15
Cowboys fall to Fresno State Saturday. B1 ON THE WEB: www.thesheridanpress.com THE WEEK IN PHOTOS: NOV. 1-9 Press THE SHERIDAN MONDAY November 11, 2013 127th Year, No. 146 Serving Sheridan County, Wyoming Independent and locally owned since 1887 www.thesheridanpress.com 75 Cents Today’s edition is published for: Meg Maze of Ranchester The Sheridan Press 144 Grinnell Ave. Sheridan, WY 82801 307.672.2431 www.thesheridanpress.com Scan with your smartphone for latest weather, news and sports PEOPLE 3 LEGALS 4 ALMANAC 5 SPORTS B1 COMICS B3 CLASSIFIEDS B4 BY TRACEE DAVIS THE SHERIDAN PRESS SHERIDAN — For many, the Sheridan Senior Center is a hang- out for residents who want to make the most of their retirements. The Day Break program takes that con- cept to a new level to empower fam- ilies. Day Break Director, Barbara Blue, said most people don’t know about the program until they find themselves in a situation where they are taking care of an elder family member, but also holding down a job outside the home. The Day Break program not only boasts a capable staff to be with elders during regular business hours, but also keeps a certified nursing assistant handy to help with bathing and personal care. “It’s a social model of adult care,” Blue said. “It’s about socialization and getting people out of their homes into a safe environment.” While the program is specifically designed for elders who live with their working children, other clients come by once in a while so they’re not stuck at home alone. “It’s about people,” Blue said. “We get to know people and develop those relationships. It’s really important.” A typical day starts when partici- pants arrive at the Day Break facili- ty, which is connected to the main Senior Center, via either a ride from a family member or the minibus. BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — The Montana Highway Patrol says a drunken driver is to blame for a crash on U.S. Highway 314 near Decker that caused a semi to spill 38 tons of coal. Trooper Ben Panas tells The Billings Gazette the driver of a car tried to pass a semi hauling two trailers of coal as it traveled around a curve in the highway at about 6 p.m. Wednesday. The car hit a guardrail. Panas says it’s not clear if the semi hit the car or if the driver crashed because he was trying to avoid the car. Panas says the driver of the car will be charged as soon as officials verify who was driving. The driver of the semi and three people in the car were treated at a hospital in Sheridan. FROM STAFF REPORTS SHERIDAN — Recent statis- tics released by the Wyoming Department of Workforce Services Research and Planning Section indicate employment in the state is up 0.2 percent and and the average weekly wage increased by $7 compared to the same quarter last year. Despite growth in overall employment, which is current- ly faster than the five-year aver- age, the state still lags 2.1 per- cent behind employment levels during the first quarter of 2008 and 2009. In addition, wages rates have not kept up with job growth. In Sheridan, 147 jobs were lost, but average weekly wages rose $9 to $719 per week. MHP: Drunken driver to blame for coal truck crash Weekly wages up despite losing 147 jobs Day Break staff works to keep seniors social, active CHEYENNE (AP) — A Wheatland man faces life in prison when he goes before a judge on Tuesday for sentencing on murder charges in the 2011 shooting deaths of his three young sons and his brother. Everett Conant III, 37, pleaded no-contest in June to the four killings and to a charge of attempted murder against his ex-wife, who also was wounded in the shootings at a Wheatland trailer park. Prosecutors have agreed not to seek the death penalty. Kerri Johnson of the Wyoming Public Defender’s Office represents Conant and declined comment Friday. Prosecutor Eric Jones was unavailable Friday, his office said. Conant’s sons — 11-year-old Joseph, 13- year-old Charles and 18-year-old Everett — and Conant’s brother, Nacuma Roland Conant, 33, were all shot and killed at the family’s mobile home. Everett Conant’s wife, Suzette Conant, was shot and wounded in July 7, 2011, attack. Soon after the killings, Conant initially entered pleas of not guilty and “not guilty by reason of mental illness.” His prosecution dragged out as he under- went repeated evaluations at the Wyoming State Hospital in Evanston to determine whether he was mentally competent to answer criminal charges. Conant entered his no-contest pleas to the charges at a hearing in June at the state hos- pital. The pleas came after District Judge John Brooks of Douglas ruled he was compe- tent to stand trial based on a stipulation to his condition by both the prosecution and the defense. Wyoming man faces life in slaying of sons, brother SEE KILLING, PAGE 2 SEE DAY BREAK, PAGE 2 Seniors play a trivia game during the Day Break program last week at the Sheridan Senior Center. THE SHERIDAN PRESS | JUSTIN SHEELY BY HANNAH WIEST THE SHERIDAN PRESS SHERIDAN — When she was a little girl, she would sit on her daddy’s lap and he would tell her about the war to end all wars. “He said there would be no more wars after that. Of course, you can’t count them now…” Her voice fades to a whisper. Her gaze drops, but it is obvious she is not looking down so much as back. Way back. Ninety-three years back over a life in which her father, her mother, her brother, her husband and herself served in America’s wars. Sheridan resident Mary Burgess has black-and-white photographs to help her remember. They show a 22-year- old woman eager to serve like so many of her loved ones had served. She has letters received from servicemen she met while serving coffee and donuts with the American Red Cross — sometimes just behind the front line — in Europe during World War II. Some came to her after men were killed, words left to live on paper long after spoken words, last words, died with the soldier. She has her husband’s trunk, engraved with a fading “Henry A. Burgess.” She received it last year and treasures the relics within, relics from a family of veterans of war. • World War I Navy uniform Her father, Joseph Ralston Hayden, joined the navy dur- ing World War I because that’s what men did then, Burgess said. He was a gunner on a Navy ship in France. His uni- form has permanent dirt stains — and gold buttons. “Mother and daddy were together when he wore that suit, and she said she had impressions from those buttons all the way down her front,” Burgess said. Going to war means embraces are a little tighter and a little longer. • Sailor hat Her father went to the Philippines during World War II. He was on Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s staff because he and his wife and children had lived in the Philippines for four years after World War I and he knew the culture. Collecting memories of service SEE BURGESS, PAGE 6 Sheridan resident Mary Burgess, 93, received an old footlocker a year ago that belonged to her husband, Henry A. Burgess. She filled it with relics from her father’s, her brother’s, her mother’s, her husband’s and her own service during World War I and World War II. She spent some time going through the items recently as Veterans Day approached. THE SHERIDAN PRESS HANNAH WIEST

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Page 1: MONDAY THE SHERIDAN ON THE WEB: … · 2015-02-07 · Trooper Ben Panas tells The ... the relics within, relics from a family of veterans of war. • World War I Navy uniform Her

Cowboys fall toFresno StateSaturday. B1

ON THE WEB: www.thesheridanpress.com

THE WEEK IN PHOTOS: NOV. 1-9PressT H E S H E R I D A NMONDAY

November 11, 2013 127th Year, No. 146

Serving Sheridan County,Wyoming

Independent and locallyowned since 1887

www.thesheridanpress.com 75 Cents

Today’s edition is published for:Meg Maze

of Ranchester

The Sheridan Press144 Grinnell Ave. Sheridan, WY 82801

307.672.2431www.thesheridanpress.com

Scan with yoursmartphone forlatest weather, news and sports

PEOPLE 3LEGALS 4ALMANAC 5

SPORTS B1COMICS B3CLASSIFIEDS B4

BY TRACEE DAVISTHE SHERIDAN PRESS

SHERIDAN — For many, theSheridan Senior Center is a hang-out for residents who want to makethe most of their retirements. TheDay Break program takes that con-cept to a new level to empower fam-ilies.

Day Break Director, BarbaraBlue, said most people don’t knowabout the program until they findthemselves in a situation wherethey are taking care of an elderfamily member, but also holdingdown a job outside the home.

The Day Break program not onlyboasts a capable staff to be withelders during regular businesshours, but also keeps a certifiednursing assistant handy to helpwith bathing and personal care.

“It’s a social model of adult care,”Blue said. “It’s about socializationand getting people out of theirhomes into a safe environment.”

While the program is specificallydesigned for elders who live withtheir working children, otherclients come by once in a  while sothey’re not stuck at home alone.

“It’s about people,” Blue said. “Weget to know people and developthose relationships. It’s reallyimportant.”

A typical day starts when partici-pants arrive at the Day Break facili-ty, which is connected to the mainSenior Center, via either a ridefrom a family member or theminibus.

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — TheMontana Highway Patrol says adrunken driver is to blame for acrash on U.S. Highway 314 nearDecker that caused a semi tospill 38 tons of coal.

Trooper Ben Panas tells TheBillings Gazette the driver of acar tried to pass a semi haulingtwo trailers of coal as it traveledaround a curve in the highwayat about 6 p.m. Wednesday. Thecar hit a guardrail. Panas saysit’s not clear if the semi hit thecar or if the driver crashedbecause he was trying to avoidthe car.

Panas says the driver of thecar will be charged as soon asofficials verify who was driving.

The driver of the semi andthree people in the car weretreated at a hospital inSheridan.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

SHERIDAN — Recent statis-tics released by the WyomingDepartment of WorkforceServices Research andPlanning Section indicateemployment in the state is up0.2 percent and and the averageweekly wage increased by $7compared to the same quarterlast year.

Despite growth in overallemployment, which is current-ly faster than the five-year aver-age, the state still lags 2.1 per-cent behind employment levelsduring the first quarter of 2008and 2009. In addition, wagesrates have not kept up with jobgrowth.

In Sheridan, 147 jobs werelost, but average weekly wagesrose $9 to $719 per week.

MHP: Drunkendriver to

blame for coaltruck crash

Weeklywages up

despite losing

147 jobs

Day Break staff works to keep seniors social, active

CHEYENNE (AP) — A Wheatland manfaces life in prison when he goes before ajudge on Tuesday for sentencing on murdercharges in the 2011 shooting deaths of histhree young sons and his brother.

Everett Conant III, 37, pleaded no-contest inJune to the four killings and to a charge ofattempted murder against his ex-wife, whoalso was wounded in the shootings at aWheatland trailer park.

Prosecutors have agreed not to seek thedeath penalty.

Kerri Johnson of the Wyoming PublicDefender’s Office represents Conant and

declined comment Friday.Prosecutor Eric Jones was unavailable

Friday, his office said.Conant’s sons — 11-year-old Joseph, 13-

year-old Charles and 18-year-old Everett —and Conant’s brother, Nacuma RolandConant, 33, were all shot and killed at thefamily’s mobile home. Everett Conant’s wife,Suzette Conant, was shot and wounded inJuly 7, 2011, attack.

Soon after the killings, Conant initiallyentered pleas of not guilty and “not guilty byreason of mental illness.”

His prosecution dragged out as he under-

went repeated evaluations at the WyomingState Hospital in Evanston to determinewhether he was mentally competent toanswer criminal charges.

Conant entered his no-contest pleas to thecharges at a hearing in June at the state hos-pital. The pleas came after District JudgeJohn Brooks of Douglas ruled he was compe-tent to stand trial based on a stipulation tohis condition by both the prosecution and thedefense.

Wyoming manfaces life inslaying of

sons, brother SEE KILLING, PAGE 2

SEE DAY BREAK, PAGE 2Seniors play a trivia game during the Day Break program last week at theSheridan Senior Center.

THE SHERIDAN PRESS | JUSTIN SHEELY

BY HANNAH WIESTTHE SHERIDAN PRESS

SHERIDAN — When she was a little girl, she would sit onher daddy’s lap and he would tell her about the war to endall wars.

“He said there would be no more wars after that. Ofcourse, you can’t count them now…”

Her voice fades to a whisper. Her gaze drops, but it isobvious she is not looking down so much as back. Wayback. Ninety-three years back over a life in which herfather, her mother, her brother, her husband and herselfserved in America’s wars.

Sheridan resident Mary Burgess has black-and-whitephotographs to help her remember. They show a 22-year-old woman eager to serve like so many of her loved oneshad served.

She has letters received from servicemen she met whileserving coffee and donuts with the American Red Cross —sometimes just behind the front line — in Europe duringWorld War II. Some came to her after men were killed,words left to live on paper long after spoken words, lastwords, died with the soldier.

She has her husband’s trunk, engraved with a fading“Henry A. Burgess.” She received it last year and treasuresthe relics within, relics from a family of veterans of war.

• World War I Navy uniformHer father, Joseph Ralston Hayden, joined the navy dur-

ing World War I because that’s what men did then, Burgesssaid. He was a gunner on a Navy ship in France. His uni-form has permanent dirt stains — and gold buttons.

“Mother and daddy were together when he wore thatsuit, and she said she had impressions from those buttonsall the way down her front,” Burgess said.

Going to war means embraces are a little tighter and alittle longer.

• Sailor hatHer father went to the Philippines during World War II.

He was on Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s staff because he andhis wife and children had lived in the Philippines for fouryears after World War I and he knew the culture.

Collecting memories of service

SEE BURGESS, PAGE 6

Sheridan resident Mary Burgess, 93, received an old footlocker a year ago that belongedto her husband, Henry A. Burgess. She filled it with relics from her father’s, her brother’s,her mother’s, her husband’s and her own service during World War I and World War II. Shespent some time going through the items recently as Veterans Day approached.

THE SHERIDAN PRESS HANNAH WIEST

Page 2: MONDAY THE SHERIDAN ON THE WEB: … · 2015-02-07 · Trooper Ben Panas tells The ... the relics within, relics from a family of veterans of war. • World War I Navy uniform Her

A2 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013

KILLING: Facing lifeFROM 1

In November 2011,Special Agent Len Proppsof the Wyoming Divisionof Criminal Investigationtestified at a preliminaryhearing that SuzetteConant told him her hus-band opened fire on hisfamily with two semi-automatic pistols follow-ing an argument.

Suzette Conant toldPropps that EverettConant was upset becausehe wanted the curtains inthe family’s modest trail-er home kept drawn.

She said her husbandbelieved people were spy-ing on him and that shebelieved he was paranoid.The killings were shock-ing to the people ofWheatland, an agricultur-

al town of roughly 3,600people some 70 milesnorth of Cheyenne.

The three Conant boyswere well known amongother students at localschools.

“It’s like, ‘How can ithappen?’” WheatlandMayor Jean Dixon saidsoon after the shooting.“This is a small commu-nity. We all know eachother.”

Brooks can sentenceConant to either life orlife without parole on themurder counts and canchoose to run the sen-tences either concurrent-ly or consecutively.

Brooks must giveConant a chance to speakat sentencing.

Whether he does is upto him.

DAY BREAK: Submitting grant for spaceFROM 1

After a complimentary breakfast, thegroup settles in front of the television towatch the news and “The Price Is Right.”

“Don’t try to turn off the TV when ‘ThePrice Is Right’ is on,” Blue warned,explaining that though the Daybreak pro-gram focuses on activities like boardgames, crafts and staying busy, clients ulti-mately have the final say in how they wantto use their time.

"When that's over, though, the TV goesoff,” Blue said. “I feel like people canwatch TV at home, so when they comehere, it’s all about activities.”

Most attendees say they enjoy showingup to Day Break for the socialization, andthey expect to be kept busy.

The larger picture of the Day Break pro-gram is that the day services offeredenables families to keep their loved onesout of a full-time nursing home.

Caretaker Neddie Cook said she foundthe Day Break program after her mother’sfailing memory made it so she would bebetter off if she wasn’t alone during theday.

“She originally had dementia, and thenit went into Alzheimer’s,” Cook said. “Iwould have to quit work if it wasn’t forDay Break and the people there. They takeexcellent care of mother, and I feel confi-dent when they’re watching her.”

Cook said that starting the Day Breakprogram wasn’t easy.

“I thought to myself, ‘Mama’s not goingto go for this,’” she admitted. “She doesn’thave any hobbies or interests in anything.Mother’s hobby is helping people — clean-ing house, getting coffee, folding clothes,whatever, and I thought she wasn’t goingto like it.”

However, Cook said she was pleasantlysurprised after she took the plunge.

“We got her to go and stay there one day,and (the staff) just fell in love with her,”she said. “They thought she was the sweet-

est thing, and mother liked everybodythere. They take excellent care of her.”

Cook said an incremental part of makingthe Day Break program work for her fami-ly was that the staff sat down with her andtogether, they were able to establish a cus-tomized care and diet plan. 

“You really have to watch her like ahawk because of the Alzheimer’s,” Cooksaid.

“Wandering is always a big thing,” Blueagreed, adding that the Daybreak facilityhas buzzers on the door so the staff knowswhen people come and go.

She said the Daybreak program can helppeople with dementia or Alzheimer’s inaddition to those who may be recoveringfrom a stroke.

However, the social model of the pro-gram does not provide for advanced med-ical care, so participants should be rela-tively medically stable.

“A lot of people, when they bring theirperson here, it’s kind of their last effortbefore a nursing home,” Blue said.“Sometimes, it’s too late by then, becausethey really need the extra care we can’tprovide. That’s why they need to comesooner.”

Day Break services are billed on a slid-ing-scale fee schedule based on the incomeof the attendee. From there, the senior’srent, insurance and medical costs arededucted before the Day Break fees areestablished.

The Day Break senior care model is aunique resource to the Sheridan communi-ty that aims to help both elders and theircaretakers arrange sustainable living situ-ations.

Next week, county officials will considera grant to build a new, separate facility tohouse the program.

Sheridan County Grant AdministratorMike Mackey said Sheridan’s county com-missioners will consider endorsing thegrant at their next regularly scheduledmeeting.

• 8-11 a.m., Conflict resolution class for those ages 50 andolder, Sheridan College Main Street, 171 N. Main St., pre-registration required.

• 7 p.m. Natural resources lecture series, SheridanCollege Whitney Presentation Hall, 3059 Coffeen Ave.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Dr. Walker to present grazing

managementresearch tomorrow

SHERIDAN — Dr. John

Walker, professor and resi-dent director of research atthe Texas A&M AgriLifeResearch and ExtensionCenter in San Angelo,Texas will be discussinggrazing managementresearch on Tuesday atSheridan College.

The lecture is free andopen to the public. It will beheld in the WhitneyPresentation Hall at 7 p.m.

The lecture is part of theWyoming Society for RangeManagement’s annual meet-ing.

There will be severalother activities includingtechnical sessions and aranch tour on Tuesday,Wednesday and Thursday. Aregistration fee will applyto all activities outside ofthe lecture.

For a complete agenda seewww.rangelands.org/wyoming.

Sheridan College is locat-ed at 3059 Coffeen Ave.

NAMI Family-to-Family

Education ProgramWednesday

SHERIDAN — TheNational Alliance onMental Illness will host aninformational session onthe NAMI Family-to-FamilyEducation Program onWednesday.

The meeting will takeplace at the Fulmer PublicLibrary Inner Circle from 7-8 p.m. and offer more infor-mation on the organizationand the program beingoffered.

The NAMI Family-to-Family Education Programis a free, 12-week course forfamily and caregivers ofindividuals with severemental illness.

The course is set to beginafter the new year andincludes current informa-tion on many afflictions,treatments, currentresearch, special workshopsand more.

All instruction and coursematerials are free to partici-pants.

For more informationcontact Michelle Feltner at

317-439-8524, email [email protected] or seewww.namiwyoming.org.

Discover ‘Whales ofOz’ Thursday

SHERIDAN — Dr. RachelKristiansen, faculty mem-ber in the Social Sciencedepartment at SheridanCollege, will introduce thecommunity to the hump-back whales of Hervey Bayon Thursday as she pres-ents “The WonderfulWhales of Oz.”

This free presentation inthe Sheridan CollegeWhitney Presentation Hallis open to everyone.

Kristiansen is a Sheridannative who received herdoctorate in experimentalpsychology.

During her graduatecareer she studied variousspecies of whales and dol-phins.

The humpback whalesexplored here have madeHervey Bay, Australia, aregular stop on their annu-al migration to Antarctica.

Join at 7 p.m. to seeencounters with the whalesand enjoy refreshmentsafter the presentation.

Sheridan College is locat-ed at 3059 Coffeen Ave.

Affordable Care Actdiscussion Thursday

SHERIDAN — State ofWyoming InsuranceCommissioner Tom Hirsigwill speak at Sheridan CityHall regarding theAffordable Care Act onThursday.

This free presentation isopen to the public and willshare insight, particularly aWyoming perspective, onthe act.

The presentation and dis-cussion will also be broad-cast live on cable televisionchannel 12.

It will take place from7:30-8:30 a.m. in councilchambers, City Hall, 55Grinnell Plaza.

For more informationcontact the SheridanCounty Chamber at 672-2485.

TUESDAY EVENTS |

LOCAL BRIEFS |

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To place a classified call

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Minimum of 1 year experience, &understands DOT requirements.

Apply in person at MullinaxConcrete - 615 Fort Road -

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P/T AT busy doctor’s officeworking directly with patients.Tues, Thurs, and Fri 10-5:30, withsome Sat AM’s, but work hoursmay vary – approx 20 hours perweek, may be less. $10/hour.Send reply to box 195, c/o TheSheridan Press, PO Box 2006,Sheridan, WY 82801

SACKETT’S MARKET has a F/T orP/T meat cutting positionavailable for an experienced,customer service oriented person.Carcass cutting experiencepreferred. Candidate must be aself starter, detail oriented andable to manage inventory and aproduction schedule. Pay rateDOE. Send resume to

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FROM STAFF REPORTS

SHERIDAN — The Brinton Museum, Science Kids andthe Big Horn Audubon will present “Birding at theBrinton” on Saturday.

This free morning of bird watching will run from 9-11

a.m at 239 Brinton Road, Big Horn.All ages and abilities are welcome to join.Participants are encouraged to bring binoculars if they

have them.For more information contact the Science Kids at 763-

0976.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

SHERIDAN — The Sheridan College Museumof Discovery science lecture series will hostSheila Flynn on Wednesday.

Flynn will discuss the paleopathology in a 10-12 million year old dolphin found on San

Clemente Island, Calif.The presentation will take place in the

Sheridan College Science Museum MohnsCenter at 7 p.m.

It is free and open to the general public.Flynn graduated from Sheridan College in

1994 with an associate’s degree in dental

hygiene. She discovered and examined the fossil in 2004

and will present her findings of indications ofperiodontal disease, a study believed to be thefirst to document dental calculus and periodon-tal disease in atooth whale fossil.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

SHERIDAN — Sheridan High Schoolhas announced its first-quarter honorrolls:

12th-grade “A” honor rollTrace Addlesperger, Luke Adsit,

Lauren Alden, Owen Bensel, AlyssaBergey, Hailey Blaney, MorganBrenneman, Cassandra Burch, Anna-Marie Calkins, Sharlene Charlson,Ethan Chartier, Shayla Christensen,Maggie Clarendon, Madeline Clift,Micah Cornell, Collin Cundy, DrewDafoe, Gretchen Dougherty, KameronEckard, Madison Farr, Abby Fauber,Ty Fauber, Laurel Fosnight, JonathanGarro, Kathryn Gilbert, Nicholas Gill,Ethan Hall, Elizabeth Hall, ColinHarnish, Daniel Harvey, Jan Jirovec,Emma Jost, Tyler Julian, TraeKaufmann, Tyler Kaufmann,Alexandra Kooper, Allison Kruse,Nicole LaFond, Sarah LeTempt, DylanLindly, Madison McClure, SheridanMcKinley, Bryan McLean, JamesNield, Brittany Nixon, SpencerPorden, Paige Rader, CrystalRichards, Austin Robinson, KathrynRotellini, Ashley Sampson, StephanieSchaffer, Daniel Sessions, WhitneySimmons, Allison Smith, EmilySpiegelberg, Jacy Springfield,Addison Stedillie, Rachel Stevens,Brennan Swaney, Mckenzi Turner,Kelsey Walton, Alannah Wardell,Lauren Weitzel, Jacquelyn Wells,Judson White.

11th-grade “A” honor roll

Zachary Ahlstrom, Jeanette Alltop,Madelene Anderson, Madison Belus,Titus Brown, Colbey Bruney, SydneyBrunz, Taylor Bruso, WilliamCarpenter, Judy Chen, BraxtonCooper, Shandyn Covolo, CameronCraft, Sierra Croley, Ashlyn Duncan,Jordynne Duncan, Aleya Dunning,Jess Edens, Jennae Fieldgrove,Deborah Granger, Eva Grywusiewicz,Aundrea Harding, River Heide,Bradley Holloway, Brooklyn Hufnagel,Elizabeth Jost, Emily Julian, CloieKinnison, Gabrielle Koltiska, LaceyKoropatnicki, Celia Lannan, ElizabethMcDougall, Megan Myers, KevinPalmer, Cody Perkins, ChanePeterson, Seth Phillips, Kaitlin Puuri,Asia Robinson, Regina Romanjenko,Miguela Sallade, Katie Sawyer, LexiSmiley, Colter Stopka,, Jade Storm,Joshua Thiel, Parker Tiffany, TaylorTownsend, Jeremy Van Buskirk,Adam Verdeyen, Brayden Vojta,Ruthie White, Hannah Wiley, HannahWill, Dylan Wrighty.

10th-grade “A” honor rollBrooke Aksamit, Davis Alden, Cindy

Alvarez, Edward Arzy, Wyatt Avery,Alexandra Bammel, Madison Bland,Benjamin Bonnet, Katelynn Brooks,Bailey Carlin, Liam Casey, AnnaCrabb, Megan Culver, NataliedeCastro, Nicholas Eaton, Avery Ellis,Charity Flock, Breanna Geertz, BlakeGodwin, Carson Holwell, KellieKekich, Kendra Ketterling, BhadshahKhan, Keenen Kugler, ShayeLivingston, Hailey Longhurst,Mikaela Moore, Andrew Oakes,Morgan Parker, Helen Patten, Zachary

Petersburg, Tyra Relaford, JillianRhoades, Jillian Stalker, ThomasTerry, Luke Thompson, KaycenTownsend, Claire Turner, SaraVonKrosigk, Shayna Wile, Tylor York.

9th-grade “A” honor rollHannah Adriaens, Jacob Ahlstrom,

Jacek Aksamit, Kristina Angeloff,Alec Arnold, Brynn Bateman, KaileeBecking, Finn Bede, MorganBlackwell, Andrew Boedecker,Andrew Boint, Peyton Bomar, RebeccaBouley, Bailey Brenneman, GabrielBriggs, Angelina Bruso, Molly Butler,Shyanna Cahoy, Caleb Campbell, HopeCampbell, Jack Clement-La Rosa,Thomas Clift, Rhylee Cooper, RobertCulver, Addison Dugal, MatthewEisenhauer, Asheton Frank, ZacharyGale, Noah Gustafson, Cody Heaps,Heather Heath, Christina Herman,Brady Holden, Rachel Jahiel, SidneyJensen, Liam Jones, Paden Koltiska,Dylan Kruse, Lillian Kukuchka,Lauren Largent, Payson Larsen, JohnLenzi, Orrin Lindberg, BrennanLindberg, Christina Linden, SpencerLonghurst, Khyra Maes, CarterMangus, Tayci Maxwell, Anna Miech,Kaitlyn Moxam, Makayla Nielsen,Jaxon Porterfield, Abigail Ressler,Xiomara Robinson, ScottRogaczewski, Benjamin Romanjenko,Jacqueline Ross, Greggory Sampson,Brendan Schaefer, Kodi Silcox, NoahSimpson, Rylee Smith, KayliTurlington, Justyce Veit, Derek Vela,Bell Ward, Emma Whiteman, AshleyWilliams.Editor’s note: The Sheridan High School “B” honor rolls will beprinted in an upcoming edition of The Sheridan Press.

FROM STAFF REPORTS

SHERIDAN — TheSagebrush Community ArtCenter is hosting a one-daycollage workshop with localartist Neltje on Saturday.

Participants should bringanything that can be glued toa piece of paper and willcover an area approximately20-inches-by-15-inches.

Supports and glues will beprovided.

The workshop will takeplace at the DowntownSheridan AssociationCommunity Room located at39 N. Scott St. from 9 a.m. to 4p.m.

Space is limited to 12 partic-ipants.

The cost is $60 for Artists’Guild members and $70 fornon-members.

Register by [email protected] or call-ing the art center at 674-1970.

Shelia Flynn to discuss paleopatholgy of dolphin in session at SC

Birding at the Brinton set for Saturday

Collageworkshop

with Neltje Saturday

Sheridan College instructor Teri Rowland shows Kavee Holwell how to read the results on her test strip Saturday afternoon inKendrick Park. SC elementary education students took advantage of the mild temperatures this weekend by holding class atKendrick Park and took water samples of Big Goose Creek with their professor.

Students test waters in Kendrick Park

THE SHERIDAN PRESS | ALISA BRANTZ

SHS announces first-quarter ‘A’ honor rolls

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PPublic notices allow citizens to monitor their government and make sure that it isworking in their best interest. Independent newspapers assist in this cause bycarrying out their partnership with the people’s right to know through publicnotices. By offering an independent and archived record of public notices,newspapers foster a more trusting relationship between government and itscitizens.Newspapers have the experience and expertise in publishing public notices andhave done so since the Revolutionary War. Today, they remain an established,trustworthy and neutral source that ably transfers information betweengovernment and the people.Public notices are the lasting record of how the public’s resources are used and arepresented in the most efficient and effective means possible.

Public NoticesA4 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013

YOUR ELECTEDOFFICIALS |

WHY PUBLIC NOTICES ARE IMPORTANT |Default: Failure to fulfill an obligation, especially the obligation to

make payments when due to a lender.Encumbrance: A right attached to the property of another that may

lessen its value, such as a lien, mortgage, or easement.Foreclosure: The legal process of terminating an owner’s interest in

property, usually as the result of a default under a mortgage.Foreclosure may be accomplished by order of a court or by thestatutory process known as foreclosure by advertisement (alsoknown as a power of sale foreclosure).

Lien: A legal claim asserted against the property of another, usuallyas security for a debt or obligation.

Mortgage: A lien granted by the owner of property to providesecurity for a debt or obligation.

Power of Sale: A clause commonly written into a mortgageauthorizing the mortgagee to advertise and sell the property in theevent of default. The process is governed by statute, but is notsupervised by any court.

Probate: The court procedure in which a decedent’s liabilities aresettled and her assets are distributed to her heirs.

Public Notice: Notice given to the public or persons affectedregarding certain types of legal proceedings, usually by publishingin a newspaper of general circulation. This notice is usuallyrequired in matters that concern the public.

Disclaimer: The foregoing terms and definitions are provided merely as a guide to thereader and are not offered as authoritative definitions of legal terms.

GLOSSARY OF TERMS |

CITY

JohnHeathCouncilorWard I307-673-1876

COUNTY

STATE

DaveKinskeyMayor307-675-4223

LeviDominguezCouncilorWard III307-461-1175

KristinKellyCouncilorWard II307-673-4751

Robert WebsterCouncilorWard III307-674-4206

AlexLeeCouncilorWard II307-752-8804

ShelleenSmithCouncilorWard I307-461-7082

TerryCramCommissioner307-674-2900

MikeNickelCommissionChairman307-674-2900

Bob RolstonCommissioner307-674-2900

Steve MaierCommissioner307-674-2900

TomRingleyCommissioner307-674-2900

RosieBergerRepresentativeHouse Dist. 51307-672-7600

MattMeadGovernor307-777-7434

MikeMaddenRepresentativeHouse Dist. 40307-684-9356

JohnPattonRepresentativeHouse Dist. 29307-672-2776

KathyColemanRepresentativeHouse Dist. 30307-675-1960

JohnSchifferSenatorSenate Dist. 22307-738-2232

BruceBurnsSenatorSenate Dist. 21307-672-6491

Matt RedleCounty Attorney307-674-2580

PaulFallAssessor307-674-2535

DaveHofmeierSheriff307-672-3455

P.J. KaneCoroner307-673-5837

Shelley CundiffSheridanCounty CircutCourt Judge 307-674-2940

Eda ThompsonClerk307-674-2500

William Edelman4th JudicialDistrict CourtJudge307-674-2960

Nickie ArneyClerk of DistrictCourt307-674-2960

John Fenn4th JudicialDistrict CourtJudge307-674-2960

Pete CarrollTreasurer307-674-2520

NOTICE OF POSTPONEMENT OF FORECLOSURE SALE

WHEREAS, default in the payment of principal andinterest has occurred under the terms of a PromissoryNote dated October 29, 2007 and all modificationsthereto, executed and delivered by Richard Rhoades,Kathy Flickenger and Kelly Schlagel, to First InterstateBank and a Mortgage dated October 29, 2007, and allmodifications thereto, which Mortgage was executedand delivered by Richard Rhoades to First InterstateBank and which Mortgage was recorded on November 2,2007 as Document No. 591462 in Book 687 at pp. 0632-0638 in the Records of the Office of the County Clerk infor Sheridan County, State of Wyoming;WHEREAS, the Mortgage contains a power of salewhich, by reason of said default, First Interstate Bankdeclares to become operative, and no suit or proceedinghas been instituted at law to recover the debt securedby the Mortgage, or any part thereof, nor has any suchsuit or proceeding instituted and the samediscontinued;WHEREAS, the written Notice of Intent to Foreclose theMortgage by Advertisement and Sale and the Notice ofForeclosure Sale have been served on the recordowners, the parties in possession of the mortgagedpremises and holders of recorded liens at least ten (10)days prior to the commencement of this publicationand at least twenty-five (25) days prior to the date ofthe foreclosure sale, and the amount due upon theMortgage on the date of the first Publication of Noticeof Sale (October 10, 2013) was the total sum of$153,094.65 (which sum is the total of the unpaidprincipal balance of $142,030.68 plus interest accruedto the date of first publication of the Notice of Sale inthe amount of $10,793.48, plus late fee in the amountof $270.49) plus attorneys’ fees, and costs expended,plus accruing interest, late charges, attorneys’ fees andcosts incurred after the date of first publication of theNotice of Sale; andWHEREAS, the property being foreclosed upon may besubject to other liens and encumbrances that will notbe extinguished at the sale and any prospectivepurchaser should research the status of title beforesubmitting a bid; andWHEREAS, the Foreclosure Sale was scheduled for10:05 a.m. in the forenoon of November 1, 2013; andWHEREAS, the Foreclosure Sale will be postponed until10:15 a.m. in the forenoon of November 22, 2013;NOW, THEREFORE, First Interstate Bank as theMortgagee will have the Mortgage foreclosed as by lawprovided by causing the mortgaged property be sold atpublic vendue by the Sheriff or Deputy Sheriff in and forSheridan County, Wyoming to the highest bidder forcash at 10:15 a.m. on November 22, 2013 at the NORTHdoor of the Sheridan County Courthouse located at 224South Main Street, Sheridan, Wyoming, SheridanCounty, for application on the above-describedamounts secured by the Mortgage, said mortgagedproperty with an address of 3728 Highway 14-16,Clearmont, Wyoming, being described as follows:TOWNSHIP 54 NORTH, RANGE 79 WEST, 6TH P.M.,SHERIDAN COUNTY, WYOMING:Section 28: SW1/4, SW1/4SE1/4Section 29: E1/2SE1/4, E1/2W1/2SE1/4, W1/2NE1/4,NE1/4NE1/4, except the north 175 lying southwesterly ofHighway 14-16 and except that portion lyingnorthwesterly of Highway 14-16. Also excepting all landlying within the right of way of the Burlington NorthernRailroad and Highway.Section 32: SW1/4, N1/2SE1/4, S1/2N1/2,S1/2NE1/4NW1/4, E1/2NW1/4NE1/4, NE1/4NE1/4Section 33: W1/2, SE1/4, W1/2NE1/4, and E1/2NE1/4lying West of Thompson Creek County Road #219.ALSO EXCEPTING THEREFROM lands contained in that

certain Warranty Deed as conveyed to Joan Mackie,recorded April 9, 1998 in Book 832 of Deeds, Page 120.EXCEPTING THEREFROM lands contained n that certainWarranty Deed as conveyed to H & P Livestock, aWyoming limited liability company recorded October 18,2006 in Book 478 of Deeds, Page 665.

Amy W. PotterGarland, Ford & Potter, LLCPO Box 4310, 235 E. BroadwayJackson, WY 83001 (307) 733-0661Attorneys for First Interstate Bank

Publish: November 4, 11, 18, 2013.

NOTICE OF POSTPONEMENT OFFORECLOSURE SALE

WHEREAS, default in the payment of principal andinterest has occurred under the terms of a PromissoryNote dated July 23, 2008 and all modifications thereto,executed and delivered by Richard Rhoades d/b/a ClearCreek Taxidermy, to First Interstate Bank and aMortgage dated July 23, 2008, and all modificationsthereto, which Mortgage was executed and delivered byRichard Rhoades to First Interstate Bank and whichMortgage was recorded on July 28, 2008 as DocumentNo. 616741 in Book 713 at pp. 0265-0671 in the Recordsof the Office of the County Clerk in for Sheridan County,State of Wyoming;WHEREAS, the Mortgage contains a power of salewhich, by reason of said default, First Interstate Bankdeclares to become operative, and no suit or proceedinghas been instituted at law to recover the debt securedby the Mortgage, or any part thereof, nor has any suchsuit or proceeding instituted and the samediscontinued;WHEREAS, the written Notice of Intent to Foreclose theMortgage by Advertisement and Sale and the Notice ofForeclosure Sale have been served on the recordowners, the parties in possession of the mortgagedpremises and holders of recorded liens at least ten (10)days prior to the commencement of this publicationand at least twenty-five (25) days prior to the date ofthe foreclosure sale, and the amount due upon theMortgage on the date of the first Publication of Noticeof Sale (October 10, 2013) was the total sum of$36,838.53 (which sum is the total of the unpaidbalance of $36,662.09 plus interest accrued from theNotice of Default to the date of first publication of theNotice of Sale in the amount of $176.44) plus attorneys’fees, and costs expended, plus accruing interest, latecharges, attorneys’ fees and costs incurred after thedate of first publication of this Notice of Sale; andWHEREAS, the property being foreclosed upon may besubject to other liens and encumbrances that will notbe extinguished at the sale and any prospectivepurchaser should research the status of title beforesubmitting a bid; andWHEREAS, the Foreclosure Sale was scheduled for10:00 a.m. in the forenoon of November 1, 2013; andWHEREAS, the Foreclosure Sale will be postponed until10:10 a.m. in the forenoon of November 22, 2013;NOW, THEREFORE, First Interstate Bank as theMortgagee will have the Mortgage foreclosed as by lawprovided by causing the mortgaged property be sold atpublic vendue by the Sheriff or Deputy Sheriff in and forSheridan County, Wyoming to the highest bidder forcash at 10:10 a.m. on November 22, 2013 at the NORTHdoor of the Sheridan County Courthouse located at 224South Main Street, Sheridan, Wyoming, SheridanCounty, for application on the above-describedamounts secured by the Mortgage, said mortgagedproperty with an address of 3728 Highway 14-16,

Clearmont, Wyoming, being described as follows:TOWNSHIP 54 NORTH, RANGE 79 WEST, 6TH P.M.,SHERIDAN COUNTY, WYOMING:Section 28: SW1/4, SW1/4SE1/4Section 29: E1/2SE1/4, E1/2W1/2SE1/4, W1/2NE1/4,NE1/4NE1/4, except the north 175 lying southwesterly ofHighway 14-16 and except that portion lyingnorthwesterly of Highway 14-16. Also excepting all landlying within the right of way of the Burlington NorthernRailroad and Highway.Section 32: SW1/4, N1/2SE1/4, S1/2N1/2,S1/2NE1/4NW1/4, E1/2NW1/4NE1/4, NE1/4NE1/4Section 33: W1/2, SE1/4, W1/2NE1/4, and E1/2NE1/4lying West of Thompson Creek County Road #219.ALSO EXCEPTING THEREFROM lands contained in thatcertain Warranty Deed as conveyed to Joan Mackie,recorded April 9, 1998 in Book 832 of Deeds, Page 120.EXCEPTING THEREFROM lands contained n that certainWarranty Deed as conveyed to H & P Livestock, aWyoming limited liability company recorded October 18,2006 in Book 478 of Deeds, Page 665.

Amy W. PotterGarland, Ford & Potter, LLCPO Box 4310, 235 E. BroadwayJackson, WY 83001(307) 733-0661Attorneys for First Interstate Bank

Publish: November 4, 11, 18, 2013.

LEGAL NOTICE POLICYThe Sheridan Press publishes Legal

Notices under the following schedule:

If we receive the Legal Notice by:

Monday Noon –

It will be published in

Thursday’s paper.

Tuesday Noon –

It will be published in

Friday’s paper.

Wednesday Noon –

It will be published in

Saturday’s paper.

Wednesday Noon –

It will be published in

Monday’s paper.

Thursday Noon –

It will be published in

Tuesday’s paper.

Friday Noon –

It will be published in

Wednesday’s paper.

• Complete information, descriptions

and billing information are required

with each legal notice. A PDF is

required if there are any signatures,

with a Word Document attached.

• Failure to include this information

WILL cause delay in publication. All

legal notices must be paid in full

before an "AFFIDAVIT OF

PUBLICATION" will be issued.

• Please contact The Sheridan Press

legal advertising department at

672-2431 if you have questions.

Your Right To Know

and be informedof government

legal proceedings isembodied in

public notices.This newspaper

urges every citizen to read and

study thesenotices.

We stronglyadvise those

seeking further

information toexercise their rightof access to public

records andpublic meetings.

P U BLIC N O TICES It is the public’s right to know .

Independent new spapers, like The S herid a n Pres s , publish governm ental proceedings to foster a greater trust betw een governm ent and it’s citizens. New spapers have long had the experience, expertise, and credibility in publishing public notices and have done so since the Revolution. Today, they are an established link enabling the public to understand how their resources are being used in the m ost efficient and effective w ays possible.

It’s m ore than foreclosures, requests for bid and m inutes of m eetings. It’s interesting reading. W hen w e launched a redesigned Sheridan Press in July, w e intended to give public notice advertising it’s due by m oving the pages from the back of the new spaper to the front section. The pages include the nam es and contact inform ation of our public officials.

O ur public notices page(s) also include valuable, insightful historical photos from the Sheridan County Historical Society.

144 Grinnell • Sheridan, W Y • 672-2431

Content matters.

The Sheridan Race and Rodeo grounds in 1887 are pictured here. The grounds were lo-cated south of Sheridan on Little Goose Creek, west of the sugar factory and a little southof where JBs restaurant is today. The photo is in the Sweem collection in the SheridanCounty Museum's Memory Book Project.

Page 5: MONDAY THE SHERIDAN ON THE WEB: … · 2015-02-07 · Trooper Ben Panas tells The ... the relics within, relics from a family of veterans of war. • World War I Navy uniform Her

SHERIDAN FIRE-RESCUEFriday• Rocky Mountain

Ambulance assist, 1600block Pond View Court,1:32 a.m.

• RMA assist, 1300 blockHolloway Avenue, 2:38 p.m.

Saturday• No calls received.Sunday• RMA assist, 1700 South

Sheridan Avenue, 9:50 a.m.• RMA assist, 2000 block

South Sheridan Avenue,6:32 p.m.

• Activated fire alarm,3000 block Coffeen Avenue,6:54 p.m.

• RMA assist, 800 EastWorks Street, 10:59 p.m.

ROCKY MOUNTAINAMBULANCE

Friday• Medical, 1400 block

West Fifth Street, 1 a.m.• Medical, 1600 block

Pond View Court, 1:33 a.m.• Medical, 2300 block Rose

Lane, 8 a.m.• Medical, 400 block

North Jefferson Street,10:56 a.m.

• Medical, 1100 blockFourth Avenue East, 11:15a.m.

• Trauma, 100 block SixthAvenue East, 1:10 p.m.

• Medical, 1300 blockHolloway Avenue, 2:37 p.m.

• Trauma, 1500 blockSugarland Drive, 5:59 p.m.

• Football standby, HomerScott Stadium, 5:48 p.m.

• Basketball standby,Bruce Hoffman GoldenDome, 8 p.m.

• Medical, 1400 blockWest Fifth Street, 8:55 p.m.

Saturday• Medical, 400 block Blue

Sky Court, 1:59 a.m.• Medical, 600 block

Sumner Street, 2:11 a.m.• Medical, US Highway

14, 4:33 a.m.• Trauma, 1800 block Big

Horn Avenue, 6:13 a.m.

• Trauma, 100 blockLadore Avenue, 8 a.m.

• Medical, 5000 blockCoffeen Avenue, 9 a.m.

• Trauma, 100 block West13th Street, 10:20 a.m.

• Medical, 1400 blockWest Fifth Street, 11:39 a.m.

• Medical, 1400 blockWest Fifth Street, 11:40 a.m.

Sunday• Trauma, 900 block Avon

Street, 8:54 a.m.• Medical, 1700 block

South Sheridan Avenue,9:49 a.m.

• Trauma, 100 blockWoodland Park Road, 3:49p.m.

• Medical, 1400 blockWest Fifth Street, 3:59 p.m.

• Medical, 300 block EastThird Street, 5:35 p.m.

• Medical, 2000 blockSouth Sheridan Avenue,6:31 p.m.

• Medical, 800 block EastWorks Street, 10:56 p.m.

• Medical, 100 block West13th Street, 11:28 p.m.

SHERIDAN MEMORIAL HOSPITALFriday• Admissions —

Stephanie E. Hamby,Sheridan, Ella MarieHamby, Sheridan

• Dismissals — No dis-missals to report.

Saturday• Admissions — Kayla G.

Trujillo, Sheridan, KaizenTrujillo, Sheridan

• Dismissals — No dis-missals to report.

Sunday• Admissions — No

admissions to report.• Dismissals — Stephanie

E. Hamby, Sheridan, EllaMarie Hamby, Sheridan

SHERIDAN POLICEDEPARTMENT

Information in the policereports is taken from theSPD website.

Thursday

• Structure fire, EastFifth Street, 1:16 a.m.

• Abandoned vehicle,North Main Street, 8:31a.m.

• Accident delayed, FifthStreet and Main Street, 8:36a.m.

• Dog at large, MydlandRoad, 8:55 a.m.

• Animal lost, SpauldingStreet, 9 a.m.

• Theft (cold), LewisStreet, 10:34 a.m.

• Verbal dispute, EastRidge Road, 12:51 p.m.

• Dog at large, NorthBrooks Street, 12:53 p.m.

• Theft (cold), LewisStreet, 1:17 p.m.

• Lost property, CoffeenAvenue, 2:36 p.m.

• Dog at large, SummitDrive, 4:13 p.m.

• Dog at large, HighlandAvenue, 4:27 p.m.

• Dog at large, DunnuckStreet, 5:01 p.m.

• Harassment, Sheridanarea, 5:04 p.m.

• Accident, CoffeenAvenue, 5:21 p.m.

• Public intoxication,Avon Street, 6:28 p.m.

• DUI reported, Sheridanarea, 7:04 p.m.

• Malicious mischief,Edwards Drive, 7:28 p.m.

• Suspicious circum-stances, North JeffersonStreet, 7:44 p.m.

• Suicidal subject, NorthJefferson Street, 7:44 p.m.

• Malicious mischief,South Tschirgi Street, 8:17p.m.

• Accident, Interstate 90westbound, 9:52 p.m.

• Court violation,Broadway Street, 10:14 p.m.

Friday-Sunday• No reports available due

to the holiday.

SHERIDAN COUNTYSHERIFF’S OFFICE

• No reports available dueto the holiday.

ARRESTSNames of individuals

arrested for domestic vio-lence or sexual assault willnot be released until thoseindividuals have appearedin court.

• No reports available dueto the holiday.

JAIL• No reports available due

to the holiday.

ALMANACMONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS A5

5-Day Forecast for SheridanTONIGHT THURSDAY FRIDAYTUESDAY WEDNESDAY

Partly cloudy and cold

Partly sunny and warmer

Partly sunny Sunshine and patchy clouds

Partly sunny and breezy

Precipitation (in inches)

Temperature

Sheridan County Airport through SundayAlmanac

Sunday ............................................................ 0.00"Month to date ................................................. 0.06"Normal month to date .................................... 0.26"Year to date ...................................................16.78"Normal year to date ......................................13.15"

High/low .........................................................51/24Normal high/low ............................................49/22Record high .............................................72 in 1956Record low ............................................. -20 in 1986 The Moon Rise Set

The Sun Rise Set

Sun and Moon

Full Last New First

Nov 17 Nov 25 Dec 2 Dec 9

Today 1:39 p.m. 12:33 a.m.Tuesday 2:08 p.m. 1:41 a.m.Wednesday 2:38 p.m. 2:49 a.m.

Today 7:00 a.m. 4:44 p.m.Tuesday 7:01 a.m. 4:43 p.m.Wednesday 7:02 a.m. 4:42 p.m.

0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme

The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Shown is the highest value for the day.

9a 10a 11a Noon 1p 2p 3p 4p 5p

UV Index tomorrow

National Weather for Tuesday, November 12Shown are

Tuesday's noon positions of

weather systems and precipitation.

Temperature bands are highs

for the day.

Regional Weather

Regional CitiesCity Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Tue. Wed. Thu. Tue. Wed. Thu.

Billings 56/43/pc 58/36/c 49/30/pcCasper 57/34/pc 55/26/pc 45/21/sCheyenne 51/35/pc 59/31/pc 47/30/cCody 56/40/pc 53/29/pc 44/25/sEvanston 57/33/pc 51/26/pc 42/22/sGillette 55/35/pc 55/30/pc 46/28/cGreen River 58/29/pc 54/26/pc 47/23/sJackson 48/29/pc 43/26/sf 37/20/sf

Laramie 52/28/pc 53/26/pc 40/21/cNewcastle 50/37/pc 54/31/pc 46/28/cRawlins 55/33/pc 54/26/pc 43/21/sRiverton 54/36/pc 55/28/pc 47/23/sRock Springs 54/34/pc 54/27/pc 44/23/sScottsbluff 52/26/pc 60/32/pc 52/30/cSundance 50/39/pc 51/30/pc 42/26/cYellowstone 45/25/pc 39/19/sf 34/15/sf

SHERIDAN

Buffalo

Basin Gillette

Kaycee

Wright

Worland

Parkman

Clearmont

Lovell

Thermopolis

Cody

BillingsHardin

Shown is Tuesday's weather. Temperatures are tonight's lows

and Tuesday's highs.

Broadus

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2013

Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

Weather on the WebFor more detailed weather information on the Internet, go to:www.thesheridanpress.com

Ranchester

Dayton

Big Horn

Big Horn Mountain Precipitation 24 hours through noon Sunday ...................... 0.00"

28/5619/54

16/53

24/5923/56

24/5726/56

25/5727/52

25/5624/53

23/53

27/60

25/55

25/55

28/5626/57

24/54

56 34 53 32 45 25 47 2323

24/56Story

Holiday Gift Bazaar Now Two Days

Friday, November 22, 3-7pm and Saturday, November 23 8am-3pm Holiday Inn Convention Center

SmoothiesSmoothies

2146 Coffeen Ave. • 673-11002146 Coffeen Ave. • 673-11002590 N. Main • 672-59002590 N. Main • 672-5900

OBITUARIES |Barbara E. Woodson

November 3, 2013

Barbara Ellen Alexander Woodson, 83, a30-year resident of Sheridan County,passed away November 3, 2013 in Hemet,CA after a series of strokes.

She was native to the Los Angeles Areaand grew up in Corvallis, OR. She met andmarried her husband for life, Karl G."Woody" Woodson, in Los Angeles Countyin 1955 as he was serving a tour in the US

Navy. As the family grew, they then moved into the bustlingsuburbs of Orange County, CA before deciding to relocate andfully embrace a country lifestyle. They initially moved toDayton, WY in 1973, before settling into their ranch and state-of-the-art, self-designed home near Wyarno in 1974.

Barbara was heavily involved in the Sheridan community,directing successful duplicate bridge tournaments at severalvenues in town. She was also an independent accountant repre-senting numerous Sheridan area businesses. She

enjoyed crochet, swimming, gardening, recipes, card andboard games as well as supporting her husband's busy localranching and high school teaching careers as they raised theiridentical twin boys.

After their sons both joined the US Navy, the couple eventu-ally decided to sell their ranch in 2002 and traveled extensivelyby RV from their new retirement home in Sequim, WA, toHemet, CA for the winter and back, with

many points in between. Barbara would continue enjoyingthese trips, which often included deliberately passing throughSheridan, before her call to heaven.

She was preceded in death by her only sister, Willa Hughes,formerly of Long Beach, CA. She is survived by her loving hus-band Woody, 79, Sequim, WA; 50-year-old twins John Woodson,Phoenix, AZ, and Andy Woodson, Casper; and 4 grandchildrenin California and Nevada. Services will be delayed until March,2014 in Washington to allow this beautiful couple one more RVtrip together.

BarbaraWoodson

DEATH NOTICES |Jerome Brown

Jerome Brown, 93, of Sheridan, died on Saturday, November9, 2013 at the Westview Health Care Center.

Online condolences may be written at www.kanefuneral.com.Kane Funeral Home has been entrusted with arrangements.

John ShafferJohn Shaffer, 60, of Sheridan, died on Sunday, November 3,

2013 at his residence.Online condolences may be written at www.kanefuneral.com.

Kane Funeral Home has been entrusted with arrangements.

SERVICE NOTICE |Nancy Louise Backer

Funeral services for Nancy Backer, 74 year old Kaycee womanwho died Tuesday, November 5th at the Wyoming MedicalCenter in Casper, Wyoming will be held Saturday, November16th at 2:00 p.m. at the Harness Funeral Home with MelissaVandeberg officiating.

Donations may be made in Nancy’s memory to the Hoofprintsof the Past Museum in care of the Harness Funeral Home at351 North Adams Avenue, Buffalo, Wyoming 82834.

Carol GarlandGraveside services for Carol Garland, 68 year old Buffalo

woman who died Tuesday at Westview Nursing Center inSheridan, Wyoming will be held Monday, November 11th at11:00 a.m. at Willow Grove Cemetery with Pastor WilliamDunlap officiating.

Visitation will be held at the Harness Funeral Home Chapelon Sunday from 1:00 to 9:00 p.m. Donations may be made inCarol’s memory to the American Alzheimer’s Association incare of the Harness Funeral Home.

Verda Mae TaylorVerda Mae Taylor, 83, of Sheridan died on Sunday, November

10, 2013 at the Green House Living.Services for Verda Mae will be at 10:00 am Saturday,

November 16, 2013 at the First United Methodist Church withReverend Don Derryberrry officiating. Interment will be in theSheridan Municipal Cemetery. A reception will follow at thechurch.

Donations to honor Verda Mae can be sent to the SheridanDog and Cat Shelter, 84 East Ridge Road, Sheridan, WY 82801

Online condolences may be written at www.kanefuneral.com.Kane Funeral Home has been entrusted with arrangements.

REPORTS |

Gearing up

for winter

sportsSheridan College

Outdoor Club PresidentDeo Lachman, left, pullsout a pair of skis withPolly Howard and herdaughter Sylvia Howard,right, during the GearSwap Saturday at theWhitney AcademicCenter.

THE SHERIDAN PRESS | JUSTIN SHEELY

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A6 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013

BURGESS: Carrying fellow soldiers off the battlefield and forever in your heartFROM 1

Her dad returned safely from his stationin the Philippines after World War II.

He died two weeks later of a cerebralhemorrhage when Burgess was 25 yearsold.

“I can only compensate it by saying hetold me everything about life that I shouldreally know,” Burgess said. “Laugh at your-self. Don’t take yourself too seriously.Whatever you take or do or anything, stayin control of it. Don’t ever let it controlyou. Good things.”

• American Red Cross uniformFrom 1942 to 1945, Burgess wore her own

uniform as a volunteer for the AmericanRed Cross — first in England, then all overthe European continent. She worked in a“clubmobile,” a specially equipped truck inwhich Red Cross girls made donuts and cof-fee and serve soldiers a few moments ofcomfort through a smile, a warm conversa-tion, a dance.

About six weeks after D-Day, Burgess andthe other American Red Cross girls landedon Omaha Beach in France. They camou-flaged their clubmobile and stayed in tentswith foxholes dug feet from the door, mov-ing nine times in five weeks to stay justbehind the front line.

• Khaki spatsWhen Burgess looks at her spats — khaki

leggings that snapped over her brownleather boots, slick-soled and creased withyears of wear — she smiles a smile full ofthe remembrance of adventure.

“When we were on the continent, wehardly ever got out of our trousers and intoa skirt,” Burgess said.

The spats protected her trousers andboots, but when she and the other girlsreally had to wash their clothes while onthe move, they filled a bucket withkerosene and dipped their clothes in tomake them “clean.”

• Nurse’s uniform“Daddy, brother Ralston and I were in the

service, so mother joined the volunteer

Health Aides at Walter Reed in D.C.,”Burgess said.

She wore her white shirt and pale denimjumper while taking temperatures andchanging bedpans.

“She was so proud to be in uniform likeher husband, son and daughter,” Burgesssaid.

• Pieces of parachutesMary Burgess and Henry Burgess were

dating before World War II began. She wentto Europe with the American Red Cross,and he went to the Pacific front. Theydidn’t see each other for more than threeyears while the war raged on. They weremarried shortly after their return.

Henry Burgess was a paratrooper. He wasstationed in Okinawa, ready to invadeJapan, when the atomic bomb fell onHiroshima and Nagasaki.

“I think that bomb is the only reason hestayed alive because he didn’t have toattack Japan,” Burgess said.

The trunk contains several pieces ofparachute, some camouflage, some white.Burgess said she often contemplated mak-ing a dress out of all those silky pieces ofcloth – but she never did.

• An American flagFolded 13 times into the shape of a tri-

cornered hat, the wool flag was alwaysflown by the Hayden family — and later theBurgess family — on the proper days.

It would fly today.• A white uniform with pins on the

pocketThere is a lieutenant pin, a France flag

pin and a pin in the shape of a red crossfastened to the pocket of a white uniformjacket in the trunk.

The pins belong to her family, Burgesssaid. The jacket does not. It is too big, andshe doesn’t know to whom it does belong —or did belong.

But, that jacket is part of her trunk ofrelics, and Burgess treasures it, too.Sometimes war means carrying a fellowsoldier off the battlefield, and it alwaysmeans carrying them back home in the

An old trunk belonging to the late Henry A. Burgess now belongs to his wife, Mary Burgess. It is filledwith items from her family’s times of service during World War I and World War II.

THE SHERIDAN PRESS HANNAH WIEST

FROM THE SHERIDAN PRESS

1988 — A report that Black Hills Statecollege has increased its Wyoming studentenrollment by 48 percent is not cause forconcern, according to Sheridan Collegepresident Stephen Maier and ExecutiveDirector of the Wyoming CommunityCollege Commission James R. Randolph.

2003 — The search is on for a name forthe new middle/junior high school beingbuilt just behind the current SheridanJunior High School. School District 2trustees voted Monday night to allowSheridan County residents to submit sug-gestions for naming the new school forgrades six, seven and eight, slated to openfor the 2005-06 academic year.

2008 — The Sheridan High School foot-ball season ended Saturday with a 44-28loss to Green River in the Class 5A statesemifinals at Homer Scott Field. However,the Broncs’ 9-2 record marked the school’sbest football season since 1993, when itwent 9-1 and won the Class 4A state cham-pionship.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today's Highlight in History:On Nov. 11, 1918, fighting in World War

I came to an end with the signing of an

armistice between the Allies and Germany.On this date:Ten years ago: In Galveston, Texas, mil-

lionaire Robert Durst was found not guiltyof murdering Morris Black, an elderlyneighbor who Durst said he'd killed acci-dentally. Toronto's Roy Halladay won theAmerican League Cy Young Award.

Five years ago: President George W.Bush marked his last Veterans Day as pres-ident at a New York pier, speaking to acrowd of thousands gathered for the reded-ication of the USS Intrepid Sea, Air andSpace Museum. San Francisco's TimLincecum won the National League CyYoung Award.

One year ago: A Florida woman identi-fied as the recipient of harassing emailsfrom David Petraeus' girlfriend acknowl-edged her friendship with the former CIAdirector. Jill Kelley, an unpaid social liai-son to MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa,said she and her family had been friendswith Petraeus and his family for more thanfive years.

Thought for Today: "Old myths, oldgods, old heroes have never died. They areonly sleeping at the bottom of our mind,waiting for our call. We have need for them.They represent the wisdom of our race." —Stanley Kunitz, American poet laureate(1905-2006).In Galveston, Texas, millionaire

TODAY IN HISTORY |

RIVERTON (AP) — Encana is constructing a facility in central Wyoming that will treatup to 1 million gallons of water a day that comes with oil and gas production.

Encana says the facility between Casper and Riverton is the third largest of its kind inthe world. It partnered with GE and Dow on the facility and held a groundbreaking cere-mony on Friday.

Officials say the water treatment plant will effectively clean produced field water toabout the same purity as mountain spring water.

Some of the cleaned water will be used for field operations, while the rest will be pipedinto Boysen Reservoir. Frequent tests will be conducted at the facility and dischargepoints, to assure water quality meets state requirements.

The plant is scheduled to begin treating water next summer.

Encana building water plant

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SPORTSMONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS B1

University of Wyoming's DeAndre Jones (4) and Brandon Miller (8) react after the Cowboys fumble a kickoff return in the fourth quarterSaturday evening at War Memorial Stadium in Laramie.

COURTESY PHOTO | BLAINE MCCARTNEY/WYOMING TRIBUNE EAGLE

LARAMIE (AP) — In a showdownbetween high-scoring Mountain WestConference offenses, Wyoming found outit isn’t in the same league as No. 17Fresno State.

The Cowboys gained only 82 yards inthe second half and Fresno State scored48 unanswered points for a 48-10 victorySaturday night.

“Our execution wasn’t at the level weneeded,” Wyoming coach DaveChristensen said. “I thought in the firsthalf there were times when we movedthe ball, and then we came out in the sec-ond half and just sputtered.”

Derek Carr threw for 366 yards andfour touchdowns, and Josh Quezadarushed for 105 yards to lead the Bulldogs(9-0, 6-0 Mountain West).

Wyoming (4-5, 2-3) is 0-15 againstranked teams under Christensen, in hisfifth year as head coach, and hasn’t beat-en a Top 25 opponent since 2002, whenthe Cowboys defeated No. 24 Air Force 34-26.

Wyoming’s offense, which ranked sec-ond to the Bulldogs in the conferencewith an average of 516.2 yards coming in,was held to a season-low 296. TheCowboys were averaging 36.5 points untilSaturday night.

Carr completed 33 of 46 passes with no

interceptions before being pulled for thenight with 9:45 left and the game well inhand. He has gone 229 pass attemptswithout an interception.

Quezada had his second consecutive(and second career) 100-yard game on 16carries.

Brett Smith led the Cowboys, complet-ing 18 of 32 passes for 141 yards and atouchdown. His 153 total yards were wellbelow his average of 349.8.

Running back Tedder Easton gained 90yards. The game pitted the top twooffenses in the Mountain West againsteach other. Wyoming got the better of theBulldogs early, grabbing a 10-0 lead.Smith connected with Shaun Wick on a 2-yard TD pass, which was set up byEaston’s 79-yard run through the middleof the Bulldogs’ defense, for the onlyscore of the first quarter.

Easton said he made a cut near the lineof scrimmage and “looked down the fieldand no one was there.” He was caught atthe 2-yard line. “I was hoping I was fastenough to get there,” he said. “This timeI wasn’t, but it felt good to get there.”

It was the first time this season FresnoState had been shut out in the openingperiod.

Stuart Williams added a 27-yard fieldgoal for the Cowboys early in the second.

“They came out with a lot of energy,”Carr said. “Coach hit it on the head:We’re going to get everybody’s best game.They came out with so much energy andso much passion. We had to take our pas-sion and energy to another level.”

Carr got Fresno State both passion andpoints with back-to-back touchdowndrives of 75 and 73 yards — the first end-ing with a 9-yard TD pass to MarcelJensen and the second on a 19-yard scor-ing strike to Isiah Burse. They were thefirst scores of a 48-0 surge by theBulldogs, who ended the game with 600total yards on offense. Fresno State hasgained more than 500 yards in sevengames and at least 600 four times thisseason. Carr connected once more withJensen on a 2-yard TD pass and withDavante Adams for a 9-yard score. JoshHarper caught nine passes for 159 yards.

“The game started out the way wewanted it to,” Christensen said, citing alack of execution by his team. “The firsthalf was exactly as we envisioned it.Obviously the second half wasn’t.”

Christensen fired his defensive coordi-nator last week after Wyoming allowedmore than 50 points in its previous twogames — both losses — and hired veterandefensive coach Bill Young to help for theremainder of the season.

Broncos roll Chargers as Manning hurts ankle

Jaguars taste firstsweet victory

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

At some point, even if they won’t admitit, Gus Bradley and his JacksonvilleJaguars must have wondered if a victorywould come this season. They can stopwondering. Maurice Jones-Drew andJordan Todman each ran for a touchdown,and the Jaguars held off the TennesseeTitans 29-27 Sunday. The Jaguars (1-8)scored the most points in a game this sea-son for first-year coach Bradley. They nevertrailed and forced four turnovers theyturned into 17 points.

“What I’m excited about is that weimproved in many areas,” Bradley said.“On my call sheet I was writing downthings that were really good that were hap-pening during the game. They just kept pil-ing up. I thought, ‘this is how it feels.’”

Feels pretty good, doesn’t it?“It’s definitely a great feeling,” Jaguars

quarterback Chad Henne said. Baltimore looks to build on its thrilling

20-17 overtime win against Cincinnati,which came only after the defending SuperBowl champions blew a 17-0 lead andallowed a 51-yard desperation TD pass onthe final play of regulation. Justin Tuckermade a 46-yard field goal to win it. TheRavens (4-5) broke a three-game slide andare back in the AFC North race.

Also Sunday, it was Carolina 10, SanFrancisco 9; Denver 28, San Diego 20;Seattle 33, Atlanta 10; Detroit 21, Chicago19; St. Louis 38, Indianapolis 8;Philadelphia 27, Green Bay 13; New Orleans49, Dallas 17; Arizona 27, Houston 24; theNew York Giants 24, Atlanta 20; andPittsburgh 23, Buffalo 10. Tampa Bay (0-8)hosts Miami (4-4) tonight.

Wyo. loses to No. 17 Fresno State 48-10

CHADRON, Neb. (AP) — The NCAA putChadron State on three years of proba-tion and vacated 15 wins over two sea-sons Wednesday after determining itsformer football coach had secret bankaccounts and extra benefits for players atthe Division II school.

The Eagles did not lose any scholar-ships and will not be banned from theplayoffs.

"We're pleased to have a decision fromthe NCAA and now we can continue toensure Eagle athletics remains thestrong program it already is," schoolpresident Randy Rhine said. "I have con-fidence in our coaching staff and athletic

administration to lead us forward."The NCAA's report ended a two-year

ordeal for the western Nebraska schoolthat produced one of Division II's all-time greats in San Diego Chargers run-ning back Danny Woodhead.

Bill O'Boyle was abruptly relieved ofhis coaching duties in October 2011 afterthe school discovered irregularities infundraising. Brad Smith, athletic direc-tor at the time and the coach beforeO'Boyle, returned to the sideline on aninterim basis but later was found to havebeen involved in violations as well.

O'Boyle now is the offensive line coachat Southern Illinois and Smith is retired.

O'Boyle said he believes informationthat could have helped his defense wasnot considered during the investigation.He declined to elaborate.

"I'll support their decision," O'Boylesaid. "But do I agree? There are a lot ofthings they missed that I'm disappointedin. But I'm going to accept what theycame up with.

According to the Division II Committeeon Infractions' report, in 2009 O'Boyleopened a private bank account for pro-ceeds from the football program's golftournaments.

NCAA places Chadron State football on three years probationRams 2A state title week

FROM STAFF REPORTS

BIG HORN — The Big Horn Rams willplay Mountain View for a 2A state titleat noon Friday in Laramie.

This is the fifth year that the fiveclasses of Wyoming high school footballwill play their championship games inLaramie. The 2A game is the first to beheld this weekend, with the class 3A tofollow Friday. Class 1A-6-man, 1A and 4Agames are on Saturday. Natrona andCheyenne East meet in the 4A title gameat 4 p.m. Saturday.

Tickets for the game can be purchasedin advance through the WyomingAthletics Ticket Office. Single sessionadult tickets cost $11, while tickets foryouth 18 and younger are $8. Forecastfor Friday in Laramie shows mostlysunny skies with a high of 40 degrees.

Stats from Big Horn’s 28-19 win Friday in LovellBox Score 1 2 3 4 FBH 7 7 7 7 28Lovell 6 0 6 7 19Passing: Connor McCafferty 6-11, 134 yards 2 TDsRushing: Colter Carzoli 98 yds, 2 TDs Receiving: SethKite 1-66-1 TD; Christian Mayer 2-31, 1 TD Team rushing:Big Horn 131/Lovell 142 Team passing: BH 134/Lovell 117Total offense BH 165/Lovell 159 BH defense: MasonLube, 7 asst. tckl., 2 solo, 1 tckl loss, 1 INT, 1 fumble rec.;Corey Sturza 1 fumble rec.; Kaleb Rosselot 8 asst. tckl., 1solo; Miles Novak 6 asst. tckl., 2 solo, 1 tckl loss.; DevenIbach 4 asst. tckl., 4 solo, 1 sack; Richard Stanely 1 sack.

SAN DIEGO (AP) — PeytonManning and the rest of theDenver Broncos will present agame ball to John Fox as soonas the coach rejoins themafter recovering from heartsurgery.

“We look forward to givingit to him in person,” Manningsaid after the Broncos beat theSan Diego Chargers, 28-20, onSunday in their first gamesince Fox had his aortic valvereplaced. Fox was releasedfrom the hospital Friday andwill continue his recovery at

his offseason home inCharlotte, N.C.

With interim coach Jack DelRio in charge, Manning threwfor 330 yards and four touch-downs, three to DemaryiusThomas.

Manning said he spoke withFox by phone on Saturdaybefore the Broncos flew to SanDiego.

“I told him not to be yellingat me during the game. It’s notgood for his blood pressure,”Manning said. “I’m not surewe’ll see if he did or didn’t.

But he was in our thoughts.Coach Del Rio has done a goodjob all week keeping us updat-ed on coach Fox.”

Fox planned to watch thegame on TV, a teamspokesman said. If hewatched, he probably didn’tlike seeing Manning hurtinghis right ankle when he washit by Corey Liuget as theBroncos ran out the clock inthe closing minutes. Manningstayed in the game.

Manning wouldn’t be specif-ic about his injury, but said he

was “pretty sore” and that heplanned to have an MRI onMonday.

Manning was hurt aftercompleting a pass to Thomaswith 1:44 left.

Manning kept the Broncos(8-1) rolling. He threw touch-down passes of 11, 7 and 34yards to Thomas on consecu-tive drives spanning the sec-ond and third quarters, stak-ing the Broncos to a 28-6 lead.

The Chargers (4-5) closed thegap late in the second half butcouldn’t catch up.

SC men get to 5-0FROM STAFF REPORTS

SHERIDAN — The Sheridan College bas-ketball team used another 2-0 weekend tocontinue their fast start to the season.

The Generals defeated Laramie CountyCommunity College, the host school at thetournament in Cheyenne Saturday, 84-76.

Fred Dure scored 21 points, Josh Adeyeyehad 15 points and a career-high 14rebounds. Rudolphe Joly scored 10 pointsand had seven rebounds.

Sheridan defeated Eastern Wyoming 96-80Friday. This weekend, the Generals host theColorado Kings Friday then NortheasternJC Saturday.

Lady Generals suffer first loss, 72-61, to Casper

SHERIDAN — The Sheridan College LadyGenerals basketball team suffered theirfirst defeat of the 2013-14 season Saturdayat Casper.

The Lady Generals (4-1) led 34-32 at half-time, but fell 72-61 to host Casper College.The game was a non-conference matchup,as was the Lady Generals win Friday overGillette. Sophomore Madison Forney ledthe Lady Generals with 14 points. Casper’sKendyl Nunn scored 30 points.

The Lady Generals are home this week-end for a tournament Friday and Saturday.

SEE CHADRON, PAGE B2

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B2 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013

National Football LeagueThe Associated PressAll Times ESTAMERICAN CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PANew England 7 2 0 .778 234 175N.Y. Jets 5 4 0.556 169 231Miami 4 4 0.500 174 187Buffalo 3 7 0.300 199 259South W L T Pct PF PAIndianapolis 6 3 0.667 222 193Tennessee 4 5 0.444 200 196Houston 2 7 0.222 170 248Jacksonville 1 8 0.111 115 291North W L T Pct PF PACincinnati 6 4 0.600 234 186Cleveland 4 5 0.444 172 197Baltimore 4 5 0.444 188 189Pittsburgh 3 6 0.333 179 218West W L T Pct PF PAKansas City 9 0 01.000 215 111Denver 8 1 0.889 371 238San Diego 4 5 0.444 212 202Oakland 3 6 0.333 166 223NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PADallas 5 5 0.500 274 258Philadelphia 5 5 0.500 252 244N.Y. Giants 3 6 0.333 165 243Washington 3 6 0.333 230 287South W L T Pct PF PANew Orleans 7 2 0.778 265 163Carolina 6 3 0.667 214 115Atlanta 2 7 0.222 186 251Tampa Bay 0 8 0.000 124 190North W L T Pct PF PADetroit 6 3 0.667 238 216Chicago 5 4 0.556 259 247Green Bay 5 4 0.556 245 212Minnesota 2 7 0.222 220 279West W L T Pct PF PASeattle 9 1 0.900 265 159San Francisco 6 3 0.667 227 155Arizona 5 4 0.556 187 198St. Louis 4 6 0.400 224 234___Thursday’s GameMinnesota 34, Washington 27Sunday’s GamesDetroit 21, Chicago 19Philadelphia 27, Green Bay 13Jacksonville 29, Tennessee 27Baltimore 20, Cincinnati 17, OTSt. Louis 38, Indianapolis 8Seattle 33, Atlanta 10N.Y. Giants 24, Oakland 20Pittsburgh 23, Buffalo 10Carolina 10, San Francisco 9Denver 28, San Diego 20Arizona 27, Houston 24New Orleans 49, Dallas 17Open: Cleveland, Kansas City, N.Y. Jets,New EnglandMonday’s GameMiami at Tampa Bay, 8:40 p.m.Thursday, Nov. 14Indianapolis at Tennessee, 8:25 p.m.Sunday, Nov. 17Baltimore at Chicago, 1 p.m.Oakland at Houston, 1 p.m.N.Y. Jets at Buffalo, 1 p.m.Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.Detroit at Pittsburgh, 1 p.m.Washington at Philadelphia, 1 p.m.Cleveland at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.Arizona at Jacksonville, 1 p.m.San Diego at Miami, 4:05 p.m.Minnesota at Seattle, 4:25 p.m.San Francisco at New Orleans, 4:25 p.m.Green Bay at N.Y. Giants, 4:25 p.m.Kansas City at Denver, 8:30 p.m.Open: Dallas, St. LouisMonday, Nov. 18New England at Carolina, 8:40 p.m.

Major College Football ScoresThe Associated PressEASTColgate 28, Lafayette 24Dartmouth 34, Cornell 6Fordham 23, Bucknell 21Harvard 34, Columbia 0Lehigh 34, Holy Cross 20Maine 33, Albany (NY) 27Monmouth (NJ) 23, Wagner 6Navy 42, Hawaii 28New Hampshire 33, James Madison 17Pittsburgh 28, Notre Dame 21Princeton 38, Penn 26Richmond 39, Stony Brook 31Robert Morris 54, CCSU 21Sacred Heart 10, Duquesne 0St. Francis (Pa.) 23, Bryant 20Texas 47, West Virginia 40, OTVillanova 45, Rhode Island 0W. Kentucky 21, Army 17William & Mary 24, Delaware 10Yale 24, Brown 17SOUTHAlabama 38, LSU 17Arkansas St. 42, Louisiana-Monroe 14Auburn 55, Tennessee 23Charleston Southern 31, Coastal Carolina26Chattanooga 20, Wofford 10Duke 38, NC State 20E. Illinois 37, Murray St. 17East Carolina 58, Tulsa 24Florida St. 59, Wake Forest 3Furman 35, Samford 17Georgia 45, Appalachian St. 6Georgia Southern 35, W. Carolina 19Hampton 29, NC Central 21Howard 42, Savannah St. 14Jackson St. 26, Alabama A&M 20Jacksonville St. 68, E. Kentucky 10Liberty 35, Presbyterian 14Louisiana Tech 36, Southern Miss. 13MVSU 20, Texas Southern 17Marist 55, Campbell 28Marshall 56, UAB 14Memphis 21, UT-Martin 6Mercer 45, Jacksonville 42Middle Tennessee 48, FIU 0Mississippi 34, Arkansas 24Missouri 48, Kentucky 17Morgan St. 24, NC A&T 23Norfolk St. 27, Bethune-Cookman 24North Carolina 45, Virginia 14Northwestern St. 37, Lamar 28SC State 25, Florida A&M 21San Diego 56, Morehead St. 3Southern U. 31, Alabama St. 28Stetson 26, Davidson 13Syracuse 20, Maryland 3Tennessee St. 31, Austin Peay 6The Citadel 35, Elon 10UCF 19, Houston 14VMI 27, Gardner-Webb 9Vanderbilt 34, Florida 17Virginia Tech 42, Miami 24Wesley 35, Charlotte 28MIDWESTButler 72, Valparaiso 12Cincinnati 28, SMU 25Drake 36, Dayton 10E. Michigan 35, W. Michigan 32, OTIndiana 52, Illinois 35Iowa 38, Purdue 14Minnesota 24, Penn St. 10Missouri St. 37, S. Illinois 27

Montana 31, South Dakota 27N. Dakota St. 28, Illinois St. 10N. Iowa 22, Youngstown St. 20Nebraska 17, Michigan 13North Dakota 24, N. Colorado 21S. Dakota St. 29, Indiana St. 0TCU 21, Iowa St. 17Tennessee Tech 41, SE Missouri 16Wisconsin 27, BYU 17SOUTHWESTArk.-Pine Bluff 45, Grambling St. 42Kansas St. 49, Texas Tech 26McNeese St. 69, Stephen F. Austin 38North Texas 41, UTEP 7Oklahoma St. 42, Kansas 6SE Louisiana 58, Cent. Arkansas 31Sam Houston St. 49, Nicholls St. 24Texas A&M 51, Mississippi St. 41UTSA 10, Tulane 7FAR WESTArizona St. 20, Utah 19Boston College 48, New Mexico St. 34Cal Poly 42, Sacramento St. 7Colorado St. 38, Nevada 17E. Washington 54, Montana St. 29Fresno St. 48, Wyoming 10Old Dominion 59, Idaho 38Portland St. 38, Idaho St. 31San Diego St. 34, San Jose St. 30S. Utah 27, Weber St. 21Southern Cal 62, California 28UCLA 31, Arizona 26Utah St. 28, UNLV 24Washington 59, Colorado 7

Sunday’s College Basketball ScoresThe Associated PressEASTBoston U. 72, Northeastern 69Brown 74, Binghamton 57Charleston Southern 95, Delaware 93Dartmouth 106, Lyndon St. 61Elon 75, Marist 48Harvard 82, Holy Cross 72Hofstra 80, Fairleigh Dickinson 58Loyola (Md.) 93, Cornell 89, OTMaine 111, Fisher 64Princeton 67, Florida A&M 50Stony Brook 81, Haverford 65UMass 86, Boston College 73SOUTHAlcorn St. 73, Tougaloo 68Anderson (SC) 91, GRU Augusta 86Ark.-Pine Bluff 66, Tuskegee 64FIU 66, Kennesaw St. 58Howard 83, Gwynedd-Mercy 66Kentucky 93, N. Kentucky 63Lander 84, Tusculum 78Lees-McRae 74, Lenoir-Rhyne 64Middle Tennessee 78, Southern U. 75Pfeiffer 90, Catawba 86SC State 59, St. Andrews 55, OTYoungstown St. 75, E. Kentucky 67MIDWESTBradley 85, Alabama St. 59Illinois 86, Jacksonville St. 62Iowa 83, Nebraska-Omaha 75Iowa St. 95, UNC Wilmington 62Lake Superior St. 93, Ill.-Springfield 71Notre Dame 80, Stetson 49Tiffin 101, Bluefield St. 86Valparaiso 113, North Park 50Wright St. 82, Mount St. Joseph 49SOUTHWESTOral Roberts 74, Tulsa 68FAR WESTColorado 91, UT-Martin 65Coppin St. 78, Oregon St. 73E. Washington 87, Pacific (Ore.) 58Washington 88, Seattle 78TOURNAMENTSMSU Mustang TournamentSecond RoundFort Hays St. 97, Upper Iowa 90, OTSW Minnesota St. 72, NW Missouri St. 50Sanford Pentagon ShowcaseSecond RoundCent. Missouri 75, Augustana (SD) 63Missouri Western 87, Northern St. (SD) 78

Sunday’s Women’s BasketballThe Associated PressEASTAlbany (NY) 77, W. Michigan 61Cent. Michigan 105, UMass 61Kentucky 96, Wagner 57Lafayette 70, Brown 69Navy 72, Stony Brook 54Penn St. 78, Fordham 61Rutgers 79, Princeton 65San Francisco 83, Columbia 69Seton Hall 86, Rider 75St. Bonaventure 77, Colgate 72Villanova 63, Drexel 52SOUTHAlcorn St. 50, Nebraska-Omaha 45Cent. Arkansas 66, Mississippi 63Clemson 72, Wofford 50Coppin St. 75, Cheyney 43Florida 88, North Florida 77Georgia 45, Presbyterian 30Georgia Tech 87, W. Carolina 47Hampton 64, St. Peter’s 37LSU 80, Saint Joseph’s 64Maryland 89, Loyola (Md.) 53Morehead St. 82, Lipscomb 77, OTRichmond 57, Miami 50Samford 62, Memphis 60South Carolina 68, Louisiana Tech 45South Florida 81, CCSU 47Winthrop 67, Coll. of Charleston 49MIDWESTIowa 97, Dayton 93, OTIowa St. 84, North Dakota 55Kansas 84, Oral Roberts 62Kansas St. 73, Charlotte 65Kent St. 75, E. Kentucky 74, OTMissouri 59, SIU-Edwardsville 48Ohio 94, Xavier 88Ohio St. 91, FAU 88Purdue 63, Ball St. 57Saint Louis 78, Valparaiso 56Toledo 95, MVSU 48Wisconsin 66, Drake 41SOUTHWESTOklahoma 89, Wichita St. 70Oklahoma St. 74, Texas-Arlington 35SMU 87, Grambling St. 65Texas 63, UTSA 42Texas Tech 70, Texas-Pan American 48UALR 69, Sam Houston St. 65FAR WESTGonzaga 91, UT-Martin 54Hawaii 74, N. Arizona 66Montana 76, Montana St.-Northern 49Montana St. 85, CS Northridge 69Sacramento St. 93, San Diego St. 89Saint Mary’s (Cal) 72, Portland St. 54Southern Cal 63, Fresno St. 54Syracuse 69, Washington St. 65UC Irvine 68, South Dakota 64UC Santa Barbara 76, Occidental 54

National Basketball AssociationThe Associated PressAll Times ESTEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division W L Pct GBPhiladelphia 4 3 .571 —Toronto 3 4 .429 1Boston 3 4 .429 1New York 2 4 .333 1½Brooklyn 2 4 .333 1½Southeast Division W L Pct GBMiami 4 3 .571 —Atlanta 3 3 .500 ½Charlotte 3 3 .500 ½Orlando 3 4 .429 1

Cowboy basketball opens withwin over UT-Martin

LARAMIE (AP) — Impressive debuts by two newcomers and strong outside shoot-ing by a veteran Friday night carried Wyoming to a 78-60 win over Tennessee-Martin in the opener for both teams.

Returning starter Riley Grabau made 4 of 6 from beyond the arc - all in the firsthalf - en route to a career-high 17 points while freshman Trey Washington III andtransfer Charles Hankerson Jr. each added 14 points for the Cowboys (1-0). LarryNance Jr. collected 10 points, 12 rebounds and two blocks for Wyoming.

Dee Oldham had 15 points, Marshun Newell added 14 and Terence Smith 10 forUT-Martin (0-1).

Washington said afterward that he had the jitters, but it didn't look that way as hehit his first three shots, all from 3-point range.

"Man, I was nervous as ever. I didn't know what to do," he said. "I forgot aboutevery play called in the book. But after the first 3 went in, I relaxed and I justplayed basketball."

Wyoming sank 6 of its first 8 shots, including a pair of 3s by Grabau, to race a 17-6lead. UT-Martin came back to go up 20-19, sparked by Dee Oldham, who scored 11points off the bench during a 14-2 run. At one point the Skyhawks scored ninestraight, prompting Cowboys coach Larry Shyatt to employ a rare zone defense.

"We played more zone tonight than I might've played in 40 years in my career, andwe kept out of foul trouble doing it," Shyatt said. New rules cracking down on foulswill force teams to adjust, he said, but added that the Cowboys will certainly adjust.

The Skyhawks took a 32-30 lead with 4:30 left in the first half, but the Cowboysended the period on a 15-1 surge to go up 45-33. Derek Cooke Jr. had two dunks andGrabau added two 3s during the spurt.

UT-Martin never got closer than 11 in the second half. Oldham's 3-pointer cut themargin to 53-42 with 13:22 remaining, but the Cowboys started going to the freethrow line to build the lead to 18 and were never threatened down the stretch.

"I thought their length really bothered us, because they were able to contest everyshot and get every rebound," UT-Martin coach Jason James said. "And I thought westruggled trying to get shots in the paint. We had to settle for long range."

Wyoming saw six players with 20 minutes or more and appears to have moredepth than last season.

"We're really comfortable with 10 guys right now," Shyatt said. "The problem rightnow is the two most mature players (Hankerson and Jerron Granberry) haven'tplayed in a while and we're going to have to let them get the kinks out."

Hankerson sat out last season after transferring and Granberry played only fivegames for North Florida before being excused from the team following the death ofhis father and didn't play again. He was granted a hardship waiver and has one sea-son of eligibility for the Cowboys. He had three points and three rebounds in hisfirst game for Wyoming.

FROM B1

He used the account for football andpersonal expenses, including paying atraffic ticket. He also used two other out-side accounts to pay concession workersand for recruiting expenses.

When questioned by school officials,O'Boyle didn't reveal the location of thegolf tournament money and the exis-tence of the outside bank accounts.

The NCAA said Smith attended thefootball fundraisers but failed to moni-tor and adequately track the approxi-mately $30,000 raised by the golf tourna-ments.

O'Boyle also gave an athlete $150 to set-tle a school bill and another $100 to anathlete so he could purchase healthinsurance. The committee said O'Boyleshould have known he violated rules bygiving money to athletes.

The Eagles also were penalized for

using an ineligible player in 2011.Chadron State's probation runs until

November 2016, its six wins in 2011 andnine wins in 2012 have been forfeited,and the school has been fined $5,000.

The NCAA also placed O'Boyle andSmith under two-year show causeorders. For O'Boyle, that means he's notallowed to have access to any moneythat comes in through football camps orfundraising at SIU. He also must pay hisown way to a regional rules seminar andwill be monitored by the SIU athleticdepartment.

For Smith, his athletically relatedduties will be restricted if he worksagain at an NCAA school.

Chadron State already had self-imposed a reduction of paid officialrecruiting visits, from 75 to 60, for the2013-14 academic year. The school alsolimited the number of coaches whorecruit off-campus.

Washington 2 4 .333 1½Central Division W L Pct GBIndiana 7 0 1.000 —Cleveland 3 4 .429 4Milwaukee 2 3 .400 4Detroit 2 3 .400 4Chicago 2 3 .400 4WESTERN CONFERENCESouthwest Division W L Pct GBSan Antonio 6 1 .857 —Houston 4 3 .571 2Dallas 4 3 .571 2Memphis 3 3 .500 2½New Orleans 3 4 .429 3Northwest Division W L Pct GBOklahoma City 5 1 .833 —Minnesota 4 2 .667 1Portland 4 2 .667 1Denver 1 4 .200 3½Utah 0 7 .000 5½Pacific Division W L Pct GBPhoenix 5 2 .714 —L.A. Clippers 4 3 .571 1Golden State 4 3 .571 1L.A. Lakers 3 4 .429 2Sacramento 1 5 .167 3½___Saturday’s GamesToronto 115, Utah 91Indiana 96, Brooklyn 91Cleveland 127, Philadelphia 125,2OTBoston 111, Miami 110Atlanta 104, Orlando 94L.A. Clippers 107, Houston 94Memphis 108, Golden State 90Dallas 91, Milwaukee 83Portland 96, Sacramento 85Sunday’s GamesSan Antonio 120, New York 89Oklahoma City 106, Washington 105, OTPhoenix 101, New Orleans 94Minnesota at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.Monday’s GamesSan Antonio at Philadelphia, 7 p.m.Memphis at Indiana, 7 p.m.Atlanta at Charlotte, 7 p.m.Orlando at Boston, 7:30 p.m.Cleveland at Chicago, 8 p.m.Toronto at Houston, 8 p.m.Denver at Utah, 9 p.m.Detroit at Portland, 10 p.m.Minnesota at L.A. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.Tuesday’s GamesMilwaukee at Miami, 7:30 p.m.Washington at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.Detroit at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.New Orleans at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.

Turkish Airlines Open Leading ScoresThe Associated PressSundayAt Montgomerie Maxx RoyalBelek, TurkeyPurse: $7 millionYardage: 7,100; Par: 72FinalVictor Dubuisson, France67-65-63-69—264Jamie Donaldson, Wales68-67-68-63—266Justin Rose, England70-66-67-65—268Tiger Woods, United States70-63-68-67—268Raphael Jacquelin, France67-72-62-68—269Ian Poulter, England66-66-68-69—269Henrik Stenson, Sweden64-68-69-69—270Marc Warren, Scotland69-70-66-65—270Bernd Wiesberger, Austria68-72-66-64—270Ross Fisher, England68-68-70-65—271Justin Walters, South Africa66-66-70-69—271Paul Casey, England66-73-67-66—272George Coetzee, South Africa6 6 - 7 1 - 6 8 -67—272Julien Quesne, France67-69-68-68—272Thomas Aiken, South Africa7 1 - 6 7 - 6 6 -69—273Darren Fichardt, South Africa6 4 - 7 3 - 7 1 -65—273Chris Wood, England69-70-65-69—273Thomas Bjorn, Denmark64 -72 -71 -67—274Alejandro Canizares, Spain67-68-66-73—274Robert-Jan Derksen, Netherlands6 7 - 6 9 -69-69—274Maximilian Kiefer, Germany66-73-68-67—274Joost Luiten, Netherlands72-70-65-67—274Garth Mulroy, South Africa70-69-66-69—274Richie Ramsay, Scotland70-69-71-64—274AlsoMartin Kaymer, Germany69-68-68-70—275Francesco Molinari, Italy6 9 - 6 8 - 7 1 - 6 7 —275Jonas Blixt, Sweden68-74-66-68—276Thorbjorn Olesen, Denmark66-72-71-67—276Charl Schwartzel, South Africa68-70-68-70—276Lee Westwood, England7 0 - 6 6 - 7 3 - 6 7 —276Paul Lawrie, Scotland74-70-66-69—279Matteo Manassero, Italy70-70-70-69—279Padraig Harrington, Ireland68-70-71-71—280Peter Uihlein, United States67-72-71-74—284Colin Montgomerie, Scotland7 2 - 7 2 - 7 4 -69—287Louis Oosthuizen, South Africa72-74-69-73—288Miguel Angel Jimenez, Spain7 3 - 7 1 - 7 3 -73—290

NASCAR Sprint Cup-AdvoCare 500ResultsThe Associated PressSundayAt Phoenix International RacewayAvondale, Ariz.Lap length: 1 miles(Start position in parentheses)1. (9) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 312 laps,140.7 rating, 48 points, $258,186.2. (7) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 312, 122.2,43, $171,715.3. (1) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 312,121.9, 42, $182,326.4. (11) Dale Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 312,107.3, 41, $131,135.5. (8) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 312, 102.6,39, $137,630.6. (19) Juan Pablo Montoya, Chevrolet,312, 93.5, 38, $132,074.7. (4) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 312, 96, 37,$137,693.8. (10) Martin Truex Jr., Toyota, 312, 94.8,36, $122,185.9. (3) Joey Logano, Ford, 312, 107.8, 36,$117,268.10. (17) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 312,92.3, 35, $128,068.11. (12) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 312, 106.5,34, $136,176.12. (27) Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Ford, 312,73.8, 32, $131,121.13. (18) Greg Biffle, Ford, 312, 84.4, 32,$97,610.

Eastern Washington beats MontanaState 54-29

CHENEY, Wash. (AP) — VernonAdams threw four touchdown passesand ran for another score as EasternWashington defeated Montana State 54-29 on Saturday to take a major steptoward the Big Sky Conference champi-onship.

The Eagles (8-2, 6-0) notched the pro-gram's 500th victory in defeating theBobcats (7-3, 5-1). It was the first Big Skymatchup of FCS top-five teams since1994.

EWU scored on all eight of its posses-sions, not counting when the Eagleswere taking a knee at the end.

Adams now has 38 touchdown passesto break the school record and rankssecond in Big Sky history. He was anefficient 16 of 18, including a scoringthrows of 76, 68 and 17 yards toShaquille Hill. Hill finished with acareer-high 172 receiving yards.

"Vernon was special and the receiverswere special," EWU head coach BeauBaldwin said. "I didn't realize (Vernon)had just two incompletions -- that isimpressive. That is just the type of play-er he is. He keeps getting better, and hekeeps working at it."

Quincy Forte's 25-yard scoring runwith 1:28 left in the first half gave EWUthe lead for good at 26-21. Forte rushedfor a career-high 123 yards and twoscores.

"The offensive line did a great job, andwe added a running game that I thinksurprised Montana State," Baldwin said.

MSU closed to 40-29 early in the fourthquarter on DeNarius McGhee's 2-yardrun. Three plays after the ensuing kick-off, Adams responded with his 76-yardTD bomb to Hill, who caught the ball instride and scored easily. That gave theEagles a 47-29 lead with 11:57 remaining.

The Bobcats came up empty on theirnext drive, giving up the ball on downs.Anthony Vitto entered at quarterbackfor EWU, with Adams on the sidelinewith cramps. Vitto led a 71-yard drive

that was capped with his 36-yard touch-down pass to Cooper Kupp to end thescoring. That gave Kupp, a redshirtfreshman, a touchdown catch in all 10EWU games this season.

Montana scores late to edge SouthDakota 31-27

VERMILLION, S.D. (AP) — EllisHenderson returned a kickoff 98 yardsfor a touchdown with 1:36 to play asMontana rallied to beat South Dakota31-27 on Saturday.

Henderson scored three touchdowns,including two receiving for theGrizzlies. He also caught TD passes of 6and 71 yards.

Henderson's long kickoff returnhelped Montana survive a late SouthDakota score.

"It's a heartache, that's for sure," saidSouth Dakota coach Joe Glenn, who ledMontana to a national title in 2001. "Wejust can't fold our tent like that. What doyou say when they run (a fumble) in fora touchdown then we kick it to theirbest player and we don't even touch him.We're not even close."

With South Dakota up 24-17, JordanTripp forced a fumble that was returned35 yards by Matt Hermanson for atouchdown with 6:33 remaining in thegame. A 38-yard field goal from MilesBergner with 1:48 left gave the Coyotes(4-6) a 27-24 lead, but then Henderson'skickoff return gave the lead back to theGrizzlies (8-2).

South Dakota had one final opportuni-ty, driving 44 yards to the Montana 31-yard line before Bo Tully broke up apass intended for Josh Vander Matenand the Coyotes turned the ball over ondowns.

Jordan Johnson had 337 yards passingand two touchdowns, highlighted by the71-yard strike to Henderson in the firsthalf.

Montana has beaten South Dakotafour straight times. The Coyotes, whoselast win in the series was 1974, have lostthree straight games.

NFL |

SCOREBOARD |

CHADRON: Probation lasts until 2016

COLLEGE FOOTBALL BRIEFS |

COLLEGE BASKETBALL |

GOLF |

COLLEGE FOOTBALL |

NASCAR |

NBA |

Page 9: MONDAY THE SHERIDAN ON THE WEB: … · 2015-02-07 · Trooper Ben Panas tells The ... the relics within, relics from a family of veterans of war. • World War I Navy uniform Her

COMICSMONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS B3

MARY WORTH by Karen Moy and Joe Giella

BABY BLUES® by Jerry Scott and Rick Kirkman

ALLEY OOP® by Dave Graue and Jack Bender

BORN LOSER® by Art and Chip Sansom

GARFIELD by Jim Davis

FRANK & ERNEST® by Bob Thaves

REX MORGAN, M.D. by Woody Wilson and Tony DiPreta

ZITS® by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

DILBERT by S. Adams

DRS. OZ & ROIZEN Dr. Mehmet Oz and Dr. Michael Roizen

DEAR ABBYPauline Phillips and Jeanne Phillips

The 2013 pizza-eating cham-pion, Molly Schuyler, downed12.9 cheesy slices in 10 min-utes. But that's definitely notwhat we're suggesting whenwe encourage you to learn

how to feel full faster! Feeling satiated after eating

involves your guts, brain andattitude. And when you eattoo fast, too much or too-processed foods (anythingwith the Five Food Felons --trans and saturated fats,added sugars and sugarsyrups, and any grain thatisn't 100 percent whole), yourbody can't tell when you'vehad enough. You need to giveyour appetite-regulating sys-tems (and emotions) a chanceto react to what you eat.

Savor the flavor. Put yourfork down between bites;chew your food slowly. Thatreleases more nutrition fromthe food and lets leptin, yourappetite-controlling hor-mone, respond so you eatless. Almost a century ago,"the Great Masticator"

Horace Fletcher advocated100 chews per bite. We say,depending on the food, chewaround 10-20 times.

Just say "NUTS." Twentyminutes before a meal eat sixwalnuts or 12 almonds. Theycontain 70 calories of fat, andthat'll slow your stomachemptying, so you'll feel fullsooner.

Practice mindful eating.Notice the texture and flavorof each bite and how yourbody responds to food; placeyourself in a calm (no TV)environment. That helps con-trol cravings and impulse eat-ing. It also improves thedigestive process that goes onin your mouth!

Experiment with this forone week; we're sure you'lleat less, feel fuller faster andenjoy mealtime a lot more!

DOGS RUNNING LOOSEARE NOT THE ONLY ONESAT RISK

DEAR ABBY: My daughter"Jenny," her husband, "Bob,"and their three dogs live withmy husband and me in ourhome. We live on a fairlybusy road. The dogs used toalways be leashed when theywere taken out. They havenow made a habit of lettingthe dogs out without leashes.

This frightens me. Not onlyam I concerned about one ofthe dogs getting hit by a car,

but also any legal ramifica-tions if they cause damage toothers. I have spoken to mydaughter about it, but noth-ing has changed.

Abby, what can we do tomake Jenny and Bob respon-sible for any damagesincurred by their actions?One last note -- one of theirdogs WAS hit by a car andhad a long, painful recoverywith a very expensive vetbill. -- OUT OF IDEAS INCONNECTICUT

DEAR OUT OF IDEAS: Youhave a right to be concerned.Contact your attorney andyour insurance broker to findout what the fallout could befor you as homeownersbecause of your daughterand son-in-law's laziness andcarelessness.

Responsible dog ownerskeep their pets leashed sothey won't be hurt by run-ning into traffic or biting achild or an adult they don'trecognize as a friend. If yourdaughter and S.I.L. can'tabide by your wishes andbehave responsibly, theyshouldn't be living under

your roof.P.S. This isn't just about the

dogs and liability; it's alsoabout respect for you.

DEAR ABBY: A couple ofyears ago, my extended fami-ly found a fun, all-inclusivesolution to the grumbling(and expense) of preparingthe holiday meal.

Each family is assigned aportion of the meal they aregoing to prepare. For fun, ithas to be a recipe that hasnever been tried before so noone can fret that it isn't madelike Grandma used to makeit. The person holding theparty coordinates kitchentime, but to be honest, every-body enjoys helping eachother out, and the cooksspend most of their timechatting.

We have tried wonderfulvariations to the traditionalturkey, enjoyed an awesomepie straight from theRenaissance, and learnedthat we will never again tryoyster stuffing. Because therecipes are untried, no onefeels bad if the dish isn't per-fect, and we have tried thingswe were surprised we liked.

Most important, we do ittogether and spend the daylaughing, talking and catch-ing up, and no one has to be aslave to the day. Hope thiswill give other people ideas. --SCOTT IN BALTIMORE

DEAR SCOTT: So do I,because your family has cap-tured the true spirit of theholiday season, which is toooften lost because of thepressure people put on them-selves to achieve perfection.

DEAR ABBY: My husbandand his sister had a fallingout after their parents diedand haven't spoken for a fewyears. My husband is verystubborn and holds grudges.

He is very ill now. I haveasked him if he wants to tellhis sister about his illness,and he says no. I'm not surehow much longer he has left.

I am thinking about goingagainst his wishes and call-ing her in the hopes that theycan make peace. Yourthoughts? -- NOT MUCHTIME LEFT

DEAR NOT MUCH TIMELEFT: Depending upon howdeep the rift between them is,I do think you should make aconfidential phone call andtell her it might be a goodidea to call her brother. Ifshe does, the conversationcould be healing for both ofthem. However, if she choos-es to ignore the situation, thechoice will have been hers,and no harm will have beendone.

DEAR READERS: Today,Veterans Day, I would like tothank not only all of you whohave honorably served ourcountry, but also those menand women who are on activeduty for your service as well.I salute each and every one ofyou. -- ABBY

Dear Abby is written byAbigail Van Buren, alsoknown as Jeanne Phillips,and was founded by hermother, Pauline Phillips.Write Dear Abby atwww.DearAbby.com or P.O.Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069.

Page 10: MONDAY THE SHERIDAN ON THE WEB: … · 2015-02-07 · Trooper Ben Panas tells The ... the relics within, relics from a family of veterans of war. • World War I Navy uniform Her

Bridge Phillip Alder

CLASSIFIEDSB4 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013

TO PLACE YOUR AD RATES & POLICIESDEADLINES

Phone: (307) 672-2431 Fax: (307) 672-7950

Run Day Deadline

Monday ........................................................................Friday 2:30 PM

Tuesday.................................................................... Monday 2:30 PM

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Friday...................................................................... Thursday 2:30 PM

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Phone: (307) 672-2431 Fax: (307) 672-7950

Monday – Friday, 8am – 5pm

Email : [email protected]

Visit : 144 Grinnell Street, Downtown Sheridan

Mail : P.O. Box 2006, Sheridan, WY, 82801

Include name, address, phone, dates to run and payment

All classified ads running in Monday’s Press also run in the weekly PressPlus at no additional charge!

Lines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 days . . . . . . . .6 days . . . . . . . . . . . .26 days

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Each additional line . . . . . .$4.75 . . . . . . . . $7.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . .$17.50We reserve the right to reject, edit or reclassify any advertisement accepted by us for pub-lication. When placing an ad in person or on the phone, we will read all ads back to you foryour approval. If we fail to do so, please tell us at that time. If you find an error in yourclassified ad, please call us before 9 a.m. to have it corrected for the next day’s paper. ThePress cannot be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion. Claims cannot be con-sidered unless made within three days of the date of publication. No allowances can bemade when errors do not materially affect the value of the advertisement.

All classified ads run for free at www.thesheridanpress.com!

Omarr’s Daily Astrological Forecast Jeraldine Saunders

BIRTHDAY GAL: Actress Cotede Pablo was born in Santiago,Chile, today in 1979. This birthdaygal, born Maria Jose de Pablo Fer-nandez, has co-starred as ZivaDavid on the hit series "NCIS"since 2005, but is reportedly leav-ing the series sometime during its11th season. On the big screen, dePablo co-starred with Kris Kristof-ferson in the 2010 Western "TheLast Rites of Ransom Pride."

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Thebusiest bees make the best honey.You're better at business negotia-tions than you think. You knowwhom to ask when you need anhonest appraisal or advice. Youcan easily get out of a sticky situa-tion.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): If a$20 bill appears on the sidewalk,pick it up. Don't pass up opportu-nities or ignore praise. You canmake helpful connections whileattending business or communityfunctions.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Bangyour own drum loudly. Someoneis willing to do you a favor, so ask.Promote your own interests andtry to get signatures on the dottedline while your charm and luckare at a high point.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Pol-ish an already sterling reputation.You are known as someone whofaithfully fulfills promises anduses sound judgment. Accept anopportunity to put plans into mo-tion and receive helpful feedback.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Good willis sharable; others support yourinterests. Those with whom youdo business are looking for a longand honorable relationship. Beconfident that promises madetoday will be faithfully honored.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Grabthe day by the tiller. Put the fin-ishing touches on agreements andcontracts and launch crucial en-terprises. Someone may offer youthe key information that puts thewind in your sails.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Exertextra effort to be sympathetic andgenerous. Ignore the little voicethat urges you to be selfish aboutmere possessions. Your staminaand ability to cope with emergen-cies may be tested for a few days.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Thebest things in life come to youwhen you accept a chance oppor-tunity. You wish life could be likethe lyrics of a song and you couldearn "money for nothing," but youknow the best checks are the re-wards of hard work.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21):Get the wagon train back on thetrail and head bravely for yourdestination. This might be a goodtime to ask for a raise or promo-tion. You're likely to receive what-

ever you truly deserve and need.CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19):

Think on your feet. You're run-ning as fast as you can to stay ontop of things, but life might feellike a treadmill right now. Taketime to socialize and relieve theburden of myriad obligations bymeeting new people.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18):You seem that someone close is la-boring hard to avoid criticism andmay wonder if this can happen toyou. No one will have a reason to

take you down a notch if you keepyour promises.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):When you land in the public eye,people pick up binoculars to lookmore closely. Be an active partici-pant rather than watching fromthe sidelines. You may earn someunexpected praise or admiration.

IF NOVEMBER 12 IS YOURBIRTHDAY: The next few weekswill offer a plethora of fresh op-portunities and a chance to makelasting improvements. Lady Luck

will smile on you, but during De-cember and early January it'swise to fulfill your obligations andavoid taking on fresh ones. Theboss is unlikely to grant favorsand people in general may be verycritical of your performance. Ifyou're diligent and responsibleyou'll emerge feeling more confi-dent of your ability to handle chal-lenges. During February, make nosignificant changes, but go aheadand take a relaxing vacationwhile you're in a romantic mood.

THE BEST BOOKS OFTHIS YEAR

As we approachthe holiday season, let'slook at some of thebooks published thisyear that might appealto the bridge players onyour gift list.

Some whodunitswith a bridge themehave been written. Thebest so far, in my opin-ion, is "Death in Dupli-cate" by Carole Coplea(Master Point Press).

Two deathsoccur during a duplicateat Kensington College inthe Adirondacks, andthe book covers the in-vestigation. Today's dia-gram shows the onlybridge deal in the book.

If this layout oc-curred during, say, an11-table duplicate, therewould no doubt be 11 dif-ferent auctions. Here, inparticular, East's double

was bizarreafter hearingher partnerraise dia-monds. Notethat Eastwould have

made five diamonds ifshe had guessed spadescorrectly.

After West led alow heart, South, a stu-dent at the college,called for dummy's 10,and East ruffed. Shethen cashed the spadeace: six, three, five. East,not guessing that thethree was West's topspade spot, shifted to adiamond.

Declarer wonwith his ace and ran allof his trumps, bringingeveryone down to threecards. North had theheart ace-queen-jack andSouth the spade queen-nine and heart three.But what could Westkeep? He was squeezed.

Seeing the need to retainthree hearts, West wasforced to discard thespade king, hoping hispartner had the queen.South now producedthat card and claimedhis contract for plus 550and a top.

Master PointPress books are avail-able from the publisherin printed and e-bookeditions.

www.thesheridanpress.com

Hints from Heloise Heloise

VETERAN HELPDear Readers: Here is this

week's SOUND ON, about sup-porting our veterans.

"Dear Heloise: Do you knowany ways I can support our vet-erans? I am looking for a way tohelp. -- Josh in Colorado"

Thank you for asking! Thereare many, many groups thathelp our veterans. In fact, toomany to list here. You can callthe chapter of the Veterans ofForeign Wars in your area forideas on how you can help. Itmay be volunteering, donations-- there are a thousand ways tohelp our vets!

Here is just one you mightconsider, which I have writtenabout for more than 15 years:

The Veterans' NationalStamp and Coin Club is a won-derful organization! They col-lect U.S. and foreign stampsand coins, postcards, sportscards and much more! Thisgroup then passes the items onto other Veterans Affairs sup-port centers across the nation!The stamps and coins, etc., aresupplied for therapeutic usehelping veterans. Send dona-tions to:

Department of Veterans Af-

fairsMedical Center Veterans' Na-

tional Stamp andCoin Club No. 135S.C.

3601 S. 6th Ave.Tucson, AZ 85723You also can check to see if

your city's VA office needs helpor donations. Thank you forwanting to support our veter-ans. They need all the help wecan give them, and anythingyou or my readers can do willbe a wonderful way to saythank you to all of the veteranswho sacrificed so much to keepus safe. And, don't forget to say"thank you" in person to themilitary personnel in uniform,or retired, when you get achance. -- Heloise

SEND A GREAT HINT TO:HeloiseP.O. Box 795000San Antonio, TX 78279-5000Fax: 1-210-HELOISEEmail:

Heloise(at)Heloise.com Dear Readers: Here are other

uses for straws:* Store necklaces in them for

no tangles.* Clean a sink drain with one.

* Make the spindle on yoursewing machine taller to holdthread.

* Hull strawberries with one.* Straighten flower stems.-- HeloiseBOX-TOP FOLLOW-UPDear Heloise: I understand

your frustration with the place-ment of box tops on products.In my time as a school box-topcoordinator, I learned theyplace the box tops such thatpeople can't rip them off in thestore without buying the prod-uct. -- Amy, via email

Thanks to you and all of theothers who wrote about this.Sorry, but I just never wouldhave thought about ripping off(really ripping off!) box tops! Iwould love to hear from gro-cery-store managers if this hap-pens a lot. If so, what can myreaders do to help? -- Heloise

RINSE AND DRAINDear Heloise: Whenever I am

opening a can of beans, I poke afew holes in the bottom with anice pick. I then open the top ofthe can all the way and hold itunder the running water. Thewater drains straight throughand rinses the contents. --Shirley in Tennessee

Send your letters to Santa The Sheridan Press is once again inviting children throughout Sheridan County to send us their letters to Santa. Here’s all you have to do:

1. Have your child write their letter to Santa as neatly as they can on white paper and in black ink.

2. If you want a picture published with their letter, please send us a recent photo with the child’s name written clearly on the back.

3. Complete the form below, attach it to the letter, enclose their photograph and mail them to: Letters to Santa, The Sheridan Press, P.O. Box 2006, Sheridan, WY 82801. You can also bring them by our office at 144 Grinnell Plaza in downtown Sheridan. (If you’re sending letters from more than one child, please complete a separate form for each letter.) Or, you can e-mail your letter to [email protected] . Please include “Letters to Santa” in the subject line.

Child’s Name & Age:

Parent’s Name:

Address:

City/State/Zip:

Daytime Phone:

I have enclosed a photo: Yes No

Please print clearly and legibly

All letters

to

S a nta m u

s t be

received b

y Frida y,

D ecem ber

13 th

Page 11: MONDAY THE SHERIDAN ON THE WEB: … · 2015-02-07 · Trooper Ben Panas tells The ... the relics within, relics from a family of veterans of war. • World War I Navy uniform Her

CLASSIFIEDSMONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS B5

Solution to 11/9/13

Rating: BRONZE

11/11/13

JANRIC CLASSIC SUDOKUFill in the blank cells using numbers 1 to 9. Each number can appear only once in each row,

level ranges from Bronze (easiest) to Silver to Gold (hardest).

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PICKLES

NON SEQUITUR

CLAS S IFIED AD VER TIS IN G R EPR ES EN TATIVE

The Sheridan Press is looking for a Fu ll-Tim e Cla s s if ied Ad vertis ing M a na ger

to join our team .

Send Resume to: The Sheridan Press P.O. Box 2006

Sheridan, W Y 82801

Q u a lif ica tio ns :

• Exceptional custom er service skills

• Strong telephone/receptionist skills • Excellent typing, spelling and reading skills • Superior attention to detail • Ability to m ulti-task

• Above average com puter abilities

• Proven record of being responsible and reliable

Benefit package includes vacation, profit sharing, m edical, dental and vision, and m ore. Hours are 8am – 5pm , Monday – Friday.

These Animals are Available at the Do g & Cat Shelter

DSH = domestic short hair DMH = domestic medium hair DLH = domestic long hair NM = neutered male • SF= spayed female

We have 22 dogs, 53 cats, and 6 kittens up for adoption!! Come up and see what we have for you!

84 Eas t R idge Road

“ Anastasia ”, 2 yr. old, SF, gray, DMH “ Belle ”, 6 mo. old, SF, gray & black, DSH “ Bianca ”, 1 yr. old, SF, gray & white, DSH “ Cali ”, 2 yr. old, SF, brown & white, DSH “ Franny ”, 2 yr. old, SF, black & sliver, DSH “ Steve ”, 7 mo. old, SF, black & white, DMH “ Balboa ”, 2 yr old, NM, gray & white, DSH “ Coyote ”, 3 yr. old, NM, black, DMH “ Darby ”, 5 yr. old, NM, black & white, DSH

“ Apache ”, 6 yr. old, NM, black & silver, Aussie mix “ Anna ”, 2 yr old, SF, black & white, Boston terrier mix “ Daisy ”, 2 yr. old, SF, black & white, Border collie mix “ Miles ”, 2 yr. old, NM, black, Retriever mix “ Bozeman ”, 4 yr. old, NM, brown & tan, Chow Chow mix “ Marty ”, 4 yr. old, NM, gold, Catahoula mix “ Digit ”, 3 yr. old, SF, tan & white, Terrier mix “ Benny ”, 3 yr. old, NM, black, Retriever mix “ Dallas ”, 7 yr old, NM, black, Retriever mix

Dogs

Cats

Please bring your aluminum cans either to our Can Hut just inside the Shelter gates or to our can trailer at Scotty’s Skate Castle. Recycling proceeds are used

to care for the animals.Thanks for your support.

• Does the outside appear to be in good condi�on?

• What are the neighbors/neighborhood like?• Are the locks good quality and secure?

• What condi�on is the paint on the inside?Are there signs of flaking paint or infesta�ons?

• Is there central hea�ng/air condi�oning?• Is there enough storage space for your belongings?

• Are there any leaks in the kitchen or bathroom sinks?• What condi�on are the kitchen appliances in?

Is there everything you need?• Are the windows sealed well and do they have locks?

• Are there enough smoke alarms? Do they work?• How much is the rent and what is included?

• What other bills are there and what are you liable to pay for?

• How much of a deposit is required and what are the condi�ons for the landlord to return the deposit to you?

FOR RENT!What to check when searching for a rental:

Furniture

OFFICE FURNITURE forsale; desk w/chair, 2drawer filling cabinet & 2sitting chairs. 752-0623

Airplanes

AVID MKIIII 100hp, 2 place experimental

aircraft. $21,500 655-7021

Miscellaneous forSale

FOR SALE 133 Shares,Park Reservoir Stock,

$5,000 per share. 674-4409

Firewood

LODGEPOLE PINEFIREWOOD 655-9417

For Lease

Rail Road Land & Cattle Co.

Buildings for lease, Shop

space, Warehouse

space, Retail space, &

office space. 673-5555

Furnished Apts forRent

1BR/STUDIO $545 Coinlaundry & cable. Utils. incl.

Pets? 673-4506

LRG FULLY furnished incl.Washer, cable & all utils.Big Horn. No smk/pets.$900/mo. No lease. 674-7718 or 751-7718

WEEKLY FROM $210,monthly $630 AmericasBest Value Inn 672-9757

Unfurnished Apts forRent

SUPER NICE 2 BR offstreet parking, quiet

neighborhood, W/D hks.,sm storage unit. $625/mo

+ 500 dep.1 yr. lease. 751-2445

LARGE 2 bdrm, 1 bath, WDhooks, garage, W/S/Gprovided. Dayton. $700mo + elc. $500 dep. Nosmok/pets. 674-7718

2 BR 1 ba., W/D hookup,gar. w/opener, mtn views$800, lse. + dep. Nosmk/pets. 672-7643.

CLEAN 4 BR Duplex inRanchester 1500 sq ft,

good size bdr & closets,good carpet, laundry room

w/ W/D, workshop forkids/work room.

Rod or Linda 655-9151461-2237(Rod) or 675-

2629(Linda)

LG 2BR Ranchester. Nopets. $625 672-7563

Unfurnished Apts forRent

Broadway Apts. 2 bdrm, 1 bath

townhouse Available in Dayton, WY. Rent based on

income.

Please call 307-751-1752 or 1-888-387-7368 Toll-Free for application

Equal Housing Opportunity

LG CLEAN 2 BR/1BA in BigHorn no smoking/ pets

$700 + elec. 674-7718 or751-7718

STUDIO APT. inRanchester $450/mo. utilpd., 683-6401

1 BR 1 BA Newlyremodeled $575 +deposit. 752-7848

NEWER 2 Bdrm$950.00/mo water/heatpaid 1000 sq ft 818 E. 7th

St 751-4061

Houses, Unfurnishedfor Rent

5 BDRM, 3 bath on 3 acres. $1600/month +

deposit 752-7848

CUTE CUTE Cottage 2 bd 1bath, SMALL garage.$800 + util. lease + dep.No smk/pets. 672-7643

5 BR/1 BR housesdowntown. $755 & $575+ gas & lights. Fncd. yard.Pets? Needs work. Call673-4506.

LG 4 BR/2BA on 3 acres onedge of town, 2 cargarage, lg fenced yard,pets neg. $1200 + deposit751-2105

COZY, CLEAN 2 BR,remodeled, garage. 543 E.Loucks. $700 + util. AvailNov 18th. 672-0227

HOUSE FOR rent $1200mo. No smk, pets neg.674-9568

CLEAN 4 BR Duplex inRanchester 1500 sq ft,

good size bdr & closets,good carpet, laundry room

w/ W/D, workshop forkids/work room.

Rod or Linda 655-9151461-2237(Rod) or 675-

2629(Linda)

4 BDRM 2 bath$1200/mo+util 344 W.Brundage St 751-4061

3 BR 2 1/2 ba., A/C, W/Dhooks, garage, $975/mo +utils. No pets. 737-2479

3 BR/1 BA, 2,300 sq ft,pets negotiable $1500673-0169 leave message

2 BR/1 BA fenced yard,garage, close todowntown. 760-6573

Houses, Unfurnishedfor Rent

NEWER 4 bdrm, 2 bathhome w/ 2 car garage. . Nosmk, pets neg., central air,fenced backyard. $1450mo. w/ lease. 763-3666

4 BR/2 BA $1295/mo IreneWinkler @ ERA

Carrol Realty 752-3665

Houses, Furnished forRent

2 BD, no smk/pets, W/D.$850 + util, 1 yr lease. 674-6345 Newly remodel

Business Bldg. forRent

25X50 SHOP SPACE, 8x10overhead door, $375/mo +elec. + dep. 1 yr lease. 751-

1970

Office Space for Rent

E X E C U T I V EOFFICE/RETAIL space innewer building, withkitchen, conference roomand open area forcubicles. 3424 sq. ft. 752-5474.

OFFICE SPACES for rent inhistoric Main St. building.672-7643

ONE ROOM officedowntown. $270 per mo.Includes utilities andjanitorial. Parking near by.Call Diana at 672-7444

TWO ROOM officedowntown. $335 per mo.Includes utilities andjanitorial. Parking near by.Call Diana at 672-7444

Storage Space

WOODLANDPARKSTORAGE.COM

5211 Coffeen Call 674-7355

New Spaces Available!

AACE SELF StorageGreat rates, secure

752-0037

DOWNER ADDITIONStorage 674-1792

CALL BAYHORSESTORAGE 1005 4th Ave. E.

752-9114.

ACMS STORAGE 674-7350. Gated, Secure &some climate control.

CIELO STORAGE 752-3904

ELDORADO STORAGEHelping you conquerspace. 3856 Coffeen. 672-7297.

INTERSTATE STORAGEMultiple Sizes avail. Nodeposit req'd. 752-6111.

Help Wanted

IN-YARAK CONST., Inc. islooking for an experiencedLead Carpenter. Pleasecall 752-8778

Help Wanted

FULL TIME benefited Diesel Truck Mechanic.

Minimum of 1 yearexperience, & understands

DOT requirements. Apply in person at

Mullinax Concrete - 615Fort Road - Sheridan, WY.Wages DOE. We are a drug

free employer.

P/T AT busy doctor’s officeworking directly withpatients. Tues, Thurs, andFri 10-5:30, with some SatAM’s, but work hours mayvary – approx 20 hours perweek, may be less.$10/hour. Send reply tobox 195, c/o The SheridanPress, PO Box 2006,Sheridan, WY 82801

SACKETT’S MARKET has aF/T or P/T meat cuttingposition available for anexperienced, customerservice oriented person.Carcass cutting experiencepreferred. Candidate mustbe a self starter, detailoriented and able tomanage inventory and aproduction schedule. Payrate DOE. Send resume to

[email protected] orstop by the Sheridan storeat 2248 Coffeen Avenue.

ACCOUNT MANAGERFrontier Asset

Management, LLC, an investment managementfirm in Sheridan, WY seeks

an Account Manager.Excellent opportunity for

candidate with BA in abusiness-related field.

Duties will includeworking with financial

advisors, daily updates toour portfolio

management system aswell as account

maintenance and clientreporting. Strong analytic,

communication and PCskills required. Multi-

tasking, working well inteam atmosphere and

positive attitude a must.Salary commensurate

with experience.Please send cover letter

and resume to:Erin Foote

Frontier Asset Management, LLC

201 N Connor St, Ste 250Sheridan, WY 82801

www.frontierasset.com

PT TELLER/MEMBERSERVICES REP POSITION.

Please bring resumes toSunlight Credit Union.

TAKINGAPPLICATIONS FOR:

Journeyman &Apprentice

Electricians to Workfor a Good SolidCompany. Bring

resume to 1851 N. MainSt. 674-9710

Help Wanted

BLOEDORN LUMBER ofSheridan Is seeking a

responsible hard workingfull time boom truckoperator with currentCDL Must be able to

complete all backgroundchecks and safety

testing. Benefits includeHealth insurance, paid

holidays, paid vacations,sick leave, life insurance,

ESOP retirement plan.Competitive wages,weekends off, 7AM-

4:30PM Monday-Friday.Please bring resume toBloedorn Lumber 860

Riverside Sheridan Wyoming 82801

Serving Sheridan for over 55 years.

AG PARTS Counter SalesRepresentative in

Sheridan. Find more info@

www.deerequipment.com

PT RN or RespiratoryTherapist to join our

enthusiastic patient careteam. Send cover letter &

resume to Box 140, c/oThe Sheridan Press,

PO Box 2006, Sheridan, WY 82801

LOCAL GENERALCONTRACTOR looking for laborers and experiencedcarpenters. Wages DOE.

Send resumes to PO Box 6812,

Sheridan, WY 82801.

FIRST INTERSTATE BANKhas a position open for a

Credit Analyst. For acomplete job description

& application, please apply on-line at

firstinterstatebank.com

HIRING BARTENDERS atWagon Box Inn. Apply inperson. Please call 683-2444 w/ questions.

EXPERIENCED BOOKKEEPER NEEDED:

Busy local CPA firm has aposition available for a

Bookkeeper. Quickbooks &payroll experience a

MUST. Send resume to:box 194, c/o The Sheridan

Press, PO Box 2006, Sheridan, WY 82801

SHERIDAN COUNTYJustice Office is

accepting resumes for theposition of Drug Court

Probation Officer. Abachelor's degree in

criminal justice or relatedfield field is preferred.

Send resume & references to SCJO

41 W. Whitney Sheridan, WY 82801

LOOKING FOR a F/Thousekeeper for

Candlewood Suites Apply in person at

1709 Sugarland Drive.

Help Wanted

WYOMING DOWNS OffTrack Betting is nowinterviewing for positionsin Cheyenne, Laramie andSheridan. Pari-mutuelexperience preferred, butnot required. Full and parttime positions available.Competitive wages andtraining provided. Pleaseapply online atwww.wydowns.com orcontact Chris Macha at307-752-6039. Drugtesting and backgroundchecks required.

ROCKY MOUNTAINExteriors is hiring

immediately experiencedSiding/Gutter

Installers, top pay DOE.Call 751-6500.

Lost & Found

LOST ACCORDION file caseat Washington Park, earlySept. Contents: old stocks

and envelope withvaluable personal doc'sbering name/SSN. Mega

reward 674-7236

Real Estate

FSBO: PRICED for quicksale. 1341 Dana, 4 bdrm,

1 1/2 bath, tri-level,6600 sq. ft. lot.

$146,000. 674-4138 or752-4288

Autos-Accessories

FOR SALE Ford 5000Diesel Tractor w/ frontend loader & blade. Ford3000 Diesel w/ brushcutter, post hole digger &log splitter 674-7598

PRIME RATE MOTORSInstalls B & W GN Hitches,5th Wheel Hitches, CMFlatbeds, Krogman BailBeds, We're also BuyingVehicles of all ages! Stopby 2305 Coffeen Ave. orCall 674-6677

REMOVAL OF junkvehicles from property forfree 307-620-5860

Garage Sales

BEST OUT West is at itagain! Semi annual indoorgarage sale. Cleaning outthe old to make room for

new Christmas items.Starting Nov. 4Mon-Sat, 9-5

109 N. Main St. 674-5003

DIDYOU

LOSEYOURPET?Call The

Pressat 672-2431

Page 12: MONDAY THE SHERIDAN ON THE WEB: … · 2015-02-07 · Trooper Ben Panas tells The ... the relics within, relics from a family of veterans of war. • World War I Navy uniform Her

B6 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013

Finish this sentence and then write five details

about your home.

The noun mucus means a slimey substance found in

the mouth and nose.

This week’s word:MUCUS

Try to use the word mucus in a sentence today when talking with your friends

and family members.

The snail left a mucus-like trail across

the cabbage leaf.

Are you an eagle-eyed reader? Circle the seven errors in the article below. Then, rewrite it correctly.

Standards Link: Spelling: Spell grade-level words correctly.

While snails are considered destructive pests to almost everyone with a garden, in in they’re natural environment they perform an important function. Snails feed on decaying plants, recycling them and creating nutritious new soil for a knew generation of plant life.

Most snails that destroy our prized petunias come to our gardens as silent, slimey stowaways. Hiding under a leave of a plant sold in garden centers, shiped from other parts of the world, snails arrive and thrive in home gerdens just about everywear.

Are yCirclarticlcorre

Whidestreverin thenvian imSnaiplan

Standards Link: Reading

Comprehension: Read for a variety of purposes.

Circle one snail on this page each

time you read 2 column

inches of the newspaper.

Can you circle all of the snails before the

week is out?

Standards Links: Reading Comprehension: Follow multiple-step written directions

A snail’s eyes are at the end of its long tentacles. The short tentacles are for smelling.

You can make a comfy motel and invite some snails for a visit. Look for snail visitors under rocks and leaves.

Partially fill a large jar with moist soil.

Add a piece of chalk, some leaves, grass, and chunks of bark.

Give the snails lettuce and cabbage leaves to eat.

Keep the jar covered with a piece of nylon stocking or window screen.

Keep the Snail Motel in a shady place.

Twice a week replace the old soil and food.

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

Snails slide along the flat part of their body, called the “foot.” Snails make a trail of silvery slime. This helps them to slide up walls and even crawl upside down.

Snails hatch from eggs as teeny, tiny snails. As they grow, the shell grows, too.

Snails don’t live just in gardens. They can also be found in ponds and even

in the ocean. They are related to oysters, clams and even octopuses. They are part of the group of animals with soft bodies known as mollusks.

Snails breathe through a hole near their shell.

If the weather turns very cold or very dry, a snail pulls into its shell and waits for the cool, damp weather it loves. It fills up the opening of its shell with a mucus-like slime, that hardens into a snug door.

The snail has a latin name that means “a belly-footed

animal.” Use the code to find out what this name is.

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Help this snail find its way to the Snail Motel.

End

How many snails can you find on this page?

Find the words in the puzzle. Then look for each word in this week’s Kid Scoop stories and activities.

Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognized identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.

© 2013 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 29, No. 49

Study the ads in today’s newspaper. Rewrite one to sell snails. Include three opinions and three facts. Use this page to gather snail facts.

Snails for Sale!

ANSWER: Your shadow.

Standards Link: Math: Compute sums and differences.

Draw a circle on a large piece of paper. Draw a small circle inside the large circle. Put two snails or more in the small circle and watch to see which one slides out to the large circle first.

Do the math to see which snail will win the race. Highest number wins!

17 + 6 + 9

28 - 6 + 12

9 + 9 + 9

42 - 11 + 5

Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Understand fact and opinion; Writing Applications: Revise writing; Write brief descriptions.

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SNAILSTENTACLEOCEANWINDOWSLIMECHALKWEATHERSMASHSHELLLETTUCEMOISTTRAILMOTELSCREENCHUNKS

NIE is a national, non-profit service that provides teachers with free local newspapers and materials for use in the classroom. We partner with local businesses and organizations to underwrite the cost of classroom subscriptions. If you teach in a accredited school. K - college, and would like to receive The Sheridan Press in your classroom please send in the form at the right.

Teacher name: _____________________________

School name:_______________________________

Grades taught:___________ Phone:____________

E-mail:_____________________________________

Number of papers wanted

Mon ___ Tues ___ Weds ___ Thurs___ Fri___

Return form to: The Sheridan Press Attn: NIE P.O. Box 2006 Sheridan, Wy 82801

or fax to 672-7950 For more information

call 672-2431

Page 13: MONDAY THE SHERIDAN ON THE WEB: … · 2015-02-07 · Trooper Ben Panas tells The ... the relics within, relics from a family of veterans of war. • World War I Navy uniform Her

OUR VETERANSMONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS C1

THE SHERIDAN PRESS | JUSTIN SHEELY

Nearly 1,000 flags wave in the wind as part of the Field of Honor display in August at the Sheridan College Campus. The flags were purchased in honor of active military members, veterans and first responders. Proceedsfrom the display benefitted the Wounded Warrior Project.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK: WOMEN IN SERVICE

The U.S. military’s first female four-star general will be a grand marshal at New YorkCity’s Veterans Day Parade.

Gen. Ann E. Dunwoody retired last year after a 37-year Army career.Organizers of the parade up Fifth Avenue have renamed it America’s Parade. The com-

memoration will include a wreath-laying ceremony at the Eternal Light Monument inMadison Square Park.

WASHINGTON, D.C.: TUSKEGEE AIRMEN

The District of Columbia will honor two of the original Tuskegee Airmen with theCongressional Gold Medal for Veterans Day.

Washington Mayor Vincent Gray and congressional delegate Eleanor Holmes Nortonwill lay a wreath at the African American Civil War Memorial. A commemoration willfollow for two Tuskegee Airmen who are D.C. residents at the African American CivilWar Museum.

The Tuskegee Airmen were a group of African-American pilots in World War II.

VIRGINIA: ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEMETERY

President Barack Obama plans the annual wreath-laying at Arlington NationalCemetery and will deliver remarks.

Obama said in his Veterans Day proclamation that the country’s obligations to thosewho have served “endure long after the battle ends.” He said their courage, self-sacrificeand devotion represent the American character at its best and he encouraged everyone tohonor every service member who has ever worn the country’s uniforms.

OKLAHOMA: PRISONERS OF WAR

A former prisoner of war will join Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin to dedicate a wall com-memorating Vietnam veterans.

Fallin and Col. Lee Ellis will give speeches Monday at the dedication of the VietnamMemorial Wall at Enid’s Woodring Regional Airport. Ellis was a former Vietnam prisonerof war for more than five years with Sen. John McCain.

The wall is a smaller replica of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington.

Veterans Day: Events, ceremonies around nation

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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS C3C2 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013

Sergeant, ArmyStationed: Fort Brag, North Carolina

Spouse: Desiree

Parents: John and Kathy Barker

A1C, Air ForceStationed: Okinawa, Japan

Parents: Rick and Debbie Bobinchak

Seabee Diver, NavyStationed: Virginia Beach, Virginia

Spouse: Gwen

Parents: Rick and Debbie Bobinchak

Warrant Officer 1, ArmyStationed: Schofield Barracks, Hawaii

Spouse: Kathy

Parents: Steve and Carrie Brantz

SSG, ArmyStationed: South Korea

Parents: Rick and Virginia Coleman

2nd Lieutenant, ArmyArmy Engineer

Stationed: Fort Hood, Texas

Parents: Tim and Rita Geary

Senior Airman, Air Force Stationed: Mountain Home AFB,

Boise, Idaho

Airman, Air ForceFuels Apprentice

Stationed: Ellsworth AFB,

South Dakota

Sergeant, 10th SpecialForces Group, Army

Stationed: Africa

Wife: Kayelyn Butler

SPC, ArmyExplosive Ordnance Disposal Technician

Stationed: Aberdeen Proving Ground, MD

Spouse: Megan

Ensign, NavyStudent Naval Aviator

Stationed: Naval Air Station, Florida

Parents: Mark and Janet Korpela

Master-at-Arms SN, NavyStationed: Navy Operational

Support Center, Montana

Parents: Fred and Karen Schubert

Captain, Air ForceStationed: Eglin AFB, Florida

Corporal, Marines3rd Assault Amphibian Battalion

Ground Radio Repairman

Stationed: Camp Pendleton, California

CW4, ArmyChinook Helicopter Pilot

Stationed: Wheeler Army Airfield, HI

Parents: Gary and Patti Sellenrick

A1C, Air ForceAir Traffic Controller

Stationed: Shaw AFB, South Carolina

A1C, Air ForceStationed: Hulburt Field, Florida

Parents: Toni and Dudley Stookey

1st Lieutenant, ArmyNational Guard

Stationed: Bahrain

Parents: Steve & Shannon Kuzara/Jeff Wilson

ChristopherJ. Bobinchak

MatthewC. Bobinchak

Kenneth BarkerSandra Coleman Scott GearyPatrick Brantz

Michael Husske Brian InmanTaylor Graves

Kegan KorpelaRobin May(Schubert)Andrew Konetzki

Grant Ritterbush Shane SellenrickAmanda E. Patton

Dylan Stookey Chris WilsonCaytlin Steil

Lieutenant Commander,Coast Guard

Stationed: Puerto-Rico

Spouse: Jessica

Second Lieutenant,Air Force

Stationed: Guam

Spouse: Andrew

Aaron J. Mader

Alicia Ferries

Staff Sergeant, ArmyStationed: Fort Bragg, North Carolina

JFK Special Warfare Center

Parents: Jim & Alice Roach

Second Lieutenant,Air Force

Stationed: Guam

Spouse: Alicia

Matthew Roach

Andrew Ferries

Lieutenant, NavyStationed: San Francisco

ROTC Instructor, UCLA Berkeley

William Ferries

We Proudly Salute You!

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C4 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2013