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  2. These Shining Lives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/These_Shining_Lives

    These Shining Lives is a play written by Melanie Marnich. [1] It is based on the true story of four women who worked for the Radium Dial Company - a watch factory based in Ottawa, Illinois. The play showcases the danger women faced in this workplace and highlights the wider lack of concern companies had for protecting the health of their employees.

  3. Radium Girls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radium_Girls

    The Radium Girls' saga holds an important place in the history of both the field of health physics and the labor rights movement. The right of individual workers to sue for damages from corporations due to labor abuse was established as a result of the Radium Girls' case. In the wake of the case, industrial safety standards were demonstrably ...

  4. Grace Fryer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grace_Fryer

    Grace Fryer (14 March 1899 – 27 October 1933) [1] was an American dial painter and Radium Girl, [2] who sued U.S. Radium after suffering radium poisoning while employed painting watch faces. [3] Subsequently, joined by fellow workers Quinta McDonald, Albina Larice, Edna Hussman, and Katherine Schaub, Fryer brought a suit labelled in the media ...

  5. Radium Girls: The dark times of luminous watches - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/radium-girls-dark-times...

    In 1917, glow-in-the-dark watches were all the rage. But the girls who painted them with radioactive paint weren’t told how dangerous it was.

  6. Agaseke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agaseke

    Agaseke. Agaseke is a type of traditional Rwandese woven basket. [ 1] It is characterized by its flat circular base that is taller than it is wide, with a sloped conical fitted lid. It is traditionally made of native natural fibers in natural off-white colors with naturally-dyed patterns in colors like purple, green, black, yellow, and red.

  7. Undark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Undark

    Undark. Undark was a trade name for luminous paint made with a mixture of radioactive radium and zinc sulfide, as produced by the U.S. Radium Corporation between 1917 and 1938. It was used primarily in watch and clock dials. The people working in the industry who applied the radioactive paint became known as the Radium Girls because many of ...

  8. Froebel gifts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Froebel_gifts

    Fröbel's Gift 4, on a special gridded tabletop he also specified. The Sunday Papers (Sonntagsblatt) published by Fröbel between 1838 and 1840 explained the meaning and described the use of each of his six initial "play gifts" (Spielgabe): "The active and creative, living and life producing being of each person, reveals itself in the creative instinct of the child.

  9. United States Radium Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Radium...

    The United States Radium Corporation was a company, most notorious for its operations between the years 1917 to 1926 in Orange, New Jersey, in the United States that led to stronger worker protection laws. After initial success in developing a glow-in-the-dark radioactive paint, the company was subject to several lawsuits in the late 1920s in ...

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