(520) SOME DEAD LEARNING AND A GREAT NAME
Thanks to Ross Anderson, a special correspondent on assignment in the field of assignations, who has drawn our attention to a passage in David Murray’s recently reprinted Lawyer’s Merriments (Glasgow: James Maclehose & Sons, 1912; see also (http://www.wshein.com/). The contemporary relevance of this is the Human Tissues Bill currently in the Scottish Parliament, and a test case on retention of children’s organs at post mortem, Stevens v Yorkhill Hospital NHS Trust, which Temporary Judge Colin McAulay QC took to avizandum on 10 March 2005. See also N R Whitty, Rights of personality