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The apartheid system was based on laws of segregation, which grew in severity as time passed.
The law of segregation as defined in this State is in no way involved.
He urged Southern blacks to violate the unjust laws of segregation.
This process was Mendel's 'first law', the law of segregation.
The film goes through the story of two young ultra-Orthodox that paid a personal price on their attempt to work against the laws of segregation.
In breeding experiments these polymorphs cleanly segregated according to Mendel's law of segregation.
This Mendel called the Law of segregation.
And when a generation ago black Americans insisted on escaping from indecent laws of segregation, they were maimed and murdered before they could prevail.
Mendel summarized his findings in two laws: the Law of Segregation and the Law of Independent Assortment.
The first, the law of segregation, states that "when any individual produces gametes, the copies of a gene separate, so that each gamete receives only one copy".
These observations of discrete inheritance and the segregation of alleles are collectively known as Mendel's first law or the Law of Segregation.
His experiments led him to make two generalizations, the Law of Segregation and the Law of Independent Assortment, which later became known as Mendel's Laws of Inheritance.
For refusing to move to the back of the bus and make way for whites, as the laws of segregation required, Mrs. Parks was arrested, convicted and fined $10, plus $4 in court costs.
The Law of Segregation states that every individual possesses a pair of alleles (assuming diploidy) for any particular trait and that each parent passes a randomly selected copy (allele) of only one of these to its offspring.
Since Mendel used experimental methods to devise his particulate inheritance theory, he developed three basic laws of inheritance: the Law of Segregation, the Law of Independent Assortment, and the Law of Dominance:
The rules of meiosis, as they apply to the dihybrid, are codified in Mendel's first law and Mendel's second law, which are also called the Law of Segregation and the Law of Independent Assortment, respectively.
Wrote De Vries, "I draw the conclusion that the law of segregation of hybrids as discovered by Mendel for peas finds very general application in the plant kingdom ... This memoir, very beautiful for its time, has been misunderstood and forgotten."
Mendel's experimental results on law of segregation and independent assortment ( presented in 1965 and published in 1866 in the Proceeding of the Brunn Society of Natural History) has led founding stone in genetical studies in plants and humans.