MONDAY November 3, 2014 129th Year, No. 141 Serving Sheridan County, Wyoming Independent and locally owned since 1887 www.thesheridanpress.com www.DestinationSheridan.com 75 Cents Press THE SHERIDAN ON THE WEB: www.thesheridanpress.com PHOTOS, VIDEOS AND BREAKING NEWS UPDATES SHS, Big Horn earn regional titles, B1 Attorneys ask Ernst murderer’s case to be sent back to district court BY HANNAH SHEELY THE SHERIDAN PRESS SHERIDAN — At least one of the three men convicted of murder in the 2009 homeinvasion killing of Sheridan businessman Robert Ernst is set to be re-sentenced in coming months following orders from the Wyoming Supreme Court. Friday, the attorneys for state and defendant filed a motion to remand the case of Dharminder Vir Sen back to 4th Judicial District Court for re-sentencing. The motion to re-sentence Sen was filed even though Sen was already scheduled for oral arguments Dec. 10 in his appeal of his recent re-sentencing that made him eligible for parole after 35 years. The motion to remand stated that Sen and the state believed it was unnecessary to continue the appeal process. Both agreed that Sen should receive a new sentencing hearing that takes into account another recent high court ruling about Wyatt Bear Cloud, one of the other teenagers convicted in the Ernst murder. On Sept. 10, the Wyoming Supreme Court published an opinion in Bear Cloud v. State that said Bear Cloud should have been resentenced after considering his murder, aggravated burglary and conspiracy convictions as a package rather than based just on his murder conviction. Essentially the high court ruled that a juvenile defender should receive an individualized sentencing hearing that will determine the juvenile’s prospects for reform when aggregate sentences result in the functional equivalent of life without parole. The motion to remand said that 4th Judicial District Court Judge John Fenn did not apply individualized sentencing based on prospects for reform to the entire sentencing package for Bear Cloud. Preparing students for the future SHS, FMHS classes help kids research careers, colleges UW professor discusses threat of censorship BY KELLI HEITSTUMAN-TOMKO THE SHERIDAN PRESS BY ALISA BRANTZ THE SHERIDAN PRESS SHERIDAN — College and career readiness is more than just a goal in Sheridan County School District 2, it’s a class. Sheridan High School and Fort Mackenzie High School each offer a course in the cluster of Career and Technical Education that takes their students beyond discussing their next step in life to doing a deep dive of research on the topic. Career Development is an optional class at SHS — though about 75 percent of the student body chooses to enroll — and a mandatory course at FMHS, that expands upon the student portfolio that is required for graduation. By taking the class, students not only have help completing their portfolio but also earn one credit from Sheridan College through the introduction to online learning component, complete a finance unit, get all six of the CTE standards tested and learn skills that SHS teacher Sharon Deutscher and FMHS teacher Kathleen Pilch say will stay with the students for the rest of their lives. One of the most important of these skills, they say, is the ability to research careers and/or colleges before selecting them. Students in the course complete a personality assessment, learning things including their learning style, their interests and what may be a good career for them. Next, they will research careers they are interested in, learning things like the salary range, required training or certification, job longevity and outcome, what tasks are involved and more. “We’re not telling them you’re going to take Careers Class in high school and choose your career for the SEE SENTENCE, PAGE 2 JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS Fort Mackenzie High School junior Bethany Freesene, left, and teacher Kathleen Pilch practice giving a firm handshake during Career Day on Oct. 24 at Fort Mackenzie High School on Highland Avenue. rest of your life, but we’re going to teach you how to explore careers realistically,” Pilch said. “We tell them that it’s a lifelong process. We as adults may still be doing it. As adults, we know if we’re going to change careers we’ll do our research and I think a lot of it is just once you’ve gone through that process, regardless of the career you pick, you can use that process for the rest of your life, because people change jobs and careers often.” “Instead of using the television to make a career choice, they are learning how to go through it and take the right steps to making an informed decision,” Deutscher added. “They say people change their careers seven times. And we don’t just do research on one career. We do research on many different careers.” Once the student has an idea of the career cluster that may be right for them, they begin researching the college component required for that career. However, Deutscher said when they discuss “college” they are not necessarily talking about a fouryear institution. “Not every student is meant to go to college, so we don’t force them to Scan with your smartphone for latest weather, news and sports Fort Mackenzie High School junior Sarah Hartman listens to Staff Sergeant Allen Price during an interview and presentation for Career Day on Friday, Oct. 24, at Fort Mackenzie High School. do just college research,” she said. “I think any type of education is going to better a person. Whether they go straight into the workforce, they’re still going to get some education there because employers have them go get trained. There are those who want to go into the military, but military is just another name for college to me, because you learn. It’s a hands on college.” “I think that’s why we try to use the terminology ‘expect post-secondary education and or training,’ rather than just saying ‘college,’” Pilch added. “I think kids these days need to know to expect to need more after high school and there are a lot of ways to get that.” The Sheridan Press 144 Grinnell Ave. Sheridan, WY 82801 307.672.2431 www.thesheridanpress.com www.DestinationSheridan.com SHERIDAN — Jeffrey Lockwood, professor of natural science and humanities at the University of Wyoming, spoke to a group of more than 120 people about instances of censorship, particularly in the arts, by institutions in which members of the fuel economy are major donors. Lockwood is currently writing a book titled “Behind the Carbon Curtain: The Energy Industry, Political Censorship and Free Speech.” In the book, he details instances where works or displays of art were either removed or canceled due to their anti-fuel industry content. Lockwood cited the removal of Chris Drury’s piece “Carbon Sink” from the UW campus two years ago. The sculpture was a large circle of trees killed by pine beetles spiraling inward to a large pile of coal. It was meant to suggest that coal emissions contributed to climate change and the blight of pine beetles. While the university claimed the sculpture was removed due to water damage, a collection of emails pointed to pressure by the coal industry to remove the piece. The main focus of Lockwood’s talk, though, was the halting of a photographic display meant for a Casper museum six years before the controversy with “Carbon Sink.” “The New Gold Rush: Images of Coalbed Methane” was scheduled to show in the Nicolaysen Art Museum and Discovery Center Sept. 8 to Nov. 5, 2006. The display was comprised of a series of photographs by four different photographers that depicted the methane industry, including before and after aerial photos of the Powder River Basin by Ted Wood. SEE FUTURE, PAGE 2 Today’s edition is published for: Kirstie Auzqui of Sheridan SEE CENSOR, PAGE 2 PEOPLE PAGE SIX ALMANAC 4 SPORTS 6 COMICS 7 CLASSIFIEDS B1 B4 B5 A2 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 U of Wyoming student dies after off-campus fight LARAMIE (AP) — A 21-year-old University of Wyoming student died Saturday following a fight shortly after midnight in an off-campus home, and another student was seriously injured in an unrelated altercation, authorities said. Joseph M. McGowan, 21, of Lander, died after he was taken to the Medical Center of the Rockies after a fight in the home on the 700 block of North 7th Street, Laramie police and the university said in a statement. McGowan was hit when he tried to break up the fight, said police, who added that alcohol was a factor in the fight. Dalton Williams, 20, has been charged with second-degree murder in connection with the incident, police said. “We are shocked and deeply saddened by this tragic event, and offer our thoughts and prayers to Joe’s family and friends,” university President Dick McGinity said in a statement. “The depth of their sorrow is unimaginable. The University of Wyoming community will do whatever we can to ease their burden at this difficult time.” About the same time as the North 7th Street incident, another university student was seriously injured in a fight involving several people in the 1100 block of Flint Street, police said. Others were also hurt. Police are seeking a suspect in the Flint Street incident. He is described as between 5 foot 8 and 5 foot 10 inches tall. CENSOR: Fears self-censorship for artists FROM 1 Holly Turner, the museum director at the time of the cancellation, said she informed the board that she alone chose to cancel the exhibit, but Ben Mitchell, the curator who had planned the exhibit, told Lockwood that the display was canceled under pressure from the donors who made their money through fuel energy. For his talk, Lockwood read from an abridged selection of the first two chapters of his book. Lockwood said that he is concerned about the “atmosphere of fear” that pushes people into self-censorship rather than action for fear of the repercussions. He told his listeners that while his book has not come under direct attack, there have been what he called “passive-aggressive whispers” that some of the UW programs he’s involved with might lose funding if he goes through with its publication. As of his talk, he said the book has more than 700 end notes to keep it from becoming fodder for lawsuits. Lockwood’s book is scheduled to be published in 2016. Lockwood’s presentation was part of the Powder River Basin Resource Council’s annual dinner and auction held Saturday at the Sheridan Holiday Inn. SENTENCE: Cases playing off each other FROM 1 The high court has decided he should have done so. Sen was re-sentenced on his three charges but the ban on life sentences without parole and consideration of prospects for reform was only applied to his murder conviction. When he is re-sentenced, the terms of all three of his convictions will be considered as a package since in aggregate they are the functional equivalent of life without parole. Sen was 15 when he, Bear Cloud and Dennis Poitra Jr. broke into Ernst’s home and shot him. Sen was the triggerman. In September, the high court ordered Fenn to re-sentence Wyatt Bear Cloud after considering his murder, aggravated burgla- ry and conspiracy convictions as a package. Fenn held a status hearing Thursday to determine the re-sentencing date for Bear Cloud, but no specific date was set as of this morning. Fenn had already re-sentenced Bear Cloud in August 2013 on his murder conviction following a 2012 ban by the U.S. Supreme Court on mandatory life sentences for juveniles and a change in Wyoming law in early 2013 that specified juveniles convicted of murder will be eligible for parole after serving 25 years if they don’t commit any other crimes in prison. Following that ruling, Bear Cloud was given life in prison on the murder charge with a chance for parole after 25 years. He, like Sen, was facing about 35 years in prison. FUTURE: Allows kids to explore options FROM 1 But whether the student intends to attend a university or go straight into the workforce, the teachers say both kinds of students are prepared for both kinds of paths. In looking at universities, they go beyond reviewing what they’ve heard to researching what they really need to know. From proximity to home, to true cost of attending and how they will pay for it, to school safety ratings and student reported on-campus “vibe,” the high schoolers look at every aspect of at least three universities. The students study scholarships — different options outside the Hathaway which is discussed in the district’s middle schools — and learn how to ask for money. They even project their success curve were they to attend the school they selected, based on their current study habits and grades. In preparing for the workforce, they practice things like a solid handshake, asking for letters of recommendation and even go through several mock interviews. Deutscher says the class is just the beginning of the learning opportunities as when the self-paced class is over and each student has a unique portfolio representing their skills, interests and research, they can move on to other resources in the school like PACE. The PACE Internship program places students in the community to gain hands on experience in careers. In order to be eligible to apply for the program, students must have a completed portfolio and be in their senior year. There are currently almost 40 students interning and Pilch said this is another way students can learn if their chosen path is right for them or not. Pilch has been the PACE coordinator at SHS and in her first year also working at Fort Mackenzie, the program is now available to FMHS students as well. Deutscher said she is passionate about this class because of her own life experience and knowing she would have benefitted from having this available to her. ‘If I would have had this it would’ve saved me a lot of money because I would have known that my career cluster was nothing in medicine.’ Sharon Deutscher SHS teacher “I went off to college and went into nursing. I spent all this money on the little hat and pumper and stethoscope thing and made it six weeks and I dropped out of the program because I was not meant to be a nurse,” she said. As she learned she did not like blood or surgery, Deutscher reinvested in schooling for archeology, which she ended up dropping as well. After some time as a general studies student, and some pressure from her dad, she landed on business as a major. “If I would have had this it would’ve saved me a lot of money because I would have known that my career cluster was nothing in medicine,” she said. “I’ve always wanted to be a teacher and if I would have taken any of these tests I bet I would’ve seen that was my intent, to be a teacher.” MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS A3 US approved Ferguson no-fly area to keep press out WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. government allowed police in Ferguson, Missouri, to restrict more than 37 square miles of airspace for nearly two weeks in August for safety reasons, but audio recordings show that local authorities instead wanted to keep news helicopters away during violent street protests. On Aug. 12, amid demonstrations following the shooting death of 18-year-old Michael Brown, Federal Aviation Administration managers struggled to redefine an earlier flight ban so police helicopters and commercial flights at nearby Lambert-St. Louis International Airport could fly through the area — but not others. “They finally admitted it really was to keep the media out,” said one FAA manager about the St. Louis County Police Department in a series of recorded tele- phone conversations obtained by The Associated Press. “But they were a little concerned of, obviously, anything else that could be going on.” At another point, a manager at the FAA’s Kansas City center said police “did not care if you ran commercial traffic through this TFR (temporary flight restriction) all day long. They didn’t want media in there.” The conversations contradict claims by the St. Louis County police, which said the restrictions had nothing to do with limiting the press and instead were imposed because of gunshots fired at a police helicopter. But county police officials told the AP recently there was no damage to their helicopter, and they were unable to provide a report on the shooting. On the tapes, an FAA manager described reports of the helicopter shooting as unconfirmed “rumors.” Fall chores The AP obtained the recordings under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act. They raise serious questions about whether police were trying to suppress aerial images of the demonstrations and the police response by violating the constitutional rights of journalists with tacit assistance by federal officials. Such images would have offered an unvarnished view of one of the most serious episodes of civil violence in recent memory. The recordings also offer a rare look into government operations, especially as local public-records requests to Ferguson officials by the AP and other news organizations were denied or met with high processing fees. “Any evidence that a no-fly zone was put in place as a pretext to exclude the media from covering events in Ferguson is extraordinarily troubling and a blatant vio- JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS Wade Frieboth uses a leaf blower to clean his yard Saturday afternoon in Sheridan. WYOMING BRIEFS | Grizzly acclimated to humans put down JACKSON (AP) — Wildlife managers in Wyoming have euthanized a young male grizzly bear that became habituated to humans. The bear had been a favorite of Jackson Hole wildlife photographers for the past two years. Wyoming Game and Fish Department large carnivore supervisor Dan Thompson says people near the small town of Clark, which is north of Cody, had seen the bear in their yards. Thompson says the grizzly had not gotten into trouble in Clark, but was all too comfortable around people and seemed to seek out houses and other structures. Thompson says wildlife managers had twice relocated the bear before in an attempt to keep it away from developed areas. He tells the Jackson Hole News & Guide that all options for keeping the bear alive were exhausted. Snow in southeast Wyoming CHEYENNE (AP) — A winter weather advisory is in effect for southeast Wyoming where snow has caused some slick driving conditions. No roads have been closed, but the Wyoming Department of Transportation advised no unnecessary travel on state highway 210 between Cheyenne and Laramie. Traffic speeds along the Interstate 80 between the two cities was slowed. The National Weather Service says between 3 to 6 inches of snow was possible in the area between Cheyenne and Laramie. Some mountain areas could see up to 10 inches. MN man arrested in WY with 3.6 pounds of marijuana GILLETTE (AP) — A 53year-old Minnesota man was arrested after Wyoming Highway Patrol troopers found 3.6 pounds of marijuana in his rental car during a traffic stop. The Gillette News Record reports officers stopped Timothy J. Otis on Tuesday night for speeding on Interstate 90 about six miles east of Gillette. Charging documents say Otis told a trooper he was headed home to Minnesota and had been driving for 20 hours straight. The officer felt Otis was acting nervously so called for a drug detection unit. Court records say Otis acknowledged having a bag of marijuana in a cooler in the car. Officers also cut open a 4-foot-long, black PVC pipe, where they found another six bundles of marijuana. Otis was charged Wednesday with felony possession of a controlled substance. UW works out agreement with Shanghai college LARAMIE (AP) — The University of Wyoming College of Arts and Sciences has entered into an agreement with China’s Shanghai University on academic study and research for students and faculty. The agreement paves the way to formally promote academic cooperation through UW Departments of Anthropology and History faculty and student exchanges for workshops, symposia and seminars of mutual interest. In addition, there can be short-term agreements to allow exchanges in archaeological field work. UW College of Arts and Sciences Dean Paula Lutz says these kinds of relationships serve to promote international dialogue and understanding. Shanghai University consists of 26 colleges and schools. It has more than 24,000 undergraduates and 11,300 graduate students in 67 majors. 2nd scenic flight firm offers tours of Tetons JACKSON (AP) — A second commercial operation has been permitted to conduct scenic air tours based out of the Jackson Hole Airport in Grand Teton National Park. For years the commercial activity was absent from the airport, but Fly Jackson Hole and now New Flight Charters are authorized to do business. Airport Director Jim Elwood told the airport’s board of directors that he lacks legal authority to prohibit or regulate scenic flights. The Jackson Hole News & Guide reports that aerial tours over almost all of Grand Teton National Park are prohibited. But the flights can take off and land at the Jackson Hole Airport, which is the only commercial airport in a national park. lation of the press’s First Amendment rights,” said Lee Rowland, an American Civil Liberties Union staff attorney specializing in First Amendment issues. FAA Administrator Michael Huerta said in a statement Sunday his agency will always err on the side of safety. “FAA cannot and will never exclusively ban media from covering an event of national significance, and media was never banned from covering the ongoing events in Ferguson in this case.” Huerta also said that, to the best of the FAA’s knowledge, “no media outlets objected to any of the restrictions” during the time they were in effect. An FAA manager, in the recordings, lamented that procedures for defining a nofly area didn’t have an option that would accommodate only excluding news helicopters. A4 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com REPORTS | SHERIDAN FIRE-RESCUE Friday • Rocky Mountain Ambulance assist, 2800 block Coffeen Avenue, 8:03 a.m. Saturday • False alarm, 1500 block Hillcrest Drive, 8:48 a.m. Sunday • RMA assist, 1000 block Florence Avenue, 12:07 a.m. • RMA assist, 1200 block Illinois Street, 5:38 a.m. • RMA assist, 1300 block Woodworth Street, 10:45 a.m. • RMA assist, 900 block Florence Avenue, 2:45 p.m. • RMA assist, 400 block North Jefferson Street, 6:42 p.m. ROCKY MOUNTAIN AMBULANCE Monday • Event standby, 1000 block Long Drive, 8:21 a.m. • Trauma, 100 block Sherri Find us online at thesheridanpress.com. View Drive, 7:37 p.m. • Medical, 1400 block West Fifth Avenue, 9:44 p.m. Tuesday • Medical, 2500 block East 15th Street, 9:35 a.m. • Medical, 1400 block Burton Street, 1:30 p.m. • Trauma, intersection of Gould Street and Mandel Street, 4:16 p.m. • Trauma, intersection of Gould Street and Mandel Street, 4:16 p.m. • Medical, intersection of Fifth Street and Long Drive, 4:38 p.m. • Medical, 2100 block West Sunset Drive, 4:41 p.m. • Medical, 200 block North Main Street, 6:40 p.m. • Medical, 300 block College Meadow Drive, 10:07 p.m. • Law enforcement standby, Dayton Road and Ohlman Road, 10:31 p.m. Wednesday • Medical, 900 block West Brundage Lane, 10:24 a.m. • Medical, 1700 block Parkside Court, 10:44 a.m. • Trauma, Interstate 90, 12:11 p.m. SEE REPORTS, PAGE 7 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 Pace of US factory activity picks up in Oct. WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. factories were busier in October, a sign that manufacturing is on sound footing despite growing concerns about the global economy. Orders, productivity and hiring all grew faster than they did in September, according to a private survey. The Institute for Supply Management, a trade group of purchasing managers, reported Monday that its manufacturing index rebounded to 59 last month from 56.6 in September. Any reading above 50 signals expansion. The result matches a three-year high hit in August and reverses a September drop. “Today’s report suggests that the manufacturing sector is expanding and will likely continue at a healthy pace in the coming quarter,” Bricklin Dwyer, an economist at BNP Paribas, wrote in a research note. Sixteen of 18 manufacturing industries grew last month, and new orders accelerated. Only petroleum and coal reported a decrease in activity. Manufacturing exports grew last month but at a slower pace than they did in September. The “weakening in overseas demand was more than offset by a strengthening in demand at home,” said Paul Dales, senior U.S. economist with Capital Economics. Indeed, the U.S. economy is showing promising strength. The Commerce Department reported last week that the U.S. economy grew at an annual rate of 3.5 percent from July through September. The third-quarter growth was driven by gains in business investment, exports and increased military spending. Employers are adding nearly 227,000 jobs a month this year — on pace to make 2014 the best year for job creation since 1999. The unemployment rate has tumbled to a six-year low 5.9 percent in September from 7.2 percent a year earlier. In a sign of increased confidence in the economy, the Federal Reserve this month ended a bond-buying program intended to push long-term interest rates lower and encourage more spending and borrowing. The Fed still plans to keep short-term rates near zero — where they’ve been since 2008 — for a “considerable time.” PEOPLE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS A5 Archaeological Society presentation to focus on Little Big Horn battle FROM STAFF REPORTS SHERIDAN — The Sheridan-Johnson County chapter of the Wyoming Archaeological Society will meet at 6 p.m. Thursday at the Sheridan Holiday Inn, in the Le Gourmet room. Dinner will be ordered from the menu, however it is not necessary to order dinner to attend the free program. Following dinner, at approximately 7:15 p.m., Little Big Horn Historian Marvin Dawes will present a program on the Little Big Horn battle. Dawes began work in 1998 as a seasonal park ranger at Little Big Horn National Historic Monument. Dawes took courses at Little Big Horn College at Crow Agency, Montana, and worked there as a tour guide coordinator in 1997-98. He has an Associate of Arts degree in liberal arts and an Associate of Arts degree in Crow studies/Native American studies. He currently teaches Crow history and interpersonal commu- Christmas craft bazaar set for Saturday in Story FROM STAFF REPORTS STORY — The Story sorority and Story Elementary School PTO will host a Christmas craft bazaar Saturday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. The event will feature various crafters with hostess gifts, jewelry, stocking stuffers, goodies and more. Lunch will be available beginning at 11 a.m. The bazaar will be held at the Story Woman’s Club, located at 28 N. Piney Road in Story. For more information, contact Joann Marquiss at 680-2451. nication at Little Big Horn College. In addition to being a full-time park ranger at Little Big Horn National Historic Monument, Dawes is the Crow tribal tourism director and an advisor at Little Big Horn College. Reservations are not necessary, and the public is invited to attend. The Holiday Inn is located at 1809 Sugarland Drive. For more information, contact Scott Burgan at 673-5997. SCSD2 to release students early Thurs. for conferences FROM STAFF REPORTS SHERIDAN — Sheridan County School District 2 will hold parent/teacher conferences Thursday and Friday. Students will be released early Thursday and there will be no school on Friday. The following are the early dismissals times: • Kindergarten: 11:25 a.m. • Elementary schools: 12:35 p.m. • Sheridan Junior High School: 1:10 p.m. • Ft. Mackenzie/Wright Place: 1:10 p.m. • Sheridan High School: 1:15 p.m. (ISSN 1074-682X) Published Daily except Sunday and six legal holidays. ©COPYRIGHT 2014 by SHERIDAN NEWSPAPERS, INC. 307-672-2431 144 Grinnell Ave. P.O. Box 2006 Sheridan, Wyoming 82801 Periodicals Postage Paid in Sheridan, Wyoming. Publication #0493-920 SUBSCRIPTION RATES 1 Mo. 3 Mos. 6 Mos. 1 Yr. City Carrier $12.75 $35.25 $67.50 $126.00 Motor Route $14.75 $41.25 $79.50 $150.00 ONLINE RATES 2 Mos. 4 Mos. 6 Mos. 1 Yr. $15.00 $28.00 $39.00 $69.00 County Mail $16.25 $45.75 $88.50 $168.00 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Sheridan Press, P.O. Box 2006, Sheridan, WY 82801. EXECUTIVE STAFF Stephen Woody Publisher Kristen Czaban Managing Editor Phillip Ashley Marketing Director Becky Martini Mark Blumenshine JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS ‘Tis the season of craft bazaars Jeanne Roelfsema folds one of her hand-painted shirts at her booth during the Christmas Bazaar Saturday at the Big Horn Woman’s Club in Big Horn. Fairgrounds to host vintage craft market Saturday FROM STAFF REPORTS SHERIDAN — A vintage craft market will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Sheridan County Fairgrounds on Saturday. The market will feature more than 45 arts and crafts booths, repurposed furniture, home and garden decor, cupcakes and vintage and retro finds. The event is sponsored by Red Shed Redos and will be held in the Exhibit Hall, located at 1753 Victoria St. For more information, contact Terri Walton at 674-6023. Lost Purple Heart returning to NY soldier’s family ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — Just a toddler when her father was killed in Vietnam, Robyn DeCuffa was devastated when his Purple Heart medal disappeared from her Syracuse-area home years ago. “The medal was really all that I did have from my father,” said DeCuffa, a 51-year-old mother of eight from Cortland in central New York. On Tuesday, DeCuffa and her mother will be reunited with Pfc. Thomas McGraw’s Purple Heart, awarded after his death in an ambush in Vietnam on Feb. 1, 1966, while serving in the Army’s 1st Cavalry Division. Sarah Dallas, McGraw’s widow, gave DeCuffa her father’s Army medals and a photo album from his military service when she was 18. Years later, the Purple Heart disappeared while she was living outside Syracuse, where her father grew up. DeCuffa said someone likely stole the medal, but she wouldn’t elaborate. “It was a part of him I could physically hang on to,” she said. “It was devastating when it was missing.” In the early 1990s, Jason Galloway found a Purple Heart on the playground at his suburban Syracuse elementary school. He later handed it in to the front office. Although McGraw’s name was engraved on the back, apparently no effort was made to return it to its owner. When school ended for the year, the medal was given back to Jason, who brought it home. Karen Galloway, Jason’s mother, said the medal mostly sat in a drawer in the kitchen of her family’s home in Liverpool. Every now and then, her husband would search the Internet in an effort to locate McGraw and return the medal, but had no luck finding any information. “We didn’t put tons and tons of effort into it,” she said. Office Manager Production Manager A6 PAGE SIX THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 TODAY IN HISTORY | 10 things to know today FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Your daily look at latebreaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today: 1. FOCUS SHIFTS TO TURNOUT IN LAST HOURS OF CAMPAIGNING The president still looms large over the midterm elections as the GOP and Democrats clash over his legacy. 2. WHO IS PAYING FOR CAMPAIGN ADS In eight of the 12 most competitive races in the midterm elections, outside groups outspent the actual people on the ballots. 3. HOW TERMINALLY-ILL ADVOCATE ENDED HER LIFE Brittany Maynard, a 29year-old brain cancer patient, took lethal drugs prescribed by her doctor after campaigning for months for the expansion of assisted-suicide laws. 4. VIRGIN SPACESHIP’S DESCENT SYSTEM DEPLOYED EARLY The NTSB finding doesn’t fully explain why SpaceShipTwo disintegrated in flight. 5. ISRAEL DENIES ENTRY TO RELEASED 1982 PLANE BOMBER Documents released to the AP show that Washington has been trying to deport the Jordanian-born Palestinian terrorist to the West Bank for over a year. 6. WHERE COPS IN FERGUSON DIDN’T WANT THE MEDIA The federal government restricted more than 37 square miles of airspace for safety, but audio recordings show that local authorities privately acknowledged the purpose was to keep away news helicopters during protests. 7. BRITISH MAN CHARGED WITH KILLING TWO WOMEN IN HONG KONG One of the victims was found dead inside a suitcase on the balcony of the 29 year-old’s upscale apartment in the Asian financial hub. 8. SESAME STREET TURNS 45 TV’s longest-running children’s program has managed to stay on the air by adapting to technology and changes in society—now the Cookie Monster sometimes eats fruits and vegetables. 9. ROBOTIC PENGUIN DESIGNED TO SPY ON REAL ONES It’s pretty darn cute, and so convincing that penguins essentially talk to it, as if it is a potential mate for their chicks. 10. BLINDFOLDED MAN WALKS TIGHTROPE BETWEEN SKYSCRAPERS High-wire artist Nik Wallenda, great-grandson of Karl Wallenda of the famous Flying Wallendas circus family, made the nail-biting walk in Chicago with no harness or net. JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS Picking out goodies Judy Pearson picks up a tray of goodies at the request of her granddaughter Ava VanHallen, 5, during the Christmas Bazaar Saturday at the Big Horn Woman’s Club in Big Horn. LOCAL BRIEFS | FROM STAFF REPORTS BHHS to host fall concert Wednesday BIG HORN — The Big Horn High School band will present a fall concert Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the high school’s auditorium. This year’s concert differs from previous concerts performed by the school band. The Music Technology Ensemble will show the 1931 classic “Dracula,” while performing the film soundtrack live. The BHHS band has composed a soundtrack for the film and will play this music live, using selected electronic tablet apps and smartphone apps as musical instruments. The music will be amplified and playback will be through powered speakers on the stage, coordinated with the dialogue and action found on the film, via the auditorium sound system. BHHS band director Ariel Downing is the project coordinator and will direct the students in the concert. The public is invited to attend this free event. For additional information, contact Downing at BHHS 674-8190. The high school is located at 333 U.S. Highway 335 in Big Horn. Polls open at 7 a.m. Tuesday for general election SHERIDAN — Rebroadcasts of the two-part candidate forum held Oct. 14-15 are now available. Videos of the forum may be found on Charter Cable channel 190, on ACT’s website www.actaccess.tv and on the Sheridan County Chamber of Commerce website, sheridanwyomingchamber.org. Voters will take to the polls between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. Tuesday for the 2014 general election. Contested races include those for statewide offices, local city and town councils and local school boards. Individuals may register at the polls and can vote through absentee ballots through today. For additional information on poll locations or a full list of candidates, see the county election office website at sheridancounty.com/info/eo/overview.php. TUESDAY EVENTS | • 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., Election Day, various polling locations in the county • 5:30 p.m., “Jentel presents,” Sagebrush Community Art Center, 201 E. Fifth St. TIPPED OVER | Ex-Michael Jackson prosecutor Tom Sneddon dies SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) — Tom Sneddon, the former district attorney who sought twice to try Michael Jackson on child molestation charges and was disparaged in one of the pop star’s songs, has died. Sneddon died Saturday at Santa Barbara Cottage Hospital after a battle with cancer, said Patrick McKinley, a retired assistant district attorney for Santa Barbara County. Sneddon was 73. “I don’t think you will find a prosecutor in the district attorney’s office who worked for him who has one bad thing to say about him. He was just a helluva boss,” said McKinley, who worked with Sneddon for more than three decades. “He wasn’t afraid to make a decision,” he said. “He would make a decision and away we’d go.” McKinley said he learned of Sneddon’s death from Sneddon’s wife. News of Sneddon’s death was first reported by the Santa Barbara News-Press. Sneddon investigated Michael Jackson on child sexual abuse allegations in 1993 and again a decade later. The first case fell apart after a young boy’s family accepted a multimillion dollar settlement from Jackson and declined to testify against him. The probe closed with no charges. Jackson shot back in a thinly disguised swipe at the prosecutor in a song called “D.S.” on the “HIStory” album. The song contains the lyrics, “Dom Sheldon is a cold man.” A second set of allegations against Jackson made by a young cancer survivor resulted in a televised trial in 2005 which ended with Jackson being acquitted. Jackson’s defense attorney, Thomas Mesereau Jr., painted Sneddon as an overzealous prosecutor who had a “personal vendetta” against Jackson after the first case fell apart. Sneddon continued to insist that he believed Jackson could be a danger to children and said he would have considered a conviction tragic, considering Jackson’s accomplishments. “If he had been convicted I think that part of it would have been a tragedy — like a Greek tragedy play of a person who obviously can bring great joy and entertainment to the people around the world, (who was) obviously a great entertainer at one point in his career, (who) could end up this way for whatever reason,” he told the Associated Press in an interview after the verdict. Sneddon retired in 2006. Joyce Dudley, Santa Barbara County’s current district attorney, said Sneddon’s expectations of his prosecutors were always clear. Today’s Highlight in History: On Nov. 3, 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson soundly defeated Republican Barry Goldwater to win a White House term in his own right. On this date: In 1852, Emperor Meiji of Japan was born in Kyoto. In 1903, Panama proclaimed its independence from Colombia. In 1911, the Chevrolet Motor Car Co. was founded in Detroit by Louis Chevrolet and William C. Durant. (The company was acquired by General Motors in 1918.) In 1936, President Franklin D. Roosevelt won a landslide election victory over Republican challenger Alfred M. “Alf ” Landon. In 1954, the Japanese monster movie “Godzilla” was released by Toho Co. In 1957, the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 2, the second manmade satellite, into orbit; on board was a dog named Laika who was sacrificed in the experiment. In 1960, the Meredith Willson musical “The Unsinkable Molly Brown” opened on Broadway with Tammy Grimes in the title role. In 1970, Salvador Allende was inaugurated as president of Chile. In 1979, five Communist Workers Party members were killed in a clash with heavily armed Ku Klux Klansmen and neo-Nazis during an anti-Klan protest in Greensboro, North Carolina. In 1986, the Iran-Contra affair began to come to light as Ash-Shiraa, a pro-Syrian Lebanese magazine, first broke the story of U.S. arms sales to Iran. In 1994, Susan Smith of Union, South Carolina, was arrested for drowning her two young sons, Michael and Alex, nine days after claiming the children had been abducted by a black carjacker. Ten years ago: President George W. Bush claimed a reelection mandate a day after more than 62 million Americans chose him over Democrat John Kerry; Kerry conceded defeat in make-orbreak Ohio rather than launch a legal fight reminiscent of the contentious Florida recount of four years earlier. Hamid Karzai was declared the winner of Afghanistan’s first-ever presidential election after a threeweek probe into vote fraud found no grounds to invalidate his triumph. Five years ago: In the 2009 elections, Chris Christie, a Republican former U.S. attorney, unseated New Jersey Democratic Gov. Jon Corzine while in Virginia, Republican Bob McDonnell beat Democrat R. Creigh Deeds. German Chancellor Angela Merkel marked the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall with a speech to the U.S. Congress by exhorting the world to “tear down the walls of today” and reach a deal to combat global warming. Actor-comedian Carl Ballantine (“McHale’s Navy”) died in Los Angeles at age 92. One year ago: President Barack Obama stepped into Virginia’s gubernatorial race, throwing the political weight of the White House behind Democrat Terry McAuliffe, who ended up defeating Republican Ken Cuccinelli. In a double victory for Kenya, Geoffrey Mutai successfully defended his New York City Marathon title and Priscah Jeptoo rallied to win the women’s race amid heightened security after the Boston Marathon bombings. Thought for Today: “Among these things but one thing seems certain — that nothing certain exists, and that nothing is more pitiable or more presumptuous than man.” — Pliny the Elder, Roman scholar. ALMANAC MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 www.thesheridanpress.com REPORTS CONTINUED | • Medical, 1800 block Big Horn Avenue, 1:54 p.m. • Medical, 400 block North Jefferson Street, 3:58 p.m. • Medical, 900 block West Brundage Lane, 4:11 p.m. • Medical, 1500 block Sugarland Drive, 5 p.m. • Medical, 900 block West Brundage Lane, 8:25 p.m. • Trauma, 600 block North Main Street, 11:28 p.m. Thursday • Trauma, 1800 block Big Horn Avenue, 3:44 a.m. • Medical, 1400 block West Fifth Street, 5:21 a.m. • Medical, 100 block West 13th Street, 5:55 a.m. • Medical, 500 block Lewis Street, 11:08 p.m. • Medical, Highway 345, 12:18 p.m. • Medical, 400 block South Brooks Street, 4:48 p.m. • Medical, 900 block West Brundage Lane, 5:45 p.m. Friday • Medical, 1900 block West Loucks Street, 1:10 a.m. • Medical, 1500 block Sugarland Drive, 1:36 a.m. • Medical, 1500 block Sugarland Drive, 1:38 a.m. • Medical, 600 block Mountain Shadows Boulevard, 2:49 a.m. • Medical, 1400 block West Fifth Street, 4:15 a.m. • Medical, 500 block West Loucks Street, 6:06 a.m. • Trauma, 1800 block Big Horn Avenue, 7:33 a.m. • Medical, 2800 block Coffeen Avenue, 8 a.m. • Medical, 1400 block West Fifth Street, 9:10 a.m. • Medical, 900 block West Brundage Lane, 11:17 a.m. • Trauma, 700 block West 15th Street, 11;50 a.m. • Trauma, 1700 block Sagebrush Drive, 12:23 p.m. • Trauma, 300 block Alger Street, 12:40 p.m. • Trauma, 2000 block Sugarland Drive, 2:31 p.m. • Trauma, 2000 block Sugarland Drive, 2:31 p.m. • Trauma, 2000 block Sugarland Drive, 2:33 p.m. • Medical, 1400 block West Fifth Street, 2:51 p.m. • Event Standby, 1000 block Long Drive, 6 p.m. • Trauma, 500 block West Fifth Street, 7:45 p.m. Saturday-Sunday • Reports not available by press time. SHERIDAN MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Sunday • Dismissals — Hayden James Pearce, Ranchester • No admissions reported. SHERIDAN POLICE DEPARTMENT Information in the police reports is taken from the SPD website. Friday • Suspicious vehicle, South Brooks Street, 12:14 a.m. • Suspicious vehicle, West Alger Avenue, 12:21 a.m. • DUI, North Jefferson Street, 12:37 a.m. • VIN inspection, West 12th Street, 12:54 a.m. • Bar check, North Main Street, 1:39 a.m. • Accident, Smith Street, 7:03 a.m. • Civil dispute, Meridian Street, 8:45 a.m. • Agency assist, North Main Street, 9:12 a.m. • Cat trap, South Tschirgi Street, 10:03 a.m. • Warrant service, North Main Street, 10:08 a.m. • Traffic complaint, Coffeen Avenue, 10:59 a.m. • Theft, Sheridan Area, 11:18 a.m. • Dead animal, Mydland Road, 12:15 p.m. • DUI, West Alger Avenue, 12:59 p.m. • VIN inspection, West 12th Street, 1:17 p.m. • Minor in possession, Long Drive, 2:17 p.m. • Accident, Sugarland Drive, 2:21 p.m. • Trespass in progress, Wyoming Avenue, 3:48 p.m. • Accident, Fifth Street, 4:22 p.m. • Accident, Coffeen Avenue, 5:31 p.m. • Traffic complaint, South Brook Street, 7:03 p.m. • Fire, Third Avenue East, 7:54 p.m. • Dog at large, Sumner Street, 7:58 p.m. • Animal found, Olympus Drive, 8:09 p.m. • Accident, Wyoming Avenue, 8:11 p.m. • DUI, Broadway Street, 8:40 p.m. • DUI, Coffeen Avenue, 8:40 p.m. • Suspicious person, Victoria Street, 8:46 p.m. • Damaged property, Park View Court, 8:24 p.m. • Careless driver, Long Drive, 10:06 p.m. • Warrant service, West Third Street, 10:48 p.m. • Criminal entry, Bluebird Lane, 11:01 p.m. • Burglary occupied, Bluebird Lane, 11:02 p.m. • Urinating in public, Broadway Street, 11:16 p.m. • Bar check, North Main Street, 11:43 p.m. Saturday • Bar check, North Main Street, 12:02 a.m. • Bar check, Broadway Street, 12:34 a.m. • Drug activity, Wyoming Avenue, 1:09 a.m. • Court violation, Broadway Street, 1:24 a.m. • Bar check, Broadway Street, 1:47 p.m. • Burglar alarm, Coffeen Avenue, 2 a.m. • Assault in progress, North Main Street, 2:28 a.m. • Drugs/possession, Broadway Street, 2:43 a.m. • Warrant Service, North Main Street, 2:58 a.m. • DUI, Broadway Street, 3:41 a.m. • Warrant service, West 12th Street, 8:19 a.m. • Barking dog, East Burkitt Street, 8:31 a.m. • Shots fired, Highway 14 East, 9:14 a.m. • Theft, Scott Drive, 9:31 a.m. • Dead animal, Dana Avenue, 10:16 a.m. • Animal found, West 12th Street, 10:41 a.m. • Malicious destruction, TUESDAY Broadway Street, 10:47 a.m. • Burglar alarm, South Main Street, 11:29 a.m. • Welfare check, East Brundage Street, 11:36 a.m. • Dog at large, Ponderosa Drive, 12:08 p.m. • Abandoned vehicle, West Burkitt Street, 12:12 p.m. • Lost property, Long Drive, 12:42 p.m. • Animal dead, South Thurmond Street, 1:34 p.m. • Juvenile out of control, Park View Court, 1:44 p.m. • Barking dog, Bruce Mountain Drive, 1:54 p.m. • Warrant service, Mydland Road, 2:38 p.m. • Barking dog, Second Avenue East, 2:39 p.m. • Animal found, Sherman Avenue, 3:27 p.m. • Accident delayed report, Mydland Road, 5 p.m. • Medical, North Main Street, 5:09 p.m. • Fight, North Main Street, 6:04 p.m. • Domestic, Mydland Road, 6:14 p.m. • Accident, North Gould Street, 8:35 p.m. • DUI, Arlington Boulevard, 10:35 p.m. • DUI, North Main Street, 10:39 p.m. • Burglar Alarm, East Brundage Lane, 10:55 p.m. • Damaged property, Coffeen Avenue, 11:19 p.m. • Public intoxication, Sixth Street, 11:55 p.m. Sunday • Reports not available by press time. SHERIDAN COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE Friday • Suspicious circumstances, Banner, 6:24 a.m. • Fraud, Banner, 10:38 a.m. • Animal incident, Owl Creek Road, 11:10 p.m. • Warrant service, Burton Street and Idaho Avenue, 3:06 p.m. • Accident, Beaver Creek Road, 3:44 p.m. • Air gun shooting, Dayton, 7:51 p.m. Saturday • Reckless driver, Red Grade Road, 12:17 a.m. • Shots fired, Highway 14 East, 9:14 a.m. • Civil dispute, Coffeen Avenue, 12:55 p.m. • Shots fired, Banner, 2:28 p.m. • DUI, Interstate 90 Eastbound, 4:40 p.m. • Trespass, Bird Farm Road and Island Road, 5:41 p.m. • Damaged property, Center Road, 9:44 p.m. • Road hazard, Beaver Creek, 9:57 p.m. Sunday • Minor in possession, North Main Street, 1:35 a.m. • DUI, US Highway 87, 2:46 a.m. • Suicidal Subject, North Park Road, 6:49 a.m. • Road hazard, Dayton, 1:10 p.m. • Theft, Lower Prairie Dog Road, 1:36 p.m. • Warrant service, Ranchester, 1:43 p.m. • Court violation, Ranchester, 2:17 p.m. • Battery, Leopard Street, 10:33 THURSDAY WEDNESDAY 22 60 Mostly sunny and breezy 37 56 Almanac Warmer with clouds and sun 27 66 39 58 Temperature High/low .........................................................63/31 Normal high/low ............................................53/25 Record high .............................................77 in 1965 Record low ............................................... -5 in 1995 Precipitation (in inches) Sunday............................................................ 0.00" Month to date................................................. 0.00" Normal month to date .................................... 0.05" Year to date ...................................................12.86" Normal year to date ......................................12.94" The Sun Rise Set Today Tuesday Wednesday 6:48 a.m. 6:50 a.m. 6:51 a.m. 4:54 p.m. 4:53 p.m. 4:51 p.m. The Moon Rise Set Today Tuesday Wednesday 3:12 p.m. 3:45 p.m. 4:21 p.m. 2:52 a.m. 4:04 a.m. 5:15 a.m. Full Last New 9a 10a 11a Noon 1p 2p 3p 4p 5p 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. 0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme SHERIDAN Big Horn 26/55 Basin 24/56 22/60 Nov 6 Nov 14 Nov 22 Nov 29 For more detailed weather information on the Internet, go to: www.thesheridanpress.com Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014 City Billings Casper Cheyenne Cody Evanston Gillette Green River Jackson Call The Press at 672-2431 Winning numbers: 1-3-13-25-38; Powerball 17 Powerplay 2X Estimated jackpot: $178,000,000 Shown are Tuesday's noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Gillette 30/57 Wright 29/55 Kaycee 28/55 Thu. Hi/Lo/W 64/45/pc 61/39/pc 55/33/s 62/42/pc 59/35/s 64/43/pc 58/31/s 53/28/pc City Laramie Newcastle Rawlins Riverton Rock Springs Scottsbluff Sundance Yellowstone Tue. Hi/Lo/W 42/24/c 55/36/pc 44/28/s 53/32/pc 45/31/c 52/31/s 53/36/pc 36/25/c Charter the Sheridan Trolley! Regional Cities Wed. Hi/Lo/W 57/37/s 56/28/s 51/27/s 55/35/pc 51/30/pc 53/34/s 54/27/pc 47/23/pc Having delivery issues? Here are the results of Saturday’s Powerball lottery drawing: Buffalo 31/57 Worland 21/56 Tue. Hi/Lo/W 58/41/c 53/32/s 48/35/s 51/39/c 46/29/pc 57/37/pc 51/29/c 43/31/pc Smoothies Clearmont 27/59 Story 26/55 Thermopolis 23/56 Weather on the Web UV Index tomorrow Cody 31/51 2146 Coffeen Ave. • 673-1100 2590 N. Main • 672-5900 Ranchester 24/60 First Big Horn Mountain Precipitation 24 hours through noon Sunday ...................... 0.00" Shown is Tuesday's weather. Temperatures are tonight's lows and Tuesday's highs. Hardin 29/61 Parkman 25/58 Dayton 25/60 Lovell 25/54 Alec C. Olson, 26, of Sheridan, passed away on Sunday, November 2, 2014, at his residence. Online condolences may be written at www.kanefuneral.com. Kane Funeral Home has been entrusted with arrangements. National Weather for Tuesday, November 4 Broadus 28/60 28 Alec C. Olson JAIL Monday Daily inmate count: 79 Female inmate count: 17 Inmates at treatment facilities (not counted in daily inmate count): 0 Inmates housed at other facilities (not counted in daily inmate count): 3 Number of book-ins for the previous day: 4 Number of releases for the previous day: 2 Number of book-ins for the weekend: 17 Number of releases for the weekend: 9 Highest number of inmates held over the weekend: 79 Mostly cloudy; breezy, cooler Sun and Moon Sheridan County Airport through Sunday ARRESTS Names of individuals arrested for domestic violence or sexual assault will not be released until those individuals have appeared in court. Friday • Kalee Marie Irish, 31, Sheridan, possession controlled substance without valid prescription, circuit court, Arrested by SPD • Tia Marie Wells, 36, Sheridan, warrant (child endangering, felony), possession controlled substance without valid prescription, possession amphetamine/stimulant, circuit court, arrested by SPD • Aileen Danielle Butterfield, 57, Sheridan, DWUI, circuit court, arrested by SPD • Cody Michael Hancock, 23, Sheridan, bench warrant (contempt of court), circuit court, arrested by SCSO • Cory Eugene Mehringer, 29, Sheridan, check fraud over $500, circuit court, arrested by SPD • Cody Wayne Porch, 22, Sheridan, expired registration, bench warrant (contempt of court), municipal court, arrested by SPD Saturday • Shannon Nichole Nesheim, 35, Banner, probation violation/revocation, out of county court, arrested by SPD. • David Lee Cooley, 26, Sheridan DWUI, circuit court, arrested by SPD. • Nichole Kaye Patterson, 20, Parkman, bench warrant (contempt of court), municipal court, arrested by SPD. • Christopher John Bowen, 20, Sheridan, bench warrant (contempt of court), circuit court, arrested by SPD. • Tyler Michael Bennett, 32, (no charge listed), Sheridan, circuit court, arrested by SPD. Sunday • Scott Clayton Mines, 33, Sheridan, warrant (2), criminal entry, circuit court, arrested by SPD. • Taylor Rose Peplinski, 21, Sheridan, DWUI, circuit court, arrested by SCSO. • Matthew Peter Gravestock, 31, Sheridan, compuls auto insurance, DWUI, DWUS, circuit court, arrested by SPD. • Tavonne Lee Dillon, 25, Ranchester, warrant (probation violation, revocation), circuit court, arrested by SCSO. FRIDAY Billings 35/58 Turning cloudy and warmer p.m. • DUI, Ranchester, 10:46 p.m. Regional Weather 5-Day Forecast for Sheridan Clear A7 DEATH NOTICE | From Page 4 TONIGHT THE SHERIDAN PRESS Wed. Hi/Lo/W 45/21/s 51/28/s 49/29/s 56/30/pc 50/30/pc 57/25/s 47/29/s 40/23/pc Thu. Hi/Lo/W 52/32/s 56/36/pc 54/34/s 60/39/pc 56/34/s 59/35/s 55/39/pc 46/25/c Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice. Add a touch of nostalgia to your event! Just $110 an hour (2 hour minimum) gets you and 30 of your friends and family to your destination. Call 672-2485 to reserve your trolley today! A8 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 SPORTS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS B1 Hill sets records, Wyoming routs Fresno State 45-17 FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — Freshman Brian Hill had 281 yards rushing and 106 yards receiving in his first career start and Wyoming got its first road win of the season 45-17 over Fresno State on Saturday night. Hill’s 387 yards from scrimmage set the Mountain West and Wyoming single-game records for all-purpose yards. It was also second-best rushing performance in program history behind Kevin Lowe’s 302 SC men’s basketball tops N. Idaho yards against South Dakota State in 1984. Hill scored on touchdown runs of 32 and 66 yards and capped his night early in the fourth quarter with an 89-yard run that set up the first of Joshua Tapscott’s two touchdown runs. He posted five runs of 20 or more yards. It was Hill’s second-straight game that he eclipsed the 100-yard rushing mark. He is the first freshman running back for UW to post multiple 100-yard performances in the same season since Wynel Seldon, who had three 100-yard efforts in 2005. Colby Kirkegaard was 19 of 28 for 320 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions, and the Cowboys (4-5, 2-3 Mountain West) outgained Fresno State 696-318. The Pokes kept possession of the ball for 13:04 of a possible 15 minutes in the first quarter and 18:22 of a possible 30 minutes in the first half. UW possessed the ball for nearly 37 minutes in the game. The Wyoming defense also had a stellar performance with two interceptions, two sacks and limiting Fresno State to just 149 yards through the air. Redshirt junior cornerback Tyran Finley had two picks, while junior defensive end Eddie Yarbrough had six tackles, one sack and two tackles for loss. Marteze Waller had 18 carries for 116 yards and a touchdown for the Bulldogs (36, 2-3). SHS, Big Horn earn regional titles BY MIKE PRUDEN THE SHERIDAN PRESS SHERIDAN — Matt Hammer questioned his teams’ work ethic after a preseason loss at Rocky Mountain College on Oct. 21, and since then, his team has responded in a positive way. The Sheridan College men’s basketball team opened the regular season with two wins at the Holiday Inn Tournament this weekend, including an 89-85 victory over No. 21 North Idaho on Saturday. The Generals dominated a struggling Great Falls JV team Friday night before facing off against one of the toughest opponents on their schedule in only their second game of the season. Like the ladies playing before them, the men’s team used their size and athleticism to create open shots. The Generals shot 54 percent in the first half, led by the hot hand of sophomore guard Kyi Thomas. Although his coaches weren’t shy to point out that Thomas isn’t typically known for his shooting, the guard definitely had his stroke Saturday. Thomas dropped in 20 points in the first half on eight of 10 shooting. Jamir Andrews added nine first half points as the Generals took a 49-3 lead into halftime. While the Generals held their lead for the entire second half, it was their lack of patience, something that Hammer has stressed as the main problem his team needs to work on, that allowed the Cardinals to chip away at the Sheridan lead and put pressure on the Generals down the stretch. Despite a nine-point lead with less than a minute to go, a Tyler Hopkins foul on a 3-pointer and an and-1 brought the lead down to four. Sheridan found Bennie Lufile for a dunk to stretch the lead to six, but the Cardinals answered with a quick 3-pointer in the corner to cut it back to three with 16 seconds left. “We get a little jittery, we get a little nervous and anxious and start making mistakes,” Hammer said. “Instead of just being solid, we’re out there trying to jump the passing lane or closing out and getting into them, so patience is the biggest thing we’re going to be stressing on offense and defense.” Despite a 63 percent freethrow shooting night by the Generals, Thomas added to his game-high 27 points by going two for two from the line with two seconds left to seal the deal for the Generals. SEE GENERALS, PAGE B2 JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS Jamy Shassetz, left, and Adriane Anderson, center, embrace after the Lady Broncs defeat Cheyenne Central in the class 4A East regional volleyball championship game Saturday at Sheridan High School. Sheridan defeated the Lady Indians in a five-set match. Lady Broncs battle through bracket to take title FROM STAFF REPORTS SHERIDAN — It wasn’t an easy road to get there, but the Sheridan High School girls volleyball team will enter the state tournament this weekend as the No.1 seed out of the East region after defeating Cheyenne Central in the title match Saturday. The Lady Broncs topped Laramie before losing to Campbell County and beating Cheyenne South on Friday. That evening of play earned the Lady Broncs a 10 a.m. matchup against No. 1-ranked Cheyenne East on Saturday. The girls from Sheridan battled through to win in four sets (25-16, 17-25, 25-11, 25-20). That victory propelled the Lady Broncs into the regional championship where they faced No. 2-ranked Cheyenne Central. They battled through five sets (17-25, 19-25, 25-20, 25-18, 19-17) to earn the 4A regional title. Sheridan will kick off the state tournament in Casper on Thursday with a 6 p.m. game against Green River. If they win that matchup, they’ll face the winner of the Natrona County (No. 2 West) versus Cheyenne East (No. 3 East) battle, on Friday at 6 p.m. The 4A state title game will be played at 4 p.m. Saturday. COURTESY PHOTO | The Lady Rams stand for a picture after earning the 2A East regional championship. Pictured, from left, are assistant coach Tina Melin, head coach Leigh McLaughlin, Kristen Carlson, Sydney Atkinson, Mollie Caiola, Lauren Passini, Emily Blaney, Cassidy Enloe, Abby Buckingham, Saije Pollard, Bailey Bard, McKinzie Taylor, Kayla Crouse and Morgan Nance. Lady Rams earn third regional title FROM STAFF REPORTS BIG HORN — Revenge has never tasted so sweet for the Big Horn Lady Rams volleyball team as it did Saturday in Torrington. The Lady Rams faced Wright in the 2A regional championship, earning a victory in four sets (25-18, 26-24, 17-25, 25-19). Wright defeated Big Horn three times in regular season play, but the Lady Rams won when they needed to, taking the regional title for the third year in a row. SEE LADY RAMS, PAGE B2 B2 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 Brady outplays Manning in Patriots’ 43-21 victory Lady Generals topple No. 18 N. Idaho MIKE PRUDEN | THE SHERIDAN PRESS Sierra Toms draws contact with a defender on her way to the basket Saturday at Sheridan College. Toms led the team in scoring with 22 points in the win against North Idaho. Toms leads team in scoring with 22 exactly what McCarthy thought and made a run in the second half. The Cardinals put the pressure on Sheridan, diminishing the Lady Generals’ numbers to 28 percent from the field with zero 3-pointers. North Idaho also attacked the basket more in the second half, upping their free-throw attempts from seven in the BY MIKE PRUDEN first half to 22 in the second. THE SHERIDAN PRESS Although the Cardinals outscored the Lady Generals 44-29 in the second half, it SHERIDAN — The size and depth of the wasn’t enough to surmount the massive Sheridan College women’s basketball team first-half lead Sheridan had built itself, and was too much for 18th-ranked North Idaho the Lady Generals came out on top, 81-71. to handle on Saturday, allowing the Lady It was the Sheridan post players that sepGenerals to dominate the floor on their way arated McCarthy’s team from their oppoto a clean sweep at the Holiday Inn nent. As North Idaho pressured the smaller Tournament. Sheridan guards, Katie Kuhn and Sarah After coasting to a win against Great Rawlings, the Lady Generals were able to Falls Friday, Sheridan faced a North Idaho use their size and athleticism to counter team just three years removed from a the Cardinals pressure and outrebound national title in Saturday’s matchup. But them 54-31. the Lady Generals looked like the ranked Tiana Hanson, a 6-foot-1 forward, spent team Saturday night. much of her night relieving Kuhn and Frank McCarthy’s squad came out firing Rawlings of the pressure, using her diverse on all cylinders, running the floor and skillset to bring the ball up the floor using their size to outwork the Cardinals. The Lady Generals shot 52-percent from the against her less-nimble defenders. Hanson also used her length and athleticism to run field in the first half, including six of 11 the floor and corral offensive rebounds, from 3-point range. Defensively, they held eight of them, on her way to 20 points and the Cardinals to 31 percent and 13 percent 17 rebounds. She also got to the line 15 from the 3-point line. Sheridan also got to times, knocking down 12 of them. the free-throw line 20 times on their way to Sierra Toms kept up with her team-leada 52-27 halftime lead. ing pace from a season ago, scoring 22 “We wanted to protect our home court,” points while chipping in 10 rebounds. McCarthy said of the fast start. “We came out aggressive. We weren’t intimidated, but Freshman Tamara Brine, who led the Lady Generals with 22 points in Friday’s win, the scary thing is, we knew they were added 15 on Saturday, and Shae Bruursema going to make a run.” scored 10. North Idaho wasn’t ranked in the presea“As long as I’ve been here, we’ve played son top-25 for nothing, though, and they did them every year, that’s the first time we’ve ever beat them,” McCarthy said of North Idaho. “It’s a solid Basketball season is right around the corner. Compete and have fun with a team, good program, well reenergized league this year. Some new features this year include: stat keeping, coached, so it was a great an established website for league leaders, individual and team awards, and more. win for us.” Registrations: October 20th - November 7th The Lady Generals (2-0) How: Sign up online at www.sheridanrecreation.com or sign up in person will travel to Colorado at 1579 Thorne Rider Park Springs, Colorado, to comCost: $540 Where: Games will be played at Sheridan Jr. High Old Gym pete in the Air Force Classic Games: Games will begin November 18th beginning Thursday. 2014 Adult Basketball League FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) — The reviews came quickly and unanimously. “Brady’s Better!” the crowd chanted midway through the fourth quarter. “I stunk,” Peyton Manning said minutes after struggling through the 16th meeting between two of the greatest quarterbacks in NFL history. All that was true Sunday in the meeting between the AFC’s two top teams. Tom Brady outplayed Manning and the New England Patriots won 43-21 for their fifth straight victory, ending the Denver Broncos’ winning streak at four. The lopsided loss by the favored Broncos was a surprise. Another Brady victory over Manning in Foxborough wasn’t. Manning is 0-4 at New England over the past five seasons. The Patriots have won their past 14 home games, the longest current streak in the NFL, and 34 in a row over AFC teams. “The crowd didn’t play,” Broncos defensive tackle Terrance Knighton said. “It is 11-on-11 and their 11 played better.” Make that 22. The Patriots (7-2) were better on offense, especially when converting on third and fourth downs. And they were better on defense, holding the Broncos (6-2) to their second lowest points total of the season. “We knew if we executed well how the game would turn out, so we weren’t surprised,” New England defensive tackle Vince Wilfork said. “It wasn’t about Peyton Manning and the Denver Broncos. It was about making sure we knew what we’re doing.” Brady threw for 333 yards, four touchdowns and his first interception in five games. Manning piled up 438 yards passing, most after the Broncos trailed 27-7 at halftime, with two touchdown passes and two interceptions. “The quarterback stinks, usually you’re not going to win many games,” Manning said. “I don’t make any excuses.” ‘Incredible. That was one of the best catches I’ve ever seen.’ Tom Brady Patriots quarterback Brady is 11-5 against Manning with one of those losses coming last season in the AFC title game. “He has always set a real high bar for how to play and I have tried to do the same through my efforts with my team,” Brady said about Manning. “The only thing I really care about is the respect from my team, going out there and trying to earn it. “ Some more highlights of the Patriots’ victory: THE OTHER MATCHUP: Just as Brady outplayed Manning, New England’s Rob Gronkowski beat Denver’s Julius Thomas in a matchup of two of the NFL’s best tight ends. Gronkowski had nine catches for 105 yards and a 1-yard touchdown, while Thomas finished with two receptions for 33 yards, with an 18-yard score. Gronkowski made a spectacular onehanded grab early in the fourth quarter and was tackled at the 1. “Incredible,” Brady said. “That was one of the best catches I’ve ever seen.” Thomas’ touchdown cut the lead to 27-14 early in the third quarter before the Patriots scored 10 points in a 17-second span on Stephen Gostkowski’s 45yard field goal and Brady’s 10-yard scoring pass to Brandon LaFell. Semifinal matchups set for Big Horn, Sheridan teams FROM STAFF REPORTS SHERIDAN — The matchups are set for the Wyoming high school football semifinals. The Sheridan Broncs, who beat Cheyenne Central in the opening round, will have a rematch against No.1 Natrona this Saturday starting at 1 p.m. at Natrona County High School. Natrona beat the Broncs 24-0 in their regular season matchup. The Big Horn Rams, the 1-seed in the 2A East, will host a semifinal rematch with Wheatland this Saturday at 2 p.m. The Rams defeated Wheatland 19-6 just two weeks ago to finish the regular season undefeated. The winners of both games earn trips to Laramie for the State Championship next week. Lady Eagles end season at regionals FROM STAFF REPORTS DAYTON — The Tongue River High School girls volleyball team wrappedup the 2014 season at the 2A regional tournament Saturday. In the team’s final game of the season, the Lady Eagles fell to Southeast, the team that went on to take third place in the tournament. The Lady Eagles battled through three sets (25-18, 26-24, 25-12). Manager’s Meeting: Thursday October 30th, 6 PM at Sheridan Jr. High School If you attend the manager’s meeting your team will be rewarded a $20 discount towards your team’s fees this year. Individuals wishing to play this year but might not have a team is also encouraged to come so that we can place you with a team. Contact Robbie Spencer at the Sheridan Recreation District office at 674-6421 for more information. LADY RAMS: Heading to state tournament this week FROM B1 “We did our homework, and we came out prepared to handle all that Wright had to offer,” Big Horn coach Leigh McLaughlin said. “We came out mentally prepared as a team and went after each and every point as if it were our last.” McLaughlin added that her team lost some mental focus in the third game, but fought hard to hold Wright at 24 points while they racked up eight. In game four, she said her team went point for point with Wright, but gained momentum as the game continued. “The consistency of our team attitude, and the consistency of our skills is what carried us through this match,” McLaughline said. She added that Kayla Crouse, Morgan Nance and Saije Pollard led the team with crucial blocking, while Bailey Bard led the team with kills including the match-ending no-touch kill. McLaughlin added that McKinzie Taylor did a great job getting the ball to her hitters, while the passers Lauren Passini, Emily Blaney and Cassidy Enloe did a tremendous job getting the ball to the setter to set up the offense. “It was an overall whole team effort and I am extremely proud of everyone including those who were on the bench cheering for their team — Mollie Caiola, Sydney Atkinson, Kristen Carlson and Abby Buckinham,” McLaughlin said. “We are peaking at the right time which is exactly what we want to see.” The Lady Rams will enter the state tournament as the No. 1-ranked team from the East. They will take on Wind River at 6 p.m. Thursday at the Casper Events Center. The championship game for 2A volleyball will be played at 4 p.m. Saturday. GENERALS: Coach urges team not to be satisfied FROM B1 “Anybody out there that’s got any tips,” Hammer joked about his team’s free-throw shooting woes. “We’ve just got to step up and knock it down.” To go along with Thomas’s 27, Andrews contributed 21, Lufile added 14 and Pablo Rivas chipped in 11. The Sheridan Generals won’t have much time to rest as they turn right around and play Tuesday night against LCCC at the Golden Dome at 7:30 p.m. “We can’t be satisfied,” Hammer said. “Starting the year 2-0, that’s great; beating a team that’s as talented as North Idaho is great; but we can’t be satisfied. We’ve got to keep wanting more.” MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS B3 SCOREBOARD | YOUNG GUNS WRESTLING | 2014 Loren Jackson Memorial Twin Spruce Jr. High School - Gillette 7th and 8th Grade 76-79 Round 1 - Reese Osborne (Sheridan JH) won by fall over Charlie Koss (Douglas MS) (Fall 1:47) Round 2 - Osborne won by fall over Trent Pennington (Twin Spruce) (Fall 1:01) Round 3 - Osborne won by fall over Reid Holmes (Newcastle MS) (Fall 2:51) 7th and 8th Grade 84-87 Round 1 - Garrett Avery (Sheridan JH) won by fall over Nyjah Lawrence (Sage Valley) (Fall 1:35) Round 2 - Preston Seamands (Wright JH) won by decision over Avery (Dec 2-1) Round 3 - Avery won by decision over Devon Swisher (Douglas MS) (Dec 3-2) 7th and 8th Grade 90-91 Round 1 - Tristan Little (Sheridan JH) won by fall over Liam Greenelsh (Big Horn) (Fall 1:17) Round 2 - Dakota Reinolds (Glenrock) won by fall over Little (Fall 2:30) Round 3 - Little won by fall over Jaron Glasscock (Twin Spruce) (Fall 1:00) 7th and 8th Grade 107-110 Round 1 - Kyle Breen (Tongue River) won by fall over AJ Lawrence (Sage Valley) (Fall 2:46) Round 2 - Ian Nemec (Wright JH) won by fall over Breen (Fall 1:19) Round 3 - Robert Woodward (Sage Valley) won by fall over Breen (Fall 2:41) 7th and 8th Grade 113-115 Round 1 - John Zorbas (Buffalo) won by fall over Lakota Schindler (Sheridan JH) (Fall 1:09) Round 2 - Garrett Strohschein (Wright JH) won by fall over Schindler (Fall 0:20) Round 3 - Pearce Jones (Moorcroft JH) won by fall over Schindler (Fall 1:09) 7th and 8th Grade 145-147 Round 1 - Tristan Scheeler (Sheridan JH) won by fall over Tyler Stempeck (Twin Spruce) (Fall 1:11) Round 2 - Scheeler won by fall over Nash Dierman (Big Horn) (Fall 1:18) Round 3 - Scheeler won by fall over Parker Boultenhouse (Sage Valley) (Fall 0:37) 6th Grade 68-69 Round 1 - Gabe Bland (Sheridan JH) won by fall over Zack Torrez (Sage Valley) (Fall 1:08) Round 2 - Bland won by fall over Dalton Lason (Niobrara County) (Fall 0:25) Round 3 - Bland won by fall over Kacy Jones (Newcastle MS) (Fall 0:53) 6th Grade 88-90 Round 1 - Devin Carr (Douglas MS) won by decision over Oliver Bartel (Sheridan JH) (Dec 6-5) Round 2 - Bartel won by fall over Paden Hulet (Buffalo) (Fall 3:16) Round 3 - Bartel won by fall over Lane Gill (Sundance JH) (Fall 3:13) 6th Grade 90-93 Round 1 - Hunter Goodwin (Sheridan JH) won by fall over Hunter Stone (Buffalo) (Fall 1:10) Round 2 - Goodwin won by fall over Dustin Simmons (Glenrock) (Fall 0:22) Round 3 - Goodwin won by fall over Max Kessler (Buffalo) (Fall 0:52) 6th Grade 92-93 Round 1 - Hayden Crow (Sheridan JH) won by fall over Olie Wagner (Buffalo) (Fall 0:56) Round 2 - Crow won by fall over Gavin Gates (Glenrock) (Fall 0:41) Round 3 - Crow won by fall over Calvin Rule (Buffalo) (Fall 0:44) 6th Grade 95-98 Round 1 - Isaiah Huus (Sage Valley) won by fall over Caleb Johnston (Sheridan JH) (Fall 0:39) Round 2 - Lane Rainy (Glenrock) won by fall over Johnston (Fall 1:07) Round 3 - John Wonka (Buffalo) won by decision over Johnston (Dec 9-5) WSWL-Saints Throwdown Jefferson High School - Edgewater, Colorado 6 & Under NOVICE 60 Round 1 - Anthony Rodriquez (Sheridan) won by fall over Jordan Lopez (JR. TROJANS) (Fall 0:39) Round 3 - Rodriquez won by fall over Edward Gonzales (JEFFERSON) (Fall 0:13) Round 4 - Rodriquez won by decision over Javon Harms (JEFFERSON) (Dec 5-0) Round 5 - Rodriquez won by decision over Archer Sanchez (Chaparral Youth Wrestling Club) (Dec 50) PREP FOOTBALL | Saturday's Scores The Associated Press Lusk 55, Riverside 0 Friday's Scores FOOTBALL State Playoffs Class 4A Quarterfinal Campbell County 48, Laramie 3 Casper Natrona 55, Evanston 12 Cheyenne East 57, Casper Kelly Walsh 27 Sheridan 28, Cheyenne Central 7 Class 3A Quarterfinal Cody 61, Rawlins 6 Douglas 38, Star Valley 13 Riverton 42, Powell 26 Torrington 41, Jackson Hole 14 Class 2A Quarterfinal Big Horn 23, Lovell 12 Mountain View 60, Thermopolis 0 Newcastle 38, Greybull 14 Wheatland 52, Lyman 6 Class 1A 11 Man Quarterfinal Cokeville 55, Tongue River 0 Lingle-Fort Laramie 28, Shoshoni 0 Upton 48, Rocky Mountain 14 Class 1A 6-Man Quarterfinal Dubois 74, Midwest 14 Guernsey-Sunrise 65, Farson-Eden 8 Little Snake River 57, Hanna-Elk Mountain 34 Meeteetse 45, Kaycee 20 NFL | National Football League The Associated Press All Times EST AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF New England 7 2 0 .778 281 Buffalo 5 3 0 .625 178 Miami 5 3 0 .625 211 N.Y. Jets 1 8 0 .111 154 South W L T Pct PF Indianapolis 5 3 0 .625 250 Houston 4 5 0 .444 206 Tennessee 2 6 0 .250 137 Jacksonville 1 8 0 .111 141 North W L T Pct PF Cincinnati 5 2 1 .688 194 Pittsburgh 6 3 0 .667 248 Cleveland 5 3 0 .625 185 Baltimore 5 4 0 .556 240 West W L T Pct PF Denver 6 2 0 .750 245 Kansas City 5 3 0 .625 200 San Diego 5 4 0 .556 205 Oakland 0 8 0 .000 129 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF Philadelphia 6 2 0 .750 234 Dallas 6 3 0 .667 230 N.Y. Giants 3 4 0 .429 154 Washington 3 6 0 .333 197 South W L T Pct PF New Orleans 4 4 0 .500 227 3 5 1 .389 177 Carolina Atlanta 2 6 0 .250 192 Tampa Bay 1 7 0 .125 150 North W L T Pct PF Detroit 6 2 0 .750 162 Green Bay 5 3 0 .625 222 Minnesota 4 5 0 .444 168 Chicago 3 5 0 .375 180 West W L T Pct PF Arizona 7 1 0 .875 192 Seattle 5 3 0 .625 202 San Francisco 4 4 0 .500 168 St. Louis 3 5 0 .375 149 ___ Thursday’s Game New Orleans 28, Carolina 10 Sunday’s Games Arizona 28, Dallas 17 Philadelphia 31, Houston 21 Kansas City 24, N.Y. Jets 10 Minnesota 29, Washington 26 Cleveland 22, Tampa Bay 17 Cincinnati 33, Jacksonville 23 Miami 37, San Diego 0 St. Louis 13, San Francisco 10 Seattle 30, Oakland 24 New England 43, Denver 21 Pittsburgh 43, Baltimore 23 Open: Atlanta, Buffalo, Chicago, Detroit, Green Bay, Tennessee Monday’s Game Indianapolis at N.Y. Giants, 8:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 6 Cleveland at Cincinnati, 8:25 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 9 San Francisco at New Orleans, 1 p.m. Kansas City at Buffalo, 1 p.m. Miami at Detroit, 1 p.m. Tennessee at Baltimore, 1 p.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m. Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m. Dallas vs. Jacksonville at London, 1 p.m. Denver at Oakland, 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Seattle, 4:25 p.m. St. Louis at Arizona, 4:25 p.m. Chicago at Green Bay, 8:30 p.m. Open: Houston, Indianapolis, Minnesota, New England, San Diego, Washington Monday, Nov. 10 Carolina at Philadelphia, 8:30 p.m. NCAA FOOTBALL | Saturday’s College Football Scores The Associated Press EAST Air Force 23, Army 6 Albright 36, Wilkes 35, OT Alderson-Broaddus 62, Va. Lynchburg 21 Alfred 23, Salisbury 21 American International 24, Merrimack 21 Amherst 7, Trinity (Conn.) 6 Bates 10, Bowdoin 7 Bethany (WV) 34, Grove City 9 Bloomsburg 34, East Stroudsburg 13 Bowie St. 28, Lincoln (Pa.) 14 Brown 21, Penn 13 Bryant 31, CCSU 3 Bucknell 27, Lafayette 24, OT California (Pa.) at Gannon, ccd. Castleton 30, SUNY Maritime 24 Charleston (WV) 42, West Liberty 13 Charleston Southern 27, Monmouth (NJ) 0 College of NJ 20, Kean 10 Curry 7, W. New England 0, OT Delaware 28, Rhode Island 13 Delaware Valley 24, King’s (Pa.) 21 Duke 51, Pittsburgh 48, 2OT Fordham 37, Colgate 13 Framingham St. 45, Mass. Maritime 0 Franklin & Marshall 13, Susquehanna 8 Frostburg St. 35, Hartwick 21 Harvard 23, Dartmouth 12 Husson 42, Anna Maria 20 Indiana (Pa.) 31, Clarion 0 Ithaca 24, Brockport 14 Johns Hopkins 42, Ursinus 14 Juniata 56, McDaniel 31 Kutztown 17, Lock Haven 0 LIU Post 28, S. Connecticut 3 Lebanon Valley 63, FDU-Florham 21 Lehigh 27, Georgetown 19 Lycoming 28, Misericordia 14 MIT 34, Endicott 29 Marist 17, Jacksonville 16 Maryland 20, Penn St. 19 Mercyhurst 49, Seton Hill 32 Middlebury 37, Hamilton 9 Montclair St. 30, Cortland St. 20 Moravian 34, Gettysburg 14 Morrisville St. 38, William Paterson 14 Mount Ida 22, Becker 0 Muhlenberg 34, Dickinson 20 NC State 24, Syracuse 17 New Hampshire 49, Albany (NY) 24 New Haven 40, Pace 0 Norwich 19, Gallaudet 9 Notre Dame 49, Navy 39 Princeton 38, Cornell 27 Rowan 25, S. Virginia 6 Sacred Heart 23, Wagner 7 Salve Regina 21, Maine Maritime 19 Shepherd 37, Glenville St. 14 Shippensburg 60, Millersville 16 Slippery Rock 29, Edinboro 7 St. Francis (Pa.) 26, Duquesne 16 St. John Fisher 35, Buffalo St. 25 St. Lawrence 20, WPI 7 Stonehill 23, St. Anselm 16 TCU 31, West Virginia 30 Temple 20, East Carolina 10 Thiel 40, Carnegie-Mellon 27 Thomas More 21, Waynesburg 14 Towson 21, Elon 19 Tufts 28, Colby 7 UConn 37, UCF 29 W. Connecticut 30, Mass.-Dartmouth 14 WV Wesleyan 34, Fairmont St. 13 Washington & Jefferson 51, Geneva 12 Wesleyan (Conn.) 22, Williams 0 West Chester 58, Cheyney 0 Westfield St. 28, Fitchburg St. 14 Westminster (Pa.) 28, St. Vincent 14 Widener 34, Stevenson 23 Wisconsin 37, Rutgers 0 Worcester St. 36, Plymouth St. 3 Yale 25, Columbia 7 SOUTH Alabama A&M 25, Jackson St. 14 Albany St. (Ga.) 40, Benedict 14 Appalachian St. 44, Georgia St. 0 Auburn 35, Mississippi 31 Ave Maria 30, Edward Waters 7 Averett 31, Methodist 21 BYU 27, Middle Tennessee 7 Bethel (Tenn.) 49, Cumberland (Tenn.) 14 Bethune-Cookman 34, NC Central 20 Boston College 33, Virginia Tech 31 Bridgewater (Va.) 34, Hampden-Sydney 9 Campbellsville 58, Cumberlands 12 Chattanooga 51, W. Carolina 0 Christopher Newport 45, LaGrange 26 Clark Atlanta 34, Paine 0 Coastal Carolina 38, Gardner-Webb 14 Concord 30, Virginia-Wise 13 Delta St. 33, North Alabama 28 E. Illinois 41, Tennessee Tech 10 E. Kentucky 56, Tennessee St. 42 Emory & Henry 36, Washington & Lee 9 Faulkner 55, Belhaven 14 Fayetteville St. 31, Livingstone 28 Florida 38, Georgia 20 Florida Tech 34, Shorter 30 Georgetown (Ky.) 37, Bluefield South 20 Georgia Tech 35, Virginia 10 Greensboro 19, Ferrum 17 Guilford 42, Catholic 21 Houston 27, South Florida 3 Howard 17, Delaware St. 10 Incarnate Word 38, Nicholls St. 20<Jacksonville St. 56, Austin Peay 0 James Madison 31, William & Mary 24 Johnson C. Smith 14, St. Augustine’s 10 Kentucky St. 47, Lane 14 Kentucky Wesleyan 43, Limestone 41 Lenoir-Rhyne 35, Carson-Newman 32 Liberty 28, Presbyterian 7 Lindsey Wilson 49, Union (Ky.) 10 Louisiana Tech 59, W. Kentucky 10 Louisiana-Lafayette 19, South Alabama 9 Maryville (Tenn.) 42, NC Wesleyan 28 McNeese St. 35, Northwestern St. 28 Floor battle JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS Sheridan General Abednego Lufile looks for a pass during Saturday’s game against North Idaho College at the Sheridan College Golden Dome. Miami 47, North Carolina 20 Miles 26, Stillman 22 Mississippi St. 17, Arkansas 10 Morehouse 24, Fort Valley St. 21 Morgan St. 38, Hampton 35 Newberry 34, Brevard 14 Norfolk St. 12, Florida A&M 10 North Greenville 24, Wingate 14 Pikeville 28, Kentucky Christian 17 Randolph-Macon 47, Shenandoah 23 Rhodes 20, Birmingham-Southern 10 Rice 31, FIU 17 Richmond 10, Villanova 9 SC State 59, Savannah St. 7 Samford 55, Concordia-Selma 0 Southern U. 28, Alabama St. 21 Stetson 28, Campbell 24 Tennessee 45, South Carolina 42, OT The Citadel 28, Mercer 26 Tusculum 20, UNC-Pembroke 17, OT UAB 31, FAU 28 UT-Martin 62, Murray St. 38 VMI 31, Furman 15 Valdosta St. 24, West Alabama 17 Vanderbilt 42, Old Dominion 28 Virginia St. 40, Chowan 7 Virginia Union 14, Elizabeth City St. 7 Webber 28, Southeastern (Fla.) 21 Wesley 62, College of Faith 0 West Georgia 55, Mississippi College 14 Winston-Salem 61, Shaw 10 MIDWEST Adrian 27, Hope 19 Albion 30, Olivet 28 Ashland 37, Grand Valley St. 14 Augustana (Ill.) 26, North Park 20 Augustana (SD) 33, Winona St. 8 Baldwin-Wallace 48, Capital 14 Benedictine (Ill.) 33, Concordia (Wis.) 6 Benedictine (Kan.) 35, Avila 14 Bethel (Minn.) 30, Gustavus 23 Briar Cliff 27, Midland 21 Butler 62, Morehead St. 52 Carthage 28, Millikin 22 Cent. Methodist 34, Evangel 10 Cent. Michigan 38, E. Michigan 7 Cent. Missouri 48, Lindenwood (Mo.) 28 Central 17, Simpson (Iowa) 0 Coe 35, Luther 14 Concordia (Ill.) 14, Aurora 13 Concordia (St.P.) 38, SW Minnesota St. 20 Cornell (Iowa) 31, Lake Forest 3 Crown (Minn.) 31, Martin Luther 13 Culver-Stockton 38, Baker 24 Dakota St. 51, Waldorf 41 Dayton 42, Valparaiso 19 DePauw 42, Wooster 13 Defiance 48, Anderson (Ind.) 7 Denison 34, Oberlin 7 Dickinson St. 42, Presentation 35 Doane 33, Dordt 7 Dubuque 34, Loras 7 Ferris St. 66, Lake Erie 56 Fort Hays St. 24, Nebraska-Kearney 17 Greenville 42, Westminster (Mo.) 14 Hamline 23, St. Olaf 17 Hanover 49, Earlham 34 Heidelberg 53, Wilmington (Ohio) 10 Hillsdale 24, Saginaw Valley St. 17 Illinois College 57, Knox 14 Indiana St. 20, Missouri St. 18 Indianapolis 36, St. Joseph’s (Ind.) 33 Iowa 48, Northwestern 7 Iowa Wesleyan 36, Eureka 28 John Carroll 62, Muskingum 14 Kansas St. 48, Oklahoma St. 14 Kenyon 35, Allegheny 24 Lakeland 20, Alma 17 Macalester 34, Carroll (Wis.) 17 Marian (Ind.) 55, Taylor 14 McKendree 41, William Jewell 20 Michigan 34, Indiana 10 Michigan Tech 37, Tiffin 17 Mid-Am Nazarene 40, Peru St. 0 Minn. Duluth 77, Minn.-Crookston 3 Minn. St.-Mankato 27, Sioux Falls 14 Minn. St.-Moorhead 52, Minot St. 7 Missouri 20, Kentucky 10 Missouri Baptist 34, Haskell Indian Nations 10 Missouri Valley 47, Graceland (Iowa) 16 Monmouth (Ill.) 38, Grinnell 3 Morningside 44, Concordia (Neb.) 21 Mount St. Joseph 33, Bluffton 24 Mount Union 66, Otterbein 7 N. Dakota St. 37, S. Dakota St. 17 N. Iowa 42, Illinois St. 28 NW Missouri St. 40, Missouri Western 3 Nebraska 35, Purdue 14 Nebraska Wesleyan 24, Dakota Wesleyan 7 North Central (Ill.) 45, Illinois Wesleyan 24 Northern St. (SD) 42, Mary 33 Northwestern (Iowa) 21, Hastings 7 Northwestern (Minn.) 49, Mac Murray 13 Notre Dame Coll. 41, W. Virginia St. 10 Ohio Dominican 49, Northwood (Mich.) 21 Ohio Northern 23, Marietta 14 Ohio St. 55, Illinois 14 Oklahoma 59, Iowa St. 14 Ottawa, Kan. 48, Kansas Wesleyan 20 Pittsburg St. 41, Missouri Southern 10 Quincy 20, Missouri S&T 13 Ripon 35, Beloit 28 Robert Morris-Chicago 37, Lindenwood (Ill.) 7 Rose-Hulman 38, Manchester 37 San Diego 17, Drake 14 Siena Heights 19, St. Francis (Ill.) 14 St. Cloud St. 30, Bemidji St. 27 St. Francis (Ind.) 30, Concordia (Mich.) 14 St. John’s (Minn.) 24, Augsburg 7 St. Mary (Kan.) 15, Southwestern (Kan.) 13 St. Norbert 42, Lawrence 0 St. Scholastica 40, Minn.-Morris 2 LaBarbera helps Ducks to 3-2 win over Avalanche DENVER (AP) — One moment, Jason LaBarbera was heading to a Halloween party with his minor-league teammates. Two hours of sleep and two long flights later, he was in Denver to serve as a backup for the Anaheim Ducks. And then, just before the opening faceoff, he was told he would be starting in net — his first NHL game since last December. The emergency goalie came to the rescue, too, stopping 16 shots as the Ducks beat the Colorado Avalanche 3-2 on Sunday night. This wasn’t exactly what LaBarbera was envisioning even 12 hours earlier. “All of it is kind of goofy,” LaBarbera said. “I’ve been around a lot, but I’ve never had to deal with something like this.” LaBarbera made an unexpected start after he arrived earlier Sunday from Norfolk of the AHL. He was supposed to be the backup in place of Frederik Andersen, who was scratched due to leg tightness. He got the start when John Gibson sustained a lower-body injury in warmups. Things got so crazy that goaltending consultant Dwayne Roloson even dressed, and was the backup in case something happened to LaBarbera. No need to worry, though. LaBarbera was on his game, even if he allowed a fluky goal early. That was just nerves. LaBarbera showed no signs of fatigue, even if he was playing for a third straight night. He made 36 saves and earned two wins for Norfolk over the weekend. He carried that momentum to Sunday and earned his first NHL victory since Oct. 7, 2013, when he was with Edmonton. “I’m still in la-la land,” LaBarbera said. Defensemen Hampus Lindholm and Cam Fowler scored their first goals of the season 1:44 apart in the second period to give the Ducks a lead that LaBarbera protected. Corey Perry also scored for the Ducks, who went 3-1 on a four-game trip. Dennis Everberg scored his first NHL goal, and Nathan MacKinnon added another for weary Colorado, which also lost at St. Louis in a shootout on Saturday. Colorado didn’t really challenge LaBarbera all that often, especially in the second period when the team was outshot 12-2. “Two shots on a guy, who obviously got called up at the last second, isn’t good enough,” forward Matt Duchene said. “We just lost the game in the second period.” The Avalanche had their chances to tie it late. Anaheim’s Francois Beauchemin drew a high-sticking penalty with 3:07 remaining, and Semyon Varlamov went to the bench for an extra skater, giving the Avs a 6-on-4 opportunity. But Colorado couldn’t capitalize. “It’s not always going to go our way, and it’s when things are not going our way we try to force plays, push plays,” coach Patrick Roy said. “This is where we get into trouble.” Varlamov was kept busy all night, making one sprawling save after another. He couldn’t help the Avalanche procure a point, though, the first time in seven games the Avalanche failed to get at least one. Varlamov finished with 30 saves. Anaheim dominated the second period, with Lindholm scoring on a pass from Patrick Maroon, who was behind the net. Moments later, Fowler gave the Ducks a 3-2 lead by driving in on Varlamov, faking one way and tapping the puck into the net with the goalie on the ice. Colorado got on the board 2:18 in when Everberg banked a shot off the boards and back to himself in order to get around a defenseman. He then lined a shot that squeezed past LaBarbera’s pads. A quirky goal that could have rattled LaBarbera, but didn’t. “I’ve been around enough. You just kind of realize the circumstances and go, ‘OK, whatever. This is really goofy, but keep playing. Don’t worry about it,’” LaBarbera said. As for what is next with LaBarbera, well, he wasn’t quite sure. Is he heading back to Anaheim with the team? “I’m assuming so. But I don’t know,” he said. Ducks coach Bruce Boudreau eased his mind. “Until we get both goalies healthy, he’s with us,” Boudreau said. NOTES: Anaheim D Bryan Allen (lowerbody injury) joined the team, but remains on the injured list. He has been in Norfolk on a long-term injury conditioning assignment. ... The Ducks open a four-game homestand Wednesday against the New York Islanders. ... Perry leads the league with 11 goals. ... The Avalanche turned aside five power plays, stretching their streak to 25 straight kills. ... MacKinnon has four goals in three games after starting the season in a slump. B4 THE SHERIDAN PRESS BABY BLUES® by Jerry Scott and Rick Kirkman COMICS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 DRS. OZ & ROIZEN Dr. Mehmet Oz and Dr. Michael Roizen MARY WORTH by Karen Moy and Joe Giella BORN LOSER® by Art and Chip Sansom FOR BETTER REHAB, TRY PREHAB BY MICHAEL ROIZEN, M.D., AND MEHMET OZ, M.D. When "This is Where I Leave You" hit theaters recently, 76-year-old Jane Fonda was as fit as ever -- and that's after a knee replacement, which followed a hip replacement (and major back surgery). Her unbelievable turnaround time is due in large part to her lifelong role as a physical-fitness guru; she was in great shape before each of her surgeries. Now we have a name for that: PREhab. And you don't need to be as fit as Fonda to get its benefits. If you're one of the more than 1.4 million North Americans who are going to get a total knee or hip replacement in 2015, seeing a physical therapist in the months or weeks before your operation can slash your need for post-op care from a home health agency or in an inpatient facility by almost 30 percent! That means you'll be back on your feet faster! So, consider making an appointment with a PT; you'll learn exercises that strengthen leg muscles and increase flexibility. For knees, they may include the Quad Build: Lying on your back, extend your legs. Tighten your quad on the affected leg; push your knee toward the surface below you; hold for 5 seconds; repeat 5-10 times. Build up to 2-3 sets. Or, for hips, the Lying Kick: Lie on your back; place a blanket roll under the knee on your affected leg. Straighten your leg. Keep knee in contact with the blanket. Hold for 5 seconds; relax. Repeat 5-10 times; up to 20 reps. DEAR ABBY Pauline Phillips and Jeanne Phillips 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 ALLEY OOP® by Dave Graue and Jack Bender GRANDFATHER'S TO-DO LIST CREATES SPECIAL FAMILY DAY DEAR ABBY: I am a 62year-old grandfather of a 5year-old granddaughter. The other day I had her for the entire day. I decided to make a list of the things we were to accomplish throughout the course of the day. It turned out to be a great success. After completing each task, she would ask, "What's next on the list?" The first item, No. 1, was to do our "strong" (that's what we call exercise). No. 2 was to write her alphabet and numbers. No. 3 was to "go on an adventure" (that's what we call walking the dog and exploring the nearby field). Nos. 4, 5 and 6 -- go to the bank, get the car washed, then go to the park to swing, slide, etc. After the park, she asked if we could go to our favorite restaurant across the street. I replied, "How did you know that was next on the list?" Her expression was priceless. After lunch we went home and did No. 8 -- another adventure, which was take the dogs for a walk again. No. 9 was painting time (what 5year-old doesn't like to paint?). After cleaning up it was time for No. 10, wash the dishes and Swiffer the floor. No. 11 she could choose something to do. We spent the next two hours playing with her dolls. At about 5:30 my daughter came to pick her up from an exhausted grandpa. Lists will be part of our routine from now on. I slept like a log that night and hope to have many nights and days just like it in the future. -- GRANDPA ROBERT IN LEXINGTON, KY. DEAR GRANDPA ROBERT: Your grandchild is lucky not only to have such a loving and dedicated grandpa, but also one with your stamina. I sometimes hear from grandparents -- and other adults -who ask me for suggestions about how to better connect with their young children. Your letter is a road map that will take them in the right direction. DEAR ABBY: During one of their "stay up all night drinking beer and talking" sessions six months ago, my husband, "Ralph," and his best friend of more than 20 years, "Jim," had a huge fight. They haven't spoken since. Ralph has tried at least three times to contact Jim by phone and email with no response. If Ralph's version of the story is true, they both behaved badly. Ralph has sincerely tried to apologize, but Jim refuses to speak to him. It breaks my heart to see how much this has upset my husband. I am still Facebook friends with Jim, and every time I see him online I'm tempted to say something to him, but so far I have resisted. Would it be crossing the line for me to reach out and see if he'll talk to me about this? Or should I stay out of it? -- HOPEFUL PEACEMAKER IN ARIZONA DEAR HOPEFUL PEACEMAKER: I know you mean well, but it would be a mistake to put yourself in the middle. Whatever happened between your husband and his friend must have been a doozy. You state that this happened during one of their allnight drinking and talking sessions. To me this indicates that one or both of them may have alcohol issues that need to be addressed. This is what should be mentioned, but only to your spouse. If the loss of his long-standing friendship has been painful enough, he may be willing to listen. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. Abby shares more than 100 of her favorite recipes in two booklets: "Abby's Favorite Recipes" and "More Favorite Recipes by Dear Abby." Send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $14 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby, Cookbooklet Set, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and handling are included in the price.) MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS B5 Pernice wins playoff in Champions Tour finale SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Tom Pernice Jr. won the Champions Tour’s season-ending Charles Schwab Cup Championship on Sunday, beating Jay Haas with a birdie on the fourth hole of a playoff. The 55-year-old Pernice got upand-down from the left bunker on the par-5 18th, holing a 6-foot putt after Haas made a 12-footer for par. “I just said, ‘He’s going to make it, so you need to be prepared to play it on the right edge. And it rolled right in,” Pernice said. “It was pretty scrappy. I hung in there. Short game is part of it as well and my short game held up and carried me through.” Pernice closed with a 3-under 67 — also making a 6-foot birdie putt on 18 — to match Haas at 11-under 269 on Desert Mountain’s Cochise Course. The 60-year-old Haas had a 66. “Jay and I have become good friends,” Pernice said. “I’ve gone back and played in his charity event in Greenville. I hate for anybody to lose.” Pernice earned $440,000 in the event limited to the top 30 on the money list. He also won a playoff in Iowa in June and has four career victories on the 50-and-over tour after winning twice on the PGA Tour. “I was just thinking last night, it’s such a privilege to be able to be out here, first and foremost, to be out here playing with Freddie Couples and Jay Haas and Kenny Perry and Bernhard Langer and Hale Irwin and Tom Watson,” Pernice said. “To be able to do that and compete and do what we do at our age is pretty amazing that this is here for us.” Haas had birdie chances to win on the second and third playoff holes, but missed both to the right. “It was a long day, longer for the team that loses in extra innings,” Haas said. “Tom’s such a beautiful bunker player and pitcher of the ball and everything. I knew I was going to have to make a birdie to beat him.” On the third on the par-3 17th, Haas missed a 15-foot birdie putt. Pernice made a 6-footer after missing the green to the left and hitting a flop shot. On 18 on the second extra hole, Haas’ 8-foot birdie also slid right, and Pernice made a 4-footer for a scrambling par. He drove right into a narrow wash channel in the desert, slashed backward to the fairway, hit his 246-yard approach to the right of the green and set up the par putt with a long pitch. “Just hit a bad drive,” Pernice said. “I had been aiming down the left side and kind of cutting with the wind and came up and out of it and blocked it and so the wind got it. .... Luckily, I had a shot, but I had to go backwards quite a ways because I was going in the direction of the washout.” Haas made a 6-foot birdie putt on 18 on the first extra hole after Pernice’s two-putt birdie. In regulation on 18, Haas holed a 35-foot birdie putt from the fringe to take the lead at 11 under. Pernice — playing a group behind — forced the playoff with his 6-foot birdie putt. Haas opened with rounds of 66 and 62 to take a four-stroke lead and break the tour record for consecutive rounds of par or better at 38, then shot 75 on Saturday to fall a stroke behind Pernice and Perry. Haas won two weeks ago in North Carolina to become the 18th player to win a Champions Tour event at 60 or older. He has 17 Champions Tour victories after winning nine PGA Tour titles. “It’s been a wonderful year and, you know, just a shot here or there,” Haas said. “Yesterday just was pretty awful, but today came back on a pretty tough day to have a chance there.” Perry eagled the final hole for a 68 to finish a stroke back. Langer closed with a 65 to tie for fourth with Colin Montgomerie at 9 under. Langer wrapped up his second Charles Schwab Cup points title last week and earned $158,000 on Sunday to break Hale Irwin’s tour record with $3,074,189. Irwin made $3,082,304 in 2002. The 57-year-old Langer topped the money list for the sixth time in seven years. CLASSIFIEDS Phone: (307) 672-2431 TO PLACE YOUR AD Fax: (307) 672-7950 DEADLINES RATES & POLICIES Deadline Lines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 days . . . . . . . .6 days . . . . . . . . . . . .26 days Monday ........................................................................Friday 2:30 PM 2 lines (minimum) . . . . . . .$10.75 . . . . . . .$16.00 . . . . . . . . . . . .$40.00 Tuesday.................................................................... Monday 2:30 PM Each additional line . . . . . .$4.75 . . . . . . . . $7.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . .$17.50 Email : [email protected] Wednesday ............................................................Tuesday 2:30 PM Visit : 144 Grinnell Street, Downtown Sheridan Thursday........................................................... Wednesday 2:30 PM Mail : P.O. Box 2006, Sheridan, WY, 82801 Friday...................................................................... Thursday 2:30 PM Include name, address, phone, dates to run and payment Saturday ...................................................................... Friday 2:30 PM We reserve the right to reject, edit or reclassify any advertisement accepted by us for publication. When placing an ad in person or on the phone, we will read all ads back to you for your approval. If we fail to do so, please tell us at that time. If you find an error in your classified ad, please call us before 9 a.m. to have it corrected for the next day’s paper. The Press cannot be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion. Claims cannot be considered unless made within three days of the date of publication. No allowances can be made when errors do not materially affect the value of the advertisement. Phone: (307) 672-2431 Fax: (307) 672-7950 Monday – Friday, 8am – 5pm Run Day All classified ads run for free at www.thesheridanpress.com! All classified ads running in Monday’s Press also run in the weekly PressPlus at no additional charge! ADOPT: A loving, devoted married couple longs to adopt your newborn into a home filled with love, warmth & financial security. Expenses paid. Stephanie & Jason @ 1-800-6728514. WE WILL welcome your baby into our hearts & home with lots of love for a bright future. Expenses paid. Please call/ text Shannon & Steve 347-243-6139 Houses, Unfurnished for Rent 2BR, 2BA townhome w/garage, appl, new carpet and paint. $900mo + util. Lease & dep. No smk/pets. Includes lawn care & snow removal. 307-751-6772 LOVELY COTTAGE in Big Horn, 2BD 1BA, XLg garage, W/D, includes all util & lawn care. $1250/mo, no smok/pets, 674-7718 LOG CABIN in Story. 3 acres. 1 BR/sleeping loft/1 ba. W/D. No Computers, Accessories Smoking. Pets ?. MAC BOOK Air w/ soft $975/mo + util case. 11" Brand new. 307-751-7794. $1200. 673-5271. UNIQUE VICTORIAN, west of Sheridan. 3-4 For Lease BR. 2 ba. $1400 + utils. & deposit. 655-9225. BUILDINGS FOR LEASE Rail Road Land & Cattle Co. Has Shop Space, Warehouse Space, Retail Space, Office Space and much more for lease! 673-5555 Furnished Apts for Rent ROCKTRIM $500. WiFi/ Cable incl. 752-8783 WKLY FR $210. Mnthly fr $630 Americas Best Value Inn 672-9757 Unfurnished Apts for Rent AVAILABLE IN RANCHESTER: 2 Studio apts., $400/mo. ea. & 2 bdrm apt. $600/mo. + dep. & heat, util. pd., pets? Laundry rm. incl. No smk. 751-4060 STADIUM PLACE TOWNHOMES 3 Bedroom $695/month Available NOW • Attached Garage • Washer & Dryer • Dishwasher For showing call 307.763.2682 Income restrictions apply Houses, Unfurnished for Rent 2BR, 1BA townhome w/appl, new carpet and paint. $900mo + util. Lease & dep. No smk/pets. Includes lawn care & snow removal. 307-751-6772 HOUSE ON Ranch. 3 BR 2 ba. Mtn. View. Deck. $1200 + utils. & deposit. 655-9225 2BR. 1BA $800 mo. + util. Close to downtown. No Smk/Pets Dep. + lease. 752-2090 SHERIDAN COZY 1BR house. screened in porch, nice location, new carpet, paint & windows, W/D, A/C. no smk/pets. $600 + dep. & util. 655-9350 leave msg. Mobile Homes for Rent 3BR. $650 mo + dep & references. Call before 5pm. 672-3077 Mobile Hm. Space for Rent RV SPACE, Big Horn. By day, month or year. 674-7718 Office Space for Rent 2 BEAUTIFUL SUITES for lease. (One with kitchen area). Security, janitorial, & utilities included. Conference room avail to tenants. 672-8700 or 751-3828. 25'X80' BUILDING. Office/Storage. Overhead door. $400/mo. 307-256-6170 Storage Space CIELO STORAGE 752-3904 CALL BAYHORSE STORAGE 1005 4th Ave. E. 752-9114. E L D O R A D O STORAGE Helping you conquer space. 3856 Coffeen. 672-7297. CROWN STORAGE Inc KROE Lane 674-9819. Storage Space WOODLANDPARK STORAGE.COM 5211 Coffeen Call 674-7355 New Spaces Available! LOST PET? Place an ad in The Press! Call 672-2431 Child Care SMART START CHILDCARE now enrolling. Infant-5 yrs Mon-Fri. Well rounded preschool curriculum, breakfast, lunch & snacks. Call 307-6602502 Work Wanted PRIVATE NANNY available. FT or PT. Any day, any time. Great references. 763-2163. Help Wanted NWCCD JOB Openings Sheridan College • Information Systems Developer • Enterprise Systems Administrator • Computer Specialist • Athletic Trainer (PT) • Math Tutor (PT) Gillette College • Records Specialist • Coordinator, Academic Success Center • Diesel Technology Instructor • Facilities Specialist • OSHA Instructor (PT) Full-time positions include outstanding benefits. On-line postings and application at: https://jobs.sheridan.ed u EOE. PT SPEECH Language Pathology Position in Northeast WY Children’s Clinic Speech Language Pathology job in Sheridan WY. This is a part-time job with flexible hours & competitive pay. Wyoming SLP license required. For more information call Matt at (307) 217-0681. Help Wanted Sheridan County Administration Job Title: Human Resource Coordinator/Full-time Grade 20 Salary Range: $49,100 to $60,000 annual DOE Benefits: Medical insurance and prescription drug coverage, dental insurance, term life insurance, Wyoming Retirement Program, vacation and sick leave, paid holidays. Hours of work are from 8:00AM to 5:00 PM, Monday-Friday. Minimum Job Requirements: Knowledge and level of competency commonly associated with the completion of a baccalaureate degree in a Human Resource course of study or similar study related to the occupational field. Sufficient experience to understand the basic principles relevant to the major duties of the position usually associated with the completion of an apprenticeship/internship or having had a similar position for one to two years. PHR certification preferred, but not required. Possession of a valid driver’s license issued by the State of Wyoming. Application deadline is November 24, 2014. To apply submit a letter of interest, a current resume, and three work related references, to Renee’ Obermueller, Administrative Director, 224 S Main, Suite B-1, Sheridan, WY 82801. Job description is available at www.sheridancounty.com/current job openings. PICKLES NON SEQUITUR Vacutech is hiring for the following positions: Welder – Contact Scott • MIG process for stainless steel • Perform detailed welding techniques • Position, clamp or assemble work piece prior to welding • Read technical drawings • Set up welding equipment • Use acetylene welding/cutting torch • Use arc welding equipment • Knowledge of welding filler rod types • Thermal-cutting equipment • Weld in flat, horizontal, vertical or overhead positions JANRIC CLASSIC SUDOKU Fill 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). Shipping Coordinator – Contact Denise Schedules pick up and arrival of inbound and outboard shipments. Schedules and executes loading activities. Coordinates quality control on outgoing orders. One year experienced required. Rating: BRONZE Solution to 11/1/14 Palleting – Contact Scott Individual will be responsible for building multiple sized pallets for shipping of large product. Knowledge of hand tools and carpentry a plus. © 2014 Janric Enterprises Dist. by creators.com Adoption CAD – Contact Scott AutoCAD experience, computer literacy, ability to learn quickly, work under pressure, ability to complete tasks in a timely manner, time management skills. Painter/Bondo/Powder Coat – Contact Scott Painter wanted - looking for a painter/bondo/ powder coater. Please email resume to Scott at [email protected] or Denise at [email protected] or fax to 307-675-1972 11/3/14 CLASSIFIEDS B6 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com Busy restauranti n searchof M AN AGERS. M u s tha ve experience in f o o d s ervice m a na gem ent& a ble to w o rk nights & w eekend s . Interested appli cants send resum es to: Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted WE ARE currently seeking vacuum truck drivers to join our team in Wyoming. We provide 24/7 service. He or she must have class A CDL, with tankers endorsement. Housing available! We also offer Insurance! $18-$22 starting pay! Contact our office in Wright, WY 307-4641146. Contact: Gilbert Moncibaiz at 307-2999200. Email: g.moncibaiz10services @gmail.com SHERIDAN ICE has the following open positions: Adult Figure Skating Instructor! Must have figure skating experience. $15/hour on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. Adult Skating Guards! Skating experience a must! Mainly weekend shifts. $9/hour. Pick up applications at the rink located at 475 Brundage or online at www.sheridanice.org. SEEKING INDIVIDUAL to wash vans at the UPS location in Sheridan. Please call Tony at 801-634-8465. Must be able to pass background check. GREAT TALENT makes good business! Kmart is seeking talented associates wanting to build a career in retail. Flexible scheduling, employee discount and opportunity for advancement! Currently recruiting for: Cashiers Pricing Specialist Service Desk Associates Little Caesars Associates Data Integrity Specialists Reset Specialists Merchandisers Join our team of dedicated, talented associates and build an exciting career with Kmart! Apply on line at kmart.jobs.com Kmart is a drug free work place and an equal opportunity employer. COUNSELOR AT Tongue River High School needed. Applicant must hold a WY license. Willing to consider both part-time and full-time applicants. To apply please call Brandi Miller at 307655-9541 or [email protected]. wy.us or visit www.sheridan.k12.wy. us Position open until filled. E.O.E. Blind Bo x 214, C/ O The S herid a n Pres s P.O . Bo x 2006 S herid a n, W Y 82801 84 East Ridge Road Can You Say I’m Lovin’ It McDonald’s Cats Employees Can. Now hiring: Night Shift Team Members 4p.m. - Midnight FULL-TIME POSITION available for Farm/Ranch hand. Some equipment experience preferred, benefits including housing and more. Call 406-679-1796, Position currently open. These Animals are Available at the Dog & Cat Shelter Dogs At Your Job? “Junior”, 1 yr. old, NM, black & tan, Min Pin “Colton”, 2 yr. old, NM, black, Retriever mix “Chief”, 1 yr. old, NM, black, Lab mix “Brut”, 2 yr. old, NM, black & brown, brindle Mastiff “Jax”, 1 yr. old, NM, white & tan, Terrier mix “Franny”, 2 yr. old, SF, black & white, Border Collie “Jojo”, 2 yr. old, SF, black, Retriever/Heeler mix “Bear”, 5 yr. old, NM, black, Chow Chow mix “Tango”, 8 mo. old, NM, brown, Retriever mix LOOKING FOR Full Time Farm Mechanic “Bobert”, 7 yr. old, NM, grey & brown, tabby, DSH “Stubby J”, 8 yr. old, NM, gray & white, bobtail, DLH “Juan”, 2 yr. old, NM, gray tabby, DSH “Muggs”, 6 yr. old, SF, gary, Persian “Eva”, 4 yr. old, SF, black & white, DSH “Annie”, 3 yr. old, SF, black & white, DMH “Leticia”, 4 yr. old, SF, black, DSH “Bean”, 17 yr. old, NM, cream & brown, Siamese mix “Bill”, 3 yr. old, NM, Grey, DSH DSH = domestic short hair DMH = domestic medium hair DLH = domestic long hair NM = neutered male • SF= spayed female We have 46 cats and 4 kittens, 17 dogs up for adoption!! Come up and see what we have for you! Apply online at mcwyoming.com/4206 or in person. 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. N ow online... ww w.D est i n at io nSher ida n.co m Hints from Heloise The Gift of No Return? Dear Readers: Here is this week's SOUND OFF, about using gift cards: "I have used five gift cards in the past couple of months. I have had to ask for the card back on all but one. The clerks act surprised and say, 'I am sorry, I didn't realize there was a balance.' Had I not said anything, the money on the card would have been lost. They always hand you back your credit card, why not the gift cards?" -- Elaine in California Good question. Some cards will show a remaining balance; others will not. On some cards I've used, the store has not been able to determine what the balance left is until it is swiped. Just always ask for the card back. -- Heloise FAST FACTS Dear Readers: Uses for paper plates: * Catch potential spills in the refrigerator. * Under a pet dish to keep the MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 Heloise floor clean. * Under a coffee cup to protect a table. * Under a soup bowl to catch drips. * As a quick cutting surface for a piece of fruit. -- Heloise SWIMSUIT RESIDUE Dear Heloise: I recently purchased a new bathing suit. I removed the "sanitary liner" in the bottom of the suit, and even after washing it, there's still sticky stuff on my suit. Any ideas how I can remove this? -M.S. in Chicago Yes, I do have a few hints for you to remove the sticky residue. First, try a little petroleum-based prewash spray or dry-cleaning fluid/spot remover. Apply to the area, let it sit a few minutes to loosen the residue, then scrape off with a dull knife. There are many products out there that do remove adhesive, and this is really the easiest way to get rid of the sticky stuff without harming the material. Then wash as usual. To find out how to remove other tough stains, order my pamphlet Heloise's Handy Stain Guide for Clothing. Send $5 and a long, self-addressed, stamped (70 cents) envelope to: Heloise/Stain Guide, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 782795001. To prevent "pilling" on swimsuits, wash them inside out and hang to dry. Don't put them in the dryer. -- Heloise THREADING NEEDLES Dear Heloise: My mother likes to hem and fix her own clothing but began having a hard time threading the needles. On a recent visit, I threaded a whole bunch for her and stuck them in her pincushion. They are ready to go, and she doesn't have to worry about threading them anymore. -Cynthia in San Antonio How nice of you to help out! I try to keep a few needles prethreaded (basic colors like black, brown and white) to quickly fix a small tear, dropped hem or a button that is about to come off. -- Heloise TOILET BRUSH Dear Heloise: When I use the toilet brush, I hold it in the toilet and flush a time or two. No chemicals to drip in the holder. -- Suzette in Gainesville, Fla. responsibility include equipment maintenance and repair, some other farm duties included, open immediately. Benefits include housing. Call 406-679-1796 LOCAL BUSINESS looking for Office Assistant. Must have valid DL. Background check will be required. Great personality, dependability and multitasking a must. Mon-Thurs 9-4. Please stop by to pick up application at 5211 Coffeen Ave during business hours ONLY! No phone calls. BIG BROTHERS BIG SISTERS is growing. Now accepting resumes for a part-time case manager. Responsible for intake of youth and volunteers, coordinating and providing ongoing support of mentoring relationships. Flexible hours, Bachelor's degree required. Send over cover letter and resume to [email protected] TACO JOHN'S/GOOD TIMES is looking for F/T & P/T employees for all shifts. Clean cut appearances & pleasing personality are essential. Stop by our store for application and your interview. References. $10.00+ per hr DOE. SEEKING KNOWLEDGEABLE bookkeeper with experience and understanding of Quickbooks and payroll reporting a must. Retirement plan & flex scheduling available. Send reply to box 216, c/o The Sheridan Press, PO Box 2006, Sheridan, WY 82801 TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Don't be afraid to spread your wings and explore limitless possibilities. You have the drive and ambition to make the changes necessary to succeed. A trustworthy partner will be by your side to help you achieve your goals. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): If you hope to impress people with a presentation, or improve your reputation, you're in luck. This is an excellent time to appear in public or push for career advancement. Grab a chance to flaunt your funloving side. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Money is a tool. Money itself might be the root of all evil, but it's the basis of all good if you use it to support your family or plan ahead for retirement. This is a good time to put financial ideas into motion. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): To love you is to trust you. Expect to receive positive feedback. This is a great time to take advantage of opportunities to implement a change, perhaps by interviewing for a new job or starting a new business or project. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You feel safe and secure when dealing with family members and people closely linked to you within the community. Let the advice of those you trust guide you where investments or major purchases are concerned. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Let yourself be known. Share your views and speak your heart and doors will open. You may be attracted to new ideas that lead to Delivery problems? Call The Press at 672-2431 Real Estate FSBO, 1368 Yonkee Ave., 7380 SF lot, 942 SF house, 2 BR 1 ba., excel. cond., w/lots of extras. Ready to Move in. call for more info. Amy or Tim at 6725293. LGE HOME near Highland Park School. 4 br/3 ba. Office, finish basement, 2 car garage, large private yard, beautiful finishes, abundant storage & much more. 752-3452. 2003 AUDI A6 Quattro. 2.7 Turbo Excellent condition. 120K miles. Asking $5500. 673-5271 2007 SAAB 93 Aero. 2.8 Turbo Fully Loaded. 78K miles. $9500 OBO. 970-371-5361 Motorcycles 2006 YAMAHA R6. All new plastic. 10K miles. $4500 OBO. 970-371-5361 Phillip Alder HOW TO TELL PARTNER WHICH SUIT TO LEAD Raymond Teller wrote in a letter, "We did not start as friends, but as people who respected and admired each other. Crucial, absolutely crucial for a partnership." He was talking about Penn Jillette and himself, but he could have been discussing bridge players. In particular, it is important to trust your partner's cards when you are on defense. How should East-West card to defeat three spades? What do you think of the auction? In the bidding, South sensibly overcalled one spade. (A few players would have intervened with one no-trump to describe their hand strength. It is much better to look for a spade fit first and keep no-trump on the back burner.) Over one spade, West should have made a negative double to show his minor-suit length. When he passed, North made a pre-emptive jump raise to show four-card support and a weak hand. (With at least game-invitational values, North would have cue-bid two hearts.) South was tempted to bid higher, but with those potentially useless diamond honors, he wisely passed. Against three spades, West led his heart. East wasn't sure that it was a singleton, but just in case, she won with her ace and returned the queen, her highest heart being a suitpreference signal for diamonds, the higher-ranking of the other two side suits. West ruffed away declarer's heart king and shifted to his dia- Omarr’s Daily Astrological Forecast BIRTHDAY GUY: Actor Travis Van Winkle was born in Victorville, Calif., today in 1982. This birthday guy currently co-stars as Lt. Danny Green on the series "The Last Ship" and plays the recurring role of Jonah Breeland on "Hart of Dixie." He's also appeared on episodes of "Raising Hope," "CSI: Miami" and "Two and a Half Men." Van Winkle's film work includes roles in "Rites Of Passage," "Friday The 13th" and "Transformers." ARIES (March 21-April 19): A romantic partner could be in the mood for love, so make plans for a quiet evening and don't be surprised if passionate fireworks go off. Don't let the past dictate the future where your cash is concerned. SEEKING QUALIFIED tax preparer for long standing CPA firm. Experience a must. Salary DOE. Retirement plan and flex scheduling available. Send reply to box 215, c/o The Sheridan Press, PO Box 2006, Sheridan, WY 82801 Autos-Accessories Help Wanted, Professional Bridge Help Wanted, Professional mond five, low guaranteeing at least one honor in the suit. East won with her ace and cashed the heart jack, West discarding the club two. Now East returned a diamond to defeat the contract, although a fourth heart would have worked also. Jeraldine Saunders success. The stars are shining brightly for amorous activities, so don't be bashful. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Under these stars, it's possible to be obsessed by your passions. Go ahead and gamble on love without worrying that the stakes are high. You can win at any romantic or financial game by following your instincts. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22Dec. 21): Your intense ambition to succeed can put the wings on your feet and send you off in search of greener pastures. Much can be accomplished if you rely upon sound principles and accurate information. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You could be misled by wishful thinking. But remember, wishful thinking won't make your bank ac- count grow larger or a loved one any more loving. Ask for some feedback from a trusted friend before taking major steps. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Your boundless enthusiasm may cause people to look to you as a mediator. Just remember that an umpire cannot compete in the game. Become an avid student of human nature and learn everything you can. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): The depth of your feelings sends out an invisible net that can capture the heart of someone special. Your charming ways can help you make money, and your magnetic attractiveness can lead to happy romantic encounters. IF NOVEMBER 4 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY: A romance, vacation break, or compelling business arrangement could be the most important thing on your mind during the next 4-6 weeks. Your mind is at an apex for pursuing financial and career success if you don't let yourself become distracted by pipe dreams and romance. Friends and organizations could come into the spotlight by December. After the first of the year, you'll be filled with wisdom and can get your priorities straight. Lucky breaks may offer encouragement and a way to expand your influence. Don't fall back into old habits in February or allow doubts to undermine your confidence. You're sensitive to others and must surround yourself with upbeat companions. YOUR ELECTED OFFICIALS | CITY John Heath Mayor 307-675-4223 Public Notices MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 www.thesheridanpress.com WHY PUBLIC NOTICES ARE IMPORTANT | Kristin Kelly Councilor 307-673-4751 Shelleen Smith Councilor 307-461-7082 Robert Webster Councilor 307-674-4206 Alex Lee Councilor 307-752-8804 Jesus Rios Councilor 307-461-9565 COUNTY Pete Carroll Treasurer 307-674-2520 Eda Thompson Clerk 307-674-2500 Nickie Arney Clerk of District Court 307-674-2960 John Fenn 4th Judicial District Court Judge 307-674-2960 Shelley Cundiff Sheridan County Circut Court Judge 307-674-2940 William Edelman 4th Judicial District Court Judge 307-674-2960 P.J. Kane Coroner 307-673-5837 Mike Nickel Chairman Commissioner 307-674-2900 Terry Cram Commissioner 307-674-2900 Tom Ringley Commissioner 307-674-2900 PUBLIC NOTICE Sheridan Area Water Supply Joint Powers Board Briefing and Agenda Setting Session Time: 9:00 A.M., Thursday, November 6, 2014 Place: Sheridan County Commissioner’s Library on the 2nd floor of the Sheridan County Courthouse Addition SAWSJPB staff will brief members of the board and present a draft agenda for the November 12, 2014 regular meeting of the board. Dan Coughlin Sheridan Area Water Supply Project Manager Publish November 3, 2014. 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 the statutory process known as foreclosure by advertisement (also known as a power of sale foreclosure). Lien: A legal claim asserted against the property of another, usually as security for a debt or obligation. Mortgage: A lien granted by the owner of property to provide security for a debt or obligation. Your Right To Know and be informed of government legal proceedings is embodied in public notices. This newspaper urges every citizen to read and study these notices. We strongly advise those seeking further information to exercise their right of access to public records and public meetings. Power of Sale: A clause commonly written into a mortgage authorizing the mortgagee to advertise and sell the property in the event of default. The process is governed by statute, but is not supervised by any court. Probate: The court procedure in which a decedent’s liabilities are settled and her assets are distributed to her heirs. Public Notice: Notice given to the public or persons affected regarding certain types of legal proceedings, usually by publishing in a newspaper of general circulation. This notice is usually required in matters that concern the public. Disclaimer: The foregoing terms and definitions are provided merely as a guide to the reader and are not offered as authoritative definitions of legal terms. LEGAL NOTICE POLICY The 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. The Sheridan Brewing Company Stockhouse is in process of demolition in 1991. The building was used for storage purposes for some time after the brewing company was closed. The photo is in the Lenz collection in the Sheridan County Museum's Memory Book project. Steve Maier Commissioner 307-674-2900 Dave Hofmeier Sheriff 307-672-3455 Bob Rolston Commissioner 307-674-2900 Paul Fall Assessor 307-674-2535 Matt Redle County Attorney 307-674-2580 STATE Matt Mead Governor 307-777-7434 Rosie Berger Representative House Dist. 51 307-672-7600 O U TD O O R S TO M M C IN TY R E i s a noveli st w hose book,‘ The S now Leopard’ s Tale, ’w as publi shed i n S eptem ber by B angtai lP ress.He i s also a contri buti ng edi tor to S ports A fi eld and Fi eld and S tream m agazi nes.Hi s Kathy Coleman Representative House Dist. 30 307-675-1960 John Patton Representative House Dist. 29 307-672-2776 Every Thursday,The S herid a n P res s publi shes i ts O utdoors page as a com pli m ent to i ts sports secti on.I ni t,you’ llfi nd fi rst-hand hunti ng and fi shi ng experi ences by tw o ofthe m ost accom pli shed book,‘ S hooters B i ble G ui de to O pti cs’w as outdoorsm en i n our area – G ordon R ose and Tom M cI ntyre.These publi shed by S kyhorse P ubli shi ng.Follow Tom on di sti ngui shed w ri ters reach deeply i nto subject m atter that affects Tw i tter @ m ci ntyrehunts. de audi ence i n S heri dan C ounty and beyond. and i nterests a w i To m M cIntyre Too,there are new s releases from the W yom i ng G am e and Fi sh Departm ent,new s that every localhunter and fi sherm an can use. GO R D O N R O S E i s an attorney w ho w orks as a Mike Madden Representative House Dist. 40 307-684-9356 com m erci alfly ti er and operates the S heri dan W YO Dave Kinskey Senator Senate Dist. 22 307-461-4297 307-278-6030 Heali ng W aters,w hi ch i s part ofa non-profi t organi zati on w hi ch teaches di sabled m i li tary veterans fly fi shi ng,fly tyi ng and fly rod bui ldi ng as part ofthei r therapy. G o rd o n R o s e Bruce Burns Senator Senate Dist. 21 307-672-6491 B7 GLOSSARY OF TERMS | Public notices allow citizens to monitor their government and make sure that it is working in their best interest. Independent newspapers assist in this cause by carrying out their partnership with the people’s right to know through public notices. By offering an independent and archived record of public notices, newspapers foster a more trusting relationship between government and its citizens. Newspapers have the experience and expertise in publishing public notices and have done so since the Revolutionary War. Today, they remain an established, trustworthy and neutral source that ably transfers information between government and the people. Public notices are the lasting record of how the public’s resources are used and are presented in the most efficient and effective means possible. INVITATION FOR BID Northern Wyoming Community College District, State of Wyoming, operating as Sheridan College, will receive bids for the construction of the following: 1. 50’ x 70’ pole barn storage building Bids will be received until 1:00 p.m., November 24th, 2014 at the Physical Plant Conference Room, Physical Plant Building. Bids will be opened at this time and place. A pre-bid conference and site inspection will be conducted at 1:00 p.m. November 10th, 2014 at the Sheridan College Physical Plant. All proposals shall be clearly marked with the wording “Sheridan College Storage Building” and information identifying the bidding firm on the outside of the envelope. Contractors must be licensed to do business in the state of Wyoming. Sheridan College reserves the right to accept or reject any or all bids, but will award based on the best interest of the institution. Preference shall be given to Wyoming contractors, sub-contractors, laborers, and materials. For additional information or for copies of the construction documents, contact James Lollar at Sheridan College Physical Plant (307-674-6446 ex 2907), 3059 Coffeen, PO Box 1500, Sheridan, Wyoming 82801. DATED this 30th day of October, 2014 /S/ Kati Sherwood Chairperson Board of Trustees Northern Wyoming Community College District Publish: November 3, 5, 7, 2014. THE SHERIDAN PRESS Content matters. 144 G ri nnell•Sheri dan,W Y •672-2431 B8 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2014 © 2014 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol. 30, No. 48 Color this World War I soldier. Then look for photos of modern military uniforms in the newspaper or online. What is similar? What is different? Yuval weitzen/Wikipedia 2014 is the 100th Anniversary of the outbreak of the first World War. People all over the world have been buying little ceramic poppies to “plant” outside the Tower of London. The goal is to “plant” one for every British or Commonwealth soldier killed in World War I. How many poppies would that be? Do the math to discover the answer: oppies were the flowers that grew on the battlefields and they became a symbol to remember fallen soldiers. In Britain and the United States, people wear poppies on November 11th, the day that soldiers on both sides of World War I stopped fighting and had what is called an armistice. Armistice means a pause in fighting agreed upon by the two sides in a conflict. Today, people in Britain call November 11th Remembrance Day. In the United States, this day y is called Veterans Day. In both countries it is a day to remember those who served their countries in the military. Replace the missing words. Are you an eagle-eyed reader? Circle the seven errors in the article below. Then, rewrite it correctly. On the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918, a peace agreement ended Wurld War I. The first remembrance of the event was on this day in 1919 when President Woodrow Wilson announced that the day should be “filled with solemn pride in the heroism of those who died in the country’s survice and with gratitude for the victory.” Although there have bean wars since then, this day is still set aside and what is now called Veterans Day is officially observed on Novimber 11th. In parade, at church services and war memorials, we onor and thank all the military servicemen and women who have served America and especially veterans living today. In many places the American flag will be hung at half mast and people everywhere participate in a moments of silence at 11 a.m. 444,123 + 444,123 Countries joined one of two sides in WWI. On one side were France, Russia and Great Britain. They were the Allied Powers. The United States joined the Allied Powers in 1917. On the other side were Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy, the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria. They were called the Central Powers. How many WWI airplanes can you find on this page? Have a friend try. Who found the most? For the first time ________, machine guns, poison gas and airplanes were used in __________. Photography changed how people connected with wars. Pictures from the war zones were published and people thousands of miles away could see the _____________ of the war. Aerial photography was used to survey troop positions and watch their ________________. Because so many men went to fight in the war, women starting _____________ in jobs that had previously been “men’s jobs.” These jobs included working in factories, delivering mail and more. After reading the article A Christmas Truce, what do you think the word truce means? diers from On Christmas Day in 1914, sol at was called both sides stepped out into wh tlefield “no man’s land” between the bat ke hands trenches to greet each other, sha and sing Christmas carols. re exchanged In some places, small gifts we a quick game and there were even reports of of soccer between troops. Use pictures and words cut from the newspaper to design your own Veterans Day flag. Display your flag in your classroom or in a window at home. a. Giving gifts to someone you don’t like or know very well. b. An agreement between enemies to stop fighting for a certain amount of time. c. An unscheduled soccer match. Standards Link: Visual Art: Know how subject matter, symbols and ideas are used to communicate meaning. Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Use the skills and strategies of the reading process to follow written directions. Draw a line connecting two syllables to make a WWI word from this page. Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Follow simple written directions. Memorial Poem Write a poem about war that expresses your feelings and opinions or how you would honor the memory of fallen soldiers. Use the newspaper to find words to use in your poem. Standards Link: Research: Use the newspaper to locate information. • • • • • • VETERANS TRENCHES MEMORIAL POPPIES ALLIED SYMBOL PHOTOS WORLD PEACE TROOP TRUCE ZONES SING MAIL GOAL Find the words in the puzzle. Then look for each word in this week’s Kid Scoop stories and activities. T S O T O H P V H O Standards Link: Language Arts: Use nouns, adjectives and verbs correctly. R N T R U C E A E L E O G R S T L C A A N V E N E L A O T C Z E R I I E G D R R H O A E P S L A N O E N D S P R L I A M S E D L O B M Y S E A S Y W P O O R T M Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognized identical words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns. Dogs and pigeons were used to carry messages First major war to use airplanes and tanks Battles took place on land, on the sea and in the air More than 9 million soldiers died Seven million civilians died Twenty-one million people were wounded This week’s word: PAUSE The noun pause means to stop temporarily. During P.E., I decided to pause for a drink of water. Try to use the word pause in a sentence today when talking with your friends and family members. Thank a Veteran November 11th is Veterans Day. Write a short note to say thank you to the many veterans who have served our country. Teacher name: _____________________________ School name:_______________________________ 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. 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 Grades taught:___________ Phone:____________ E-mail:_____________________________________ Number of papers wanted Mon ___ Tues ___ Weds ___ Thurs___ Fri___
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