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H. Gordon Hogue was born in Kermit, Texas on Oct. 12, 1946 to his parents, Charles Gordon Hogue and Lena Emmaline Addison Hogue.
He went to New Mexico and Colorado schools, graduating in 1964 from Cortez High School in Cortez, Colorado. He attended Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colorado where he was awarded a music scholarship for four years and earned his Bachelorâs in Business Administration in 1967. He was also a graduate of the Southwestern Graduate School of Banking at SMU in Dallas and the Commercial Banking School at the University of Oklahoma.
He died, with family by his side, on July 24, 2021 at Presbyterian St. Lukeâs Hospital in Denver, Colorado following complications from COVID pneumonia.
Wed April 14, 2021 - Midwest Edition #8
Irwin Rapoport â CEG Correspondent
JE Dunn Construction Company broke ground last June for the $295,974,160 design-build replacement of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Kansas City district) Fort Leonard Wood Hospital.
JE Dunn Construction Company broke ground last June for the $295,974,160 design-build replacement of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Kansas City district) Fort Leonard Wood Hospital, an initiative expected to be delivered in fall 2024.
The project at the U.S. Army Base near St. Robert, Mo., and funded by Department of Defense military construction funds, was awarded to JE Dunn in August 2019. As the construction agent for Defense Health Agency, the USACE s Kansas City district is responsible for the design, construction and delivery of the hospital.
The Central Texas Food Bank of Austin recently received an 11,000 pound donation of Texas rice, which will be used to feed those in need, on behalf of the Western Rice Belt Production Conference committee in light of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
The donation was purchased with funds collected for the 2021 Western Rice Belt Production Conference that were not needed after event officials decided to hold the event virtually due to the pandemic. Money that would have been used to obtain an event location and provide attendees with meals were instead used for the donation.
âCOVID-19 has certainly drawn more attention to food security, and the enormous infrastructure and workforce responsible for creating a safe and reliable food supply,â AgriLife Extension Agent Corrie Bowen said via a press release. âThis was a great opportunity to bring rice to the table to our friends in Austin.â