Academic literature on the topic 'Cuyahoga Co., O. Sheriff'

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Journal articles on the topic "Cuyahoga Co., O. Sheriff"

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Jog, Suneeti K., John T. Kartesz, Jeffrey R. Johansen, and George J. Wilder. "Floristic Study of Highland Heights Community Park, Cuyahoga County, Ohio." Castanea 70, no. 2 (June 2005): 136–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.2179/0008-7475(2005)070[0136:fsohhc]2.0.co;2.

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Fulton, David C., Kevin Skerl, Erin M. Shank, and David W. Lime. "Beliefs and attitudes toward lethal management of deer in Cuyahoga Valley National Park." Wildlife Society Bulletin 32, no. 4 (December 2004): 1166–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.2193/0091-7648(2004)032[1166:baatlm]2.0.co;2.

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Peck, John A., Andrea Mullen, Andrew Moore, and Joseph H. Rumschlag. "The Legacy Sediment Record within the Munroe Falls Dam Pool, Cuyahoga River, Summit County, Ohio." Journal of Great Lakes Research 33, sp2 (September 2007): 127–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.3394/0380-1330(2007)33[127:tlsrwt]2.0.co;2.

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Rumschlag, Joseph H., and John A. Peck. "Short-term Sediment and Morphologic Response of the Middle Cuyahoga River to the Removal of the Munroe Falls Dam, Summit County, Ohio." Journal of Great Lakes Research 33, sp2 (September 2007): 142–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.3394/0380-1330(2007)33[142:ssamro]2.0.co;2.

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Ogojiaku, Chinonso N., JC Allen, Rexford Anson-Dwamena, Kierra S. Barnett, Olorunfemi Adetona, Wansoo Im, and Darryl B. Hood. "The Health Opportunity Index: Understanding the Input to Disparate Health Outcomes in Vulnerable and High-Risk Census Tracts." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 16 (August 10, 2020): 5767. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17165767.

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The Health Opportunity Index (HOI) is a multivariate tool that can be more efficiently used to identify and understand the interplay of complex social determinants of health (SDH) at the census tract level that influences the ability to achieve optimal health. The derivation of the HOI utilizes the data-reduction technique of principal component analysis to determine the impact of SDH on optimal health at lower census geographies. In the midst of persistent health disparities and the present COVID-19 pandemic, we demonstrate the potential utility of using 13-input variables to derive a composite metric of health (HOI) score as a means to assist in the identification of the most vulnerable communities during the current pandemic. Using GIS mapping technology, health opportunity indices were layered by counties in Ohio to highlight differences by census tract. Collectively we demonstrate that our HOI framework, principal component analysis and convergence analysis methodology coalesce to provide results supporting the utility of this framework in the three largest counties in Ohio: Franklin (Columbus), Cuyahoga (Cleveland), and Hamilton (Cincinnati). The results in this study identified census tracts that were also synonymous with communities that were at risk for disparate COVID-19 related health outcomes. In this regard, convergence analyses facilitated identification of census tracts where different disparate health outcomes co-exist at the worst levels. Our results suggest that effective use of the HOI composite score and subcomponent scores to identify specific SDH can guide mitigation/intervention practices, thus creating the potential for better targeting of mitigation and intervention strategies for vulnerable communities, such as during the current pandemic.
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Canning, Ruth A. "James Fitzpiers Fitzgerald, Captain Thomas Lee, and the problem of ‘secret traitors’: conflicted loyalties during the Nine Years’ War, 1594-1603." Irish Historical Studies 39, no. 156 (November 2015): 573–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/ihs.2015.25.

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AbstractExisting evidence pertaining to Ireland’s Nine Years’ War (1594–1603) strongly lends itself to the impression that the majority of Old English Palesmen, at least those of higher social status, chose to support the English crown during this conflict rather than their co-religionist Gaelic Irish countrymen. Loyalties, however, were anything but straightforward and could depend on any number of cultural values, social concerns, and economic incentives. Nevertheless, James Fitzpiers Fitzgerald, a ‘Bastard Geraldine’ who served as sheriff of Kildare, seemed to have been driven by a genuine sense of duty to the English crown and establishment. With the outbreak of hostilities in the 1590s, Fitzpiers proved to be a devout crown servitor, risking life and limb to confront the English queen’s Irish enemies. But, in late 1598 he suddenly, and somewhat inexplicably, threw his lot in with the Irish confederacy, defying the government he had once championed. During the ensuing investigation, the Dublin administration accumulated much damning evidence against Fitzpiers, including a patriotic plea from rebel leader Hugh O’Neill which urged Fitzpiers to defend his Irish homeland from the oppressions of English Protestant rule. Yet, at the very same time, a counter case was made by Fitzpiers’s controversial English friend, Captain Thomas Lee, which argued that Fitzpiers’s actions were more loyal than anyone could have imagined. Through an examination of Fitzpiers’s perplexing case, this paper will explore the complicated nature of allegiances in 1590s Ireland and how loyalties were not always what they seemed.
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"First person – Lozan Sheriff and Reenam Kahn." Disease Models & Mechanisms 13, no. 12 (December 1, 2020): dmm048009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/dmm.048009.

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ABSTRACTFirst Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Disease Models & Mechanisms, helping early-career researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Lozan Sheriff and Reenam Kahn are co-first authors on ‘Alcoholic hepatitis and metabolic disturbance in female mice: a more tractable model than Nrf2−/− animals’, published in DMM. Lozan is a postdoctoral research fellow in the lab of Dr Patricia Lalor and Reenam a PhD student in the lab of Prof. Phil Newsome. Both are at the Centre for Liver and Gastrointestinal Research, Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK, investigating the potential of multipotent adult progenitor cells (MAPCs) as a novel therapy for alcoholic steatohepatitis.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Cuyahoga Co., O. Sheriff"

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Finley, Kim. "How Two Large Library Systems Co-Exist in Cuyahoga County, Ohio." University of Toledo / OhioLINK, 2010. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=toledo1271880820.

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Books on the topic "Cuyahoga Co., O. Sheriff"

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Evans, Loretta Luce. Descendants of Serenus Burnett, 1787-1858, and Jane Burnside, 1794-1864, of Trumbull Co. and Cuyahoga Co., Ohio, with descendants in Knox Co., Indiana: Related families include but are not limited to Gardner, Bentley, Nance, Eastham, Griffith, Sturtevant, Judah, Smith, Standish, Quick, Willis, and Langdon. [Cuyahoga County, Ohio]: Loretta Luce Evans, 1999.

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(Firm), Universal Map. Cleveland & Cuyahoga Co. Mapart Publishing, 1998.

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(Firm), Universal Map. Cleveland Cuyahoga Co Map. Universal Map, 2000.

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Company, Turner Publishing. Fairfax Co, Va Sheriff. Turner Pub Co, 2002.

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Graphics, Inc Profile Computer. Akron & Summit Co., Ohio: Including Barberton, Cuyahoga Falls, Fairlawn. Universal Map, 1994.

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Survey, United States Geological. Lakewood quadrangle, Ohio--Cuyahoga Co., 1994: 7.5 minute series (topographic). For sale by the Survey, 2000.

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United States Geological Survey. East Cleveland quadrangle, Ohio--Cuyahoga Co., 1994: 7.5 minute series (topographic). For sale by the Survey, 1997.

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United States Geological Survey. Shaker Heights quadrangle, Ohio--Cuyahoga Co., 1994: 7.5 minute series (topographic). For sale by the Survey, 2000.

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Survey, United States Geological. Cleveland South quadrangle, Ohio--Cuyahoga Co., 1994: 7.5 minute series (topographic). For sale by the Survey, 2000.

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United States Geological Survey. Cleveland North quadrangle, Ohio--Cuyahoga Co., 1994: 7.5 minute series (topographic). For sale by the Survey, 1998.

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