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assesses and critiques Andrew Cappel’s A Walk Along Willow. This Note asks and answers three questions: (1) Are Cappel’s findings about land use
always show bias against blacks; bias is acti- vated only when evidence is ambiguous. Strength of evidence is a good proxy for ambiguity, as evidence
schol- arship articulates, the Court consistently strikes a “blow against not only poor women, an unprotected class, but also against poor Black and
again, he hits a pedestrian. All driving conditions are exactly the same as they were in the rich neighborhood the day before; the second accident would
argument gen- erally fares well as a technique. This assessment is not altogether surprising: any interpretive technique that both assumes and
At the time, section 213(a) of the DGCL authorized the board to fix a record date between ten and sixty days before the date of an annual or
acting on behalf of a religious organization,” two levels are added. Still other enhancements are transsubstantive in that they apply across all types
cooperative bargaining. An attempt to contest and alter national policy is rightly understood as dissent. We are well aware how rough a cut this is. Even
allowing for private actions against a lower-level government is not alien to American law. Congress has, on occasion, authorized private lawsuits against
Res. 1, 3 (1980). Although continuous variables are typically analyzed using a multivariate regression, an ANOVA is more appropriate here. Aversive