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FREEDMAN

MEETS THE CUP


Writer tells of encounter

WINTER SPORTS
PREVIEW

B-1

Section C

ALL-STATE
COUNCIL

McHoes serves on state level E-2

T H U R S D AY

DECEMBER 10, 2015


116TH YEAR, NO. 46 75

Major gift lifts Heritage Museum


Goal surpassed as Bakers donate $150,000
By LEW FREEDMAN
Staff writer
A $150,000 gift puts the Cody
Heritage Museum beyond its
capital fund-raising goal and
will allow for final restoration of
its building and to establish an
endowment fund.
The new commitment came
in Sunday and was announced
Tuesday at the museums Board
of Directors meeting.
You can imagine how elated I
was, said Mick Barrus, the volunteer chairman of a year-long
fund-raising effort that concludes
Jan. 1.

Donated by Dr. Lennox Baker


and his wife Fran, owners of the
Pitchfork Ranch in Meeteetse,
the money rocketed the museum
past its original fundraising goal
of $150,000.
Lennox Baker is the incoming president of the Park County
Historical Society. Fran has
worked on projects for the organization.
The Bakers are vested in local
history and taken with how
young it is, only dating back to
the late 1800s besides living on
an historical ranch themselves.
Its a unique area, Lennox

People pass
by the historic DeMaris
House at 11th
and Sheridan
on June 19.
The house is
being renovated and
eventually
will become
home to the
Cody Heritage
Museum.

Baker said. Were not so far


removed from it.
As of Tuesday the fundraising campaign had registered
$258,485, with some additional
pledges expected to come to fruition by the end of the calendar
year.
It was very, very good news,
said Board President Marge
Wilder. Its exciting.
The Board met in the Park
County Library, so she couldnt
whoop and holler in celebration
as loudly as she wished.
The Wilder family made a
Please see GIFT, page A-2

CODY CHORALE

Providing holiday music ... then and now City trims

police chief
field to 16
By VIN CAPPIELLO
Editor
The first cut has been made from 77
applicants and the field of candidates
narrowed in the search for the new
Cody police chief.
City Administrator Barry Cook said
Tuesday morning the pool is now at 16,
and the City is working with consultant
Fred Rainguet from KRW Associates
out of Grand Junction, Colo., to screen
those still under consideration. Cook
said there is at least one local candidate
in the final 16 but would not release the
name.
Among the qualifications being
considered, Cook said, is for the future
police chief to be proficient on all levels. This includes a specific skill set
in such areas as communication and
department leadership.
For the force of 24 badged officers,
Public Information Officer John Harris
said this means someone who will lead
with high expectations intact.
Obviously there are lots of different
qualities that we can ask for in a chief
that would be beneficial to our department, Harris said. We trust that the
city administrator and everyone else

Please see CHIEF, page A-2

photos by RAYMOND HILLEGAS

Margaret Ruth Bullock directs the Cody Chorale, including (front, from left) Leslie Christler, Kassandra Ross, Julie
Crooks, Tally Payne, Donna-Lynn Murray, Maddie Welch, Emily George, Vickie Streeter, Francie Audier, Jonene Geile
(middle) Yvonne Nielson, Loretta Welch, Dana Cranfill, Marie Gorham, Cathy Wacaser, Norma Wheeler, Zara Logan, Lynn
Lundquist, Rachel Lindamood, Sue Boutelle, Courtney Beardall (back) Tim Gorham, Arley George, Ken George, Charles
Welch, Glenn Nielson, David Robertson, Barry Welch, Jacob Robertson, Carson Rowley, John Osgood, Howard Donley,
Tom Bullock, Scott George and Jack Wagner. They are accompanied by Karen Bree (far left) on the piano. The group was
practicing Christmas songs Tuesday at Cody United Methodist Church as they prepare for their upcoming holiday performance A Christmas Wish on Sunday.
By SCOTT KOLB
Staff writer
The Cody Chorale is presenting
its 39th annual Christmas concert
Sunday night at the United Methodist
Church.
Featuring traditional Christmas
music, the concert is free of charge and
begins at 7:30 p.m. There are 40 singers in the Cody Chorale, which gave its
first holiday concert back in 1976.
We liked being together, so we
just kept singing and have put on 60
performances over the years, Cody
Chorale director/conductor Margaret
Ruth Bullock said. We used to also
sing on different holidays like the 4th
of July and a few others, but then
we settled on just doing the annual
Christmas concert.
The musical show lasts about an
hour-and-a-half and also features
musical accompaniment. Karen Bree
has played the piano for the last 23
years at the free concerts.

2015 The Cody Enterprise

If you go
The Cody Chorale
annual free Christmas
concert will be 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 13, at Cody
United Methodist Church,
1405 Beck Ave.
Ive played the piano my whole life
and love being the accompanist for the
chorale, Bree said. I met Margaret
through the Cody Music Club and
have played at the Christmas concert
all these years.
People seem to enjoy this concert
and listening to the beautiful music
amid the acoustical backdrop of the
sanctuary at the Methodist Church.
Last year, the group printed 200 programs and ran out, so there has been
Please see CONCERT, page A-2

By VIN CAPPIELLO
Editor
Momentum is on the side of the Cody
School District as it looks to maintain
that which it does well and improve
upon the areas the External Review
Team from AdvancED said require
attention.
This after the official accreditation
report was revealed this week. And in
it were five areas the school district
was lauded for demonstrating Powerful Practice and two areas that need
improvement.
We cannot rest on our laurels,
School Board Chairman Jake Fulkerson
said. We cannot take a day off.
Superintendent Ray Schulte said he
wasnt surprised by the overall results,
some of which were revealed in October,
but also emphasized the importance of
keeping in place what works while eyeing ways to raise the bar.
With any new initiative we implement, we cannot lose momentum where
we know were strong, Schulte said.
Please see SCHOOLS, page A-2

CODY WEATHER REPORT

INDEX
Almanac........... D-2-3 Opinion .............A-4-5
Calendar ..............E-4 People .. D-1, 4, E-2-4
Classifieds ........E-1-2 Public Notices ......E-3
Obituaries ............A-7 Sports .......... B-1, 3-4
Winter Sports Preview ... C-1-8

CODYENTERPRISE.COM

An image of the Cody Chorale from 1976 includes (front,


from left) Bill Nielson, Wood Bullock, Judy Schulz, Julaine
Cozzens, Yvonne Nielson, Bill Rohrbach, Howard Thompson (back) Athelia Wooley, Vickie Streeter, Craig Schulz, Mo
Ellis, Ken Wooley, Mary Alice Moncur and Lorece Doerr with
director Margaret Ruth Bullock and pianist Ilene Dibble.

Review team:
District has
clear vision

Complete area forecast page E-4


Cody High School will host the
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Thursday
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Friday
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and 11:30 a.m. and 7 p.m. Saturday.
Snow

DEATHS

Bruce Robinson, 72, Cody.

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A-2 - Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015

City/region
CHIEF

involved in the hiring process


will choose someone who will
continue the departments long
history of professionalism and
integrity.
Cook said the large number of original applicants likely
occurred due to the widespread
advertising the City conducted
between October and November.
We even put it on the KRW
website, Cook said. Thats
what produced a lot of the resums ... from all over the country.
City officials then made the
initial cut to 23 and ranked
them in blocks. This information
then was shared with KRW, and

SCHOOLS

(from page A-1)

Rainguet, a retired police chief


himself, made the next cut to 16.
But before the half-dozen or
so finalists arrive for two days of
interviews and meetings sometime in January, Cook said the
consultant will conduct phone
interviews and reference and
background checks on the final
16.
Chief Perry Rockvam officially retired Oct. 1, and individual
officers have been serving as acting chiefs in one-month increments. Sgt. Jon Beck is in charge
during December.
The department has been
without an assistant chief since

PARK COUNTY
ANIMAL SHELTER!

(Vin Cappiello can be reached


at vin@codyenterprise.com.)
(from page A-1)

The AdvancED report, which was completed


by the nine-person review team, contains detailed
descriptors and results as they applied to three
overall areas: Teaching and Learning Impact; Leadership Capacity; and Resource Utilization.
The school districts overall score of 288.11 was
slightly higher than the AdvancED Network Average (278.34). The district also scored about average
in Teaching and Learning Impact (283.93-268.94)
and Resource Utilization (314.06-283.23).
The district was lauded for achieving Powerful
Practice status in the following areas:
Strong culture of engagement and continuous improvement.
Instructional staff demonstrate their commitment to actively engaging in a collaborative,
structured learning community that is system-wide
and leads to improved curriculum, instruction and
analysis of student data.
The system maintains facilities, services and
equipment to provide a safe, clean and healthy environment for all students and staff.
[The school district] has established, systematic processes and procedures that ensure
students have quality opportunities to develop
learning, thinking and life skills that align with
the systems purpose even in times of significant
change.
The system provides a modern, functional
technology infrastructure; state-of-the-art equipment, and the students and staff effectively utilize
the infrastructure and equipment to increase and
enhance educational opportunities and programs
throughout the system.
Schulte said the school district will continue to
focus on the role technology plays.
Using technology for technologys sake is not
compelling for most people, Schulte said. We
will continue to be mindful of its use to ensure it
enhances the teaching and the learning.
In Leadership Capacity, the district scored
278.12, and the average is 292.64. Within this area
lies one of the improvement priorities, specifically, according to the report: Adhere to the roles
and responsibilities for the board as defined by the
Park County School District No. 6 board policies to
report the purpose and direction of the school system.

This Holiday Season


There Is More Than
1 Way To Give At

George Menig officially resigned


Aug. 4. Cook said that while the
City searches for the best fit for
police chief, it also is considering
restructuring the department to
form a more triangular leadership model.
This would involve the elimination of the assistant chief position in favor of two lieutenants
and four sergeants.
Finalists will have meetings
with City department heads and
the community and one-on-one
interviews with Cook.

Within the report, the review team noted a


comment made by a board member during the
accreditation interview in which it was revealed
this individual said, I am elected to lead the school
and to represent the parents. The team also noted
it believed the School Board does not regularly
adhere to its own policies with respect to their roles,
responsibilities and practices.
Meanwhile, the report indicates one trustee said
the board needed to focus on setting principals up
to succeed, and the reviewers believed having
the entire board understand the steps involved in
achieving that goal would be powerful.
Fulkerson outlined several steps already taken
to address this rating since the Oct. 25-29 accreditation team visit.
We are on the right trajectory, Fulkerson said.
We attended the Wyoming School Boards Association state convention and will continue to take
part in professional development. We attended the
Covey trust training.
Everyone on the board realizes theres room for
growth.
The other improvement area involved ensuring all staff are consistent with the acquisition and
analysis of data and how it applies to meaningful
student performance. Schulte said even before the
team visit, school district staff had identified this as
an area requiring attention.
It didnt come as a surprise, Schulte added.
One post-accreditation visit requirement is for
each school to create and submit an improvement
plan.
These have been completed and are available for
review on the district website, park6.org. Schulte
encouraged patrons to access the links and read
about specific plans at specific schools.
The superintendent also added the fact the Cody
School District once again is accredited for five more
years is significant. He and Fulkerson expressed
pride in one of the comments of the review team in
the first sentence of the Conclusion section of the
report. It reads: Consistently observed throughout
the system is a commitment to opening the doors of
opportunity to all students.
To this Schulte said: As a parent, I would feel
very fortunate to have my child in a school that is
described in such a way.

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GIFT

$50,000 donation to the fund at


the beginning of the drive.
Its an answer to our
prayers, Wilder said. It gives us
the chance to complete the project.
The idea for a Cody Heritage
Museum was born in Wilders
living room in January 2007.
Lynn Houze, vice president
of the museums Board of Directors, called the Bakers contribution, Fantastic. Wonderful. We
couldnt be happier.
The Baker gift is split. Some
$50,000 goes to the building fund
and $100,000 is earmarked to
create an endowment fund.
The Sheridan Avenue museum site is looking at a soft opening during summer 2016 with
a full-blown operation the next
year, but it is possible this donation will speed things up.
Work has been underway for
months. New windows were
recently installed with historical
photographs on display.
If you look at the way the
building looked in April when
timbers were holding up the
walls, its definitely coming into
shape, Barrus said.
Only a few weeks ago, the fundraising effort was inching its
way towards the $150,000 goal.
The Baker donation sped up the

CONCERT

good attendance through the


years.
Weve been holding the
Christmas Concert at the Methodist Church for all of the 39
years and theyve been good
to us, Bullock said. There
are wonderful acoustics at the
church and its great for instruments.
As part of the celebration one
of the early members of the chorale will perform a solo. Howard
Thompson, accompanied by his
guitar, will sing a song from the
very first show.
Cody Chorale has had as many
as 46 members at various times
over the years, but only two
remain from the original group.
Yvonne Nielson and Vickie
Streeter have been singing at
this Christmas concert since the
start. David Robertson has been
with the group almost that long
as he began singing at the Christmas concerts back in the late
1970s.

(from page A-1)

Its an answer
to our prayers.
It gives us
the chance to
complete the
project.

Marge Wilder,
President, Cody Heritage
Museum Board of
Directors

pace. Houze, who has worked


closely with Fran Baker on the
local historical society chapter,
received the commitment for the
$150,000.
When the directors convened
Tuesday, Barrus told them to
hang onto their chairs for an
announcement. He said they
really did so.
The news was thrilling, he
said.
Wilder said the step-by-step
solicitation of donations was

aimed at making sure construction could be paid for, but this


development takes the plan further.
Money in the endowment
fund can be invested, Barrus
said, and the proceeds and interest can be used to support the
museum.
It can be used for expenses,
Wilder said. Its something for
the future. It will be wonderful to
have that. This will be a big head
start.
The two largest donations
to the building fund were the
$50,000 gifts from the Bakers
and the Wilder family.
Also recently, the Paul Stock
Foundation contributed $15,000.
Other donations of as much as
$12,000 are included in the total,
one from Bob Coe, who previously gave to the museum, and a
recent $10,000 gift from Bill Garlow, who also previously donated
to the project.
Two Cody High School graduating classes from the 1950s
contributed a combined total of
about $2,000.
The culmination of the fundraising drive marks a turning
point for the museum, but it is
not an end point.
We still have a lot of work to
do ahead of us, Wilder said.
(from page A-1)

I love the traditional Christmas music and its fun to sing


for the audience, Robertson
said. Theres nothing quite like
worshipping the savior with the
music from this concert.
Blending the background
music with the angelic voices
from the choir is inspirational
for Bree. She relishes the title of
being the collaborative pianist.
I really enjoy it and playing
the piano at this concert is like
creating a partnership with their
voices, Bree said. My playing adds to the experience and
enhances the overall sound of the
music.
Prior to their Tuesday night
practice for the interdenominational concert, members of the
Cody Chorale presented Bullock and Bree with special quilts.
The gifts were given to the pair
for their dedication through the
years.
Its been a really fun group,
Bullock said. A lot of them sing

in church choirs. With this concert they can branch out and do
different songs, which in turn
reach a wider audience. The community has been nice and weve
had wonderful audiences over
the years.

CorreCtions
City Council Vice President Landon Greer is owner
of Quality Asphalt in Cody,
which had $11,164 in total
invoices among bills approved
by the Council. His company
name and amount were incorrectly reported in a Dec. 1
article about Nov. 17 City
Council actions.

A Dec. 1 hunting story that


appeared in the sports section
incorrectly identified one of
the individuals. The correct
name is Lynn Sessions.

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Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015 - A-3

City/region
Tennis court no more

Pilot shortage has impact


on regional air service
approved, but these problems would affect
By SCOTT KOLB
future projects.
Staff writer
The directors told the commissioners its
An overview of air service at regional airports in Wyoming was presented to the Park becoming apparent airline service is more on
the backs of regional communities.
County commissioners at Tuesdays meeting.
Cody Shooting Complex vice-president Otis
The commissioners also considered a
request for the countys assistance on the road Smith asked the commissioners to be put on
going to the Cody Shooting Complex. Bids the countys list for road repairs. This would
were taken on the Elk Basin project and also be for the access road leading to the complex
from the Belfry Highway.
for widening bridges in the county.
This road is being used for a lot of events
The overview report was presented by
CYAir Director Ray Lee and Yellowstone and wed like to see it chip-sealed from the
Regional Airport Manager Bob Hooper. Last county road up to the gate, Smith said. We
only have one chance
year saw a record 1.1
to make an impression
million passengers use
on people coming in
commercial airlines in
from all over the counthe state. Yellowstone
try for these shooting
Regional Airport in
events.
Cody also had a good
Commissioners
year of service in 2014
were supportive of the
with regular flights
request. Smith then
running to major hubs.
signed a new five-year
Yet, it wasnt a unilease with the county
versal success story
for the property.
throughout Wyoming.
Ray Lee,
Bids were opened
Regional airports in
for
repair work on
Sheridan, Riverton and
CYAir director
the road in Elk Basin.
Cheyenne fell below
There was a significant
the 10,000 enplanelandslide in the area
ment threshold and
lost grant money. Sheridan lost all of its com- last spring. County Engineer Brian Edwards
asked for another week to consider all of the
mercial air service over the past year.
Although there were record numbers on the bids.
An engineering firm was selected to plan the
books for major airlines in 2014, recent industry regulation changes have made an impact work for a widening off the bridge on Lane 10.
at smaller airports. Federal guidelines now This has been on the countys radar for some
require pilots to have 1,500 hours of train- time. The firms of JL Engineering and Sage
ing to be certified. This has led to problems in Engineering will be working together on the
project.
smaller cities.
In other business on the commissions agenQualified pilot shortages continue to present challenges to regional airline staffing, Lee da:
Three bids were opened for replacing the
told commissioners. Before that law went into
effect, new pilots were hired by regional carri- air handlers at the Powell Library. The winning bid went to Building and Comfort Specialers. Now thats not the case.
Commercial aircraft with 50 or fewer seats ists of Cody for $54,310.
An appeal for rezoning of buildings on
have been reduced by 40 percent at regional
airports. The pilot shortage only adds pressure property owned by Steve Herrmann was
to those already challenged by the reduction of denied.
Requests were submitted for the Bikaircraft at regional airports.
Were not in the drivers seat when it comes ers Against Child Abuse to host a Christmas
party for children at the fairgrounds, a church
to commercial aviation options, Lee said.
One of the solutions for the future would be retreat to be held at the large building on the
an agreement with an airline for several air- fairgrounds and for a Christmas tree drop-off
craft to serve most of the Wyoming airports site at the fairgrounds. The commissioners
exclusively. There is also the possibility of honored all three of the fee waiver requests.
Approval was given to post a help-wanted
increased funding from the state to add more
advertisement to hire a part-time events marflights into smaller airports.
Theres enough money in state funds to keting assistant to work for the county.
meet our needs, Hooper said. Were good
(Scott Kolb can be reached at scott@codyenthrough 2016, but after that theres no guarantee. Theres no reduction in projects already terprise.com.)

Were not in the


drivers seat when it
comes to commercial
aviation options.

photo by RAYMOND HILLEGAS

Operating a backhoe, Kolton Dehaan (right) of the Cody Streets Department pulls up turf from the old City Park tennis court as he and a coworker
tear out the court on Tuesday. Plans to re-seed the area.

2 Cody men OK after rollover


Two Cody men suffered
minor injuries as a result
of single vehicle rollover
crash early Sunday morning.
Park County Communications Center received
a report of a single vehicle
rollover in the area of 56
Lane 17 at about 6:30 a.m.,
according to a news release
from the Park County Sheriffs Department.
A deputy was dispatched
to the scene as was the
Cody Fire Department and
West Park Hospital ambulance. A second ambulance
also responded from Powell
Valley Hospital.
Upon arrival the deputy discovered a gray 2014
Chevrolet four-door passenger car sitting upright

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that point the vehicle rolled


one time, coming to rest on
all four tires.
Smith and Griffin were
wearing their seat belts and
the vehicles airbags had
deployed. Smith was taken
by ambulance to West Park
Hospital and Griffin to Powell Valley Hospital. Both
were treated for minor injuries and released.
The report said Smith
had no idea how fast he
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speed too fast for conditions.

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off of the north side of


Lane 17. The driver, Aaron
Daniel Smith, 35, and his
passenger, Jared Michael
Griffin, 24, both from Cody
were being tended to by
ambulance personnel.
The investigation
revealed Smith was westbound on Lane 17 when he
failed to negotiate a lefthand curve in the road.
Smith admitted he was
going too fast to make the
curve. He veered off the
north side of the road and
slid sideways until the vehicle struck a dirt mound. At

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Opinion
From
my Desk
Vin
Cappiello

Production manager
John Sides
News editor
Amber Peabody
Photographer
Raymond Hillegas

Mixed Bag

Keep keen eye on animal disease

If youre looking for Doug


Blough, hes over on Page A5 today.
He has an extra special story to tell
and needs more than the 525 words
to which hes relegated each week.
So either read me first, then read
him, or vice versa.

Ugly sweaters. Just when the


heck did these become so popular?
And why, WHY are people spending
money on them?
I have chosen to boycott this new
tradition, simply because in a former life, I participated by wearing a
drab-tan cardigan. The result, however, was numerous compliments
from students and colleagues.
Cap, nice sweater. You should
wear that more. To quote my
dearly departed sister Loretta: Yeah
... OK.

Jail vs. prison. Neither word


has positive connotation, especially
when they are used incorrectly.
A recent headline of ours had the
wrong word. Hands moving faster
than brain; yeah, thats my excuse.
But for those of you who dont
know: jail is where you go when
youre accused; prison is where you
go if convicted. The case involving
our inaccurate headline involves a
Cody woman who was jailed following an arrest.
My error. My apology.

Kudos: To any and all involved


with the downtown parade and
Christmas stroll.
While a good number of us truly
enjoy the Cody Stampede parades in
July, the Christmas parade has an
obviously different feel. And I dont
mean temperature-wise either.
Many locals talk about hibernating during tourism months, avoiding the downtown crowds and only
emerging after the throngs have
departed.
Hence the smaller scale, more
intimate but equally as fun parade
and accompanying stroll make for a
different kind of holiday joy.
For this editor, it hearkens back
to one of the very first dates the
lovely missus and I enjoyed back
in 1986. Wed been on a couple of
dates, and it more or less became
official Thanksgiving weekend that
year, even after an unfortunate turn
of events.
There we were in Hyde Park,
a cozy township in Cincinnati. I
decided to impress the lass, inviting
her on a hayride around the famous
square. She accepted, we climbed
aboard and what ensued provided
the impetus for a truly shameful
result.
Within minutes, perhaps even
seconds, my nose and eyes began
to itch and run. My throat began to
close. I was gasping for air, choking
and in the throes of a full-blown
asthma/allergy attack. It was the
hay ... and the horses ... and the
dander.
As the wagon train made its way
around the square, Lisa put her
hand on my shoulder and inquired,
You OK? You dont look very good.
Through mucus and tears, I muttered, Uh huh.
The sojourn finally came to a
halt, though it wasnt the official
end of the ride. Some merciful soul
near the front must have slipped
the driver a few bucks to stop so
the poor sap in the back trying to
impress the girl could disembark
and start pumping his lungs full of
Albuterol, which he did.
But the girl stuck around.
Did I mention she married me ...
exactly two years later?
Jingle jingle.

Editor
Vin Cappiello

Editor
Vin Cappiello

THURSDAY,
DECEMBER 10, 2015
Cody Enterprise

ENTERPRISE EDITORIAL

Of Blough,
sweaters and
wrong words

Publisher
John Malmberg

Page 4

Publisher
John Malmberg

The two separate and isolated instanc- ing animals with chronic wasting disease
es of diseases being found in area ani- according to an organization called the
mals should be reason for concern but not Chronic Wasting Disease Alliance.
panic.
The disease also has the possibility of
Separate cases of chronic wasting dis- impacting out-of-area hunters and the
ease in a whitetail deer and brucellosis economic benefit to Park County they
in a single domestic cow
bring.
recently were reported in
Brucellosis also is scary.
The issue:
Park County.
Even if the cases are rare, if
Animal disease
By themselves they dont
other states will not accept
What
it
means
to
you:
mean much except to the
Wyoming cattle because of
No need to panic
family who harvested and
the fear of the disease, it
ate part of the deer and to
will be a severe blow to the
What we think:
the ranchers whose cattle
ranching industry in WyoKeep an eye on it
herd is quarantined and
ming.
cant be sold.
It is extremely fortunate
But what this could mean to Park Coun- the diseases were caught early and both
ty in the future is cause for concern.
were isolated cases.
Chronic wasting disease could put a real
Neither disease case is a recipe for disasdent in animals available for harvest and ter or a cause for panic. Both cases, howwould make those families who depend on ever, are a wake-up call for caution, congame meat fearful of eating them.
cern and careful surveillance.
The World Health Organization advises
Our sympathies go out to the families
people to not eat meat from animals with impacted by the diseases.
that disease.
But there have been no verified instancJohn Malmberg
es of humans becoming sick from eat-

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

No better time of year to pay it forward


To the editor:
I recently ran over my glasses
with my wheelchair again. Then I
went to Basin Vision Center to see
if I could get some frames to fit my
lenses. They were able to find some
frames that were an acceptable fit
to the lenses. They were only $40
and I was excited until I put them
on; unfortunately they didnt fit at
all. So I went back into Basin Vision to look at frames.
I found some glasses that
worked for me but was very discouraged to find out they cost
$400. That was not in my budget.
So I told them I would have to
shop around. While I was there I
saw a lady from my church and
I stopped to talk to her. She informed me that wasnt expensive
for glasses and that hers were
$600. I noticed other people sitting

Reporters
Lew Freedman,
Scott Kolb,
Rhonda Schulte
Advertising reps
Gurney DeAtley,
Megan McCormick,
Shannon Koltes,
Mike Voss

Graphic designers
Cassie Capellen,
Quincy Sondeno
Social media coordinator
Gabriella Cappiello
Pressmen
Todd Smith,
Michael Sosa,
Rob Templin
Front office
Alisa DesJardin,
Paula Rhoads

and waiting to be helped with their


purchases. I didnt see anybody
else I knew but noticed they were
listening to our conversation.
I left to shop around for other
glasses and didnt make it very
far before I received a phone call.
It was someone from Basin Vision
telling me a gentleman was going to pay for my glasses and did I
want to go ahead and order them.
It was a blessing from God that
must be passed on. I told them to
please order them right away.
In order to pass on this God-given blessing, I forgave a debt that
was owed to me. I called the woman who owed me the debt and told
her what had happened to me and
that I would be paying it forward
to her by forgiving her debt. Unknown to me, she was struggling
with ways to pay me back.

The Cody Enterprise was founded


in 1899 by Col. William F. Buffalo
Bill Cody. It is published twice
weekly and printed on site:
PO Box 1090
3101 Big Horn Avenue,
Cody, WY 82414
(USPS 120-440)
Office phone: (307) 587-2231
FAX; (307) 587-5208
Web site:
codyenterprise.com
The Cody Enterprise is wholly
owned by Sage Publishing Co
Contact Robert Kennedy,
P.O. Box 578, Cody, WY 82414

She started crying. She said she


didnt know how she could afford
to help anyone but she would be
paying attention and trying to find
another way to pay it forward.
This lady helps people out in
the community and the church all
the time. So I know she will do just
that.
Later I received a phone call
from an old friend and told her
the story. She told me she had
been praying for ways I could be
repaid for all I have done for her.
Remember when you bought my
glasses for me? she said. They
were $400. Youve been repaid.
What goes around comes around.
To the gentleman who wants to
remain anonymous: You are not
forgotten. Thank you.
(s) EDE DOZIER
Cody

Jeanette
Sekan

Let kindness
dictate what
you express
Before you speak, let your
words pass through these gates:
Is it true? Is it necessary? Is it
kind?
I happened to run across this
saying on one of my rare forays
onto social media. As one who
has been struggling to make
sense of the nonsensical we
seem surrounded by of late, this
captured much of my thinking.
Too often we hear words spoken
that fail this basic process at all
three levels.
I look around and dont
recognize the world anymore.
While I am pleased our forefathers saw the value of free
speech, Im not sure they envisioned it being used as a weapon. I rather think they viewed it
as a shield against tyranny and
oppression and a marker for the
value of individual thought.
I struggle to understand
why mordant language is now
the acceptable way of speaking
with and to each other. At times
my struggle isnt with the one
who may be saying things that
are preposterous or incendiary.
Rather, I am more appalled by
the applause and cheers of the
people reacting to such talk.
I cant quite wrap my mind
around the fact people want to
hear one verbally annihilate
another. Its as if were in a
modern day gladiator contest.
Instead of the grotesque entertainment of watching people
fight to the death in a coliseum,
we turn on our news station
to hear one verbally excoriate another as part of our new
entertainment genre.
If we see cordiality, calm
manner and cooperation, it is
now labeled dull. How quickly
the pendulum of life swings.
All of us say and do things we
wish that, in hindsight, we could
change, take back or didnt
have to do at all. Sometimes the
situation necessitates difficult
words.
There is no easy way to give
or receive bad news. Through
the years Ive had to let people
know they werent doing
their job, fire people, break an
engagement and stand ground
while doing what was appropriate, even if it hurt inside. If
were lucky, we can distinguish
between necessity and meanness. Today its harder to see
that distinction in our public
and private discourses.
We are eye witnesses to a sea
of change in societal behavior.
Political leaders and wannabes
rise in popularity when they
ridicule entire groups of people,
make promises that most know
cant be kept or worse. The
more outrageous the rhetoric,
the more its applauded.
In Psych 101 we learn how
easily we can succumb to the
lure of mob behavior. We need
to fit in; being part of the group
is deeply ingrained in our DNA.
Therefore, jumping on the bandwagon, regardless of the music,
is the easy choice. We can blend
in. Courage to stand out or
stand up is tough.
We all bring basic human
foibles to the table. However, I
would like to think the nearly
extinct clich if you cant say
anything nice about someone,
dont say anything still lurks
somewhere inside all of us.
Truth, necessity and kindness are good gatekeepers for
our words.

LETTERS POLICY
The Enterprise operates as an
open forum for the free exchange of
ideas. We welcome letters to the editor, provided they meet the following
criteria:
Word limit: 300.
No personal attacks.
No product advertisements.
All letters must be signed and
accompanied by a verifiable phone
number and address.
All letters are subject to editing for
clarity, factual accuracy and appro-

priateness.
Management limits a single letter
writer to one letter every 30 days
(from publishing date, not submission date).
The Enterprise ascribes to the four
basic tenets of the Society of Professional Journalists:
Seek truth and report it.
Minimize harm.
Act independently.
Be accountable and transparent.

Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015 - A-5

OpiniOn

SANTAS COMING TO TOWN

Minor miracles for Gabe and Jerry


By DOUG BLOUGH
Enterprise Columnist
And on the fifth day, he played.
Ill explain later, but first I wish eternallyyoung Jerry Lanchbury a racehorse recovery
from his devastating horse-shoeing accident.
His only memory is waking up in the hospital with a dozen broken ribs and bruised
heart.
When I asked why hes still shoeing
horses at 85, he said, Every scar on my body
came from a horse. Laughter being the
best medicine for freshly-broken ribs, I said,
Every scar on my body is from falling off
the couch.
Healing at faithful friend Helens, Jerry
wont blame the horse and it does nothing to
harness his equine love. Also unbroken is his
Christian faith, saying he gives all glory to
his Lord for surviving the ordeal.
That compassionate animal love was my
column inspiration, along with introducing
my new border collie, best friend Gabriel. At
12, hes Jerrys age.
Ill spare details of Gabes previous
decade, because while disagreeing 100 percent with his animal philosophy, Im grateful the guy finally agreed to sell him to me.
Though impossible for most to fathom, there
is a tiny subculture out there that sees nothing wrong with a dog living his life alone at
the end of a chain.
They wont be bothered with facts, like
dogs being pack animals, are excruciatingly
lonely and miserable when chained alone.
They vehemently dispute the fact spayed
dogs live an average 20 percent longer (of little significance since when too old to work,
theyre often terminated with a bullet).
All my dedicated hunter friends treat
their dogs as valued family members. Darren
Samuels prize-winning, wire-hair Caesars
best hunting days are past, but hell sleep
with Darren until the sad final day. Jeff
Andre admits his two dogs main duties are
to hunt, but they also sleep with my son
every night.
After Gabes Ultra-Sound today, an emergency neuter was scheduled. Among other
exposure issues like his infected manhood,
his huge prostate prevents normal urineflow. My new best buddy wouldnt have survived the winter at his old address.
Each day, Gabe destroys another unsolicited parting tip. Hell want to stay outside on Day 1, he apologetically hugged
my couch like he feared losing it. With my
pet door offering a choice, hes gone outside
only to relieve himself (there went tip No.
2: Hell pee all over your house). He never
stays out alone longer than five minutes, yet
forces me into endless walks.
He wont ride well/ hell chase your
cats. Ive never had a dog ride so serenelystationary and there doesnt seem to be a
thing my cats can do to garner his attention. My oldest cat swatted him one night

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Doug Blough and Gabe share a


moment recently. (Courtesy photo)
and he rolled over and went to sleep.
I asked Kathy McDonald of 3-Dog Rescue
how her spirit endures the terrible plights
she witnesses in her tireless rescues. She said
its only possible by proud, grateful adopters
who flood her with gushing testimonials.
I get that. Just when one begins to lose
faith in humanity, good people suddenly
appear. Every day we meet people at the dog
park who would sooner sleep outside on a
freezing night than allow their pet to do so.
That first day, Vet Kristin Myers insisted on
pro-bono treatment, and Hope Sheets called
during his discount, three-hour grooming to
say, You found the perfect dog.
Delia and Lester Santos and Tish and
Andy Cowens split Gabes purchase price
with me. We have the perfect Animal Shelter
president, Ken Markert, and dedicated board
members. And dont get me started on the
shelter workers and vet tech obviously not in
it for money. I came so close to adopting the
gentlest pit-cross I fostered, but returning
sweet Darla after walks is less sad because
sweet employee Tiffany is overjoyed to see
her.
And on the fifth day, he played. After four
days of ignoring toys, I heard a squeak I
assumed was my asthma. I looked over to see
Gabe, like a puppy, throwing a tennis ball in
the air. My rare company better expect a ball
dropped at their feet.
What a Thanksgiving blessing. And like
Jerry, I thank God for that gift. Unlike Jerry
though, I wont still be working at 85. Heck,
I semi-retired in my 40s, and by my late
60s, I wont be leaving this couch unless an
extremely elderly Gabriel whimpers for his
walk.

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Foam rollers available for purchase or bring your own.
Call Advantage Rehab to sign up. Space is limited!

Merry Christmas
Join us for the Cody Chamber of Commerce

Ribbon Cutting and Open House


December 17th, 4:00-6:00pm
Refreshments will be served

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A-6 - Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015

Give the Gift of Relaxation

City/region

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OFFICE HOURS: 9 am-6 pm Mon-Tues, Thurs-Sat by appointment only

Zach Tromble, 6, reaches


for a homemade treat
as he warms up in the
wagon barn during the
annual Holiday Open
House at Old Trail Town
on Saturday.

2608 Big Horn Drive


Cody, WY
307-587-5493

Happy 75th Mom

photo by RAYMOND HILLEGAS

No P&Z meeting to
discuss sign issue
By RHONDA SCHULTE
Staff writer
It will be at least another
two weeks before Planning and
Zoning members take action
on a request to let signs stay
on a business in Codys historical main street despite several
City violations.
The P&Z meeting scheduled for Tuesday, Dec. 8, was
cancelled shortly before the
noon meeting when it was
learned not enough members
could attend to form a quorum.
Of seven on the board, a minimum of four are needed to take
action.
The next meeting is scheduled for Tuesday, Dec. 22, at
noon, according to an email
from City Planner Todd Stowell.
The Dec. 8 agenda included
the tabled special exemption
request by Yellowstone Gift
Shop owner Althea Stringari,
who is asking P&Z to grant a
variance that would let her to

keep signs on the building. Six


signs with exposed light bulbs
on the building were mounted
without a City permit and violate Codys Downtown Architectural Sign District code,
which has more restrictions
than other areas.
Since Stowell told the board
about the violations Aug. 25,
P&Z members have discussed
the issue numerous times;
however, for various reasons
they have repeatedly tabled
action.
Had the meeting proceeded,
its probable the P&Z would
have delayed action until Dec.
22 anyway. Listed under the
tabled item on the Dec. 8 agenda is the statement, Applicant
requests review to be tabled for
two more weeks.
Aside from the sign variance
request listed under tabled
item and the routine approval
of minutes, P&Z members
were not scheduled to take any
other actions.

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Big Horn Basin Briefs

Cody woman faces charges


A woman from Cody was arrested on burglary charges after an
incident last week on New Hope Drive.
Chelsea Hensley, 28, was arrested Friday and charged with two
counts of burglary.
According to court documents, the first incident took place Nov. 21
with the report of a break-in from a rock thrown through a house window and prescription pain medication missing from the residence.
The second incident was reported last Friday.
During her initial appearance in court Monday, Hensley requested
leniency asking for a signature bond instead of the $10,000 cash bond,
but the judge refused her request.
Hensleys preliminary hearing is scheduled for Dec. 17.

Only 1 in 3 Orthodontists is Board Certified

Dr. Mathew A. Moss, DDS, MS


Board Certified by the
American Board of
Orthodontics

Tuckness named top bullfighter 6th straight year

Dusty Tuckness did it again.


For the sixth year in a row the Meeteetse rodeo star was named the
Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association bullfighter of the year.
Tuckness, 29, set the record for the honor last year when he won
for the fifth time in a row.
The announcement was made at a banquet at the National Finals
Rodeo in Las Vegas last week.
Joining Tuckness on the list of honorees was Justin Rumford, who
got his start as a clown at Cody Nite Rodeo, won the Coors Man in the
Can and Clown of the Year awards.
This marked the fourth year in a row Rumford won Clown of the
Year. It was his second Man in the Can victory. He also won in 2013.
Last July, immediately after the Cody Stampede, Tuckness and
Rumford were the featured instructors at a Cody rodeo school.
Additional details will appear in next weeks Enterprise.

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Your Family
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Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015 - A-7

City/region

Black Hills Energy warns of


scam involving payment threat
Black Hills Energy this
week received a report of a
scam involving unknown parties calling customers, impersonating Black Hills Energy
personnel and demanding
money.
According to the reports,
the fraudulent caller tells
BHE customers their natural
gas service will be disconnected if they dont pay immediately.
The Cody Police Department is aware of this scam. If
you suspect fraud, immediately contact local law enforcement. If you have concerns or
questions about Black Hills
Energy employees, call Black
Hills Energy at 888-890-5554.
The company can confirm
the legitimacy of the claim
and can also confirm bill payments, service work or a service call to any address.
That holds true for any

utility. Customers can find the


number to call on the monthly
bill or the utilitys website. Its
important to know scammers
can cause caller ID displays to
mimic legitimate companies,
making it appear as if the call
is legitimate.
These scams often start
with different stories and can
involve any type of business.
The way to avoid falling victim
is usually the same:
Do not provide your
Social Security number, credit
card numbers or bank account
information to anyone who
requests that information during an unsolicited phone call
or an unannounced visit.
If someone calls claiming
they represent your local utility provider and they demand
immediate payment or personal information, hang up
and call the customer service
number on your utility bill. Do

not give in to a high-pressure


call seeking personal information.
Never allow anyone
into your home for an unannounced visit to check your
electrical wiring, cable or
phone lines, natural gas pipes
or your appliances unless you
have scheduled an appointment or are aware of a confirmed problem. Any time a
utility employee arrives at
your door, require the employee to produce proper identification, and do not hesitate to
confirm the visit with the utility company via a phone call
before permitting any access
to your property.
Black Hills Energy employees carry company-issued
photo identification at all
times and would be happy to
have you contact our customer
service number listed to verify
their identity.

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Obituaries
Bruce Robinson
Bruce Robinson, 72, born
Oct. 12, 1943, died unexpectedly following heart surgery
on Nov. 18, 2015.
He was preceded in death
by his father Abraham, his
mother Mavis and stepson
Curtis Martinez (Kari), his
first wife Deanna and second
wife Willie.
He leaves behind a grieving
family. Wife Amy, daughter
April (Colby), son Jonathan
both of Casper, grandchildren Tre, Ava, Colby Jr., and
Amelia of Casper, and Matthew and Mikayla of Billings,

Mont., as
well
as
siblings in
California
and many
saddened
friends.
He was
a disabled
BRUCE
Vietnam
ROBINSON veteran. A
VIETNAM VET true friend
t o m a n y,
his hobbies were gardening,
helping people and being a
great chef. He owned and
operated Robinson Cares

cleaning and restorative services for over four decades.


Memorial service is to be
held at the Holy Trinity Episcopal Church, 7th and Arapahoe, at 1 p.m. Saturday, Dec.
12 in Thermopolis.
In lieu of flowers Bruce
requested a memorial tree.
Donations will be accepted at
the memorial service or mail
to family at 1212 Clark, Thermopolis, 82443.
Military service will be in
May 2016 with military honors in Casper at the Veterans
Cemetery.

Melvin R. Madsen
Melvin R. Madsen, 91 died
Dec. 6, 2015, at Spirit Mountain Hospice in Cody.
He was born Oct. 21, 1924,
the son of Otto R. and Bertha E. Madsen in Fromberg,
Mont.

He participated in the Central Europe and Rhineland


campaigns of WWII. After
the war he worked within the
Agriculture and Construction
industry. He also visited various WWII sites in Europe with

his wife Pat later in life.


A graveside service will be 2
p.m. Friday, Dec. 11, at Rockvale Cemetery in Montana.
Memorials may be made to
the charity of choice in Melvins name.

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Cody Enterprise

Sports & Outdoors

THURSDAY, December 10, 2015

Viewing
holy grail
of hockey
By LEW FREEDMAN
Staff writer
TORONTO The archivist beckoned with a crooked finger.
Have you ever seen the Stanley
Cup? she asked.
Once, I said, in Anchorage, Alaska, from a distance.
Come with me, she said.
Then she unlocked a door in the
Hockey Hall of Fame Resource Centre in Toronto and ushered me into
a back room.
There was the Cup, the holy grail
of the hockey world, being polished
by an employee.
Bill Wellman was rubbing it with
a substance called Never Dull,
but for anyone who loves hockey,
nothing about the Cup is dull.
For the next 15 minutes, as the
Cup reposed on a counter in all its
glory, Miragh Bitove, Wellman and I
talked Cup trivia.
They posed me next to the Cup
for souvenir pictures and explained
how fortunate my timing was last
month because the Stanley Cup
travels about 300 days a year. It just
so happened the Cup and I occupied
the same area code at the same time
by coincidence.
This was the genuine article,
Bitove assured me, the Cup the
players hoist above their heads in
celebration when they skate around
the rink after winning the National
Hockey League championship.
All I could think of was, How
cool is this, me and the Stanley
Cup?
The Stanley Cup is the most
Please see CUP, page B-4

Lack of
snow delays
SG opening
By VIN CAPPIELLO
Editor
Skiers hoping to hit the slopes at
Sleeping Giant Ski Area this weekend will have to wait awhile longer.
Organizers were forced to cancel
the Friday hill opening and Saturday
Wake the Giant Sleepy G Jamboree
due to lack of snow.
Our instincts were just to put
it off for a week, but we had to
postpone it until there is sufficient
snow, organizer Jen Talich said
Tuesday morning.
General Manager Jon Reveal said
there are 11 inches on the ground,
and the snow that fell Monday was
wet snow, which has a tendency to
melt.
Reveal also said you need at least
18-24 inches on the ground to get the
Sno-Cats out to groom the runs.
According to the National Weather Service website forecast.weather.
gov, temperatures in the 20s and
30s, along with rain and snow showers, are forecast for the next five
days.
Organizers said the decision to
postpone the season opening was a
difficult one and there was some consideration given to staging the Saturday party without the skiing. But
for now, the opening will be delayed
until snow accumulates.
Reveal said the weather pattern
for the ski area, which sits 46 miles
west of Cody on US 14-16-20, is different than in town. This was typified Monday evening when he drove
the 18 miles from the hill to his
home in Wapiti.
It was snowing when I left, it
switched to rain around Creekside
and was clear when I got to Wapiti,
Reveal said.
Talich added that when the snow
does fly and Sleeping Giant opens,
organizers will move forward with
the planned opening party, which
will feature retro lift ticket and
food pricing, live music and door
prizes.
There will be Sno-Cat rides, a
retro ski-garb fashion show and
torchlight ski parade, as well as an
evening bonfire, soup and chili feed
and smores station. Ski-themed
movies also will be shown in the
lodge.
For details and updates about
Sleeping Giant, visit skisg.net. The
site also features a web cam, which is
updated every 15 minutes, 6 a.m.-6
p.m.
(Vin Cappiello can be reached at
vin@codyenterprise.com.)

MEETEETSE BASKETBALL

Girls excited for season


Talented senior
duo set to lead
young team

By LEW FREEDMAN
Staff writer
In the weeks leading up to the
first practice of the season for
the Meeteetse girls basketball
team, the Lady Horns conducted their own conditioning drills,
ran their own practices and
enlisted in a nutrition program
of their own organizing.
The idea was to indoctrinate
the young players joining the
team and get them in shape
before the official start of the
season at the end of November. Senior forward Brooklynn
Graybill had taken a nutrition
course that delved into what
athletes should eat to be on the
top of their game and she shared
the information with her teammates.
The 5-foot-7 Graybill, who
emerged as a steady low-post
threat for the Lady Horns last
season, doesnt intend to stray
far from the basket during the
2015-16 season, but she hopes a
fast start will help Meeteetse fulfill a simple goal this winter.
Well just go for regionals,
she said. Lets get to regionals first and then we can think
about state.
Graybill should be pivotal to
Meeteetses hopes, figuratively
and also literally as she plays
in the pivot. She cant wait for
the season to start against 1A
competition in the Burlington
tournament Friday and Saturday, and then against the Lovell
JV before the team breaks for
Christmas and New Years.
Its definitely fun being back
on the court, Graybill said only
two days into pre-season practice. She also liked the looks of
freshmen and sophomores who
will have to help uplift the team
if it wants to put together a winning record.
Theyre learning quickly,
she said.
Graybill said her job is to
rebound and make lay-ups, but
she drilled hard on hitting outside shots during the off-season
and she may be called upon to
use that extra skill.
Im definitely an inside
shooter, Graybill said. But Im
hitting my outside shot a lot better. Still, its not my best shot.
Another senior with experience is forward Anastasia Corbett, who got a birthday gift of a
new basketball in June and used
it on outdoor courts all summer.

Senior Brooklynn Graybill drives for a shot while guarded by coach Kelsey Scolari during
girls basketball practice Dec. 1 in Meeteetse. (Photos by Cory Dziowgo)
Its looking pretty rough
right now, she said.
Corbett suffered a seasonending leg injury last winter and
spent the latter portion of the
year watching games from the
bench as she relied on crutches.
She is healed, healthy and anxious to get going.
Its my favorite sport and
Im really excited to see how far
we can go, Corbett said. Ive
been going to the gym every
weekend and Im definitely
more aggressive than I was last
season. Im not afraid to knock
people around for getting the
ball.

Last year at times the Lady


Horns could only suit up six or
seven healthy players. Coach
Kelsey Scolari has 10 players out
for the team this year and hopes
that means there will never be
personnel shortages.
Scolari, who is also the head
volleyball coach, is doubling this
winter by serving as the assistant boys basketball coach while
running her own girls team.
The other senior on the team
is Madeleine Myers, but she has
not played for the team for the
last couple of years.
Guard Matilynn May is only a
sophomore, but she was a regu-

lar as a freshman and will be an


integral part of the line-up. So
will sophomore point guard Caitlyn Crum. Crum gained more
varsity minutes than expected
last winter because of the injuries. She was thrown into clutch
situations with little experience,
but now she expects to reap
rewards from that time invested.
She had to jump in and play
as a freshman, Scolari said.
She got a lot of experience. We
had to bring in people to even
scrimmage last year with the
injuries.
Crum said the playing time
Please see GIRLS, page B-4

Work in offseason
benefits Longhorns

Meeteetse junior Dalton Abarr shoots a free throw during


basketball practice Dec. 1 in Meeteetse.

By LEW FREEDMAN
Staff writer
Hunter Johnson put in long,
lonely workouts in the gym during
the offseason, trying to perfect his
outside shot, trying to increase
his range. He wouldnt quit for
the night until he took 70 shots,
10 shots from seven spots on the
floor.
The 5-foot-11 junior could be
the X factor for the Meeteetse
boys basketball team this winter,
a player who saw considerable
playing time as a sophomore, but
a player who wants to be a key to
success during the Longhorns
2016 season.
I was just trying to shoot
more, Johnson said of time spent
at the local rec center when it was
just him and a basketball.
In small-town Meeteetse, it
wasnt always easy to find enough
bodies for a pick-up a game when
Johnson wanted one. Whenever
enough guys showed up Johnson
played 3-on-3, 5-on-5 or whatever.
The rest of the time he shot. And
if not staying busy trying to nail
more jumpers from deep in the
corner to enhance his three-point
contributions, he lifted some
weights.
Johnson looks stronger and
feels stronger.
I kind of beefed up, he said.
Back as head coach this season
after spending a season as assistant to departed Brandon Robbins,
Ty Myers said the amount of time

Johnson put in was evident right


from the first day of practice.
You can tell hes been in the
gym, Myers said. He has a
natural shot. Hes so mechanically
sound. Hes a fast kid, a smart kid
and hes one of my better defenders.
The Longhorns open their season by playing in the Burlington
tournament Friday and Saturday,
Dec. 11-12, and the real question
will be how much starting point
guard Dalton Abarr can contribute by then. Abarr was the star
quarterback for the Meeteetse
six-man football team this fall. He
was injured in the state title game
Nov. 14.
Abarr left the game with damage done to his ankle and leg and
thought he would be sidelined
for weeks. Although he is not at
full strength, Abarr participated
some in the first basketball practice Nov. 30. Myers said Abarr
attacked his rehab full-blast.
Outside of his football teammates, no one was more concerned
about Abarrs immediate athletic
future for Meeteetse than Myers,
who knows Abarr is a serious component in the hoops lineup.
Hes been proactive about his
health, Myers said, who was surprised Abarr showed signs of coming back so quickly. I was really
nervous. Three days after the
injury his ankle was swollen down
to his toes.

Please see BOYS, page B-4

B-2 - Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015

Annual

contest
uck
Big B

CO-SPONSORED BY: Rimrock Tire Inc., the Cody Enterprise and


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CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR WINNERS


AND THANK YOU TO ALL CONTESTANTS!

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Barry Zeller (5 point)

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Nathan Whalen

Marty Talon

Crystal Davis

Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015 - B-3

SportS/outdoorS

YNP bison only considered Serious improvement needed


75 percent genetically pure for UW football next season
I respect and
T

S
Behind
Ordinarily, 4-8
Tracks,
admire my

aw in a recent news release Yellowstone Lake


is not winning their
trout war, but at least theyre
holding their own.
The release claimed Park
biologists and fishermen had
netted around 350,000 lake
trout this past year, give or
take a few thousand. Thats
a number that seems to be
holding steady for the last
couple of years.
Apparently this indicates
lake trout also are holding
their own, since when they
start losing ground, that
number should reduce each
subsequent year. The Parks
PR people say cutthroat
trout, which the big shaggies
rely on for groceries when
they are in spawning mode
(the fish, not the bears), are
coming back swimmingly,
pun intended.
One quote emphasized
some were regular Moby
Dicks of the trout world. Still,
until better news from the
front, the war rages on.
What do the park people
do with all those lake trout
they catch? After all, thats a
lot of fish, which equals protein that could be used to further some other agenda, such
as feeding hungry people.
There are many alternate
ways to dispose of the catch,
but I imagine they just bury
them. After all, it would
cost money to find a way to
convert them into a practical
resource, and thats a concept
thats alien to Big Brother. At
least it has been in previous
eradication and control campaigns.
Speaking of Yellowstone
Park, there was another
article stating the parks
bison, or buffalo to the untu-

Trails
American Indiand Tidbits an heritage and

Bob
Meinecke
tored, are 75 percent pure,
or genetically isolated or
something else that indicated
these were the genuine article when it comes to buffalo/
bison. Im not hard to confuse and genetics-speak does
that rather well. Best I could
figure, these park bison/buffalo are more closely related
to those ancient shaggies
that thundered across the
American Plains a couple of
hundred years ago than those
presently existing in domestic
herds.
The reality is most of what
we call bison today have a
great deal of domestic cattle
DNA in their genetic makeup, necessary a century or
two ago to ensure their survival. But that doesnt make
them less of a bison than it
makes them more of a cow.
I have a good deal of Amerindian DNA and I certainly
dont consider myself tribal
in the least. In fact, like most
Americans today, I have
really confused DNA, with a
smattering of Native American tossed in to even things
out I guess. But that, and a
$1.50 will get me a cup of coffee downtown at the Irma.
And as far as that DNA
being ancient, the only
impact this purity factor

the buffalo that


supported their
belief system.

should have is an energized


effort to eliminate the casual
slaughter of those animals
with true bison genetics and
an honest effort made to relocate and breed these living
icons, by live trapping them
and then placing them with
institutions that wont take
them simply to breed them to
make a profit.
Ill end this on a personal
note. In case you took offense,
understand I respect and
admire my American Indian
heritage and the buffalo that
supported their belief system
and was their general store
and commissary for eons
before the Northern Europeans arrived on these shores.
In that regard, what is
transpiring around Cody this
year, with the painted buffalo sculpture art contest is
nothing less than a sacrilege
to me. I feel its a slap in the
face of the native American
buffalo peoples. God himself
made these beasts magnificent, and I find it repulsive to
make carnival caricatures out
of them.
I also understand most of
Codys citizens will not agree
with me on this, but its how
I feel.
And with a cowboy hat?
Really?

Snowboarder dies at Jackson resort


JACKSON (AP) Officials say a snow- dent on one of the trails.
boarder has died following an accident at
The woman was found in the trees
the Jackson Hole Mountain Resort.
below the Togwotee Pass traverse.
The Jackson Hole News and Guide
Patrollers attempted to revive the vicreports that the woman, who has not yet tim.
1 12/6/2015
PM
She was taken
to a12:01:08
hospital
and later
been identified, died Monday afterNov.WeatherBanner_Left11.30.15.pdf
ski
patrol staff received a report of an acci- pronounced dead.

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here arent many


NCAA Division I
football playing
schools that have patience
with a 2-10 record.
In how many languages
can a coach say goodbye?
The fan base reads those
numbers with the hard
squint of a gunfighter at
high noon and does not get
all warm and fuzzy. More
often things get downright
nasty.
The 2-10 is the University of Wyomings final
record for 2015. Two years
into the Craig Bohl coaching administration and
there is nothing to point
to that suggests things are
getting better in Laramie
than then they were under
his predecessor coaches.
Maybe Bohl uses a different brand of microscope
than the rest of us to see
things only Superman with
his X-ray vision can spot.
And maybe being up
close and personal with
the personnel, the young
players, and owning a track
record that previously suggested he is a gold miner of
potential, will allow Bohl to
show off fruits of time investment and wily recruiting a year from now.
After finishing 4-8 and
2-10 in his first two Wyoming seasons, no matter
what Bohl accomplished
before including his three
straight national titles at
North Dakota State, he will
be walking a tightrope in
2016.
Surely by now some
Cowboy fans are disillusioned enough to call for
severance pay for Bohl.
Most everyone felt Wyoming was closer to winning
than this when he was
hired.
Ordinarily, 4-8 and 2-10
in football coaching will get
you an employment death
sentence.
There was a fair bit
of excitement when Bohl
was hired to succeed Dave
Christensen and his un-

the Score and 2-10 in foot-

ball coaching will


get you an
employment
death sentence.

Lew
Freedman
palatable 5-7 record in the
2013 season. Bohls resume
glowed in the dark.
But in 2015, 5-7 looks
like the good old days.
Hey, after two autumns of
4-8 and 2-10, 5-7 seems as
tasty as filet mignon.
Wyoming wrapped up
its 2-10 year with a 35-28
victory over UNLV on Nov.
27. The only other triumph was a 28-21 win over
Nevada. The Cowboys are
champs of the Silver State.
Does Carson City have a
team?
The hiring of Bohl
(which is pronounced bowl,
isnt it?) was about starting
over. Starting over usually
means growing pains. Well,
ouch.
Whats the balance
between growing pains and
growing up?
Despite what would be
considered a tragic season
at most campuses around
the US of A, Wyoming
wont pull the plug on Bohl
this quickly. The administration wouldnt even know
where to go to start over
again.
Still, there are no doubt
officials occupying powerful
positions in Laramie who
are biting their nails and
muttering to themselves.
But they are not going to
mutter out loud just yet.
Bohl is not naive. For
eight years he was an assistant coach at Nebraska,
where he also played. Not
very long ago the Cornhuskers, who have a zero
tolerance policy for coaches
that dont win major bowls

(which rhymes with Bohl),


fired a coach for being
clutzy enough to only win
at least nine games for
seven years in a row.
Bohl was the head coach
at North Dakota State
between 2003 and 2013,
where they began celebrating winning those NCAA
Division I-FCS national
championships as if they
were regularly scheduled
like Halloween.
It is difficult to look at
the Cowboys this year and
say they are one linebacker,
one running back and one
quarterback away in 2015.
Maybe if those players were
named Dick Butkus, Jimmy
Brown and Peyton Manning.
The point is that Wyoming must improve in every phase of the game. Just
because many local citizens
have the patience of ranchers and farmers waiting
on rain doesnt mean they
will have the same kind of
patience waiting for the
Cowboys to win.
Bohl did not come to
Laramie for one winning
season. He came to Laramie to make Wyoming a
winner. He is 57 years old,
so this can be his legacy
job.
Bohl was brought in to
mold the Cowboys into the
best they have ever been on
the gridiron. If it is going
to happen, it must start
happening in 2016 and
Wyoming better obtain an
invitation to one of those
late-season games called
bowls.

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B-4 - Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015

SportS/outdoorS

Quake dominate
Glacier on road
By LEW FREEDMAN
Staff writer
When a team registers 69
shots on net, it should score
some goals.
The Yellowstone Quake
notched 69 shots against the
Glacier Nationals two days in
a row last weekend in Havre,
Mont.
And two days in a row a
bushel of goals followed.
The Quake bested their
hosts 13-2 and 8-2 to improve
its record to 14-5-3. The mark
leaves Yellowstone in second
place in the Frontier Division
of the North American Tier III
Hockey League.
They really dominated
both games all of the way
through, Quake coach Ryan
Theros said.
The explosive Quake piled
up 27 shots on goal in the first
period of the opener, 32 shots
in the second period, and collected 28 shots in the first period of the second contest.
A lot of teams dont get
that in a game, Theros
said.
Theros has exhorted his
guys to play hard for every
minute of each period of every
game and this was one weekend the Quake followed orders.
Thats what Ive been looking for, Theros said of the
steady pressure that the players put on the Nationals two
goalies.
One of them, Raymond
Smith, faced 52 shots in 44
minutes and made 47 saves in
the 8-2 loss.
Yellowstone goalie Lance
Knudson made 26 saves in
the 13-2 win and Derrick
LaCombe made 23 stops in the
second game.
The firepower supporting
them made life a bit easier.

It just goes to
show we have a
lot of depth, no
matter who we
put on the ice.
Ryan Theros,
Quake coach

Max Doner and Nick Elliot


each collected hat tricks in the
13-goal game and they had
plenty of company in the scoring column.
Matt Runyon, Nick Greene,
Vadam Nesteruk, Jake Dickison, Reed Kelly, Cosimo Yapello and Tony Dahlberg each
scored once.
The Quake tallied 11 goals
in the last two periods.
In the other win Yellowstone
goals came from Curtis Greenbush, Justin Berezinski, Drew
Nelson, Dickison, Kelly, Nestrum (two) and Greene.
It just goes to show we
have a lot of depth, no matter
who we put out on the ice,
Theros said.
The Quake face the Billings
Bulls Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at
Riley Arena. It is the last home
game until Dec. 31, New Years
Eve.
Yellowstone plays in a threegame tournament in Minnesota in-between and then has a
holiday break.
(Lew Freedman can be
reached at lew@codyenterprise.com.)

Northwest women
finish weekend 1-2
By SCOTT KOLB
Staff writer
The Northwest College
womens basketball team won
its opener at the College of
Southern Idaho Tournament,
but then lost the next two
games.
The Lady Trappers won
74-65 over Chemeketa Community College on Dec. 3 at
Twin Falls, Idaho.
The Lady Trappers then
lost 82-68 to Lethbridge College. In the final game of the
tourney, the result was a 71-61
loss to Lake Region State College.
In the opener, the Lady
Trappers rallied from a sixpoint halftime deficit to get
the win. Kealani Sagapolu led
the way with 30 points and 13
rebounds. Chandler Rose had
10 points, Kennedy Netto netted 12 points and Shelby Nicholson grabbed 13 rebounds.
Four players for Northwest

reached double figures in scoring for the loss to Lethbridge.


Jacey Shaw led the Lady
Trappers with 19 points.
Sagapolu had 13 points and 16
rebounds. Rose scored 12 and
Aubree Porter added 10 points
in the setback.
In their final game of the
tournament, the Northwest
women were tied at halftime
against Lake Region State.
The offense of the Lady Trappers couldnt keep pace in the
second half.
Three players scored
in double figures for the
Trappers. Sagapolu scored
16 points and grabbed 20
rebounds. Shaw had 11 points
and Larissa Knight added 10
points.
NWC (6-9) plays at home
Saturday against the Northwest All-Stars in Powell.
(Scott Kolb can be reached
at scott@codyenterprise.com.)

Trappers easily defeat


Utah all-star team
By LEW FREEDMAN
Staff writer
The Northwest College
mens basketball team is either
9-3 or 10-3 after last weekend.
An interpreter is needed to
analyze the results.
The Trappers defeated
Game Gear, an all-star team
from Utah, 105-66 at home Friday night to push their record
to 9-3.
But a scheduled game
against the Colorado Kings,
an all-star team from Colorado
Springs, fell through Saturday.
There was a family emergency affecting three related
players on the squad and the
Kings pulled out of Powell and
went home.
That might go down as a forfeit, which would make Northwests record 10-3, but the only
reason coach Brian Erickson
would want to keep the forfeit
is to make sure his team has
enough required regular-season games. He would prefer to
find a late fill-in game, but that
may be difficult on short notice.
We need all the game experience we can get, Erickson
said of his young team that has
been almost completely rebuilt
from last years National
Junior College quarterfinalists.

The Trappers put five players in double figures in the victory over Game Gear and that
was without leading scorer Joel
Maumba, who was sidelined
with an injury.
Jordan Root pumped in 17
points and Grantham Gillard
scored 15. Granthams brother
Graham, Dan Milota and Levi
Londole, each scored 12 points.
Londole also contributed 10
rebounds.
The Trappers shot 55.3 percent from the field
We were a little shorthanded without Joel, Erickson
said.
The Trappers are now on
holiday break and do not play
again until Dec. 31-Jan. 2 in a
tournament in Ontario, Ore.
at Treasure Valley Community
College.
The reigning Region IX
champions will open defense
of their district title Jan. 6 at
home against Casper College.
Weve grown a lot and
become a better team, Erickson said. Thats what I was
looking for before we go to
break.
(Lew Freedman can be
reached at lew@codyenterprise.
com.)

CUP

beloved sports trophy in the


world. The main reason is
because it travels. It does
not sit on a pedestal. It is not
sequestered behind glass. It
does not reside from year to
year in a league office.
Every summer since 1995,
players on the winning team
have gained custody of the
Cup for one day. Most bring
it to their hometown.
This has led to some wild
adventures, including the
Cup being left on the side of
a highway, flown by helicopter to the top of a 9,000-foot
mountain Fruit Loops being
eaten from its bowl on top
and being dropped into a
pool.
Since the NHL has gone
international, the Cup has
required a passport. Some
Russian champs with the
Detroit Red Wings attempted
to bring the Cup into Lenins Tomb in Moscows Red
Square but were rebuffed.
By comparison with other
major American team sports,
the Cup is the lead in a
Broadway play.
Can anyone even name the
World Series championship
trophy?
Has anyone ever seen the
Vince Lombardi Trophy for
the Super Bowl winner anywhere but on a TV screen?
Ah, but the Stanley Cup
is the most familiar oversized hunk of jewelry outside
the Hope Diamond. Not that
this prized stature prevents
champagne or beer being
sipped from it.
When the Stanley Cup
appears in public, which
it regularly does, it radiates a magnetic pull. The
Cup brings smiles to faces.
It represents excellence on
the ice, but its tradition and
well-known, if somewhat odd
shape, is unique.
Youre not supposed to kiss
or hug the Cup unless you
win it, lest you become jinxed, doomed never to become
a champ. So unless you are a
hockey player who has just
won the seventh game in
Madison Square Garden, you
best be cautious around the
gleaming silver and nickel
alloy trophy that stands nearly three feet tall and weighs
about 35 pounds.
The Cup is the ancient
mariner of sports trophies.
It was created when Buffalo
Bill Cody was in his prime,
decades before the National
Hockey League was founded.
The Cup was commissioned in 1892 and first
awarded as the Dominion
Hockey Challenge Cup to the
best amateur team in Canada. It is named after Lord
Stanley of Preston, who at
the time was Governor-General of Canada.
Starting in 1915, the Cup
was presented to the winner of Canadas professional
championship and since 1926
to the NHL playoff champ.
For the better part of a century, the NHL has essentially
leased the right to award the
Stanley Cup. But it is technically owned by Trustees of
the Cup, who were first designated when the Cup was
made.
Such trustees approval
aside, to the outside world
the Stanley Cup means one
thing: NHL supremacy. In
the hockey world, crossing
paths with the Cup is akin to
catching a glimpse of Prince
Charles or one of his sons, a
brush with royalty.
Although they are all
between 16 and 20 years
old, several members of the
Yellowstone Quake North
American Tier III junior
hockey team have met up

BOYS

Other veterans of last


years team are Adam Poole,
Trevor Neil, Andrew Merz,
Owen Burbank and Shawn
Shepperson.
Dawson Kluesner, a 6-foot-3
power player who transferred
from Dillon, Mont., could be an
important addition, although it
is not clear if he will be eligible
before January.
Shepperson, a 6-4 senior,
should be an inside force as a
rebounder and scorer.
Hes the kind of kid who
just doesnt quit, Myers said
of Sheppersons engine. I
love his work ethic. Hes an
athlete.
Shepperson said he likes
the way this team is shaping
up and believes the Longhorns have the talent to make

(from page B-1)

Cody Enterprise reporter Lew Freedman is pictured with the Stanley Cup at the
Hockey Hall of Fame Resource Centre in Toronto.
with the Cup, an occasion
at least as memorable for a
hockey player as winning free
tickets to a Black Keys or Red
Hot Chili Peppers concert.
Many Quake players are
from Minnesota, a hockey
hotbed, and the Cup has
toured there more than once.
Tanner Vincent of Lakevile, Minn., saw it once.
Its so surreal being close
to it, he said. Its so special.
Vincent admitted he went
beyond the bounds of Cup
decorum by hugging it.
In the NHL, each member
of the winning team has his
name engraved on the Cup on
a band of silver. However, the
Cup was getting so tall that
it started to resemble the
Leaning Tower of Pisa and
some rings were removed and
placed on permanent display
in the Hockey Hall of Fame.
That keeps the Cup the same
height and looking the same
year after year.
The Cup came to St. Louis
Park, Minn., when Quake
forward Curtis Greenbush
was playing there.
It was daunting, Greenbush said of seeing the Cup.
I didnt touch it. I didnt
want the jinx.
Quake coach Ryan Theros
has seen the Cup more than
once in Minnesota, the first
time at 17. It often appears at
the state high school hockey
tournament.
They just had it on display and you could get your
picture taken with it, Theros said. I was thinking
it was awesome, all those
names are on it. Youve seen
the videos and the pictures of
the greats holding it up. No
other trophy is like that.
Actually, there is one other
trophy like the Cup. It is the
Stanley Cups identical twin
brother.
Hockey fans used to come

to the Hall of Fame from


thousands of miles away to
see the Cup. But with the
Cup on its frequent-flyer
schedule, they left disappointed.
So a duplicate Cup was
made that lives in the Hall
of Fame, mounted on a pedestal, in front of a large wall
emblem of the Hall. That way
anyone can come to downtown Toronto to take pix with
the Cup.
So I saw the bookend Cups
in the same week.
The only other time I saw
the true Stanley Cup was 15
years ago.
In summer 2000, after the
New Jersey Devils won the
NHL title, Scott Gomez, local
boy made good, got the Cup
in his hometown for 24 hours.
That happened to be
Anchorage, Alaska, where I
was a sportswriter. Gomez,
now 35, was 20 at the time.
The Devils won again in 2003
and Gomez brought it back to
Alaska, but I wasnt present.
All these years later,
Gomez, who now plays for
the St. Louis Blues, remembers well the excitement and
fun of bringing the Stanley
Cup home for a day the first
time.
Gomez received a call
alerting him the Cup was due
in on a late-night flight with
its minder. His first reaction?
Oh, wow, Gomez said
recently.
What do you do with the
Stanley Cup at midnight?
Well, of course, bars are still
open. Gomez was under
drinking age, but somehow
an exception was made to let
him show the Cup around to
patrons in some of Alaskas
most popular bars.
Then he brought the Cup
to his parents house and
babysat it all night long.
I got like one hours
sleep, he said.
(from page B-1)

some noise in the region.


We should have a pretty
good year, Shepperson said.
Ive seen a lot of the younger
guys getting better.
Shepperson has played the
power forward role the last
couple of seasons, but he may
have added a fresh element to
his game. He doesnt expect
to be taking long-range jumpers, but for the first time he
expects to take shots from outside the paint.
Mostly Ive posted up on
them (other teams), Shepperson said. Thats where Im
most effective. I get the boards
and shoot lay-ups. But Im
getting a lot better mid-range.
Ive always been a little scared
to shoot from out there.
No more.

Early the next day his


neighborhood threw a block
party.
I got to show it to the people I grew up with, he said.
The Cup visited a senior
citizens home and a local
hospital before settling in
for a few hours at a downtown park where hundreds
of people lined up to pose for
photos.
Some fans brought tiny
babies and perched them on
the open mouth of the Cup
for photos.
Gomez laughed when he
said he has since met some of
those babies who have grown
into teenagers.
One of them is like 6-foot2, he said.
A big indoor party followed
at a local hotel and eventually a fire engine provided an
escort to the airport.
I couldnt believe how
special it was, Gomez said.
I wanted everyone in town
to see it. I was thinking, This
is for everyone.
The Cup is for everyone.
Thats why everyone loves it.
Three hours after my brief
private visit with the Cup,
Craig Campbell, manager of
the Hall resource centre, was
moving around what I took to
be some equipment for a storage area.
Only he paused next to me
pushing a large black trunk
on wheels, flipped open the
locks, removed a blanket and
there was the Cup once more,
cushioned so it wouldnt bang
against the hard metal sides
while in transit.
It was a last look for me.
The most famous trophy in
sports was being shipped to
Chicago for its next feel-good
appearance. The Stanley Cup
was out the door before I was.
(Lew Freedman can be
reached at lew@codyenterprise.com.)

GIRLS

After the two days of play


in Burlington this weekend,
the Longhorns face the Lovell
JV on Dec. 17 and then break
for the holidays.
Myers was not in charge
last season, but he was not far
removed and he has coached
many of the players for up to
six years, in junior high and
in high school so he thinks
he has a good handle on their
capabilities. He wants the
Longhorns to run more this
year and thinks this could be
a solid year.
Im super excited about
this group of kids, Myers
said.

was useful, even though


she was often nervous.
Now the jitters should be
gone because she has lived
through various circumstances in real games, not
just practice.
I didnt expect to play
last year, Crum said. It
helped me a lot with ballhandling. Im not nervous
now. I feel like I got a lot
better. Weve got a great
group of girls. Ive mostly
worked on my defense. And
I really worked to get into
shape pre-season.

(Lew Freedman can be


reached at lew@codyenterprise.com.)

(Lew Freedman can be


reached at lew@codyenterprise.com.)

(from page B-1)

Cody Enterprise Thursday, Dec. 10, 2015

section

WINTER SPORTS

Preview

2015-2016

Nordic skiers (from left) Charlie Davis, Nicki Hansen and Trent Bronnenberg are ready for the season to begin.

WRESTLING: C-2

GIRLS BASKETBALL: C-4

ALPINE SKIING: C-7


Cody Enterprise publication

C-2 - Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015

Winter sports previeW

photo by RAYMOND HILLEGAS

Austin Royer (right) practices a takedown on David Plummer on Dec. 2 in the wrestling room.

Broncs excited to hit mats after last years success


By AMBER PEABODY
News editor
After their best state finish in
years last March, Cody wrestlers
are excited to hit the mats again.
In the few weeks between the
fall and winter seasons, coach
Trev Wood hosted open mats
and about 25 wrestlers consistently showed up.
There was a time when we
only had 15 on the team, Wood
said. But the boys were anxious
for the season to start.
He believes the increase in
attendance was due in part to
the teams success in recent
years. Last year the Broncs finished fourth at the state tournament and had multiple state
placers including two-time
defending state champ John
Beaudrie.
Kids look up to those athletes and I think that draws
more kids out, Wood said.
The Broncs have also benefited from several former wrestlers
coming in to help, including twotime defending champion Bobby
West.
Its awesome they come
back and help, Wood said.
Theyre part of the wrestling
community.
Thirty two are out for the
team, which only features
six upperclassmen three

Wrestling

Coach: Trev
Wood.
Last season:
Fourth at state, third
at regionals.
Top returners:
Nathan Gifford,
David Plummer, Jonathan Sanchez.
First meet: Dec.
11-12 at Powell
Invite.
First home meet:
Jan. 9 hosting Cody
Invitational.
seniors and three juniors.
Seniors Dallin Jones and
Tron Adams are back, and are
joined by wrestling newcomer
Austin Kennedy. Juniors are
David Plummer, Nathan Gifford
and Austin Royer.
With so few upperclassmen
it puts us in a leadership role,
Gifford said. You dont really
have a choice when theres only
six of you.
Wood said hes excited about
the large freshman class, which
includes several experienced
athletes. Drew Morris, Tris-

Boys Varsity

WRESTLING

Fri., 12/11 ........Powell Invitational ..............................TBA


Sat., 12/12 .......Powell Invitational ..............................TBA
Fri., 12/18 ........Battle in the Big Horns @ Worland... TBA
Sat., 12/19 .......Battle in the Big Horns @ Worland....TBA
Sat., 1/9 ...........Cody Invitational .............................TBA
Thurs., 1/14 ....Lovell.............................................6 p.m.
Thurs., 1/21 ....Worland.........................................6 p.m.
Fri., 1/22 ..........Lander Invitational .............................TBA
Sat., 1/23 .........Lander Invitational .............................TBA
Thurs., 1/28 .....Riverton.......................................... 5 p.m.
Fri., 1/29 ..........Buffalo Invitational..............................TBA
Sat., 1/30 .........Buffalo Invitational..............................TBA
Thurs., 2/4 .......Lander ............................................ 5 p.m.
Fri., 2/5 ............Ron Thon @ Riverton ........................TBA
Sat., 2/6 ...........Ron Thon @ Riverton ....................... TBA
Tues., 2/9 ........Powell............................................. 6 p.m.
Thurs., 2/11 .....Greybull.......................................... 6 p.m.
Fri., 2/19 ..........3A West Regional @ Pinedale ..........TBA
Sat., 2/20 .........3A West Regional @ Pinedale ..........TBA
Fri., 2/26 ..........State @ Casper .................................TBA
Sat., 2/27 .........State @ Casper .................................TBA

tian and Greyson Hicks, Jared


Grenz, Josh Jones and Noah
Goodwin had successful middle
school careers and competed in
national events.
The level of competition will
increase quite a bit for them this
year, Wood said. Its a challenge because theyll be going
against upperclassmen with
more experience. They need to
stay positive.
Many sophomores return
including Liam and Chris Eissinger, Owen and Orin Oiler and
Ira Mickelson.
They all finished their seasons on positive notes, Wood
said.
There are a handful of boys
new to the sport of wrestling so
the Broncs spent the first week
reviewing the basics.
We have a lot of young and
new kids but theyre picking it
up well and learning fast, Jones
said.
The younger athletes will
have to step in and fill spots
vacated by last years talented
senior class. Cody returns three
state placers as Gifford finished
third, Plummer fifth and Jon
Sanchez sixth. Sophomore Dan
Beaudrie, who also finished

third last year, is sitting out this


season as he wont be cleared
to play sports again until this
spring.
Looking ahead to dual lineups, most of the Broncs will
compete in the middle and light
weights.
Most of our big kids graduated so we only have four or five
in the upper weights, Wood
said.
Forfeiting upper weights
makes winning the lower weight
classes more critical.
We cant afford to lose the
lower weights, Jones said.
They need to do their part to
pull out the win.
Gifford says he looks forward
to the dual competitions.
I like duals because its more
one-on-one, he said. You know
who youre going to wrestle
and its your team against their
team. Its more personal.
Cody opens the season Dec.
11-12 at the Powell Invite.
That first one is an eye
opener, Wood said. I want
them to be aggressive off the
whistle. The more experienced
guys I want to be consistent and
not make simple mistakes. The
new kids need to stay focused

Girls Varsity

BASKETBALL

Fri., 12/11 ........East/West Classic @ Buffalo .............TBA


Sat., 12/12 .......East/West Classic @ Buffalo .............TBA
Fri., 12/18 ........Lander Classic ...................................TBA
Sat., 12/19 .......Lander Classic ...................................TBA
Thurs., 1/7 ......Worland....................................5:45 p.m.
Tues., 1/12 ......Lovell ......................................... 5:45 p.m.
Fri., 1/15 ..........Buffalo ............................................ 7 p.m.
Sat., 1/16 .........Glenrock......................................... 5 p.m.
Fri., 1/22 ..........Lander ......................................5:45 p.m.
Fri., 1/29 ..........Pinedale .................................... 5:45 p.m.
Sat., 1/30 .........Mountain View ........................ 12:45 p.m.
Fri., 2/5 ............Powell.......................................5:45 p.m.
Sat., 2/6 ...........Worland................................... 12:45 p.m.
Thurs., 2/11 ....Lovell........................................5:45 p.m.
Fri., 2/12 ..........Lander ............................................ 6 p.m.
Fri., 2/19 ..........Jackson ..................................... 5:45 p.m.
Sat., 2/20.........Star Valley ..............................12:45 p.m.
Fri., 2/26 ..........Powell........................................ 5:45 p.m.
Thurs., 3/3 .......Regionals @ Star Valley ....................TBA
Fri., 3/4 ............Regionals @ Star Valley ....................TBA
Sat., 3/5 ...........Regionals @ Star Valley ....................TBA
Thurs., 3/10 .....State @ Casper .................................TBA
Fri., 3/11 ..........State @ Casper .................................TBA
Sat., 3/12 .........State @ Casper .................................TBA

and develop a mental toughness.


The Broncs first home event
will be Jan. 9 at the Cody Invite.
This is the first year weve
had a tournament since Ive

I look forward
to working with the
younger kids to help
make them better.
Dallin Jones
Senior

been here, Wood said. Our


goal is to get the word out and
get some teams to get the tournament growing.
Wood is assisted by Shawn
Trotter and Chuck Kirkham.

I want to get better


and do my best any
time I wrestle.
Nathan Gifford
Junior

Boys Varsity

BASKETBALL

Fri., 12/11 ........East/West Classic ........................... TBA


Sat., 12/12.......East/West Classic ...........................TBA
Fri., 12/18 ........Douglas Invite ....................................TBA
Sat., 12/19 .......Douglas Invite ....................................TBA
Tues., 1/7 ........Worland.....................................7:30 p.m
Tues., 1/12 ......Lovell .......................................... 7:30 p.m
Fri., 1/15 ..........Buffalo ............................................ 7 p.m.
Sat., 1/16 .........Glenrock......................................... 4 p.m.
Fri., 1/22 ..........Lander ......................................7:30 p.m.
Fri., 1/29 ..........Pinedale .................................... 7:30 p.m.
Sat., 1/30 .........Mountain View ............................... 3 p.m.
Fri., 2/5 ............Powell.......................................7:30 p.m.
Sat., 2/6 ...........Worland..................................... 2:30 p.m.
Thurs., 2/11 ....Lovell........................................7:30 p.m.
Fri., 2/12 ..........Lander ....................................... 7:30 p.m.
Fri., 2/19 ..........Jackson....................................7:30 p.m.
Sat., 2/20.........Star Valley ................................2:30 p.m.
Fri., 2/26 ..........Lander ....................................... 7:30 p.m.
Thurs., 3/3 .......Regionals @ Star Valley ....................TBA
Fri., 3/4 ............Regionals @ Star Valley ...................TBA
Sat., 3/5 ...........Regionals @ Star Valley ...................TBA
Thurs., 3/10 .....State @ Casper .................................TBA
Fri., 3/11 ..........State @ Casper .................................TBA
Sat., 3/12 .........State @ Casper .................................TBA

Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015 - C-3

Winter sports previeW

photo by RAYMOND HILLEGAS

Maddie Welch works on her high jump technique during indoor track open gym Dec. 2 in the Stock Activities Center.

Track team ready for tougher competition indoor brings


By VIN CAPPIELLO
Editor
Indoor track and field athletes never miss a day of training,
says fourth-year head coach Bret
Engdahl.
In fact, the easy-going mentor of the Bronc and Filly charges
who are poised to run, jump,
vault and throw in the upcoming

Indoor
Track
Coach:
Bret Engdahl
Last season: Fillies
fifth, Broncs 11th at
state.
Top returners:
Brooke Gordon, Heidi
Adamson, Madison
Christy (pole vault);
Elisha Smith (sprints),
Brody Smith and Jeron
Waltari (middle distance and distance);
Aaron Erickson (shot
put); Caleb Rentz
(pole vault).
First competition:
Jan. 16, Spearfish,
S.D.

One reason I like


indoor track is because
it helps me get better
for outdoor. I have to
work on my form ... and
getting over the bar the
right way.
Brooke Gordon
Senior

season, says this sport has a hidden advantage.


Theres a place for them if
they want to work, says Engdahl, noting the no-cut aspect of
the indoor season. We get a lot
of first-time track kids and we
guide them through and push
them in a direction they can be
successful.
The indoor season provides all
the usual track and field events,
with the exception of the discus.
Engdahl said while much time is
spent preparing athletes for the
spring campaign, improvement
in an individuals performance
often is a positive side effect.
If you go from 20 to 23 feet
in the shot put, even if you dont
win, youve gotten better, said
Engdahl, who with field event
assistant coach Shawn Allred
completed world class shot putter John Godinas training program to learn more about throwing. A kid can say, Hey I worked
and I got better. Sometimes its
hard to see that in other sports.
Scott Shafer will continue
to work with the pole vaulters, while Maggie Kirkham
will coach the distance runners. Engdahl said she is a
volunteer assistant, but she

shows up every day.


Engdahl also said while
much of the athletes training
will occur in the Stock Activities Center, Kirkham usually
has the distance runners outside. On extremely cold days or
if conditions are too snowy or
icy, the sprinters and distance
runners will work out indoors,
often using the circuit of the high
schools long hallways as their
training area.
The schedule calls for travel
to seven meets, the closest of
which is in Gillette, and the farthest in Pocatello, Idaho, and
Salt Lake City. The boys and
girls teams train and travel
together.
If athletes qualify for the
state meet, which will be March
4-5 in Gillette, they will compete
against all schools in Wyoming,

regardless of size. And Engdahl


said Cody likely will have several
athletes from Powell, including
Anissa Warner, the 2015 outdoor state triple jump champ and
long jump runner-up (to Codys
Emily Reed).
The Fillies placed fifth and
the Broncs 11th at the 2015
indoor state meet. Senior Brooke
Gordon captured the state title
in the pole vault and is the lone
returning Filly champ. She is
nursing an ankle injury and will
see limited action. Senior Brody
Smith won the 3,200-meter run
last year and will be back to contest the distance events.
Engdahl also noted the
importance of injury prevention during the indoor season,
which involves athletes training and competing on surfaces
not always ideal and running

Boys & Girls Varsity

on tighter turns 160- and 200meter tracks as opposed to the


standard outdoor 400-meter
oval.
We do some preventive

maintenance with their ankles


and shins, Engdahl said. Were
careful to make sure theres no
overuse or surface injuries, too.
We spend a lot of time on that.

Blakes
Portrait Studio
Since 1982

587.3330 blakesportraitstudios.com

Lets Go Team!

We Wish all of the Teams


Good Luck!

GARVIN MOTORS
1105 W. Coulter Powell, WY
(307) 754-5743 1-800-788-4669
www.garvinmotors.com

INDOOR TRACK

Fri., 1/16 ....... Stadium Sports Invite



Spearfish, S.D. ..................................TBA
Sat., 1/24 ...... Gillette Invite .....................................TBA
Sat., 1/31 ...... Winter Classic

Chadron, Neb. ..................................TBA
Thurs., 2/19 .. Simplot Games

Pocatello, Idaho ................................TBA
Fri., 2/20 ....... Simplot Games

Pocatello, Idaho ................................TBA
Sat., 2/21 ...... Simplot Games

Pocatello, Idaho ................................TBA
Wed., 2/25 .... Gillette Quad .....................................TBA
Fri., 3/6 ......... State @ Gillette.................................TBA
Sat., 3/7 ........ State @ Gillette.................................TBA

Its important to me
because its more competitive than outdoor,
because were competing against the 4A
schools and we go to
Simplot. Theres bigger
and better competition.
Caleb Rentz
Junior

1107 Sheridan Avenue


Cody, Wyoming 82414
307) 527-7274
Tim Wade
www.northforkanglers.com
Owner/Outfitter
flyfish@wavecom.net

Go Cody!
1902 Big Horn Ave.
Cody, Wyoming 82414

(307) 587-2223
www.bloedornlumber.com

Beck Lake Plaza Cody


587-8555
Mon.-Sat.: 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sun.: 10 a.m.-3 p.m.

1702 17th St. Cody


307-587-4915

Professional Waste Removal


Residential Commercial Farm Ranch

Portable Restrom Service Septic Tank Pumping


Serving all Park County & Big Horn County

307-587-3282

587-6616 / 272-6616 mobile 899-6262

Good
Luck!

1414 17th St. www.goodyearprinting.com


FAST, DEPENDABLE SERVICE

GO TEAM!

Bear Co. Inc.


Tires and More

| New Construction | Tear-Offs | Re-Roofs |


| Shingles | Shakes | Wood Shingles |
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| Licensed & Insured |

Dallas Beardall
Owner

Tires and Full


Automotive Repair

2130 Big Horn Ave.


Cody, WY 82414

307-587-8188
307-587-6259

Build with the Pros... ProBuild


1938 Sheridan Ave Cody 587-2202

Kalkowski

Chiropractic Center
Helping You Stay Active
587-1500 1408 17th St. Cody
www.kalkowskichiropractic.com

C-4 - Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015

Winter sports previeW

New coach brings new energy to Filly basketball team


By SCOTT KOLB
Staff writer
The Cody girls basketball
team has a new coach this
season, with Tim Vannoy
taking over the duties on the
bench.
After winning only two
games last season, the Fillies
are looking for a fresh start
on the basketball court.
Vannoy, who previously
coached the Fillies from
1992-99, is trying to instill
a stronger work ethic in the
girls and conditioning drills
have been a big part of the
workouts. In the past, the
trademark of the Fillies has
been defense and that will be
the case again this season.
Everybody has to be
patient, because weve given
the girls a lot of new stuff
to work on, Vannoy said.
Were going to try and play
a more up-tempo game on
both offense and defense.
Im pleased with how hard
the girls have worked in the
preseason practices.
One of the top returners is
senior guard Scout Vannoy,
the daughter of the coach.
Shell be point guard for the
Fillies and in charge of keeping the fast-paced approach
under control.
The other seniors are
Ky l i e S k i n n e r, S h a y l e e
Schutzman, Ashly Nieters,
Emily Hinze, Lindsey Nissen
and Regina Gee.
Practice has been going
good and were all looking forward to the season,
Schutzman said. Were
learning a new offense and
getting more comfortable
with our positioning on the
court.
Schutzman, Nieters,
Hinze and Nissen are all
guards or wings. Skinner
and Gee will be the main
scoring options for the Fillies in the low post.
This is a completely different system from last season, but were adjusting well
and ready to roll, Nieters
said of the up-tempo game.
Added Hinze on the offensive approach, We have a
lot of guards who can shoot
the ball, so that should give
us a balanced inside-outside
game.
The new coach has been
preaching fundamentals
to the girls and theyre listening to his wisdom. This
means a lot of work in practice on the basics of the
game.
Were adjusting to the
new program and everybody
is optimistic about the season, Nissen said. Coach

photo by RAYMOND HILLEGAS

Cody girls coach Tim Vannoy instructs Ashly Nieters (center) and Shaylee Schutzman during a recent practice on guarding an opponent.

Girls
Basketball
Coach:
Tim Vannoy
Last season: 1-2 at
regionals.
Top returners:
Ashly Nieters, Emily
Hinze, Regina Gee,
Scout Vannoy.
First competition:
Dec. 11-12 in the East/
West Classic in Buffalo.
has been stressing, dont
turn the ball over, dont
foul and make your free
throws.
Skinner is the tallest play-

Cynthia Rankin, C.P.A.


1285 Sheridan Ave., Suite 235
307.587.8966

We Support the Team!

Childrens Resource
Center
808 North Street 527-7060
www.crcwyoming.org

1702 Sheridan Ave.


Cody, Wyoming 82414
307-527-7186

627 Yellowstone Ave.


Cody, Wyoming 82414
307-527-7186

Go Team!

152 N Absaroka St. Ste. D


Powell, Wyoming 82435
307-754-7955

www.wypinnbank.com

er on the team and shell be


the main option for scoring
in the low post. On the other
side of the lane, Gee will
focus on rebounding and getting her points on putbacks.
Last year, we didnt use
the low post as much, so
with a more fluid and faster approach we should get
the ball inside more often,
Gee said. My strengths are
defense and rebounding. We
should have a dynamic duo
in the low post.
Running an up-tempo
game on both ends of the
floor means more players
will see time in the rotation.
The Fillies will have a deep
bench with two juniors and
eight sophomores.
Hannah Bailey and Ashley
Wilson are the juniors. Ash-

lyn Bower, Kalie Chandler,


Alannah Gee, Erika Larsen,
Jordan Nielson, Jules Novakovich, Isabelle Place and
Haylee Shumard are the
sophomores on the roster.
Its nice to have a lot
of players on the roster,
because we plan to be a running team, coach Vannoy
said. Well face some tough
teams in the opening tournaments and this is still a work
in progress.
Starting the season on the
road, the Fillies will play in a
pair of tournaments before
the Christmas break.
They open the schedule
with games at the East/West
Classic in Buffalo on Dec.
11-12. The following weekend the Fillies play in the
Lander Classic.

Good Luck Broncs & Fillies!


Division of Glacier Bank

Good Luck Cody!


492 E. South Street Powell, WY 82435
acelectric1@live.com

Lets Go Broncs!

good luck broncs!

Park County Title

Cody: (307) 587-4926


Powell: (307) 754-2720
FAX: (307) 587-9784
1-800-325-4926

Insurance Agency
Mary J. Hall
Manager

1014 Rumsey Avenue


Cody, Wyoming 82414
mary@parkcountytitle.com

Dave Balling
Insurance and Financial Services Agent
1808 Sheridan Ave., PO Box 1870
Cody, WY 82414
Tel 307.587.6266
Fax 307.527.5056
dballing@farmersagent.com

Registered Representative, Farmers Financial Solutions, LLC


30801 Agoura Road, Bldg. 1, Agoura Hills, CA 91301-2054
Tel 818.584.0200
Member FINRA & SIPC

1025 12th Street Cody 307.587.4959


www.realestatecodywyoming.com

Cody bbhc.org

We have a lot of
players coming back
from last year and
weve really put the
work in, so were looking forward to a successful season.
Scout Vannoy
Senior

1507 8th St. 307.587.3800

Best of Luck
to our Teams
Come
face-to-face
with the
Wild West!

Ive worked a lot on


my game down low.
The offense is coming around and were
getting better, so we
should have balanced
scoring this season.
Kylie Skinner
Senior

Absaroka
Orthopaedics
Dr. Jay Winzenried, MD

Cathcart Health Center 424 Yellowstone Ave. Suite 140


527-7100 754-7192 877-509-7100

Dr. Dale Myers, MD


Obstetrics & Gynecology
1613 Stampede Ave., Cody
(307) 587-1155

Go Broncs
& Fillies!

1332 Beck Ave., Cody, WY 307-587-2253

Jeanna Kennedy
www.jeannakennedy.com

Luke Hopkin
www.lukehopkin.com

1308 Rumsey Ave. Cody, WY


(307) 587-9669

Frank Schmidt, MD Jared T. Lee, MD


Stephen Emery, MD Jeff Poffenbarger, MD

Big Horn Basin

BONE & JOINT

Good luck to our teams!

720 Lindsay Lane, Suite C, Cody 578-1955 or 1-866-414-1955

Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015 - C-5

Winter sports previeW

photo by RAYMOND HILLEGAS

Dawson Ritt drives the ball down the court past Austin Alexander during practice.

Broncs young and hungry to gain experience on court


By LEW FREEDMAN
Staff writer
The scheme coach Dean
Olenik has hatched for the
2015-16 Cody boys basketball
season has as much in common with track as basketball.
The Broncs are going to
run so much they will have to
be in the same shape as milers.
Offensively, they will fastbreak. Defensively, the Broncs
will cover the opposition all
over the floor all of the time.
Although it is risky to mention his name in the same
breath as an untried generation of players, one coach who
made this style work for him
was John Wooden at UCLA.
The greatest college basketball coach in history won 10
NCAA championships in 12
years.
The aspirations of Olenik
and his players are more modest. They would be content
with a Wyoming 3A state title.
We want to make the
other team feel like it is constantly under pressure, Olenik said.
Two years ago the Broncs
won a state title. Last year
they finished 15-11. This year

there are only two seniors


on the roster and another 10
guys who believe they have a
chance for meaningful minutes.
Going all out, all of the
time maximizes the need for
fresh players shuttled in and
out of the game.
We have 11 or 12 guys if
they come around and compete, they could start, Olenik
said.
Point guard Blake Hinze
and forward Parker Shreve
are the seniors. Hinze is a
savvy floor leader who has
run a half-court offense, but
also thrives at high speed.
We are a lot smaller team
than we were last year,
Hinze said. We have a lot of
kids who are hungry. It will
pay off. Were going to run.
Making passes on the fly
rather than making passes from a set plan changes
Hinzes role a bit.
It makes you think, he
said. You pass on your first
instinct.
Shreve is 6-foot-7, but
slender. Because of his height
defensive opponents underestimate his outside shooting.
But Shreve can shoot from

Best of Luck to all players & teams!


Where our name means a great deal!

Boys
Basketball
Coach:
Dean Olenik
Last season: Third
at regionals, 0-2 at
state.
Top returners:
Blake Hinze, Parker
Shreve, Zach Ross.
First competition:
Dec. 11-12 in the East/
West Classic.
long range. He loves it when
defenses give him space.
If I see an opening, I take
it, Shreve said. It makes my
eyes light up.
This is a young, sophomore-laden team but with a
small group of juniors who
have some varsity experience
such as guards Zach Ross,
who will be a lot busier this
winter.
Ross played more as the
season progressed last year.
He was timid about taking his
shot, sticking only with layups. He will shoot more from
outside this season.

Practice began Nov. 30, and


the season opens with two
days of play in the East-West
Classic at Sweitzer Gym on
Dec. 11-12.
A coach might be more
alarmed about readiness if
the inexperienced Broncs
hadnt spent the entire summer attending clinics, tournaments and fielding a summer
league team. They played in
Billings, Logan, Utah and
Laramie.
There are a lot of kids
who dont have a lot of varsity
minutes, Olenik said.
But he believes that summer play was worth 25 games
of experience.
Youre not a sophomore
anymore, he told the 10
players who are listed in that
class.
Shreves first varsity minutes came last year and he
said he was nervous until he
made his first bucket. Then
he realized it was all just basketball and he is planning
to pass on that advice to the
younger guys: Stay loose,
dont play tight.
Still, he knows there will
be jitters on display at first
because when play begins

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Were Cheering for You!


Wishing all teams a successful
and safe season.

sometimes the memory goes


blank.
Your heart races when
you get on the floor the first
time, he said.
Although most of the
Broncs have not been varsity players before, Shreve
said he has played with them
for years and echoed Hinzes

As a team we
played tournaments
(over the summer). It
helps a lot refining your
skills.
Zach Ross
Junior

thinking about their competitiveness.


They are hungry and they
want to eat, Shreve said.
Olenik said Shreve seems
primed for a breakout season
as a leader and high scorer.
If he steps up into that
role the skys the limit for
us, Olenik said.

Best of Luck Broncs and Fillies

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Its a young group,


but we have a lot of
potential. With the conditioning we should be
able to run all day.
Hunter Capron
Junior

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762 Lindsay Lane
587-2500

Get Up On Your Feet, Shout

GO CODY!

Products you rely on, people you trust!

Jake Stephens

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706 Yellowstone Ave., Cody

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Sat.: 9 a.m.-12 p.m.

307-527-6201 1220 Sunshine Ave., Cody, WY

Tim
Mahieu

FINANCIAL ADVISORS

Financial Advisor
Vice President
Investments

Wealth Brokerage Services

527-6848

Have a Terrific
Season!

1401 Sheridan Avenue Cody

307.527.2682

1355 Sheridan Avenue 586-4175

codyenterprise.com

www.edwardjones.com

Member SIPC

Rob Boysen, AAMS

Dan Stevens, CFA

1321 Sheridan Avenue


Cody, WY 82414
307-587-2269

1121 13th Street


Cody, WY 82414
307-587-1000

C-6 - Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015

Winter sports previeW

Nordic skiers look forward to competing on home turf


By SCOTT KOLB
Staff writer
The Cody Nordic ski team
is looking forward to hosting a
home meet again this winter.
There were no home dates on
the schedule last year as each
team sits out hosting for a season. So the chance to ski on the
course at Pahaska in mid-January will be one of the main highlights of the season.
Its always good to compete on your home turf, coach
Andy Quick said. We have the
most scenic course in the state
and the kids look forward to
that home meet.Were always
looking for volunteers to help
spot on the course at the home
meet.
Top skiers returning for Cody
include senior Trent Bronnenberg for the boys and junior
Nicki Hansen for the girls.
Bronnenberg is back for
his sixth season on the Nordic
ski team (two years in middle
school). His experience and leadership on the course should help
the newer members of the team.
Weve had some good indoor
workouts and the team is ready
to race, Bronnenberg said. I
had a good football season and
hope it continues.
Hansen is the most experienced of the girls skiers and has
worked diligently to improve
her technique on the course.
Although there are a few of
the girls on the team who are
seniors, they are new to the
sport.
There are a total of 14 boys
and girls on the teams roster.
The other skiers are freshman
Steven Stowell, sophomore Finn
Jackson, senior Abbey Brasher,
senior Samantha Stowell, senior
Charlie Davis, junior Jesse
Campbell, junior Tatum Buss,
junior Hunter Graves, junior
Evan Wambeke, junior Alex
Edwards, freshman McKenna
Fink and sophomore Ted Gerber.

Nordic
Skiing
Coach:
Andy Quick
Last season:
Broncs third, Fillies
seventh at state.
Top returners:
Hunter Graves, Charlie Davis, Trent Bronnenberg, Nicki Hansen, Tatum Buss.
First meet: Dec.
11-12 at Casper Classic.
Home meet: Jan.
8-9 at Pahaska.

photo by RAYMOND HILLEGAS

Cody senior Abbey Brasher (right) and Nordic ski coach Andy Quick run along the Paul Stock Nature Trail on Dec. 1.
Numbers are down a little
bit from last year with four skiers graduating and some of the
other kids deciding to do other
things this winter, Quick said.
Still, we have a good group and
its exciting to see some new
faces. We have three new skiers
on the team this year.
Distances on the course in
the Nordic competition are
five kilometers and 10 kilometers. Long distance training to
increase stamina is essential in
these races.
Graves was an All-State cross
country runner in the fall. Bronnenberg was a football player
in the fall season, so the skiers
all know how to stay in shape.
Stamina on the course is key to
top-tier finishes in this sport.
The kids have come into
the season with a greater level
of fitness, it really helps them
to have a base of physical conditioning, Quick said. Most
of them participated in a fall
sport and some of them were
into road biking. Were also
working on weight training to
help them build up their overall
strength.
Skiing uphill sounds like an

impossible task, but members of


the Nordic team routinely defy
the laws of gravity. In Nordic
skiing the competitors traverse
up and down hills, then they
must pick up time on the flat
stretches of the course.
To improve their strength

and techniques for meets, the


skiers conduct challenging dry
land practices in which they use
roller skis. The sport is all about
timing, with the top 20 finishers
in each meet accruing points for
All-State selections.
Later in the season they

NORDIC SKIING

Ive worked on my
form and technique
from last season. The
whole team has worked
really hard on conditioning, so it should be
a good season.
Nicki Hansen
Junior

Ive always enjoyed


Nordic skiing, its something different from the
other sports. Im hoping
for a lot of good results
from the team this season.
Trent Bronnenberg
Senior

3127 Big Horn Ave Cody, WY 82414

MonFri 106, Sat 102

E & JOIN
ON

Keeping the Communitys Health a Priority!

YELLOWSTONE
SPORTS MEDICINE
Dr. Jimmie Biles, mD.

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Have a great season!

1362 Sheridan Ave. in Cody

Kirkhoff s Floor Covering

www.fremontmotors.com

Fri., 12/11 ..... Casper Relay ................................... 5 p.m.


Sat., 12/12 .... Casper Classic ............................ 9:30 a.m.
Fri., 12/18 ..... Jackson Freestyle ............................ 9 a.m.
Sat., 12/19 .... Jackson Classic ............................... 9 a.m.
Fri., 1/8 ......... Cody Freestyle ...................................Noon
Sat., 1/9 ........ Cody Classic ............................... 9:30 a.m.
Fri., 1/15 ....... Lander Classic ...................................Noon
Sat., 1/16 ...... Lander Freestyle ......................... 9:30 a.m.
Fri., 1/29 ....... Soldier Hollow Classic ..................... 9 a.m.
Sat., 1/30 ...... Soldier Hollow Freestyle .................. 9 a.m.
Fri., 2/12 ....... Laramie Freestyle ..............................Noon
Sat., 2/13 ...... Laramie Classic........................... 9:30 a.m.
Fri., 2/26 ....... State Freestyle @ Casper .......... 9:30 a.m.
Sat., 2/27 ...... State Classic @ Casper.............. 9:30 a.m.

CHS!

GO TEAM!
P: 307-587-6206 T: 800-733-3174 307-527-7049

took them to West Yellowstone


over Thanksgiving and that was
a great workout. We would love
to see Pahaska get hit with some
more snow.
The Broncs and Fillies open
the season at Casper Mountain
on Dec. 11-12.

Boys & Girls Varsity

Go

527-6929
2229 Big Horn Ave.
info@hbiinsurance.com
Business Farm & Ranch Auto Home Life & Health

practice at Pahaska about three


times per week. When theres
snow on the ground in town,
they get to practice on the football field.
Right now, were the only
team in the conference not
being on snow, Quick said. We

2945 Big Horn Avenue


307-527-7229

Get the Best for Less Today.

Go Broncs
& Fillies

720 Lindsay Lane, Suite B


307-578-1953 Toll Free: 877-372-4537

HOBO OIL CO.

Joan & Jim Hoffman


587-6991
2019 Big Horn Ave.
Cody, WY 82414

24 Hour Fuel Site: gasoline & diesel

Good Luck
broncs!

Cook Moving & Storage


2214 Big Horn Ave., Cody
307-587-3500 800-698-3665
email: cookms@bresnan.net

Good Luck Broncs & Fillies!


1172 16th Street, Cody, Wyoming 82414
307-587-4218
www.dennymenholtcody.com

Good Luck
Broncs & Fillies!
NEW IMAGE EYEWEAR

Professional Care Quality Products

(307) 587-5788

424 Yellowstone Avenue, Suite 110 Cathcart Health Center

Formerly Prudential Brokerage West, Inc.

587-6234 | 1-877-443-6234 | 1432 Sheridan Ave., Cody

www.codyliving.com

Good Luck
cody!

Fremont Beverages
1150 E. South St.
Powell
307-754-7290

Spirit Mountain Spas


& Wyoming Waterworks
2201 17th St., Unit 8 Cody
(307) 587-8775 (307) 587-5823

Barry P. Welch M.D.


Eye M.D.
Board Certified

424 Yellowstone Ave, Suite 110


Cody, WY 82414

Fax (307) 587-4896 1-800-654-9447 (307) 587-5538

Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015 - C-7

Winter sports previeW

Alpine ski team excited to put in practice time on snow


By RHONDA SCHULTE
Staff writer
This early in the season,
Alpine skiing head coach
Rick Stonehouse hasnt yet
seen the Fillies and Broncs
race downhill. And until
the first competition, hes
not sure how they will measure up against their opponents.
But the longtime coach
does know one thing.
Its going to be a lot of
fun. Theres a lot of great
kids out, he said. Theyll
have fun and feed off each
other. You know it will be a
good year.
With 15 boys and 13 girls,
Stonehouse is pleased so
many students have signed
up.
Its up to right where we
want it to be, in the upper
20s, he said. Thats a really good number for us.
After 17 years coaching
at CHS, 10 of those as head
coach, Stonehouse hasnt
lost enthusiasm.
I think its such a great
sport and every year its
exciting, he said. You
never know what youre
going to get whats going to
surprise you.
For the past few years,
the Broncs have posted competitive scores last year
finishing second behind
Jackson at state, a team that
traditionally monopolizes
first-place trophies.
They will feel the loss of
top senior placers Michael
Creel, Kevin Page and Trey
Montgomery.
We really dont know
until we see [teams] in the
first race, Stonehouse
said.
The first week of December they hadnt yet been on
snow at Red Lodge, making it hard for the coach to
assess the skiers skills, but
Stonehouse believes several
boys could develop into solid
competitors.
Hell look to senior Cade
Bragonier who earned first
team All-State last season by
scoring high in the pack and
scoring consistently.
The top five skiers make
up the varsity and five others race on the junior varsity
team. Whoever competes in
each category could change
week-to-week depending on
time and other subjective
factors.
Casey Wagler, who ended
the 2015 season 13th at
state as a sophomore, will
likely compete at the varsity level while seniors Silas
Ward, David Henrich and
Brad Sankey could fluctuate.
Theyll be on the JVvarsity bubble, Stonehouse
said.
Norwegian foreign
exchange student Paavo
Saukkonen hasnt raced in
alpine; however, he has
good fundamental skills,
Stonehouse said. It should
be fun to see what he does.
Four freshmen boys add
strength by numbers: Thomas Bower, Matthew Montgomery, Jakoby Vipperman
and Nathan Whalen.
We have a whole bunch
of new guys, Stonehouse
said. Theyre a little green,
but theyre having fun I
love it.
Others filling out the roster are Guinness Ruesch,

photo by RAYMOND HILLEGAS

Alpine skiers (from left) Thomas Bower, Holly Morgenweck, Ashley Christensen and Mackenzie Gunn sprint the straightaway of the
track as they train Dec. 3 for the upcoming ski season.
Ian Shwartz, Lathan Warner, Alex Aguirre and Garrett Gross.
Last year the Fillies
placed third at state. About
10 from that team have
graduated, including Sami
Heimer and Sara Reed, who
placed sixth and 11th at
state and garnered All-State
honors.
Of the 13 Fillies, eight are
freshmen.
That was a great surprise, Stonehouse said,
describing the girls squad as
a real mix.
New to high school Alpine
are Natalie Call, Mackenzie Gunn, Beth Henderson,
Cheyenne Hume, Holly Morgenweck, Julia Peterson,
Alexa Prosceno and Ellie
Schwab.

Alpine
Skiing
Coach:
Rick Stonehouse
Last season:
Broncs second at
state, Fillies third.
Top returners:
Broncs Cade Bragonier and Casey Wagler;
Fillies Ashley Christensen, Effie Clark and
Erin Henderson.
First meet: Jan.
8-9, Kelly Walsh Invite,
Hogadon Ski Area.
Home meet: Feb.
12-13, Red Lodge
Mountain.

Big Horn Redi Mix


wishes all athletes
the best of luck
this season!
Cody: 587-3140
Powell: 754-2923

Good Luck Broncs & Fillies

Stonehouse also coaches


track. Hes excited to have
senior runner Taylor Golden
try out skiing for the first
time. Another senior, Suzie
Tope, has been with the
team since ninth grade.
Shes shown a steady
growth curve throughout,
Stonehouse said.

He predicts juniors Ashley Christensen, Effie Clark


and Erin Henderson should
be pretty solid.
Hendersons younger sister Beth skied with the team
as an eighth grader. She will
probably qualify for a varsity
spot, Stonehouse said.
Hes ready for the stu-

dent athletes to have time


on the slopes, where he can
better evaluate their abilities. Broncs and Fillies train
Monday-Thursday on dry
land, and Friday and Saturdays at Red Lodge.
Im ready to get the kids
out running the courses
and hopefully by Christmas

break well see who will be


good, he said.
The first meet is soon
after New Years. Scott Bragonier and Taylor Hensen
are assisting Stonehouse, as
are volunteers Troy Koster
and Bret Reed. The season
will end with the state meet
March 4-5 at Jackson.

Boys & Girls Varsity

ALPINE SKIING

No course is ever the


same. The snow is always
different. There are tons of
variables.
Cade Bragonier
Senior

At races theres so
much anticipation, but if
you dont turn fast enough
at a gate and you screw
up, everything is gone.
Erin Henderson
Junior

Way to Go Cody!
Youre The Best In The West!

Rodeo West Exxon

130 Yellowstone Ave., Cody 527-5606

Canyon Real Estate, LLC

Lance Bower, Sales Assoc. 272-4114


1327 Rumsey Ave Cody, WY 82414

(307)527-7092

www.canyonrealestate.net

Medical Center
Pharmacy

Fri., 1/8 ......... Kelly Walsh Invite ........................... 10 a.m.


Sat., 1/9 ........ Kelly Walsh Invite ........................... 10 a.m.
Fri., 1/22 ....... Laramie Invite................................. 10 a.m.
Sat., 1/23 ...... Laramie Invite................................. 10 a.m.
Fri., 2/5 ......... Pinedale Invite................................ 10 a.m.
Sat., 2/6 ........ Pinedale Invite................................ 10 a.m.
Fri., 2/12 ....... Cody Invite @ Red Lodge ........... 10 a.m.
Sat., 2/13...... Cody Invite @ Red Lodge ........... 10 a.m.
Fri., 2/19 ....... Natrona Invite ................................. 10 a.m.
Sat., 2/20 ...... Natrona Invite ................................. 10 a.m.
Fri., 3/4 ......... State @ Jackson ..................................TBA
Sat., 3/5 ........ State @ Jackson ..................................TBA

Best of Luck Cody!


Were proud of you!

Rons Exxon
1502 Sheridan Ave 587-2431

Good Luck Broncs!

Teamwork doubles the success.


SALES SERVICE REPAIR

622 Blackburn Ave. 587-6812 800-718-1055 www.woodward-tractor.com

Supporting the Youth


of our Community!

527-6221 698 Yellowstone Ave.

321 Yellowstone Ave., Cody

GO CODY!

(next to Abbey Carpet)

~Your locally owned independent pharmacy~

1401 Sheridan Ave. Cody 307.587.4237

Go Team!

Lifetime Small
Animal Hospital
2627 Big Horn Ave., Cody, WY 307-587-4324

(307) 587-4679 307 17th Street

C-8 - Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015

Winter sports previeW

photo by RAYMOND HILLEGAS

Victor Bautista swims the butterfly during practice Dec. 2 at the Rec Center pool.

Swimmers look to rebuild with talented newcomers


By AMBER PEABODY
News editor
Coming into a new season
swimmers often forget how difficult the training is, especially if
they havent put in time during
the off-season.
Members of the Bronc swim
team were quickly reminded last
week when they started piling
up the yards.
Its not easy, senior Reese
Graham said. If you dont start
swimming before practice starts,
youre sloppy until you get into a
rhythm again.
Cody spent the first week
focused mainly on getting back
in shape.
Were working on building
stamina, technique and correct
stroke, Coach Buffy Allred
said. It will be a learning and
growing year. Were definitely
rebuilding.
Thirteen are out for the team
this year, with many new faces.
The Broncs return Noah Reeder,
Noah Maslak, Colton Curtis,
Graham and Ethan Walton.
No one is complaining and
weve been going hard, Curtis
said. We have to get back in the
habit of harder workouts and
early morning practices.
The new guys are starting to
figure out what stroke their best
at and are starting to get the
hang of it.
The Broncs will miss last
years seniors Jon Call and Seth

Todd, who had the top finishes


at the state meet.
They were tough to lose,
Allred said. Im hoping some
younger guys will step up to help
fill their shoes. Colton is already
stepping up to take more of a
leadership role, which is a great
thing.
Curtis and Maslak are the
lone individual state qualifiers
back. Curtis swam the 50 and
100 free, while Maslak competed
in the 100 free and diving.
I want to try as hard as I can
and have a good attitude about
everything, Curtis said.
With so many new faces,
Allred is trying to determine

each boys skill level. Making


things difficult was the fact they
had to share the pool with the
CMS swim team for the first
week of practice.
Its crazy and every man for
himself, Curtis said. Its hard
when you only have two lanes,
especially with speed differences.
Once they had the pool to

themselves during Week 2,


Allred could begin the process of
determining what each boy will
swim in their first meet. And
along with Maslak, two others
are learning to dive.
Divers really help with
the points, Graham said.
Hopefully we can win some
meets and when we show up
the other teams will know

Dec. 11 in Rawlins.
Its a place to start with
times, Allred said. I hope we
get better each meet.
She also would like to see a
few older boys swim state qualifying times in the meet.
Hopefully Colton will get
the 50 and 100, and Wyatt
[Campbell] and Noah [Maslak]
in a couple events, she said.

Boys Varsity

SWIMMING

Boys Swimming
Coach: Buffy
Allred
Last season:
Third at regionals,
ninth at state.
Top returners:
Colton Curtis,
Noah Maslak, Noah
Reeder, Reese Graham, Ethan Walton.
First meet: Dec.
11 at Rawlins.
First home meet:
Dec. 18 Cody Quad
at 4 p.m.

were competitive.
Allred is hoping every swimmer will have a decent base built
up by January. Graham agrees
it will likely take some time for
everyone to figure things out.
With so many rookies I
think well be into the season
some before we really see some
improvements, he said.
Cody opens the season

Swimming is so
much a battle with
yourself. Its fun to beat
other people but more
about trying to improve
yourself.
Colton Curtis
Junior

As a senior Im
looking forward to
bonding with my team
one last time and
having a fun last year. I
want to be competitive
and do my best.
Reese Graham
Senior

Fri., 12/11 ........Rawlins .......................................... 5 p.m.


Sat., 12/12 .......Rawlins Pentathalon ....................11 a.m.
Fri., 12/18........Cody Quad....................................4 p.m.
Sat., 12/19 .......Riverton Invitational ..................... 10 a.m.
Fri., 1/8 ............Lander, Powell..............................4 p.m.
Sat., 1/9 ...........Powell Invitational ........................ 10 a.m.
Sat., 1/16 .........Worland.........................................11 a.m.
Fri., 1/22 ..........Powell............................................. 5 p.m.
Sat., 1/23 .........Worland Invitational ......................11 a.m.
Tues., 1/26 ......Worland.......................................... 5 p.m.
Sat., 1/30 .........Lander Invitational ........................11 a.m.
Tues., 2/2 ........Powell............................................5 p.m.
Fri., 2/5 ............Riverton, Sheridan @ Sheridan..... 4 p.m.
Fri., 2/12 ..........3A West Conference @ Rawlins .......TBA
Sat., 2/13 .........3A West Conference @ Rawlins .......TBA
Fri., 2/25 ..........State @ Gillette..................................TBA
Sat., 2/26 .........State @ Gillette..................................TBA

P eople

Cody Enterprise

THURSDAY, December 10, 2015

D
Anne Hay, a
volunteer at the
Buffalo Bill Center of the West,
talks with Jim
Davis of Powell
as she shows
off Hayabusa, a
peregrine falcon
in the Draper
Museum Raptor
Experience on
Saturday.

The Eastside
Honor Choir
sings holiday
tunes as they
entertain family, friends and
those attending the annual
Holiday Open
House at the
Buffalo Bill Center of the West
on Saturday.

Ringing
in the

Season

Museum open house


draws large crowd

Bridger Lee, 5, poses as a gingerbread man as he enjoys the


annual event at the Center.

Cody Center for the Performing Arts dancers perform on the tile map in the Draper Museum of
Natural History during the annual Holiday Open House.
Photos by Raymond Hillegas

Dressed in the red and white of a candy cane, the young ladies of the Absaroka Mountain Thunder Cloggers dance in rhythm to the sounds of the Christmas season during their performance
at the open house.

9 from CHS
qualify for
state music
Nine Cody High School students
have been selected to participate in
the All-State Band and Choir Clinics on Jan. 17-19 in Cheyenne.
Students in the All-State Band
are Bridger Moss (Alto Saxophone
2) and Tayler Kindt (Tenor Saxophone).
Students in the All-State
Choir are Paige Ballard (Alto 1),
Hope Beier (Alto 2), Skylah Bree
(Soprano 1), Caden Crooks (Bass
1), Isaiah Duff (Bass 2), Elisha
Smith (Alto 1) and Evan Wambeke
(Bass 1).

With bells in hand, Wapiti Elementary students (from left)


third-grader Gabby Sanchez, first-grader Mia Broussard,
third-grader Regan Williams, fourth-grader Allie Broussard
and fifth-grader Ida Tallen perform a rendition of Jingle Bells
alongside their schoolmates during the annual Holiday Open
House on Saturday.

Speaker: Rich history at Natural Trap Cave


By SCOTT KOLB
Staff writer
Natural Trap Cave in the foothills of the
Big Horn Mountains has been a depository of
dead mammals for the past 100,000 years.
Gretchen Hurley, a geologist in the Cody
Field Office of the Bureau of Land Management, lectured a standing-room only crowd
on the geology and paleontology of the Natural Trap Cave during the Lunchtime Series at
the Buffalo Bill Center of the West on Dec. 3.
The cave is located 23 miles northwest of
Lovell on the Big Horn plateau. Many species
of extinct animals have been found during
excavations at the Natural Trap Cave. The
most extensive study of these specimens took
place in the 1970s.
During her lecture, Hurley highlighted a
BLM Management research project being
conducted at the site. She leads an interna-

tional team of paleontologists, paleobotanists


and scientists studying ancient climates and
DNA at the cave.
The area has a thick deposition of limestone, which is essential to the development
of caves, Hurley said. Limestone was then
uplifted and subjected to lots of erosion.
Hurleys presentation at the museum came
complete with life-size replicas of the skull of
an Ice Age short-faced bear and a dire wolf.
These were only a few examples of the
diverse array of extinct mammal species
trapped in the cave during the Pleistocene
Era. Over 30,000 specimens have been collected from the cave over the years.
Bones from lions, camels and mammoths,
along with many smaller creatures have
been discovered in the sediment during the
research work.
The cave is like a time-capsule giving a

glimpse to the type of animals roaming this


area of Wyoming in the distant past. Many
of these animals disappeared from the landscape during the last major extinction about
11,000 years ago.
The cave has a small 15-foot wide
entrance hole and its hidden from view by a
mound of limestone on the northeast side,
said Hurley, describing the location. Its also
obscured by vegetation and animals running
across the landscape didnt see the hole. They
then fell 90 feet to the bottom of the cave.
After the excavations some 40 years ago, a
protective grate was placed over the entrance
to the cave.
Even with modern equipment its still a
tricky place to explore.
(Scott Kolb can be reached at scott@codyenterprise.com.)

page

AlmAnAc

D-2

Cody Enterprise

THURSDAY, December 10, 2015

Police/Sheriff NewS
Sheriffs office news
includes:
Arrests
Shanna Rae Jolley, 26,
warrant
Heather Lee Johnson, 51,
second DUI within 10 years,
open container alcoholic beverage
Sandra Lee Bird, 50, warrant
Melissa Jean Flores, battery-non domestic violence,
child abuse-physical injury
family, interference with
police officer
Disturbance
Report of man kicked in
the head two miles from the
Elk Fork campground on US
14-16-20 West. Subject evacuated by friend, Nov. 29
Caller reported male made
suicidal statements to him
earlier in the night on County
Road 8VC, Clark, Dec. 5
Livestock got loose on
property on County Road
6SU. Caller reported they
destroyed his gates, ate his
hay and have been a general
nuisance, Dec. 5
Traffic
Possible abandoned vehicle
reported with flashers on and
windows down at Lane 10 1/2,
Powell, Nov. 29
Vehicle been left for a year
reported abandoned at Production Machine in Powell,
Nov. 30
Fed Ex truck involved in
crash with GMC truck at
GOOD2GO, Ralston, Dec. 2
A tractor/trailer belonging
to Ryans Trucking driving
with no tractor lights. Last
seen at MP3 on US 14A, Dec.
3
Search and rescue call
occurred at MP21 on US 212.
Ford Fusion slid off the road,
deputy responded and pulled
them out, Dec. 4
Other
Water tank heater fire
reported at Lane 9/Road 12,
Powell, Dec. 1
Fraud related charges
reported on Lane 17 as someone opened credit card in
mans name, Dec. 2
Report of an animal attack
on wildlife on Stagecoach
Trail, Dec. 4
Ambulance sent to incident at Mw Construction on
Panorama Lane, Dec. 4

Pontiac collided. No injuries


or blockage of traffic, Dec. 4
Traffic complaint reported
at Walmart on Yellowstone
Ave. Car with expired plates
left in parking lot, Dec. 4
Report of a black SUV running two stop signs near Mentock Park on Blackburn Ave.,
Dec. 4
Disappearance of vehicle
at the Silver Dollar Bar on
Sheridan Ave. Caller reported
his vehicle was parked in the
lot in back of bar and now its
gone. Doesnt believe anybody stole it and may have
been towed, Dec. 5
Motor vehicle crash at
Maverik store on Big Horn
Ave. One vehicle backed into
another, Dec. 7
Crash reported at Pinnacle
Bank on Yellowstone Ave.
with truck struck in the parking lot, Dec. 7

Report of property lost


at Cody Auditorium on
Beck Ave. Navy blue checkbook reported lost, but later
returned to owner, Dec. 5
R ecent police news
includes:
Arrests
Patrisha Kirk, 52, public
intoxication
John Hoburka, 33, interference with peace officer
Chelsea Hensley, 28, burglary
Disturbance
Intoxicated subject reported at Shamrock Apts. on 29th
St. Man walking around with
pants around his ankles in
parking lot, Dec. 2
Report of what sounded
like a gun shot coming from
behind K-Mart store on 17th
St., Dec. 3
Female caller on Cedar
Lane reported her husband
had a gun and she asked
him to put it down. Caller
then hung up and nobody
answered on call back, Dec. 3
Vehicle driving illegally on
property of Keele Sanitation
on Pearson Ave., Dec. 4
Possible attempt to extort
money. Man came into Cody
Law Enforcement Center on
River View Dr. and reported
the incident, Dec. 5
Harassment issues reported on Sheridan Ave./16th
St. by caller who wished to
remain anonymous, Dec. 5
Wo m a n w a l k i n g d o g
reported that a male subject
harassed her at Jubys Trailer
Court on 19th St., Dec. 7
Back door appeared to be
kicked in on 11th St. Possible burglary as items noticed
missing from garage and broken fishing poles in the driveway, Dec. 7
Traffic
Complaint reported of a
little gray Chevrolet car being
driven around with a plastic rear window on Sheridan
Ave., Dec. 1
Two trucks involved in
crash on 12th St./Sheridan
Ave., Dec. 1
Accident occurred at Midway Auto Sales on Big Horn
Ave. Caller took his truck in
for repairs and it was damaged by another vehicle while
on the lot, Dec. 2
Crash occurred on Rumsey

Cody Police Officers (from left) Rayna Wortham, Mark Martinez, Community Service Officer Jennifer Morris and Sheriffs Deputy Andy Varian
wrangle a deer caught in a hammock on Sunshine Avenue. The hammock was cut from the deers antlers and the uninjured deer was set
free. (Courtesy photo/Cody Police Department)

Deer-related incidents reported


Airbag deployed after car hit a deer
on WYO 120 North. Car off the road and
ambulance paged, Dec. 1
Red Dodge Dart hit a deer at Lane 9/
Road 4, Powell. No injuries reported and
deer was still alive, Dec. 1
Car hit a deer on Lane 9 in Powell. No
injuries reported and deer removed from
the roadway, Dec. 3
Crash with deer occurred at Gooseberry
Ave./10th St. between Dodge
Ram and a Toyota Tundra
with matching camper. Call-

Rest Area on WYO 120 South near Meeteetse, Dec. 3


Road hazard and traffic blockage after
deer hit at MP110 on WYO 120 North,
Dec. 3
Assistance requested of officers with a
deer stuck in a hammock on Sunshine Ave.
No rangers on duty, Dec. 6
Dead deer found on north side of residence on Cedar Lane, Dec. 7

er advises he continued and


didnt get a good look at other
driver, Dec. 3

fire cAllS
Cody Volunteer Fire
Department calls:
Nov. 24, 11:13 a.m., two
u nit s a n d 2 8 pe r so nnel
responded to alarm at 1817
17th St. Cancelled. Time in
service: 15 minutes.
N o v. 2 5 , 1 2 : 5 2 p . m . ,
one unit and 29 personnel
responded to alarm at 2102
Pioneer, apartment 201.
Changed smoke detector battery. Time in service: 12 minutes.
N o v. 2 7 , 7 : 2 3 a . m . ,
three units and 12 personnel responded to alarm at
Riley Arena, 1400 Heart
Mountain St. Investigated,
faulty gas monitor. Time

fifth DiStrict court


in service: 25 minutes.

Time in service: 20 minutes.

service: 29 minutes.

Nov. 27, 12:24 p.m., three


u n i ts an d 15 p e r sonnel
responded to report of fan
smoldering in attic at 1002
Rumsey. Removed fan. Time
in service: 35 minutes.

Dec. 1, 12:34 a.m., 12


personnel and three units
responded to report of dumpster fire in alley behind 23rd
Street and Peak Avenue. Cause
unknown; extinguished. Time
in service: 26 minutes.

Dec. 2, 7:07 a.m., 17


personnel and three units
responded to carbon monoxide alarm at 602 9th St. residence. Investigation turned
over to Black Hills Energy.
Time in service: 1 hour.

Dec. 1, 1:38 p.m., 29 personnel and two units responded to


fire alarm at the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints,
1719 Wyoming Ave. Cancelled.
Time in service: 7 minutes.

Dec. 5, 9:24 a.m., 23


personnel and four units
responded to call for assistance at 2420 Central Ave.
residence. Helped EMS lift a
patient. Time in service: 16
minutes.

Nov. 27, 4:56 p.m., three


u n i ts an d 18 p e r sonnel
responded to report of large
fire at 394 WYO 291. Owner
failed to call in burn permit.
Firefighters let fire continue
to burn per owners request.
Time in service: 18 minutes.
Nov. 27, 8:54 p.m., four
u n i ts an d 21 p e r sonnel
responded to two car crash
at 15th and Sheridan. Spread
absorbent on leaking fluid.

Dec. 1, 5:51 p.m., 20


personnel and four units
responded to one vehicle
crash at milepost 107 WYO
120 North. Assisted emergency medical personnel. Time in

Dec. 6, 6:24 a.m., 21 personnel and four units responded


to one-car rollover at 57 Lane
17 and assisted EMS. Time in
service: 1 hour 6 minutes.

PArk couNty circuit court


Recent fines paid,
bonds forfeited or other
penalties imposed in
Pa r k C o u n t y C i r c u i t
Court include:
RESIDENT
SPEEDING OFFENSES
James Hollinger, $90;
James Parks, $79; Cynthia
Bennett, $75; Clifton Carson, $78; Bryan Olenik,
$100; Rachelle Pederson,
$78; Marnee Crawford, $87;
Kurt Bailey, $72; Leonard
Zaffarano, $83; Stanislaw
Gidaszewski, $110; Jean
Wilder, $60; Lily Diaz, $85;
Shelly Waidelich, $73; Magdalena Siebert, $73
RESIDENT
OTHER OFFENSES
Steven Shaw Eck, compulsory auto insurance
first offense, child safety restraint system first
offense, 10-day sentence, 10
days suspended, six months
probation, $340;
George G. Ward, DUI
alcohol second offense

Cars crashed at intersection of Sheridan Ave./9th St.


Toyota Tundra and a white

Other
Property damage at Beck
Lake on 14th St. Caller
reported someone drove into
their gate, Dec. 1
Abandoned vehicle on Bleistein Ave. Caller advises the
car has been on his property
for over a year, Dec. 1
Property lost at the Thai
Restaurant on Sheridan Ave.
Woman missing wallet with
$60 in cash, Dec. 2
Welfare check needed on
18th St. Caller reported that
friend was snapshoting her
statements and sounded like
he was contemplating harming himself, Dec. 2
Bicycle found behind the
trash dumpster on Robert St.,
Dec. 2
Attempt to locate subject
at Jubys Trailer Court on
18th St. Caller reported her
cousin as missing, Dec. 3
Suspicious activity reported at Shoshone River access
on 12th St. Dark colored
Jeep Liberty running with its
lights off at the upper picnic
table area, Dec. 4
Building burglary occurred
at Olive Glenn Country Club on
Meadow Lane Ave. Caller got to
work and found all of the cash
drawers were empty, Dec. 5
Found a lost little boy
about 4 years old on 12th St./
Sheridan Ave., Dec. 5
Property found near Cody
Law Enforcement Center on
River View Dr. Caller found a
wallet on hood of car, Dec. 7

within 10 years, 40-day sentence, 33 days suspended,


credit 1 day, six months probation, $940;
Mark Holsinger, breach
of peace, 10-day sentence,
9 days suspended, credit 1
day, $340; Jennifer Lynn
Gould, leaving scene of accident: damage to attended
vehicle or property, 3-day
sentence, credit 3 days,
$290;
Ashley Monton, valid
drivers license, $120; Lance
Arnold, no registration and
improper display of tabs,
$75; Michael Cervantes,
expired/improper registration, $125;
Taleah Brewer, hunt big
game/trophy game/wild
bison in wrong area, $220;
Ronald Smith, take wrong
sex of animal, $220; Samantha Caldwell, cause bodily injury to peace officer,
bound over;
Joshua Hebert, manufacture or deliver methamphetamine or narcotic controlled substance, bound

over; Dennis Custer, stop


sign violation, $110; Thomas Salveson, no U-turn violation, $60; Judy Baggs,
failure to display license
plate on rear of vehicle, $60;
Michael Morris, expired/
improper registration,
$110; Nathan Underwood,
expired/improper registration, $110; driving while
license cancelled, suspended
or revoked, $410; Carter
Kennedy, no valid drivers
license, $120
NONRESIDENT
SPEEDING OFFENSES
Philip Roomet, Parkesburg, Penn., $254; Jason
McDonald, Sandy, Utah,
$78; Madelene Anderson,
Sheridan, $117; Caryn Bassett, Cheyenne, $111; Steven Kriner, Billings, Mont.,
$112; R onny Chesmore,
Lander, $87; Emily Hamilton, Kenmore, Wash., $75;
Grant Andrews, Oklahoma
City, Okla., $81; Grace Robertson, Lovell, $75; Warren Johnson, Demarest,

N.J., $70; William McCurry,


Grover, Colo., $60; Noah
Meier, Basin, $70; R obert Logan, Worland, Wyo.,
$88; Raymond Krol, Dandridge, Tenn., $94; Steven
Underwood, Sanford, N.C.,
$70; Terrence Tonn, Thermopolis, $76; Calvin Brown,
Basin, $75; Luke Bromley,
Lander, $72; Benjamin Middleton, Powell, $88
NONRESIDENT
OTHER OFFENSES
Bill Bullock, Red Lodge,
Mont., taking moose without a license, $1,540; Tab D.
Severns, Silverdale, Wash.,
hunt, trap, fish on private
land without permission,
$220; Gregory Costanza,
Bozeman, Mont., stop sign
violation, $115; Tanner
Jackson, Powell, failure
to display license plate in
front of vehicle, $65; Randy
Labeff, Spokane, Wash.,
take wrong sex of animal,
$125; David Zubke, La
Porte, Minn., take wrong
sex of animal, $220

CIVIL ACTIONS
Antonia Reyes Amaya; arraignment continued until
Dec. 28 at 11 a.m.
Van Fusselman; driving
under the influence, fourth
offense; evidentiary hearing
in case; Dec. 10, 2:30 p.m.
Steven Gilmore; theft of
fuel belonging to McIntosh
Oil, Powell, ordered to pay
restitution of $2,883; sentenced to not less than 3 years
and not more than 5 years,
credit 62 days; sentence suspended and defendant placed
on probation for 5 years.
CRIMINAL ACTIONS
Arraignment in State vs.
Tammy Friedman Dec. 3; delivery of methamphetamine,
Aug. 10, 2015; permit child to
remain in dwelling or vehicle
being used to manufacture
or store methamphetamine,
Aug. 10; delivery of schedule
II controlled substance, Aug.
12; defendant pled innocent
to three felony charges; pretrial conference, March 17,
2016; jury trial, Apr. 28, 2016.

Four counts dismissed


in State vs. Desaray Dawn
Ramirez, Dec. 3; driving under the influence; disturbing
the peace; possession of a
controlled substance; driver
of a vehicle which caused
an accident or damage substance, methamphetamine,
felony charge, possible sentence of not more than 20
years in prison and fine of
not more than $25,000; permit child to remain in room,
dwelling or vehicle that person knows is being used to
manufacture or store meth
Aug. 10, 2015, felony charge,
possible sentence of not
more than 5 years in prison
and fine of not more than
$5,000; delivery of schedule
II controlled substance Aug.
12, 2015, felony charge, possible sentence of not more
than 20 years and fine of not
more than $25,000; defendant entered plea of innocent Dec. 3; pre-trial conference set for March 17, 2016;
jury trial scheduled for Apr.
28, 2016.

ANimAl Shelter

Molly is a fun and friendly adult female. Ferguson


is an affectionate adult male cat. For more
information, call the Park County Animal Shelter,
587-5110. (PCAS photos)

Cody Enterprise -Thursday, December 10, 2015 - D-3

PeoPle
MuNicipAl court
Recent
fines
p a i d , b o n d s f o r f e i ted or other penalties imposed in Cody
Municipal Court
include:

$125, $10; Allison Hyatt,


f o l l o w i n g t o o c l o s e l y,
crash, $125, $10;
Tanner Souder, careless driving, $100, $10;
Teke Thunder, driving
while under suspension,
bench warrant failure to
comply with a court order.

RESIDENT
TRAFFIC OFFENSES
J o a n n W i n n i n g e r,
failure to yield/stop at
sign, crash, $125 fine,
$10 court cost; Michael
Owens, no tail lights, forfeiture, $40, $10; Owens,
no valid drivers license,
$750, $250 suspended;
Robert House, no valid/
expired registration, $60;
Garrett Castagne, exhibition of speed, $110;
George Albrecht III, no
proof liability insurance,
bench warrant failure to
pay court fine;
Maria Eagleman,
improper backing, crash,

RESIDENT
OTHER OFFENSES
Stephen Rex Sr., public
intoxication, $750, $250
suspended, $10 court
cost;
Aaron Kittle, illegal
possession controlled substance, bench warrant
failure to pay court fine;
Johathan Philips,
dog at large, $50 (two
counts); Philips, abandoned animal, $250;
Philips, no rabies tag displayed, $10;
Tehya Knight, aban-

doned vehicle, littering,


$150, $10.
NONRESIDENT
TRAFFIC OFFENSES
Monte Lewis, no valid/
expired registration, $60,
$10;
Christine Bunn, failure
to yield/stop at stop sign,
$125, $10;
J o s e p h D o n n e r, n o
valid drivers license, $60.
NONRESIDENT
OTHER OFFENSES
Kayla Harmon, malicious mischief/theft,
bench warrant failure to
comply with court order;
Kayloni Good, dog at
large, $60, $10; Good,
dangerous animal, $200,
$100 suspended; Courtney Hoffman, illegal possession of alcohol, $500,
$200 suspended, $10.

Billings Clinic reaches out

New ArrivAls
Ella Grace Reekers
was born Dec. 5, 2015,
at West Park Hospital to
Scott and Rachel Reekers
of Powell.
She weighed 8 lbs. 2 oz.
Grandparents are Greg
and Paulette Koepp and
Steve and Jolene Reekers.
Christiana Eve Vieira was born Dec. 6, 2015,
to Trajan and Hailey Vieira of Cody.
She weighed 6 lbs. 10
oz.
Christiana joins a
3-year-old sibling, Shaye.
Her grandparents are
Kathleen Vieira and Renita Byers. Elva Byers is
her great grandmother.
Jackson Taylor Felts

Billings Clinic Cody Manager Jesse Birch (left) smiles with Chris Galagan after
the clinic donated non-perishable food items to Provisions of Grace food pantry. Several patients donated to their favorite decorated turkey with cash or a
non-perishable food item. (Courtesy photos)

was born Dec. 1, 2015,


at West Park Hospital to
Alan and Amberlyn Felts
of Cody.
He weighed 7 lbs. 1 oz.
and was 21 inches long.
Grandparents are
David and Cindy Felts
and R ocky and Laurel
Sherman.
Maddison Elaine
Kittle was born Dec. 6,
2015, at West Park Hospital to Nate Kittle and
Deserea Ringler of Cody.
She weighed 6 lbs. 4 oz.
Maddison joins siblings
Nathan Croix Kittle,
age 1, and Zoie Kittle, 2.
Grandparents are
Clint and Sassy Ringler,
Otto and Mary Phillips,

and Adam and Sabrina


Aviles.

Billings Clinic Cody


staffers (from left)
Lacy Jones, Marika
Aldrete, Megan ONeil,
Emily Martin, Kathy
Shirley and Suzi Hamilton participated in
the distribution of
Thanksgiving cheer.
The items on the table
were used as center
pieces for Thanksgiving dinner at the
Senior Center, which
received a donation
from the clinic as well.

Divorces
The following divorces recently were
granted in Fifth District Court:
Tana J. Brown, aka
Tana J. Bennett, and Darold M. Brown

MArriAge
liceNses
Amanda Case, 23, and
Craig Shidler, both of Lovell;
Catherine Brixey, 65, and
Joseph Bernavich, 65, both
of Wapiti.

WORSHIP
This Week as a Family

ASSEMBLY OF GOD

CHRIST THE KING

CODY BIBLE CHURCH

FAITH COMMUNITY CHURCH

Loving God & One Another


Offering hope by exalting Christ
Love God Love Others
LUTHERAN CHURCH
1532 Bleistein Ave. 527-7339
Pastor: Levi Robinson
1267 Road 18 (Hwy 294), Powell
Lutheran
Church-Missouri
Synod
codyassembly@yahoo.com www.codyassembly.org
Church located 3 miles SW of Ralston 1/2 mile N off 14A
Associate Paster: Joel DeBlaay
1207 Stampede Avenue
Visit us on Facebook
Pastor: Kevin Piscator
Music: Joel Proffit
Pastor:
Dr.
Ron
Garwood
Corner of 16th Street & Bleistein Ave.
Bible Study ............................................... 9:30 a.m.
Youth Pastor: Raymond Loftis
Church
and
Church
Office:
587-3025
(Across from Basin Vision & Eastside School)
Sunday Worship ..................................... 10:45 a.m.
2137 Cougar Ave. P.O. Box 1475
Christ the King Preschool: 587-5774
Pastor Don Brockus
307-271-7835 revkev@bresnan.net
(307) 527-4488
Sunday
Worship
Service
...........................
9:00
a.m.
Sunday Services ...................11:00 a.m. & 6:30 p.m.
Early Morning Worship ............................. 8:15 a.m.
Sunday
School
.......................................
10:15
a.m.
Sunday School ........................................10:00 a.m.
Adult Bible Fellowship/
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
During School Months Christ the King
Wednesday Bible Study............................ 7:00 p.m.
Sunday School ....................................... 9:45 a.m.
Independent - Fundamental
Preschool
...............................................
Mon-Wed.
Please call 527-7339 for more information
Morning Worship Service ....................... 10:45 a.m.
Across from Dairy Queen Phone: 587-3687
Pastor Jim Barrick
BAH FAITH
CHURCH OF CHRIST
CODY CHRISTIAN AND
Sunday School ..........................................9:45 a.m.
Spiritualizing our Neighborhoods
2044 Stampede Ave. 587-3311 P.O. Box 1676
Service ......................................11:00 a.m.
Devotionals sharing the worlds sacred scriptures
MISSIONARY ALLIANCE CHURCH Morning
Sunday - Bible Study ................................ 9:30 a.m.
Evening Service ........................................ 5:00 p.m.
Christ-centered - Acts 1:8 - Family.
1st & 3rd Thursdays .................................. 7:00 p.m.
Morning Services .................................... 10:30 a.m.
Midweek Service (Wednesdays) ............... 6:30 p.m.
147 Cooper Lane East 587-3418
899-1206 for info
Evening Services ...................................... 1:00 p.m.
Kindergarten through 12th Grades Day School
General Information on the Bah Faith: www.us.bahai.org
Lead Pastor Mark Price
Wednesday Bible Study............................ 6:30 p.m.
Mon. thru Fri. .......................... 8:15 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.
1-800-22-UNITE (1-800-228-6483)
Outreach & Family Pastor Kelly Carnahan
So powerful is the light of Unity that it can
Youth Pastor Greg Brooks
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
illuminate the whole earth
Worship Arts Pastor Chad Chapman
CHURCH
OF
JESUS
CHRIST
OF
From the Writings of Bah llh, ProphetChildrens Pastor Jake Williams
CHURCH OF CODY
LATTER-DAY SAINTS-CODY STAKE Sunday Worship ............................... 8:30 & 11 a.m.
Founder of the Bah Faith
Where Everyone is Welcome
P.O. Box 1538
Sunday School ......................................... 9:55 a.m.
2025 23rd Street 587-2647
BENNETT CREEK CHURCH Cody I Ward ............................ 1719 Wyoming Ave.
(1 block south of Stampede & 23rd)
Ministering Together
Bishop Steve Reynolds
www.codyfirstpresbyterian.org
CODY CHRISTIAN CHURCH
11 Rd. 8WC, Clark, WY 307-645-3211
Study: 587-3855, Home: (307) 527-7780
Pastor: Pat Montgomery
The Place For New Beginnings
Hwy. 120 North of Cody 30 miles, west at
Sacrament Meeting .................................. 9:00 a.m.
Praise Music ..............................................9:15 a.m.
2637 Sheridan Ave. 527-7431
Edelweiss 2 more miles (Corner of 1AB and 8WC) Sunday School ....................................... 10:20 a.m.
Worship Service .........................................9:30 a.m.
Pastor: Bill Frey
Pastor Kurt McNabb
Primary ................................................... 10:20 a.m.
Worship .................................................. 10:45 a.m. Fellowship .................................... 10:30-11:00 a.m.
Imcnabb@nemontel.net
Priesthood Meeting ................................ 11:10 a.m.
Sunday School ..................... 11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m.
Sunday School ........................................10:00 a.m. Young Womens Meeting ........................ 11:10 a.m. Sunday School ......................................... 9:30 a.m.
Wed. Night Dinner: 5:30 p.m. Clases 6-7 p.m.
Morning Worship .....................................11:15 a.m. Relief Society .......................................... 11:10 a.m. Childrens Church
NURSERY CARE AVAILABLE
Call fo rcurrent Sun./Wed. evening schedule/youth Wednesday: Mutual .................................. 7:00 p.m.
activities. Where you are always welcome!
CODY UNITED
***
HARVEST CHURCH
For Sunday morning transportation to services call Cody II Ward .................................1407 13th Street
Live the Life
METHODIST
CHURCH
Rich Alberta, 307-645-3378
Bishop Fred Gifford
Open Hearts. Open Minds. Open Doors.
1601 Stampede Ave 307-213-9733
Study: 587-4840, Home: (307) 250-0101
1405 Beck Ave. (307) 587-4430
Sunday Worship Service.........................9 & 11 a.m.
BIBLE BAPTIST CHURCH
Sacrament Meeting ................................ 11:00 a.m.
Pastor: Karen McRae
www.harvestchurch.tv
Biblicist - Edifying Believers
Sunday School ....................................... 12:20 p.m.
Sunday Services
2302 Davidson Ave Phone: 586-4105
Primary ................................................... 12:20 p.m.
Child care provided for 5 and under
Dr. Harold Davidson - Pastor
LIVING FORTRESS
Priesthood Meeting .................................. 1:10 p.m.
Sunday School ........................................10:00 a.m. Young Womens Meeting .......................... 1:10 p.m. Praise Service ........................................... 8:30 a.m.
FOURSQUARE
CHURCH
Traditional
Service
.......................................
11
a.m.
Morning Service ......................................11:00 a.m. Relief Society ............................................ 1:10 p.m.
a place of hope
Afternoon Service ..................................... 1:30 p.m. Wednesday: Mutual .................................. 7:00 p.m. Sunday School (children ages 312)...... 9 to 10 a.m.
(Call church office, Mondays-Thursdays,
725 19th Street 527-4444
Wednesday Bible Study............................ 7:00 p.m.
***
9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. for further information.)
Pastor Kenny Lee
................................1407 13th Street www.codyumc.com E-mail: office@codyumc.com Sunday Worship Service..........................10:30 a.m.
BIBLE BELIEVERS BAPTIST Cody III Ward
Bishop Jeffrey B. Rudolph
Call for more service times and information.
Study: 587-5694, Home (307) 587-3023
CHURCH
cody4@bresnan.net www.codychurch.org
CODY CHURCH
Sacrament Meeting .................................. 9:00 a.m.
Where the Bible is enough.
Sunday School ....................................... 10:20 a.m.
1239 Rumsey Ave. (Next to the Thistle)
OF
THE NAZARENE
MOUNTAIN VIEW COMMUNITY
Primary ................................................... 10:20 a.m.
Pastor Nathan Merrill
808 Skyline Drive 587-4397
Sunday School ........................................10:00 a.m. Priesthood Meeting ................................ 11:10 a.m.
CHURCH OF GOD
CONNECTING PEOPLE TO CHRIST
Morning Service ......................................11:00 a.m. Young Womens Meeting ........................ 11:10 a.m.
2926 Big Horn Ave. (Powell Highway) 587-5437
THROUGH GENUINE RELATIONSHIPS
Evening Service ........................................ 6:00 p.m. Relief Society .......................................... 11:10 a.m. Sunday Worship ..................................... 10:00 a.m.
Pastor: Mike Neal
Wednesday Service .................................. 7:00 p.m. Wednesday: Mutual .................................. 7:00 p.m. Childcare available
Sunday Worship ......................................10:30 a.m.
Nursery Provided
***
Wednesdays .................................................. 7 p.m. Wednesday Prayer & Bible Study ............. 6:30 p.m.
www.mtnvwchurch.org
Cody IV Ward .......................... 1719 Wyoming Ave. Go to www.codynaz.com for Wednesday schedule
CHRIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Bishop Jimmie Edwards
Questions? pastorbrian@codynaz.com
The Rev. Mary Caucutt, Rector
Study: 587-3855, Home (435) 757-4829
NEW HOPE SOUTHERN
Sunday Services of
Sacrament Meeting ................................ 11:00 a.m.
BAPTIST CHURCH SBC
Holy Communion ..................8:00 a.m. & 10:00 a.m. Sunday School ....................................... 12:20 p.m.
1202 29th St., Cody
Tuesday Service of
Primary ................................................... 12:20 p.m.
Pastor: Frank Algarme - Phone: 307-899-4598
Holy Communion & Healing Service ....... 12:05 p.m. Priesthood Meeting .................................. 1:10 p.m.
Sunday School ..........................................9:45 a.m.
Wayferers Chapel Sunday Services
Young Womens Meeting .......................... 1:10 p.m.
Morning Worship .....................................11:00 a.m.
June - August ........................................ 10:00 a.m. Relief Society ............................................ 1:10 p.m.
Evening Worship ....................................... 6:30 p.m.
Church located on Yellowstone Highway across
Wednesday: Mutual .................................. 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study............................ 6:30 p.m.
from the Best Western Sunset Motor Inn
307-587-3849

These businesses
are helping
to bring you
this page.

LM Excavation

Cody Ace Hardware


2201 17th St., Cody
307-587-8555

Leroy Morris
Excavation-Backhoe-Dump Truck
Sand & Gravel - Portable Screener
527-6463

Stroupe
Pest Control

27 Years Serving the Area


David Jamison
527-6781

Holm, Blough & Co.

Civil Engineering &


Land Surveying
1402 Stampede Ave.
587-6281

3101 Big Horn Ave.


587-2231

Schrader Metal
& Design

Heating and air conditioning

2420 Sheridan Ave.


587-2288

Reno Collision Center

1432 Sheridan Ave.


587-6234

Cody's Choice For


Expert Collision Repair
307-527-5556

OPEN GATE FELLOWSHIP

3219 Sheridan Ave. 527-6231


Pastor: Jon Henson Jesus Is Lord
Sunday Worship ..................................... 10:30 a.m.
Childrens Church ....................................10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Youth Group Grades 6th-12th .............7:00 p.m.
Home Groups throughout the week.

SEVENTH-DAY
ADVENTIST CHURCH

Pastor Steve Nelson 307-431-2774


1608 19th St. & Central Ave. 307-213-5009
Services Begins .......................................10:00 a.m.
Worship ................................................... 11:00a.m.

ST. ANTHONY OF PADUA, Catholic

1333 Monument Drive, Cody


(behind Buffalo Bill Center of the West)
Rectory 587-3388 Center 587-2567
MASS SCHEDULE ST. ANTHONYS IN CODY
Saturday Vigil ............................................ 5:00 p.m.
Sunday ......................................................9:00 a.m.
Monday .................................................... 8:30 a.m.
Tues.-Fri............................... 8:30 a.m. & 12:15 p.m.
Saturday ................................................... 8:30 a.m.
CONFESSIONS
Wednesday ................................................ 6:30 p.m
Saturday ................................................... 3:00 p.m.
ST. THERESES IN MEETEETSE
Sunday ......................................................8:30 a.m.
OUR LADY OF THE VALLEY IN CLARK
Sunday ....................................................11:00 a.m.
ST. BARBARAS IN POWELL
Sunday (Latin Mass) ............................... 12:00 p.m.

TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH

3401 Sheridan Ave., Cody 587-2436 E.L.C.A.


Pastor Audrey F. Rydbom
Sunday Nursery available
Worship Sundays.................................... 10:30 a.m.
Sunday Christian Education (youth & adult) 9:15 a.m.
Open Communion ............................. Every Sunday
www.codytlc.org

UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH

#5 Nez Perce Drive 899-4120


7 miles from Cody on the Powell Highway
Pastor, John Sides - (307) 202-0169
Sunday Worship ..................................... 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study & Prayer ............. 7:30 p.m.

WAPITI VALLEY CHURCH

Independent - Bible Believing


3122 North Fork Highway
Pastors: Joseph Hutcheson, Noah Smith 587-4789
Sunday School ..........................................9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship .....................................10:45 a.m.
Afternoon Worship .................................... 1:00 p.m.
Wed. Bible Study ...................................... 7:00 p.m.

WORD OF FAITH FAMILY CHURCH

Learn How to Reign in Life


Holiday Inn - Cody at Buffalo Bill Village
1701 Sheridan Ave., Cody
Pastor: Robert 928-208-3175
The First Saturday and Sunday of each Month
Learn How to Reign In Life.......... Saturday, 6:30 PM
Learn how to be a success ........ Sunday, 10:00 AM
Be Refreshed in His Presence ...... Sunday, 6:30 PM

Chamber
Rons Exxon Cody
of Commerce
6 a.m.-9 p.m. Every Day

1502 Sheridan Ave.


587-2431

836 Sheridan Ave.

587-2777

F & R Insulation

Serving the Area Since 1975


Greenhouse Nursery Landscaping
84 County Road 2ABN, Cody (307) 527-6272

2229 Big Horn Ave.


527-6929

4873 Powell Hwy.


587-4194

3101 Big Horn Ave.


587-2231

Hobo Oil Co.

2019 Big Horn Ave.

587-6991

Mon-Sat.:
9 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
1250 Sheridan Ave.
587-5234

D-4 - Cody Enterprise -Thursday, December 10, 2015

PeoPle
Old Trail Town gathering
1) Model # 303 Little Rock $38,525BALANCE OWED $15,900
2) Model # 403 Augusta $42,500BALANCE OWED $16,500
3) Model # 502 Santa Fe $44,950BALANCE OWED $17,500

NEW - HOMES HAVE NOT BEEN MANUFACTURED

Make any design changes you desire!


Comes with Complete Building Blueprints &
Construction Manual
Windows, Doors, and Roofing not included
NO TIME LIMIT FOR DELIVERY!
BBB
A+ Rating

photos by RAYMOND HILLEGAS

Above, the wagon barn fills with visitors enjoying the sounds of live music and keeping warm with hot drinks
and homemade treats at Old Trail Town Christmas on Saturday. Below, John Nail and Gail Cole chat next to a
mound of antlers wrapped with colorful lights in the wagon barn.

Who Should Get a


Flu Vaccine? YOU!


Almost everyone older


than six months should
get a flu vaccine.
Protect yourself
and help keep
your family and
friends healthy.

Its Up to You
to Fight the
Flu!

Visiting Specialists

Cardiology
Collin Fischer, MD
Dr. Fischer provides diagnosis and treatment
of cardiovascular disease in adults. He is
board certified in cardiovascular disease,
echocardiography and nuclear cardiology.

Cardiac, Thoracic & Vascular Surgery

Accent your home


for the holidays

Alexander Sasha
Kraev, MD

J. Scott
Millikan, MD

David
Yandell, MD

Dr. Kraev, Dr. Millikan and Dr. Yandell are board-certified surgeons.
This specialty clinic focuses on evaluation and follow-up for
surgical treatment of vascular, pulmonary and cardiac systems.

Cardiology
Dermatology

Roger Ng, MD
Jared Lund, MD
Jeffrey Williams, MD
Urology
Lawrence W. Klee, MD
Richard B. Melzer, MD
The above doctors see patients at Billings Clinic Cody

Nephrology

Heather McGuire, MD
Kim Trostel, MD

Dialysis patients seen at West Park Hospital.


Nephrology patients seen at Billings Clinic Cody.

To schedule an appointment please call,


1-800-332-7156.
Sameh
Abuerreish,
MD

Cody
Board-certified
physicians

Unique

furniture

accents and accessories

307-527-7561
201 Yellowstone Ave.
Family Medicine
Adair Bowlby, MD
Douglas Morton, MD
Adam Peters, MD
John C. Trotter, MD
Jennifer Curtis, NP

Internal Medicine

1402 Sheridan Avenue

Downtown Cody, Wyoming 307-587-5520

Visit us online at www.mountainhomeinteriors.com

is board
certified in
oncology and
hematology.
He provides
diagnosis and
treatment of all types of cancer as
well as diseases of the blood.

Medical Oncology
& Hematology
Sameh Abuerreish, MD
Kerry Bower, PA-C

Pulmonary
& Sleep Medicine

Danielle Sankey, ANP

Stephen Mainini, MD, FCCP


Lisa Hobby, PA-C

Diabetes Care

SameDay Care

Dian True, MA, RN, CDE

Lisa Harvey, MD

billingsclinic.com

Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015 - E-1

Y O U R

M A R K E T

P L A C E

Classifieds
Reach all of Park County with the Cody Enterprise and Heart Mountain
Rustler plus reach the world online at codyenterprise.com

587-2231

Call
Today

Quick Look
100-155

Real Estate . . . . . . . . E-1

160-195

Rentals . . . . . . . . E-1 & 2

200-250

Merchandise . . . . . . . E-2

260-295

Animals . . . . . . . . . . . E-2

300-355

Transportation . . . . . E-2

360-395

Recreation . . . . . . . . . E-2

400-445

Announcements . . . . E-2

450-495

Services . . . . . . . . . . E-2

500-590

Employment . . . . . . . E-2

3101 Big Horn Ave. P.O. Box 1090 Cody, WY 82414

(307) 587-2231 codyenterprise.com

Call us Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

587-2231

Or you can place an ad online anytime at:

codyenterprise.com
Important details

Abbreviations: We try not to use them. Ads with


abbreviations are often hard to read and understand.
Using normal language is better for both buyers and
sellers!
Deadlines: For ads published Monday, we need them
by 5 pm the previous Thursday and for ads published
Wednesday, we need them by 5 pm Monday.

100
Homes For Sale

100
Homes For Sale
thedonleyteam.com

Real Estate Advice


You Can Trust
Theresa Donley
Broker-Associate

MAKE THE
DISCOVERY

3 bed, 2 ba home,
2 car + det. garage.
Open floor plan,
vaulted ceilings, deck,
12.36 acres in Clark.
Sold As Is.
$140,000
See all our listings at:

www.codysage.com
1131 13th St., Suite 103
P.O. Box 788 Cody, WY 82414
Bus: 307-587-4764
E-MAIL: sagerlty@wavecom.net

Phyllis M. Claudson,
Broker
ABR, CRP,
CRS, GRI

MLS

2-Bedroom, 1.5 bath home with


basement on 0.5 acre in city.
Large kitchen, formal dining
room, appliances, $198,800
(307)527-5600
Brand New Home: 1950 sq.ft.,
3 bedroom, 2 bath on the main
level with bonus room above
garage. Tile floors in bathroom
with large soaking tub in the
master bath, open floor plan,
vaulted ceilings, laundry room
with folding area. Custom knotty
walnut cabinets, with solid surface countertops. Luxurious and
w a r m i n t e r i o r f i n i s h . F i r st
months rent of $1,800 plus utilities, plus security deposit of
$1,000 required to move in. NO
SMOKING/NO PETS. Available
December 18th. (307)250-3743.
kipthiel@outlook.com

HOMES FOR SALE?


Try
codyrealty.com
For the latest listings.
Call JoAnn Humphries

307-272-9340

Coldwell Banker Antlers Realty, Inc.

Investors, Developers, Contractors: 1.33 acres in Cody


city limits. Duplex, 3-bedroom,
2.5-bath each side and 3-bedroom 2-bath home. Long-term
renters, room to build more.
$650,000 (307)899-8311.
OPEN HOUSE: Sunday
12/13/2015, 2 - 4pm. 19 Goshawk, Cody. MLS 10009362
Custom Built Home. Peaks to
Prairie Realty (307)250-7369
Place your classified!
(307)587-2231.

587-3883

130
Acreage - Lots

For Sale By Owner: 5-acre lot,


utilities at lot line. Desirable Development 7mi from Cody.
Great views. (612)741-3076.
MOBILE HOME SPACES for
Rent! At Green Acres Mobile
Home Park. 3 Months FREE
RENT or HELP WITH MOVING
EXPENSES! Largest Lots in
Cody! (307)587-3738.

140
Commercial Property
SHOPS FOR RENT: One 1000 sq. ft. shop for $360 per
mo. + utilities; and One - 2000
sq. ft. shop for $575 per mo. +
utilities. Nice concrete block
buildings and both shops
have 1/2 bath, gas heat and
overhead doors. Call
(307)587-6810.

160
Houses For Rent

1-Bedroom house, located 7


miles north of Cody, off Hwy
120, $475/month + security deposit and utilities, Call after 5pm
(307)587-2050
2 Bedroom condo with basement. Draw Street location. No
smoking, no pets. $685/mo.
plus utilities. Deposit and lease
required. (307)527-4399.
2-Bedroom, 1-bath duplex.
Great location, $650/month +
utilities. $650 deposit. References required. Available Now
(307)899-8311
3 bedroom one bath house in
town ready to rent. $1000 per
month, pets extra/ per pet/ per
month. Proof of employment required. (307)250-2110
3 bed, 2 bath home on 3 acres.
Ready for horses with 2 stall
barn and tack shed. $650/mo.
plus utilities. First, last and security deposit. No pets. Call
(307)272-9506.
4-bedroom/2-bath, Furnished or
unfurnished, walnut floors and
plantation shutters. No smoking,
no pets. Must have good credit.
Deposit and last month. 1401
Salisbury Ave. See Craig's List
for details or call (858)7753918.

3 bedroom, modular home, 1


3/4 bath. Small garden, big yard
and trees. Covered deck and
8x10 storage shed. 5 miles from
Cody. Non-smoking/Pets negotiable, $900/mo. + utilities. Possible horse pasture available for
2 horses additional charge.
$1,000 security deposit. $200
Non-refundable pet deposit. For
rental application (307)5270699 or (307)587-7889
4 Bedroom, 3 bath, 3,600 sq.ft.
Woodstove, deck, 2 Car garage, 6 miles NE Cody,
$1,300/mo. (307)899-4641.
Beautiful new 4 bedroom, 2
bath home in town with big back
yard. NO pets/NO smoking. Deposit required. Utilities not included. $1,500/mo. (307)5875894.
Duplex apartment on private
ranch, 7 miles north of Cody.
$575/month, +utilities and security deposit. Complete background check on applicants, NO
pets, NO smoking. (307)5872050 after 5pm.
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
All real estate advertising in this
newspaper is subject to the
Federal Fair Housing Act, which
makes it illegal to advertise any
preference, limitation, or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin,
or intention to make any such
preferences, limitation, or discrimination. Familial status includes children under the age of
18 living with parents or legal
custodians, and pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This
newspaper will not knowingly
accept any advertising for real
estate which is in violation of
the law. Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are
available on an equal opportunity basis. To report discrimination call Wyoming Fair Housing
at 1-866-255-6362. Wyoming
Relay: (Voice) 1-800-877-9975
or TTY at 1-800-877-9965 or
call HUD toll-free at 1-800-6699777.
For Rent in Cody: Nice, newly
remodeled home, 2 bedroom, 1
bath in quiet neighborhood, very
near park and shopping. Family
room/office, oak floors, w/d, d/w
and garbage disposal. Large,
no-maintenance yard. Off-street
parking. $875/mo. plus utilities.
No smoking, no pets. One year
lease required. (307)587-5748
or (307)250-9392.
4-Bedrooms, 2-Bath, A Great
Location! Year lease. No
smoking/No pets. $1395 + deposit. (307)899-3355
HOUSE FOR RENT: 5 bedroom, 3 bath house 1 block
from NWC in Powell. W/D, dishwasher, sauna, wood stove.
$1250/ month plus utilities
(307)754-2272 or (307)2544906.
Immediate availability: House
for rent, 2 bedroom, fenced
yard, hardwood floors, garage,
consider small dog, washer/dryer hookup. No Smoking, 1 year
lease! $895.00/mo., deposit required, references required.
Brett (307)899-5776
Like-new condos and duplexes for rent in Cody, include washer/dryer, dishwasher, micro, fridge, stove.
A/C, efficient utilities, some
have garages. See available
rentals at rentcody.com or call
American West Realty at
(307)587-9608.
Place your classified ad online
at your convenience! codyenterprise.com

160
Houses For Rent

Nice 1 bedroom house in town,


No smoking, no pets. $600.
(307)587-8135 or (307)5876539.
Townhouse for rent. 1204 Blue
Water Ct. 2BR, 1BA up; 840SF
unfinished basement- TTL SF
1,680. Fenced; Seasonal lawn
care required. Mower provided.
1 car garage. Washer/dryer.
Central air. Pet negotiable.
Available 12/2/2015. $900/mo.
(307)587-2313 or email qmappraisal@vcn.com for more details/pictures.
TWO TOWNHOMES, both 2
bedroom, 1 bath. Full unfinished basements, both with garages . $825 and $ 850 per
month, each with full month security deposit. All details and
p h o t o s a t w w w . r e a l e s t a te
cody.com. Theresa Donley, Realtor, (307)587-3883.
Furnished, Western guest
house $1,200 month. Includes
utilities, DirecTV, wifi, and w/d.
Available immediately through
May 1. References preferred
(307)578-6074.

165
Apartments

1 to 4 bedroom apartments &


houses available. Rents from
$475 to $1,400 plus security deposits. No Pets. Phyllis M.
Claudson, Broker 1131 13th St.
Ste. 103, P.O. Box 788, Cody,
WY 82414 (307)587-4764
2 Bedroom on Draw Street.
Heat Included. Coin laundry.
You Pay Electric. Starting @
$600/month Plus Deposit & 1year lease. No Pets/No
Smoking. (307)899-5916.
2 bedroom, 1 bath, laundry with
washer/dryer. Central location
in Cody. $650/mo., 1 year
lease. No pets, no smoking.
Call (307)272-8365.
Available: 2 bedroom in 4-plex:
Stove, fridge, dishwasher, air
conditioning. Lease required.
No Smoking/No Pets.
$675/mo., $675/deposit.
(307)587-9312 or (307)8996929.
Chinook Apartments downtown,
2 bedroom, clean, quiet and
convenient w/appliances, laundry, storage and heat included.
No pets or smoking. $500/mo.
plus $400 deposit. (307)5873456.
Cute 2-bedroom, Appliances,
W/D, dishwasher, blinds, carpet, carport, $625, No Pets.
(307)899-1409

CODYLIVING.COM

Place your classified


ad your way!

160
Houses For Rent

165
Apartments

165
Apartments

Convenient, downtown 2-bedroom furnished apt., upstairs.


Nice & Clean. $750/mo, plus
deposit. No pets or smoking.
Minimum 6 month lease.
(307)250-0040.

Shamrock
Apartments

Downtown, furnished, small 1bedroom apt., appropriate for


one individual, $450/month +
deposit, 6-month minimum
lease. No Smoking/No pets.
(307)250-0040.
FOR RENT: Two bedroom
apartment. $600 per month plus
utilities, No pets, No smoking.
Downtown Powell. (307)7542272 or (307)254-4906.
Furnished sleeping rooms available by the week or month, 20
mins west of Cody on the North
Fork Hwy. $550/mo plus $150
security deposit includes all utilities, wifi and DirecTV. Apt size
refrigerator and microwave included. Call or text Ron at
(307)899-5594.
In Cody: 2 bedroom apt. in 4plex. All new flooring. Very
clean. Parking on site. Utilities
not included. No smoking/No
pets. $600/$600. (914)4731128.
Mountain View Manor: Taking
applications for 1-bedroom and
studio apartments. Age/Income
limits apply. Non-smoking.
$330-$457/month. See manager at office or call (307)5875244
Multiple apartments for rent in
Cody! Some ground floor,
handicap accessible, like
new. 2bed/1bath, private
parking, some include dishwasher, clothes washer/dryer.
Visit www.rentcody.com or
call American West Realty at
(307)587-9608.
MUST SEE - Quality Built
New Apartments - 2 BR - All
appliances, includes
washer/dryer. No smoking, no
pets. Elderly & Handicap,
friendly. $850/mo. + utilities.
Call Bill (307)250-6107 or Rita
(307)587-5873.
Quiet 2-bedroom apartment.
$690 rent $600 deposit. Includes heat, water, appliances,
drapes. Laundry available. No
pets. (307)587-9708 or
(307)272-6427
It's Your Right to Know!
Read Public Notices in
the Cody Enterprise.
Advertise your way! (307) 5872231 codyenterprise.com

2 Bedroom Available.
Rent based on income.
Please contact HDA
Management at 307-250-4710
or toll free 1-888-387-7368 for
information and application.

HDA
Management

Equal Housing Opportunity

Upstairs 2-bedroom furnished


apartment for rent on the North
Fork Hwy 20 minutes west of
Cody on the road to Yellowstone. $700/ mo includes all utilities, wifi and 95 channels of
DirecTV. $250 security deposit.
No smoking or pets. Call or text
Ron at (307)899-5594

170
Mobile Homes
For Rent

3 bedroom, 2 bath for rent in


Powell. No smoking. No pets.
Contact Karen at (307)2544686.
3 bedroom, 2 bath, no smoking.
$850/mo. + utilities. Green
Acres Mobile Home Park.
(307)587-3738.
Beautifully refurbished 2 bedroom, 1 bath 14 X 60. $750 per
month, $700 security. In
wooded park on river in Cody.
Photos at RiversBendMHP.com
(307)587-9089.
Large 2-bedroom 1-bath, Mobile for rent. $525/month $525
deposit + utilities.
Call
(307)899-5596 or (307)8995557
ON THE RIVER! Best mobile
home rental in Cody! 14 X 70
with large riverfront deck. Newly
renovated throughout. $995 per
month, $750 security. In
wooded park in Cody. Very
private home, nestled O N
CURVE OF SHOSHONE
RIVER. RiversBendMHP.com
(307)587-9089.

175
Storage

Storage Units, 10x20, $55


month (307)272-5092
We'll publish your classified ad
message in 97% of Wyoming's
newspapers that reach more
than 163,000 households in the
state. Just $135 for a 25-word
message; Call the Cody Enterprise, (307)587-2231.
codyenterprise.com

WELL MAINTAINED HOME IN EXCELLENT


LOCATION
Quiet neighborhood, bordering #15 Fairway. Beautifully
landscaped with mature trees, shrubs & flowers, all watered
with an automatic system. New Dishwasher, New Double
Ovens. Minimal maintenance with Girard metal roof & brick/
stone exterior. Covered back deck with hot tub and fenced in
area. $439,900 (10010190)
NEWLY PRICED!
Ranch style design, 4 BR, 3 BA with full basement. Oversized
double garage/work shop with built in shelving/cabinets and
overhead radiant heater. Enjoy the rim lot privacy. River &
mountain views from the backyard. Close to public park and Stock
Trail. Now $319,500. (10010726)
PRICED TO SELL!
This roomy well-kept 5 BR, 3 BA home has many special
upgrades such as tile floors, tile shower, granite and travertine
countertops. No maintenance steel exterior, fenced yard with
automatic sprinkler system & nice deck for entertaining. Take a
look at this one! $289,000 (10010213)

Formerly Prudential Brokerage West, Inc.

587-6234 | 1-877-443-6234 | 1432 Sheridan Ave., Cody

A member of the franchise system of BHH Affiliates, LLC

E-2 - Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015

PeoPle

CHS student officer learns valuable life lessons


By AMBER PEABODY
News editor
A momentous event in Cody
senior Quentin McHoes life
recently came to a close.
After being elected last year,
McHoes performed his final
duties as Wyoming Association
of Student Councils vice president at the state convention
Nov. 16-17 in Green River.
Things went well, he
said. There were a lot of great
ideas and great talent. I was
upset when it was over. I had
the opportunity to see so many
people and learn so many
things. I discovered who I was
as a person and its hard to let
it go.
McHoes became involved
in student council in seventh
grade and has held a position every year since, including senior class president this
year.
As a young person, I
thought I knew everything
and wanted to be the center of
attention, he said of his original reasons for joining. Later
it became a passion.
Last year he decided to run
for state vice president. Two
powerful speeches helped him
win the primary and general
elections.
The real reason I ran was
I wanted to prove to myself
I could do it, he said. I was
very nervous going into it and
I cried when I realized I was
going to win.
According to the WASC
website, the duties of the vice
president include:
Perform the duties of the

2015-16 CHS Student Council


Student Body

President - Paige Ballard


Vice President - Scout
Vannoy
Secretary - Zeta Eirtree
Business Manager - Cassidy Alexander
Officer at Large - Tatum
Buss

Senior Class

President - Quentin
McHoes
Vice President - Sterling
Boone
Officers at Large - Austin Asay, Aaron Erickson

Junior Class

President - Gaston
Osterland

Cody senior Quentin McHoes (left) served as vice president for the Wyoming
Association of Student Councils last year. He is pictured with (second from left)
Executive Board member Ben Schanck, Secretary Benjamin Finch and President Griffin Leemon. (Courtesy photo)
president in the absence of the
president.
Oversee the activities of
all committees.
Perform all duties delegated by the President.
Serve as chairperson of
the Process Committee.
McHoes, along with President Griffin Leemon of Lander
and Secretary Benjamin Finch
of Glenrock met occasionally
throughout the year for execu-

tive board meetings and to discuss plans for the WASC convention.
I was very busy because
you always have to maintain
things, he said. You had
to keep up on everything at
schools around the state.
They also attended the
Wyoming summer convention
and nationals in Albuquerque,
N.M., on June 21-28.
I love the metaphor NASC

is WASC on steroids, he said.


It couldnt be more true.
All the work led up to this
years WASC convention.
McHoes was is in charge of all
platforms or resolutions and
oversaw all workshops.
The platforms were:
Platform 1: An Act to Promote the Decrease of Unsustainable School Wastefulness
and to Promote Environmentally Conscious Stewardship.

Platform 2: An Act to Promote the Active Participation in


Supporting National and International Observances Days.
Platform 3: Wyoming is
Known as the Equality State.
Platform 4: Making the
Projects to Unify a Reality.
There were about 100 workshops about a variety of topics
including school and community involvement, safe driving
and teacher appreciation.
For his efforts McHoes was
named to the All-State Student Council. And though he
was busy, he said he enjoyed
the convention.
When I ran last year I was
the most serious candidate
and was the polar opposite of

Classifieds

Vice President - Evan


Wambeke
Officers at Large Gaelan Williams, Sarah
Roberts

Sophomore Class

President - Kaden Bollinger


Vice President - Lucille
Sax
Officers at Large - Guinness Ruesch, Ethan Walton

Freshman Class

President - Lawren
Johnson
Vice President - Stephania George
Officer at Large Mackenzie Hansen
everyone else running, he
said. When we gave our officer farewells this year, I was
more relaxed.
He said overall he is happy
with his experience as vice
president, only wishing he
could have done more.
There are some things I
wish I could do over but hindsight is 20/20, he said.
In his final year of student
council at CHS, he said he
hopes to reinvent the dynamic
of the student body.
My senior quote is, Those
six minutes in the mall were
all too important, he said.
I think people are focused on
the wrong things but its not
too late to change.

To sell your item call (307) 587-2231 or online at codyenterprise.com

175
Storage

10
15
15
15
18

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x
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x
x

20
30
40
50
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240
Garage Sales

440
Personals

500
General Employment

PubliC NotiCes

Stor-N-Lock
STORAGE UNITS

200
Miscellaneous
For Sale

208 N. Blackburn St.

307-272-6967

180
Commercial For Rent

Beautiful work spaces for artists


at Stone Soup Studios. Available monthly or short-term for
classes. Call Linda, (307)5873694.
Business/Office space for
lease in busy Big Horn Avenue Plaza. 2706 Big Horn Ave.
1300 + sqft, high speed internet. Avaliable. (307)587-3755
or (307)272-3755.
Commercial shop with office
and bathroom in Cody. 1700
sq.ft., lots of parking, fenced
yard, storage shed. Walk-out
doors and one rollup. $800 a
month. Contact American
West Realty at (307)5879608.
Commercial shop/warehouse
for lease: Great location,
2,880 sq.ft. 36' x 80' deep, 16
ft interior side walls with 2 14ft garage doors. Overhead
gas forced air heat, 2 bathrooms, secure lot with 6' chain
link security fence, new construction. Lower monthly rate
with long term lease. Call
(307)899-9851
In town, 1,800 sq.ft., available
January 1st. $550/mo. plus utilities. (307)250-2984.
Office available in Cody, 1414
17th St. Halfway up Greybull
Hill. Just over 700 sq. ft. Call
(307)899-9593
Office Space for lease, 900 sq
ft. Available Now, Prime
downtown location. (307)8993165
Small office space for rent.
$450/deposit, $450/mo. includes utilities. (307)587-4550.

codyenterprise.com
Advertise here (307)587-2231
Place your classified ad online
at your convenience! codyenterprise.com

Regular Part Time Office Assistant I: City of Cody Recreation


Center- The primary duties include a variety of administrative
Don't forget to get your ad
duties including reception of
into the Cody Enterprise
guests, creating and maintainby 5 p.m. Mondays
NEED RAIN GUTTERS? Call
ing records, cash balancing and
for the upcoming weekend.
Simmons' Ironworks (307)587your right to know
correspondence. This position
Make Your Sale aIt's
Success
Have you been affected by requires the employee to work
8259 or (307)899-8259. 5"or 6"
with a Garage Sale Kit;
loss? A free support group, shift work including early mornseamless.
includes Ad, Signs, Price
"Hope
and Healing," is held ings, evenings, weekends and
Stickers and More.
Thursday's at YBHC, 2538 Big holidays and will work a minimOnly $15.
Horn Ave in Cody from Noon to um of 20 hours and maximum
You don't want to be missed.
1:00 pm and Wednesday's at of 28 hours per week. ApplicaYBHC 627 Wyoming Ave, Pow- tion and complete job descripell from Noon to 1:00p.m. Call tion may be obtained from City
270
(307)587-2197.
Hall at 1338 Rumsey Ave., by
Horses
emailing debl@cityofcody.com
Benson Farrier Service since Immunization clinics for chilor on the Citys website
To sell your
property
call (307)
587-2231
online
codyenterprise.com
drenor
and
adultsat
are
held at the
1994.
Conar Benson
(307)868www.cityofcody.org. Applica2383 home or (256)558-2801 Public Health Office every
tion deadline is Friday, DecemTuesday from 1-4pm. For apcell.
ber 18, 2015 by 4:00 p.m. Base
pointment call (307)527-8570.
pay is $12.72 per hour, plus
310
partial benefit package. The
450
Trucks
City of Cody is an Equal OpporServices
2012 Ford F350, King Ranch
tunity Employer.
Save 10% on
Dually/Crew cab. Only 14,000
520
miles, like new. B&W 5th wheel
hitch, liner in the bed and bed
Motels/Restaurants
Tammys Wine
cover. $48,900, a new one is
The Irma restaurant hiring excall (307) 587-2231 or online at codyenterprise.com
Stella RosaTo find a new
overemployee
$80,000. (307)254-3573.
perienced servers. Apply in per20
Stella Rosso $
son.
320
A fresh, semi sparkling, sweet
Sport Utility Vehicles
fine jewelry
530
red wine. Produced using the
charmat method, which gives a
Skilled
Trades
1356 Sheridan Ave Cody 587-9959
Christmas Special 1994
sparkle to the gorgeous strawberry
227 N. Bent Powell 254-5562
Toyota 4-Runner, 6 cyl,
Albertsons - Cody, WY
aromatics. Although sweet, the
$3200. (307)421-2090
Now Hiring Meat Cutter
I Care Sharpening can serve
acidity balances it out perfectly.
Experience Preferred
Best served chilled along side fruit
your sharpening needs. Drop off
400
Apply Online at:
and cheese.
and pick up at Ace Hardware or
Albertsons.com
Announcements
call (307)587-9716 anytime.
If someone else's drinking
codyenterprise.com
troubles you, attend Al-Anon Responsible young lady seekmeeting at West Park Hospital ing houses or businesses to
1801 17th 587-3380
in the Cedar Mountain Room. clean. Experienced. References available. Call or text
This newspaper is not respons- Tuesdays 7:00 - 8:00 p.m. Use Haley at (307)213-0176.
RETAIL SPACE FOR LEASE: Apthe
cafeteria
entrance.
ible or liable whatsoever for any
Firewood for sale: $160.00/
cord. Free delivery
Powell/Cody area- Call anytime
(307)254-5765

PLANNING
A GARAGE SALE?

CODY Narcotics Anonymous


MEETINGS- Mondays at 7
p.m., Church of Christ Episcopal Church, 825 Simpson
Ave. All open meetings. Mailing
address: P.O. Box 1164 Cody,
WY 82414.

Real estate
HelP WaNted
BuyiNg
goLd & SiLver

Wine of the Month

15

The Golden Buffalo

540
Professional

I ndoor Fir earms Range


Manager/Instructor: The
new Cody Firearms Experience indoor range is looking
for a full time range manager.
Must have previous range experience, supervisory experience and possess current
NRA Instructor ratings for Pistol, Rifle and RSO minimum.
NRA Training Counselor preferred. Salary Negotiable. Benefits and housing available.
EOE. Send resume to PO
Box 2514, Cody. WY. 82414

560
Sales
Inside Sales - Crum Electric
Supply has an opening for an
Inside Sales person in our
Cody, WY location. Individual
will be responsible for sales
and application assistance to
all market segments served.
Knowledge of residential,
commercial and industrial
electrical products is desired.
Extensive training will be
provided. The position offers
development, training and the
opportunity to advance into
other parts of the company.
Complete benefit package including 401K plan, health insurance, & paid vacation.
Please e-mail your resume to
employment@crum.com or
drop off at our location, 800
Elk St. Rock Springs, Wyoming 82901.

Statewide Classifieds

claim made by an ad in this


newspaper or for any of the services, products or opportunities
offered by advertisers. The content of any advertisement is the
sole responsibility of the advertiser.
We reserve the right to refuse
advertising we deem inappropriate or unacceptable.

240
Garage Sales

Garage Sale: Lots of nice


Christmas Decorations, Department 56, guns, ammo, generator, tools and other miscellaneous. Saturday 8am-2pm.
1727 Eagle Nest Trail, Powell,
WY
We'll publish your classified ad
message in 97% of Wyoming's
newspapers that reach more
than 163,000 households in the
state. The cost? Just $135 for a
25-word message; additional
words at $5 each. Call the Cody
Enterprise (307)587-2231 for
details.

410
Lost and Found

Please Help: Lost Woman's red


face stainless steel Swiss Army
watch. Reward. Call (307)5877070, was a gift.

440
Personals

AA meets at 1220-12th Street


every night at 6 p.m. AA also
meets Monday through Saturday at noon and Sunday at
9:00 a.m. Open meeting
Monday 6:00 pm, and Friday
6:00 pm. For more information,
call (307)587-3024.
ARE YOU A WOMAN FACED
WITH A DRINKING PROBLEM? Perhaps an Alcoholics
Anonymous Women's Meeting
can help. Saturday 10:00 am.
1220 12th Street, Cody.
Pregnant...Now What? Free,
Confidential Support. Serenity
Pregnancy Resource Center,
Cody (307)213-5025.

T.S. Painting: Residential and


Commercial. Free Estimates.
References available (307)2502709

500
General Employment

RESPITE CARE AIDE: Wallace H. Johnson Group Home:


Multiple part time positions
available. Shifts vary. Nights
and weekends. Observe and
provide assistance to clients living at the Group Home. For
more information visit www.ybhc.org
We'll publish your classified ad
message in 97% of Wyoming's
newspapers that reach more
than 163,000 households in the
state. The cost? Just $135 for a
25-word message; additional
words at $5 each. Call the Cody
Enterprise, (307)587-2231, for
details.
It's Your Right to Know!
Read Public Notices in
the Cody Enterprise.

proximately 8,200 square feet of


prime retail space on North Federal Blvd. in Riverton, WY. Call
Visor, 307-857-3799 or email zorstore_1@bresnan.net
-------------------------------------------FREMONT COUNTY SCHOOL
DISTRICT No. 25, Riverton, WY.
Position open immediately. Teacher at Frontier Academy Alternative
High School. (Must be certified
in secondary level content areas
of: Social Studies, Math, English/
Language Arts or Science. Seeking candidates with multiple secondary content endorsement and/
or At Risk Certification via WY
Professional Teaching Standards
Board). If interested in obtaining
information or applying, please
contact: Riverton Workforce Services, 422 E. Fremont, Riverton,
WY 82501. 307-856-9231. Applications are received electronically
at: http://www.applitrack.com/fremontcountysd/onlineapp Fremont
County School District No. 25 is

an Equal Opportunity Employer.


-------------------------------------------WESTERN STAR POST FRAME
BUILDINGS - 24x32x10- $6,763,
30x40x10- $8,713, 36x48x12$11,842, 42x56x14- $16,081.
Complete material packages with
instructions. Experienced and insured crews available. 1-800-6585565.
-------------------------------------------WHATS YOUR GOVERNMENT
UP TO? Find out for yourself! Review public notices printed in all
of Wyomings newspapers! Visit
www.wyopublicnotices.com
or
www.publicnoticeads.com/wy.
-------------------------------------------HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL?
WANT TO ANNOUNCE YOUR
SPECIAL EVENT? Reach over
380,550 Wyoming people with
a single classified ad when it is
placed in WYCAN (Wyoming
Classified Ad Network). Only $135
for 25 words. Contact this newspaper for details.

WELL PUBLISH YOUR CLASSIFIED AD message in 97% of


Wyomings newspaper that reach 181,000 households in the state.
The cost? Just $135 for a 25-word message; additional words are $5
each. Call the Cody Enterprise, 587-2231, for details

Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015 - E-3

PeoPle

UW narrows president search to final 3; trustees meet Dec. 18


The ASSOCIATED PRESS
The University of Wyoming
Board of Trustees has selected three
finalists all currently with institutions outside the state for president of the states only public fouryear university.
The candidates announced Friday are Jeremy Haefner, senior vice
president for academic affairs and
provost at the Rochester Institute
of Technology in Henrietta, N.Y.;
Duane Nellis, president of Texas
Tech University in Lubbock, Texas;

and Laurie Nichols, provost and visit on Wednesday and Haefner on conducted its search for a replaceIf a decision is made before Jan.
executive vice president for aca- Dec. 14.
ment for outgoing president Dick 1, the new president will be UWs
third in as many years.
demic affairs at South Dakota State
Public meetings will be held McGinity in secret.
University in Brookings, S.D.
for the finalists to visit with facThe original timeline set by the
McGinity was appointed to the
I find all three of them to be ulty, students, staff and community trustees for selecting a new presi- job of administering the univerquality people that I think could members. In addition, the Board of dent was early next year. But with sity with about 13,400 students
Notice
lead the University of Wyoming, Trustees Public
will accept
public comment other colleges across the country in January 2014. He replaced
Department
Environmental
Quality,
Division
of Air Quality
PUBsaid trustee Dave Bostrom,
who of
until
Dec. 15 and
conduct
closed
looking
to fill positions, the UW Bob Sternberg, who resigned in
LIC NOTICE:
In accordance
6, Section 2(m)
of has
the been expedited.
chaired one of the two search
com- interviews
withwith
eachChapter
candidate.
search
November 2013 after less than
Wyoming Air Quality
Standards
Regulations,
notice isIf
hereby
mittees.
Trustees
haveand
scheduled
a spewe get it done in a shorter five months on the job amid
given that
thecial
State
of Wyoming,
Department
Environmental
Each of theTocandidates
was call
meeting
on Dec. or
18.online atofcodyenterprise.com
time period, we dont have the risk many complaints from faculty
sell your
item
587-2231
Quality,
Division(307)
of Airtrustees
Quality, released
proposes
to approve
request
scheduled to make public
appearThe
the
names a of
losingbyqualified applicants who and others about changes SternNorthwest College
Mesa
Natural
Gas
Solutions
LLC
to
operate
300
temporary
a decision to go elsewhere, berg made among top adminisances on campus, beginning Mon- after a closed-door meeting on Fri- make port2015-2016
Trapper Arena Renovation
rich to
burn day.
natural
gas fired
engineshad
consisting
of thirBostrom
said.
day with Nellis. Nicholsable
is set
Until
now,generator
the university
trators.

Classifieds

ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS


teen (13) 106 hp Doosan 8L Naturally Aspirated engines, thirtyeight (38) 199 hp Doosan 8L Turbo Charged engines, forty-five (45) Separate Sealed Bids for the 2015-2016 Trapper Arena Renova272 hp Doosan 11L Turbo Charged engines, one hundred-eight tion Project will be received by Northwest College, the OWNER, at
(108) 362 hp Doosan 14L Turbo Charged engines, thirty-two (32) the Orendorff Administration Building, Room 106, located at 231
456 hp Doosan 18L Turbo Charged engines, and sixty-four (64) West Sixth Street, Powell, Wyoming 82435 until 2:00 P.M. prevail550 hp Doosan 22L Turbo Charged engines to be operated at oil ing local time, January 5, 2016. Bids will be publicly opened and
and gas well sites at various locations in Albany, Campbell, Car- read aloud.
bon, Converse, Crook, Fremont, Goshen, Johnson, Laramie, Lin- The Work includes and consists of: furnishing all labor, operations,
coln, Natrona, Niobrara, Park, Platte, Sweetwater, Uinta and West- materials, accessories, incidentals, services, and equipment for
work on the specific aforementioned project. The specific Work inIt's your right to know
on Counties in Wyoming.
For the duration of the public comment period, copies of the per- cludes: furnishing all labor, materials, services and equipment remit application, the agencys analysis, and the public notice are quired for the renovation of the Northwest College Trapper Arena
available
for public inspection online at http://deq.wyoming.gov located at 766 Road 2AB South, Cody, Wyoming 82414. Materials
Notice of Intent to Subdivide
Hagen Properties, LLC intends to subdivide a 9.42 acre parcel of /aqd/new-source-review/resources/applications-on-notice/ and at and/or work not specifically mentioned which are necessary in orland located in Tract 46, T. 46 N., R. 102 W., 6TH P.M., Park the Park County Clerks Office, Cody, Wyoming. In accordance with der to provide a complete project shall be included in the Bid and
County, Wyoming into two lots. Proposed Lot 1 will contain 3.00 the Americans with Disabilities Act, special assistance or alternate shall conform to all Local, State, and Federal requirements in acacres, more or less, and proposed Lot 2 will contain 6.42 acres, formats will be made available upon request for individuals with dis- cordance with the requirements, terms, specifications, conditions,
and provisions hereinafter contained. The work on site shall commore or less. Proposed Lot 1 has an existing residence that is loc- abilities.
Written comments may be directed to the Administrator, Division mence no sooner than February 15, 2016 and shall be substanated at 1278 Park County Road 4DT (Wood River Road). Proposed Lot 2 has an existing residence that is located at 1290 Park of Air Quality, Department of Environmental Quality, 200 West 17th tially completed no later than May 23, 2016, final completion by
Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002 or by fax (307) 635-1784. Please June 6, 2016. The sealed bids shall reference Owners Assigned
County Road 4DT (Wood River Road).
To sell yourSt.,
property
call (307) 587-2231 or online at codyenterprise.com
reference A0001542 in your comment. Comments submitted by RFB number: NWC 2015-010
Publish: December 10 and 17, 2015
The Plans and Project Manual for the work may be reviewed and
email will not be included in the administrative record. All comLegal No. 2469
ments received by 5:00 p.m., Monday, January 11, 2016 will be obtained at the office of Point Architects, P.O. Box 1001,1203
considered in the final determination on this application. A public Sheridan Ave, Cody, Wyoming 82414. No partial sets will be isPublic Notice
hearing will be conducted only if in the opinion of the administrator sued. The Plans and Project Manual will be issued at a non-refundDepartment of Environmental Quality, Division of Air Quality PUB- sufficient interest is generated or if an aggrieved party so requests. able cost of $50.00 per set. Project documents may also be exLIC NOTICE: In accordance with Chapter 6, Section 2(m) of the Publish: December 10, 2015 only
amined at the Physical Plant Office.
Wyoming Air Quality Standards and Regulations, notice is hereby Legal No. 2471
Questions regarding the technical aspects or requirements of the
given that the State of Wyoming, Department of Environmental
Contract Documents are to be referred to the Project Manager,
Quality, Division of Air Quality, proposes to approve a request by
Kane Morris, Point Architects, Cody, Wyoming, 307-272-4006.
Mesa Natural Gas Solutions LLC to operate 300 temporary portNorthwest College
The instructions to Bidders, and RFB Documents, will be issued at
To find
a new employee2015-2016
call (307)
587-2231
online at codyenterprise.com
able rich burn natural gas fired generator engines consisting
of thirTrapper
Arena or
Renovation
the following location by referencing Owners Assigned RFB numteen (13) 106 hp Doosan 8L Naturally Aspirated engines, thirtyADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS
ber: NWC 2015-010.
eight (38) 199 hp Doosan 8L Turbo Charged engines, forty-five (45) Separate Sealed Bids for the 2015-2016 Trapper Arena Renova- MANDATORY PRE BID at Physical Plant Office, 839 Road 9 ,
272 hp Doosan 11L Turbo Charged engines, one hundred-eight tion Project will be received by Northwest College, the OWNER, at Powell, Wyoming 82435-1861, December 15, 2015 at 10:00 A.M.
(108) 362 hp Doosan 14L Turbo Charged engines, thirty-two (32) the Orendorff Administration Building, Room 106, located at 231 prevailing local time, followed by site visit at 766 Road 2AB
456 hp Doosan 18L Turbo Charged engines, and sixty-four (64) West Sixth Street, Powell, Wyoming 82435 until 2:00 P.M. prevail- South, Cody, WY.
550 hp Doosan 22L Turbo Charged engines to be operated at oil ing local time, January 5, 2016. Bids will be publicly opened and In determining the lowest responsive proposal, the Owner will conand gas well sites at various locations in Albany, Campbell, Car- read aloud.
sider cost as a primary criterion. The Owner will also consider
bon, Converse, Crook, Fremont, Goshen, Johnson, Laramie, Lin- The Work includes and consists of: furnishing all labor, operations, whether the bidder is a responsible bidder. The Owner reserves the
coln, Natrona, Niobrara, Park, Platte, Sweetwater, Uinta and West- materials, accessories, incidentals, services, and equipment for right to waive any informality or to reject any or all Proposals.
on Counties in Wyoming.
work on the specific aforementioned project. The specific Work in- Dated this 24 day of November, 2015
For the duration of the public comment period, copies of the per- cludes: furnishing all labor, materials, services and equipment re- Publish: December 10 and 17, 2015
mit application, the agencys analysis, and the public notice are quired for the renovation of the Northwest College Trapper Arena Legal No. 2468
available for public inspection online at http://deq.wyoming.gov located at 766 Road 2AB South, Cody, Wyoming 82414. Materials
/aqd/new-source-review/resources/applications-on-notice/
at and/or work not specifically mentioned
which are
necessary
orFREMONT
MOTOR
CODY,inINC
2016 DODGE CARS (2)/
44,753.10
City of Cody Meeting and
Minutes
the Park County Clerks Office, Cody, Wyoming.
accordance with der to provide a complete project shall be included in the Bid and
RETURN BID BONDS
Council In
Proceedings
the Americans with Disabilities Act, Tuesday,
special assistance
or17,
alternate
shall conform to all Local, State, and
Federal
requirements
in ac- PARK
GREEN
ACRES
MOBILE HOME
REFUND CREDIT BALANCE
97.66
November
2015
formats
will
be made
available
upontorequest
with
dis- was
cordance
specifications, conditions,
H B I INSURANCE
NOTARY BOND
50.00
A
Special
Meeting
was
held at 6:30
review for
theindividuals
agenda. No
action
taken. with the requirements, terms,
abilities.
and provisions
hereinafter
contained.
on site shall
comHALThe
LEEwork
PLUMBING
& HEATING
REFUND ON OVER PAYMENT
20.00
A
regular meeting of the Cody City Council was held in the Council Chambers
at City Hall
in Cody, WyoDivision
Written
comments
may
be
directed
to
the
Administrator,
than
February
15,
2016
and
shall
be
substanmence
no
sooner
HARRIS
TRUCKING
&
CONST.
CO
ASPHALT
24,438.66
ming on Tuesday, November 17, 2015 at 7:00 p.m.
of Air Quality,
Department
Environmental
200Donny
West 17th
tiallyKaren
completed
no Jerry
later than
23, 2016,JOE
final completion by
REIMBURSE FOR TRAVEL EXPENSE
64.00
Present:
Mayor
Nancy TiaofBrown
, CouncilQuality,
Members
Anderson,
Ballinger,
Fritz,MayHUGHES,
St.,
Cheyenne,
Wyoming
82002
or
by
fax
(307)
635-1784.
Please
June
6,
2016.
The
sealed
bids
shall
reference
Owners Assigned
HUTCHINS,
SAMUEL
REFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
126.37
Landon Greer, Steve Miller and Stan Wolz, City Administrator Barry Cook, City Attorney Scott Kolpitcke,
reference
A0001542
in your
comment.
submitted by RFB number: NWC 2015-010
ICMA - MEMBERSHIP RENEWALS
ICMA MEMBERSHIP
848.00
and
Administrative
Services
Officer,
Cindy Comments
Baker.
email
will
not
be
included
in
the
administrative
record.
All comThe Plans and Project Manual forJthe
work may be reviewed
and
L ENGINEERING,
LLC
PARK SHOP RENOVATION
9,185.00
Absent: None.
ments Brown
received
by 5:00
p.m., Monday,
January
11, 2016 will be obtained at the office of Point Architects,
P.O. Box 1001,1203
JARVIS, WILLIAM
REFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
90.24
Mayor
called
the meeting
to order at
7:00 p.m.
considered
in theMiller
final made
determination
this application.
A Member
public Greer
Sheridan
Ave, Cody,
Wyoming
NoAMY
partial sets will be isJONES,
PERSONAL TRAINING - REC CENTER
915.86
Council
Member
a motion on
seconded
by Council
to approve
the agenda
as 82414.
hearing
willVote
be conducted
only if in the opinion of the administrator sued. The Plans and Project Manual
will be issued
at a non-refundKEEGAN
& WINSLOW
LAW FIRM
PROFESSIONAL FEES
395.10
presented.
was unanimous.
sufficient
interest
is
generated
or
if
an
aggrieved
party
so
requests.
able
cost
of
$50.00
per
set.
Project
documents
may
also
be
exKEELE
SANITATION,
LLC
8TH
ST
/
SKYLINE
PROJECTS
168.00
Introduction and Oath of Office Police Officers - CT Griswold and Matt Wiles.
Publish: Member
December
10, made
2015 only
amined
at the Physical
Plant Office.
KITCHEN, SCOTT
REIMBURSE FOR MILEAGE
30.22
Council
Miller
a motion seconded by Council Member Greer
to approve
Special Meeting
Legal No. 2471
Questions
regarding
technicalKRUBECK,
aspects or LUCAS
requirements of the
PERSONAL TRAINING - REC CENTER
257.76
Minutes from October 29, 2015 and Regular Meeting Minutes from November
3, 2015;
approve the
a request
Contract
Documents
to be referred
to the Project Manager,
LUM, JESSICA
REFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
99.19
from the Cody Events Committee to close Sheridan Avenue from 9th Street
to 14th
Street on are
Saturday,
Kane
Morris,
Point
Architects,
Cody,
Wyoming,
307-272-4006.
REFUND RETURNED PAYMENT
35.00
December 5th from 3:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. for the annual Cody Country Christmas Celebration, event MCALMOND, MELISSA
The instructions
Bidders,
and RFB
Documents,
MCVEY,
DENNYwill be issued at
REFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
10.93
starting at 4:00 p.m. and sponsor cost in the amount of $2,054.16 associated
with this to
event
with cost
following
location
by Events
referencing
Owners Assigned
MCWILLIAMS,
CARYRFB numREFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
400.00
being allocated from the Lodging Tax and Contingency Funds; approvethe
a request
from
the Cody
ber: NWC 5,
2015-010.
REFUND CREDIT BALANCE
100.00
Committee to hold a bon fire at the Chamber Parking Lot on Saturday, December
2015 in conjunction MILLER, SHARON
MANDATORY PRE BID at Physical
Plant Office,
839CONTRACTING
Road 9 ,
NICHOLSON
DIRT
RETAINAGE
PAYOUT
HABITAT
31,188.55
with the Annual Christmas Celebration and coordinate with the staff for an appropriate location; approve
Powell, Wyoming 82435-1861, December 15, 2015 at 10:00 A.M.
FOR HUMANITY
a request from Graham Jackson and Marge Wilder to allow the Buffalo (purchased during the WPH
prevailing local time, followed by
site visit at 766 Road 2AB
SUPPLIES
11.53
Foundation Where Buffalo Roam Project) to remain on the City public right-of-way on the sidewalk by NORCO, INC.
South, Cody, WY.
REFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
367.50
the side of the Demaris Building on Sheridan Ave for the next 6 to 8 months with the provision that WPH NUSBAUM, TRACEY
In determining the lowest responsive
proposal,
the THE
Owner will conOFFICE
SHOP,
COPIER - SHOP
6,167.50
work with staff to affirm a date of removal. Vote was unanimous.
sider cost as a primary criterion. PARK
The Owner
will also consider
COUNTY
LEC CONTRACT AND
55,883.10
At 7:11 p.m. Mayor Brown entered into a public hearing regarding Forward Codys petition for the crewhether the bidder is a responsible bidder. The Owner reserves the
UTILITIES (2 MONTHS)
ation of a Use Control Area under State Statute W.S. 35-11-1609 on a portion of its real property known
right to waive any informality or to reject any or all Proposals.
ANIMAL SERVICE CONTRACT
3,750.00
as the North Cody Industrial Park. Todd Stowell, City Planner provided information and a brief overview PARK COUNTY ANIMAL SHELTER
Dated this 24 day of November, 2015
PARK
COUNTY
LANDFILL
LANDFILL
CHARGES
66,073.27
as it relates to this item. After asking for comments three times and there being none further at 7:16 p.m.
Publish: December 10 and 17, 2015PARK COUNTY READY MIX
FLOWABLE FILL, SLURRY, CONCRETE
8,677.50
Mayor Brown closed the public hearing.
Legal No. 2468
INCARCERATION - OCT 2015
1,080.00
Council Member Ballinger made a motion seconded by Council Member Fritz to approve Vouchers and PARK COUNTY SHERIFF
HOUSEHOLD HAZ WASTE COLLECTION 9,579.27
Payroll in the amount of $1,666,308.20. Council Member Greer recused himself from the vote. Vote was PARK COUNTY WEED AND PEST
PELIS, RYAN
RESTITUTION
80.00
unanimous from remaining Council Members.
PRIEST, TYLER
REIMBURSE FOR BOOTS
9.99
RESOLUTION 2015-18
PREMIUMS
183.44
APPROVAL OF A RESTRICTED USE CONTROL AREA PETITION IN THE NORTH CODY INDUS- PROVIDENT LIFE & ACCIDENT INS
ASPHALT PATCHING
11,163.50
TRIAL PARK FOR FORWARD CODY WY, INC. LOCATED WITHIN SECTIONS 20 AND 29 OF T53N, QUALITY ASPHALT PAVING, INC
RAIN
FOR
RENT
POOL
DRAIN
PROJECT
23.50
R101W, 6TH PM, PARK COUNTY WY.
RESTITUTION
50.00
Council Member Fritz made a motion seconded by Council Member Anderson to approve Resolution RICHELDERFER, JAMES
RMEL
MEMBERSHIP DUES
460.00
2015-18. Vote was unanimous.
UTILITIES
268.83
Council Member Greer made a motion seconded by Council Member Ballinger to remove Ordinance ROCKY MOUNTAIN POWER
RULE STEEL TANKS, INC
(45) 3 YARD DUMPSTERS
26,550.00
2015-13 from Tabled Items. Vote was unanimous
REC CENTER REFUND
136.00
After brief review and discussion ORDINANCE 2015-13 THIRD AND FINAL READING - AN ORDI- SCHEIBER, LAURA
PERSONAL TRAINING- REC CENTER
29.68
NANCE AMENDING TITLE 3, CHAPTER 2, ARTICLE II, SECTION 15, SUBSECTION C, OF THE CITY SECHRIST, DAVID J
SEHNERT, ERIK
REFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
31.35
OF CODY CODE failed due to lack of motion.
SELBYS
MAINT
&
REPAIRS
442.50
There being no further business, Mayor Brown adjourned the meeting at 7:27 p.m.
SHOSHONE MUNICIPAL PIPELINE
SMP WATER PURCHASES - OCT 2015 114,700.82
Cindy Baker
Nancy Tia Brown
SITZ III, ALEX H.
PROFESSIONAL FEES
110.19
Administrative Services Officer
Mayor
SPOMER, KEN
REFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
16.92
VENDOR NAME
DESCRIPTION
AMOUNT
SPRADLEY BARR MOTORS INC
2016 F250 PICKUP
23,730.00
813-NCPERS WYOMING
PREMIUM
416.00
STATE FARM
RESTITUTION
100.00
ADVANCED INFO SYSTEMS
OUTSOURCE BILLS
633.21
SUMMIT BUILDING SERVICES
REFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
387.26
AMERICAN FAMILY LIFE ASSUR
AFLAC PREMIUM
2,227.98
T J ELECTRIC
LIGHTS - WATER SHOP
268.66
AMERICAN WELDING & GAS, INC.
SUPPLIES
50.73
TIRRELL,
BRANDON
REFUND
UTILITY
DEPOSIT
36.65
ANIXTER POWER SOLUTIONS, LLC
SYSTEM MAINTENANCE
177.47
TRAIL SOURCE LLC
BECK LAKE MTN BIKE PARK
4,781.56
ASCHOFF, ALI
REFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
146.79
U S BANK PURCHASE CARD
SUPPLIES/ TRAVEL /
122,720.59
ASPEN GROVE CONCRETE, INC
CONCRETE
600.00
MEETINGS / OPERATIONS
ASPEN PRACTICE P.C.
PRE-EMPLOYMENT EVALUATIONS
2,746.25
UNUM LIFE INS - LTD
LONG TERM DISABILITY - PREMIUM
2,918.78
BETTER BODY FITNESS
FITNESS EQUIPMENT REPAIRS
791.38
UNUM LIFE INSURANCE - LIFE
UNUM LIFE INSURANCE PREMIUM
1,854.68
BIG COUNTRY CONCRETE, LLC
GLENDALE PARK CONCRETE
2,775.00
US POSTMASTER
2 MONTHS POSTAGE FOR UTILITY BILLING 3,700.00
BLACK HILLS ENERGY
UTILITIES - REC CENTER
7,222.07
VAN DUSEN, LISA
REIMBURSEMENT FOR MILAGE
50.37
BORDER STATES INDUSTRIES, INC
INVENTORY
4,691.32
WAL
MART
STORES
RESTITUTION
54.00
BOYS & GIRLS CLUB OF PARK COUNTY COMMUNITY FUNDING ALLOCATION
2,200.00
WATCO or
POOLS
POOL CHEMICALS
33.26
To sell your item call
(307) 587-2231
online at codyenterprise.com
C & C WELDING
SANITATION ARM
993.33
WENKE, ELIZABETH
REC CENTER REFUND
75.00
CARQUEST AUTO PARTS
REPAIR PARTS
1,054.42
WESTERN UNITED ELECTRIC SUPPLY
TOOLS
840.68
CITY OF CODY
RESTITUTION
399.36
WILLIAMS, SAMANTHA
REFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
31.34
CODY ROTARY CLUB
ROTARY DUES
65.00
WILLOUGHBY, STEPHANIE
REFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
159.41
CODYS TOWN TAXI
TIPSY TAXI VOUCHERS
147.00
WRIGHT, KENNETH
REFUND ENCROACHMENT DEPOSIT
150.00
COPENHAVER KATH KITCHEN
LEGAL SERVICES
6,907.92
WYOMING DEPT OF WORKFORCE
CONTRIBUTIONS
6,904.41
KOLPITCKE LLC
SERVICES
CREED, DUSTIN
REFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
126.24
WYOMING DEPT OF WORKFORCE
UNEMPLOYMENT
126.96
CROFT, KELLY A
REFUND UTILITY DEPOSIT
300.00
SERVICES
DIVISION OF VICTIMS SERVICES
CRIME VICTIMS COMP - OCT 2015
200.00
WYOMING MUNICIPAL POWER AGENCY POWER PURCHASE - OCT 2015
675,307.08
DOLL, BEVERLY
REFUND CREDIT BALANCE
279.48
WYOMING RETIREMENT SYSTEM
CONTRIBUTIONS
71,505.32
EASTMAN, RINDA
PERSONAL TRAINING - REC CENTER
291.70
YELLOWSTONE REGIONAL AIRPORT
NOVEMBER FUNDING
16,465.75
ENGINEERING ASSOCIATES
PROFESSIONAL FEES
6,580.33
TOTAL
1,393,794.77
EVANS, JIM
REFUND ENCROACHMENT DEPOSIT
150.00
Publish: December 10, 2015 only.
FRANDSON SAFETY, INC.
MASK SAFETY
120.00
Legal No. 2467

PubliC NotiCes
Real estate
HelP WaNted

E-4 - Cody Enterprise - Thursday, December 10, 2015

PeoPle
O tennenbaum ...
CODY WEATHER REPORT
THU NIGHT

FRI

SAT

SUN

MON

TUE

WED

Snow showers in
the evening

Mostly cloudy

Mostly sunny

Cloudy

Snow at times

Snow or flurries
possible

Mostly cloudy
with snow possible

27

37 23

35 24

39 30

38 14

29 17

30 15

RealFeel: 23

35

21

32

16

35

27

31

22

12

25

12

The patented AccuWeather.com RealFeel Temperature is an exclusive index of the effects of temperature, wind, humidity, sunshine intensity,
cloudiness, precipitation, pressure and elevation on the human body. Shown are the highest and lowest values for each day.

Columbus
Billings
Livingston 30/43
31/45
26/38
Red Lodge
22/35
Bridger
27/42
Mammoth
15/29

Hardin
29/46

Bozeman
22/38

Grant Pate (left) and Andy Scott, both members of Boy Scout Troop 78, help
Bobby Bruce haul a grand fir tree at Ponderosa Campground. The Christmas
tree sales serve as the troops main annual fundraiser. Hours are 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Saturday, noon-4 p.m. Sunday and 4-6 p.m. Monday-Friday.

your entertainment
Friday

DECEMBER 11

Cody
Provisions of Grace food pantry,
5-7 p.m., 4 Southfork Road.
Bingo at the Eagles, 7 p.m., 1001
13th St., open to public.
Kody Kut n Capers square dance
club meets 7:30 p.m., Christ Episcopal
Church. Call (307) 587-8430 for more
information.

Saturday

DECEMBER 12

Cody
18th Annual Nutcracker, 7 p.m.,
Wynona Thompson Auditorium.
Red Lodge
Christmas Kids Shoppe, 9 a.m.noon, Messiah Lutheran basement.
How to Make a Painting Work with
E. Denney Neville, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Carbon County Depot Gallery.

Sunday

DECEMBER 13

Cody
Provisions of Grace food pantry,
after 11 a.m. service, 4 Southfork Road.
Park County Arts Council Holiday

Calendar

Home Tour, 1-4 p.m., around town.


18th Annual Nutcracker, 2 p.m.,
Wynona Thompson Auditorium.

Monday

DECEMBER 14

Cody
Weight Watchers Meeting, 5:30
p.m., The Cody.
Bingo at the Elks Lodge, 6 p.m.,
1202 Beck Ave., open to public.
Yellowstone Harmony Chorus practice (a womens chorus), 6:30-8:30
p.m., Church of Christ. Newcomers welcome. For details, call Mary (307) 5872957 or Jonene (307) 527-6122.
Crisis Intervention Services support
group, 6:30-7:30 p.m. For more information call (307) 587-3545 or (307) 7547959.
Tuesday

DECEMBER 15

Cody
MANNAHOUSE food distribution
and worship, 1:45-3 p.m., 2343 Mountain View Drive.
The Yellowstone Squadron of the
Civil Air Patrol, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Trinity Lutheran Church. For information call
(307) 272-8680.

Meeteetse
19/35

Driggs
23/31

Jackson
23/29

Lovell
26/39

Powell
24/37
Cody
Greybull
27/37
23/36

West Yellowstone
16/26

photo by RAYMOND HILLEGAS

Lodge Grass
29/44

Dubois
17/28

Sheridan
29/41

Manderson
26/39

Worland
23/38

Ten Sleep
25/37

Thermopolis
26/39

Shown is Fridays weather. Temperatures are Thursday nights lows and Fridays highs.

REGIONAL CITIES
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
Fri.
Sat.
Sun.
City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
City
Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
Billings, MT
45/26/pc 41/27/s 47/29/c
Kirby
39/13/c 37/12/pc 39/21/c
Bozeman, MT
38/17/pc 37/21/pc 42/28/sn
Laramie
40/23/c 32/14/sf 38/27/pc
Bridger, MT
42/20/pc 40/27/s 43/30/c
Lodge Grass
44/22/c 42/19/s 46/24/c
Buffalo
42/27/c 42/24/pc 47/33/pc
Lovell
39/15/c 36/18/s 38/24/sn
Casper
43/24/c 41/21/c 44/33/pc
Manderson
39/18/c 36/14/pc 38/24/c
Cheyenne
45/24/sf 35/19/sf 43/32/pc
Powell
37/16/c 35/22/s 39/27/c
Columbus, MT
43/21/pc 41/26/s 44/29/c
Rawlins
36/20/c 35/17/sn 36/28/sn
Dubois
28/9/c
25/7/pc 30/21/sn
Rexburg, ID
34/23/c 32/27/pc 37/27/sn
Gillette
43/25/c 43/24/pc 45/30/pc
Rock Springs
32/15/c 30/15/c 35/24/sn
Green River
34/13/c 29/16/c 34/25/sn
Sheridan
41/20/c 43/21/s 46/25/pc
Greybull
36/13/c 31/12/s 30/17/c
Shoshoni
37/14/c 35/15/pc 39/26/c
Jackson
29/9/sn 29/16/pc 33/22/sn
W. Yellowstone 26/9/sn 23/16/pc 27/18/sn
Jeffrey City
34/13/c 31/16/pc 33/26/c
Worland
38/16/c 33/9/pc 34/15/c
Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice

WEEKLY ALMANAC
Cody for the 7-day period ending Tuesday

TEMPERATURES
High/low
54/9
Normal high/low
37/17
Average temperature
36.7
Normal average temperature
27.0
*estimated data
PRECIPITATION
Total for the week
0.00
Month to date
Trace
Normal month to date
0.08
Percent of normal month to date
0%
10.53
Year to date
Snowfall for the week
0.0
Snowfall month to date
Trace
7.5
Snowfall season to date

SUN AND MOON


SUN
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday

RISE
7:42 a.m.
7:43 a.m.
7:44 a.m.
7:45 a.m.
7:45 a.m.

SET
4:36 p.m.
4:36 p.m.
4:36 p.m.
4:37 p.m.
4:37 p.m.

MOON
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday

RISE
7:35 a.m.
8:29 a.m.
9:18 a.m.
10:03 a.m.
10:43 a.m.

SET
5:23 p.m.
6:17 p.m.
7:16 p.m.
8:20 p.m.
9:27 p.m.

MOON PHASES
New
First

Dec 11

Dec 18

Full

Last

Dec 25

Jan 1

Forecasts and graphics provided by


AccuWeather, Inc. 2015

Weather sponsored by:

RED HOT
HOT
RATES

RED
RATES

Annuity rates so hot they should


come with a warning!

With a simple one-time premium


payment, you can earn up to 3.25%
guaranteed1 interest2 in the first
year on Farm Bureaus New Money 4
fixed annuity product. PLUS our
With a simple one-time premium payment, you can earn
up to
3.25%
great rates
continue
in years 2-4 of
theNew
product
when
you
earn up to
guaranteed1 interest2 in the first With
year onaFarm
Bureaus
Money
4 can
fixed
simple
one-time
premium
1.95% guaranteed interest.

Annuity rates so hot they should


come with a warning!

annuity product. PLUS our great


rates continue
years
2-4 of
payment,
youin
can
earn
upthe
toproduct
3.25%
when you can earn up to 1.95%guaranteed
guaranteed
interest.
1
2
interest in the first
Jeanna Kennedy
ED

JEANNA KENNEDY
Agent
www.jeannakennedy.com

1308 Rumsey Ave


IT
R!
LIM FFE4
year
on
Cody,
WYFarm
82414 Bureaus New Money
EO
M
I
T
y!
a
307-587-9669
l
fixed annuity product. PLUS oour
t de
D n
www.jeannakennedy.co
great
rates continue in years 2-4 of
m
the product when you can earn up to
1308 Rumsey
Avenue
1.95% guaranteed
interest.
LUKE HOPKIN

Cody, WY 82414
Agent
www.lukehopkin.com
307-587-9669
Minimum premium payment required, offer valid
for a limited time beginning November 2, 2015 . Four year contract required,

Jeanna Kennedy

surrender charges for early termination are as follows: Year 1: 8%; Year 2: 6%; Year 3: 4%; Year 4: 2% 1.The guarantees

here arerequired,
based on the
claims paying
ability of for
Farmearly
Bureau
Life Insuranceare
Company.
2.BasedYear
on the1:Companys
Minimum premium payment required, offer valid November 2, 2015. Four expressed
year contract
surrender
charges
termination
as follows:
8%; Year 2:
2
11/2/2015
declared interestability
rate for of
the Farm
New Money
4 (Select
Fixed Premium
Annuity) product.
Current
interest
rates posted
6%; Year 3: 4%; Year 4: 2%. 1.The guarantees expressed here are based on
the claims-paying
Bureau
LifeIVInsurance
Company.
Based
on the
Companys
above are neither guaranteed nor estimated for the future and premium banding is as follows: Year 1 3.00%
11/2/2015 declared interest rate for the New Money 4 (Select IV Fixed Premium
Annuity)
product.
Current
interest
rates
posted
above
are
neither
guaranteed
nor
($25,000-99,999); 3.25% ($100,000+). Years 2-4 1.70% ($25,000-99,999); 1.95% ($100,000+). Credited ratesestimated
following
for the future and premium banding is as follows: Year 1 3.00% ($25,000-$99,999);
Years
2-4 1.70%
($25,000-$99,999);
1.95% reserves
($100,000+).
the initial rate3.25%
guarantee($100,000+).
period are neither
guaranteed
nor estimated
for the future. The Company
the rightCredited
to change
the current
for future
purchases
without
notice at any
for to
anychange
reason. Contact
the company
currentpurchases
rate. Farm
rates following the initial guarantee period neither guaranteed nor estimated
for therate
future.
The
Company
reserves
thetime
right
the current
rate for
forthefuture
Bureau
Life
Insurance
Company*/West
Des
Moines,
IA.
*Company
provider
of
Farm
Bureau
Financial
Services
A139-ML-1
without notice at any time for any reason. Contact the company for the current
rate. Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company/West Des Moines, Iowa* Company provider of
(11-15)
Farm Bureau Financial Services. A139-ML-1 (11-15)

1308 Rumsey Ave


Cody, WY 82414
307-587-9669
www.jeannakennedy.co
m

ITED
LIM FFER!
EO
TIM
y!
la

t de

Don

Minimum premium payment required, offer valid for a limited time beginning November 2, 2015 . Four year contract required,
surrender charges for early termination are as follows: Year 1: 8%; Year 2: 6%; Year 3: 4%; Year 4: 2% 1.The guarantees
expressed here are based on the claims paying ability of Farm Bureau Life Insurance Company. 2.Based on the Companys
11/2/2015 declared interest rate for the New Money 4 (Select IV Fixed Premium Annuity) product. Current interest rates posted
above are neither guaranteed nor estimated for the future and premium banding is as follows: Year 1 3.00%
($25,000-99,999); 3.25% ($100,000+). Years 2-4 1.70% ($25,000-99,999); 1.95% ($100,000+). Credited rates following
the initial rate guarantee period are neither guaranteed nor estimated for the future. The Company reserves the right to change
the current rate for future purchases without notice at any time for any reason. Contact the company for the current rate. Farm
Bureau Life Insurance Company*/West Des Moines, IA. *Company provider of Farm Bureau Financial Services A139-ML-1
(11-15)

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