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Gazetteer
Wilkin -- U.S. County in Minnesota
Population (2000): 7138
Housing Units (2000): 3105
Land area (2000): 751.430930 sq. miles (1946.197091 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.195316 sq. miles (0.505867 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 751.626246 sq. miles (1946.702958 sq. km)
Located within: Minnesota (MN), FIPS 27
Location: 46.323696 N, 96.478321 W
Headwords:
Wilkin
Wilkin, MN
Wilkin County
Wilkin County, MN

Usage examples of "wilkin".

Wilkins had committed a murder, she believed she would acquaint you with it.

DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, served as the tapes, and not until 1953 that James Dewey Watson, Francis Harry Compton Crick, and Maurice Hugh Frederick Wilkins worked out the structure of DNA and how it functioned.

For unlike the liberal integrationists Roy Wilkins of the NAACP and Whitney Young of the Urban League, Rustin was also a socialist.

Tulsa and sharing an apartment with Stan Wilkins, an ironworker four years his junior.

I drew back the sheet and saw for myself what Noddie Wilkins had described on the phone.

Wilkins had taken all the silver here, he probably tapped around, hoping to find a voog next to this one.

Thomson, Maria Torres, Audrey Verdin, Trina Wallace, Robert Ward, Stephen Wildman, Peter Wilkins, Perry Willett, Chris Willis, Michael Wolff and Karen Wolven.

I am satisfied that there is a general Indian war much nearer at hand than Major Wilkins is willing to admit, and in that case we must be prepared at any moment for all sorts of unexpected happenings.

Alfred helped position the unconscious guardsmen on the backs of Aldridge and Wilkins and sent them through to Kensington.

Ku Klux Klan Wiggins, Mary June: see Meredith, Mary June Wiggins Wilkins, Roy, 42 Williams, Bill, 240 Williams, John Davis, 76, 135, 235-36, 281, 291,294,314 Williams, J.

As it was, the laboratory that those three lonely hereticks had set up on the Masham estate seemed a masque of what Wilkins and Hooke had done as guests of John Comstock.

Deborah Wilkins, with some proper animadversions on bastards I have told my reader, in the preceding chapter, that Mr.

Gus Brannhard guffawed at Roy Wilkins, a slender man who stood nearby, chatting with Ernst Mallin, frowned and pursed his lips.

Wilkins, with great art, fished all out of her at her own house, and had she not indeed made promises, in Mr.

Crick, and Wilkins, showed that each giant DNA molecule is a string of millions of base pairs, organized into hundreds of thousands of genes, that encode all the proteins that a cell can manufacture.