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Gazetteer
Mallory, WV -- U.S. Census Designated Place in West Virginia
Population (2000): 1143
Housing Units (2000): 491
Land area (2000): 11.527049 sq. miles (29.854918 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 11.527049 sq. miles (29.854918 sq. km)
FIPS code: 50860
Located within: West Virginia (WV), FIPS 54
Location: 37.730315 N, 81.835857 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Mallory, WV
Mallory
Wikipedia
Mallory

Mallory is an English surname. Spelling variants include Mallary, Mallery, Malorie, Mallorie, and Mallorey. Mallory is also a given name derived from the surname.

Mallory (Sliders)

A fraternal alternate of Quinn Mallory was a main character during the fifth and last season of the show Sliders played by Robert Floyd. This version of Quinn Mallory is usually just called Mallory but sometimes he is credited or referred to as Quinn 2 or Quinn Mallory (2).

The Quinn from Earth Prime was merged with this fraternal alternate of Quinn Mallory by Dr. Oberon Geiger as a science experiment. This version of Quinn Mallory, along with a scientist Dr. Diana Davis, joined the sliders (who were Rembrandt Brown and Maggie Beckett at the time) in order to find a way to unmerge the two Quinns.

This Quinn Mallory is not a genius and not a scientist, as the Quinn Mallory who grew up on Earth Prime was. He was used as a guinea pig for Dr. Geiger's experiments. Mallory had muscular dystrophy and lived in a wheelchair for a while, until Dr. Geiger cured him by extracting some DNA from an unaffected alternate of Quinn Mallory and merging it with Mallory.

Mallory never liked the other Quinn Mallory being merged inside of him and wanted him to be removed.

Category:Fictional characters from San Francisco, California Category:Sliders characters Category:Fictional characters introduced in 1999

Mallory (disambiguation)

Mallory is an English surname and given name.

Mallory may also refer to:

  • Mallory, Minnesota
  • Mallory, West Virginia
  • Mallory Township, Clayton County, Iowa
  • Mallory Airport, an airport in West Virginia, United States
  • Mallory Park, a motor racing circuit in Leicestershire, England
  • Mallory Square, a public square in Key West, Florida, United States
  • Mallory, later Cornell Dubilier, is an American producer of capacitors that was acquired by KEMET Corporation in 2012

In other uses:

  • Mallory (novel), a 1950 novel by James Hadley Chase
  • Mallory (Sliders), a character in the TV series Sliders
  • Mallory body, an inclusion found in the cytoplasm of liver cells
  • Mallory, a fictional, placeholder name for a malicious attacker in computer security and cryptographic discussions; see Alice and Bob
Mallory (novel)

Mallory is a 1950 thriller novel written by James Hadley Chase. Mallory is one of the eighteen novels Chase published under the nom-de-plume Raymond Marshall.

Usage examples of "mallory".

Mallory peered in as a bonneted crone arose from a squat, adjusting her skirts.

And now, too late by one year, when all the mechanics are in the army, Mallory begins to telegraph Captain Ingraham to build ships at any expense.

From where he sat on a fish-box on the port- of the fo'c'sle, industriously sewing a button on to the old coat lying on the deck between his legs, Mallory could see six men, all dressed in the uniform of the regular German Navy--one crouched behind a belted Spandau mounted on its tripod just aft of the two-pounder, three others bunched amidships, each armed with an automatic machine carbine--Schmeissers, he thought--the captain, a hard, cold-faced young lieutenant with the Iron Cross on his tunic, looking out the open door of the wheelhouse and, finally, a curious head peering over the edge of the engine-room hatch.

I knew that Mallory was at home baby-sitting for Nicky and the triplets (her mother had taken the three younger girls shopping).

Mallory looked around him, could see Maidos broad off the port bow and the great bulk of Navarone slipping by to starboard.

It was Stevens's place, but Stevens had still been suffering from shock, had lost much blood: besides, it required a first-class climber to bring up the rear, to coil up the ropes as he came and to remove the spikes--there must be no trace left of the ascent: or so Mallory had told him, and Stevens had reluctantly agreed, although the hurt in his face had been easy to see.

Hair took his figures to Mallory, pointed out the political dangers of failure if ACCED was continued on its present scale, recommended cutting it back sharply to the level of a controlled experiment until Curtice's group was able to show that the current stages of their work would not bog down in the same type of problems as the first had done.

The Central Statistics Bureau suspected her of having fled to France, Mallory assumed, because someone had appended translations of French policereports of 1854 dealing with a crime passionel trial in the Paris assizes.

The Central Statistics Bureau suspected her of having fled to France, Mallory assumed, because someone had appended translations of French police-reports of 1854 dealing with a crime passionel trial in the Paris assizes.

In defiance of proper procedure, Mallory insisted on taking Tse's hand and egressing with her.

I could see Mallory peek up from her books every now and again to watch me.

Silently, stolidly, having no one to lament with, Mallory watched as the aliens carefully and efficiently sliced into the abdomen and removed, insofar as he was able to tell, the complete set of female reproductive organs: uterus, fallopian tubes, ovaries, everything.

Now that the evening chez Fedder had been endured, Mallory expected Dustin to retire to the bedroom and give her a half hour of his undivided and energetic attention.

Now, all at once, the gossip acquired solid flesh-a figure of speech almost inevitable when looking toward the rotund frame of Secretary Mallory.

Mallory glanced at Maria, Reynolds and Groves, all sitting silently by, then at Miller who was reclining in his sleeping-bag with his volume of poetry.