Walston Wells P.c Jun 1996 - Mar 1999
Partner
Sirote & Permutt, P.c. Jun 1996 - Mar 1999
Chair, Private Clients, Trusts and Estates Group
Education:
New York University School of Law 1988 - 1989
Masters, Master of Laws
Samford University 1978 - 1981
Doctor of Jurisprudence, Doctorates
Judson College 1974 - 1977
Bachelors, Bachelor of Arts, English, History
Skills:
Trusts Estate Planning Wills Estate Tax Planning Estate Law Estate Administration Income Tax Litigation Class Actions Legal Research Succession Planning Civil Litigation Small Business Commercial Litigation Corporate Law
Interests:
Family Football Cooking Theatre Reading Southern Authors
Estate Planning Estate, Gift and Trust Tax Charitable Planning Trusts and Estates Wills Probate
Memberships:
Birmingham Bar Association Alabama State Bar State Bar of Georgia State Bar of Texas American College of Trust and Estate Counsel Birmingham Estate Planning Council Alabama Planned Giving Council.
ISLN:
906281909
Admitted:
1981, Alabama 1983, Texas 1989, Georgia
University:
Judson College, B.A., summa cum laude, 1977
Law School:
Cumberland School of Law of Samford University, J.D., summa cum laude, 1981 New York University School of Law, LL.M., in Taxation, 1989
Links:
Site
Biography:
Phi Kappa Phi. Comments Editor, Cumberland Law Review, 1980-1981. Law Clerk to Judge Robert B. Propst, U.S. District Court, Northern District of Alabama, 1981-1982. Listed in The Best Lawyers in Ameri...
Elizabeth Holland Hutchins, Birmingham AL - Lawyer
Sirote & Permutt, PC Po Box 55727, Birmingham, AL 35255 2059305381 (Office)
Licenses:
Alabama - Authorized to practice law 1981
Education:
New York University School of Law Degree - LL.M Graduated - 1989 Samford University, Cumberland School of Law Degree - JD Graduated - 1981 Judson College Degree - BA Graduated - 1977
Silvermine Elementary School Norwalk CT 1982-1985, Veterans Park Elementary School Ridgefield CT 1985-1988, East Ridge Middle School Ridgefield CT 1988-1989, Haddam - Killingworth Middle School Higganum CT 1989-1991
takes about 60 days to re-grow, is a lot different from the original, Kusumi said. It has a hollow cartilage tube instead of a spine, and it has entirely different muscle groups, said Elizabeth Hutchins, lead report author and an ASU graduate student in the molecular and cellular biology program.
Date: Aug 22, 2014
Category: Sci/Tech
Source: Google
Scientists Have Figured Out How Lizards Regrow Their Tails, And That's Good ...
"Regeneration is not an instant process," study co-author Elizabeth Hutchins, a graduate student at the university, said in a written statement. "It takes lizards more than 60 days to regenerate a functional tail."