Academic literature on the topic 'Divorce, ohio'

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Journal articles on the topic "Divorce, ohio"

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DeKeseredy, Walter S., and Carolyn Joseph. "Separation and/or Divorce Sexual Assault in Rural Ohio." Violence Against Women 12, no. 3 (March 2006): 301–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077801205277357.

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DeKeseredy, Walter S., and Martin D. Schwartz. "Separation/Divorce Sexual Assault in Rural Ohio: Survivors' Perceptions." Journal of Prevention & Intervention in the Community 36, no. 1-2 (July 9, 2008): 105–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10852350802022365.

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Duncan, Karen A., Golden Jackson, and Sharon Selling. "Disposition of the Family Home at Divorce: An Ohio Study." Housing and Society 20, no. 3 (January 1993): 63–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08882746.1993.11430173.

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Hall-Sanchez, Amanda K. "Male Peer Support, Hunting, and Separation/Divorce Sexual Assault in Rural Ohio." Critical Criminology 22, no. 4 (August 28, 2014): 495–510. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10612-014-9251-6.

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Haque, Amber. "Unveiling Islam." American Journal of Islam and Society 20, no. 3-4 (October 1, 2003): 213–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/ajis.v20i3-4.1846.

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Many books have been written on Muslims and Islam since 9/1 I. Amajority of them have tried to show Islam's negative side in an attempt toprove that Islam teaches violence and that Muslims love to engage injihad to become martyrs. Such contentions are generally made by antiMusliminterest groups, certain religious organizations, and politiciansunder the influence of such extremists. These people stir up anti-Muslimsentiments to influence public opinion and bend government policies infavor of such groups. This book is a similar attempt to gain popularity forthe authors and arouse anti-Muslim sentiment at a time that is trying formost Americans. The authors, Ergun Caner and Emir Caner, are brothers.The senior author is professor of theology at Criswell College, Dallas,Texas, and the second author teaches at the Baptist Seminary in WakeForest, North Carolina.The book contains a preface and introduction, I 6 chapters on variousaspects of Islam, and four appendices, including an index to the Qur'anand a glossary of Arabic terms. The preface is a story of the clash ofculturesbetween the authors' Muslim (Turkish) father and Swedish mother,which resulted in a divorce when the Caner brothers were still veryyoung. The father had visitation rights and would take Ergun and Emir tothe Islamic Center in Columbus, Ohio, on weekends "to do the prayers,celebrate Ramadhan and read the Qur'an." This was the children's onlyexposure to Islam, until Ergun was I 5 and visited a church after his bestfriend invited him to do so. Ergun found the people at church warm and"didn't mock when he stumbled through the hymns." He joined thegospel ministry in 1982 and has since been preaching (against Islam) inorder "to bring salvation for 1.2 billion Muslims." Thus the title of thebook is itself deceiving, as it conveys that a practicing Muslim became aChristian, when, in fact, the authors actually became Christians in theirearly teens and had almost no education in Islam.It is appalling that the introductory chapter opens with a threat from"Shaikh" Osama bin Laden to the Americans and blessings for those whogave their lives to k.ill the 9/1 I victims. The authors portray bin Laden asa typical Muslim who is out to get all people who refuse to accept Islam ...
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Sonnekus, JC. "Gierigheid is die wortel van alle kwaad." Tydskrif vir die Suid-Afrikaanse Reg 2023, no. 2 (2023): 175–208. http://dx.doi.org/10.47348/tsar/2023/i2a1.

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The judgment in Maqubela v The Master leaves room to revisit some established norms in private law that define under what circumstances a subject may be disqualified and found to be unworthy to benefit financially from his/her behaviour against another – including the deceased. The deceased Maqubela AJ took out a significant life policy (R20 million) on his own life two weeks before his death. At the time of his death he was still married in community of property to his wife but was seriously contemplating divorce. His wife was not only aware of the significant life insurance that had just been taken out, but also of his contemplation of divorce. She was much annoyed about his multiple adulterous affairs over many years and even mentioned as much to the minister of justice the day before his sudden death in a deliberate way so as to discredit him in the eyes of the minister. After the sudden demise of the insured life under suspicious circumstances, the widow was originally found guilty of premeditated murder of her husband and of the fraudulent production of a document presented to the master of the high court as the last will of the deceased that was proven to be a falsification in every respect. For the second offence she was sentenced by the court of first instance to prison for three years. On appeal the supreme court of appeal upheld her appeal regarding the conviction on the murder charge, but the other conviction remained intact. In the civil case under discussion the court had to decide whether the widow as claimant was entitled to half of the common estate with inclusion of the R20 million insurance benefit as well as to lay claim as beneficiary under the norms of intestate succession to the widow’s part of the deceased’s estate. It is submitted that the well-known “bloedige hand” rule, which excludes the person responsible for the death of the deceased from benefiting under the law of succession from the estate of the deceased, is merely an example of the underlying broader principle encapsulated in the text from Roman law “nemo ex suo delicto meliorem suam condicionem facere potest” (D 50 17 134 1): “No one is allowed to improve his own condition by his own wrongdoing” or “no woman should profit from her own wrong”. This principle can be found not merely in every civil law legal system but is also recognized in all common-law jurisdictions as can be deduced inter alia from the judgment in Karen L Postlewait v Ohio Valley Medical Center, Inc, a Corporation, et al, and Ohio Valley Medical Center, Inc, a Corporation, and The Estate of Robert L Postlewait, where Maynard JA on 8 Dec 2003 in the appeal to the supreme court of appeal of West Virginia held: “However, the majority equally fails to consider the possibility that Mrs Postlewait’s misconduct in pushing her husband off the porch played a significant role in her husband’s death. Clearly, the chain of events that led to Mr Postlewait’s death were directly put in motion by Mrs Postlewait. Mrs Postlewait filed a medical malpractice/wrongful death action against her husband’s medical providers and successfully negotiated a settlement netting herself more than half a million dollars! Given these circumstances, I am unable to find that Mrs Postlewait is entitled to profit from her husband’s death. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent” (31406). Clearly the claim of Mrs Postlewait to the resulting benefit of more than half a million dollars was unrelated to any claim founded on the law of succession. The quoted Latin maxim is a venerable old maxim in equity and should have been at the root of the judgment in the Maqubela case where there is room to suspect that the old adage still applies: the love of money is the root of all evil. In light of the proven circumstances surrounding the demise of the late acting judge and the fraudulent attempt by his widow Maqubela to pass herself off as the primary testamentary beneficiary of his estate, reasonableness and equity prescribed that the erstwhile wife may neither lay claim to the significantly enhanced half of the common estate thanks to the life insurance benefit nor claim a child’s share as the widow’s portion of the estate of the deceased as governed by the law of intestate succession. Her conduct regarding the proven crime of the falsification of the will should have excluded her as unworthy beneficiary from any form of financial benefit from her marriage to the deceased including the claim to half of the common estate. Matthaeus, the most prominent Old Authority on the implications of this principle in Roman-Dutch law, clearly states in Zinspreuken 6:4 that the disqualified unworthy spouse is also excluded from benefitting from the enhanced half of the common estate under the guise of the default principle of a rightful holder of half of the common estate. Modern Dutch law applies the same underlying principle to prevent unjustified enrichment of the wrongdoer. The principle of legal certainty in South African law did not benefit by this judgment. Not merely does it ignore the standing principles of Roman-Dutch law, but it also compares unfavourably with the outcome in related scenarios in comparable other legal systems.
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Patel, Sajan, Siran Koroukian, Johnie Rose, Long Vu, and Holly Hartman. "Abstract C125: Prostate specific antigen testing patterns and prostate cancer stage at diagnosis in Ohio cancer patients." Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention 32, no. 12_Supplement (December 1, 2023): C125. http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1538-7755.disp23-c125.

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Abstract Summary Statement This study aims to: 1) examine patterns of prostate specific antigen (PSA) testing — diagnostic or screening — across subgroups of prostate cancer (PCa) patients; and 2) analyze patterns of PSA testing in relation to PCa stage at diagnosis. Background Recommendations for PSA tests, blood-based screenings used for PCa detection, are issued by the United States Preventive Services Task Force. Changes in national recommendations, as well as demographic and clinical information can influence the likelihood of an individual receiving a PSA test, and the subsequent PCa diagnosis. Methods Using data from the 2014-2016 linked Ohio Cancer Incidence Surveillance System (OCISS) and Medicare database, we categorized PSA testing as diagnostic or screening, based on diagnosis and procedure codes. Bivariate analyses were conducted on several factors, including patient demographics, claims-based frailty measures, and certain social determinants of health, to evaluate their association with receipt of screening PSA and stage of PCa diagnosis. Two multivariable logistic regression models were created to identify factors associated with receipt of screening PSA test, and subsequently, of being diagnosed with distant stage PCa. Results After excluding individuals identified without any PSA testing in the three years prior to diagnosis (n = 964) and those with unknown staged cancer (n = 446), our final study population included 3034 Ohio men diagnosed with PCa between 2014-2016. The median age was 73 years. Being of older age at the time of PCa diagnosis (adjusted odds ratio (aOR): 0.95 [95% confidence interval: 0.94, 0.97]) was associated with significantly lower odds of being screened. Compared to non-frail men, pre-frail patients (aOR: 0.69 [0.57, 0.84]) and patients with mild to severe frailty (aOR: 0.54 [0.39, 0.75]) also had decreased odds of being screened. History of receipt of screening PSA tests was associated with lower odds of being diagnosed with distant stage disease (aOR: 0.55 [0.42, 0.72]). On the other hand, being of older age at the time of PCa diagnosis (aOR: 1.14 [1.12, 1.17]), having moderate to severe frailty (compared to non-frailty) (aOR: 4.30 [2.38, 8.02]), and being separated or divorced (compared to being married) (aOR: 1.75 [1.06, 2.78]), were associated with increased odds of being diagnosed with distant stage disease. Conclusions Younger age and lower gradients of frailty were strongly associated with receipt of screening PSA. In turn, receipt of screening PSA was associated with early stage PCa, while being older, having higher degrees of frailty, and being divorced or separated from a spouse, were associated with elevated odds of distant stage PCa. This study adds to existing evidence suggesting that PSA-based screening may promote earlier detection of prostate cancer in a real-world setting and challenges preexisting beliefs on the usefulness of PSA testing in older populations. Citation Format: Sajan Patel, Siran Koroukian, Johnie Rose, Long Vu, Holly Hartman. Prostate specific antigen testing patterns and prostate cancer stage at diagnosis in Ohio cancer patients [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 16th AACR Conference on the Science of Cancer Health Disparities in Racial/Ethnic Minorities and the Medically Underserved; 2023 Sep 29-Oct 2;Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 2023;32(12 Suppl):Abstract nr C125.
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Botelho-Filho, Carlos Roberto, Luiza Foltran de Azevedo Koch, Flares Baratto-Filho, Giuliana Martina Bordin, Bárbara Munhoz da Cunha, Igor Renan Zen, Pablo Guilherme Caldarelli, João Armando Brancher, and Marilisa Carneiro Leão Gabardo. "Oral health, quality of life and associated factors in adults in a southern Brazilian city." Concilium 23, no. 11 (June 22, 2023): 418–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.53660/clm-1417-23h04.

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It was verified the association between oral health, quality of life and associated factors in a population in a southern Brazilian city. Cross-sectional study with 373 dwellers of the Ferraria District, Campo Largo, PR, Brazil, that answered a questionnaire with sociodemographic, socioeconomic, quality of life, habits, general and oral health, and Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP-14) variables. Statistical analysis was performed in a univariate and multivariate way (significance level of 5%). In the univariate analysis, 47.7% of individuals had OHIP-14> 12. Worse impacts were reported by olders, women, non-white, divorced or widowed, with lower education and income, worse self-classification of quality of life and general health, depressive, with worse neighborhood conditions, who brush their teeth less and with more need for dental treatment. In the multivariate analysis, olders, female, non-white, presnce of caries or gingival problems and poor self-classification of quality of life reported worse impacts. The worst impacts was associated with sociodemographic, socioeconomic, psychosocial and behavioral variables, which indicates the need for actions to improve several aspects of the population of the Ferraria District.
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Colaço, Jaqueline, Francisco Wilker Mustafa Gomes Muniz, Damieli Peron, Milena Giotti Marostega, Jéssica Jardim Dias, Cassiano Kuchenbecker Rösing, and Paulo Roberto Grafitti Colussi. "Oral health-related quality of life and associated factors in the elderly: a population-based cross-sectional study." Ciência & Saúde Coletiva 25, no. 10 (October 2020): 3901–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/1413-812320202510.02202019.

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Abstract This study aimed to evaluate the oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) and associated factors in the elderly. A cross-sectional study was conducted with 287 elderly of Cruz Alta, Brazil. The following variables were collected: age, sex, ethnicity, level of education, marital status, retirement, medical/dental history, smoking/alcohol exposure, oral hygiene habits, use and need of dental prosthesis, missing teeth, temporomandibular disorder symptoms (TMD), nutritional status, and halitosis. OHRQoL was assessed by Oral Health Impact Profile-14 (OHIP-14). The sample was categorized into low impact (sum scores ≤6) and high impact (sum scores ≥7). Associations were analyzed by Poisson regression with robust variation. Mean scores of OHIP-14 was 5.92±8.54. Divorced individuals and those who did not use dental floss presented 77% and 54%, respectively, higher prevalence ratio (PR) of having higher OHRQoL impact. Elderly that did not need dental prosthesis demonstrated a lower impact on OHRQoL (P<0.01). Elderly with TMD presented a higher PR of having higher OHRQoL impact (P<0.01). It was concluded that higher impact on OHRQoL was associated with marital status, non-users of dental floss and those with TMD. No need dental prosthesis were associated with lower impact on OHRQoL.
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Chaudhary, Farooq Ahmad, Basaruddin Ahmad, Muhammad Qasim Javed, Shaikh Shoeb Yakub, Bilal Arjumand, Asma Munir Khan, and Saeed Mustafa. "The Relationship of Orofacial Pain and Dental Health Status and Oral Health Behaviours in Facial Burn Patients." Pain Research and Management 2021 (May 8, 2021): 1–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/5512755.

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This study aims to examine the association of orofacial pain and oral health status and oral health behaviours in facial burn patients. The participants in this cross-sectional study were randomly recruited from the Burn Care Center, Institute of Medical Sciences, Islamabad, Pakistan. An intraoral evaluation was carried out to record the DMFT and OHI-S. A self-administered questionnaire was used to collect information on sociodemographic status, brushing frequency, and dental visits. Orofacial pain during mandibular movement was assessed using the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). Psychological status was assessed using the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale and Impact of Events Scale. ANOVA and simple and multiple linear regression tests were used to analyse the data. From the 90 facial burn patients included, the majority were below 34 years of age, female, single or divorced, and unemployed. The mean DMFT was 10.7, and 71% had poor oral hygiene. 56% of the participants had moderate-to-severe anxiety, and 68% had posttraumatic stress disorder. 53% of the participants had moderate-to-severe pain during mouth opening or moving the mandible with a mean score of 41.5. Analyses showed that orofacial pain was associated with less frequent brushing, irregular dental visits, greater DMFT score, and more plaque accumulation (OHI-S). It was also associated with employment status, the severity of a burn, anxiety, and stress. The treatment and management of dental and oral conditions in burn patients need judicious balance in controlling and accurate assessment of the pain and improving psychological problems in burn patients.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Divorce, ohio"

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Cookro, Nicholas A. "Divorce Mediation in Northeast Ohio: Perceptions of Legal and Social Services Professionals." Akron, OH : University of Akron, 2009. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=akron1248100212.

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Thesis (M.A.)--University of Akron, School of Family and Consumer Sciences-Child and Family Development, 2009.
"August, 2009." Title from electronic thesis title page (viewed 11/11/2009) Advisor, Pamela A. Schulze; Faculty Readers, Gary Rosen, David Witt; School Director, Sue Rasor-Greenhalgh; Dean of the College, James M. Lynn; Dean of the Graduate School, George R. Newkome. Includes bibliographical references.
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Davis, Theresa M. "We Will All Come Together: Women In the Nineteenth Century Stark County Court in Ohio." University of Akron / OhioLINK, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=akron1384781123.

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Books on the topic "Divorce, ohio"

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Wright, Cheryl Door. Divorce records 1805-1918 Athens County, Ohio. Athens, Ohio (65 North Court Street, Athens 45701-2506): Athens County Historical Society & Museum, Athens County Genealogical Chapter, OGS, 2003.

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A, Haman Edward, ed. How to file for divorce in Ohio. 2nd ed. Naperville, Ill: Sphinx Pub., 2001.

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Gilchrist, John. How to file for divorce in Ohio. 3rd ed. Naperville, Ill: Sphinx Pub., 2005.

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Wright, Cheryl Dorr. Divorce records, 1805-1918, Athens County, Ohio. Athens, OH (65 N. Court St., Athens 45701-2506): Athens County Historical Society & Museum, Athens County Genealogical Chapter, OGS, 2003.

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Powers, William Tatnall. Mahoning County, Ohio divorces, 1846-1887. Mahoning County: Mahoning County Chapter, Ohio Genealogical Society, 1995.

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A, Haman Edward, ed. How to file for divorce in Ohio: With forms. Naperville, IL: Sphinx, 2000.

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Houten, Ellen Van. Divorces, 1803-1900, Court of Common Pleas, Warren County, Ohio. Loveland, OH (9500 Creekside Dr., Loveland 45140): Cardinal Research, 1990.

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Gilchrist, John. Divorce in Ohio: A people's guide to marriage, divorce, dissolution, alimony, child custody, child support, visitation rights. Columbus, Ohio: Pro Se Pub. Co., 1989.

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Gilchrist, John. Divorce in Ohio: A people's guide to marriage, divorce, dissolution, spousal support, child custody, child support, visitation rights. 3rd ed. Columbus, Ohio: Pro Se Pub. Co., 1992.

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Ohio Genealogical Society. Fairfield County Chapter., ed. Marriages recorded in Fairfield County, Ohio, from sources other than Probate Marriage Records: With divorce records. [Lancaster, Ohio]: Fairfield County Chapter of the Ohio Genealogical Society, 1999.

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Book chapters on the topic "Divorce, ohio"

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Nielsen, Kim E. "Mrs. Anna Miesse, Local Doctor’s Wife." In Money, Marriage, and Madness, 11–21. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043147.003.0002.

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This chapter relays the limited information available about Ott’s early life, and focuses on her live as the wife of Dr. Jonathan Miesse in Chillicothe, Ohio. The household of this small-town physician and his wife, the household in which their children grew, was complicated, unhappy, and sometimes ugly. Jonathan filed for divorce in 1849, after twelve years of marriage, but withdrew his application within two months, and attempted a separation agreement in 1853. He again filed for divorce in late 1855. This chapter focuses on marriage laws and the contrast between marriage ideals and realities.
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Rosenthal, Cindy Simon. "Ohio: Gender Power in a Time of Leadership Transition." In When Women Lead, 117–36. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195115406.003.0007.

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Abstract On February 22, 1995, Senator Merle Kearns was presiding over one of her first meetings as chair of the Human Services and Aging Committee. A standing-room-only crowd was on hand to hear a bill dealing with child custody and parental responsibilities in cases of divorce. As Senator Grace Drake began a line of questioning with the sponsor, she abruptly stopped to ask Senator Kearns what title she preferred in her new role. “Do you want to be called ‘Madame Chairwoman,’ ‘Madame Chairman’ or what?” Senator Drake, who up until then had been the only woman chairing a Senate committee, added: “Personally, I have always preferred ‘Madame Chairman.”‘ Senator Kearns responded, “Whatever works.” An almost identical question was posed by a male lawmaker a day earlier to Representative Cheryl Winkler, the new chair of the House Family Services Committee. Her preferred title is “Madame Chairperson.” The two events are not merely incidents of self-conscious “political correctness.” They reflect the transitional stage at which female committee chairs in Ohio find themselves. Unlike the few women chairs in Oklahoma, who are largely defined by their token status, institutional practices, and political culture, Ohio women are defining roles for themselves during a period of institutional change and leadership transition. Because Ohio women are still relatively few in number and new to leadership positions, however, their long-term imprint on leadership practices seems less certain than that of women chairs in other states. But their impact has thus far been considerable because of real power rather than numbers.
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Orr, David W. "The Architecture of Science." In The Nature of Design. Oxford University Press, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195148558.003.0022.

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Back to the future. Suppose for a moment that you are the chair of a faculty team at Cornell University in the year 1905 and are charged with the responsibility for developing plans for a new science building. You, however, have the foreknowledge that this building is the one in which a young man from Columbus, Ohio, Thomas Midgley Jr., will one day learn his basic science. Further, you know what he will do over the course of his career. You have only this one chance to affect the mind of the man who will otherwise someday hold the world’s record for banned toxic substances by formulating leaded gasoline and chlorofluorocarbons. What would you do? Before developing the building program, could you engage your faculty colleagues in a conversation about the kind of science to be taught in the building? Would it be possible, in other words, to make architecture a derivative of curriculum? Would it be possible to signal to all entering the building that knowledge is always incomplete and that, at some scale and under some conditions, it can be dangerous? Is it possible to make this warning similar to but more effective than the Surgeon General’s warning on a pack of cigarettes? If you succeed, the catastrophes of lead dispersal from automobile exhaust and the thinning of stratospheric ozone from chlorofluorocarbons will not occur. Of course, the design of science buildings alone is not likely to influence young minds as much as teachers, peers, and classes do, but it is far from inconsequential. Frank Lloyd Wright once said that he could design a house for a newly married couple that would cause them to divorce within a matter of weeks. By the same logic, it is possible to design science buildings in such a way that they contribute to the estrangement of mind and nature, deadening senses and sensibilities. Indeed, this is the way we typically construct buildings. Typically, science buildings are massive and fortresslike and give no hint of intimacy with nature. Their design is utilitarian, with long, straight corridors and graceless, square rooms. Neither daylight nor natural sounds are permitted. Windows do not open.
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Isaacs, Lily. "Green to Bluegrass." In Industrial Strength Bluegrass, 124–33. University of Illinois Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043642.003.0007.

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In 1949 Lily Isaacs came to New York from Germany with her Jewish family. She met Joe Isaacs when he played a Greenwich Village folk club with Frank Wakefield and the Greenbriar Boys. Married in 1970, they moved to South Lebanon, Ohio. Joe played with Larry Sparks. After Joe’s brother died in an accident, Lily converted to Christianity. She and Joe began singing gospel, and recorded with Hamilton’s Pine Tree Records and at Jordan Studios in Covington, traveled with children Ben, Becky and Sonya as Sacred Bluegrass, then moved to LaFollette, Tennessee. After Lily and Joe divorced, Lily and her children performed as the Isaacs, earned a 2016 Grammy nomination, and Lily published her 2014 autobiography, You Don't Cry Out Loud.
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Snyder, Michael. "A Day after the Fair." In James Purdy, 23—C2.F4. Oxford University PressNew York, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197609729.003.0003.

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Abstract William moved his family to Findlay, Ohio. He did accounting work and became a bank inspector, which required travel away from home. Findlay was a small city that had been enriched in the late nineteenth century by an oil and gas boom, but by 1919 it was a boomtown after the boom. Amid a conservative environment, James as a child began writing strange stories and printing his own little magazine. His older brother Richard was a gay youth who aspired to be an actor. James did not much like public school but he found a high school English teacher who encouraged him and said he could be a writer, and he won a club contest with a poem. In the middle of his high school years, his parents divorced. To make ends meet, Vera turned the family home into a boarding house.
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