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About 429,000 Missouri kids would be eligible for $51.5 million in food benefits next summer through a federal program — if the state accepts.
Children’s Mercy Kansas City reports seeing an average of 24 children each day for mental or behavioral health emergencies. | Opinion
On May 1, 1922, the St. Louis Colored Orphans Home at the new location was dedicated, providing care for 35 children between the ages of five and fourteen. [1] By 1926, a daily average of 65 children were receiving services from the home. [1] By 1938, the number of children served has risen to 232, it declined to 190 children in 1941. [1]
The state took at least $6.1 million in benefits from foster children last year — generally Social Security benefits for those with disabilities or whose parents have died. The money is used to ...
The Magic House from Kirkwood Road. The Magic House is a not-for-profit children's museum located in Kirkwood, Missouri, just outside St. Louis.The Magic House opened as a children's museum in 1979 with the mission of engaging children in hands-on learning experiences that encourage experimentation, creativity and the development of problem-solving skills within a place of beauty, wonder, joy ...
The Children's Education Alliance of Missouri (CEAM) is a non-profit organization concerned with statewide education reform and issues. [1]The mission of the Children's Education Alliance of Missouri (CEAM) is to improve Missouri's K-12 education system by advancing education policies that ensure all families have the right to choose the education they determine is best for their children.
A Missouri court on Monday upheld a state law banning gender-affirming health care for minors and prohibiting Medicaid from covering transition-related care, allowing the controversial law to ...
Captain 11's Showboat was a locally produced children's program, based in St. Louis, Missouri, airing on KPLR-TV, Channel 11 during the late-afternoon hours, starting in May 1959, and ending in August 1968. Captain 11, named after the channel, was portrayed by former Broadway actor and longtime St. Louis radio personality Harry Fender.