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Do You Have Pandemic Empty-Nest Syndrome?

Do You Have Pandemic Empty-Nest Syndrome? How parents can cope when kids leave home a second time by Sarah Elizabeth Adler, AARP, May 24, 2021 | Comments: Terry Vine/Getty Images Homemade bread and backyard chickens weren t the only trends to take off during the pandemic. Cohabitation between parents and young adult children skyrocketed, too, with the number of 18- to 29-year-olds living at home reaching levels not seen since the Great Depression, according to 2020 findings from the Pew Research Center. But as colleges and workplaces across the country begin to reopen, many young adults who returned home in the last year are preparing to leave the nest once more. It s a change that can find parents grappling with feelings of loss and sadness but experts say the transition to an empty nest doesn t need to be fraught a second time around. Here are their strategies to ease the adjustment.

Ohio State Bar Association recognizes excellence in the profession at its virtual Annual Meeting

Please, reenter the code in the captcha! The link was successfully Sent! Ooops!:( An error has occurred!   Judge Mary Jane Trapp. (Submitted photos) Ohio Supreme Court Justice Melody Stewart. Karen E. Rubin. • • • • On Friday, May 14, the Ohio State Bar Association (OSBA) recognized excellence in the legal profession at its 2021 Virtual Annual Meeting.   The event included the presentation of the Ohio Bar Medal – the OSBA’s highest honor – to Judge Mary Jane Trapp of the 11th District Court of Appeals.   In addition, Ohio Supreme Court Justice Melody Stewart received the OSBA Women in the Profession Section’s Nettie Cronise Lutes Award. The OSBA’s Eugene Weir Award for Ethics and Professionalism went to Cleveland attorney Karen E. Rubin, and the Ohio Access to Justice Foundat

NRA s failed gamble in Texas court boosts chances of its demise | Top Stories

The National Rifle Assocation took what might have been the biggest legal gamble of its life and lost. Now, it faces a potential outcome that progressive U.S. politicians have long

University of Detroit Mercy law school names professor as dean

University of Detroit Mercy law school names professor as dean View Comments Detroit  A nationally recognized expert in sentencing law and procedure has been named as the first African American dean of the University of Detroit Mercy School of Law. Jelani Jefferson Exum, who also will be the second woman to serve as dean of the law school, joined the university in 2019 as the Philip J. McElroy Professor of Law. “I am honored to be the next dean of Detroit Mercy Law,” Jefferson Exum said in a statement released by the university. “Our school has a rich history of service, dedication to social justice and commitment to diversity and equity, all values that I hold dear. I look forward to expanding our deep connection to the Detroit community and to strengthening our regional, national and transnational presence.” 

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