1 killed in Carmel Mountain hit-and-run on I-15 10news.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from 10news.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Calls for help from a man trapped at Buccaneer Beach were answered over the weekend by a good Samaritan and rescuers from the Oceanside Fire Department, reports NBC 7 s Joe Little.
Making a difficult rescue much more dire for the firefighters was the fact that they were in a race against the incoming tide. As the first-responders worked to free the man from the rocks, waves began to crash on the beach around the victim and his rescuers, with the trapped man eventually becoming fully submerged. We were constantly up to water right here, Oceanside firefighter/paramedic David Pepsny recalled to NBC 7 on Tuesday at the scene, gesturing halfway up his face, with the side of his head parallel with the ground. . and so he would just completely disappear underwater and then just come back and f -ing pleading, you know?
New second tower on the way up at Scripps La Jolla hospital
A rendering depicts the new second medical tower now under construction at Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla.
(Courtesy)
Print
For months, workers have been pouring a new foundation on a triangular piece of ground on the northern edge of the Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla campus.
Cement trucks are delivering the beginnings of a $664 million, seven-story medical tower that will mirror an adjacent and nearly identical V-shaped structure that opened in 2015 and houses the Prebys Cardiovascular Institute on Genesee Avenue just east of Interstate 5.
An official groundbreaking ceremony was set for Thursday, April 22. “We started construction during the height of COVID and we couldn’t do a ceremony then, so it’s a little after the fact, but it’s still exciting,” said Chris Van Gorder, Scripps’ chief executive officer.
Print
For months now, workers have been pouring a new foundation on a triangular piece of ground on the northern edge of the Scripps Memorial Hospital La Jolla campus.
Cement trucks are now delivering the beginnings of a $664 million, seven-story medical tower that will mirror an adjacent and nearly-identical v-shaped structure that opened in 2015 and houses the Prebys Cardiovascular Institute on Genesee Avenue just east of Interstate 5.
Though work is already underway, Scripps will hold an official groundbreaking ceremony for its latest investment on Thursday.
“We started construction during the height of COVID, and we couldn’t do a ceremony then, so it’s a little after the fact, but it’s still exciting,” said Chris Van Gorder, Scripps’ chief executive officer.