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    Sep 9, 2005 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  1. Privately run city schools cost more to improve

    Sun Staff
    Three Baltimore elementary schools run by the for-profit Edison company are making progress, but it's costing more to run them than other city schools that have seen bigger jumps in test scores, according to a new Abell Foundation report. The state...

    Tags: Martin Luther King Jr., Public Schools, Career and Workplace, Companies and Corporations, Students

  2. Dec 3, 2006 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  3. Keeping ties to team suits Modell just fine

    Sun reporter
    Art Modell doesn't make road trips anymore. He no longer endures marathon work weeks, either. As for major decisions around the Ravens, let's just say it's a choice between baked chicken and prime rib at the team's cafeteria. Modell's reign as majority...

    Tags: Multi-Sport Events, Steve Bisciotti, Arts, Football, Buffalo Bills

  4. Apr 10, 2005 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  5. State's lax oversight puts fragile children at risk

    Sun Staff
    There were warning signs in the months before 11-year-old Arthur Lee Wiley became deathly ill. The severely disabled boy was kept in bed so long he moaned in pain. He suffered a broken leg for reasons no one has ever determined. By February 2002, his...

    Tags: Health and Safety at Work, Cherry Hill, Society, Children, Health and Medical Professionals

  6. May 9, 2000 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  7. Studies suggest link between lead, violence

    Sun Staff
    Two new studies on the effects of lead exposure to be released this week suggest that the toxin commonly found in household paints made before 1960 may stunt normal brain growth and could contribute to patterns of violent crime. The reports - to be...

    Tags: Hearing Impairment, Research, Hospitals and Clinics, Brain, Children

  8. Jul 23, 2001 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  9. OHRP letter reinstating JHU MPA with restrictions

    Office for Human Research Protections 6100 Executive Boulevard, Suite 3B01 National Institutes of Health (MSC 7507) Rockville, Maryland 20892-7507 July 22, 2001 Edward D. Miller, M.D. Dean and Chief Executive Officer Johns Hopkins Medicine The Johns...

    Tags: Research, Hospitals and Clinics, David Grant, Government, Science

  10. Nov 17, 2002 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  11. The famous dead yield only murky diagnoses

    Sun Staff
    The claims are everywhere: on posters and T-shirts, on the Internet and in books, even sometimes headlining the national news. Thomas Jefferson's eccentricities were actually a form of autism. Albert Einstein's genius flourished despite a learning...

    Tags: Hospitals and Clinics, Children, Edgar Allan Poe, Asperger Syndrome, Death

  12. Jul 24, 2001 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  13. U.S. eases constraints on Hopkins

    Sun Staff
    A federal agency lifted a suspension of human medical research at the Johns Hopkins University yesterday but frustrated school officials by imposing severe restrictions that will likely delay full resumption of research for months. While regulators...

    Tags: Research, Georgia, Hospitals and Clinics, Bill Hall, Diseases and Illnesses

  14. Jan 26, 2002 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  15. Draft focuses on subjects in experiments

    Sun Staff
    A state delegate is proposing to introduce legislation that would strengthen protections for volunteers in medical experiments and open up the records of university review boards to public scrutiny. Del. James W. Hubbard, a Democrat from Prince George'...

    Tags: Research, Medical Procedures and Tests, Arts and Culture, Health, Colleges and Universities

  16. Dec 27, 2003 |Story| Allentown Morning Call
  17. Part 3: First year in valley filled with setbacks, joy

    Of The Morning Call
    When Corinna and Alan Kline adopted a Bulgarian child born without a hand and with social and developmental delays, they expected a tough adjustment. They knew it would take time for their daughter Lalka to bond with them and their three biological...

    Tags: Family, Hospitals and Clinics, Children, Restaurants, Lifestyle and Leisure

  18. Oct 22, 2003 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  19. Disclosure at Chimes puts donors in the dark

    Sun Reporter
    The Chimes, a highly respected, Baltimore-based nonprofit group that provides jobs and care for the disabled, paid three top executives $2.44 million over three years that it failed to disclose in Internal Revenue Service filings of Chimes Inc. and its...

    Tags: Internal Revenue Service, Corporate Officers, Social Services, Hospitals and Clinics, Society

  20. Apr 24, 2003 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  21. Md. officials rule out two SARS cases

    Sun Staff
    Health authorities ruled out two potential SARS cases in Maryland Thursday, but three members of a Millersville family who traveled recently to China were in isolation at home after one developed symptoms of the deadly respiratory ailment. Anne Arundel...

    Tags: Family, Hospitals and Clinics, Medical Procedures and Tests, Bel Air (Allegany, Maryland), Diseases and Illnesses

  22. Feb 25, 2004 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  23. Baltimore City School Board members

    Patricia L. Welch - Chairwoman of the Baltimore City Board of School Commissioners - Appointed in 1997 - Dean of the School of Education and Urban Studies, Morgan State University Samuel Stringfield - Vice chairman of the Baltimore City Board of...

    Tags: Towson University, Public Schools, Morgan State University, Coppin State University, Arts and Culture

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Original site for Kennedy Krieger Institute topic gallery.
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Kennedy Krieger Institute Photos
Rebecca Zimmerman, a teacher at the Kennedy Krieger Ins...
(January 2, 2013)
Rebecca Zimmerman, a teacher at the Kennedy Krieger Institute Center for Autism and Related Disorders, uses the principles of Applied Behavior Analysis to teach a student.
Sophie Escalante, 3, and her brother, alex Escalante, 6...
(November 25, 2012)
Watching trains
The Moving Co. Dance Center (Cockeysville) performs sev...
(November 25, 2012)
Dance performance