|
Showing 1 - 11 of
11 matches in All Departments
This updated text explains how advances in mammalian and plant
genetics contribute to better therapeutics agents and more
wholesome foods. It addresses such topics as new pharmaceutical
agents, agribiotechnology, safety evaluation of
biotechnology-derived drugs, food safety, nutritional science, and
regulatory and environmental aspects of genetically-modified
organisms. New to this edition are chapters on biotherapeutics and
herbicide-resistant crops. It should be of interest to
biotechnology, toxicologists, pharmaceutical scientists,
environmental scientists and agriculturists.
First published in 1986. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
This updated text explains how the advances on mammalian and plant
genetics contribute to better therapeutics agents and more
wholesome foods. It addresses such topics as new pharmaceutical
agents, agribiotechnology, safety evaluation of
biotechnology-derived drugs, food safety, nutritional science, and
regulatory and environmental aspects of genetically-modified
organisms. New to this edition are chapters on biotherapeutics and
herbicide-resistant crops. It should be of interest to
biotechnology, toxicologists, pharmaceutical scientists,
environmental scientists and agriculturalists.
In this last hour, God is looking for women who will rise up with
the word of God and stand tenaciously against the enemy for the
Kingdom of God for their husbands and their children. All the help
and power she needs is revealed in the word of God, through the
Holy Ghost, who is ever present with all help, power, and guidance.
This book will provide the tools necessary to help the godly woman,
who has determined in her heart that she has had enough of being
stolen from, to be prepared to tenaciously use the full armor of
God and the sword of the word, empowered by the Holy Spirit and
God's grace. She must consistently resist the devil through prayer,
repentance, praise, and meditating on and by obeying the word of
God. There is power in the spoken word. When we speak the word in
faith, God confirms the word and manifest His glory, moving the
mountain out of our way of victory. We can speak the word illumined
by the Holy Ghost to defeat the enemy, and our changed lives become
the world's Bible.
|
Why Bee Angry? (Paperback)
J.A. Thomas; Roxanna Thomas; Edited by Jeff Sargent
|
R284
Discovery Miles 2 840
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
In this last hour, God is looking for women who will rise up with
the word of God and stand tenaciously against the enemy for the
Kingdom of God for their husbands and their children. All the help
and power she needs is revealed in the word of God, through the
Holy Ghost, who is ever present with all help, power, and guidance.
This book will provide the tools necessary to help the godly woman,
who has determined in her heart that she has had enough of being
stolen from, to be prepared to tenaciously use the full armor of
God and the sword of the word, empowered by the Holy Spirit and
God's grace. She must consistently resist the devil through prayer,
repentance, praise, and meditating on and by obeying the word of
God. There is power in the spoken word. When we speak the word in
faith, God confirms the word and manifest His glory, moving the
mountain out of our way of victory. We can speak the word illumined
by the Holy Ghost to defeat the enemy, and our changed lives become
the world's Bible.
Marlboro County, located in the northeast corner of South Carolina,
was established in 1785 in the Pee Dee region of the state (see
Gregg's Early Pee Dee Settlers in the Main Catalog under "South
Carolina"). It is believed that the area was inhabited solely by
Indians until about 1730. The book presents chapters on the
county's early history and settlers; industrial affairs of the
early settlers; the American Revolution and the build-up toward it;
operations on Pee Dee; Bishop Gregg; members of the legislature;
Scottish settlers; the town of Clio; the courthouse; Bennettsville;
Brightsville; Blenheim; the "Confederate War"; early ministers;
Baptist, Methodist and Presbyterian churches; the town of McColl;
Adamsville; educational matters; "The Colored People"; 1886; "Down
to the Twentieth Century"; and families such as David, Evans,
Wilds, Hodges, Irby, Pegue, Rogers, Brown, Magee, Carloss, Mason
Lee, Coxe, Townsend, Henagan, Bruce, Kolb, Pouncey, Cochrane,
Spears, Vining, Terrell, Thornwell, Gillespie, Ellerbe, Forniss,
Pledger, Thomas, Parker, Ammons, Fletcher, Easterling, Ayer,
Covington, Eden, Meekins, Wilson, Campbell, McColls, McLaurins,
McCall, Hawley, Weatherly, McRae, Hinshaw, McLeod, McLucas,
Bennett, Stubbs, Moore, McInnis, Huckabee, Matheson, James,
Williams, Bedgegood, Pugh, Breeden and Adams. In the chapter on the
"Confederate War" there are rosters listing more than 800 soldiers,
and an everyname index lists over 3,200 names. A fold-out map of
Marlboro County and a map of the Old Marlborough Court House
complement the work.
|
|