109th Year, No.141 Thursday, July 16, 2015 50 Cents

UW Graduates — 5 Extension for UW’s Shyatt — 6 National News — 10 Ten Sleep school project faces new deadline By Ryan Mitchel Collins ation meeting in early 2016, prior to the “We could say to the committee that we lic discussion, the board went into a closed session Staff writer 2016 Legislative Budget Session that be- only want a specific land and if we don’t for an hour and a half. TEN SLEEP — The new Ten Sleep school project gins Feb. 8, 2016. get it that we’ll go back to the drawing “We wanted to prepare ourselves for the school could possibly be delayed from its original construc- According to Phelps, “That’s the reason board. board meeting on Wednesday, so we discussed this tion schedule with a new deadline looming. why we had this special meeting (Tuesday “We have been working on this for issue for over an hour so we can present our infor- On Friday, July 10 Washakie County School night) was to inform the public about this a very long time, so we want to get this mation to Troy Decker,” Phelps said. District No. 2 (Ten Sleep) Superintendent Jimmy new information. We want to maintain the right. We don’t want to make a decision Troy Decker is the planning coordinator at the Phelps received some information via a conference same construction schedule.” and then a few years from now find out Wyoming School Facilities Department. call with Dan Odasz, the vice president of Plan One If the Washakie County School District that there was a better option out there,” “Troy might present some new information on Architects about a new deadline for the district. No. 2 board cannot present a priority list Jimmy Phelps Phelps said. the subject at the board meeting on Wednesday,” Phelps said Odasz informed him that the Wyoming to the Joint Appropriations Committee on Ten Sleep Supt. The public was informed of this new said Phelps. Joint Appropriations Board has a deadline for land what land they want to acquire, the proj- deadline at a special meeting Tuesday. A report on Wednesday’s board meeting will be recommendations in the next few weeks in order to ect may be delayed until the committee has their The public discussed the issue for 45 minutes Tues- published in Friday’s issue of the Northern Wyoming present that information at their funding appropri- next funding appropriation meeting in 2018. day evening at the Ten Sleep School. After the pub- Daily News. Cause still unknown Early Evening Fisherman in structure fire By Zach Spadt responders arrived,” Nancy Staff Writer Quinn said in an email. WORLAND — By the time Nancy Quinn expressed Worland firefighters arrived on appreciation for the Wor- the scene, the garage located land Fire Department. at 1310 B Lane 12 had already “I know how blessed I collapsed. am to live in Worland and I Worland Fire Department appreciate the service ren- firefighters responded to a re- dered by an all-volunteer port of a structure fire at the fire department and medi- location at 5:11 p.m. Tuesday. cal personnel as well as lo- Firefighters were on the scene Chris Kocher cal law enforcement. Some at 5:20 p.m. Worland Fire Chief of the firemen and women According to Worland Fire I knew, many I did not, but Chief Chris Kocher, the cause of the my heartfelt thank you is sincere,” fire has not been determined and is un- Nancy Quinn said. der investigation. She said some personal items in the The building was a garage that sat garage were lost, in addition to tools about 20 feet away from a residence and other equipment belonging to the located adjacent to the Worland Live- sale barn. stock Auction sale b arn. Kocher said Quinn determined the While the garage was a total loss, building was fully involved at 5:14 p.m. the residence’s vinyl siding suffered There were no injuries reported. melted vinyl siding on the north side, The building collapsed sometime be- Kocher said. tween 5:18 and 5:20 p.m. Kocher said investigators are still Three engines, a tender unit and working with the occupants of the two command units responded to the home, Bob and Nancy Quinn, to deter- call with 15 firefighters present. Ko- mine a cause of the fire. cher said when the first engine arrived, Nancy Quinn’s call to Washakie firefighters began suppressing the fire County Dispatch was one of eight 911 and made efforts to cool the lost build- calls, Kocher said. ing. “On Tuesday evening, I arrived home The fire department left the scene at from work and noticed flames that I 7:54 p.m., Kocher said. thought were from the barbecue grill. The Washakie County Sheriff’s Of- Upon inspection, I noticed the flames fice and Worland Ambulance also re- were not from the grill but from an ac- sponded to the call. DAILY NEWS/Zach Spadt tual fire. I called 911 and reported the More information will be published fire and in less than five minutes, first as it becomes available. Lansing, Mich., resident Alex Butzine takes advantage of the Worland pond south of the city. Butzine and others were out fishing in the early evening Wednesday, but as of 6 p.m., no one had a bite. Eleven Wyoming counties, including Washakie, eligible for emergency loans WORLAND — Presidential Major Di- mary designated counties and are there- physical loss or $500,000, whichever is saster Declaration has made Wyoming fore also eligible for assistance. less. counties, including Washakie and Big To qualify for production loss loans, ap- FSA Emergency Loans are available Horn, eligible for disaster assistance. plicants must have suffered at least a 30 only to operators of not larger than family Farmers and ranchers may qualify for percent loss of their normal production size farms and operators unable to obtain emergency Loans based on losses caused per acre or normal per animal production. credit elsewhere. by severe storms and flooding that oc- Production losses are calculated from an The deadline for applying for FSA curred May 24, 2015, through June 6, average of the three years immediately loans under this Disaster Designation is 2015. preceding the disaster year and may be March 7, 2016. For further information, Johnson and Niobrara counties in Wyo- made for an amount up to 100 percent of farmers and ranchers located in the desig- ming are declared primary disaster areas. the total actual calculated production loss. nated counties are encouraged to contact Big Horn, Campbell, Converse, Goshen, Under the FSA Emergency Loan pro- their local FSA County Office. The office Natrona, Platte Sheridan, Washakie and gram, the amount available to qualified for Washakie County is located at 208 Shi- Weston counties are contiguous to the pri- producers cannot exceed the sum of the loh Road, 307-347-3946.

Capitol restoration oversight group wants project manager CHEYENNE (AP) — Top Group and voted unanimously David H. Hart and MOCA Sys- tentious meeting last week at Wyoming officials have voted to after a closed session to negoti- tems, the firm where he works. which oversight group mem- hire a project manager to over- ate a contract with a Utah firm Sen. Tony Ross, R-Cheyenne, bers expressed concern that the see the $300 million renovation that has experience overseeing chairman of the oversight deadline for substantial comple- DAILY NEWS/Zach Spadt of the state Capitol. capitol renovation projects in group, said he expects work on tion of working drawings for the Worland Fire Department Captain Brandon Yule inspects the aftermath Gov. Matt Mead and Wyo- other states. the contract to start in coming Capitol restoration project had after a fire that ocurred near the Worland sale yard early Tuesday - ming legislative leaders met The group directed state of- days. been pushed back to October — ning. A garage near a residential building caught fire and was a total loss. Wednesday as the Capitol ficials to negotiate a contract The move to hire Hart and two months later than they had A cause has not been determined. Building Restoration Oversight with Salt Lake City architect MOCA Systems follows a con- been promised in June.

Weather & Vitals see page 2 2–Northern Wyoming Daily News, Worland, Wyo., Thursday, July 16, 2015

Grant support from First Lady Carol Mead hosts book signing July 21 CHEYENNE — First Lady er editions of her book this fall. woman governor, first national sen children’s issues as her prima- Carol Mead will be signing copies Proceeds go back into the cost park and other fun facts such as ry area of focus. She and Governor Rocky Mountain Power of her children’s book, “Wyoming of printing, provided by Pioneer how Wyoming got the nickname, Mead believe that children are Firsts,” on July 21 from 11:30 Printing in Cheyenne. All other “The Cowboy State.” Wyoming’s greatest asset. To th at a.m. – 12:30 p.m. at the Wyoming costs associated with the book The First Lady decided to in- end, her work is aimed at promot- State Museum and again from were made possible through gen- vite high school art students from ing healthy lifestyles among kids 1:30 – 2:30 p.m. at the Wyoming erous donations by Anadarko Pe- around the state to submit illus- to make sure they grow up healthy, Products General Mercantile in troleum Corporation, Devon Ener- trations aimed at young children happy and safe. She believes that Old Frontier Town at Cheyenne gy Corporation, FMC Corporation, after visiting the Wyoming High reading to your child every day Frontier Days. TransCanada and Union Pacific School Art Symposium and recog- is fundamental to strengthening “Wyoming Firsts: A Children’s Railroad. nizing the immense talent among the parent-child bond, develop- Book” will be on sale at each book The artwork submitted by Wyoming’s artists. The cover of the ing emergent literacy skills, and signing location for just $4.95. Wyoming high school students de- book was designed by Cheyenne encouraging intellectual curiosity First Lady Carol Mead plans on picts many “firsts” that Wyoming East student, Sharon Cooper. – all keys to becoming a lifelong launching both hard and soft cov- is known for including the first First Lady Carol Mead has cho- learner. Comments sought on Sheridan weather tower project SHERIDAN – The Tongue Ranger District campus in the Bighorn National Forest. er District office is open from 8:00 am to 4:30 is seeking public comments on a proposal to in- Comments can be sent by email to com- pm Monday through Friday, except federal holi- stall a weather tower on top of the dam at Park [email protected] with “Sheridan Col- days. To be most helpful, comments should be Reservoir. lege weather tower” in the subject line, or by received by August 1, 2015. The 12-foot lattice weather tower would regular mail or hand delivered to Travis Fack, For more information about this proposed DAILY NEWS/Zach Spadt be used for communication with the weather Bighorn National Forest, 2013 Eastside 2nd project, contact Travis Fack at [email protected] The Rocky Mountain Power Foundation has provided a station at Sheridan College’s Spear-O-Wigwam Street, Sheridan, WY 82801. The Tongue Rang- or 307- 674-2683. grant for the annual Pepsi Wyoming State BBQ and Blue grass Festival. Pictured left to right are Craig Nelson, cus- tomer and community manager of the Rocky Mountain Pow- er Foundation; Val Busch, Pepsi Wyoming State Barbecue Fundraising Commiteeperson and Event Chairman Dale Former Casper Police discovered the theft after campus in a red pickup truck. That some patients leave unpaid. Wagner. the club’s new director reported same day, damage was reported to The Casper Star-Tribune re- youth sports possible stolen funds in March the UniWyo Sports Complex and ports a legislative labor commit- Pepsi Wyoming State BBQ also receives funds 2014. War Memorial Fieldhouse. tee is studying uncompensated director gets Strom has also been ordered to A still image of the two suspects care at hospitals ahead of the next from Devon and Wyoming Arts Council pay back the money she took from was taken from a campus security legislative session, when lawmak- probation the club. camera. The public aided police ers and advocates predict a failed WORLAND — The 11th an- Devon Energy has also do- with nearly three dozen phone call Medicaid expansion bill will suc- nual Pepsi Wyoming State BBQ nated $2,000 to the family- CASPER (AP) — A former tips and more than a dozen text ceed this time. and Bluegrass Festival is fast friendly event, and the Wyo- director of the Wyoming Youth UW vandalism tips. Expanding Medicaid would approaching. The festival is ming Arts Council has awarded Sports Association who has been Samp says the damage to the mean more federal funding for slated to begin Aug.14-15 and the festival their support for accused of stealing more than suspects floor in the sports complex and ad- hospital districts. the committee is promising an what they consider a communi- $13,000 from the organization has ditional damage to seating would Casper Republican Senator even bigger event with lots of ty building event, Wagner said. been sentenced to probation. identified cost anywhere from $4,000 to and Legislative committee co- about $45,000. BBQ, more food vendors and, as Wagner said, the festival The Casper Star-Tribune re- LARAMIE, Wyo. (AP) — The chair Charlie Scott opposes Medi- always, world class bluegrass also relies on the generosity of ports Katherine Strom was or- University of Wyoming Police De- care expansion, saying those fed- music. the Worland merchants, ser- dered to serve one to five years of partment has identified two sus- eral dollars won’t last and states The committee, according vice providers and citizens to supervised probation Tuesday. In pects in connection with the van- Unpaid hospital will be left to pick up the tab. to Event Chairman Dale Wag- help fund this event. Letters March, she pleaded guilty to grand dalism of the university’s athletics A report by the Wyoming Leg- ner, announced that the Rocky have gone out to the generous larceny under a plea deal. facilities. bills outstrip islative Service Office says prop- Mountain Power Foundation community-minded people of According to court documents, The Laramie Boomerang re- erty taxes contributed about $40 has once again given the festi- Worland in hopes they will join Strom, who had been director of ports university chief Mike Samp property tax million to hospital districts in the val a grant of $2,500. Craig Nel- Pepsi, Rocky Mountain Power the association for 10 years, used reported Tuesday that the names state. son, customer and community Foundation, Devon Energy and the club’s bank account to write of the suspects won’t be released revenue Unpaid costs came in almost checks to herself and to make per- manager, said that helping fund the Wyoming Arts Council in because they are juveniles. CASPER, Wyo. (AP) — Hos- three times that amount in 2012, sonal purchases, including Kindles worthwhile projects is a grati- support of the Pepsi Wyoming Police received a call Monday pitals aren’t making enough in improving somewhat in 2013 to from Amazon. fying part of the foundation’s State BBQ and Bluegrass Fes- reporting two suspects leaving property taxes to cover bills that total $100 million. work. tival. 70 years after atomic bomb test, residents seek compensation Nature walk in the Bighorns Friday LOS ALAMOS, N.M. (AP) — secret World War II nuclear de- the Trinity Test. ect, Los Alamos scientists worked When a flash of light beamed from velopment program. It comes as “It’s a moral and ethical issue. to develop the bomb that was Big Horn County University all ages. the arid New Mexico desert early Tularosa residents say they were It’s about consent,” said Cordova, a dropped on the Japanese cities of of Wyoming Extension Service is The Nature Walk & Plant Iden- on July 16, 1945, residents of the permanently affected by the test former Tularosa resident and can- Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It in- hosting a Nature Walk & Plant tification will be led by Mae Smith historic Hispanic village of Tularo- and want acknowledgement and cer survivor. “We were never given volved three research and produc- Identification this Friday. and Bobbie Holder, both of Exten- sa felt windows shake and heard compensation from the U.S. gov- the opportunity to do anything to tion facilities at Los Alamos; Oak The walk begins at the Porcu- sion. dishes fall. Some in the largely ernment. protect ourselves, before or after.” Ridge, Tennessee; and Hanford, pine Campground along U.S. High- For more information, call Big Catholic town fell to their knees Tina Cordova, co-founder of Vera Burnett-Powell, a spokes- Washington. way 14A at 1:30 p.m. Horn County Extension Office at and prayed. the Tularosa Basin Downwind- woman for the U.S. Department Last year, President Barack The walk is free to everyone of 307-765-2868. The end of the world is here, ers, said the aftermath caused of Justice’s Radiation Exposure Obama signed federal legislation they thought. rare forms of cancer for many of Compensation Act program, did to create the Manhattan Project Mormon church appoints new leader What villagers didn’t know was the 30,000 residents in the area not immediately return a phone National Historical Park to pre- that just before 5:30 a.m., scien- surrounding Trinity. She said resi- message and email from The As- serve the sites that helped with SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — The Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, its tists from the then-secret city of dents weren’t told about the site’s sociated Press. the bomb’s creation. Mormon church has a new top- high-level governing body. Los Alamos successfully exploded dangers and often picnicked there Cordova’s father, Anastacio “Ta- Retired physicist Duane ranking leader to replace the late Mormon President Thomas S. the first atomic bomb at the near- and took artifacts, including the cho” Cordova, was a 3-year-old Tu- Hughes, who gives tours at the Boyd K. Packer, who was next in Monson appointed Nelson to the by Trinity Site. Left in its place radioactive green glass known as larosa resident at the time of the National Museum of Nuclear Sci- line to become president and proph- post. was a crater that stretched a half- “trinitite.” blast and later had multiple forms ence & History in Albuquerque, et of the faith. Nelson has been a member of mile wide and several feet deep. Researchers from the National of cancer. He died in 2013, and Cor- said the Trinity Test’s history is The Salt Lake City-based Church the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles Thursday marks 70 years since Cancer Institute are studying past dova believes his illnesses were re- important because it helped end of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints since 1984. Trinity Test took place as part and present cancer cases in New lated to Trinity’s aftermath. World War II and set the stage for announced Wednesday afternoon He replaces Packer, who died of the Manhattan Project, a top- Mexico that might be related to During the Manhattan Proj- a Cold War arms race. that Russell M. Nelson will serve July 3 at his Salt Lake City home of as the president of the church’s natural causes. He was 90.

Land Transfers  led with the Sanford et vir to Nathan M. Decker Stellar Concept Properties Inc., war- Lot 42, 43, Block 13, Evert Addition Washakie County Clerk’s Of ce et ux and Kristen K. Decker et vir, ranty deed, Lot 1D, Northern Lights •Larry S. Plotnick a/k/a Laurence S. BIRTHS coming north northeast 5 to 7 mph in in Worland for the month of June warranty deed, Lot 4 B, Ponderosa Subdivision Plotnick to Jerry Williams, warranty None Reported. the afternoon. include: Estates Subdivision •Kenneth R. White to Lloyd T. Clark, deed, Lot 1, Block 19, Court Place Friday Night: A 20 percent chance •Trustee Sally Biegert and Sally •Danielle N. LeBoeuf to Branden C. warranty deed, Lot 7, Block 7, Cloud Addition DEATHS of showers and thunderstorms be- Biegert revocable trust to trustee Christiansen et us and Tiffany Marie Peak Addition •Edward Barnes and Estate of Ed- None Reported. fore midnight. Some of the storms Jeffery L. Biegert and Jeffery L. Christiansen et vir, warranty deed, •Dan E. Cristoffersen to Kappital ward Barnes to Alicia Clark, war- could produce small hail and gusty Biegert revocable trustee, warranty Lot 5, Block 6, Cloud Peak Addition Managed Futures LLC, warranty ranty deed, Lot 14, Block 6, Evans MARRIAGE LICENSES winds. Partly cloudy, with a low deed, Lot 65, Canyon Creek Village •Lyle G. McGarvin trustee, Gladys A. deed, Lot 3, Block 3, Court Place Addition None Reported. around 55. North northwest wind 5 Subdivision McGarvin trustee, Lyle G. McGarvin First Addition •Michael Burrington Jr. to Emily Cor- to 10 mph becoming west southwest •Kilnt Malkovich to Andrew Lenz, living trust and Gladys A. McGarvin •Craig A. Pannell to Starla K. Atkin- row, quit claim deed, Block 26, First DIVORCE ACTIONS after midnight. warranty deed, Lot 4, Block 1, Cloud living trust to Bart A. Burningham et son, warranty deed, Block 9, Origi- Addition Town of Ten Sleep None Reported. Saturday: A 30 percent chance of Peak Addition ux and Aleene Burningham et vir, nal Town of Ten Sleep •Joshua Preuit and Christi R. Preuit showers and thunderstorms, main- •Baker Hughes Oil eld Operations warranty deed, sec 6 Twp 47, range •Fannie Mae a/k/a Federal National to Joshua A. Preuit, quit claim deed, AMBULANCE CALLS ly after noon. Partly sunny, with a Inc. et al and Alexander L. Peng, 087, NE4SE4 Mortgage Association to Shane A. Mott Subdivision, Tracts 1-29, 2-29, • July 14 4:59 p.m. N. 11th St. high near 76. West southwest wind Vice President to Benet Brown et ux •Thomas John Wilkinson et us and Anderson et ux and Daleen E. An- 3-29 around 8 mph becoming north north- and Barbara Brown et vir, warranty Nichole R. Wilkinson et vir to Michael derson, warranty deed, Lot 2, Block •Darrell C. Barnes trustee; Barnes FIRE CALLS west in the afternoon. deed, Lot 5, Block 8, Rupp Addition; H. Montgomery et al and Stephanie 1, Sugar Beet Hilltop Subdivision Family Living Trust and Kathleen • July 14 4:19 p.m. Gooseberry Rd. Saturday Night: A 20 percent Lot 6, Block 8, Rupp Addition; Lot 7, M. Montgomery et al, warranty deed, •Richard C. Bricker executor and es- Marie Barnes trustee; Barnes Family Lightning strike. chance of showers and thunder- block 8, Rupp Addition; Lot 8, Block Lot 3, Block 3, Sunrise Heights Ad- tate of James L. Bricker to James S. Living Trust to Darrell C. Barnes, joint • July 14 5:21 p.m. Fire. Worland storms before midnight. Partly 8, Rupp Addition dition Lee et ux and Barbara S. Lee et vir, tenants and Kathleen Marie Barnes Livestock Auction. Ln. 12. cloudy, with a low around 49. •New York Mellon, the Bank of FKA, •Thomas D. McKinnnon to Nothern warranty deed, Tract 52, sec 21, Twp joint tenants, quit claim deed, Lot 16, Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high Bank of New York trustee for Na- Lights Investments LLC, warranty 47, range 088 Block 1, Riverview Subdivision LAW ENFORCEMENT REPORT near 81. tionstar Home Equity Loan Trust to deed, Lot 15, Block 11, Pulliam Ad- •Northern Lights Investments LLC to •Darrell C. Barnes, joint tenants and Law Enforcement report for July Sunday Night: Partly cloudy, with a Dylan Sanchez, et al and Samantha dition Stellar Concept Properties Inc, war- Kathleen Marie Barnes joint tenants 14 - 15: low around 52. Sanchez et al, warranty deed, sec •Thomas McKinnon et al and Marcy ranty deed, Lot 7, 8, Block 5, North- to Darrell C. Barnes trustee; Barnes • July 14 3 p.m. Hedge Music. Sus- Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high 25, Twp 47, range 093, SW4NW4 L. McKinnon et vir to Northern Lights ern Addition; Lot 11, 12, Block 4, Family Living Trust and Kathleen picious vehicle reported. near 88. •Mark J. Hinkel et ux and Martha A. Investments LLC, warranty deed, Worland First Addition Marie Barnes trustee; Barnes Family • June 14 9:59 p.m. Crown Cork and Monday Night: Partly cloudy, with a Hinkel et vir to Jesse L. Sheppard, Lot 11, Block 2, Evans Addition; Lot •Aaron W. Hyndman to Simeon Living Trust, quit claim deed, Lot 16, Seal. Suspicious incident reported. low around 57. warranty deed, Lot 11, Block 16, 16, 17, 18, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, Block McDonald, warranty deed, Lot 38, Block 1, Riverview subdivision • July 15 1:48 a.m. Noise complaint Forecast provided by Evert Addition 20, 15, 18, Court Place Addition; Lot Block 15, Evert Addition •Rani Nicole Nomura to Russell received. National Weather Service, weather.gov. •Barbara A. Cornett to Jerry Lee 13, Block 10, Booker Addition; Lot 1, •Stuart Todd Kuchel trustee and D. Nomura, quit claim deed, Lot 1, Cornett et al and Michael Ray Cor- Block 10, Court Place First Addition; Berneil D. Kuchel revocable trust to Block 1, Sugar Beet Hilltop Subdivi- Sunset tonight: 8:52 p.m. WEATHER nett, warranty deed, Lot 6, Block 4, Lot 9, 7, 8, Block 5, North Addition; Kuchels Three, LLC, warranty deed, sion Sunrise tomorrow: 5:44 a.m. Worland temperatures: High 78, Sage Creek Addition Lot 10, 11, 12, 13, Block 5, 2, Decker Low 57 Precipitation: Record of •H and W Properties Inc. to Thomas Addition; Lot 11, 12, Block 4, Wor- 0.15, breaking the 1991 record on M. Pederson, warranty deed, Lot 18, land First Addition July 15 of .02. Block 7, booker Addition •Leta Ihde to Tom McKinnon et ux Thursday: Sunny, with a high near Winning Numbers •Caroline L. Green to Erick D. Clark, and Marcy McKinnon et vir, warranty 91. Southeast wind 5 to 9 mph be- for July 14, 2015 warranty deed, Tract 68 deed, Lot 11, Block 4; Lot 12, Block coming west in the afternoon. MegaMillions •John M. Cook, Co-Personal Rep- 4, Worland First Addition Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with 19 24 30 35 72 5 resentative, Patricia C. Smith, Co- •Thomas McKinnon et al, et us and a low around 57. Light and vari- Personal Representative, Estate of Marcy L. McKinnon et al, et vir to able wind becoming north northeast Marian G. Cooke to John M. Cooke Stellar Concept Properties Inc., war- around 6 mph in the evening. et al, Patricia C. smith et al, warranty ranty deed, Lot 7, 8, Block 5, North Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high deed, sec 29, 03, 04, 05, Twp 48, Addition; Lot 11, 12, Block 4, Wor- near 84. Light and variable wind be- range 089, 090, 090, 090 land First Addition •Wade Sanford et us and Kimberly •Northern Lights Investments LLC to Northern Wyoming Daily News, Worland, Wyo., Thursday, July 16, 2015—3

Seussical Jr. Summer Performing Arts Camp Performances on July 24 - 25 at Washakie Museum

By Taylor Maya Staff Writer WORLAND — Since July 6, 20 children have been practicing for the play Seussical Jr. at the Washakie Museum. These chil- dren are a part of the Summer Performing Arts Camp which runs through July 25. The overarching plot of the show mirrors that of “Horton Hears a Who”, centering on Hor- ton the Elephant’s endeavors to protect the people of Who- ville, who live on a tiny speck of dust. It also features characters and scenarios from many other Seuss books including musical numbers based on the original stories, “The Cat in the Hat” also acts as “your host and MC” – acting variously as a narrator, an outside observer, and a devil’s advocate throughout the show, and briefly leaping into the ac- tion on several occasions to cre- ate conflict and keep the story moving, according to the Seus- sical Jr. Broadway Junior book. The musical incorporates the books “Horton Hears a Who”, “Did I Ever Tell You How Lucky You Are”, “One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish”, “The Cat in the Hat”, “If I Ran the Circus”, “McElligot’s Pool”, “Green Eggs and Ham”, “Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories”, “Horton Hatches the Egg”, “I Had Trouble in Get- ting to Solla Sollew” and “Oh, the Things You Can Think!” Accoridng to camp coordi- nator Sherryl Ferguson, in the musical performance Dr. Seuss characters come to life – Ger- trude McFuzz, Horton the El- ephant, Mayzie La Bird, Sour Kangaroo, The Cat in the Hat, and more. The children are also learning all aspects of a full- scale rural production—staging, DAILY NEWS/ Taylor Maya DAILY NEWS/ Taylor Maya make-up, costuming, sound, and The Summer Performing Arts children practiced the opening number of the Seussical Jr. play. Two Hailey Richards (front) sings during the “Horton Hears a lights. There will be two perfor- performances will be held at the Washakie Museum on July 24 and 25. Children participating in the Who” play rehersal as Samantha Johnson (back) watches. mances of the production. One play include; Gage Stanek, Ella Stanek, Ashlyn Erikson, Chauntea Mocko, Hailee Hunt, Samantha Richards plays the part of the Kangaroo and Johnson plays Firday, July 24 at 7 p.m. and one Johnson, Hailey Richard, Monica Nelson, Caleb Durrant, Gabe Durrant, Addie Carver, Katherine Jo Jo. The children have been practicing since July 6. Two Saturday, July 25 at 2 p.m. Martinson, Daisy Weaver, Ellie Durrant, Jacob Durrant, Joseph Durrant, Kyra Klinghagen, Katie performances will be at the Washakie Museum on July 24 For more information call the Burrows, Gwendolyn Bird and Tatum Byrd. The show is being directed by Naomi Durrant. More on and 25. museum at 347-4102. page 5.

Sisters-in-law torn a part by husband Upcoming Events erings I have with my husband's surgery at a cabin retreat. Please call the Daily News, Pinochle 12:45 a.m. nior Center family, I tolerate James, but oth- I had a brain tumor and can Annie’s Mailbox 347-3241, if you are anticipating Coffee/ Pool 9 a.m. Ten Sleep Wii Bowling 10 a.m. - Worland erwise, I have no interaction with tell "Ohio" not to feel guilty. Bal- any changes in your organiza- Senior Center Senior Center him or his wife. I wasn't invited to ance and tripping issues continue tion’s meetings. Pool Players 8:00 a.m. - 12 p.m. Pokeno 12:45 a.m. – Worland their wedding, although my hus- to plague me even six years after Thermopolis Senior Center Senior Center band attended. I only recently re- my surgery. "Ohio" was so kind to Thursday, July 16 Bridge 12:30 Thermopolis Se- Pickleball 1:30 – 3 p.m. Wor- vealed to him what James wrote bring the man somewhere to recu- Line Dancing 10 – 11 a.m. – nior Center land Senior Center Community about me in that text. I could see perate, and falling down and hit- Worland Senior Center Craft Club 1 p.m. Thermopolis Complex Center it upset him, but all he said was, "I ting his head could have happened Party Bridge 12:45 p.m. Senior Center Coffee/ Pool 9 a.m. Ten Sleep didn't realize." anywhere at any time. That cabin Pickleball 1:30 – 3 p.m. Wor- Students’ Performing Arts Senior Center Lately, my mother-in-law has retreat was probably just what land Senior Center Community Camp, Washakie Museum Pool Players 8 a.m. - 12 p.m. been making comments about the guy needed, and his death was Complex Center Relay For Life, 6 p.m. - mid- Thermopolis Senior Center how she doesn't understand why no one's fault. Coffee/ Pool 9 a.m. Ten Sleep night, Warrior Stadium. 5-6 p.m. Bridge 12:30 Thermopolis Se- "people" don't talk to each other. I was so moved to read how Senior Center : final check-in; Opening ceremo- nior Center I'm sure she's referring to me. I heartbroken this friend is, but I Pool Players 8 a.m. - 12 p.m. ny, 6 p.m. Pinochle 6:30 p.m. Thermopo- know James is a master manipu- wanted to say that there are sup- Thermopolis Senior Center Basin: Country Western Gui- lis Senior Center lator and has probably told her all port groups all over where people Students’ Performing Arts tarist Dan Garnett at Basin City Students’ Performing Arts kinds of untrue things about me. listen to stories like this all the Camp, Washakie Museum Arts Center Friday, July 17 @ 7 Camp, Washakie Museum I haven't wanted to upset her by time. It helps relinquish any guilt. Friday, July 17 p.m. located in Basin on Main Tuesday, July 21 giving her the lowdown on James, — J. Aerobics 9 a.m. Street across from the IGA Country Line Dancing: Begin- but should I? — Hurt and Fed up Dear J.: Thank you for your Wii Games 10 a.m. – Worland Monday, July 20 ners 10 a.m. - Worland Senior Dear Hurt: Please don't. It kind words. We received doz- Senior Center Aerobics 9 a.m. - Worland Se- Center Kathy Mitchell and wouldn't help your relation- ens of letters expressing sym- Mary Sugar ship and might push James pathy and understanding. to go after you with more Several readers also pointed Dear Annie: My husband and venom. Your husband knows out that hospice offers grief I have been together for 12 years. the truth, and that's the most counseling whether or not the We have three children. His moth- important thing. Make sure he patient was in hospice. We ap- Same Name, er is still living, and he has one is supportive of you if James preciate all of the expressions younger brother. or his mother says anything of concern and know that My issue is with this brother, unkind. Beyond that, you are "Ohio" will, too. Same Lenders, "James." A few years ago, James handling this as well as can be Annie's Mailbox is written by cheated on his then-girlfriend, expected. Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, "Sheila," with whom he has a Dear Annie: It was with great longtime editors of the Ann Land- Same Bank daughter. Sheila also has a son interest I read the letter from ers column. Please email your from a previous relationship "Devastated in Ohio," the kind questions to anniesmailbox@cre- Big Horn Federal that James never cared for. In writer who is grieving the loss of a ators.com You can also find An- ‡ÊÜ iÀiÊÌ iÊiÊÌ iÊ the midst of their troubles, she friend who tripped and fell while nie on Facebook at Facebook.com/ ˜>“iʜ˜ÊÌ iÊÈ}˜Ê>˜`` would call my husband and me recuperating from brain tumor AskAnnies. and vent about the way James Ì iÊ«iœ«iÊLi ˆ˜`ʈÌÊ`œ˜¿Ìʜ˜¿ÌÊ treated her and her son, saying he V >˜}i]ÊÌ iÞʍÕÃÌʎii«Êi«Ê was emotionally abusive. Sheila Patty Deromedi Kim Johnsey Tad DeBolt }iÌ̈˜}ÊLiÌÌiÀ° Vice President Vice President Senior Lender once showed me one of James' NMLS# 759160 NMLS# 759159 Senior Vice President text messages referring to me as NMLS# 759158 his brother's "scumbag wife" and 7ˆÌ ʜÛiÀÊ75 yearsÊof other nasty things, all because I spoke to Sheila when she was lending experience]ÊÜ ÞÊ}œÊ hurting. >˜ÞÜ iÀiÊiÃi¶ Sheila took her son to a coun- selor who told her to pack up and remove herself and the kids from the home because of James' be- havior. Eventually, she sent her son to live with his father. Then she and James got married. During the few holiday gath- Lˆ} œÀ˜vi`iÀ>°Vœ“ÊÊUÊ£ääÈÊ ˆ}ÊœÀ˜ÊAÛi˜ÕiÊÊUÊÊ­ÎäÇ®ÊÎ{LJȣ™ÈÊÊUÊÊWœÀ>˜`]Ê79ÊnÓ{ä£ 4–Northern Wyoming Daily News, Worland, Wyo., Thursday, July 16, 2015

Historical ignorance Iran agreement means failed legacy for Obama Dear Editor: would be forced to dismantle its without verification that physi- mic sensors will register an un- The victors of war write its history in President Obama was desper- centrifuge program; cal actions were taken to prevent derground nuclear test, despite order to cast themselves in the most fa- ate for a foreign policy agreement 2) Obama promised “US sanc- nuclear weapon development. The Iran assuring us “that under no vorable light. That explains the consider- with Iran as part of his legacy. tions on Iran for terrorism, human Obama regime failed us. circumstances will Iran ever seek, able historical ignorance about our war Well, he got it. I agree with Is- rights abuses, and ballistic mis- Iran is allowed to retain all of develop, or acquire any nuclear of 1861 and panic over the Confederate raeli Prime Minister Netanyahu sile will remain in place.” False – their nuclear infrastructure. They weapons.” We fell for this before flag. To create better understanding, we in his characterization of our ca- most sanctions will be lifted; received immediate economic in 1994 with North Korea and have to start a bit before the 1787 Con- pitulation (sorry, agreement) as 3) The embargo on conven- sanctions relief (even before Con- Clinton’s Agreed Framework – stitutional Convention in Philadelphia. “an historic mistake.” Specifically, tional weapons will be lifted with- gress votes on the deal), plus an they now have nuclear weapons. The 1783 Treaty of Paris ended the the deal includes key concessions in the next five years. The embar- immediate influx of approximate- Sanctions will never “snap back.” war between the colonies and Great made against Obama’s previously go on ballistic missiles expires in ly $150 billion. We receive hollow Israel will look to its own defense, Britain. Its first article declared the 13 announced minimum criteria: eight years; promises from a regime that still as will the Saudis and their Gulf colonies “to be free, sovereign and inde- 1) Iran will receive interna- 4) The IAEA will have to re- chants “Death to America!” every allies. Instead of closing a nuclear pendent states.” These 13 sovereign na- tional assistance in the research quest access to sensitive sites Friday. Congress may reject the weapons risk, this deal will stim- tions came together in 1787 as principals and development of next-genera- (including those with “potential deal, but are unlikely to sustain ulate nuclear weapons develop- and created the federal government as tion centrifuge technology for iso- military dimensions”), which Iran an Obama veto. Iran will pocket ment and proliferation. their agent. Principals have always held Walter E. Williams tope production (which uses the can deny, after which an arbitra- their winnings, continue to cheat, Quite the legacy! the right to fire agents. In other words, same technology as enrichment). tion board that includes Iran is and continue to obstruct IAEA Steven Piel, states held a right to withdraw from the pact -- secede. Obama promised us that Iran convened. The deal has no teeth inspectors. Ultimately, our seis- Worland During the 1787 Constitutional Convention, a proposal was made that would allow the federal government to suppress a seceding state. James Madison rejected it, saying, “A union of the states containing such an ingredient seemed to provide for its own destruction. The use of force against a state would look more like a declaration of war than an infliction of punishment and would probably be considered by the party attacked as a dissolution of all previous compacts by which it might be bound.” In fact, the ratification documents of Virginia, New York and Rhode Is- land explicitly said they held the right to resume powers delegated should the federal government become abusive of those powers. The Constitution never would have been ratified if states thought they could not regain their sovereignty -- in a word, secede. On March 2, 1861, after seven states seceded and two days before Abraham Lincoln’s inauguration, Sen. James R. Doolittle of Wisconsin proposed a constitutional amendment that read, “No state or any part thereof, heretofore admitted or hereafter admitted into the union, shall have the power to withdraw from the jurisdiction of the United States.” Several months earlier, Reps. Daniel E. Sickles of New York, Thomas B. Florence of Pennsylvania and Otis S. Ferry of Connecticut proposed a constitutional amendment to prohibit secession. Here’s a question for the reader: Would there have been any point to offering these amendments if secession were already unconstitutional? On the eve of the War of 1861, even unionist politicians saw secession as a right of states. Rep. Jacob M. Kunkel of Maryland said, “Any attempt to preserve the union between the states of this Confederacy by force would be impractical, and destructive of republican liberty.” Both Northern Democratic and Republican Parties favored allowing the South to secede in peace. Just about every major Northern newspaper editorialized in favor of the South’s right to secede. New York Tribune (Feb. 5, 1860): “If tyranny and despotism justified the Revolution of 1776, then we do not see why it would not justify the secession of Five Millions of Southrons from the Federal Union in 1861.” Detroit Free Press (Feb. 19, 1861): “An attempt to subjugate the seceded states, even if successful, could produce nothing but evil -- evil unmitigated in character and appall- ing in content.” The New York Times (March 21, 1861): “There is growing sentiment throughout the North in favor of letting the Gulf States go.” The War of 1861 settled the issue of secession through brute force that cost 600,000 American lives. We Americans celebrate Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, but H.L. Mencken correctly evaluated the speech: “It is poetry, not logic; beauty, not sense.” Lincoln said the soldiers sacrificed their lives “to the cause of self-determination -- that government of the people, by the people, for the people should not perish from the earth.” The pope and the hammer and sickle Mencken says: “It is difficult to imagine anything more untrue. The Union Last week the Marxist quasi-dictator of Bolivia, Evo Mo- tially liberal/Left movements with religious (and in the case soldiers in the battle actually fought against self-determination; it was rales, presented Pope Francis with a gift: a carved wooden of Judaism, ethnic) identities. the Confederates who fought for the right of people to govern themselves.” hammer and sickle cross on which the figure of Christ is In terms of evil committed, what is the difference between The War of 1861 brutally established that states could not secede. We crucified. the hammer and sickle and the swastika? are still living with its effects. Because states cannot secede, the federal The Vatican announced that the pope had not been in- Would the pope receive, let alone keep, a fascist, racist government can run roughshod over the U.S. Constitution’s limitations of formed in advance about the gift. And some commentators or Nazi with a crucified Christ on it? Of course the Ninth and Tenth Amendments. States have little or no response. said photos of the pope and Morales show that the pope was not. Yet the hammer and sickle represents more human suf- Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason Uni- actually offended. That was a false — probably wishful — fering than all of them combined. The number of people en- versity. interpretation. The pope himself later announced that he slaved and murdered under the hammer and sickle dwarfs was keeping the hammer and sickle crucifix and taking it the number of people enslaved and murdered by any other home, saying, “I understand this work. For me it wasn’t an doctrine in history. by Leigh Rubin offense.” My heart breaks for the millions of Catholics who feel Rubes And as reported by The Guardian, “Vatican spokesman Dennis Prager that their beloved church is being led over a moral and re- Federico Lombardi said he personally wasn’t offended by ligious cliff by a Leftist pope and innumerable other Leftists Morales’ gift.” among cardinals, bishops and parish priests. The pope’s acceptance of Morales’ gift — along with his attacks on Though I am not a Catholic, my heart breaks, too. The only institutions capitalism during his Latin American tour — further confirms one of that can resist the left-wing takeover of contemporary life are religious the most troubling moral developments of our time: The Roman Catholic ones. When they fail, upon which institutions can we depend? Church is currently led by a man whose social, political and economic Tragically, we cannot turn to the contemporary Catholic Church. When views have been shaped by Leftism more than by any other religious or the pope keeps a hammer and sickle crucifix; when the pope declares free moral system. market capitalism, the one economic system that has lifted masses of It also reconfirms what is probably the single most important develop- people out of poverty, to be largely evil (“the dung of the devil”); when ment one needs to understand in order to make sense of the contemporary Cuba’s Cardinal Jaime Ortega declares that there are no political prison- world: The most dynamic religion of the past hundred years has been ers in Cuba; and when the pope issues an encyclical on global warming Leftism — not Christianity or Islam or any other traditional religion. In- while the oldest Christian communities in the world are exterminated, it deed, regarding traditional religions, Leftism has influenced them — par- is clear that while one can still turn to individual Catholic priests and lay ticularly Christianity and Judaism — far more than they have influenced leaders for moral guidance, one cannot turn to the Catholic Church and the Left. Mainstream Protestant Christianity, much of Catholicism (es- its pope for moral guidance. On the contrary. One must fight back. pecially in Latin America, where Pope Francis lived his whole life before Dennis Prager is a nationally syndicated radio show host and creator becoming pope), and most of non-Orthodox Judaism have become essen- of PragerUniversity.com.

Letter to the Editor Policy St. Francis professor changing lives Letters to the editor are encouraged. We offer the public forum and we want to Emily Horowitz spends a lot of time with people oth- This was at the very dawn of day care sex abuse panic. see it used. All letters must be signed and include the author’s home address and phone number. Addresses will not be published but they will be used to verify au- er professors don’t. Criminals. Domestic violence victims. Baran was quickly found guilty and given three life sen- thorship. No more than 350 words will be allowed. The Daily News reserves the Domestic violence perps. Sex offenders. Guys convicted of tences. The judge said that putting a gay man in a day right to change this policy at any time. Letters can be mailed to: Letter to the Editor, murder. She teaches sociology and criminology at St. Fran- care center was like putting a chocoholic in a candy store Northern Wyoming Daily News, P.O. Box 508, Worland, WY 82401 or emailed to cis College in Brooklyn and she introduces her students to — as if being a gay man and being a child molester were [email protected]. the same folks she’s meeting, in an effort to change lives — one and the same thing. the students’ and the convicts’. A group that Horowitz joined, the National Center for Horowitz is one of those people who walk the walk. Be- Reason and Justice, helped champion Baran’s case, and fore coming to St. Francis, she got her PhD in sociology he was finally freed after more than 20 years behind bars. at Yale, concentrating in women’s studies. As research, she The charges against him were completely dropped. “When decided to spend a year in domestic violence court, watch- he spoke to my class, he was talking about what it was like ing as women finally got justice. Lenore Skenazy being a gay man convicted of child molestation, in prison. But ... that wasn’t what she saw. “I was shocked that it They’d put cigarettes out on his head,” Horowitz says. He Serving the Big Horn Basin since 1905 was just poor and unemployed men being slammed over and over,” says was beaten. He was raped more than 30 times. As he told his story, her www.wyodaily.com Publisher of Sun Country Review Horowitz, herself the mom of four. “If a man slapped his partner, yes, he students wept. Postal Permit - (USPS 396-320) Online Subscription - 12 months $104.00 should be punished.” But the extraordinarily harsh sentences she wit- Those tears — and those students — will go on to make a difference. 1-800-788-4679 in Wyoming Mail Delivery Subscription Rates nessed didn’t seem designed to improve anyone’s prospects. The courts “St. Francis is this amazing college for first generation students,” says 201 N. 8th St. Phone 347-3241 In Washakie County P.O. Box 508 Worland, Wyoming 82401 3 Months $37.00 were treating every case as if it was inevitably going to end in murder. Horowitz. Many choose careers in law enforcement. “Now they will have 6 Months $57.00 PATRICK MURPHY, Publisher She began to regard the criminal justice system with curiosity: How a much more nuanced view of the people they’re dealing with. They’re 12 Months $104.00 KARLA POMEROY, Editor In Big Horn, Park & Hot Springs Counties much was overkill baked into the system? seeing people who have been affected personally by the system.” TRENT AGEE, Retail Sales Manager 3 Months $41.00 DENNIS JONES, Business Manager To find out, she started inviting convicts who’d been exonerated to It changed Horowitz herself. This past year she arranged for five 6 Months $61.00 DEANA NEWTON, Circulation Manager 12 Months $112.00 speak to her class. Horowitz said, “We had Bernard Baran.” folks who were formerly incarcerated to matriculate at her college. If Of cial Newspaper of Outside the 824 Zip Code Area Washakie County, Wyoming, Who? you believe in second chances — and especially if you don’t — consider 3 Months $55.00 Worland 6 Months $82.00 “Bernard was a working-class, gay teenager who dropped out of high this: One of those students has already proved such an amazing scholar, Periodical Postage Paid 12 Months $132.00 at Worland, Wyoming Post Of ce school because he was bullied. This was in the ‘80s. He started working straight A’s, that the school is sending her on a Franciscan pilgrimage Associated Press Wire Service Postmaster: Send address changes to: at a day care center, which he really liked,” says Horowitz. “But a couple to Assisi. Wyoming Press Association Northern Wyoming Daily News went to the head of the day care and said they didn’t want a ‘homo’ St. Francis was all about redemption. Horowitz, too. Here’s hoping Published every morning except P.O. Box 508, Worland, Wyoming 82401 Sunday and Monday by watching their son. ‘ And the day care said, ‘Well, we can’t fire a per- her students — and the rest of us! — are likewise stirred. Grand Teton News. Inc. son because of that.’ And lo and behold, the couple started alleging that Lenore Skenazy is author of the book and blog “Free-Range Kids.” Her Single Copy 50¢ Baron molested their son,” says Horowitz. TV show, “World’s Worst Mom” airs on the Discovery Life Channel. Northern Wyoming Daily News, Worland, Wyo., Thursday, July 16, 2015—5 The Nature Conservancy sends urban youth to summer jobs Seven West Coast interns planning for the future of the planet at the Tensleep Preserve Seven high school students From July 20-23, the interns vironmental leadership pro- travelled from the West Coast to will be working at the Conser- gram serves students attend- spend much of July in Wyoming vancy’s Tensleep Preserve. ing environmentally-themed as part of The Nature Conser- Their assignments will range high schools in urban areas in vancy’s Leaders in Environmen- from clearing out invasive weeds 11 states. Students will work tal Action for the Future (LEAF) and removing old fencing that on conservation projects in 26 program. They are a highly di- poses hazards to wildlife and states across the country. verse group of young women, collecting aquatic insects for National conservation activi- from a 16 year old girl who hails research and helping stabilize ties created by LEAF and The from a farm on Vashon Island, stream banks. Nature Conservancy’s Youth Washington to the children of This is the third year that Programs are made possible immigrants from Mexico and Wyoming has hosted LEAF in- through support from Lowe’s. Guatemala who now call sprawl- terns on our preserves. The company has supported the ing Los Angeles their home. For 21 years, the LEAF pro- Conservancy’s work for more For 17-year-old Samantha gram has engaged urban youth than a decade, contributing Mariscal, the program is a way in conservation activities today more than $10 million to protect to contribute to conserving our so that they will become stew- important freshwater and for- planet. ards for our planet tomorrow. est lands across North America, “I want to be a part of creat- The program provides paid in- and to advance environmental ing change, and help The Nature ternships for students on con- youth programs and help build Conservancy achieve its mission servation projects around the the next generation of conser- to conserve lands and waters country, and enriches these ex- vationists. Learn more about that life depends on. I believe periences in the classroom by the students who LEAF serves, COURTESY/ Nature Concervancy that after this program I will be partnering with environmental Lowe’s support and this unique Interns who will be at the Tensleep Reserve next week are (l-r) Monica Jara , Bethany Schmidt, Sa- more passionate than I am right high schools across the country. partnership model at www.na- mantha Mariscal, Lesly Linares, Jayrlyn Molina, Stephania Tovar Vargas, Chanel Lindsay, Hannah now to create that change.” This comprehensive en- ture.org/youth. O’Flanagan and Mira Peterson.

Area graduates Seussical Jr. practices for upcoming performance Shirley Temple’s announced polka dot dress from University brings $75,000 at of Wyoming auction KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — A The University of Wyoming red polka dot dress that Shirley accorded degrees upon the fol- Temple wore in a 1934 movie has lowing students from Washakie sold for $75,000 at an auction in and Hot Springs counties at the Kansas City. completion of the 2015 spring se- The Kansas City Star reports mester. the auction Tuesday included The following degrees may be more than 500 of Temple’s child- included on this list: BA (Bach- hood belongings, including hun- elor of Arts); BS (Bachelor of Sci- dreds of dolls and toys, and doz- ence); BSCH (Bachelor of Science ens of her costumes. The auction in Chemical Engineering); BSME was organized by Maryland-based (Bachelor of Science in Mechani- Theriault’s auction house for Tem- cal Engineering); PHRD (Doctor ple’s estate. of Pharmacy) and BSN (Bachelor Shirley Temple Black died in of Science in Nursing). February 2014 at the age of 85. Students are: She starred in more than 80 films. Worland As an adult, she served in the Thaddeus Bowden Cannon, United Nations General Assembly BA and became U.S. ambassador to Joshua Dan Garcia, MA Ghana. Jennifer Cristy Herrmann, BA Temple’s baby grand Steinway Todd Manning Jolley, double also sold at the auction for $45,000. BA Zachary E. Ley, BA Misti Lyn Leyva, BS Paperback Holly Michelle Mickelson, BA Shanendoah A. Redding, BSCP edition of ‘The James G. Rieger, BSME Eric D. Rothleutner, BS Prophet’ coming Martha M. Schneider, BA Molly Christina Varney, BS next week DAILY NEWS photos/ Taylor Maya Ashley N. Vigil, PHRD NEW YORK (AP) — It only took Payton D. Vigil, BS The Performing Summer Arts Camp was in full swing 92 years for the U.S. publisher of Thermopolis Wednesday afternoon at the Washakie Museum. 20 Kahil Gibran’s inspirational classic Cody D. Abbott, BA children are practicing for the Seussical Jr. musical “The Prophet” to release the book Sarah Stephan Green, BA which they will perform on July 24 and 25. in paperback. Weston Garrett Hubele, BSCH ABOVE: Ella Stanek (front) and Kyra Klinghagen The Penguin Random House Sarah Deanna Leddige, BS imprint Vintage Books told The As- (back) dance and sing in the opening number of the David Allen Leonhardt, BSME sociated Press on Wednesday that Chris D. Leyba, BS Suessical musical. the new edition would be available Jocelyn Gail Materi, BSN TOP RIGHT: Gage Stanek plays a frog in the “Horton July 21, two weeks before the open- Joshua Don Materi, BS Hears a Who” act of the Seussical Jr. musical. ing of an animated film adaptation Kylie A. Olsen, BA that features the voices of Liam Neeson and Selma Hayek. “The Prophet” has sold more than 9 million copies in the U.S. Trendy but calm: Adult coloring books selling like crazy alone since it was first published in 1923. It offers on every- NEW YORK (AP) — Adult coloring tests and a frenzy of coloring posts on Not that I’ve got much to show for my limit my equipment to just four crayons thing from marriage to clothing. books are giving Harper Lee a run for the social media. Parade magazine devoted a work. It took me more than two months and three colored pencils, preferring not Vintage plans a first printing of money on best-seller lists this summer. Sunday cover to the trend. Dover plans a to complete a single page of “Splendid to complicate my palette with too many 50,000 for the paperback. Dover Publications has sold more than national coloring book day on Aug. 2. Cities” because I never spent much time choices, and I enjoyed deciding which of 3 million adult coloring books with titles “People are stressed and anxious all on it in one sitting. I’d color during a my seven colors to fill the template’s tiny like “Flower Fashion Fantasies.” Quarto the time,” said Jeannine Dillon, Quar- stressful moment at the office or at home, spaces with. Blue or yellow? Crayon or Publishing will have 1.3 million in print to’s publisher. “Coloring is a way to calm or use it as a break from a complicated pencil? Finish the window or start the Correction this year ranging from mandalas to fair- down and unwind at the end of the day.” or boring task, or to transition between roof? Names of Erin Berryman ies. “Secret Garden: An Inky Treasure But art therapy is not the only rea- tasks. When every space was colored in, I and Taylor Berryman were Hunt,” by one of the genre’s most popular son coloring has taken off. As hobbies My longest stretch coloring was an started over, rubbing crayon over pencil, misspelled in the caption un- illustrators, Johanna Basford, remains a go, coloring books are incredibly simple: hour while awaiting delivery of time- pencil over crayon, mixing colors to make der the Animal Planet Sum- top seller on Amazon two years after its portable, easy to pick up and put down, sensitive documents that I feared were new ones and layering for a mottled ef- mer Fun Camp published in initial publication. old-school analog pursuits with no bat- lost. Coloring distracted me from worry- fect. Wednesday’s issue of the Daily In fact, adult coloring books occupied teries or messages, no calorie-counting, ing about something I couldn’t control or Jason Keyser, 42, a stay-at-home dad News. as many of eight of the top 20 slots in a skill-building, classes or scores. fix. I channeled the book’s subtitle, “Color from a suburb of Sacramento, Califor- spot-check of Amazon’s best-seller list And the finished product is perfect Your Way to Calm,” and could feel anxious nia, picked up the hobby a year ago in this week, including “Creative Cats” and for minimalists. Pottery and paintings thoughts waning as I concentrated on the a program to help him with anxiety and “Adult Coloring Book: Stress Relieving demand shelf and wall space; knitted picture. Coloring required just enough at- depression after a friend passed away. Patterns.” scarves cry out to be worn or bestowed as tention to disrupt the obsessive loop play- “I’ve been doing it ever since,” said Key- “We cannot print them fast enough,” gifts. But a colored-in page takes up al- ing in my mind. It wasn’t so much relax- ser, who placed third in a coloring contest said Amy Yodanis, Quarto’s head of mar- most no space at all (unless you frame it). ation as immersion in something else. for a picture he completed from Dover’s keting. “We are getting orders of 60,000 I can attest to the trend’s allure. I’ve The page I completed depicts a San “Asian Tattoo Designs.” at one time from some of our biggest re- been spending my spare moments color- Francisco streetscape of Victorian row “It’s really relaxing,” he said. “Takes tailers.” ing a book called “Splendid Cities: Color houses with geometric patterns form- your mind away from stressful things in There are coloring clubs, coloring con- Your Way to Calm.” ing gabled roofs and arched windows. I life.”

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UW, Larry Shyatt Giving chase in the dirt agree to extension Steer and tie-down roping begin at Frontier Days Rodeo By David Watson “I didn’t plan on rodeoing very WyoSports much this year, mainly going to ju- through 2020 CHEYENNE – Mike Chase nior rodeos. Then I bought my card made a strong case Wednesday for just a few big rodeos, like San By Robert Gagliardi that everyone should start chas- Antonio and Cheyenne. It’s funny WyoSports ing him in the Professional Rodeo how it has worked out.” LARAMIE – It took nearly three months, but the University of Wyoming Cowboys Association world stand- Wood won the fi rst round, tied and men’s basketball coach Larry Shyatt have agreed on a contract exten- ings. for third in the second round and sion. The second-ranked steer roper was fi fth in the third round to win It is through April of 2020. Shyatt, 64, also gets an increase in his base from McAlester, Oklahoma, was the average at the San Antonio salary from $210,000 in 2015-16 to $230,000 in 2019-20. the only cowboy to record a time (Texas) Stock Show and Rodeo UW athletics director Tom Burman said Wednesday that Shyatt’s total under 14 seconds when he posted early in the season. compensation for 2014-15 was “north of $800,000.” That includes other bo- a 13.9 in the fi rst go-round during Tying Wood in fourth place was nuses and incentives in his contract. slack competition Wednesday at Trent Mills of Gillette, Wyoming, The extension includes retention incentives of $100,000 for assistant the Cheyenne Frontier Days Ro- when he posted his time early coaches Jeremy Shyatt (Larry’s son) and Allen Edwards for the next two deo. with the fourth run in the round. seasons. Each will get bonuses of $50,000 for the next two years if they stay “Here in Cheyenne, this is a ro- “It’s always about luck in Chey- on the staff over a certain time in the calendar year. deo I’ve always kind of wanted to enne,” Mills said. “You never know Associate head coach Scott Duncan’s contract was extended through win,” said Chase, who has never what you’re going to get, and you 2016-17, but there are no retention incentives. qualifi ed for the National Finals are happy when you win some- All three assistants have been with Shyatt at UW since he returned for Rodeo since joining the PRCA in thing, and just try. the 2011-12 season. 1996. “I’ve been second and third “But I do want to say thanks “These guys have done it all since they’ve been here,” Shyatt said. “They and fi fth, but never won, and I to the Rodeo Committee for keep- not only bled into winning each and every year, they did a great with sure would like that.” ing steer roping. It has always player development.” A full fi rst go of steer roping, been part of this rodeo and always Shyatt said all three had chances to leave for other assistants’ jobs at featuring more than 110 contes- should be.” bigger schools. He also said Edwards was “second in line” to become the new tants, and today’s second go will Tie-down roping head coach at Eastern Kentucky this spring. Burman said the retention be the only time the event runs The fi rst half of Wednesday’s incentive is new since he became UW’s athletics director in October of 2006. before the fi nals at the end of the six-hour slack competition at Duncan makes about $175,000 per year; Edwards, roughly $120,000; rodeo. Frontier Park Arena was devoted and Jeremy Shyatt, around $100,000. Chase trailed No. 1 Vin Fisher to roping calves. “We would like to keep this group together until coach Shyatt decides Jr. of Andrews, Texas, by a little The more than 100 tie-down he’s had enough, and then hopefully we will be in a position to look within,” more than $5,000 in the PRCA ropers appearing Wednesday and Burman said. “I believe coach Shyatt is going to coach a long time.” standings entering this week. today would not fi t into the perfor- Shyatt said there is no language in the new contract that ensures a “It has just been a very blessed mances starting Saturday, which member of his staff will take over if he retired or left. year, with things falling my way,” feature 10 contestants each day. Burman said UW will spend $100,000 more in 2015-16 for operational Chase said. Chris Demases of Boyd, Texas, budgets, recruiting, team travel and equipment within the basketball pro- Wyoming cowboy Casey Tillard and Justin Macha of Needville, gram. There was the same $100,000 increase the year before. of Glenrock jumped into second Tommy Martino/WyoSports Texas, tied for fi rst place with UW also is in the process of a $30 million renovation of the Arena-Audi- place with a 14.5-second run near Justin Parke of Gooding, Idaho, ropes a calf during the first go- 10.5-second runs. torium. The fi rst part of that was done before the start of last season. the end of the go-round. round of tie-down roping Wednesday morning at the 119th annu- Demases had to wait for a bit so “We’ve made a substantial commitment to basketball, and Larry is prov- “I drew really well for a great al Cheyenne Frontier Days Rodeo slack at Frontier Park Arena. a calf that got out onto the other en he’s worth the investment as is his program,” Burman said. steer, and you have to get lucky in Parke made the run in 16.3 seconds. side of the fence in the arena was In fi ve seasons at UW, the last four and one in 1997-98, Shyatt has a Cheyenne,” Tillard said. “I am rid- corralled. He also was the last con- record of 103-60. The Cowboys won their fi rst-ever Mountain West Tourna- ing a fairly green horse (Houdini), but he worked great. testant before the halfway point of the slack and before the ground was ment title this year, fi nished 25-10 and played in their fi rst NCAA Tourney “My dad (Marty) and cousin (Troy) have won here. I’ve made the short freshly raked. since 2001-02. UW announced on April 22 that it was in negotiations for a round a couple of times, but never had any luck.” “It was probably good for my horse (Ozzy) to chill out in the box for a contract extension with Shyatt. Burman said there was no sense of urgency Marty Tillard won a CFD steer roping title in 1991. Troy Tillard won little bit, and I got to think about it too,” Demases said. since Shyatt had four years left on his existing contract. in Cheyenne in 2004. “Anytime you tie one in the 10-second range in Cheyenne, you are Shyatt said he and Burman had several conversations during the nego- Martin Poindexter of Stephenville, Texas, earned a healthy paycheck doing pretty well. This year has been really slow, so this is a good rodeo tiations and there were “no dramatic moments.” with a fourth-place 14.7. to turn it around at.” In a statement from UW earlier Wednesday, Burman said Shyatt was of- Poindexter fi nished just ahead of two-time CFD champion Neal Wood Riley Pruitt of Gering, Nebraska, was third (10.8); Chris Neal of fered a job in the NBA over the last month. He added that may have slowed of Needville, Texas. Wood clocked in at 14.9. Muldrow, Oklahoma, was fourth (10.9); and Jake Hannum of Plain City, the process to get this extension done. “Every time you do well at this rodeo – the ‘Daddy of ’em All’ – it Utah, was fi fth (11.0). Shyatt and Burman refused to get into specifi cs on what that opportu- makes you feel good,” said Wood, who is currently ranked sixth in the Today’s slack competition begins at 7 a.m. and will feature the same nity was. PRCA standings. two events. Demaryius Thomas signs  ve-year, $70 million contract with Broncos ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — signed Wednesday. cos won’t have to worry about him as has ranked fi rst in the league ning era is over. him backing up at all. The expec- Demaryius Thomas hasn’t lost any Earlier this year, Thomas told being a no-show when camp train- in yards receiving, second to Anto- “I don’t think there’s any ques- tations are going to be increased of his impeccable timing. The Associated Press he wasn’t ing camp starts in two weeks. Nor nio Brown in catches and second tion that D.T.’s one of the top wide now and we just think he’s got all The Denver Broncos’ star wide interested in using Bryant as a will they go into the 2016 offsea- to Dallas’ Bryant in touchdowns receivers in the league and he’s be- the skills. receiver signed a fi ve-year, $70 barometer for his own contract, in- son with two superstars entering while making the Pro Bowl each ing compensated that way now. It’s “Plus, the type of person he is ... million contract just before the sisting, “I’m just trying to get what free agency. year. very much, very well deserved,” El- we have a tremendous amount of deadline Wednesday. I think I deserve. I don’t worry Linebacker Von Miller, barring Elway said he has faith that way said. “So, we have high expec- confi dence in D.T. And that’s why It’s the richest contract in fran- about no other player.” an extension, will be up for a mega Thomas will continue being a tations. We think he comes right we felt comfortable paying him chise history and includes $43.5 Thomas told The AP this spring deal after the 2015 season. great player even after the Man- into his prime. We don’t anticipate this kind of money.” million guaranteed. he also didn’t think his absence Thomas set career highs with Had the sides not hammered from the offseason program would 111 catches for 1,619 yards — a out a deal, Thomas would have hamper his timing with Manning, franchise record — in 2014, when played this season under the suggesting their three years to- he scored 11 times. Since Man- $12,823,000 franchise tag, which gether gave him confi dence “we ning’s arrival in Denver in 2012, still would have been about as can pick up where we left off” Thomas has caught 297 passes for much as he’d made in his fi rst fi ve whenever he signed his deal. 4,483 yards and 35 TDs. seasons combined. By signing Thomas, the Bron- In that three-year span, Thom- “Thrilled to reach a long-term deal with Demaryius,” general manager John Elway tweeted. “He is one of the NFL’s top WRs & will continue to be a big part of the Broncos’ success!!” That was a far different tone than the last time Elway spoke publicly about Peyton Manning’s top target. It was just before the draft and Elway was asked about Thomas boycotting the team’s offseason program, his only perceived le- verage under the franchise tag designation. Wanting Thomas on hand as new coach Gary Kubiak installed his offense, Elway fumed then, “there’s zero value in him not being here.” That was about as unpleasant as things got, however. The negotiations never really got nasty. Manning said sure, he’d prefer Thomas show up but he also wanted him to get every penny he had coming. Teammates good- naturedly photo-shopped Thomas into their pictures. And Kubiak had his video department send Thomas the new playbook and clips of practice to keep him up to speed. “We’ll just have to be care- ful with D.T. when he comes into training camp and really manage him and get him up to speed with what we’re doing mentally but also physically because he didn’t have the OTAs or the minicamps with us,” Elway said. The total value of Thomas’ deal is similar to the one Dallas Cow- boys All-Pro receiver Dez Bryant Demaryius Thomas Northern Wyoming Daily News, Worland, Wyo., Thursday, July 16, 2015—7 KC Chiefs, Justin Houston reach 6-year, $101 million deal KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City Chiefs spoke with representatives for Justin Houston “You just have to be consistent day in and day out, and kind of peck away, and make sure com- about an extension before last season. When they were unable to reach a pact, the defensive star made munication is ongoing,” Dorsey said. a big gamble by playing out the fi nal year of his rookie contract. “Joel did a great job as well in this thing.” The Chiefs rewarded their standout pass rusher handsomely on Wednesday. The team and Houston was considered one of the top linebackers in the draft coming out of Georgia, Houston agreed to a six-year, $101 million contract just hours before the deadline but a failed test for marijuana at the scouting combine caused his stock to slide. The for a long-term deal, the culmination of long negotiation that made the All- Chiefs wound up taking him in the third round, in retrospect a massive bargain — or Pro the highest-paid linebacker in NFL history. downright steal.He has only made roughly $3 million over the course of his rookie con- “I just had to make sure I took care of what I needed on the tract. fi eld,” said Houston, who left the negotiations in the hands of For that small price, Kansas City got 200 tackles, 48 1/2 sacks and fi ve fumble his agent, Joel Segal. recoveries. “Once you get paid,” Houston added, “it’s not like you won Houston has also grown into one of the leaders in the locker room, help- the lottery. You still have work to do. You can still get better each ing keep things together when a rash of injuries struck last season. and every day, so that’s my goal.” Despite losing linebacker Derrick Johnson and tackle Mike DeVito in But in some ways, Houston did win the lottery. His massive new deal the opener, the Chiefs still had one of the AFC’s top defenses. includes $52.5 million guaranteed, a person familiar with the terms told Houston skipped the Chiefs’ entire offseason program, including their The Associated Press. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because mandatory minicamp, rather than signing his franchise tender. But all terms were not disclosed by the team. along, coach Andy Reid expressed optimism that the sides would reach an That makes Houston’s contract the richest in franchise history, too. The only agreement before the start of the season.Reid also wasn’t concerned about defensive player to sign a larger deal is defensive tackle Ndamukong Suh, who agreed the missed workouts. to a six-year, $114 million pact with the Miami Dolphins earlier this year. “I think he’s working out, absolutely,” Reid said at the end of offseason “In situations like this, you have to have a degree of patience,” Chiefs general manager work. “That’s just him by nature, so he’s not going to let things slide on John Dorsey said. “What’s good is it kicks off a very positive attitude for training camp.” his side.” The big deal is the payoff for a big season: Houston broke Derrick Thomas’s franchise Fellow linebacker Tamba Hali, who went through a similar negotia- record with 22 sacks. tion with the Chiefs in 2011, said he had been in touch with Houston He had four alone in a dynamic season-ending game against San Diego, leaving him a throughout the offseason. half-sack short of the NFL’s single-season record set by the Giants’ Michael Strahan. “He’s working his tail off,” Hali said. “Like any player he wants to Those gaudy totals sent Houston to his third consecutive Pro Bowl and earned him fi rst- be here, but again, we know our league is a business and you have team All-Pro honors for the fi rst time in his four-year career. to allow that business to work itself out.” Still, the sides continued to make slow progress when the Chiefs were forced to use the Dorsey declined to address the specifi c terms of the contract, franchise tag on Houston. If he signed the tender, he would have played this season on a though its long-term nature means the Chiefs should receive some one-year deal worth about $13.1 million, and they would have been in the same predica- salary cap relief. That could come in handy with several others ment next season. entering contract years, including Johnson and cornerback Sean So with the deadline approaching on a long-term deal, negotiations fi nally picked up. Smith. Segal met with the Chiefs on Tuesday, and Houston soon got a phone call to fl y to Kansas “We’ve always said, if you can retain your own football play- City. ers, great football players, that helps you sustain going forward,” “I knew they weren’t going to fl y me out here for nothing,” he said. Dorsey said. Perhaps the most remarkable part of the negotiations? How quiet they were. There “I feel that we have enough fl exibility to where we’ll be able were no leaks and no posturing, despite the high stakes. to do more deals.” Dallas Cowboys, WR Dez Bryant agree to 5-year, $70M deal IRVING, Texas (AP) — Dez Bry- Owner Jerry Jones fl ew to New the league since 2010, when Dallas got as opposed to the franchise (tag) ant and the Dallas Cowboys have the York to meet with agent Tom Condon drafted him late in the fi rst round af- and ongoing or future negotiations re- long-term contract both sides said and representatives of Jay Z’s Roc ter his stock fell over concerns about garding his contract,” Jones said. they wanted during a long stalemate Nation talent agency. Jones said they off-the-fi eld issues. Bryant never signed the franchise that came right up against the dead- were up until early Wednesday morn- “As well as we know him, you see tender, so Dallas couldn’t fi ne Bryant line to get a deal done. ing discussing terms, and the owner the kind of commitment that we’ve for missing offseason workouts and The All-Pro receiver signed the felt confi dent a deal was close to done made here,” Jones said. “That says camp practices. Bryant didn’t practice fi ve-year, $70 million deal Wednes- when he went to bed. everything about what feel about him all spring, but did show up from time day, less than an hour before he “There was never a doubt in my on and off the fi eld. He’s made tre- to time. That included the fi nal man- would have run out of time to play mind that we wanted a long-term mendous strides since he came out of datory minicamp workout, when he under anything other than a one-year deal with Dez,” Jones said. “We just college, relative to his complete matu- had a 15-minute conversation with agreement in 2015. had to get the pot right.” ration.” Jones. A person close to the negotiations Now the Cowboys can focus on In the months before the deal Because of those appearances, the provided contract terms to The As- defending their NFC East title and was reached, Bryant would occasion- Cowboys were gambling that the pas- sociated Press because they weren’t trying to make a deeper playoff run ally use Twitter to express frustra- sionate Bryant simply wouldn’t be announced. The deal, which includes after one that ended on Bryant’s tion over not having what he thought able to stay away once games started. $45 million in guaranteed money, is much-debated catch that wasn’t in a was a suitable offer. The most pointed Now Dallas doesn’t have to worry similar to one that Denver receiver divisional-round loss to Green Bay. threat came Monday, when he tweet- about it. Demaryius Thomas got at about the The deal also ended the contract- ed he would “not be there if no deal,” The Cowboys believed they could same time as Bryant. related drama that fi lled the offsea- clearly a reference to training camp let Murray walk because they’ve The 26-year-old Bryant, who led son for the Cowboys. First, they decid- coming up in two weeks. Bryant had assembled one of the NFL’s best of- the NFL in touchdowns receiving ed not to match Philadelphia’s offer already said he would consider miss- fensive lines, bolstered by three fi rst- with 16 last season, had threatened on running back DeMarco Murray in ing games, at a cost of about $750,000 round picks in the past fi ve drafts. to skip training camp and regular- free agency, and let the NFL rushing each time he didn’t play. But the prospect of playing with- season games without a contract to leader go to one of their division rivals. “Unquestionably, this is in the out Bryant was more daunting for replace the $12.8 million offer for one Then the focus turned to Bryant, who best interest of the Dallas Cowboys to Dallas. year he had under the franchise tag. has the most touchdowns receiving in have the contract and the terms we’ve He has more catches (381), yards (5,424) and touchdowns (56) through fi ve years than any receiver in fran- chise history — a list that includes Jordan Spieth trying to look at Hall of Famers Michael Irvin and Bob Hayes. The most accomplished receiver behind Bryant is Terrance Williams, British Open as another event who has 81 grabs for 1,357 yards and ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (AP) — With a chance PGA Tour title of the year. Whatever he lost in study by 13 TDs in two seasons. Dez Bryant to match history at the home of golf, Jordan Spieth is not coming over early, he might have gained in confi - trying to make the British Open feel like just another dence that not much has changed since the U.S. Open. event. “Coming over earlier certainly could have helped,” he And that might be as tough as any challenge at St. said. “I just liked the fact that I could go somewhere I Andrews. could play hard, and possibly win a PGA Tour event in The press room was at capacity and spilled out the preparation. But certainly, more time on this golf course door when he spoke to the media Wednesday for the couldn’t ever hurt anybody.” fi rst time this week, creating an atmosphere normally The jet lag hasn’t been a problem. Besides, Spi- reserved for Tiger Woods or Rory McIlroy. Fans gathered eth won the Australian Open in late November, fl ew around a board that listed the practice round schedule, straight to Dallas, went to Florida the next day for the scanning up and down until they found Spieth. Hero World Challenge, and beat an 18-man fi eld of top “Please hold the cameras until after the shot,” cad- 50 players by 10 shots. die Michael Greller told the gallery. The sound of shut- But this is a full fi eld, and the oldest championship ters began at the top of his swing, and Spieth could only in golf on the links where it all began. laugh when he launched his tee shot. “It’s like this on “Maybe a slightly bigger stage,” Spieth said. every hole,” he said. The only concern is the weather. It has been reason- The 21-year-old Texan does not have the aura of able all week, though the forecast is for wind to increase Woods. up to 35 mph (55 kph) with shifting directions. He does not have the accomplishments of McIlroy. “It seems a little easier than I think it’ll play,” Spieth He still is the main attraction at this British Open, said. “So I would have liked to see tougher conditions and would be even if McIlroy — the defending cham- in practice rounds to get used to prevailing winds and pion and No. 1 in the world — were not out with an wind switches. That’s part of the fun and the adjust- ankle injury. ment.” Folks know their history at St. Andrews. Everything seems fun to Spieth at the moment. Ben Hogan in 1953 is the only other player to cap- Just two years ago, he didn’t even have a full PGA ture the Masters, U.S. Open and British Open in the Tour card when he won the John Deere Classic by hol- same year. Only three players since then — Arnold ing a bunker shot on the 18th and winning a playoff. Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Woods — have ever come to The next day he was in Muirfi eld, and the 19-year-old Scotland with hopes of a Grand Slam. was three shots off the lead going into the weekend. He Spieth knows history, too, as much as he’d rather not faded badly. think about it until he has no choice. “I remember almost thinking like that was too big “I like to study the history of golf, and it’s extremely for me at the time in a way,” Spieth said. “I felt like I special what this year has brought to our team,” he said. wanted to compete, I loved the pressure, and I felt like “And to have a chance to do what only one other per- I could do it, but it was a position I’d never been in, and son in the history of golf has done ... I’m sure embracing it was an odd feeling being in contention in a major on that opportunity. a weekend. It was brief. I didn’t fi nish well that round.” “But by the time I start on Thursday, it won’t be in It’s different now. my head. It’ll be about how can I bring this Open Cham- He dominated at Augusta National and tied Woods’ pionship down to just another event, get out there and record score of 270 in a wire-to-wire victory. In the fi nal try and get myself into contention.” hour of the U.S. Open, he kept reminding himself that He set out for his fi nal practice round on a cool morn- he had won a major and others in contention had not. ing with an overcast sky, occasional rain, and not much Now, the trick is to forget about the green jacket and wind. There is plenty of talk about how ready Spieth will the U.S. Open trophy. be for his shot at history. He played two full rounds and “When I step on the tee Thursday, I don’t look at this 10 holes leading up to the start Thursday. He played the as trying to win three in a row,” Spieth said. “I look at Old Course four years ago on his way to the Walker Cup. this as trying to win The Open Championship at a very Then again, St. Andrews has rarely been this green, special place. That’s the hardest thing for me, is trying this slow, because of recent rain. That takes some of the to forget about where you are because being here at St. roll out of the fairway, and with it the unpredictable na- Andrews and looking at the past champions and who ture of links golf. wins Open Championships here, that’s elite company. Spieth is the betting favorite, and it didn’t hurt that “And that’s something I’m just going to have to forget he won the John Deere Classic on Sunday for his fourth about more than the other two majors.” 8–Northern Wyoming Daily News, Worland, Wyo., Thursday, July 16, 2015

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Small squares, grass/alfalfa license in the State of Wyoming or teeing 29 hours per week. No CHILD CARE ganizational skills necessary. We Duties include performing preven- mix $100 per ton. be able to be licensed provisional- benefits included. Applications State licensed, 2 to 5 years of need self-motivated, professional tative maintenance and emergen- 307-867-2222 or 431-9807 ly. Training and experience with can be picked up at the County age, provides balanced meals, individual who is detail oriented cy service calls on residential and children and adolescents given Clerks office between the hours of stimulating environment. and able to work with technical in- light commercial HVAC equip- preference but a general under- 8:00 am and 5:00 pm Monday Now accepting all formation in a busy office. Ability ment. Must have clean MVR, pass 320 For Sale: Misc. standing of clinical therapy and through Friday. Application form pre-school enrollment. to meet deadlines important. Ac- drug test. Pay range $20-30 per mental illness recovery a must. can be found on website at 347-2551 or 431-4725. curacy required. Responsibilities hour, retirement plan, insurance, Salary and benefits are nego- www.washakiecounty.net. Appli- ARE you ready for winter with your include: Accounts receivable us- company truck, uniforms provid- tiable. HSCCS provides an array cations will be taken until July 22, firewood? I have a DR 5 ton DIVINE MERCY RADIO ing Quick Books Pro with some ed, positive work environment. of medical and dental benefits 2015 at 5:00 pm. Washakie Coun- wood splitter (with table) and Ru- 95.3 FM accounts payable record keeping; E-mail resume to: bighornheat- and lucrative paid time off. We are ty is an equal opportunity employ- elon chain saw for sale. Asking P.O. Box 1021 Preparing, organizing, research- [email protected] Thank you for your support! a CARF accredited facility and an er. $350 for the wood splitter and ing, scanning & filing documents; $125 for the chain saw (paid Typing letters, forms, reports, etc.; EOE. Email resume to al- DON Vail Construction: From the THE City of Worland will be accept- $180-used once, still in the box). Incoming & outgoing mail; An- [email protected] or drop it ground up. New construction, re- ing applications for the position of 200 For Rent Both for $410. 307-921-1762 or swering phones; and other tasks by the office at 121 S. 4th Street, model, concrete. 30 years experi- Utility Maintenance/Equipment 307-921-8128. Both are in very as assigned. Position is part-time Thermopolis, WY 82443. ence. Call Don, 347-6538 or Jeff, Operator. The position requires ACCEPTING applications for one good condition. but may grow to full-time, depend- the ability to operate specialized 431-1723. IF YOU'RE an ambitious and ener- and two bedroom apartments. ing on workload and employee's heavy equipment, to do physical getic Reporter, we have a spot for HUD subsidized senior citizen CUSTOM log swing, $215; Two DONAHUE HOME INSPECTIONS skills, performance and willing- labor and the ability to lift a mini- you at our daily newspaper in Sid- housing, equal housing opportuni- (like new) chaise lounge chairs, Certified & Professional Service ness to learn. Send resume with mum of 50 lb. A Commercial ney, NE. We're looking for some- ty; Worland Gardens! Call 431- $200 each or both $350; Large Contact James Donahue, references to Wyoming Water Drivers License (CDL), or the abil- one with weekly or small-town dai- 1985 or 347-6324, leave mes- dining room table, $200. Must 307-431-5473 Rights Consulting, Inc., P.O. Box ity to obtain a CDL within 30 days ly experience or a star who shined sage. see to appreciate. 431-8695. 316, Worland, WY 82401. Com- of hire, is required. The applicant at their collegiate paper. We have GRABER petitive wage and benefits pack- shall have the ability to work un- FOR Rent: 3 Bdrm., 2 Bath House, an opportunity for you to write SHOPSMITH Mark V Woodworking Custom Window Treatments age. Apply immediately. der supervision, the temperament $750/mo., pets upon approval news stories and features in a System (Complete, plus extra at- also custom draperies. to work with others, and is willing with $200 non-refundable deposit, growing community. This position tachments); Excellent condition. Sewing Machine and Vacuum ALL around Ranch Hand to work to learn. Applications can be cleaning & security deposit re- is an immediate opening, so we're Great for a small, woodworking Cleaner Repair and Parts. small ranch. Must have experi- picked up at Worland City Hall, quired. 307-921-3857. looking for someone who can shop. Two complete systems (7 Elmer & Yvonne's, 347-2095, ence with cattle, haying, irrigating 829 Big Horn Avenue or online at start quickly. Send resume and FOR RENT: Newer office or retail tools in 1) - $2,500 takes all. 307- 1261 A Lane 14, Worland. & mechanic work. Must be moti- www.cityofworland.org. EOE. vated and able to work with limit- several writing samples to: space with off street parking. 388-2120 (Worland) ed supervision. ranchjob_1@ya- Publisher Rob Langrell at Handicapped rest room, carpeted, HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL? Turn Up The Heat On WANT TO ANNOUNCE YOUR hoo.com [email protected]. air conditioned. 2,400 sq. ft. 347- TOP SOIL / FILL DIRT Your Career 2789 or 388-9599. $5.00 per yard. SPECIAL EVENT? Over 380,550 AQUATIC CENTER MANAGER, at KENNEDY Ace Hardware in Wor- At V1 Propane, the nation's Located in Thermopolis, Wyoming people will read your Fremont Co. School Dist. #25. land has immediate full-time largest propane distributor, we FOR RENT: Office or retail space in 307-864-3811 classified ad if you place it in See our website: www.fremon- openings in our electrical and have an immediate opening for newer building with off street WYCAN (Wyoming Classified Ad t25.org for application and details. hardware departments. Apply a hard-working, customer fo- parking. Freshly painted, handi- WESTERN STAR POST FRAME Network). Only $135 for 25 words. Call Karen at 307-856-9407 for in person at 801 Big Horn Ave. cused Delivery Rep for our capped rest room, air conditioned. BUILDINGS - 24x32x10- $6,763, Contact this newspaper for de- additional information. Worland location. We offer: 800 sq. ft. Call 347-2789 or 388- 30x40x10- $8,713, 36x48x12- tails. $11,842, 42x56x14- $16,081. BIG Horn Co-op currently has an NOW Hiring: Seasonal Part-time Full-time schedule; Competitive 9599. Complete material packages with LAWN MOWER / SMALL ENGINE opening for a Part Time Sales Office Person, 3 hrs. a day, M-F. Wages; Medical and Dental FOUR Bdrm., 2 Bath House, 2 car instructions. Experienced and in- REPAIR & MAINTENANCE Clerk Position at their Worland Ag Please apply in person at Green Benefits; 401 (k) Savings Plan; Fast service, pickup & delivery! Team Environment. Require- garage with huge carport, ½ mile sured crews available. 1-800-658- Store Location. Pre-employment Turf Lawnscapes, 1218 Big Horn st Service & repair for all your ments include a high school from town, $750/mo., 1 & last 5565. drug testing is required plus clean Ave. month's rent, $750 deposit. Avail- lawn equipment needs. driving record. Strong customer diploma (or equivalent), a valid Call Brad, 388-0918. WAIT STAFF CDL with Hazmat and Tanker able immediately. Call 388-0901 service skills & is willing to work Needed at Brass Plum or 347-7940. 330 Miscellaneous all shifts & some Saturday's. Able endorsements, a great driving RYAN Nomura Painting and Dry- Great opportunity, great tips & record, and satisfactory comple- to lift at least 50 lbs. For more in- IMMACULATE 2 Bdrm., 1 bath wall. Full finish, texture, patch, wages! Apply in person at Brass tion of a DOT physical, drug test CANYON ROCK / RICH GEMS formation please contact Mark house with garage, no smoking, paint. New construction, remod- Plum, 1620 Big Horn. and background check. Please will have a booth at the Rocky Naasz at 307-347-3211 or stop by no pets, available August 1st, els, basement finished. 347- send/fax a resume, or apply in Mountain Federation Mineral & the Big Horn Co-op Store at 400 WORLAND Healthcare is now ac- $750/mo. + deposit, one year 8863. person to: Gem Show, July 16-18 at the West Big Horn, Worland, WY cepting applications for RN/LPN's. lease. Call 431-1479 for details. SULLIVAN ROOFING V1 Propane, Cody Sweitzer Gym. 82401. (EOE & Drug Free Work- Come join a resident oriented th Call now for free estimates. If place) team and enjoy our generous 817 N. 10 , LARGE Studio Apt., $425/mo. + you're thinking about a new roof, P.O. Box 77, $425 deposit, includes utilities. FIREARM TRANSFERS benefit package. Sign on bonus David, 307-431-9176. why not use someone local! EVENING Cashier and part-time $1,500 for LPN's, $2,000 for RN's. Worland, WY 82401 No smoking. Call Lisa, 431-4773. Many years experience. Deli help. Apply in person, Blairs If interested, please call Kristen at Fax: 307-347-9205. Email: NICE 2 Bdrm. House, central air, WHAT'S YOUR GOVERNMENT 431-2214. Market, 1801 Big Horn Ave. (307) 347-4285. Housing avail- [email protected]. appliances, fenced backyard. No UP TO? Find out for yourself! able. EOE. Drugfree Workplace. EEO/AA/M/F/D/V UNITED Pawn Brokers. Fast cash LOOKING for Journeyman or Mas- pets, no smoking inside. Review public notices printed in for that financial emergency. 515 ter Electrician. Worland area. $700/mo. + utilities. 347-4215. all of Wyoming's newspapers! South Railway Street. 347-2055. Please call 307-388-0701. Visit www.wyopublicnotices.com ONE & TWO Bdrm. Apartments, or www.publicnoticeads.com/wy. 160 Help Wanted PART-TIME cleaning person need- $475/mo. & $575/mo. First ed for weekends & some holi- month + deposit. 805-233-1313. days. Average 3-4 hrs. per day. PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE MANAG- 350 Wanted New Hope Humane Society, 700 QUIET 2 Bdrm., all utilities paid ex- ER, Wyoming Department of Fifteen Mile Rd., 347-2324. cept lights, no pets/smoking, Health/Sheridan. To apply online washer/dryer facility. 388-2127. WE Pay Cash for used firearms. go to: http://agency.governmen- TRANSPORTATION SUPERVI- Buy, sell, trade. The Outdoors- tjobs.com/wyoming/default.cfm SOR at Fremont Co. School Dist. TEN Sleep: Commercial office man, 632 Big Horn. 347-2891. Enter HSNU11-03169 in search #25. See our website: www.fre- space, TSI building starting at box. A background check includ- mont25.org for application and $150. 307-272-3814. ing fingerprints is required. Open details. Call Karen at 307-856- 360 Travel Trailers & until filled. EEO/ADA Employer. 9407 for additional information. TWO Bdrm. Apartment, washer and Motor Homes dryer on site, good neighbor- hood, no smoking, no pets. $475/mo., $450 deposit. Call 1989 SUNCREST Motor Home, 431-5190. needs some TLC. Come see and make offer. 347-8794. TWO Bdrm. Apt., $400/mo. + utili- ties, $400 deposit. 431-1906 or Now Hiring 347-4906. 380 Recreational Customer Service Associates, All Shift TWO Bdrm. Apt., all utilities paid, Vehicles Worland, Wyoming $550/mo. + deposit. 431-1906 or 347-4906. Qualified Candidates must have high school 08 HARLEY DAVIDSON FXSTS, diploma or equivalent. TWO Bdrm. Apt., stackable Springer front end, HD Big bore Drug test and background checks required. washer/dryer. Available immedi- kit, 5,900 miles. clean and sharp. Great benefits include; Medical, Dental, ately. 347-3289. $10,000, (307) 851-7700, Cody. Vision,Company Match 401(K), Kroger Stock Purchase Plan, $3000 tuition reimbursement and Company Paid Life Insurance. TWO Bdrm. House, $650/mo. + util- ities, references & deposit re- 420 Automotive QUALIFIED CANDIDATES APPLY ONLINE AT quired. No pets. 347-3755. Jobs.loafnjug.com Accessories Pay based on experience. We are proud to offer a drug-free working environment. E.O.E TWO Bdrm., detached garage, alot of storage, privacy fence, sprin- PETE Smet Recycling now selling klers, sunroom, paved driveway. used cars & trucks. Will trade. Call 431-4764. Call Pete, 307-347-2528. Northern Wyoming Daily News, Worland, Wyo., Thursday, July 16, 2015—9 BLONDIE

WALL STREET — corn 9.00, unchanged; FootLockr 69.44 —.50 NEW YORK (AP) — The U.S. stock market PORTLAND—— no bids for soft white, white FordM 14.75 —.06 edged lower Wednesday, ending a four-day rally, club or DNS; hard red winter 6.10-6.20, down 2; GenDynam 147.25 +.28 as a drop in energy shares and jitters over Greece corn 5.03-5.09, down 1-up 3; oats 265.00/ton or GenElec 26.77 +.11 outweighed encouraging earnings reports from 3.8475 bushel, unchanged; GenMills 56.81 —.44 banks. NAMPA— Soft white new crop 9.92, un- Hallibrtn 41.07 —1.49 Energy stocks slumped along with the price of changed cwt; 5.95, unchanged bushel. HeclaM 2.44 —.11 oil after a report showed that a drop in U.S. sup- LIVESTOCK AUCTION—— Blackfoot Live- Hess 63.05 —1.52 plies last week was less than expected. stock Auction on July 10. HewlettP 30.50 —.01 The market’s pause follows strong gains. Utility & boner cows 95.00-113.00; cutters HonwllIntl 103.84 —.24 Stocks have surged in the past week as a slump 85.00-98.00; Idacorp 58.20 +.21 in China’s stock market abated and Greece heiferettes 115.00-168.00; slaughter bulls IBM 168.53 —.08 reached a deal with its creditors for more loans 110.00-144.00; IntPap 47.22 —.53 to avoid bankruptcy and a possible exit from the feeder steers: heavy 180.00-223.00, light JohnJn 100.42 +.64 euro. 210.00-274.00, stocker 240.00-326.00; LockhdM 199.41 +.36 ANDY CAPP Greece’s deal with its creditors must still be feeder heifers: heavy 175.00-213.00, light Loews 38.88 —.07 approved by the country’s lawmakers. As inves- 190.00-251.00, stocker 230.00-302.00; LaPac 15.97 —.44 tors waited for a vote in the nation’s parliament, holstein steers: heavy 140.00-180.00, light MDURes 19.03 —.23 protesters clashed with police in the streets of 170.00-210.00. MarathnO 24.40 —.68 Athens. The protesters want an end to the harsh Remarks: Cows 2-3 lower. McDnlds 99.07 +.29 austerity measures demanded by Greece’s credi- LISTINGS — McKesson 234.44 +.61 tors in exchange for more loans. Wed.’s closing New York Stock Exchange Merck 58.22 +.03 “You come in some days and it looks like it’s selected prices: NCRCorp 29.43 +.12 all clear and that Greece has been resolved, Stock Last Chg Norfl kSo 86.96 +.24 and the next day it hasn’t,” said Michael Scan- AT&TInc 34.73 —.39 NorthropG 168.59 +.10 lon, portfolio manager with John Hancock Asset AerojetR 24.05 +.27 OcciPet 73.09 —1.19 Management. Alcoa 10.57 —.20 Olin 25.05 —.53 The Standard & Poor’s 500 index edged down Altria 51.23 —.12 PG&ECp 51.42 +.42 1.55 points, or less than 0.1 percent, to 2,107.40. AEP 55.68 +.49 Penney 9.10 +.09 The Dow Jones industrial average slipped 3.41 AmIntlGrp 64.03 +.46 PepsiCo 96.35 —.78 points, or less than 0.1 percent, to 18,050.17. The ApldIndlT 39.63 —.29 Pfi zer 34.98 —.10 Nasdaq composite fell 5.95 points, or 0.1 percent, Avon 5.80 —.14 Praxair 118.69 —.58 to 5,098.94. BPPLC 40.04 —.29 ProctGam 82.15 +.11 The U.S. stock market started the day higher BakrHu 59.50 —1.63 Questar 21.61 +.01 after encouraging second-quarter results from BkofAm 17.68 +.55 RockwlAut 122.89 —2.11 GARFIELD banks, including Bank of America. Boeing 146.89 —.86 SempraEn 102.54 +.56 The bank said its profi t more than doubled BrMySq 69.28 —.78 SouthnCo 43.37 +.16 thanks to lower legal bills. It also said an in- Brunswick 53.08 —1.14 Tegna 32.49 +.38 crease in deposits, lower expenses and an im- Caterpillar 84.16 —.30 Textron 43.49 —.84 proving balance sheet helped offset a decline in Chevron 94.24 —1.31 3MCo 156.00 —.78 revenue. Citigroup 56.46 +.55 TimeWarn 90.48 +.49 The bank’s stock rose 55 cents, or 3.2 percent, CocaCola 41.13 —.04 Timken 34.75 —.61 to $17.68. ColgPalm 66.91 —.36 TriContl 21.44 —.05 Investors were also following Federal Reserve ConocoPhil 58.42 —1.11 UnionPac 96.98 +.19 Chair Janet Yellen’s comments to the House Fi- ConEd 60.79 +.37 Unisys 20.81 —.04 nancial Services Committee. CurtisWrt 71.54 —.16 USSteel 18.52 —1.40 Yellen told Congress she sees encouraging Deere 96.52 +.12 VarianMed 87.36 —.51 signs that the economy is reviving after a harsh Disney 118.30 +.45 VerizonCm 47.33 —.08 winter. If the improvements continue, she said, DowChm 52.10 —.94 ViadCorp 26.86 —.47 policymakers will likely start raising interest DuPont 59.00 —.43 WalMart 73.65 —.14 rates later this year. The Fed has kept its bench- Eaton 65.74 —.69 WellsFargo 57.78 +.53 mark rate near zero since December 2008, push- EdisonInt 58.11 +.17 Weyerhsr 31.21 —.05 ing up bond and stock prices. ExxonMbl 82.76 —.35 Xerox 10.44 —.09 Yellen was fl agging the possibility of higher FMCCorp 50.30 —.60 YumBrnds 88.88 —2.70 GASOLINE ALLEY rates so as not to surprise investors when the Fed does eventually lift them, said Quincy Krosby, a market strategist for Prudential Financial. FAMILY CIRCUS “That’s the last thing she wants to do,” said Krosby. “That’s why we have to pay attention when she says that (a rate increase) is on the table.” Among individual stocks, Macy’s was the big- gest gainer in the S&P 500. The stock jumped on reports that activist investor fi rm Starboard Val- ue thinks the department store chain could boost its value by spinning off its real estate holdings. Macy’s climbed $5.28, or 7.9 percent, to $72.01. In government bond trading, prices rose. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.36 percent from 2.40 percent on Tuesday. The dollar rose to 123.78 yen from 123.35 yen. The euro was down slightly to $1.0950 from $1.1010. OIL PRICES — BARNEY GOOGLE In energy trading, benchmark U.S. crude fell $1.63, or 3 percent, to close at $51.41 a barrel, as a report on supplies showed a smaller-than- expected decline last week. The price of oil has fallen 13 percent this month. Oil has come under further pressure after Iran reached a nuclear deal with world powers. That paves the way for sanctions on the country to be lifted, allowing Iran to export oil and add to a glut in global supply. In other futures trading on the New York Mer- cantile Exchange: — Wholesale gasoline fell 7 cents to close at $1.86 a gallon. — Heating oil slipped 5.6 cents to close at $1.67 a gallon. — Natural gas rose 8 cents to close at $2.92 per 1,000 cubic feet. CROSSWORD PUZZLE BOARD OF TRADE — CHICAGO (AP) — Grain futures were WIZARD OF ID mostly lower Wednesday on the Chicago Board of Trade. Wheat for September delivery was off 4.25 cents to $5.6675 a bushel; September corn was 1.25 cents higher at 4.2950 a bushel; December oats lost 1.25 cents at 2.6725 a bushel; while November soybeans declined 9 cents to $10.16 a bushel. Beef was mixed and pork was lower on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. August live cattle was off .13 cent to $1.4702 a pound; August feeder cattle was up 1.02 cents to $2.1532 a pound; while August lean hogs were .62 cent lower to $.7530 a pound. METALS — NEW YORK (AP) — Spot nonferrous metal prices W. Aluminum -$0.7497 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$2.4958 Cathode full plate, LME. BEETLE BAILEY Copper -$2.5305 N.Y. Merc spot Wed. Lead - $1809.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $0.9139 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1147.40 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1147.20 troy oz., NY Merc spot Wed. Silver - $15.020 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $15.028 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Wed. Platinum -$1019.00 troy oz., Handy & Har- man. Platinum -$1021.60 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Wed. n.q.-not quoted n.a.-not available r-revised GOLD — London morning fi xing: $1154.75 off $2.65. London afternoon fi xing: $1147.40 off $10.00. NY Handy & Harman: $1147.40 off $10.00. NY Handy & Harman fabricated: Not Avail- B.C. able . NY Engelhard: $1151.60 off $8.22. NY Engelhard fabricated: $1237.97 off $8.84. NY Merc. gold July Wed. $1147.20 off $6.10. NY HSBC Bank USA 4 p.m. Wed. $1148.00 off $7.00. INTERMOUNTAIN GRAIN & LIVESTOCK — BLACKFOOT —— white wheat 5.60, down 1; 11.5 percent hard red winter 5.50, down 1; 14 percent spring 5.90, down 1; hard white 5.60, down 1; BURLEY —— white wheat 5.60, unchanged; hard red winter 4.76, unchanged; 14 percent spring 5.71, unchanged; feed barley 5.95, un- changed; hard white 5.36, unchanged; OGDEN — white wheat 6.11, unchanged; 11.5 percent winter 5.21, unchanged; 14 percent spring 6.56, unchanged; barley 6.00, unchanged; MUTTS SUDOKU

MOTHER GOOSE & GRIM 10—Northern Wyoming Daily News, Worland, Wyo., Thursday, July 16, 2015 Yellen: First Fed rate hike likely later this year WASHINGTON (AP) — Feder- been at a record low near zero Yellen stressed that her out- The unemployment rate in “Consumer spending has growth in coming months. al Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said since December 2008. That has look is based on the expectation June dropped to a seven-year low picked up and sales of motor ve- “The situation in Greece re- Wednesday she is encouraged by translated to historically low bor- that the labor market will keep of 5.3 percent. She also cited “no- hicles in May and June were mains difficult,” she said. “And signs that the economy is reviving rowing rates for consumers and improving and inflation will be- ticeable declines” over the past strong,” Yellen said, also noting China continues to grapple with after a brutal winter. And if the businesses. gin moving closer to the Fed’s 2 year in the number of long-term recent improvements in home the challenges posed by high debt, improvements stay on track, the Many economists peg Septem- percent target for annual price unemployed — people who have construction. weak property markets and vola- Fed will likely start raising inter- ber for a rate liftoff, but they see gains. Inflation is currently run- been out of work six months or But she described business tile financial conditions.” est rates later this year. at most only two quarter-point ning lower than the pace the Fed longer — and in the number of investment and export sales as Yellen said that the Fed would Yellen, however, downplayed moves this year. believes is optimal for a healthy people working part-time because weak. Investment has been hurt closely monitor developments in the importance of the timing of “If the economy evolves as economy. they can’t find full-time jobs. But by spending cutbacks at energy, Greece and China. If either coun- the first rate hike as she delivered we expect, economic conditions A decision to raise rates, Yel- she said problems with the labor while exports have suffered from try created “substantial risks,” it the Fed’s mid-year economic out- likely would make it appropriate len said, “will signal how much market remained, including ane- the rising value of the dollar, could delay a Fed rate increase, look to Congress. Interest rates at some point this year to raise progress the economy has made mic wage growth. which makes U.S. goods less com- she said. Any delay could mean will remain at very low levels “for the federal funds target,” Yellen in healing from the trauma of the Many of the problems that sent petitive in foreign markets. that subsequent rate hikes might quite some time after the first in- told the House Financial Services financial crisis.” the economy into reverse in the Yellen listed foreign develop- take place more rapidly than the crease,” she said. Committee in the first of two days Yellen highlighted a number of January-March quarter appeared ments as one of the key uncer- gradual pace the Fed currently The Fed’s benchmark rate has before Congress. areas that had improved. to be waning, she said. tainties that could weigh on U.S. anticipates.

Court documents obtained by term measure as Senate Republi- urban counties. Scientists aren’t question whether to allow children Obama: No The Associated Press have re- cans circulated a list of about $80 Study shows sure why high-risk areas are ex- out of their homes alone. vealed that Cosby admitted under billion in potential savings, enough panding, but it likely has some- Twelve-year-old Sheila Lyon mechanism to oath that he obtained quaaludes to cover the cost of a renewal of high-risk areas thing to do with development and and 10-year-old Katharine Lyon to give to women with whom he highway and mass transit funding other changes that cause the mice, walked from their house to the revoke Cosby’s wanted to have sex. for several years. for Lyme disease deer and ticks that carry the bac- Wheaton Plaza Mall in March A sexual assault awareness Among the items was a proposal teria to move, Kugeler said. 1975. They never came home. No Medal of group has petitioned the White to reduce the rate of return on one growing Overall, 17 states have high- bodies were found. Freedom House to revoke Cosby’s medal. of the investment funds available NEW YORK (AP) — The geo- risk counties. The entire state of After decades of investigating to federal retirees, a $31 billion graphic areas where Lyme disease Connecticut, where the illness was leads and periodically identifying WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi- item over a decade. is a bigger danger have grown dra- first identified in 1975, has been suspects, officials say they now dent Barack Obama is rejecting House to take Another would reduce the divi- matically, according to a new gov- high-risk for decades. know who was responsible: Lloyd the idea of revoking Bill Cosby’s dend that the Federal Reserve pays ernment study published Wednes- Lee Michael Welch Jr., 58, a child Presidential Medal of Freedom up bill to keep to member banks, worth about $17 day sex offender serving a lengthy because of sexual misconduct al- billion. U.S. cases remain concentrated Murder charges prison term in Delaware. He had legations. highway aid Tax compliance measures in the Northeast and upper Mid- previously been named a person of Obama says there’s no prec- would raise another $5.2 billion west. But now more areas in those for sex offender interest in the case. edent or mechanism to take back flowing to states over a decade, and raising custom regions are considered high risk. Welch was indicted on the two the medal. He declined to talk fees annually to adjust for inflation “The risk is expanding, in all di- charges of first-degree felony mur- WASHINGTON (AP) — The in case of about the specific allegations would generate another $4 billion. rections,” said the lead author, Ki- der with intent to defile by a grand House was primed Wednesday to against Cosby because there are Officials stressed that no de- ersten Kugeler of the Centers for jury on Friday, officials said. The temporarily shore up funding for missing sisters pending legal matters. cisions had been made on either Disease Control and Prevention. indictment initially was sealed. transportation programs and pre- WHEATON, Md. (AP) — Au- But at a presidential news con- the duration or the financing of a There are now 260 counties At the time of the girls’ disap- vent a shutdown in highway and thorities on Wednesday announced ference Wednesday, Obama left no longer-term highway measure that where the risk of catching Lyme pearance, Welch was an 18-year- transit aid to states at the end of first-degree murder charges question about his position on the Senate Republicans are likely to disease is at least twice the na- old carnival worker and drifter this month. But Senate Republi- against an imprisoned sex offender larger issue of rape. Obama says advance in the coming days. tional average, up from 130 a de- who had been spending time in the cans are trying to cobble together a in the disappearance of two sisters that drugging someone and hav- If the Senate can’t reach agree- cade earlier, the report shows. Wheaton area. Authorities have longer-term bill that could provide from a suburban Maryland mall in ing sex with them without consent ment on a long-term bill, GOP Lyme disease is most common established that he was at the mall funds for several years. 1975, bringing some clarity to the qualifies as rape. leaders are likely to accept the in wooded suburban and far sub- the day the girls vanished and was The House debated its short- House’s short-term extension bill. baffling case that made parents seen paying attention to them.

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