LECTURE AT UNIVERSITY OF UTAH FOCUSES ON RESPONDING TO YOUNG ADULTS
September 30, 2008
September 30, 2008
SALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 30 -- The University of Utah issued the following news release:
"Siblings can be our longest-lived relationships. During childhood, we closely share life space and by the time we are old, these are the people we will have known longest. For many of us, they are our closest genetic ties," says Jan Hare, professor of family studies and gerontology at the University of Wisconsin-Stout and an expert in the areas of death, bereavement and health care eth . . .
"Siblings can be our longest-lived relationships. During childhood, we closely share life space and by the time we are old, these are the people we will have known longest. For many of us, they are our closest genetic ties," says Jan Hare, professor of family studies and gerontology at the University of Wisconsin-Stout and an expert in the areas of death, bereavement and health care eth . . .
