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  2. CC PDF Converter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CC_PDF_Converter

    CC PDF Converter was a free and open-source program that allowed users to convert documents into PDF files on Microsoft Windows operating systems, while embedding a Creative Commons license. [1] [2] The application leveraged RedMon and Ghostscript and was licensed under the GNU GPL. A 2013 review in PC World gave the software 4 out of 5 stars. [2]

  3. Solid Converter PDF - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid_Converter_PDF

    Solid Converter PDF is document reconstruction software from Solid Documents which converts PDF files to editable formats. Originally released for the Microsoft Windows operating system, a Mac OS X version was released in 2010. The current versions are Solid Converter PDF 9.0 for Windows and Solid PDF to Word for Mac 2.1.

  4. Morris Cohen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_Cohen

    Morris Cohen (chemist), Canadian chemist and corrosion researcher; winner of the 1983 Olin Palladium Award; Morris Cohen (scientist) (1911–2005), American metallurgist; Morris Cohen (spy) (1910–1995), American convicted of espionage for the Soviet Union; Morris L. Cohen (1927–2010), American attorney, law librarian and professor of law

  5. Morris L. Cohen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_L._Cohen

    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.

  6. Morris Raphael Cohen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morris_Raphael_Cohen

    Morris Raphael Cohen (Belarusian: Мо́рыс Рафаэ́ль Ко́эн; July 25, 1880 [a] – January 28, 1947) was an American judicial philosopher, lawyer, and legal scholar who united pragmatism with logical positivism and linguistic analysis.

  7. Liberty's Prisoners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberty's_Prisoners

    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."