131st year, no. 138 press sports, - the sheridan press · nina legerski of sheridan the sheridan...
TRANSCRIPT
SHERIDAN — When you shake hands with Matthew Campbell for the first time, you’ll likely make a quick judgment about him.
At first, you will see a man covered from head to toe with tattoos; artwork covering his face, head and most of his arms. Many people draw conclu-sions about him that reflect negative stereotypes.
A brief conversation with the local tattoo artist, though, will reveal a calm, level-headed man who operates a successful business.
“When you treat people with respect and are nice to them, that can really change people’s opin-ions about guys like me who have a lot of tattoos,” Campbell said. “I like to show people that are cov-ered in tattoos aren’t bad people.”
In fact, the tattoos on his body made Campbell the success he is today, and helped him get past some of the toughest periods in his life.
“It really has been kind of my savior,” he said
about tattooing. “I know a lot of people who were in my situation thank gods or deities, but for me, it’s been my artwork. It levels my head and it keeps me sane.”
Campbell grew up with little stability. For most of his young life, he spent his days mov-
ing from home to home. As a child, he spent time in the foster system and lived in orphanages in the Los Angeles area.
“Los Angeles in the 1980s wasn’t the greatest area to grow up,” Campbell said. “I grew up a little bit harder than most.”
It wasn’t until he was a teenager that he found a permanent home. He moved to Moses Lake, Washington, to live with his grandparents.
Though he moved to a strict Protestant house-hold, Campbell made a habit of rebelling. He was always getting into fights with classmates and was constantly getting in trouble. He eventually ended up spending several years in a juvenile detention facility.
“I was always told growing up that I was just always going to be in trouble, and that I was always just a bad egg. For the longest time, I really believed in what everyone said about me,” Campbell said.
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PEOPLE 5
PAGE SIX 6
ALMANAC 7
SPORTS B1
COMICS B4
CLASSIFIEDS B5
PHOTOS: Haunted House of Hoops.
SPORTS, B1PressT H E S H E R I D A NMONDAY
October 31, 2016131st Year, No. 138
Serving Sheridan County, Wyoming
Independent and locally owned since 1887
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75 Cents
Coal company to resume exports to
AsiaCASPER (AP) — Gillette-
based Cloud Peak Energy will again export coal to Asia, a positive sign in a troubled industry.
Some coal companies filed for Chapter 11 and prices fell to their lowest level in three decades over the last year, reported the Casper Star-Tribune.
“The last few months has been very positive for Cloud Peak Energy and certainly a big improvement from the first half of the year,” Cloud Peak President Colin Marshall said during an analysts’ call. “At the same time, the recent dramatic improvement in interna-tional thermal coal prices has allowed us to contract to export approximately one million tons between November and February next year.”
The company’s third quar-ter losses totaled $1.6 mil-lion compared to last year’s $9 million gain during the same time period.
Marshall said the compa-ny will export about a mil-lion tons from November to February.
“Demand growth in South Korea, Vietnam, and Taiwan continues its fore-cast, giving an overall pos-itive outlook,” he said. “At the same time supply from Indonesia and Australia appears to be constrained due to low capital spending in recent years.”
He noted no injuries among the 1,200 workers in the third quarter.
“There were no environ-mental citations at any of our sites during the quar-ter,” he said. “It is now over two years since our last environmental citation.”
Ruling on wild horse
roundup could affect Honor FarmRIVERTON (AP) — A
recent federal court deci-sion on Bureau of Land Management wild horse roundups could mean fewer horses available for adop-tion through the Wyoming Honor Farm in Riverton, an official said.
“In the short-term, we’re OK. But in the not-too-dis-tant future, it could have some effect,” Scott Fluer, the BLM’s wild horse spe-cialist in Lander, told The Ranger.
For years, the BLM has gathered horses on Wyoming’s checkerboard — a long stretch of land in southern part of the state that contains alternating plots of private and federal land established in conjunc-tion with a historic train route.
But the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals recently ruled that BLM violated the 1971 law establishing federal protections of wild horses by treating the public sec-tions of the checkerboard as private land during the roundups.
Researchers use dead fish
to kill trout embryos
JACKSON (AP) — Dead fish are being used to kill lake trout embryos in an experimental method to combat a threat to a native Yellowstone Lake species.
Researchers successfully killed all the embryos in an experiment using hundreds of lake trout carcasses, reported the Jackson Hole News and Guide.
Park managers are trying to help native cutthroat trout stage a comeback that could help reduce the num-ber of elk calves eaten by grizzly bears.
Yellowstone Fisheries Supervisor Todd Koel intro-duced the carcass experi-ment.
“We were just trying to create an extremely nega-tive environment for lake trout embryos to survive, and one idea was to use carcasses,” Koel said. “They caught 350,000-plus this year, and we dump them back into the lake anyway.”
WYO expansion project to begin in ‘17SHERIDAN — The WYO Theater
will soon begin phase two of its expansion, which will bring the Hallmark building up to date as well as provide additional space to the theater.
WYO Theater Executive Director Erin Butler said with the addition of the Hallmark building, the theater will be able to expand its backstage and lobby as well as add a dance studio.
“You know, we have rehearsals in here; we have classes in here; we have things that are always happening in this building,” Butler said. “And so to be able to renovate it and make it more
useful space is, well, it’s extremely exciting.”
The Hallmark building has a rich past that dates back to the early 1900s and includes classic design aesthetics, but the history comes with modern construction complications.
“Currently people are rehears-ing upstairs in the third floor, and this is a very old building,” Butler said. “The ceiling’s literally falling in.”
While she said that currently the building doesn’t pose substantial dangers to occupants, it’s import-ant to repair it before small prob-lems become worse.
BY CHELSEA COLI
SEE HORSES, PAGE 2
SEE TROUT, PAGE 2
JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS
Tattoo artist Matthew Campbell stands in his studio on West Loucks Street last week.
BY MIKE DUNN
BUSTING STEREOTYPES
JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS
K.T. Ley, left, and Pam Overton help a customer purchase tickets for an event at the WYO Theater box office last year. The WYO Theater recently received funding to continue its expansion project.SEE EXPANSION, PAGE 3
Tattoo artist finds solace in tattooing
SEE INK, PAGE 3
A2 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016
TROUT : Tracking where fish spawnFROM 1
The method could be used on a larger scale depending on its success.
“We were killing the embryos at up to a 100 percent rate inside of three weeks,” Koel said. “It far exceeded our expecta-tions.”
Chris Guy of the Montana Cooperative Fishery Research Unit said fungus from the dead fish may be what killed 100 percent of the embryos in the experiment.
“We tried killing embryos just with a tarp, and we couldn’t get the dissolved oxy-gen to go down enough,” he said. “Now we put the lake trout carcasses on and we get
100 percent mortality in about three weeks and that, to me, corroborates fungus.”
Researchers including Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center biologist Bob Gresswell are also trying to track where lake trout spawn.
“What we’re learning is that we’re see-ing some very site-specific places, and it’s much more dispersed than I originally anticipated,” Gresswell said. “Certainly we’re coming close to knowing more where the general spawning areas are, but the specifics within those sites is a little trick-ier. That’s the $64,000 question: Where are those spots? And can we develop some kind of technique that maybe is useful?”
HORSES : Reserve stock of horses availableFROM 1
Federal law only provides for the removal of horses from private land.
Supporters of the cur-rent system argued that it’s impossible to gather horses from just private land because most of the area involved has no fences to keep horses from going
between private and public sections.
The BLM had removed 1,263 horses from that land in 2014 and had planned a removal of another 500 later this year.
Nationally, Fluer said, the BLM typically adopts out 2,600 horses a year annually. The 60 to 65 horses trained and adopt-
ed through the Wyoming Honor Farm are just a small percentage of that number, but includes about 25 to 30 percent of the totally num-ber adopted in Wyoming.
The BLM has a reserve stock of horses available on hand from previous round-ups that will end up in the Honor Farm adoption pro-gram.
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JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS
Adding color to a dreary dayTen-year-old Callista Roush stands under her umbrella during the Sheridan Jaycees Halloween Parade Saturday outside of city hall in downtown Sheridan. Dozens of participants came to the parade despite the rain.
Parallels seen in protests of Dakota pipeline, Oregon refugePORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — On the same
day seven defendants celebrated their acquittal in the armed takeover of a federal wildlife refuge in Oregon, law enforcement officers dressed in riot gear and firing bean bag rounds arrested nearly 150 oil pipeline protesters camped out in North Dakota.
The sudden developments in the two pro-tests drew an unsettling contrast for some between the treatment of mostly Native American citizens at an encampment near the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation and the heavily armed occupiers who held the federal government at bay for weeks in the remote Malheur National Wildlife Refuge.
“How is it that people who were seen on national media with guns having a standoff with police officials were acquitted ... and we’re being treated like we’re terrorists?” said Cody Hall, a member of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe in South Dakota and a spokesman for the pipeline protesters.
Yet experts on public land policy who have watched both situations unfold cau-tioned it is too soon to draw conclusions about either protest’s outcome — and pointed to broad yet important themes that
underlie movements otherwise separated by hundreds of miles and an ideological chasm.
Both the Standing Rock Sioux and the Oregon occupiers consider themselves mar-ginalized groups fighting to preserve a way of life.
Both movements feel disenfranchised and are disillusioned with federal land policy, said Gregg Cawley, a University of Wyoming political science professor.
“At that level, even though all the details are different, they’re very similar,” Cawley said. “If you step back far enough ... then you can start seeing some parallels here.”
Ammon and Ryan Bundy, neither native to Oregon, seized the refuge in January to a protest the imprisonment of two ranchers convicted of setting fires on public land. More than two dozen others eventually joined the 41-day occupation, which grew into demands for the U.S. government to turn over public lands to local control.
On Thursday, jurors acquitted the broth-ers and five others on felony charges that included conspiracy and possession of a gun in a federal facility.
In North Dakota, hundreds of Standing Rock Sioux tribal members and their sup-porters have held a monthslong campaign
to protest the Dakota Access oil pipeline, which would skirt the reservation’s northern border. The tribe says the 1,200-mile pipeline
will damage its water supply and endanger sacred sites.
Texas-based Energy Transfer Partners is building the conduit from western North Dakota to Illinois, and state officials say no sensitive cultural sites have been found on the route.
The North Dakota protesters face misde-meanor charges, including trespassing and engaging in a riot.
Standing Rock Sioux Chairman Dave Archambault called the action “violence against innocent, prayerful people.”
The scale of the arrests shocked many onlookers, but public land policy experts cautioned it’s too early to make meaningful comparisons between Standing Rock and Oregon.
“These folks on the pipeline have just been arrested, but we don’t even know if any of that is going to hit a trial,” said John
Freemuth, of Boise State University. “I certainly think the tribes will have a point if they find themselves arrested and in jail and these Oregon guys get off.”
That’s a possibility that deeply worries James Riding In, interim director and asso-ciate professor of American Indian Studies at Arizona State University.
The response to the Standing Rock pro-test has been racially charged since the beginning, he said.
“History has placed the Indian peoples as expendable. And I think that attitude still exists in some circumstances,” he said.
That perception underscores what many at Standing Rock see as the ultimate irony: that although the Oregon occupiers said they were protesting the government’s takeover of public lands, they themselves are descendants of the original American occupiers.
That alone has strengthened the North Dakota protesters’ resolve — particularly when the Burns Paiute Tribe in Oregon spoke out about potential damage the ref-uge protesters were doing to their sacred sites and to tribal artifacts in storage there, Freemuth said.
“They’re seeing a protest against the gov-ernment and these lines, ‘We want to take the land back.’ That is wrong historically for the Bundys to say that, but any Native American with any appreciation of their history, when they hear, ‘Take the lands back,’ that really resonates,” he said.
BY GILLIAN FLACCUS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
‘How is it that people who were seen on national media with guns
having a standoff with police officials
were acquitted ... and we’re being
treated like we’re terrorists?’
Cody HallMember of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe in South Dakota
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INK : Hours sketching design for tattoosFROM 1
Some good did come out of that period in his life, though, and it was about that same time he fell in love with tattoos.
“I saw this guy covered in tattoos, and I thought ‘I want to be that guy,’” he said. “I wanted to be different. I never really went with the flow in life, and I wanted to be a little strange. I really love the artwork.”
At 14 years old, he got the first of many tattoos, and once the ink hit his skin for the first time, he was hooked. Campbell has lost count of how many tattoos he has today, but he estimates that he has more than 250 hours of work done across his body.
Campbell started to find solace in tattoo-ing. He realized that he had a passion in creating art and drawing tattoo designs. After a few years, a friend of his invested in him to start professionally tattooing, and his career skyrocketed from there.
Tattooing has taken him all over the world. He spent several years in Europe, tattooing in Norway and England. He’s
done guest spots across the country, as well. Campbell’s primary focus is in black and grey photorealism, which is a detail-oriented type of tattooing that takes photos and copies them on the skin as real as possible.
It was the quality of his work that caught the attention of Paige Pozos. Recently, the local tattoo artist asked Campbell to set up in her shop — Forever Flawless — in Sheridan.
“I love having Matthew at my shop,” Pozos said. “He exceeds all the clients’ expectations with the quality of his work, his professionalism and in how he does business.”
Today, Campbell stays busy. When he is not spending time working on a client, he’s awake well into the night creating designs and ideas for tattoos. He said it’s entirely worth all the hours he puts into the job.
“I’ve met so many people and done so many things that I wouldn’t have otherwise if it weren’t for tattooing,” Campbell said. “It’s really been one of the best things in my life.”
EXPANSION : Additional growth downtownFROM 1
Other updates include fixing the heating and cooling throughout the building, add-ing an internal elevator and making rooms more open with windows.
The theater will bring a youthful zest while keeping the building’s character throughout the renovations. Butler said she hopes they’ll uncover hidden gems like brick walls, exposed beams and natural floors, that can be used to highlight the building’s history, ultimately adding the building to the mosaic of properties now associated with the WYO.
“It’s interesting because you can see the WYO, you see the façade, it’s this really great kind of ‘20s art deco thing, and then moving south into the Mars, it’s a very dif-ferent feel from the outside,” Butler said. “So we want to incorporate the historic nature of this building specifically — and maybe it has a different look than the other two buildings.”
Northern Wyoming Community College
District Vice President for External Relations and Economic Development Susan Bigelow said the project is possi-ble with partnerships among the city, the Whitney Benefits Foundation, the WYO Theater and the college.
She said using the Hallmark building in this project was the goal since Whitney Benefits purchased it more than a decade ago. It was the donation of the building to the college as a non-cash match that ulti-mately made the project eligible for the $2 million grant.
Bigelow said the grant will not cover all renovations and the priority is main-tenance on the property followed by the additional theater space. They’ve had a structural engineer examine the Hallmark building and found it’s structurally sound, and Butler said she thinks construction should start by January 2017.
With one of the largest seasons for the WYO coming up, Butler said they’ll have to work closely with the construction crew so the theater can continue to operate during the renovations. She said the staff and users of the building may have to get cre-ative when construction punches through to the lobby, but the WYO will continue to operate at least through June. Once con-struction is done, though, it will allow for more events and larger audiences, some-thing Butler said she hopes the community will enjoy.
“It’s great. We’re excited — we’re excit-ed to be right next to SAGE (Sagebrush Community Art Center), and to be moving forward,” Butler said. “And hopefully benefiting downtown Sheridan. That’s our hope.”
‘So we want to incorporate the historic nature of this building specifically — and maybe it has
a different look than the other two
buildings.’
Erin ButlerExecutive director, WYO Theater
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Call The Press at 672-2431
Mead appoints
new judge in Albany
County
CHEYENNE (AP) — Gov. Matt Mead has appointed Tori R. A. Kricken as the new judge for the 2nd Judicial District in Albany County.
Kricken will replace District Judge Jeffrey Donnell’s retire-ment, effective Jan. 2.
Kricken is currently a staff attorney with the 2nd Judicial District. She has also worked in private practice in Laramie, as a hearing examiner for
the Office of Administrative Hearings in Cheyenne, a cir-cuit court magistrate and as a law clerk.
Kricken received her law degree, as well as a bachelor’s degree in business adminis-tration, from the University of Wyoming.
She has taught as a visiting or adjunct professor at the UW College of Law for the past 12 years.
JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS
Parading through downtownPeggy Miller huddles next to her grandson Max Schutte, 3, during the Sheridan Jaycees Halloween Parade Saturday outside of city hall in down-town Sheridan. Dozens of participants came to the parade despite the rain.
A4 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016
MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS A5
PEOPLEOpen
Studios show and sale this weekend
SHERIDAN — The Sheridan Open Studios fall show and sale will take place Friday from 4-7 p.m., Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The 14th annual show and sale will include 15 artists at several locations.
Locations and participat-ing artists for the show and sale are:
• 239 E. Mountain View Drive (Friday and Saturday only) — Bob Tippie
• 160 W. Sixth St. — Misty Plott, Ed Barbula and Warren Adams
• 637 W. Loucks St. — Dean States, Connie Robinson and Hugh Jennings
• 1986 Stadium Drive — Pat Trout, Paulette Kucera and Dianne Wyatt
• 303 W. Brundage St. — Helen Lytle-Campbell
• 3 Airway Place — Diane and Lloyd Marsden
• 14 Trish Drive — Jim and Mary Lawson
For more information, call 672-6706.
FROM STAFF REPORTS
www.thesheridanpress.com
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COURTESY PHOTO |
Welcoming a new managing partnerChamber Ambassadors recently welcomed Mike Browne to the Powder River Pizza & Pub ownership group as the new managing partner of the restaurant. Pictured, from left, are Chamber Ambassadors Brandy Campbell, Neel Dhodapkar, Mary Kay Liggett and Bob De Fries; Powder River Pizza managing partner Mike Browne; Ambassadors Mike Nickel, Brenda Rendon and Cathy Wilson.
SC to host ‘Kang Ding Love Song’ Thursday
SHERIDAN — The Whitney Center for the Arts at Sheridan College will host a presentation on “Kang Ding Love Song: An East-West Collaboration for Jazz Orchestra,” on Thursday at 7 p.m. in the arts center concert hall.
Dr. Eric Richards, Sheridan College’s director of bands and jazz studies, will discuss the composi-tional process behind the piece, which was commis-sioned for the Shanghai Conservatory of Music Orchestra. The presentation is free to the public, and refreshments will be served following the lecture.
Richards currently serves as music director of the Sheridan Wind Ensemble, Jazz Ensemble, Jazz Combo and leads program initia-tives in recruiting, outreach and curriculum develop-ment.
For additional informa-tion about this and other upcoming events at the Whitney Center for the Arts at Sheridan College, see www.whitneyarts.org.
FROM STAFF REPORTS
Newton to present at Archaeological SocietySHERIDAN — The
Sheridan-Johnson County chapter of the Wyoming Archaeological Society will meet Thursday at 6 p.m. at the Sheridan Holiday Inn.
The meeting is free and open to the public. Dinner
can be ordered from the menu but is not required to attend.
At 7 p.m., Cody Newton with SWCA Environmental Consultants will give a presentation regarding archaeological investiga-tions and preliminary anal-ysis of one of the “Camps
of Instruction” recently located in north central Wyoming.
Reservations are not required to attend.
For more information, contact Christine Varah at [email protected].
The Holiday Inn is located at 1809 Sugarland Drive.
FROM STAFF REPORTS
Pete Simpson to speak at Powder River Basin Resource Council meeting Nov. 5
SHERIDAN — The Power River Basin Resource Council will meet on Saturday from 7-9 p.m. at the Sheridan Holiday Inn.
The event will include keynote speaker Pete Simpson and his lecture “Working Together for Wyoming’s Future.” The cost
to participate is $35 for members and $45 for non-members, which includes a one-year membership to the PRBRC.
Attendees are encouraged to RSVP at 672-5809. For more information, see www.pow-derriverbasin.org/2016-annual-meeting/
The Sheridan Holiday Inn is located at 1809 Sugarland Drive.
FROM STAFF REPORTS
Jennifer Holliday enjoys ‘a new lease on life’ on Broadway
NEW YORK (AP) — At the Broadway musical “The Color Purple,” you can see a powerful tale of redemption and empowerment. That’s not just the show — it’s also the story of one of the actresses.
Jennifer Holliday has returned to Broadway for the first time in 15 years, and her appearance as the latest Shug Avery in the Tony-winning revival is something to cheer even before she sings a single note.
In the years since she won a Tony Award in “Dreamgirls” in 1982, Holliday has traveled a harder path than most, including enduring multiple
sclerosis, gastric bypass sur-gery and clinical depression that led her to try to kill herself on her 30th birthday. It was enough to shake her faith in God.
“I was like, ‘Excuse me, uh, hello? This is a whole bunch you putting on a Dreamgirl. You know what I’m saying? There’s only so much a Dreamgirl can take,’” she said recently.
“I said, ‘No, maybe he does love me. Maybe he believes so much that I need to be stronger — that I need to reach deeper inside, that I need to find the place of love that no one has dared to discover about me, even myself.’”
Today, Holliday, 56, is starting a new chapter in her life. She’s older than her co-stars but she can
pull from a deeper well. She never gave up on herself.
“I didn’t really know that I would have a new lease on life. I would love to say I always believed but I didn’t,” she said. “I just kept saying, ‘If someone does rediscover me, I still want to have my voice. I still want to be ready.’”
Director John Doyle said he picked up some element of fragility when Holliday auditioned for “The Color Purple “ and thought she would fit perfectly into the musical’s theme of surviv-ing with grace.
“I was really impressed because she came into the room and she auditioned for the role. A lot of people think they’re beyond doing that and they’re too big for that. She wasn’t,” he said.
BY MARK KENNEDY AP ENTERTAINMENT WRITER
A6 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016
PAGE SIX10 things to know today
Your daily look at late-breaking news, upcoming events and the stories that will be talked about today:
1. CLINTON SEEKS TO USE NEW FBI INQUIRY AS GALVANIZING FORCEThe campaign is press-ing the agency to release more details about the new emails, hoping more information distances the Democrat from the discoveries.
2. WHERE THE ELECTION COULD BE WONFlorida’s “Interstate 4 corridor” and its 6.5 million residents are considered the bellweth-er of the nation’s largest swing state.
3. OKLAHOMA MANHUNT ENDSMichael Dale Vance Jr., 38, wanted in a string of violent crimes, is killed in a shootout after a mas-sive, weeklong search, authorities say.
4. WHY FRANCIS’ VISIT TO SWEDEN IS REMARKABLEThe pontiff is marking the 500th anniversa-ry of the Protestant Reformation, a bold gesture given his Jesuit order was founded to defend the faith against “heretical” reforms.
5. ‘ZERO POVERTY’ PROMISE A DISTANT GOAL FOR ARGENTINAPresident Mauricio Macri campaigned on a promise to end desti-tution, though his mar-ket-friendly reforms so far have brought pain to the country’s poor.
6. IRAQ TV CALL-IN SHOW GIVES GLIMPSE INSIDE IS-HELD MOSULBut as Iraqi forces push closer to the besieged city and the militants enforce a ban on phones and the internet, voices from inside Mosul are falling silent.
7. TAKING ‘HONOR’ OUT OF KILLINGSTwo female Pakistani politicians become unlikely allies in the bat-tle to pass a historic law to protect women from murder by members of their own families.
8. WHAT CALIFORNIA WATER AGENCIES ARE LEFT TO PONDERAfter spending $350 million to pay prop-erty owners to rip out water-slurping lawns, authorities are wonder-ing if the drought-re-lieving experiment was worth it.
9.TWO BILLION KIDS WORLDWIDE BREATHE TOXIC AIRUNICEF says about a third of those children live in northern India and neighboring coun-tries and are at risk for lung and brain damage.
10. CUBS CUT WORLD SERIES DEFICIT TO 3-2Closer Aroldis Chapman gets eight outs and the Cubs beat the Indians 3-2, winning their first Series game in Chicago in 71 years.
FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Today’s Highlight in History:
On Oct. 31, 1926, magi-cian Harry Houdini died in Detroit of peritonitis result-ing from a ruptured appen-dix.
On this date:In 1517, Martin Luther
posted his 95 Theses on the door of the Wittenberg Palace church, marking the start of the Protestant Reformation in Germany.
In 1795, English poet John Keats was born in London.
In 1864, Nevada became the 36th state as President Abraham Lincoln signed a proclamation.
In 1941, the Navy destroy-er USS Reuben James was torpedoed by a German U-boat off Iceland with the loss of some 100 lives, even though the United States had not yet entered World War II. Work was completed on the Mount Rushmore National Memorial in South Dakota, begun in 1927.
In 1956, Navy Rear Adm. George J. Dufek and six oth-ers became the first air trav-elers to set foot at the South Pole.
In 1961, the body of Josef Stalin was removed from Lenin’s Tomb as part of the Soviet Union’s “de-Staliniza-tion” drive.
In 1964, Theodore C. Freeman, 34, became the first member of NASA’s astronaut corps to die when his T-38 jet crashed while approaching Ellington Air Force Base in Houston.
In 1968, President Lyndon B. Johnson ordered a halt to all U.S. bombing of North Vietnam, saying he hoped for fruitful peace negotiations.
In 1984, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassinated by two Sikh security guards.
In 1994, a Chicago-bound American Eagle ATR-72 crashed in northern Indiana, killing all 68 people aboard.
In 1996, a Brazilian Fokker-100 jetliner crashed in Sao Paulo, killing all 96 people on board and three on the ground.
In 1999, EgyptAir Flight 990, bound from New York to Cairo, crashed off the Massachusetts coast, killing all 217 people aboard.
Ten years ago: A fire at a residential hotel in Reno, Nev., killed 12 people. (A hotel resident who set the fire was sentenced to 12 consecutive life terms.) Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki ordered the lifting of joint U.S.-Iraqi military checkpoints around the Shiite militant stronghold of Sadr City and other parts of Baghdad. P.W. Botha, South Africa’s apartheid-era pres-ident, died on the southern Cape coast at age 90.
Five years ago:Palestinians won their great-est international endorse-ment yet with full member-ship in UNESCO, but the move prompted the U.S. to cut off payments to the Paris-based cultural agency. The United Nations estimated that the world’s population had surpassed 7 billion.
One year ago: A Russian passenger airliner crashed in a remote part of Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula 23 minutes after taking off from a popular Red Sea resort, killing all 224 people on board. Four people were killed, including the gunman, following a shooting rampage in Colorado Springs that ended in a gunbattle between police and the shoot-er. The Kansas City Royals rallied for three runs in the eighth inning and beat the New York Mets 5-3 for a 3-1 lead in the World Series.
Thought for Today:“Moral indignation is in most cases two percent moral, forty-eight percent indignation, and fifty percent envy.” — Vittorio De Sica, Italian movie director (1901-1974).
FROM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOCAL BRIEFS |
Sheridan Dog and Cat Shelter will
temporarily close
SHERIDAN — The Sheridan Dog and Cat Shelter will be temporarily closed to the public to replace the chipped and uneven flooring Tuesday through Thursday.
Members of the public that seek to pick up their impounded animal can still do so by calling 674-7694. However, during the two days, the shelter will not be able to accept surrendered animals, allow visits or adoptions due to construction.
‘Met Opera Live’ season
continues Wed.
SHERIDAN — The WYO Theater will pres-ent Mozart’s “Don Giovanni” as part of its The Metropolitan Opera: Live in High Definition series at 6 p.m. Wednesday.
As part of its efforts to reinvigorate opera and reach out to a broader public, The Metropolitan Opera in New York launched the series of opera performances transmitted live to movie theaters and other venues around the world.
The two acts of “Don Giovanni” include the Commendatore, who challenges Giovanni to a duel and is killed. Giovanni and Leporello escape. Anna asks her fiancé, Don Ottavio, to avenge her father’s death. In the morning, Giovanni and Leporello encounter one of Giovanni’s former conquests, Donna Elvira, who is devastated by his betrayal.
Tickets are $21 for adults and $11 for students. They are available at the WYO Theater box office. For more information, call the box office at 672-9084. The WYO Theater is located at 42 N. Main St.
Eagles #186 to host candidate forum
SHERIDAN — The Eagles #186 will host a forum for candidates for city, county and state positions from 6-9 p.m. on Wednesday.
Each candidate will have five minutes to address the audience. A question and answer period will follow between the candidates and audience mem-bers.
For more information, contact Mona Hansen at 672- 9578 or 751-5626.
Eagles #186 is located at 850 N. Main St.
Halloween candy buy-back
set for Wednesday
SHERIDAN — The Halloween candy buy-back will take place Wednesday from 3-5 p.m. at Bighorn Pediatric Dentistry.
Participants are encouraged to bring in extra Halloween candy that will then be bought back for $1 per pound with a maximum of five pounds.
The candy will be sent to Operation Gratitude, an operation that will make individual holiday pack-ages and send them to troops overseas. For more information, call Bighorn Pediatric Dentistry at 674-5437.
Bighorn Pediatric Dentistry is located at 531 Coffeen Ave.
FROM STAFF REPORTS
TUESDAY EVENTS |
TODAY IN HISTORY |
• 5:15-6:15 p.m., Weight Release Seminar, $10 per class, Sheridan Senior Center, 211 Smith St.• 5:30-7 p.m., Jentel Presents Artists in Residency, Sagebrush Community Art Center, E. Fifth St.
NATIONAL OBITUARY |Trailblazing talent agent Norman
Brokaw dies at age 89
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Norman R. Brokaw, a trailblazing talent agent who represented Marilyn Monroe, Elvis Presley, Clint Eastwood and other top Hollywood stars, has died at age 89.
Brokaw’s son, David, says his father died after a long illness on Saturday in Beverly Hills, California.
Brokaw ascended from the mailroom of the William Morris Agency to become its CEO in 1989. Along the way he helped steer actors to work in the fledgling television industry in the 1950s and later signed politicians such as Gerald Ford and Alexander Haig so they could chart careers after they left public service.
His television plan involved teaming up under-utilized film stars with directors who were skilled at delivering low budget movies within a few days, his family said in a news release.
JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS
Aerial daredevil visits downtown Four-year-old Jaxon Filkins waits with his mother, Ashli Filkins, during the Sheridan Jaycees Halloween Parade Saturday out-side of city hall in downtown Sheridan. Dozens of participants came to the parade despite the rain.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS A7
ALMANAC
SHERIDAN FIRE-RESCUEFriday• Activate fire alarm, 1000
block Long Drive, 8:42 a.m.• Structure fire, 100 block
Murphy Gulch Road, 5:25 p.m.
• Rocky Mountain Ambulance assist, 400 block North Jefferson Street, 9:38 p.m.
Saturday• Patient transfer, 1500
block Sugarland Drive, 10:43 a.m.
• Motor vehicle accident, 1200 block Big Horn Avenue, 4:29 p.m.
Sunday• Activated smoke alarm,
3000 block Coffeen Avenue, 12:03 a.m.
• Stove problem, 800 block Emerson Street, 8:38 p.m.
GOOSE VALLEY FIRE DEPARTMENTFriday• Structure fire (Story
assist), 198 Murphy Gulch Road, 5:25 p.m.
Saturday-Sunday• No called reported.
ROCKY MOUNTAIN AMBULANCEFriday-Sunday• No reports available.
SHERIDAN MEMORIAL HOSPITALFriday• Admissions — Shelby L.
Swinyer, Sheridan; Jareth Charles Franks, Sheridan; Isaiah Jordon Swinyer, Sheridan
• No dismissals reported.Saturday-Sunday• No admissions or dis-
missals reported.
SHERIDAN POLICE DEPARTMENTInformation in the police
reports is taken from the SPD website.
Friday• Battery, North Main
Street, 2:06 a.m.• Assist agency, Omarr
Avenue, 4:09 a.m.• Drugs (scheduled surren-
der), West 12th Street, 6 a.m.• Dog at large, Coffeen
Avenue, 8:51 a.m.• Animal injured, Coffeen
Avenue, 10 a.m.• Sex battery (cold), Avoca
Avenue, 11:50 a.m.• Gas theft, Coffeen
Avenue, 12:08 p.m.• Found property,
Mydland Road, 12:51 p.m.• Vehicle identification
number inspection, West 12th Street, 1:03 p.m.
• Bar check, North Main Street, 1:43 p.m.
• Accident, Thurmond Street, 1:54 p.m.
• Suspicious circumstance, North Sheridan Avenue, 2:38 p.m.
• Fraud, North Jefferson Street, 3:14 p.m.
• Suicidal subject, North B Avenue, 5:28 p.m.
• Furnishing , North Main Street, 5:35 p.m.
• Reckless driver, Coffeen Avenue, 5:42 p.m.
• Theft (cold), East Brundage Lane, 6:49 p.m.
• Accident, Sugar View Drive, 7:42 p.m.
• Suicidal subject, Marion Street, 9:13 p.m.
• Drugs (possession), Industrial Road, 10:15 p.m.
Saturday• Suspicious vehicle,
Emerson Street, 1:57 a.m.• Medical, Long Drive, 4:37
a.m.• Parking complaint,
Emerson Street, 10:08 a.m.• Dog at large, West
Loucks Street, 12:53 p.m.• Breach of peace, Yonkee
Avenue, 1:18 p.m.• Civil dispute, West
Eighth Street, 3:46 p.m.• Parking complaint, Third
Avenue East, 3:51 p.m.• Accident, Big Horn
Avenue, 4:24 p.m.• Accident, Sheridan area,
4:27 p.m.• Accident, Coffeen
Avenue, 4:54 p.m.• Barking dog, Park Street,
5 p.m.• Gas theft, East Brundage
Lane, 5:25 p.m.• Motorist assist, Seymour
Street, 5:56 p.m.• Suicidal subject, Avoca
Place, 6:42 p.m.• Parking complaint,
North Main Street, 6:57 p.m.• Drugs (possession), Hill
Pond Drive, 8:46 p.m.• DUS, Big Horn Avenue,
8:55 p.m.• Barking dog, West Fifth
Street, 9:24 p.m.• Suspicious vehicle, West
Eighth Street, 10:25 p.m.• Barking dog, Johnson
Lane, 10:57 p.m.• Welfare check, North
Main Street, 11:09 p.m.Sunday• Bar check, Broadway
Street, 12:07 a.m.• Bar check, North Main
Street, 12:32 a.m.• Bar check, North Main
Street, 12:36 p.m.• Bar check, North Main
Street, 12:42 p.m.• Assist agency, Coffeen
Avenue, 1:04 a.m.• Minor in possession,
West Loucks Street, 1:08 a.m.
• Suicide attempt, East Loucks Street, 1:58 a.m.
• Dispute all other, North Main Street, 2:19 a.m.
• DUI, North Main Street, 2:32 a.m.
• Domestic, Mydland Road, 3 a.m.
• Mental subject, North Jefferson Street, 3:41 a.m.
• Bar check, North Main Street, 3:49 a.m.
• Domestic, Bellevue Avenue, 4:40 a.m.
• Theft (cold), West Loucks Street, 9:04 a.m.
• Suspicious circumstance, West 12th Street, 9:41 a.m.
• Accident, North Main Street, 9:47 a.m.
• Death investigation, North Main Street, 11:27 a.m.
• Welfare check, North Main Street, 12:07 p.m.
• Dog bite, West Fifth Street, 2:28 p.m.
• Parking complaint, Skeels Street, 2:33 p.m.
• Gas theft, East Brundage Lane, 4:00 p.m.
• Hit and run, Highland Avenue, 5:28 p.m.
• Welfare check, West 11th Street, 9 p.m.
• Suicidal subject, West Fifth Street, 10:21 p.m.
• Theft (cold), Long Drive, 10:53 p.m.
• Shoplifting, North Main Street, 10:59 p.m.
SHERIDAN COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICEFriday• Prowler, Highway 335,
Big Horn, 2:54 a.m.• Domestic, Omarr
Avenue, 4:09 a.m.• Warrant service, West
13th Street, 11:10 a.m.• Damaged property,
Commercial Avenue, 12:07 p.m.
• Burglar alarm, Dry Ranch Road, 2:13 p.m.
• Suspicious circumstance, Airport Road, 3:58 p.m.
• Theft (cold), Mobile Drive, Ranchester, 4:27 p.m.
• Structure fire, Murphy Gulch Road, Banner, 5:22 p.m.
• Suspicious circumstance,
Dayton Street, Ranchester, 6:44 p.m.
• DUI (citizen report), Story area, 7:19 p.m.
• Citizen assist, Coffeen Avenue, 8:16 p.m.
• Suspicious vehicle, Interstate 90 westbound, exit 27, 8:31 p.m.
• Welfare check, Sheridan area, 9:36 p.m.
Saturday• Domestic, Indian
Paintbrush Road, 2:22 a.m.• Probation violation,
North Main Street, 10:44 a.m.
• Theft (cold), Coffeen Avenue, 11:55 a.m.
• Domestic disturbance, Gosling Drive, 1:50 p.m.
Sunday• Welfare check, Coffeen
Avenue, 12 a.m.• Intoxication, mile mark-
er 24, Interstate 90 east-bound, 12:57 a.m.
• Welfare check, Dayton area, 9:52 a.m.
• Illegal parking, Second Avenue West, Ranchester, 11:32 p.m.
ARRESTSNames of individuals
arrested for domestic vio-lence or sexual assault will not be released until the individuals have appeared in court.
Friday• David Allen Samdahl, 49,
Sheridan, contempt of court bench warrant, out of coun-ty court, arrested by SCSO
• Earl Edson Butts, 72, Sheridan, felony strangula-tion, circuit court, arrested by SCSO
Saturday• Lisa Renee Lyles, 54,
Sheridan, warrant, circuit court, arrested by SCSO
• Curtis Keith Garn, 21, Sheridan, breach of peace, circuit court, arrested by SPD
Sunday• Jamie Raheleen
Galloway, 40, Sheridan, DWUI, child endangerment (misdemeanor), circuit court, arrested by SPD
• Jessica Ruth Crider, 25, Sheridan, DWUI, circuit court, arrested by SPD
• Wesley R. Short, 20, Worland, pedestrian under influence, minor in posses-sion, consumption alcohol, circuit court, arrested by SCSO
JAIL
TodayDaily inmate count: 79Female inmate count: 15Inmates at treatment facil-
ities (not counted in daily inmate count): 0
Inmates held at other facil-ities (not counted in daily inmate count): 2
Number of book-ins for the weekend: 5
Number of releases for the weekend: 0
Highest number of inmates held over the week-end: 81
REPORTS |
Happy
HalloweenNine-year-old Sydney Dixon stands under her umbrella adorned with Day of the Dead themed tattoos during the Sheridan Jaycees Halloween Parade Saturday outside of City Hall in downtown Sheridan. Dozens of participants came to the parade despite the rain.
JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS
Ukrainian man renames himself iPhone 7 to win the phoneKIEV, Ukraine (AP)
— A Ukrainian man has officially changed his name to iPhone 7 after an electronics store offered the latest Apple product to the first five people who do that.
The 20-year old iPhone Sim (Seven) got the cov-eted prize Friday. He said he might change it back to his original name, Olexander Turin, when
he has children.The price of phone
starts at US$850 in Ukraine, while the name changes costs the equiva-lent of $2.
Sim’s friends and fam-ily were shocked at first but eventually supported the idea.
His sister, Tetyana Panina, said “it was dif-ficult to accept that and hard to believe it’s true.”
Here are the results of Saturday’s
Power Balllottery drawing:
Winning numbers: 19-20-21-42-48;
Power Ball 23 Power Play 3X
Estimated jackpot: $198,000,000
5-Day Forecast for SheridanTONIGHT THURSDAY FRIDAYTUESDAY WEDNESDAY
Partly cloudy and breezy
Some sun Mostly sunny and nice
Sunny and pleasantly warm
Mostly sunny and mild
Precipitation (in inches)
Temperature
Sheridan County Airport through SundayAlmanac
Sunday ............................................................ 0.00"Month to date ................................................. 1.45"Normal month to date .................................... 1.38"Year to date ...................................................14.67"Normal year to date ......................................12.88"
High/low .........................................................55/31Normal high/low ............................................55/26Record high .............................................81 in 1950Record low ............................................... -9 in 1991 The Moon Rise Set
The Sun Rise Set
Sun and Moon
First Full Last New
Nov 7 Nov 14 Nov 21 Nov 29
Today 8:26 a.m. 6:55 p.m.Tuesday 9:23 a.m. 7:30 p.m.Wednesday 10:18 a.m. 8:09 p.m.
Today 7:45 a.m. 5:57 p.m.Tuesday 7:46 a.m. 5:56 p.m.Wednesday 7:48 a.m. 5:55 p.m.
0-2 Low; 3-5 Moderate; 6-7 High; 8-10 Very High; 11+ Extreme
The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection. Shown is the highest value for the day.
9a 10a 11a Noon 1p 2p 3p 4p 5p
UV Index tomorrow
National Weather for Tuesday, November 1Shown are
Tuesday's noon positions of
weather systems and precipitation.
Temperature bands are highs
for the day.
Regional Weather
Regional CitiesCity Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Tue. Wed. Thu. Tue. Wed. Thu.
Billings 58/36/pc 60/43/s 65/38/sCasper 59/30/sh 58/33/s 66/34/sCheyenne 61/36/pc 57/32/s 68/38/sCody 53/33/pc 57/36/s 64/37/sEvanston 45/27/pc 49/29/s 58/36/sGillette 59/35/pc 60/34/s 69/40/sGreen River 50/29/pc 51/26/s 55/31/sJackson 44/24/pc 46/22/s 53/24/s
Laramie 57/27/sh 53/23/s 63/28/sNewcastle 60/36/pc 58/32/s 67/35/sRawlins 54/30/i 52/23/s 62/33/sRiverton 53/29/pc 53/29/s 58/31/sRock Springs 48/28/pc 49/27/s 55/32/sScottsbluff 65/36/pc 63/31/s 72/31/sSundance 56/32/pc 55/34/s 64/35/sYellowstone 37/22/sn 39/23/s 49/22/s
SHERIDAN
Buffalo
Basin Gillette
Kaycee
Wright
Worland
Parkman
Clearmont
Lovell
Thermopolis
Cody
BillingsHardin
Shown is Tuesday's weather. Temperatures are tonight's lows
and Tuesday's highs.
Broadus
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2016
Weather (W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
Weather on the WebFor more detailed weather information on the Internet, go to:www.thesheridanpress.com
Ranchester
Dayton
Big Horn
Big Horn Mountain Precipitation 24 hours through noon Sunday ...................... 0.15"
40/5836/60
33/60
33/5831/58
31/5632/55
32/5631/51
35/5331/55
32/55
39/56
35/59
32/60
30/5930/54
29/55
58 29 60 29 66 30 63 3131
33/49Story
SmoothiesSmoothies
2146 Coffeen Ave. • 673-11002590 N. Main • 672-5900
A8 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016
If elected, Clinton faces awkward coexistence with Comey
WASHINGTON (AP) — The relationship between James Comey and Hillary Clinton was never going to be tension-free, not when Comey’s FBI had conduct-ed an election-year crimi-nal investigation into the Democratic presidential candidate’s email practices.
But Comey’s sudden announcement to Congress that FBI agents would review new emails that may be connected to that dormant investigation revives questions about how Clinton, if elected, would
coexist with the indepen-dent-minded FBI director. Comey has shown a willing-ness to break with the White House and has been critical of her handling of sensitive information as secretary of state.
The FBI director is appointed to 10-year terms, to avoid any appearance of political influence. Comey took over in September 2013, meaning he still would be on the job if Clinton is sworn into office in January. That could raise the prospect of an unmis-takably fragile dynamic, but it probably would not be any easier if Republican Donald Trump won, given his criticism of the FBI after Comey’s recommendation in July against prosecuting Clinton in the email matter.
“There needs to be a mutu-al trust between a president and an FBI director given the importance of that post,” said Jamie Gorelick, deputy attorney general during for-mer President Bill Clinton’s administration.
Ron Hosko, a former assistant FBI director under Comey, said he envisioned a “very, very difficult rela-tionship,” but Comey’s abil-ity to compartmentalize his duties would enable him to keep doing his job.
“Could Jim Comey go over to the White House and brief on terrorism intelligence or a terrorism strike, and what the bureau is doing about it or has done about it, and keep that in a separate box? Yes,” Hosko said.
Clinton and her campaign have aggressively chal-lenged the FBI to release more information about the emails, presumably because they believe a fuller portrait would prove exculpatory. Clinton on Saturday called it “pretty strange to put something like that out with such little information right before an election.” Her campaign chairman, John Podesta, called the letter an “unprecedented step” that cried out for more clarity.
Comey acknowledged in a
memo Friday that his letter created the risk of being misunderstood so close to the Nov. 8 election. But he said he felt obligated to alert Congress to the new emails, which surfaced during an unrelated criminal sexting investigation involving for-mer Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., after having previ-ously told lawmakers that the email investigation had been concluded. Keeping the emails secret until after the election carried its own political risks.
Late Sunday, a law enforcement official con-firmed the FBI had obtained a warrant to begin review-ing the emails, which he said would be done expe-ditiously. The official had knowledge of the investiga-tion, but was not authorized to speak of it publicly and requested anonymity to do so. It’s not clear what the emails are about, wheth-er they contain classified information or how they’re connected to the Clinton investigation, which exam-ined the mishandling of classified information on her private server. Comey could not guarantee that the review would be done by Election Day.
Conflict between a presi-dent and an FBI director is not without precedent.
Bill Clinton had a noto-riously tense relationship with his FBI director, Louis Freeh. Clinton devoted mul-tiple paragraphs in his 2004 memoir to castigating Freeh for various decisions. Freeh, for his part, resigned before his 10 years were up, and has said he wore Clinton’s criticism as a “badge of honor.”
When Comey was nom-inated for the job in 2013, President Barack Obama praised him for his “fierce independence and deep integrity.” A former Republican who served as deputy attorney general under President George W. Bush, Comey has said he’s no longer registered with a political party.
BY ERIC TUCKER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS
‘Things that Go Bump’ at The BrintonEight-year-old Alex Eisenman looks for artifacts in the Plains Nations Exhibit during “Things that Go Bump in the Night” event Saturday at The Brinton Museum. Guests were given a list of items to find in the gallery to learn about Native American history and were rewarded with a bag of treats after completing the tasks.
Supreme Court to rule in Virginia transgender caseWASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme
Court will take up transgender rights for the first time in the case of a Virginia school board that wants to prevent a trans-gender teenager from using the boys’ bath-room at his high school.
The justices said Friday they will hear the appeal from the Gloucester County school board sometime next year. The high court’s order means that student Gavin Grimm will not be able to use the boys’ bathroom in the meantime.
The court could use the case to resolve similar disputes across the country,
said Shannon Minter, legal director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights. “Obviously, for transgender people, the stakes of this case are incredibly high. Whatever the court rules in Grimm may ensure that transgender people are accept-ed and included as equal members of our society, or it may relegate them to outsid-ers for decades to come,” Minter said.
A lower court had ordered the school board to accommodate Grimm, but the jus-tices in August put that order on hold while they considered whether to hear the appeal.
Grimm, a 17-year-old high school senior,
was born female but identifies as male. He was allowed to use the boys’ restroom at his high school for several weeks in 2014.
But after some parents complained, the school board adopted a policy requiring students to use either the restroom that corresponds with their biological gender or a private, single-stall restroom. Grimm is backed by the Obama administration in his argument that the policy violates Title IX, a federal law that bars sex discrimination in schools.
“I never thought that my restroom use would ever turn into any kind of national
debate,” Grimm said in a statement issued after the court announced it will hear his case. “The only thing I ever asked for was the right to be treated like everyone else. While I’m disappointed that I will have to spend my final school year being singled out and treated differently from every other guy, I will do everything I can to make sure that other transgender students don’t have to go through the same experience.”
Gloucester County school board chair-man Troy Andersen praised the court for agreeing to hear what he called a difficult case.
MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS B1
SPORTS
JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS
Eleven-year-old Patton Hamilton shoots from the free-throw line during the Haunted House of Hoops Saturday at the Bruce Hoffman Golden Dome at Sheridan College.
Left: Sheridan College women’s soccer players Maria Grogan, left, and Sarah Jones hand out candy to kids during the Haunted House of Hoops. Right: Sheridan College men’s basketball player Dmonta Harris dunks the ball during the Haunted House of Hoops Saturday at the Bruce Hoffman Golden Dome. The event featured activities for kids, a men’s basketball scrimmage, 3-point contest, dunk contest and an autograph session.
HAUNTED HOUSE OF HOOPS
Bohling: Wyoming upsets No. 13 Boise State 30-28 on late safety
LARAMIE (AP) — Wyoming defensive tackle Chase Appleby didn’t practice all week because he was recovering from a concussion and was “dog sick” on Thursday. It didn’t show two days later.
But Appleby highlighted a resur-gent Wyoming program when he sacked Brett Rypien and forced a fumble that bounced out of the back of the end zone for a safety with 1:25 left to give the Cowboys a 30-28 upset victory over No. 13 Boise State on Saturday night.
“I tried to put a good hit on
him, and I saw the ball fly out,” Appleby said. “I wanted to recover it for another score but we’ll take the safety.”
It was Wyoming’s first win over the Broncos in 11 games between the two teams and its first vic-tory over a Top 25 team since beating No. 22 Air Force in 2002. Thousands of fans swarmed the field and the Cowboys’ players as the final seconds ticked off.
Josh Allen completed 18 of 31 passes for 274 yards and three touchdowns, and Brian Hill ran for 146 yards for the Cowboys (6-2, 4-0 Mountain West).
Rypien completed 22 of 35 passes
for 295 yards, and caught a 33-yard TD pass on a trick play for Boise State (7-1, 3-1).
Jeremey McNichols ran for 143 yards and two TDs, and Jake Hollister caught six passes for 144 yards and two touchdowns.
The game featured two of the top running backs in the nation in Hill, who entered the weekend second in rushing, and McNichols, who was No. 6. Wyoming out-gained Boise State 489 yards to 487.
Wyoming, which trailed 21-7 in the first half, tied it on a 27-yard TD pass from Allen to Tanner Gentry , followed by a 2-point con-
version on a pass from Allen to Jake Maulhardt with 6:42 left in the fourth quarter.
The teams traded possessions with Boise State getting the ball at its own 10-yard line with 1:38 remaining.
After an incomplete pass, Rypien was sacked by Appleby near the goal line and the bounced through the back of the end zone.
“We trust Brett, and they made a play,” Boise State coach Bryan Harsin said. “He’s trying to get the ball out. This is football, this is every week football and some-times that ball bounces funny and it came out and they got the safety
at a critical time in the game.”THE TAKEAWAYBoise State: Saw its hopes of
cracking the Top 10 and eventu-ally earning a spot in the College Football Playoff dashed. The Broncos likely needed an unblem-ished record to do that.
Wyoming: The win shows it’s a program on the upswing. The team is stocked with youth and is vastly improved under the direc-tion of coach Craig Bohl after fin-ishing last season 2-10.
BY BOB MOEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEE POKES, PAGE B3
SC volleyball
knocks off
LCCC, B2
Mixed results at
regional volleyball
tourneys, B2
B2 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016
MIKE PRUDEN | THE SHERIDAN PRESS
Sheridan College’s Miranda Gallagher, right, and Mallory Noble block a spike from Laramie County’s Carlee Morrison Saturday at the Bruce Hoffman Golden Dome. SC beat LCCC in five sets.
Lady Generals knock off 17th-ranked Golden Eagles
SHERIDAN — It took five sets, but the Sheridan College volleyball team closed out the regular season with a big win over the 17th ranked Laramie County Community College Golden Eagles Saturday (22-25, 25-14, 26-24, 25-27, 15-11).
It was the second five-set match of the week-end for the Lady Generals (13-15, 7-11 in Region IX). They dropped a five-set match Friday to Eastern Wyoming before bouncing back on Saturday.
But where Sheridan lacked in keeping sets close Friday — each of the first four sets was decided by 5 points or more — the Lady Generals never let LCCC (24-8, 13-4) get a full head of steam.
Sheridan’s worst set of the day came in the opener, and the team still showed signs of life after falling behind early. The Lady Generals lost the first 4 points of the set and eventually found themselves in a 6-point hole at the set’s halfway point.
But Sheridan battled back thanks to strong serving from Dani Potter and very tough play at the net. An Ashlee Purcella kill tied the set at 18, and SC took its first lead when LCCC’s
Lindsay Vanderwood spiked one into the net on the ensuing point. However, a couple of missed shots put Sheridan in another hole before Elizabeth Clark put the game away with a kill for LCCC.
Sheridan wasn’t deterred.The energy in the gym increased in set two
as the Lady Generals took a 4-1 lead and never looked back. Again, the play at the net set the tone for Sheridan, and it increased over the final three sets.
SC trailed early again in the third set but battled back late. The team’s first lead came at 18-17 off a big Miranda Gallagher kill, and Purcella put one away right after.
Another kill from Gallagher gave Sheridan its largest lead of the set at 23-19, and Kiahlei Yaste thwarted a LCCC comeback with a cru-cial kill with the set tied at 24 before SC took the set.
The kills kept coming, too.As Sheridan and LCCC battled back-and-
forth in the fourth set — the most even-ly-matched set of the day — the Lady Generals made the plays when they needed to. The teams traded points for the final 12 serves of the set, with neither team mounting more than a 2-point lead.
Ally Gates and Purcella had two big kills
that tied the set at 22 and 24, respectively, but a short bump into an open space in the middle of the court meant a second-straight fifth set for the Lady Generals.
This time, though, Sheridan put it away.The final set featured six kills for SC to go
with two aces, all forcing LCCC to play on its heels. Purcella, Maranda Koch and Gallagher put away three straight kills that gave Sheridan an 8-5 lead before the teams switched sides. When the Golden Eagles stopped the bleeding, Potter fooled them with a service ace.
Another ace from Mckayla Ward made it 14-11, and Gates put the exclamation point on the match with a kill on the final point.
Gates led with 13 kills to go with three blocks, and Purcella added 11 kills. Potter had four service aces and 33 digs, as well.
The match was a big momentum boost for Sheridan as they head to the Region IX Tournament this week. The win was the Lady Generals’ best of the season against a team that had dismantled them earlier in the year (13-25, 17-25, 24-26).
Sheridan’s won four of its last five matches after a losing streak of seven.
The Region IX Tournament begins Wednesday in Riverton.
BY MIKE PRUDEN
Lady Rams volleyball
season comes to an end
BIG HORN — Big Horn’s volleyball sea-son came to a close Saturday afternoon.
The Lady Rams were knocked out of the 2A East Regional Tournament Saturday after going 1-2 for the weekend in Torrington.
The Lady Rams started off hot Friday afternoon when they demolished Southeast in three sets (25-16, 25-22, 25-19).
But during their next game Friday, they
ran into a familiar roadblock.Big Horn went up against the two-time
defending state champs in Wright, and the Lady Rams couldn’t hang on. Despite a good effort, Big Horn lost 3-0 (25-16. 25-22, 25-20). This was the fourth time Big Horn had lost to Wright this season.
In a crucial elimination game where the winner went to state and the loser went home, Big Horn could not get it done.
After falling to Pine Bluffs 25-20 and 28-26 in the first two sets, the Lady Rams still put up a good fight.
Big Horn rallied and won its next two sets 25-18 and 25-23. Yet, the season ended in heartbreak for the Lady Rams when they
lost 15-10 in the final set.The Lady Rams wrapped up the season
with a 16-17 overall record and a 7-3 record in Northeast Conference play.
Lady Broncs heading
to state tournament
SHERIDAN — The Sheridan High School volleyball team won a critical match over Cheyenne Central late Friday night to clinch a spot in the 4A state tournament. The Lady Broncs finished fourth at the 4A East Regional Tournament Saturday and were a few points away from taking third.
After clinching the fourth spot in Saturday’s final round with its win over Central Friday, Sheridan was faced with the tough task of battling the reigning state champion Cheyenne East Saturday morn-ing. The Lady Broncs lost in straight sets (19-25, 25-27, 15-25), pitting them with rival Gillette for third place.
Sheridan bounced back in the final match of the weekend, taking the higher-ranked Lady Camels to five sets after dropping the first two. Eventually, though, Gillette got the edge in the final set to claim the match (22-25, 19-25, 25-22, 27-25, 7-15).
The state tournament begins Thursday in Casper.
FROM STAFF REPORTS
LOCAL SPORTS BRIEFS |
Chapman, Cubs stop Indians, cut World Series deficit to 3-2
CHICAGO (AP) — They’ve waited 108 years for a champion-ship. So with this World Series on the verge of slipping away, the Chicago Cubs could not wait any longer.
Manager Joe Maddon summoned closer Aroldis Chapman from the bullpen in the seventh inning for the first eight-out save of his big league career, needing to hold off the Cleveland Indians in Game 5.
As nervous fans fretted at Wrigley Field, Chapman fired his 100 mph heat and preserved the Cubs’ 3-2 win Sunday night, cut-ting Cleveland’s lead to 3-2.
The Cubs won a Series game at Wrigley for the first time since Game 6 in 1945.
“High anxiety,” first baseman Anthony Rizzo said. “A lot of deep
breaths. Every pitch gets bigger and bigger as the game goes on. It’s unbelievable. Great win here, we sent these fans off with a win, now we have to go to Cleveland and win.”
Now, the team that led the majors in wins this year will try to extend its season again Tuesday night when Chicago right-hander Jake Arrieta faces Josh Tomlin at Cleveland in Game 6.
Chicago is trying to become the first club to overcome a 3-1 Series deficit since the 1985 Kansas City Royals and the first to do it by winning Games 6 and 7 on the road since the 1979 Pittsburgh Pirates.
Cleveland, in search of its first title since 1948, is in search of its third-ever title and has won the championship at home just once, in 1920. Chapman hadn’t pitched in the seventh inning since 2012.
He threw 42 pitches, 15 of them at least 100 mph.
The lefty struck out four and fanned Jose Ramirez, who had homered earlier, with 101 mph heat to end it.
With the crowd at the Friendly Confines desperate for a win, Kris Bryant homered to start a three-run burst in the fourth off Trevor Bauer. That gave Jon Lester a 3-1 lead. The Indians nicked him for a run in the sixth, and Carl Edwards Jr. took over to begin the seventh with a 3-2 edge. Chapman came in with a runner on second and one out. He stranded the potential tying run at second base in the seventh and at third in the eighth, then pitched a 1-2-3 ninth.
Lester, the Game 1 loser, improved to 4-1 in Series play by allowing two runs and six hits.
Ramirez homered in the sec-ond to put the Indians ahead.
Cleveland closed within a run in the sixth when Rajai Davis sin-gled, stole second scored on a two-out single by Francisco Lindor.
Mike Napoli singled against Edwards leading off the seventh and took second on a passed ball by rookie catcher Willson Contreras, who had just replaced David Ross. Carlos Santana flied out, and Chapman came in to strike out Ramirez with a 100 mph pitch. He hit Brandon Guyer on the left leg and retired Roberto Perez on a groundout as fans screamed in relief.
Then in the eighth, Davis singled with one out on a hard grounder down the line that Rizzo stopped with a dive — Chapman took a few seconds before heading to cover first, leaving Rizzo with no one to throw to. Davis stole sec-ond, and after Jason Kipnis fouled out, swiped third standing up.
BY RONALD BLUM
AP BASEBALL WRITER
Broncos pick apart Rivers in 27-19 win
over Chargers
DENVER (AP) — The Denver Broncos took turns picking off and pummeling Philip Rivers in a 27-19 win over the San Diego Chargers on Sunday.
But defensive coordinator Wade Phillips was taken to a hospital after getting knocked down during Bradley Roby’s 51-yard touchdown return in the second quarter, tempering their enthusiasm.
San Diego running back Melvin Gordon was blocked into the 69-year-old assis-tant, who was strapped to a backboard and carted off the field. The Broncos said Phillips was alert and had movement in his arms and legs when he arrived at the hospital via ambulance.
With linebackers coach Reggie Herring taking over Denver’s defensive calls for Phillips, the Broncos (6-2) had a goal-line stand in the closing minutes and picked off Rivers twice more in the second half.
They only turned one of those takeaways into points, however, and that allowed the hard-luck Chargers (3-5) to stay in it until the end, forcing Denver to make two stands in the closing min-utes.
Safety Darian Stewart’s takeaway gave Denver the ball at the San Diego 10, and Devontae Booker’s 3-yard TD run made it 17-7. Safety T.J. Ward’s interception set up his offense at the Chargers 7. But Booker, making his first career start after C.J. Anderson (knee) went on IR, fumbled at the San Diego 2 and linebacker Jatavis Brown recovered.
The Chargers capitalized with a 98-yard touchdown drive that ended with Travis Benjamin’s one-handed TD grab. Shaq Barrett blocked Josh Lambo’s extra point, keeping the score 17-13.
Juwan Thompson, promot-ed from the practice squad Saturday, scored from the 1 to make it 24-13. But the Chargers got into the defen-sive act themselves when cornerback Casey Hayward returned a tipped pass from Trevor Siemian to Jordan Norwood 24 yards for a touchdown that made it 24-19. Antonio Gates’ illegal pick negated a 2-point con-version catch by Gordon, and Jared Crick deflected Rivers’ do-over pass, keep-ing it a five-point game.
The Chargers reached the Denver 2 with three minutes remaining but threw four consecutive incompletions without handing off to Gordon, who had 111 yards on 23 carries.
San Diego’s last gasp ended at midfield.
Roby, starting in place of Pro Bowl cornerback Aqib Talib (lower back), gave Denver a 10-7 lead with a 51-yard pick-6 in the sec-ond quarter. Rivers’ pass went off receiver Tyrell Williams’ hands, and Roby took the ball out of the air.
BY ARNIE STAPLETON
AP PRO FOOTBALL WRITER
MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS B3
SCOREBOARD |
All Times MDTWILD CARDTuesday, Oct. 4: Toronto 5, Baltimore 2, 11 inningsWednesday, Oct. 5: San Francisco 3, N.Y. Mets 0DIVISION SERIES(Best-of-5)American LeagueToronto 3, Texas 0Thursday, Oct. 6: Toronto 10, Texas 1Friday, Oct. 7: Toronto 5, Texas 3Sunday, Oct. 9: Toronto 7, Texas 6, 10 inningsCleveland 3, Boston 0Thursday, Oct. 6: Cleveland 5, Boston 4Friday, Oct. 7: Cleveland 6, Boston 0Sunday, Oct. 9: Cleveland at Boston, ppd., rainMonday, Oct. 10: Cleveland 4, Boston 3National LeagueChicago 3, San Francisco 1Friday, Oct. 7: Chicago 1, San Francisco 0Saturday, Oct. 8: Chicago 5, San Francisco 2Monday, Oct. 10: San Francisco 6, Chicago 5, 13 inningsTuesday, Oct. 11: Chicago 6, San Francisco 5Los Angeles 3, Washington 2Friday, Oct. 7: Los Angeles 4, Washington 3Saturday, Oct. 8: Los Angeles at Washington, ppd., rainSunday, Oct. 9: Washington 5, Los Angeles 2Monday, Oct. 10: Washington 8, Los Angeles 3Tuesday, Oct. 11: Los Angeles 6, Washington 5Thursday, Oct. 13: Los Angeles 4, Washington 3LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES(Best-of-7)American LeagueCleveland 4, Toronto 1Friday, Oct. 14: Cleveland 2, Toronto 0Saturday, Oct. 15: Cleveland 2, Toronto 1Monday, Oct. 17: Cleveland 4, Toronto 2Tuesday, Oct. 18: Toronto 5, Cleveland 1Wednesday, Oct. 19: Cleveland 3, Toronto 0National LeagueChicago 4, Los Angeles 2Saturday, Oct. 15: Chicago 8, Los Angeles 4Sunday, Oct. 16: Los Angeles 1, Chicago 0Tuesday, Oct. 18: Los Angeles 6, Chicago 0Wednesday, Oct. 19: Chicago 10, Los Angeles 2Thursday, Oct. 20: Chicago 8, Los Angeles 4Saturday, Oct. 22: Chicago 5, Los Angeles 0WORLD SERIES(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)All games televised by FoxCleveland 3, Chicago 2Tuesday, Oct. 25: Cleveland 6, Chicago 0Wednesday, Oct. 26: Chicago 5, Cleveland 1Friday, Oct. 28: Cleveland 1, Chicago 0Saturday, Oct. 29: Cleveland 7, Chicago 2Sunday, Oct. 30: Chicago 3, Cleveland 2Tuesday, Nov. 1: Chicago (Arrieta 18-8) at Cleve-land (Tomlin 6-9), 6:08 p.m.x-Wednesday, Nov. 2: Chicago at Cleveland, 6:08 p.m.
All Times MDTAMERICAN CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PANew England 7 1 0 .875 217 132
Miami 3 4 0 .429 146 159N.Y. Jets 3 5 0 .375 150 208South W L T Pct PF PAHouston 5 3 0 .625 137 167Tennessee 4 4 0 .500 182 183Indianapolis 3 5 0 .375 208 230Jacksonville 2 5 0 .286 139 196North W L T Pct PF PAPittsburgh 4 3 0 .571 170 150Cincinnati 3 4 1 .438 167 189Baltimore 3 4 0 .429 133 139Cleveland 0 8 0 .000 158 238West W L T Pct PF PADenver 6 2 0 .750 194 136Oakland 6 2 0 .750 215 203Kansas City 5 2 0 .714 166 137San Diego 3 5 0 .375 225 212NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast W L T Pct PF PADallas 6 1 0 .857 188 130N.Y. Giants 4 3 0 .571 133 141Philadelphia 4 3 0 .571 179 117Washington 4 3 1 .563 186 189South W L T Pct PF PAAtlanta 5 3 0 .625 262 231Tampa Bay 3 4 0 .429 152 189New Orleans 3 4 0 .429 201 215Carolina 2 5 0 .286 191 196North W L T Pct PF PAMinnesota 5 1 0 .833 129 84Green Bay 4 3 0 .571 172 156Detroit 4 4 0 .500 183 190Chicago 1 6 0 .143 111 169West W L T Pct PF PASeattle 4 2 1 .643 131 109Arizona 3 4 1 .438 179 140Los Angeles 3 4 0 .429 120 154San Francisco 1 6 0 .143 144 219ThursdayTennessee 36, Jacksonville 22SundayCincinnati 27, Washington 27, OTHouston 20, Detroit 13New Orleans 25, Seattle 20N.Y. Jets 31, Cleveland 28
Carolina 30, Arizona 20Kansas City 30, Indianapolis 14Oakland 30, Tampa Bay 24, OT
Atlanta 33, Green Bay 32Denver 27, San Diego 19Dallas 29, Philadelphia 23, OTOpen: Los Angeles, San Francisco, N.Y. Giants, Miami, Baltimore, PittsburghMondayMinnesota at Chicago, 6:30 p.m.Thursday, Nov. 3Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 6:25 p.m.Sunday, Nov. 6Dallas at Cleveland, 11 a.m.N.Y. Jets at Miami, 11 a.m.Philadelphia at N.Y. Giants, 11 a.m.Jacksonville at Kansas City, 11 a.m.Detroit at Minnesota, 11 a.m.Pittsburgh at Baltimore, 11 a.m.New Orleans at San Francisco, 2:05 p.m.Carolina at Los Angeles, 2:05 p.m.Tennessee at San Diego, 2:25 p.m.Indianapolis at Green Bay, 2:25 p.m.Denver at Oakland, 6:30 p.m.Open: Washington, Arizona, Chicago, New En-gland, Houston, CincinnatiMonday, Nov. 7
All Times MDTEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAMontreal 9 8 0 1 17 31 14Detroit 10 6 4 0 12 28 24Ottawa 8 5 3 0 10 25 25Tampa Bay 9 5 4 0 10 27 29Florida 9 4 4 1 9 25 23Boston 8 4 4 0 8 18 23
Toronto 9 2 4 3 7 26 35Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAPittsburgh 9 6 2 1 13 25 27N.Y. Rangers 9 6 3 0 12 35 22Washington 8 5 2 1 11 22 17New Jersey 8 4 2 2 10 18 16Philadelphia 10 4 5 1 9 36 38N.Y. Islanders 9 4 5 0 8 27 25Columbus 7 3 3 1 7 18 17Carolina 8 2 4 2 6 24 30WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAMinnesota 9 6 2 1 13 32 19St. Louis 9 5 2 2 12 22 21Chicago 9 5 3 1 11 31 27Colorado 7 4 3 0 8 19 19Winnipeg 9 4 5 0 8 22 26Dallas 8 3 4 1 7 18 26Nashville 8 2 5 1 5 19 28
GP W L OT Pts GF GAEdmonton 9 7 2 0 14 29 19San Jose 9 6 3 0 12 23 21Vancouver 9 4 4 1 9 17 24Calgary 10 4 5 1 9 31 35Los Angeles 9 4 5 0 8 20 26Anaheim 9 3 4 2 8 21 23Arizona 8 2 6 0 4 24 33NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.Sunday
Philadelphia 4, Carolina 3Florida 5, Detroit 2N.Y. Islanders 5, Toronto 1N.Y. Rangers 6, Tampa Bay 1Chicago 3, Los Angeles 0Ottawa 2, Edmonton 0Washington 3, Calgary 1TuesdayDallas at Columbus, 5 p.m.St. Louis at N.Y. Rangers, 5 p.m.Edmonton at Toronto, 5:30 p.m.Carolina at Ottawa, 5:30 p.m.Tampa Bay at N.Y. Islanders, 5:30 p.m.Boston at Florida, 5:30 p.m.Washington at Winnipeg, 6 p.m.
Calgary at Chicago, 6:30 p.m.Nashville at Colorado, 7 p.m.San Jose at Arizona, 8 p.m.Anaheim at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.WednesdayVancouver at Montreal, 5:30 p.m.Detroit at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.Pittsburgh at Anaheim, 8:30 p.m.Thursday
Edmonton at N.Y. Rangers, 5 p.m.Philadelphia at N.Y. Islanders, 5 p.m.Winnipeg at Washington, 5 p.m.Vancouver at Ottawa, 5:30 p.m.Boston at Tampa Bay, 5:30 p.m.New Jersey at Florida, 5:30 p.m.Colorado at Chicago, 6:30 p.m.St. Louis at Dallas, 6:30 p.m.Nashville at Arizona, 8 p.m.Pittsburgh at Los Angeles, 8:30 p.m.Calgary at San Jose, 8:30 p.m.
SundayAt Martinsville SpeedwayMartinsville, Va.Lap length: .526 miles(Start position in parentheses)1. (3) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 500 laps, 115.7 rating, 44 points.2. (19) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 500, 105.3, 39.3. (8) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, 500, 111.6, 39.
4. (17) Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 500, 129.7, 39.5. (9) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 500, 122.1, 37.
7. (1) Martin Truex Jr, Toyota, 500, 119.1, 35.8. (14) Jamie McMurray, Chevrolet, 500, 92.9, 33.9. (2) Joey Logano, Ford, 500, 104.2, 33.10. (4) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 500, 102.7, 32.11. (22) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet, 499, 79.3, 30.12. (5) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 499, 82.1, 29.
14. (11) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 499, 89.4, 28.15. (16) Aric Almirola, Ford, 499, 71.7, 26.16. (13) Ryan Newman, Chevrolet, 499, 81.7, 25.17. (32) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 499, 78.8, 24.18. (30) Michael McDowell, Chevrolet, 498, 58.0, 23.19. (15) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 498, 64.8, 22.20. (20) Kevin Harvick, Chevrolet, 498, 76.0, 21.21. (26) Casey Mears, Chevrolet, 497, 69.7, 20.22. (23) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 497, 65.7, 19.23. (31) Trevor Bayne, Ford, 497, 52.5, 18.24. (24) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 497, 53.2, 17.25. (18) Paul Menard, Chevrolet, 496, 55.5, 16.26. (6) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 496, 55.7, 15.27. (29) Chris Buescher, Ford, 495, 46.2, 14.28. (28) Clint Bowyer, Chevrolet, 495, 57.8, 13.29. (33) Landon Cassill, Ford, 494, 46.4, 12.30. (21) Regan Smith, Chevrolet, 494, 45.4, 12.31. (37) Dylan Lupton, Toyota, 490, 32.0, 0.32. (27) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, 489, 41.2, 9.
34. (35) Brian Scott, Ford, 484, 35.8, 7.35. (40) Michael Annett, Chevrolet, 479, 32.5, 6.36. (7) Carl Edwards, Toyota, 477, 64.0, 5.37. (12) David Ragan, Toyota, 424, 43.1, 4.38. (34) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 407, 31.5, 3.39. (36) Gray Gaulding, Chevrolet, reargear, 360, 27.8, 2.40. (39) Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Ford, accident, 21, 24.0, 1.Race StatisticsAverage Speed of Race Winner: 78.537 mph.Time of Race: 3 hours, 20 minutes, 55 seconds.Margin of Victory: 1.291 seconds.Caution Flags: 5 for 54 laps.Lead Changes: 15 among 9 drivers.Lap Leaders: M.Truex 1-24; J.Logano 25-45; M.Truex 46-62; R.Smith 63-64; M.Truex 65-73; K.Larson 74-79; M.Truex 80-110; Ky.Busch 111-113; M.Truex 114-150; M.Kenseth 151; M.Truex 152-180; M.Kenseth 181-355; D.Hamlin 356; A.All-mendinger 357-361; D.Hamlin 362-408; J.Johnson 409-500Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Led, Laps Led): M.Kenseth, 2 times for 174 laps; M.Truex, 6 times for 141 laps; J.Johnson, 1 time for 91 laps; D.Hamlin, 2 times for 46 laps; J.Logano, 1 time for 20 laps; K.Larson, 1 time for 5 laps; A.Allmending-er, 1 time for 4 laps; Ky.Busch, 1 time for 2 laps; R.Smith, 1 time for 1 lap.Wins: Ky.Busch, 4; K.Harvick, 4; B.Keselowski, 4; M.Truex, 4; D.Hamlin, 3; J.Johnson, 3; C.Edwards,
2; M.Kenseth, 2; J.Logano, 2; C.Buescher, 1; Ku.Busch, 1; K.Larson, 1; T.Stewart, 1.Top 16 in Points: J. Johnson, 4,044; D. Hamlin, 4,039; M. Kenseth, 4,039; Kyle Busch, 4,037; J. Logano, 4,033; K. Harvick, 4,021; Kurt Busch, 4,019; C. Edwards, 4,005; M. Truex Jr, 2,226; B. Keselowski, 2,207; A. Dillon, 2,187; C. Elliott, 2,185; K. Larson, 2,183; T. Stewart, 2,156; J. Mc-Murray, 2,143; C. Buescher, 2,123.NASCAR Driver Rating FormulaA maximum of 150 points can be attained in a race.The formula combines the following categories: Wins, Finishes, Top-15 Finishes, Average Running Position While on Lead Lap, Average Speed Under Green, Fastest Lap, Led Most Laps, Lead-Lap Finish.
BASKETBALLNational Basketball AssociationCHARLOTTE HORNETS — Exercised the third-year option on the contract of F-C Frank Kaminsky.NBA Development LeagueRIO GRANDE VALLEY VIPERS — Traded the returning player rights to G Will Cummings and C
to Oklahoma City for F J.P. Tokoto and their 2017 sixth-round draft pick.HOCKEYNational Hockey LeagueNHL — Fined Detroit F Steve Ott $2,222.22 for spearing Boston D Zdeno Chara during Saturday’s game.ANAHEIM DUCKS — Reassigned D Shea Theo-dore and G Dustin Tokarski to San Diego (AHL).LOS ANGELES KINGS — Placed D Brayden McNabb on injured reserve.TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING — Reassigned F Cory Conacher to Syracuse (AHL).ECHLALLEN AMERICANS — Released G Dave Weninger as emergency backup goalie. Added G David DeSander as emergency backup goalie.ATLANTA GLADIATORS — Released G Steve Racine.BRAMPTON BEAST — Loaned D Justin Baker to Utica (AHL).ELMIRA JACKALS — Released G Nick Niedert as emergency backup goalie.GREENVILLE SWAMP RABBITS — Loaned F Allan McPherson to Utica (AHL).INDY FUEL — Released D Kyle Shapiro.COLLEGEATLANTIC COAST CONFERENCE — Fined Florida State $20,000 and publicly reprimanded football coach Jimbo Fisher for making remarks criticiz-
Clemson.
JUSTIN SHEELY | THE SHERIDAN PRESS
Piling onThe Big Horn football team celebrates in the end zone during its overtime win over Pinedale Friday at Big Horn High School. The Rams advanced to the semifinal round of the 2A playoffs where they’ll host Newcastle Friday at 6 p.m.
MLB POSTSEASON |
NFL |
NHL |
NASCAR |
TRANSACTIONS |
POKES: Hollister had 10 catchesFROM B1
“There’s wins that you look back on that help define a pro-gram — this is one of them,” Bohl, who brought his brand of more traditional type football to Laramie, said.
Entering Saturday’s game, Boise State had beaten Wyoming in five previous contests between the two teams at Laramie by an average of 30.8 points.
Harsin credited Bohl for Wyoming’s improvement.
“They got some mojo going on out there,” he said.
POLL IMPLICATIONSBoise State will likely fall in
the poll . The question is how far. Wyoming might get consideration from a few poll voters, but it cer-tainly will draw more attention the rest of this season and next year.
TURNOVER WOES: Entering the game, Harsin lamented the 11 turnovers the Broncos had committed this season against
only three takeaways by his team. Things didn’t improve against Wyoming, as Boise State turned the ball over twice on an intercep-tion thrown by Rypien and a fum-ble by McNichols. The Broncos fumbled two more times but retained possession. Meantime, the Broncos defense intercepted Allen once for one turnover.
WYOMING TIGHT END: Bohl said he wanted to make better use of Hollister at tight end. Entering the game, Hollister had just 10 catches for 112 yards on the sea-son. “He certainly was a weapon today,” Bohl said.
UP NEXTBoise State: The Broncos return
home for a game against San Jose State this Friday night. It is the second of three Friday night con-tests for Boise State this season. The Broncos are 27-7 in Friday night games.
Wyoming: The Cowboys host Utah State next Saturday. Utah State is last in the conference’s Mountain Division.
Dallas owner spoke to NFL counsel about Elliott
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Cowboys owner Jerry Jones has acknowledged speaking with the NFL’s special counsel for domes-tic violence investigations, and rookie running back Ezekiel Elliott said he was interviewed by the league this season about an abuse claim made against him.
Elliott said after Sunday night’s 29-23 overtime victory over Philadelphia that he was interviewed once by league investigators about six weeks ago. He characterized there being “an ongoing investiga-tion” but said he didn’t really know what was going on.
Prosecutors in Ohio declined to press charges over the sum-mer in a domestic violence case involving the fourth overall draft pick.
“All I can do is not worry about it, focus on this team and do whatever I can do to help
these guys get wins,” Elliott told the AP after running 22 times for 96 yards and catching four passes for 52 yards against the Eagles.
CBS Sports reported ear-lier Sunday, citing multiple unnamed sources, that Jones raised the topic of the probe during league meetings in Houston about two weeks ago with Lisa Friel, a former New York prosecutor serving as special counsel. That report said they were within earshot of other league and team execu-tives.
Jones said after Sunday night’s game that the two had a “good discussion.” He said the conversation might have gotten loud, but said it was a situation where he had “to talk over the music.”
Asked if the interaction was contentious, he responded, “Well, I don’t know about that, but certainly, the volume of it had a lot to do with noise in there.”
In September, when Ohio offi-cials decided not to file criminal charges, the Columbus city attorney’s office cited conflicting and inconsistent information in evidence.
A police report said Elliott, who played at Ohio State, denied allegations that he assaulted his girlfriend in July, causing bruis-es and abrasions.
Three witnesses told police they didn’t see Elliott assault the 20-year-old woman. Elliott said the woman got the bruises and abrasions in a bar fight.
That same report included doc-uments that had a text exchange between Elliott and the woman indicating concern over the run-ning back passing a drug test.
The report was released less than two weeks after video sur-faced of Elliott in a legal mari-juana shop in Seattle, which led to admonishments from Jones and coach Jason Garrett.
Elliott apologized then for that, saying he realized he made a mistake.
BY STEPHEN HAWKINS AP SPORTS WRITER
COMICSB4 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016
MARY WORTH by Karen Moy and Joe Giella
BABY BLUES® by Jerry Scott and Rick Kirkman
ALLEY OOP® by Dave Graue and Jack Bender
BORN LOSER® by Art and Chip Sansom
GARFIELD by Jim Davis
FRANK & ERNEST® by Bob Thaves
REX MORGAN, M.D. by Woody Wilson and Tony DiPreta
ZITS® by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
DILBERT by S. Adams
DRS. OZ & ROIZEN Dr. Mehmet Oz and Dr. Michael Roizen
DEAR ABBY Pauline Phillips and Jeanne Phillips
In a tiny room in London’s New Scotland Yard there’s a police unit made up entire-ly of officers who have an uncanny ability to recog-nize human faces. These super-recognizers are trans-forming the justice system by ID’ing and catching crimi-nals who appear blurry-faced
on closed-circuit surveillance cameras.
Statins might have recently recognized superpowers, too. These supermeds could trans-form more than your risk for heart disease. For those who tolerate them well (they can have serious side effects or be contraindicated), statins can help protect you from some cancers and reduce the risks associated with osteoarthritis and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease!
You see, these heart-pro-tecting medications do more than lower lousy LDL cholesterol. They nudge the immune system to reduce bodywide inflammation. A study published in the Journal of the American Heart Association reveals that statins tamp down inflammatory immune cells that cluster around trouble
spots, like plaque in arterial walls or damaged cartilage in your joints, and stimulate the arrival of anti-inflamma-tory immune cells. Statins also appear to influence cell proliferation and migra-tion (fewer trouble-making inflammatory cells may contribute to this benefit), so they reduce the risk of tumor formation and the possibil-ity of recurrence of cancer. In one Danish study, can-cer patients taking a statin reduced their risk of dying during the study period by 15 percent.
So, if you’re at risk for heart disease or have any inflammatory condition, talk to your doc about taking a statin. It may help your cardiovascular and immune system super-recognize and expel some elements you don’t want hanging around.
DEAR ABBY: My 34-year-old daughter, “Martha,” is a single mom. I adore my granddaughter. Martha needs me to give her $500 a month, plus cover emergencies (new tires, hospital bills for baby, etc.) in order to get by. She has said repeatedly that she wants to have another baby
before she’s 35.Abby, it’s a financial bur-
den to help her as much as we have. My husband (her stepdad) believes, along with me, that we should help until her finances improve. Martha is awash in student debt and has a low-paying job. She lives 12 hours away, so we have to fly out to see them, which means we don’t see them often.
My question: How can I tell her that having a second baby when she can’t sup-port the first is something I can’t handle financially? I am becoming resentful. Our retirement has been dismal because all our money is going to her.
My daughter has a
hair-trigger temper and would use access to my granddaughter as leverage to keep the money coming. I’m appalled that she’s in this position and upset that I have to pay for her choices. -- APPALLED IN OHIO
DEAR APPALLED: You DON’T have to pay for your daughter’s choices. Tell Martha that as an adult it is HER responsibility -- not yours -- to provide for herself and her child, and that if she becomes pregnant before her finances improve to the point that she’s self-supporting, not to expect one more penny from you.
Please consider starting to reduce the amount you give her and set a deadline beyond which you will no longer sup-plement her income. Martha may need to find a second job, but that’s better than you spending all your retire-ment money shouldering her responsibilities.
Expect her to be angry. If she threatens to blackmail you with access to your grandchild, tell her that the person she’ll be punishing is the little one, not you, and stick to your guns.
DEAR ABBY: My husband has purchased different pieces of equipment over the years. He recently bought a small tractor that he’s very proud of and enjoys using around our property. He also has purchased a large trailer that he often uses to haul his equipment and other things.
His problem is friends who seem to think they can help themselves to his stuff. They actually have the audacity to say, “I may borrow your trac-tor, trailer, etc., tomorrow.” I find this to be rude in that they are not asking -- they are TELLING him they will.
I told him to say he doesn’t loan his equipment out, but he can’t seem to be able to say that. Do you have a good comeback that he could use without offending his friends? -- FRAZZLED WIFE
DEAR FRAZZLED: You, not your husband, appear to be the person with the problem. Nowhere in your letter did you mention that HE thinks he has one. If he resents what these friends are doing, a solution might be for him to tell them to talk to YOU about borrowing the equipment, so you can refuse for him.
A NOTE TO PARENTS OF YOUNG CHILDREN: If your little ones will be out trick-or-treating tonight, please be sure they are supervised to assure their safety.
CLASSIFIEDSPhone: (307) 672-2431 Fax: (307) 672-7950
MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS B5
Bridge Phillip Alder
Albert Sz-ent-Gyorgyi, a Hungari-an-American biochemist and Nobel Prize winner who shot himself in
the arm during World War I so that he could finish his medical studies, said, “Dis-covery consists of looking at the same thing as everyone else and thinking something different.”
In bridge, if everyone had the same thoughts, the bid-ding and play of a given deal would always be the same. But, of course, that doesn’t happen. Also, several deals give both sides, declarer and the defense, a chance to do something clever.
Today, we will look at the declarer-play in this deal. Tomorrow, we will turn to the defenders. South is in five diamonds. How should he plan the play after West cashes two spade tricks, then shifts to a heart?
The bidding was compli-cated. North had to pass on the first round because he
had no five-card suit and was too short in hearts for a takeout double. North’s sec-ond-round two-spade cue-bid showed a strong hand: at least a good 12 points op-posite South’s balancing double. North’s three-spade cue-bid was an unsuccessful attempt to get into three no-trump.
To make the contract, South had to play the trump suit without loss. Who had the di-amond queen?
Declarer counted up the high-card points. He had 15, and dummy held 13. That left only 12 outstanding, but since West had opened the bidding, he had to have the dia-mond queen.
South played a diamond to his king at trick four, then ran the diamond jack through West. When that won, declarer drew the last trump and claimed.
Hints from Heloise Heloise
Dear Readers: Today’s SOUND OFF is about shopping, and multi-ple letters came in about this:
A reader in Columbus, Ohio, wrote, “To get the most value for my shopping dollars, I have to shop at several grocery stores.”
A Texas reader wrote: “Whenever I shop, I make a list and then shop at three different stores to get every-thing on the list. One large chain store is my favorite, but it doesn’t carry every-thing I need, so I complete the list at the other two stores. I think I’m going to try online shopping very soon.”
But then Rosemary Q.W., via email, said, “If everyone continues to shop online, eventually we will have no local stores, which equals empty storefronts and more unemployment.”
So, what’s your take? Which reader can you iden-tify with? Send me your thoughts. -- Heloise
SEND A GREAT HINT TO:
HeloiseP.O. Box 795000San Antonio, TX 78279-
5000Fax: 1-210-HELOISEEmail: Heloise(at)Heloise.
com FAST FACTSDear Readers: Here is a
list of other places a bar stool could come in handy besides under your kitchen island:
* In a craft room under your sewing or cutting table.
* In the bathroom for young ones to sit on as you help them get ready for the day.
* In a game room for gamers.
* A lower stool for under your vanity mirror and as an extra seat in the bed-room.
* As a work stool when working in the garage at a table or flat surface.
-- Heloise HAPPY HALLOWEENDear Readers: Trick-or-
treat night is here. The following hints are for all those who are out this eve-ning:
* Consider bright, less-frightening costumes. Little ones can get scared easily, and this is supposed to be fun for them, too.
* Consider not wearing a mask while walking. With limited vision, you could stumble, seriously injuring yourself or others.
* Don’t run. Take your time. You’ll get your treats soon enough.
* Limit accessories. You will last longer without hav-ing to carry extra stuff.
* If the front-porch light is off, move on. They aren’t participating.
* Try to stay with others and not “treat” on your own. There is strength in numbers.
* When finished, go through your treats and dis-card anything questionable. When in doubt, throw it out!
-- Heloise
Adoption
ADOPTION: LOVING,secure couple hopes to
adopt a baby. Ex-penses pd. Denise &Nick, 1-800-818-5250
Household Goods &
Appliances
(2) METAL foldingchairs w/ covered seat
$7.00 ea674-7270
3" TWIN memory foammattress topper. $50.00
(307)673-4837
GLASS PUNCH bowlw/ glass tray. $30
672-2802
GLASS TABLE.108"x48"x1/2" Beveled
edge. 2 pedestals.$1600 6 chairs @ $125
(720)320-8336
NEW! DIAMOND 33”x22"x9" double bowl
black granite compos-ite/ drop-in/under mount
kitchen sink. Photosavail. $295. 751-3940.
PICTURES. 1. Boy Blue2. Pink lady 3. With
Frame 22"x19" $25 ea.674-7270
NEED TODECLUTTER?
SELL ANY ITEM($50 or less)
FOR FREE IN THESHERIDAN PRESS!
For more details,call Amber 672-2431.
Sporting Goods
HOLLIDAY BRANDGolf Simulator. Locatedin basement of Tuckersbuilding. Works great.
$1500. 751-9907.
Boats
17FT TRACKER boat &trailer. 90 HP & 6 HP
Merc & Min Kota Elec.All excellent.
307-672-3330
2002 VOYAGERPontoon aluminum
boat & trailer. 90 HPoutboard Mercurymotor. 22' long.
$12,000 674-8328
Farm & Ranch Supplies
FREEMAN HAY Baler.$250 obo. Used steelt posts 5,6,6.5 ft tall &
delineator post$1.40/each.
(307)763-1004
HESSTON 565 Roundbaler. 1000 PTO for
parts. $500 obo.655-9067
HESSTON 565A Roundbaler. 540 PTO doubletwine arms. $3500 obo
655-9067
Farm & Ranch Supplies
NEW HOLLAND 7450rotary disk bind swath-er. 13 ft. cut. 1000 PTOalmost new. 700 acre.
$25,000 boo 655-9067
VERMEER CHIPPER1600A. On brand newheavy duty trailer. Canhaul other equip. New
blades 800 hours.$6000 obo 462-6144
Pets & Supplies
3 YO chi/pom neutered.House broke. Gets
along well with cats. Notdogs. very friendly. Free
to good home.(307)421-3933
TEDDY BEAR puppiesalso known as Shih TzuBichon. Non shedding/low dander. $300 male;$300 female. Avail now.
672-7019
Heavy Equipment
30' SEMI trailer flat bed.Heavy Duty. Good tires.Duel tandem. $2500obo. 462-6144
SVL90-2 2012 KubotaSkidsteer tracked. 92HP Air conditioning,
heat, air ride seat & lowhours. enclosed cab.likenew $49,000 462-6144
Hardware & Tools
CEMENT MIXER.Electric Motor. On
rubber wheels. Withhitch. Good condition.$350 (307)655-2240
Hardware & Tools
JET DC-1200 Dust Col-lector. Stock#708622
1200CFM. 2 H.P 1 P.H20" bag dia. 5.34 cu/ft
collection capacity.$250. 751-8271Office Machines &
Equipme
SHARP MX-2610NCopier. Digital. Full Col-or. Multi-functional sys-tem; Copy. Print. Scan& More! Asking $1500
(307)675-1919
Medical Items for Sale
INVACARE QUANTUMElectric Wheel chair likenew $2000 obo. w/ bat-tery charger. 672-5722
leave message.
Miscellaneous
ANTIQUE TRACTORseat. $25 672-2802
COMMERCIAL GRADEToledo Band Meat Saw.Model 5201. Has 5 new
bands. $600.(307)674-4032
DEER FENCING! Free!751-4951
FOOSEBALL TABLE.26"x43" $30.00 excel-
lent condition! Call 673-1329 afternoons,
evenings orleave a message.
HAVE AN ITEM youwant to sell for$50 or more?
Advertise with us!ONLY $20.16!!!
Run it until it sells!Call Amber672-2431
SLAT BOARD shelvingw/ glass shelves from
Dollar Wise. Paid$36,000. Will take
$5,000 for all. 673-7398674-5555 - Leave msg.
STUDIO 56 Christmasvillage collection. NorthPole Series. 10 build-ings in boxes + extra
figures. $325. 674-6602
TREE EQUIP for Sale.1250 Vermeer Chipper.
$12,000If interested call
751-5277
Miscellaneous for Sale
MEN'S XL VARSITYJacket. Dark Green w/black leather sleeves.Only worn twice. $100.307-683-6529.
Firewood
ASH, PINE & BOXELDER. Split & de-
livered. 307-751-6608
Lawn & Garden
Equipment
RYAN LAWN aeratorlike new. $800 462-
6144
VINTAGE 1952 Tororeel lawnmower w/
Briggs & Stratton motor- NOT CEASED -Always garaged.
Photos available. $125.751-3940
Musical Instruments
PIANO! KIMBALL con-sole upright piano forsale. $650. Matchingbench. Pecan wood.
Music books included.Call 674-7662.
For Lease
Rail Road Land & Cattle Co.
Buildings for lease, Shop
space, Warehouse
space, Retail space, &
office space. 673-5555
Roommate Wanted
ROOMMATE WANTED$450/mo. incl. util.
Call 751-7353.
Furnished Apts for Rent
1 BR. $595/ mo + dep +util pd (exc. elec). Nosmk/Pets. 307-674-5838
WKLY FROM $250Monthly $750
Updated rooms.Am. Best Value Inn
(307)672-9757
Unfurn Apts for Rent
NEWER 3 BR/3 BA.2600 sq. ft. Condo.Fplc, fam. rm, DW,
refrig, W/D, AC, deck,2 car gar, maint. free,snow removal, nearhospital & daycare.$1500 + dep. Avail.10/3. Call 751-4951.
1 BR. $600/moincl. utils. & cable
No smk/pets. 763-2848.
Unfurn Apts for Rent
2 BR 1 BA. BighornW/S/G & lawn careprovided. 1 dog al-lowed. $750/mo.
LG 1 BR. Handicappedfriendly. $800/mo. 1 dog
allowed. Utilities in-cluded. Bighorn.
LG 2 BR 1 BA DaytonW/D hookups. W/S/G
provided. Garage$700/mo. 751-7718
Houses, Unfurn for Rent
3 BR/1 Ba. Garage.Fenced back yard.$1250/mo. + util.
Updated Kitchen. W/D.A/C. Hardwood floors.Dan Casey, Wyoming
State Licensed Realtor.752-1453.
4 BR. Bi-level. A/C.$1250/mo. N. Heights.
Garage. No pets.307-752-5526
E X Q U I S I T EP O W D E R H o r nDeck Home, Brandnew, no mainten-ance-6 month lease,membership priv-ileges, 2bed/3 bathwith Loft and oversized garage, $2450per month. CallJudy at PowderHorn Realty, 307-674-9545
4 BR, 2 ba. Home nearKendrick Mansion &
Park. No smk.$1575/mo. + util.
461-0552. Owner isLicensed Agent.
CUTE 2 BR. hard-wood floors. backyard. by hospital.
$1000/mo 751-3828
2 BDRM w/ garage. Nosmoking/pets. Lease &dep. $975/ mo + util.
307-751-1415.
2 BR Lrg yard. Down-town. $895/mo. No
smoking/pets.307-751-0194
3 BR/ 2 Ba. House. Offstreet parking. Nosmoking/no pets.$925/mo plus util.
Lease req'd. Avail. 11/1715-781-2006
CLEAN 2 BR. Incl. W/D.Water/garbage &
summer yard upkeep.Close to down town.
No smk/pets. $900/mo+ deposit & 1 yr lease.
672-2850
2 BR 1 BA house. Re-modeled. Near Mead-owlark School. W/D.
$800/mo + $800 Depos-it. No pets.
(307)752-4147
Houses, Unfurn for Rent
2 BR Fresh Paint newcarpet. Basement hasbonus room laundry &storage. Shed & smallyard. NO PETS/SMK
$950/mo 875 S. Sherid-an Ave. (307)752-2399Townhomes, Unfurn for
Rent
CHARMING 3-bed, 2.5bath townhomes
available. 1 or 2 cargarage. W/D hookup.1-year lease. Pets ne-gotiable. No smoking.
Walk to downtown,YMCA and parks.
$1,150 and$1,250/month. 222. W.
Loucks. Call303.324.6723.
STADIUM PLACETownhomes. Spa-cious, Beautiful &Well-Maintained 3BR/3 Ba apts. Now
available.Income restrictions
apply. Call for details307-763-2682.
Office/Retail Space for
Rent
1500 SQ/ft. 3 offices.Open area. break room.
808 Coffeen Ave.$1300/mo
307-752-2399
1530 SQ/ft office spacelocated on Coffeen Ave.High visibility & parking.
Please call for leaseterms & rates.
(307)751-4915.
1100 SQ/ft office. Easyaccess. Off road
parking. Close to downtown. 673-5555
OFFICE FOR RENTWell priced 1K+ SFin quality/charmingProfessional Bldg.Near courthouse.
307-673-4425.
COTTONWOODCENTER
Professionaloffice space for
lease utilitiesincluded.
Conference roomavailable & elevatoraccess. 672-8700 or
751-3828
Storage Space
CALL BAYHORSESTORAGE 1005 4thAve. E. 752-9114.
INTERSTATE STOR-AGE. Multiple Sizes
avail. No depositreq'd. 752-6111.
Storage Space
CIELO STORAGE752-3904
SHIPPINGCONTAINERS FOR
SALE: 1 Trip 20’$3495.00. Used 20'$2800.00. 1 Trip 20'
Open Side $5995.00.1 Trip 40’ $4700.00.Used 40' $3600.00.
307-751-5116
DOWNER ADDITIONSTORAGE 674-1792
WOODLANDPARKSTORAGE.COM
5211 CoffeenCall 674-7355New Spaces
Available!
ELDORADO STOR-AGE Helping you con-quer space. 3856 Cof-feen. 672-7297.
Work Wanted
DOCUMENTS, PRO-FESSIONALLY pre-pared for publication.Brochures, letters, let-
ter head, advertise-ments, manuals, fliersetc. Reasonable rates!
Call or txt 307-763-6910
HONEY-DO handymandoes odd jobs 672-2638
Help Wanted
NOW HIRINGHousekeeping,
Front Desk, Main-tenance, Night
Audit & Laundry.Top wages. Apply
in person atComfort Inn &
Suitesor Hampton Inn
**Sign on bonus!**
SHERIDAN COLLEGEFacilities Specialist
Outstanding benefitsand great facilities.
Responsible for custodi-al work,
event setups, officemoves,
painting, light carpentry,minor plumbing and
preventivemaintenance. Able to lift
50 lbs.,work on ladders and
overhead. 7am –3:30pm
Apply online at:https://jobs.sheridan.ed
u. EOE.
Busy pediatric officeseeking LPN/RN.
Please send resume to:PO Box 6072
Sheridan, WY 82801
Deliveryproblems?
Call 672-2431
Omarr’s Daily Astrological Forecast Jeraldine Saunders
BIRTHDAY GUY: Actor Logan Marshall-Green was born in Charleston, S.C., today in 1976. This birthday guy stars in the title role of the new series “Quarry.” He also starred as Dean Bendis on “Dark Blue” and played recurring roles on “The O.C.”, “Traveler,” and “24.” On the big screen, Mar-shall-Green’s film work in-cludes roles in “Snowden,” “The Sound and the Fury,” and “Prometheus.”
ARIES (Mar 21-Apr. 19): Don’t rock the boat. Though you may not agree with it, you’ll make more progress if you go along with the consensus opinion for now. Making minor sacrifices today will end up benefit-ing the greater good in the future.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May
20): Go along to get along. A team can only succeed if all parties involved co-operate to reach the same goal. Your positive attitude and friendly demeanor will make it an easy task to bring others to your side.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Forgive and forget. You won’t gain anything by har-boring a grudge so it would be in your best interest to reconcile and move on. Someone with more expe-rience may have profound advice to offer if you are willing to listen.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Little things mean a lot. Thoughtful gestures and acts of kindness may require a minimal effort on your part but may end up paying big rewards. When faced with tough questions,
just speak your mind and you won’t go wrong.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Honesty is the best policy. Being truthful and forth-right in all ways will silence any critics who may doubt your motives. It may be the thought that counts but don’t be stingy when pur-chasing gifts for friends or loved ones.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Nothing but the best. You may decide to spend a little extra on the more expensive brand because it’s true that you get what you pay for. Acquiring attractive items that have caught your eye may be worth stretching the budget.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22.): Pick a direction. When at the proverbial crossroads, it falls to you to choose a
single path and stick with it. Look for some sort of inspiration so that you may approach any projects or tasks with enthusiasm and passion.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Two heads are better than one. A project may run more smoothly if you have someone else along to help pick up the slack. Be dis-criminating with purchases and only buy items that fall within the boundaries of good taste.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Kindness yields its own rewards. While you may not get back every-thing you give, karma will ultimately smile upon you. Adding alluring items to your wardrobe may help improve your self-esteem.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth. Be gracious when someone presents you with a token of affection, no matter how you may truly feel about it. There’s no need to be envious of a peer when you have much to be proud of yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Put your best manners forward. Whether wheeling and dealing in the business world or trying to win over the object of your affection, being at your best will make it happen. A bit of tasteful humor can help break the ice.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Let bygones be bygones. Give someone who may have wronged you a second chance. You’ll be surprised at how they come through for you. A special someone
may be waiting for a chance to lavish affection upon you.
IF NOVEMBER 1 IS YOUR BIRTHDAY: Genuine peace and tranquility can be yours during the upcom-ing six to eight weeks. Put a new health regimen into motion to improve your health. People who are good for you grow closer while those who do not have your best interests in mind will find it difficult to get in touch. This is an excellent time to make crucial deci-sions about people and com-mitments. Shrewd financial maneuvering can get you into a good position during December. You may even make some lasting con-nections with people who understand and appreciate your true nature.
CLASSIFIEDSB6 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016
PICKLES
BIZZARO
NON SEQUITUR
Help Wanted
Sales Ad Rep.needed. Established
account list. Base pay+ commission.Previous sales
experience preferred.Full benefit pkg
includes vacation,profit sharing, medical,
dental,commission/bonus
plan & more. Pleasebring your resume &
application to:Becky Martini,
The Sheridan Press,144 E Grinnell St.
Sheridan WY, 82801or email resume to
NSI ACADEMY isseeking Clinical
Therapists, RN or LPNNurses, SubstituteTeachers & Direct
Care Staff. Must be atleast 21, drug free &
pass backgroundcheck. Benefits
available! Visit ourJOB FAIR forappetizers &
immediate interviewsheld at Powder River
Pizza on November 7,3-6pm. Or apply to:Human Resources
NSI Academy 5 LaneLn. Sheridan, WY
82801 (307) 674-6878erin.oetken@sequely
outhservices.com
P/T Mail Room/Newspaper Insertionposition avail. Mustbe able to lift 50 lbs.
Please bring yourresume & application
to: Becky Martini,The Sheridan Press,144 E. Grinnell St.
Sheridan, WY 82801or email resume to
Help Wanted
Spring Creek MineCareer Fair
Team Players Wanted
Spring Creek Mine isholding a Career Fair
on November 14th from8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
Best Western inSheridan, WY.
The career fair is forfull-time and temporaryHaul Truck Operators
and full-timeMechanics. Pleaseapply at www.cloud
peakenergy.com priorto attending the Career
Fair. Bring yourresume and speak with
us regardingemployment.
TONGUE RIVERCOMMUNICATIONSis looking for a Cable
TV technician/installer.Must have cable
television experience.Starting @ $20/hr &
benefits. Send resumeto [email protected] mail to Box 759
Ranchester, WY 82839
Help Wanted
Youth Services Aide,Wyo. Girls School,
Sheridan; Class CodeSOYS03-05179; TargetHiring Range: $2184-$2730/mo. GeneralDescription: Duringnight shift and while
residents are sleeping(10:00pm to 8:00am,
four days a week)provide a safe and
secure environment forresidents and staff at
the Wyoming GirlsSchool, an institution for
adjudicated femaleyouth. For more info orto apply online go to:https://www.govern
mentjobs.com/careers/wyoming. The State of
Wyo. is an EqualOpportunity Employer &
actively supports theADA & reasonably
accommodatesqualified applicants w/
disabilities.
Care giver needed.(307)674-8193
Antiques
2 OLD mine car chassis$200 ea. OBO.(307)763-1004
Antiques
12 ANTQ. cast alum.lamp posts. 14' post.Globes incl. w/ extrapieces. Excel. cond.
$500/ea. Deliveryavail. 308-641-1085
Land/Property
FOR SALE: Magnifi-cent Mountain ViewLot at the Powder-horn. Priced to sell at$44,500.00 call Kateat 307-752-3839
Real Estate
FOR SALE or lease22,000 sq/ft buildingon 10 acres offices &
large warehouse area.1814 KROE Lane.
45’ ceilings. 3 Largeoverhead doors307-256-6170
Mobile Homes for Sale
16’ X 80’ Schult. Vaul-ted ceiling. Remodeledkitchen w/ island. New-er flooring. Windows.
A/C. Roof. Fenced yard& handicap ramp.
$43,500. (503)444-0969
Autos & Accessories
'98 GRAND Prix. 103kmi. $2500 672-0761.
Daytime ask forRodney.
13 SP Fuller transmis-sion. $1600. 4 GMC 8hole wheels 165. $100.4 875 R165 tires. $300.OBO. Like new. 752-2887
16 K Fifth wheel pivothitch with rails & hard-
ware. $225(307)672-5119
Autos & Accessories
1990 HONDA AccordSedan. Good Shape
both inside & out. NiceStereo System. $2000obo For more info call
751-5445
2007 VOLVO V50. 67kmi. Great Shape. $8200
Price Reduced!(307)461-0008
PRIME RATEMOTORS is buying
clean, preownedvehicles of all ages.We also install B&W
GN hitches, 5th WheelHitches, Pickup Flat-beds, Krogman Bale
Beds. Stop by2305 Coffeen Ave. or
call 674-6677.
RUBBER MADE travelcooler & warmer Ac/Dc$30 674-4086
Pickups & Vans
2005 CHEVY C-4500stock full size box.
Duramax 75k miles.Custom painted. Dual
axles. semi tires.674-8252 $39,000 obo2005 DODGE Pickup
3500 5.9 cummins. nondually. Black. Lifted. 20"rims 35" tires. 700 Hprating. $24,000 obo.
462-6144
2015 DODGE RAM1500 crew cab 4x4Laramie. 6 cylinder
diesel. Perfect condi-tion. Priced to sell.
$32,900. 307-461-0470
Pickups & Vans
2011 GMC Denali HD3500, Crew Cab,
every option available,108k highway miles,
Duramax Diesel,Allison Transmission.
New Tires,$33,000 752-1259
2011 GMC SierraSLT 3500, Crew Cab,103,000 highway mi.
Duramax Diesel.Allison Transmission.New Tires, $29,000
752-1259BRAHMA TRUCK top-per. Black. Excellentshape. 5' wide x 7'3"long. $200 OBO. 763-4631.
ATV’s & Snowmobiles
2013 HONDA Ranch-er 420. 3000# winch.ITP Baja cross 8 plyRadial tires. ITP 7"steel wheels. $5995
firm. 672-22112014 POLARIS XP
1000 Like new. Orange& black. Extras.
$17,400 673-0907
Motorcycles
1997 HARLEYSportster 1200 with
Lehman trike conver-sion. Low miles, extras.
$9500.00 (307)752-4459 (307)674-7889
2002 HARLEY Spring-er, 33K miles, AMAZ-ING condition, $7950,
763-3352.
2006 DYNA WideGlide 5k mi. screaming
eagle pipes.PRICE REDUCED!
$8000Call 751-6723
2008 HARLEY David-son Road King. With
windshield. Back rest.Custom handlebars.
7400 mi $13,000.(307)660-2539
Motor Homes & RV’s
81 ALEGROMotorhome. 26' 454Engine. Automatic.
Onan 5.0 generator.$6,000 674-8328
Campers, Trailers
1998 34' Cardinal 5thwheel. 3 slides. Verynice. $13,500. 672-7935
2001, 1061 Lance Pick-up Camper. Full Loa-
ded, Excel. Cond. Slideout. Satellite. In-board
Generator $16,000751-2501 or 751-6154
Campers, Trailers
2011 STARCRAFT Au-tumn Ridge. 278 BH. 29Ft. Great Condition. Un-
der book @ $10,300.674-5381
2014 STARCRAFT Au-tumn Ridge 265 RLSCamper. Exl. cond. w/lots of extras. leatherfurn. 12' slide. Arctic
pkg. $24,580 461-1120
2015 SUMMERLANDby Springdale SM2670.sleeps 6-8. Fully Con-ta ined. 1 13' s l ide.$16,500 (513)235-3147
KEYSTONE MONTANAHigh Country 323 RL
fifth wheel. Lots ofExtras incl. W/D!!!
3 slide outs. Storedinside. $32,000307-763-9469
LUXURY 2013 Kom-fort by Dutchman. 5
slides, w/ fireplace. Tallceilings. Dble fridge &
freezer. King sized bed.Arctic pkg. cust. skirting$55,500 obo 674-8252
Utility Trailers
WANT TO BUY Uhaul5x9 utility trailer w/ramp or equivalent.
674-6339 Todd
LOST PET? Place an ad in
The Press!Call 672-2431
SOLD
Deliveryproblems?
Call 672-2431
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Public NoticesMONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016 www.thesheridanpress.com THE SHERIDAN PRESS B7
YOUR ELECTEDOFFICIALS |
WHY PUBLIC NOTICES ARE IMPORTANT |
Default: Failure to fulfill an obligation, especially the obligation to
make payments when due to a lender.
Encumbrance: A right attached to the property of another that may
lessen its value, such as a lien, mortgage, or easement.
Foreclosure: The legal process of terminating an owner’s interest
in property, usually as the result of a default under a mortgage.
Foreclosure may be accomplished by order of a court or by the
statutory process known as foreclosure by advertisement (also
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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.
GLOSSARY OF TERMS |
CITY
John Heath
Mayor
307-675-4223
COUNTY
STATE
Dave
Kinskey
Senator
Senate Dist. 22
307-751-6428
Kristin Kelly
Councilor
307-673-4751
Thayer
Shafer
Councilor
307-674-4118
Alex Lee
Councilor
307-752-8804
Shelleen
Smith
Councilor
307-461-7082
Terry
Cram
Commissioner
307-674-2900
Mike
Nickel
Commissioner
307-674-2900
Bob Rolston
Chairman
Commissioner
307-674-2900
Steve
Maier
Commissioner
307-674-2900
Tom Ringley
Commissioner
307-674-2900
Rosie
Berger
Representative
House Dist. 51
307-672-7600
Matt
Mead
Governor
307-777-7434
Mike
Madden
Representative
House Dist. 40
307-684-9356
Mark
Jennings
Representative
House Dist. 30
307-461-0697
Bruce
Burns
Senator
Senate Dist. 21
307-672-6491
Matt
Redle
County
Attorney
307-674-2580
Paul
Fall
Assessor
307-674-2535
Dave
Hofmeier
Sheriff
307-672-3455
P.J. Kane
Coroner
307-673-5837
Shelley
Cundiff
Sheridan
County Circut
Court Judge
307-674-2940
Eda
Thompson
Clerk
307-674-2500
William
Edelman
4th Judicial
District Court
Judge
307-674-2960
Nickie Arney
Clerk of District
Court
307-674-2960
John Fenn
4th Judicial
District Court
Judge
307-674-2960
Pete Carroll
Treasurer
307-674-2520
Jesus Rios
Councilor
307-461-9565
Kelly Gooch
Councilor
307-752-7137
Mark
Kinner
Representative
House Dist. 29
307-674-4777
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.
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.
B8 THE SHERIDAN PRESS www.thesheridanpress.com MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2016