((Excerpt))
TROTWOOD, Ohio — Growing up, Adrian McLemore was a troubled little soul who spent much of his time exploding in confusion and rage.
At 6, he nearly set the house on fire.
At 7, his mother — raising him and his two sisters alone in Georgia — told social workers to place him in a foster home.
McLemore would spend a total of 11 years in foster care and he would learn many things — how to control his anger, how to channel it into programs that helped children like himself, how to survive in homes where families had completely different rules and expectations.

Turning injury into impact
From dance to data, Wright State students showcase research at annual celebration
A lifetime of curiosity
Wright State students raise more than $59,000 for Dayton Children’s Hospital at Raiderthon
Wright State retains Carnegie Research 2 classification, reinforcing national research impact