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See Langdon, Univ. of Penns. Mus. Publ., Bab. Sect., Vol. X, No. 1 , pl. i f., pp. 69 ff.; Journ. Amer. Or. Soc., Vol. XXXVI , pp. 140 ff.; cf. Prince, Journ. Amer. Or. Soc., Vol. XXXVI, pp. 90 ff.; Jastrow, Journ. Amer. Or. Soc., Vol. XXXVI, pp. 122 ff., and in particular his detailed study of the text in Amer. Journ. Semit. Lang., Vol. XXXIII, pp. 91 ff. Dr.
He held the degree of LL.D. from the Univ. of Edin. , and Camb. , and Doctor of Theology of Leyden . Novelist, b. at Westhampton, Mass., studied for the ministry at Yale, and became a Unitarian pastor. He pub. Philo, a religious poem, followed by Margaret, a Tale of the Real and the Ideal , Richard Edney, A Rus-Urban Tale . He also produced some theological works.
This is therefore the kind of organ which would be expected to be affected by hormones from the generative organs. It is stated that the sexual instincts were also unaltered, a male containing ovaries instead of testes readily copulating with a normal female. Univ. Cases in Lepidoptera, e.g. Amphidasys betularia, have frequently been recorded.
Among his friends there were Edward Kirke, who ed. the Shepheard's Calendar, and Gabriel Harvey, the critic. While still at school he had contributed 14 sonnet-visions to Van de Noot's Theatre for Worldlings . On leaving the Univ.
The English in the West Indies . The year 1892 saw his appointment as Prof. of Modern History at Oxf., and his lectures there were pub. in his last books, Life and Letters of Erasmus , English Seamen in the Sixteenth Century , and The Council of Trent . F. was elected in 1869 Lord Rector of the Univ. of St. Andrews, and received the degree of LL.D. from Edinburgh in 1884.
On a fragment of another Nippur text, No. 4611, Dr. Univ. of Penns. Mus. Publ., Bab. Sec., Vol. It may be added that, on either alternative, the meaning of the name is the same. The meaning of the Sumerian element u in the name, rendered as utu in the Semitic form, is rather obscure, and Dr. Poebel left it unexplained. It is very probable, as suggested by Dr. Proc. Soc. Bibl.
He bore the honorary title of "colonel," and was to some extent regarded as the governor's deputy; but in later times his duties were confined entirely to military matters. Hist. of the U.S., vol. i. pp. 388-407; also Edward Ingle in Johns Hopkins Univ. If now we sum up the contrasts between local government in Virginia and that in New England, we observe:
Little Classics, 25 vols.; Riverside, 15 vols.; Standard Library, 15 vols.; the two last have biographies. Diplomatist and poet, b. at Salem, Indiana, ed. at Brown Univ., and called to the Illinois Bar, served in the army, and was one of President Lincoln's secs. He then held diplomatic posts at Paris, Madrid, and Vienna, was Ambassador to Great Britain, and was in 1898 appointed Sec. of State.
Theologian, b., at Greenock, and ed. at Glasgow, entered the Church of Scotland, of which he became one of the most eloquent preachers. After being a minister in the country and in Edinburgh, he was translated to Glasgow, becoming in 1862 Prof. of Divinity in the Univ. of that city, and in 1873 Principal.
He wrote various religious treatises in Latin and English, turned the Psalms into English verse, and composed a poem The Pricke of Conscience in 7 books, in which is shown the attitude of protest which was rising against certain Papal pretensions and doctrines. Theologian and scholar, b. in Stirlingshire, was first a Prof. in St. Andrews, and then the first Principal of the Univ. of Edin.
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