Natalie Dee, a resident of Columbus, Ohio, publishes a webcomic, , and wrote a weekly advice column titled "Ask Natalie," which ran in the Columbus Alive from July 2005-January 2006 and now appears in her blog. Her husband Drew also publishes a webcomic, called toothpaste for dinner. Together, the two write the collaborative webcomic Married to the Sea.
Natalie Dee (a pseudonym) was born in Ohio in 1979. She is an independent writer/artist, and is well-known (as is her husband Drew) for her desire to keep her personal life private.
Natalie has two pug dogs, Charles and Chester, who have their own infrequently-updated .
Webcomic
was launched on September 17 2002 and was updated sporadically until December 29, 2003 when it began to be updated every weekday. On May 9 2005 the comic began updating daily. It does not have a plot or recurring characters, apart from Natalie Dee herself, her dog Chester, and real-life people who are occasionally mentioned. There are no persistent themes in the comic - occasionally, though, more than one comic will focus on the same topic, such as the 'Shitty Zoo' series.
Natalie Dee (a pseudonym) was born in Ohio in 1979. She is an independent writer/artist, and is well-known (as is her husband Drew) for her desire to keep her personal life private.
Natalie has two pug dogs, Charles and Chester, who have their own infrequently-updated .
Webcomic
was launched on September 17 2002 and was updated sporadically until December 29, 2003 when it began to be updated every weekday. On May 9 2005 the comic began updating daily. It does not have a plot or recurring characters, apart from Natalie Dee herself, her dog Chester, and real-life people who are occasionally mentioned. There are no persistent themes in the comic - occasionally, though, more than one comic will focus on the same topic, such as the 'Shitty Zoo' series.
The Simon family are Jewish Texan community and business leaders from Brenham, Texas. Led by Alex Simon, the family settled in Brenham, Texas in 1866 and helped to build B'Nai Abraham Synagogue, Brenham and the Simon Theatre.
The Simon Theatre was built by and designed by renowned Houston architect Alfred C. Finn. Its doors opened in 1925 and hosted theatrical performances, vaudeville acts, ballroom dances, special events and movies. The Simon Theatre remained open until it closed in the 1970s.
Historically, family members have been buried at the B'nai Abraham Cemetery
The Simon Theatre was built by and designed by renowned Houston architect Alfred C. Finn. Its doors opened in 1925 and hosted theatrical performances, vaudeville acts, ballroom dances, special events and movies. The Simon Theatre remained open until it closed in the 1970s.
Historically, family members have been buried at the B'nai Abraham Cemetery
City of Shoulders and Noses is an original screenplay written by artist, Tommy Ardolino, and is the optioned property of Adventuress Productions, International. The dark comedy film will be produced by Tommy Ardolino, Sybil Danning, and George Parra, and will star Miko Hughes, Ruth Buzzi, Danielle Gamba, Jennifer Sciole, Johnny Martino, and Daniel Booko.
Seed of a concept:
(Note: This stub article should evolve differently than Child Support Policy in the United States)
I believe that an article is needed to provide a broad overview of the issues involved in child support policy. Many pages exist that provide information about policy implementations in particular countries.
North American child support law was based on traditional British common law practice up until 1990. Federal reforms in the US from 1975, 1984, and finally 1988 changed all that (1990 the year of first non-British common law type implementation). This was a fundamental change that completely swapped out the British common law approach for one based on the Soviet model (well documented and currently being discussed much on talk radio). People interested in the topic held their breath awaiting constitutional rulings on the reforms. In 1993, in P.O.P.S. V Gardner, a federal appeals court accepted the reforms by reclassifying family issues as "social policy" (it was private issue law with a high degree of constitutional protection). "Social policy" does not have the constitutional protections that relate back to British common law and the classic liberal relationship between the individual and the state. An example of social policy is the setting of welfare entitlements. Recipients have no rights other than equal treatment under law. It was this fundamental change that also led to rulings by state courts on same-sex marriage. Once the constitutional requirement became "equal treatment" on ONLY equal treatment, some state courts found it necessary to treat same-sex couples equally in their desire to marry. Other countries used in the current article here followed suit.
web references
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*
*
*
*
*
Other references:
* Braver, Sanford L., and Diane O'Connell (1998). Divorced Dads: Shattering the Myths. Penguin Putnam, Inc.
* Baskerville, Stephen (2007). Taken into Custody, the War Against Fathers, Marriage, and the Family. Cumberland House, Tennessee.
* RSFSR (1969) Article 68 of the Russian Soviet Family code established July 30, 1969; one quarter of earnings for one child, one third for two, and one half for three or more (modified by Code No. 223-FZ of December 29, 1995; see RFFLC, 1995)
* RFFLC (1995) Article 81 of the Family Code of the Russian Federation No. 223-FZ of December 29, 1995 (still applies a percent-of-income formula, see RSFSR, 1969)
(Note: This stub article should evolve differently than Child Support Policy in the United States)
I believe that an article is needed to provide a broad overview of the issues involved in child support policy. Many pages exist that provide information about policy implementations in particular countries.
North American child support law was based on traditional British common law practice up until 1990. Federal reforms in the US from 1975, 1984, and finally 1988 changed all that (1990 the year of first non-British common law type implementation). This was a fundamental change that completely swapped out the British common law approach for one based on the Soviet model (well documented and currently being discussed much on talk radio). People interested in the topic held their breath awaiting constitutional rulings on the reforms. In 1993, in P.O.P.S. V Gardner, a federal appeals court accepted the reforms by reclassifying family issues as "social policy" (it was private issue law with a high degree of constitutional protection). "Social policy" does not have the constitutional protections that relate back to British common law and the classic liberal relationship between the individual and the state. An example of social policy is the setting of welfare entitlements. Recipients have no rights other than equal treatment under law. It was this fundamental change that also led to rulings by state courts on same-sex marriage. Once the constitutional requirement became "equal treatment" on ONLY equal treatment, some state courts found it necessary to treat same-sex couples equally in their desire to marry. Other countries used in the current article here followed suit.
web references
*
*
*
*
*
*
Other references:
* Braver, Sanford L., and Diane O'Connell (1998). Divorced Dads: Shattering the Myths. Penguin Putnam, Inc.
* Baskerville, Stephen (2007). Taken into Custody, the War Against Fathers, Marriage, and the Family. Cumberland House, Tennessee.
* RSFSR (1969) Article 68 of the Russian Soviet Family code established July 30, 1969; one quarter of earnings for one child, one third for two, and one half for three or more (modified by Code No. 223-FZ of December 29, 1995; see RFFLC, 1995)
* RFFLC (1995) Article 81 of the Family Code of the Russian Federation No. 223-FZ of December 29, 1995 (still applies a percent-of-income formula, see RSFSR, 1969)