Pilfer & CIA, Benedito
Pitier Filho, 55-35-3714-4778, pifferfilho@poeos-net.com.br, P.
If the President is convinced that a statute violates equal protection, then the DOJ can push for recognition of rights and equality, as it did in its lower-court litigation in
Pitier v.
23 (criticizing readability formulas when used by persons without expertise in reading and language); Emily
Pitier & Ani Nenkova, Revisiting Readability: A Unified Framework for Predicting Text Quality, http://www.cis.upenn.edu~nenkova/papers/revisitingReadability.pdf (accessed Aug.
22 October 2008: Kevin James Gladen Boehm, John Casimir Burzynski, Brian Emerson Cox, Matthew Mead Dellinger, Zachary Ara Elmassian, Jennifer Rebecca Ewing, Natalie Elizabeth Gross, Jessica Morgan Hall, Allison Finley Hardy, Brian Thomas Lynch, Melissa Stewart Mills, Christine Marie Misterka, Jonathan Stas Nogay, Samantha Elizabeth
Pitier, Margaret Brundage Porter, Derek Robert Schatzlein, Adam William Halonen Seeley, Krista Ann Slavicek.
Supreme Court recognized this right in the famous case of
Pitier v.
Sunstein wrote in his 2004 book on "FDR's unfinished revolution." (29) The prospect that the Court's increasingly embattled liberals could use
PITier v.
Supreme Court, in
Pitier v Doe (1982), ruled that public education (K-12) must be provided to all children.
(43) In some contexts, the word 'pity' implies that the
pitier is in some way better off than the person who is pitied.
(313.) Interestingly, Professor
Pitier, author of one of the leading articles on the poisonous tree doctrine, describes Wong Sun both ways.
One result, a distancing pity, is an appealing safety maneuver, keeping us, if not coldly analytical in Brechtian Verfremdungseffekt, at least apart, as other, as the
pitier who feels the difference between ourselves and these women.