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Here’s how local science and engineering students are assisting houseless veterans [Video]

Students at the Klesse College of Engineering and Integrated Design plan to build and donate a tiny home to a nonprofit supporting the houseless community.

SAN ANTONIO — Science and engineering students at the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) are taking what they learn in the classroom and putting it towards real world solutions. Trinity Schaefer and Elizabeth De Leon brought the Big Heroes Tiny Homes project to the university as a service project. 

Soon after, architecture students Lauren Cepeda, Lorena González, Marianne Friedel, and Simran Maredia joined the team to help with the completely disability accessible design for houseless veterans in San Antonio. 

“The counters themselves are a few inches below the standard, the doors are sliding doors so it’s easier for someone in a wheelchair to open them,” said Maredia. 

The group expects to start construction next spring semester, then plans to donate the home to the Town Twin Villageon the city’s east side. Nonprofits are working together to turn …

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'Band of Brothers' actors travel to historic Toccoa camp [Video]

A group of actors from the 2001 HBO series "Band of Brothers" have come together to honor the service members they portrayed and it's all happening at a historic camp in Toccoa, Georgia.It was a place where tens of thousands of military service members trained. For the first time in 80-plus years, parachute training is back at Camp Toccoa."Everybody that's here understands the significance of this place and this site. To have that training come back here is just amazing," Board member for Camp Toccoa, Brad Retting said.They're considered a band of brothers in their own right and have come back together to honor the original "Easy" Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, of the 101st Airborne Division for the 80th anniversary of D-day. All Airborne Battalion, a nonprofit organization that focuses on conducting a number of operations to honor the legacy of service members before them, has been in charge of training the actors."To bring them back to where their heroes trained and to being them back essentially they were made, the company as a whole was made is truly the power behind this project," All Airborne Battalion president, Darren Cinatl said. For the actors themselves, many said it was surreal."To still be talking about it 24 years later in the actual place where these guys trained, the original airborne, its quite emotional," Mark Lawrence who played Cpl. William H. Dukeman Jr said.The men of Easy Company created a bond so strong that it has transcended time and people. So that bond they created during the Second World War still exists with us," Douglas Spain, who played Technician Fifth Grade Antonio C. Garcia said. The actors fully immersed themselves in the experience from the training, to living in the barracks, to enjoying a MRE.All preparing to do just like the men they portrayed did and parachute into Normandy."It just means so much to me. What these guys did for us, the greatest generation and to be here where they started out, where they became a band of brothers it's overwhelming," Lawrence said."The fact that he made a decision to 82 years ago has affected my life today. Because of him I am here. It's just tremendous and it's like I love Tony Garcia," Spain said."To just kind of follow in his footsteps, just a tiny piece it's one of the greatest things I have ever done," Lawrence said.There will be a documentary of the cast's trip from Toccoa to Normandy. If you would like to learn more, click here.