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Morrison C. England Jr. at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges, a publication of the Federal Judicial Center. 107-2 Hearings: Confirmation Hearings on Federal Appointments, S. Hrg. 107-584, Part 4, May 9, May 23, June 13, June 27, and July 23, 2002, * This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
Microsoft Word - FINAL_Declaration of M. Cohen: Author: HenryHZhang: Software used: PScript5.dll Version 5.2.2: Conversion program: Acrobat Distiller 15.0 (Windows); modified using iText® 7.1.6 ©2000-2019 iText Group NV (Administrative Office of the United States Courts; licensed version) Encrypted: no: Page size: 612 x 792 pts (letter ...
Jen Manion is a social and cultural historian, author, and professor of History and Sexuality, Women's and Gender Studies at Amherst College. [1] Manion is the author of Female Husbands: A Trans History and Liberty's Prisoners: Carceral Culture in Early America .
As a redshirt freshman in 2011, he started 10 out of 12 games. He finished the season completing 305 of 473 passes for 3,328 yards, 16 touchdowns, and 18 interceptions. [5] During his sophomore season in 2012, Mannion completed 200 of 309 passes for 2,446 yards, 15 touchdowns, and 13 interceptions. [6] Mannion remained the starter in 2013.
Sharon Block describes Manion as a "dexterous scholar" in a review for the Journal of Women's History, noting the "theoretically-influenced empirical approach to tracing the development of the carceral state in post-Revolutionary Pennsylvania" as well as the footnotes and appendix tables that "make clear this commitment to evidentiary documentation of lives too often erased."
In the Los Angeles Review of Books, Samuel Clowes Huneke writes, "A self-described "lifelong LGBTQ rights advocate" and professor of history at Amherst College, Manion created not only a strikingly original portrait of individuals who, as [Manion] puts it, "transed" gender in the 18th and 19th centuries, but also an impassioned cri de coeur for trans rights."
Morris Leo Cohen (November 2, 1927 – December 18, 2010) was an American attorney who left the practice of law to become a law librarian and professor of law at the University at Buffalo, University of Pennsylvania, Harvard Law School and Yale Law School.
Researchers have used Cohen's h as follows. Describe the differences in proportions using the rule of thumb criteria set out by Cohen. [1] Namely, h = 0.2 is a "small" difference, h = 0.5 is a "medium" difference, and h = 0.8 is a "large" difference. [2] [3] Only discuss differences that have h greater than some threshold value, such as 0.2. [4]