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Page 2 - ஓஹியோ பள்ளத்தாக்கு மருத்துவ மையம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

New Interpretation of the West Virginia Medical Professional Liability Act

DONALD MAJOR | News, Sports, Jobs - The Times Leader

Donald W. Major, 69, of Bellaire, Ohio died May 8, 2021 in Wheeling Hospital. He was born January 6, 1952 in Bellaire, a son of the late Alfred Willis Major and Edna LuGail Wallace Major. Don was a 1970 graduate of the Bellaire High School. He served in the United States Air Force during the Vietnam War and later graduated from the OVGH School of Nursing. He was a retired Registered Nurse from the former Ohio Valley Medical Center in Wheeling with 41 dedicated years of service. Serving with the Belmont County Veteran’s Association honoring veterans, gardening and collecting Air Force memorabilia were things he enjoyed. Don will always be remembered as a caring person and compassionate nurse.

BETH WILKES | News, Sports, Jobs - The Intelligencer

Beth Wilkes: Wheeling’s Quiet Kindness Hero In 1968 a young lady named Beth Wilkes boarded a bus from Buffalo, New York destined for Wheeling, West Virginia a city she would call home for the next 50 plus years. Beth, a recent graduate of Nazareth College in Rochester and daughter of pediatrician Dr. Frederick B. Wilkes and nurse Elizabeth M. Wilkes, was sent to Wheeling on assignment through the Americorps’ Volunteer in Service to America (VISTA) Program. Beth was a slight, quiet woman, but she had a heart and compassion far greater than anyone else. Three years prior to her arrival in Wheeling, Beth found herself watching the 1965 March on Selma, Alabama which was broadcast around the country. This moment, which changed the trajectory of our country and changed the Civil Rights movement, also changed Beth Wilkes. On her breaks from college, she traveled to Selma where she regularly volunteered within the local community, specifically teaching African-American nursing s

Funding in Place for Demolition on 19th Street in Wheeling | News, Sports, Jobs

Staff Writer Photo by Eric Ayres The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection has approved funds for the asbestos abatement, environmental remediation and demolition of dilapidated warehouse buildings on 19th Street purchased by the city of Wheeling last year. WHEELING The City of Wheeling is getting some funding help from the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection to clear dilapidated warehouse buildings from the 19th Street property, which the city of Wheeling acquired last year. City Manager Robert Herron reported to city council this week that the funding has been secured, and work should begin in the coming weeks to clean up environmental issues and raze the buildings. That came last Friday, he said.

Wheeling Officials Optimistic About Proposed New Fire Department Headquarters Site | News, Sports, Jobs

Wheeling Officials Optimistic About Proposed New Fire Department Headquarters Site | News, Sports, Jobs
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