500]

Material in this section is based on the information summarized by Samuel T. Jones in Gas-Liquid Mass Transfer in an External Airlift Loop Reactor for Syngas Fermentation, PhD Dissertation, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Iowa State University, 2007. Used with permission. [Pg.31]

The first inventor of Friction Lights (as he called them) was undoubtedly John Walker [1781-1857], of Stockton-on-Tees, who in 1825 compounded a percussion powder of equal parts by weight of potassium chlorate and antimony sulphide such mixture (made into a paste with gum) was afterwards used for the tips of Friction Lights made and sold by him from 7th April, 1827, onwards, as recorded in his Day-Book. The head of the match, on a wooden splint, was pressed in a fold of sand-paper and forcibly drawn out. Such matches, called lucifers and struck on sand-paper, were patented in 1832 by Samuel Jones in London. Wiggers reproduced them with a composition of 2 drachms of chlorate, i scruple of antimony sulphide, drachm of animal glue, and water to make a thin paste. [Pg.197]

Johnson, Samuel, xvi, 585, 587 Johnson, William, 449, 450 Jones, Dr. Walter, 38 Judaism, compared to classics and Christianity, 265-70, 403-5 judiciary authority of Supreme Court over states, 453-7... [Pg.619]

Castle knew that the acid- and pepsin-secreting part of the stomach in patients with pernicious anemia had atrophied. In the year Thomas Addison published his distinction between idiopathic anemia and the anemia of adrenal insufficiency, Charles Handheld Jones of St. Mary s Hospital wrote that no trace of the gastric tubules was to be seen in the stomach of a patient who had died of profound ane-mia. " Five years later, Samuel Fenwick of London Hospital cited Handheld Jones when he reported the results of an autopsy he performed on a patient who had died of what Fenwick clearly understood was the unremitting form of anemia described by Addison. Fenwick made certain that the patient did not have the characteristic pigmentation of adrenal insufficiency, and at autopsy he found the adrenal glands unaffected. In the same year, Arnold Cahn and Joseph von Mering, working in... [Pg.113]

Cahaba prison camp [1] had a much lower mortality rate than AndersonviUe. It was much smaller (intended for less than 700 prisoners), and it had relatively good sanitation, a prison hospital, and a humane commandant, the Rev Dr Howard Henderson. However in July 1864 a new commandant was appointed. Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Jones, whose intention was to see the God-damned Yankees suffer. By late 1864, its population rose to over 2000 and conditions deteriorated, and it became the most overcrowded prison on either side of the war. Rations dropped and rats and lice increased. The camp then suffered serious flooding in March 1865 but shortly after, as the war ended, Jones announced that the prisoners were to be released. Exchanges had been arranged to repatriate soldiers from both sides. These exchanges took place at a neutral site near Vicksburg on the Mississippi River, which had been under Union control since the Battle of Vicksburg in the summer of 1863. [Pg.100]

Davidson MH, Dfllon MA, Gordon B, Jones P, Samuels J, Weiss S, et al. Colesevelam hydrochloride (Cholestagel) a new, potent bile acid sequestrant associated with a low incidence of gastrointestinal side effects. Arch Intern Med 1999 159 1893-900. [Pg.680]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.234 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.236 ]




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