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200 workers to be on the project in December
DENVER -- Kiewit-Turner, a joint venture, has begun mobilizing additional workers and equipment as const...
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A man last seen Friday at the Veterans Affairs Hospital on Highland Drive in Lincoln-Lemington is being sought by Pittsburgh police.
Robert Lee Holt, 65, is described as black, 6 feet 2 inches tall and weighing 170 pounds. He has gray hair, brown eyes and a beard. Police said he was last seen at noon Friday at the hospital, but released no other details.
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Anne Ruth Schultz, Laura Thomas Rivero, Lisa A. Hirsch, Miami, FL, for Defendants-Appellees.
Janis Brustares Keyser, Gay, Ramsey & Warren, P.A., West...
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MARTINSBURG - Brian Tolstyka stood at the edge of a giant American flag spread across several tables in the Veterans Affairs hospital gym. Wearing a leather vest with a flag patch and a hat with a flag pin, Tolstyka was about to stitch his place in history.
Gently clasping a threaded needle between thumb and forefinger, Tolstyka, 43, slipped it into the fabric of a red stripe. The 300 people in the Eastern Panhandle gym clapped. The Persian Gulf War veteran felt a lump in his throat.
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Design work will begin this week on the new Veterans Affairs hospital planned for downtown New Orleans, said hospital architect Mark Ripple of New Orleans-based Eskew+Dumez+Ripple.
This is just the very first step in what will be a two-year effort," Ripple said.
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The remains of a once thriving neighborhood lay scattered throughout Habitat ReStore in Faubourg Marigny.
Doors, shutters and mantles pried from the long-dead homes of lower Mid-City, future site of the nearly $1 billion U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Hospital, rest on shelves and in piles on the floor, waiting to be purchased, installed and resurrected in houses throughout New Orleans.
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MARTINSBURG - Brian Tolstyka stood at the edge of a giant American flag spread across several tables in the Veterans Affairs hospital gym. Wearing a leather vest with a flag patch and a hat with a flag pin, Tolstyka was about to stitch his place in history.
Gently clasping a threaded needle between thumb and forefinger, Tolstyka, 43, slipped it into the fabric of a red stripe. The 300 people in the West Virginia gym clapped. The Gulf War veteran felt a lump in his throat.
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CARIBOU - , 66, passed away peacefully Oct. 26, 2011, at Cary Medical Center. She had worked there as a neurologist for more than 30 years, and fittingly, she was cared for there by her colleagues and family through her final weeks battling cancer. Born in Cheadle, Cheshire, England, Elizabeth was the first of four children that Ernest and Irene Quayle would have.
After a family move to Canada, Elizabeth graduated from McGill University, Montreal, and University of Toronto to become a doctor. She practiced in Montreal and Vancouver before leaving Canada for the USA. She worked for several years at Chicago's Veterans Affairs hospital before moving south to do research in Birmingham, Ala. In 1981 Elizabeth took up a post in Caribou, where she remained working unt...