Works


  1. Working conditions

    Anna Farrell of Cheyenne tends to a mannequin, which represents a patient who has been hit by a vehicle, as Wyoming Medical Center EMT Heather Hahn looks on during a Wyoming Skills USA competition Tuesday morning at the Parkway Plaza in Casper. Photo by Dan Cepeda, Star-Tribune.

  2. Water works

    Niecia Staggs demonstrates deck push-ups at Equinox in Rolling Hills Estates, Calif. (Los Angeles Times photos by Robert Lachman.)

  3. Water works

    Water limits joint impact and provides resistance. Niecia Staggs demonstrates deck push-ups at Equinox in Rolling Hills Estates, Calif. (Los Angeles Times photos by Robert Lachman.)

  4. Work in progress

    David Loya, of SOS Staffing, pressure washes the student section at War Memorial Stadium Friday afternoon. A section of seats on the east side of the stadium will be roped off during the 2009 season due to the construction. The project is scheduled to be finished in August 2010. (Tim Kupsick/Star-Tribune)

  5. New nurses start work

    Friends and family members reach to take photos and video during graduation ceremonies in May.
    Photo by Dan Cepeda, Star-Tribune

  6. Working under a cloud

    Joan Barron, Star-Tribune staff writer

  7. Tailgating at work is pause for safety

    Ensign Drilling roughnecks listen during a safety meeting at the start of a night shift last week near Moneta. Each meeting goes over what the earlier shift has done and what the coming shift will entail on the drilling rig. (Tim Kupsick/Star-Tribune)

  8. Class works together to continue tradition

    Kaitlyn O'Brien, 4, shows her excitement before receiving a bowl of stone soup in Cathy Quinlan's class at Crest Hill Elementary on Tuesday. Quinlan read the book called "Stone Soup" to the class, in which three soldiers manage to make a hearty pot of soup, starting with only a stone, to teach the students about sharing. (Kerry Huller, Star-Tribune)

  9. Those hard-working honeybees

    Dana Peterson, an employee of the Wind River Honey Company, pumps liquid sugar into a bee hive in order to feed them. The bees have recently moved back to their location near Arapahoe after being used to pollinate crops on the West Coast. The move can be hard on the bees and sometimes they need extra food to recover from the journey.
    Photo by Ryan Soderlin, Star-Tribune

    To view an audio slideshow with more from the Wind River Honey Company, please click here.

  10. NCSD offers summer work opportunities

    Monty Green, 17, staples boards during the morning session of the Youth Build program that educates students during the extended school year in skilled labor. The program allows students to make up or get ahead in elective credits while also making some summer spending money. (Tim Kupsick, Star-Tribune)

  11. State starts work on cancer plan

    State starts work on cancer plan

  12. 'We're just here to work'

    People rally for immigrant rights in the Jackson TownSquare earlier this month. The rally, one of many heldaround the country, attracted close to 50 people in theresort community that now includes an estimated 2,700Latinos. Photo by Andrew Wyatt, special to the Star-Tribune

  13. Gov: Coal plant work could begin in '08

    Jeff Gearino, Star-Tribune The Jim Bridger power plant near Rock Springs is a conventional coal-fired plant. The state and GE is working on a demonstration project that would focus on clean coal and coal-gasification projects.

  14. WYDOT: New highway message system working

    One of the new electronic message signs installed on Interstate 80 just east of Green River blinks out a drunk driving warning earlier this week. The Wyoming Department of Transportation is installing the signs across interstate highways. (Jeff Gearino/Star-Tribune)

  15. WYDOT: New highway message system working

    One of the new electronic message signs installed on Interstate 80 just east of Green River blinks out a drunk driving warning earlier this week. The Wyoming Department of Transportation is installing the signs across interstate highways. (Jeff Gearino/Star-Tribune)

  16. New Jersey gets back to work following government shutdown

    Miguel Flores, of Elizabeth, N.J., rests in a hammock at Cheesequake State Park in Old Bridge, N.J., Sunday, July 9, 2006. State parks and forests opened Sunday after being closed due to the state budget impasse. New Jersey Gov. Jon S. Corzine on Saturday morning signed an executive order that ended the weeklong state government shutdown, clearing the way for state parks to reopen. (AP Photo/Mike Derer)

  17. Man works as miner by day, Science Man in off hours

    Dylan Gwinnup covers his nose while another student sniffs a bottle of purple cabbage juice held by 'Science Man' Max Borchert during a science demonstration at Rozet Elementary School in Campbell County. Photo by Nathan Payne, AP.

  18. To be self-sufficient, girls must work like men

    Erika Franks, a machine tool and technology major at Sheridan College, holds up a solid piece of aluminum she machined for a school project while giving a presentation during the 2006 Nontraditional Job Fair on Tuesday afternoon at Casper College. Photo by Dan Cepeda, Star-Tribune

  19. DNA technology, detective work led to arrest of David Bush

    David and Lynn Bush in 1988. Photos courtesy Western History Collection, Casper College Library.

  20. New family medicine residents come to work; some graduates are here to stay

    Dr. Dale Ross completes a checkup on Iris Sandborgh, 1, while her mother, Dorina Sandborgh, left, looks on at Community Health Center of Central Wyoming on Monday morning. Dr. Ross graduated this week from the University of Wyoming Family Medicine Residency Program of Casper and has accepted a position at the Community Health Center. Photo by Kerry Huller, Star-Tribune.

  21. Cheney's pacemaker working properly, overall heart condition is stable

    Vice President Dick Cheney waves as he leaves George Washington University Hospital, Saturday, July 1, 2006, in Washington. Cheney, who has a long history of heart ailments, had his annual physical Saturday. Man on the right is unidentified Secret Service agent. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

 
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