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    Apr 11, 2013 |Story| Baltimore Sun
  1. Section of brick facade falls off troubled NIH building in Baltimore

    A large section of brick facade fell off a National Institutes of Health research facility on the Southeast Baltimore campus of Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, reviving concerns about a building that opened two years late because of other problems.
    A large section of brick facade fell off a National Institutes of Health research facility on the Southeast Baltimore campus of Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, reviving concerns about a building that opened two years late because of other problems....

    Tags: National Institutes of Health, Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center , Greektown, Baltimore Development Corporation, Alzheimer's Disease

  2. Apr 27, 2013 |Story| Glendale News Press
  3. More than 250 athletes on hand for CV CAN GAMES

    LA CRESCENTA — Ryan Muir let out a yell for all of the athletes at the CV CAN Games to hear. Muir had just finished a throw in the shot put competition at the Special Olympics qualifying event and was as thrilled as any other athlete, no matter...

    Tags: Special Olympics, Track and Field, Special Olympics World Games

  4. Apr 27, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  5. Transient pulled man out of wheelchair, stole it, police say

    A 53-year-old Glendale man pleaded not guilty this week to charges that he pulled a man out of his wheelchair and stole it so he could use it as a prop for panhandling, police said. Prosecutors charged Phillip Papineau with felony grand theft and felony...

    Tags: Crime, Law and Justice, Crimes, Trials, Theft

  6. Apr 27, 2013 |Story| South Florida Sun-Sentinel
  7. South Florida Jews help unearth clues to genetic diseases

    South Florida has one of the world's largest populations of Ashkenazis — Jews of Central and Eastern European descent — making it home to some potentially groundbreaking medical research.
    South Florida has one of the world's largest populations of Ashkenazis — Jews of Central and Eastern European descent — making it home to some potentially groundbreaking medical research. In Boca Raton, the Parkinson's Disease and Movement...

    Tags: Genetics, University of South Florida, Mastectomy, Delray Beach, Gaucher's Disease

  8. Apr 27, 2013 |Story| Herald Mail
  9. Support group: Week of April 29

    TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sensibly) Md. 0077 Today, weigh in 7:15 to 9:15 a.m., meeting 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. First Christian Church, 1345 Potomac Ave., Hagerstown. 301-582-2292. Gam-anon Today, 7 to 8:30 p.m. 33 E. Church St., Frederick, Md. Use side...

    Tags: Christianity, Western Sizzlin Corporation, Frederick (Frederick, Maryland), Reformed, Google Inc.

  10. Apr 26, 2013 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  11. Jury considers verdict in trial tied to tainted Crestwood well

    A federal jury will return to deliberations Monday in the case of a former Crestwood Water Department supervisor accused of repeatedly lying about the secret use of a community well contaminated with toxic chemicals.
    A federal jury will return to deliberations Monday in the case of a former Crestwood Water Department supervisor accused of repeatedly lying about the secret use of a community well contaminated with toxic chemicals. Theresa Neubauer, 55, on paid...

    Tags: Justice System, Water Supply, Water, Crime, Law and Justice, Local Government

  12. Apr 26, 2013 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. Winter blues and summer bummer link brains of rats and man

    Nicholas Spitzer and Davide Dulcis felt for people in higher latitudes whose attitudes soured in the shorter daylight hours of winter.
    Nicholas Spitzer and Davide Dulcis felt for people in higher latitudes whose attitudes soured in the shorter daylight hours of winter. The neuroscientists, who work in balmy San Diego, wondered whether summer was a bummer for rats. They’re...

    Tags: Science, Diseases and Illnesses, Science and Technology, Light Therapy, Research

  14. Apr 28, 2013 |Column| South Florida Sun-Sentinel
  15. Gary Stein: $60,000 could really go a long way

    Would you like to get $60,000 a year for doing nothing? Would that $60,000 be a nice little cushion as you head into retirement? For the average person, that money would pay the house payment and the car payment for a year, and plenty of food, with...

    Tags: Justice System, Criminals, Misdemeanors, Ethics, Pension and Welfare

  16. Apr 26, 2013 |Story| Reuters
  17. Heavy use of herbicide Roundup linked to health dangers-U.S. study

    Reuters
    * Study says chemical residues linked to disease * Roundup developer Monsanto says glyphosate is safe * Researchers say more study is needed By Carey Gillam April 26 (Reuters) - Heavy use of the world's most popular herbicide, Roundup, could be linked...

    Tags: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental Issues, Science and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Environmental Politics

  18. Apr 25, 2013 |Story| Reuters
  19. Heavy use of herbicide Roundup linked to health dangers: study

    Reuters
    (Reuters) - Heavy use of the world's most popular herbicide, Roundup, could be linked to a range of health problems and diseases, including Parkinson's, infertility and cancers, according to a new study. The peer-reviewed report, published last week in...

    Tags: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Environmental Issues, Science, Science and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  20. Apr 25, 2013 |Story| Glendale News Press
  21. Glendale man pleads not guilty to wheelchair theft

    A 53-year-old Glendale man pleaded not guilty this week to charges that he allegedly knocked a man out of his wheelchair and stole it so he could use it as a prop for panhandling, police said.
    A 53-year-old Glendale man pleaded not guilty this week to charges that he allegedly knocked a man out of his wheelchair and stole it so he could use it as a prop for panhandling, police said. Prosecutors on Tuesday charged Phillip Papineau with...

    Tags: Crime, Law and Justice, Crimes, Trials, Theft

  22. Apr 25, 2013 |Story| Petoskey News
  23. John Elmer Duvernay Jr., 87

    John Elmer Duvernay Jr., 87, of Little Traverse Township, died April 21, 2013, at Bortz Health Care of Petoskey.
    John Elmer Duvernay Jr., 87, of Little Traverse Township, died April 21, 2013, at Bortz Health Care of Petoskey. John was born at the old Petoskey Hospital on Feb. 6, 1926, the son of John and Anna (Sherman) Duvernay. He grew up in the Indian section...

    Tags: South Korea, Human Interest, Arts and Culture

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