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Page 7 - டிக்ஸி பிராந்திய மருத்துவ மையம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

GoFundMe account aims to keep Dixie in DSU s name

GoFundMe account aims to keep Dixie in DSU s name Kaitlyn Bancroft, St. George Spectrum & Daily News Dixie State University is asking the Utah State Legislature to remove DIXIE from the school s name in January 2021, the GoFundMe page states. As a strong community, Dixie Alumni and Dixie supporters, we can stop this action! Funds are needed NOW to fight this on a State and Legislative level. © Chris Caldwell / The Spectrum & Daily News Protestors gather at the St. George City office to show their desires to keep the Dixie name on local entities Thursday, July 2, 2020. As of 3:30 p.m. on Thursday, the Fundraiser had raised $1,705. The GoFundMe does not state exactly how the funds would be used, but IIene Hacker, listed as the fundraiser s organizer, said the money would go toward hiring professional lobbyists.

Swig founder paying it forward to help fellow cancer survivors

Deseret News Share this story Breast cancer survivor Nicole Tanner, founder of drink company Swig, is photographed at her newest location in West Jordan on Wednesday, Dec. 16, 2020. Tanner raises money to help other women who need surgery and can’t afford to pay for it themselves. Eleven years ago, Tanner’s surgery was paid for by an anonymous donor. Laura Seitz, Deseret News WEST JORDAN Before Nicole Tanner was a successful entrepreneur, she was just a normal person living a contented life with her husband and family in the scenic red rock country of southern Utah. But in 2010 she came up with the idea to open up a drive-thru soda shop that would serve thirsty customers all manner of their favorite soft drinks in wild flavor combinations along with the requisite sweet snacks.

It provides light : First Utah health care workers receive COVID-19 vaccine

KSL TV 5PM: Caregivers at Intermountain Healthcare among first in Utah to get COVID vaccine KSL TV KSL TV SALT LAKE CITY Five University of Utah Health workers and four Intermountain Healthcare staffers became the first Utahns to receive the COVID-19 vaccine outside of a clinical trial Tuesday. Vaccinations took place at the University of Utah Hospital and Intermountain s LDS Hospital on Tuesday. Christy Mulder, a U. health intensive care unit nurse, was the first person to receive the vaccine in Utah, U. health officials said on Twitter. U. health care assistant Diana Navarrete, environmental services worker Maria Cuevas, emergency medicine Dr. Stephen Hartsell, and respiratory therapist Brad Thompson were all vaccinated shortly after Mulder Tuesday morning.

Utah s COVID-19 vaccine plan going smoothly, as cases continue to surge

COVID-19 vaccine ushers in hope for hospital workers 2,928 new COVID-19 cases in Utah, 19 more deaths reported Wednesday Share this story Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News SALT LAKE CITY The day hospitals in Utah started vaccinating caregivers against COVID-19 was one for the record books, according to the pharmaceutical supply manager at University of Utah Hospital. “It was the best day of work I’ve ever had,” Russell Findlay told the Deseret News. He said it felt like “the deliverer of hope.” “There’s been so much anxiety and uncertainty over the last nine months or so and this was a feeling that we’re turning a corner,” Findlay said, adding that there is a lot of excitement among his colleagues at U. Health.

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