Auditors say Rock Springs has no material weaknesses
Transcription
Auditors say Rock Springs has no material weaknesses
12515088.qxp 11/15/2012 10:35 PM Page 1 Volume CXXXIII - No. 273 www.rocketminer.com Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 75¢ YOUR LOCAL NEWS SOURCE SINCE 1881 Auditors say Rock Springs has no material weaknesses PAUL MURRAY Rocket-Miner News Reporter ROCK SPRINGS — The 2011-2012 fiscal year audit of Rock Springs did not uncover any material weaknesses. Cheyenne-based McGee, Hearne and Paiz, LLP, conducted the audit of the fiscal year, which ended June 30. Robert Dahill, a certified public accountant, presented the audit results at the Nov. 6 meeting of the Rock Springs City Council. Although no material weaknesses were uncovered in the city financial audit, the Oct. 31 report said there were significant deficiencies uncovered that did not constitute a material weakness. “Of 10 payments tested that were made subsequent to year end, two included amounts that should have been accrued in accounts payable as of year end but were not. Both instances were for construction in progress billings where a portion of the service period was before year end and a portion was after year end. The aggregate amount of the portion of the service period relating to before year end was approximately $707,000. Neither instance had an income effect,” the report said. The report said generally accepted accounting principles require governmentwide and proprietary fund financial statements to be reported on the accrual basis of accounting, which requires construction in progress expen- ditures be accrued in the year in which the service was provided by the contractor. Dahill said the city finance department has control structures in place to properly report expenditures. However, he said the two construction expenditures “slipped through the cracks.” “Because it was such a large SEE AUDITORS, PAGE 3A Investigators blame ice for plane crash CHEYENNE (AP) — Federal investigators say ice most likely caused the crash of a small plane near Rock Springs last year, killing both people on board. A report from the National Transportation Safety Board says the single-engine Bellanca 17-30A Viking descended rapidly after flying into an area where forecasts expected precipitation with supercooled droplets. Investigators say that likely resulted in rapid ice accumulation on the plane. They found no indications of problems with the airframe, flight controls and engine before the crash. The plane went down about 30 minutes after taking off from Pinedale en route to Fort Collins on May 18, 2011. Pilot Gilmer Mickey of Englewood, Colo., and passenger Bob Albert of Fort Collins, Colo., both 55, were killed. COMPLICATED RECOVERY Sweetwater County Sheriff Rich Haskell said after searchers located the downed Bellanca 17 aircraft on May 19, 2011, it became clear special equipment would be needed to extract the bodies. The Associated Press said Steven Shute of Glenwood Springs, Colo. told The Denver Post that he and Mickey coowned Pinedale Natural Gas and that Albert was a consultant for the company. Wyoming Civil Air Patrol spokeswoman Jeanne Stone-Hunter says about 2 feet of snow fell in the area. STRANDED OFFICIALS Haskell said nearly every Sweetwater County Sheriff’s Office and Search and Rescue vehicle involved in the operation became badly stuck in the snow and mud. Ultimately, two chained-up Sweetwater County Road and Bridge graders and a tracked bulldozer were used to extract some vehicles. A number of Sheriff’s Office, Coroner’s Office, and Search & Rescue personnel spent the night at the scene. Several were able to make it out around daybreak, though others were delayed for hours. Collared wolves from Yellowstone killed MATTHEW BROWN Associated Press BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — Seven gray wolves originally from Yellowstone National Park and wearing collars for research purposes have been shot by hunters in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming in recent weeks, a park scientist said Thursday. There has been no indication any of the wolves were taken illegally, said state officials and Dave Hallac, chief of Yellowstone’s Center for Resources. Two of the animals were from packs that no longer spend most of their time in the park, but the remainder lived and denned primarily in Yellowstone, Hallac said. Four of the seven were shot in Montana, two in Wyoming and one in Idaho. Wildlife advocates said Thursday the killings underscore the need for a buffer zone around Yellowstone, with strict limits on wolf hunting and trapping. They warned the number of dead park wolves could quickly climb once Montana’s trapping season begins next month. Gray wolves were removed from the endangered species list last year by Congress under pressure from hunting and livestock groups. Hallac said the number of park wolves killed so far does not threaten Yellowstone’s population of 85-100 wolves. A more immediate worry, he said, is retrieving the research collars used to track the animals’ movements. Several of the hunters who shot collared wolves already have offered to return the devices, Hallac said. “Which is great for us because we have a lot of data on those collars,” he said. “We’ve been able to get some of the collars back and we hope to get all the collars back.” Four collared wolves were killed during prior hunts: two in 2009, when the animals were off the endangered list only temporarily, and two last year, Hallac said. Montana this year joined Idaho in lifting its quotas on wolves across most of the state, meaning there is no longer any limit on how many can be harvested except in certain areas. One of those areas abuts the park’s northern boundary; the other is around Glacier National Park. Only three wolves can be killed annually in the special management zone outside Yellowstone, which was established after hunters killed nine wolves there in the span of a few weeks in 2009. Two wolves have died in the quota area so far this year. It was uncertain if that included any of the collared wolves that were shot. “That buffer zone is a minimum buffer and this is absolutely not enough,” said Kim Bean with the advocacy group Wolves of the Rockies. “These animals travel and they go in and out of the park. They don’t go far, but they go far enough.” Generally, any wolf that crosses the park’s boundary during hunting and trapping season is considered fair game, said Andrea Jones with Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks. “The park boundary does not have a fence around it. Animals that have collars on them and SEE WOLVES, PAGE 3A It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas, and the holiday season as Rock Springs starts to light up. In addition to annual adopted tree decorating, such as this example near the corner of Grant and Elk streets, lighting the Rock Springs Christmas tree traditionally precedes the annual parade, which is scheduled for Dec. 1. URA plans for 2012 and 2013 holidays Hangar fees may go up at the Rock Springs/Sweetwater County Airport as the board said local fees were low compared to other airports. Airport board discusses raising airport hangar fees PAUL MURRAY Rocket-Miner News Reporter ROCK SPRINGS — Hangar fees at the Rock Springs/Sweetwater County Airport may go up in early 2013. The airport board is expected to discuss fees at its December meeting. On Nov. 14, board member Gary Valentine suggested beginning the process of raising the hangar fees. Board chairman Larry Levitt concurred and said a survey of hangar fees at airports around the state showed local rates “were way off.” Legal adviser George Lemich said adequate notification would need to be provided to tenants regarding the proposed increases. Valentine said they should give notice so the board could take action at its next meeting. CONSTRUCTION UPDATE Airport Development Group principal Chuck Kellerman said they completed the north end of the taxiway and it looks good. “It passed all the tests,” Kellerman said. Board member Sigsbee Duck said the best test will be if airplanes decide to use the new taxiway. Ken Walker from Uintah Engineering and Land Surveying said the new water tank will be smaller than the 500,000-gallon tank previously envisioned. Board member Donna Acker asked why the figure had been used so frequently in the past. Kellerman said the figure had been a preliminary estimate. Walker said the tank would not be filled to capacity, which is not necessary given the airport’s current level of use and requirements. The estimated completion date for the tank is June 1, 2013. The new water tank is a necessary before expansion of airport operations or development of a new business park near the airport. Airport manager Terry Doak said there were mechanical issues with one of the new snowplower and blower. The equipment is under a one-year warranty, and the airport mechanics are working on the problem. Doak stressed the airport still has enough equipment to plow snow when necessary. Board member Jerry Klein was unable to attend the meeting. NO PILOT PROBLEM EXPECTED Levitt said he has not heard of a possible shortage of airline pilots which could impact the airport, or they would have organizational meetings to discuss the issue. Levitt said it can be stressful for new pilots throughout their training, as they are continually confronted with a variety of emergency situations so they know how to handle any out-of-the-ordinary problems. Acker said that one drawback for any new pilot is salary level. It takes many years, she said, for a new pilot to accumulate the hours and experience necessary to graduate to a larger plane and a meaningful income. Levitt said he did not foresee a problem with airport operations in the future because of any projected pilot shortage and talk of that nature might be overhyped. Groups seek expansion of coal mining suit MEAD GRUVER Associated Press CHEYENNE (AP) — Environmental groups asked a judge Thursday to expand the scope of a lawsuit they’ve filed against the U.S. Forest Service over plans to mine coal in northeast Wyoming. U.S. District Judge Alan Johnson heard the groups’ arguments, and the Forest Service’s objections to the request, and said he would rule on the motion in a day or two. He didn’t hint which way he might decide. The lawsuit is one of several that environmentalists have filed recently to contest Wyoming coal mining on grounds that include climate change. WildEarth Guardians, Sierra Club and Powder River Basin Resource Council filed suit last December over a proposal to sell 402 million tons of coal reserves next to St. Louis-based Peabody Energy Corp.’s North Antelope Rochelle Mine in the southern Powder River Basin. The basin is the top coal-producing region in the U.S. and the surface coal mine is one of the world’s largest mines. In May, Peabody subsidiary BTU Western Resources Inc., successfully bid more than $446 million with the U.S. Bureau of Land Management to mine the contested South Porcupine tract, helping to ensure that the mine can be expanded and remain viable for years to come. The three groups also object to a separate plan to mine more than 721 million tons of coal from another tract next to the mine. BTU Western Resources successfully bid more than $793 million for the coal in the North Porcupine tract in June. Much of the coal in the two tracts underlies the Thunder Basin National Grassland. National grasslands fall under Forest Service purview. The Forest Service leaned heavily on BLM analysis in approving both leases, but the analyses were flawed in part because BLM didn’t adequately address how burning the coal in power plants would contribute to carbon dioxide emissions and climate change, the groups say. Now, the groups want to add their concerns about the bigger North Porcupine tract to their lawsuit over the South Porcupine tract. SEE SUIT, PAGE 3A PAUL MURRAY Rocket-Miner News Reporter ROCK SPRINGS — Letters to Santa can be sent through a mailbox outside the Rock Springs Urban Renewal Agency/Main Street Office beginning Monday, Nov. 26. The office is located in the downtown train depot, and the letter collection will continue through Monday, Dec. 17. URA/Main Street administrative assistant Terri Nations said they received a number of letters to Santa dealing with economic or social situations facing families in 2011. “One letter was from a kid who asked nothing for himself,” Nations said. “He wanted a green sweater and a blender for his mom because her food has to be blended.” She said other letters requested help from Santa in getting a driver’s license for a parent or asked to get a father out of jail. One child told Santa her family had recently lost their home and included new directions so he could find their new residence, Nations said. Rock Springs councilman Glennise Wendorf, who attended the URA board meeting in her role as liaison, said, “It’s not at all like when we were kids and we asked for a toy or two.” Wendorf said the responses to the child with a parent in jail said Santa could not go above or around the law. URA/Main Street manager Jeff Pedersen said one kid told Santa to bring a six-pack for his dad. “These are real-life issues,” Pedersen said. “Mom losing her car, a parent losing a job, losing a place to live and a child being worried that Santa won’t be able to find where they live now. These are real-life issues.” Pedersen said the responses try to convey hope and tell kids to keep the faith. CHRISTMAS PARADE The Christmas parade in downtown Rock Springs is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 1. The URA is not sponsoring the parade, but it is participating with a float. SEE HOLIDAYS, PAGE 3A YOUR GUIDE TO INSIDE TODAY: Mostly sunny with a high near 45. South southwest winds around 5 mph. TONIGHT: Partly cloudy with a low around 29. South southwest winds 5 to 7 mph. Complete weather is on page 2A Business 10A Classifieds 2B-5B Comics 9A Opinions 8B Lifestyles 4A-5A Local News 3A National Obituaries Sports State World 6B, 7B 2A 6A-8A 1B, 9B 5B Home delivery saves you money. Call 3623736 or toll free at 1-888-443-3736. 12515089.qxp 2A 11/15/2012 10:09 PM Page 2 Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 rocketminer.com YOUR WEATHER 5-day forecast Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun 11/14 11/15 11/16 11/17 11/18 Only ritual talk on fiscal cliff so far fect, a combination known as the “fiscal cliff” that many economists say could send the econWASHINGTON (AP) — omy back into recession. When President Barack Obama That sounds ominous, and if greets congressional leaders at nothing else, neither party the White House on Friday, an wants to bear the responsibility elaborate set of postelection rit- if it happens. uals will be complete. Yet dividYet government, particularly ed government’s ability to at- divided government, has a curitack the nation’s economic woes ous relationship with deadlines. is no clearer now than it has On the one hand, they can fobeen for months. cus on compromise Eventually, someefforts, and can result thing’s got to give in a ‘I argued in an agreement. country where voters Yet just as often, are weary of gridlock for a they lead to interim and wearier still of balanced, half-measures that set high unemployment. a new deadline for the responsible final day of reckoning. Or does it? “I’m open to comThe fiscal cliff itself approach, promise and I’m open is an example. to new ideas,” Obama and part of Republicans used said at his White the threat of an unHouse news confer- that precedented federal ence on Wednesday. included default to win about $1 He stressed the imtrillion in spending portance of avoiding making cuts over 10 years the “fiscal cliff,” a doufrom Obama and Deble whammy of tax in- sure that mocrats in 2011. The creases and spending the same agreement set cuts at the turn of the up a deficit “super wealthiest year. committee” to seek Up to a point. more and bigger Americans deficit savings. That He referred more than once to his defeat pay a little effort ignominiously of Republican Mitt failed a year ago, leavRomney, saying, “I ar- bit more.’ ing in place a series of gued for a balanced, Mitt Romney automatic across-theresponsible approach, board spending cuts and part of that intimed to coincide with cluded making sure that the the scheduled expiration of tax wealthiest Americans pay a little cuts at the turn of the year. bit more.” As always in the run-up to ne“By the way, more voters gotiations, the two sides vie for agreed with me on this issue leverage. than voted for me,” he added, a Hence, Boehner is fond of reminder to Republicans that pointing out that while the pressome of their supporters, too, ident may have a mandate, so, disagree with the party’s posi- too, do the House Republicans, tion. who renewed their majority in House Speaker John Boehner, last week’s elections. R-Ohio, also regularly stresses a Senate Republican Leader willingness to reach across the Mitch McConnell of Kentucky aisle, citing the emergence of a is more pointed. “Most people “spirit of cooperation” since the may focus on the White House, election that he says bodes well but the fact is the government is for an agreement. organized no differently today Like Obama, he avoids defin- than it was after the Republican itive answers to hypothetical wave of 2010,” he said earlier in questions. the week. “I don’t want to box myself in. Not exactly. I don’t want to box anyone else In other areas, numerous Rein,” he said recently. publicans have made it clear Yet also like the president, they are ready to talk comproBoehner has laid down a mark- mise — from a position of elecer for the talks ahead. “Raising toral weakness. tax rates is unacceptable,” he Despite the claim of a dual said referring to Obama’s cam- mandate, Boehner has signaled paign-long call to allow rates to the end of efforts to repeal Obarise on incomes over $200,000 ma’s health care legislation, a for individuals and $250,000 cause that animated the tea parfor couples. ty and united Republicans who Both sides take credit for con- swept to power in the House cessions, none of them particu- two years ago. larly new. Numerous Republicans in In talks that came close to a Congress and among the nadeal in 2011, Obama said he was tion’s governors say the party willing to make significant cuts must appeal more effectively to in the growth of benefit pro- Hispanic voters, who account grams like Medicare and Medic- for an ever-increasing share of aid, infuriating liberals. Boehn- the electorate and gave Obama er spoke of as much as $800 bil- more than 70 percent of their lion in new revenue, angering votes this fall. Already there are conservatives. the first stirrings of compromise The talks eventually col- talks on an overhaul of immigralapsed. tion law, to include a pathway to Now White House Press Sec- legal status if not citizenship for retary Jay Carney says Obama millions who are in the country will ask for $1.6 trillion in new illegally. taxes over a decade when the The “tone and rhetoric” emtalks resume after Friday morn- ployed by Republicans in recent ing’s meeting at the White debates over immigration have House. “built a wall between the RepubIt’s an opening bid, not a de- lican Party and Hispanic command, part of the standard rit- munity,” Sen. Lindsey Graham, ual for such occasions as is the R-S.C. conceded a few days afrhetoric from both sides. ter the election. Barring legislation, taxes will So much for Romney’s staterise on nearly everyone on Jan. ment in last winter’s primaries 1, and a series of across-the- that illegal immigrants can selfboard spending cuts will take ef- deport. DAVID ESPO AP Special Correspondent 42/26 47/26 46/28 48/30 A mix of light rain and snow later in the day. High 42F. 42/24 Clouds giving way to sun . Highs in the low 40s and lows in the mid 20s. Partly cloudy. Highs in the upper 40s and lows in the mid 20s. Mostly sunny. Highs in the mid 40s and lows in the upper 20s. A few clouds. Highs in the upper 40s and lows in the low 30s. Sunrise: 7:05 AM Sunset: 4:56 PM Sunrise: 7:06 AM Sunset: 4:56 PM Sunrise: 7:07 AM Sunset: 4:55 PM Sunrise: 7:08 AM Sunset: 4:54 PM Sunrise: 7:09 AM Sunset: 4:53 PM Area Cities Area Cities City Afton Big Piney Buffalo Casper Cheyenne Cody Douglas Evanston Gillette Green River Greybull Jackson Kemmerer Lander Laramie Hi 38 42 45 47 47 39 48 41 46 39 41 33 40 43 44 Lo Cond. 17 sn shower 15 mixed 25 cloudy 25 cloudy 27 cloudy 24 mixed 22 cloudy 23 sn shower 25 cloudy 17 sn shower 23 cloudy 16 sn shower 18 sn shower 23 cloudy 25 cloudy City Lusk Mountain View Newcatsle Pinedale Powell Rawlins Reliance Riverton Rock Springs Sheridan Thermopolis Torrington Wheatland Worland Yellowstone NP Hi 47 41 47 37 42 44 42 42 42 45 41 54 52 42 31 Lo Cond. 21 cloudy 22 mixed 26 cloudy 12 sn shower 24 cloudy 23 mixed 24 mixed 24 cloudy 24 mixed 21 pt sunny 21 cloudy 25 pt sunny 29 cloudy 18 cloudy 11 sn shower City Minneapolis New York Phoenix San Francisco Seattle St. Louis Washington, DC Hi 47 48 78 72 50 53 51 Lo Cond. 34 pt sunny 37 sunny 52 mst sunny 51 pt sunny 38 pt sunny 33 pt sunny 38 sunny National Cities National Cities City Atlanta Boston Chicago Dallas Denver Houston Los Angeles Miami Hi 51 47 44 63 53 68 76 80 Lo Cond. 43 drizzle 34 sunny 30 pt sunny 38 sunny 30 pt sunny 39 pt sunny 55 cloudy 68 pt sunny Moon Phases Moon Phases New First Full Last Nov 13 Nov 20 Nov 28 Dec 6 U.V. Index UV Index Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun 11/14 11/15 11/16 11/17 11/18 2 Low 2 Low 2 Low 2 Low 2 Low The UV Index is measured on a 0 - 11 number scale, with a higher UV Index showing the need for greater skin protection. Holly Dabb PUBLISHER Michele Depue MANAGING EDITOR 0 11 Rick Lee Pam Haynes GENERAL MANAGER CIRCULATION MANAGER How to reach us 362-3736 (1-888-443-3736 if out of Rock Springs Area) If your copy hasn’t arrived by 7 a.m. THE ROCKET-MINER (USPS 468-160) is published every morning except Monday by Rock Springs Newspapers, Inc. at 215 D Street, Rock Springs, Wyoming 82901. Telephone (307) 362-3736, ISSN: 0893-3650 Entered as a periodical Nov. 29, 1907 at the post office at Rock Springs, Wyoming, 82901, by Rock Springs Newspapers, Inc., under the act of Congress of March 3, 1879 USPS No. 468-160, ISBN 0893-3650 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the Rocket-Miner, 215 D Street, P.O. Box 98, Rock Springs, WY 82902. HOLIDAYS - No publication of the Rocket-Miner will be made on the day after the following holidays: New Years Day, Memorial Day, July 4th, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas. SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER 3 Months $33.00 6 Months 12 Months $60.00 $117.00 BY MAIL IN SWEETWATER COUNTY 3 Months $43.00 6 Months $70.00 12 Months $127.00 BY MAIL IN WYOMING 3 Months $53.00 6 Months $80.00 12 Months $137.00 BY MAIL OUTSIDE WYOMING 3 Months $63.00 6 Months $90.00 12 Months $147.00 Member • Audit Bureau of Circulation • Associated Press • Wyoming Press Association • National Newspaper Association BYU research: Tiny tubes could revamp lab testing JIM DALRYMPLE Daily Herald PROVO, Utah (AP) — Deep in the basement of Brigham Young University’s Benson building, amidst piles of beakers and a jungle of piping, Debolina Chatterjee sits on a stool staring at a clear plastic rectangle, held delicately between her thumb and forefinger. When held up to the light, the piece of plastic looks almost like a small, simple computer chip: in the center, a smaller piece of plastic has been attached, and on that piece several tiny lines span the distance between a pair of ball bearing-sized holes. The entire thing is no more substantial than a bar of soap, two weeks out of the box. But small as it may be, the implications of the device could be tremendous. A collaboration between Chatterjee, a Ph.D. candidate in chemistry, professor Adam Woolley and others, the rectangle of plastic is a prototype of a new testing device that could revolutionize the way experts test for contaminants in all sorts of liquids. The idea, Woolley explained, is that a liquid — blood or water, for example — is dropped onto the piece of plastic then travels along the hair-sized lines, which are actually tubes. “The tubes are about the same size as real capillaries in blood vessels,” Woolley said. Researchers can then look at how far through the tubes the liquid travels. From that distance, they can extrapolate information about what chemicals might be present. The process could eventually be used to test for diseases such as cancer or tuberculosis, as well as contaminants in water, among other possible applications. OBITUARY DARLA J. TALBOT ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Darla J. Talbot, 49, died Sunday, Nov. 4, 2012. She is survived by her husband, William Talbot; children, Toni and fiancé James Reed and Karla Arnold; mother, Darlene Sexton; siblings, James and wife Debbie Sexton, Susan and husband Gary Brown, Crystal Whitney and fiancé William Wesley, Donna and husband Harry Bobak, Elizabeth and husband Loren Rogers and Valerie and husband Tom Sylvester; grandchildren, Aleycia Perez, Zachariah Reed, Jacob Reed and Mekih Parson; father-in-law, James Talbot; brother- and sister-in-law, Debbie and husband Clifford Roy, Ginney and husband Joe Sofia and Jim and wife MaryKay Talbot; 21 nieces and nephews; 34 great-nieces and greatnephews; and many dear friends. She was preceded in death by her father, Melvin J. Sexton; and mother-in-law, Margaret Talbot. Memorial services were conducted Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2012, at the Church of Christ, 15 Lawson Road, Rochester, N.Y.. Interment was conducted privately. Condolences can be left at www.MeesonFamily.com. City settles with man who flipped off officer OREM, Utah (AP) — A manho was pulled over and cited after flipping off a Utah police officer in 2010 has agreed to drop his complaint after the city of Orem agreed to pay him $2,500 in damages and promised not to ticket anyone else for the obscene gesture. The American Civil Liberties Union of Utah had threatened a lawsuit on behalf of Seth Dame, saying an officer violated Dame’s constitutional right to express himself after Dame flipped him off on June 25, 2010. “Allowing police to detain and charge people for impolite behavior would grant police wide discretionary power to harass people they do not like,” said John Mejia, Legal Director of the ACLU of Utah, in a statement Thursday. “Any police overstep of power to crack down on expression, even rude expression, is therefore worth serious attention.” The city declined to prosecute the case, but ACLU claimed the incident violated Dame’s First Amendment free speech rights and his Fourth Amendment protection against unlawful search and seizure. In the settlement, Orem agrees it shouldn’t have stopped Dame solely for giving the finger, and won’t do so in the future. The police department also agreed to continue training its officers about First Amendment protection. “We do view this as a one-time, isolated incident, and don’t anticipate it happening it again,” Orem City Attorney Greg Stephens said. The settlement provides $2,500 in attorneys’ fees to the ACLU, and $2,500 in damages to Dame. Officials with the Orem city attorney’s office didn’t immediately return a request for comment Thursday. The ACLU notes similar cases have been settled in Pennsylvania and Kansas. “Various courts have concluded that using your middle finger to express discontent or frustration is expressive conduct protected by the First Amendment,” Mejia said. “We are very pleased that Orem has responded to our efforts to ensure that everyone’s free speech rights are protected.” 12515090.qxp 11/15/2012 10:34 PM Page 3 rocketminer.com Family takes body from mortuary over burial fight SHANNON DININNY Associated Press SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Teddy Serawop always wanted to be cremated after he died, with his ashes scattered across his favorite hunting lands in Utah’s Uinta Mountains, his mother and sister said. But his father’s side of the family wanted him buried in a traditional ceremony on the Northern Ute Tribe’s reservation. When the two sides couldn’t agree, tribal members went to the mortuary in eastern Utah and removed his body, burying it on the Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation in rural eastern Utah. “I’ve been here 38 years, and I’ve never seen anything like it,” John Hullinger of Hullinger Mortuary in Roosevelt said Thursday. “We’ve served both of these families before, but the Ute Tribe took it into their own hands.” Toxicology results are still pending to determine the cause of death for Serawop, a 32-yearold tribal member who died Nov. 5. His father also is a tribal member. His mother is not. Unless a person leaves written instructions, decisions about burial fall to the legal spouse, children or parents of the deceased. Serawop had three children with a woman who also is a tribal member. A tribal court named her his common-law wife and issued two orders to the mortuary to release the body to her and his father’s family. However, because the mortuary is not on the reservation, Hullinger said, its legal counsel advised the mortuary to wait for a state or federal judge to weigh in on the matter. Hullinger Mortuary was still awaiting a ruling when tribal members arrived to pay their respects Tuesday night — along with tribal officers who served the mortuary with a third notice. Hullinger said his son was trying to negotiate with the two families when one of the officers closed the door, at which point tribal members removed the casket from the building, loaded it onto a truck and drove away. Serawop’s older sister, 36year-old Ricki Lynn Hackford, claims his common-law wife had since married another man and had no claims to her brother’s body. She said Serawop had always wanted to be cremated, but that she, her mother and sister agreed to bury him at a cemetery off the reservation instead. Tribal members still insisted he be buried on the reservation, she said. “We don’t even know where they buried him,” Hackford said. “We haven’t been able to grieve yet, because we’ve been too busy fighting.” The Ute tribe did not return a telephone call seeking comment Thursday. Tribal leaders issued a statement criticizing the mortuary for engaging in “unequal treatment and institutional racism,” KSL television reported. Serawop’s common-law wife and his family had every right to take his body from the mortuary, and he was buried in a cemetery pursuant to the cultural traditions of the Ute Indian Tribe, tribal leaders said. Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 3A Army suicides for 2012 surpass 2011 numbers WASHINGTON (AP) — Ten months into 2012, the number of suspected suicides by active-duty soldiers has surpassed last year’s total, even as the Pentagon struggles to stem the persistent problem. According to the Army, there were 20 possible suicides in October, bringing the total for the year to 166 — one more than the total for 2011. The 20 suspected soldier suicides in October is also a spike, compared to 15 in September. U.S. Army officials have been worried about the pace of suicides this year and were concerned the numbers would surge higher than last year despite efforts to increase pro- grams and outreach. In late September, the Army ordered a servicewide “stand down” requiring soldiers to put aside their usual duties and spend time discussing suicide prevention, including how to identify signs of trouble with their comrades. Military leaders have wrestled with ways to identify factors that trigger suicides. While it has been linked to combat stress, many of the suicide victims are soldiers who have never deployed. Other pressures, including marital, financial or health problems, are also known causes of suicides. Officials have also been puzzled by the rise in suicides after years of working to blunt the problem with new programs such as a regime of resilience training starting at boot camp and the hiring of more psychiatrists and other mental health workers. The questions are compounded by the fact that the pace of combat deployments — often thought to be a trigger — has begun to slow and suicide rates were leveling off for the two previous years. Suicides also are rising in the civilian population, officials said. Suicides among National Guard and Reserve soldiers who are not on active duty are also on pace to surpass last year’s numbers. CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE AUDITORS amount, we felt it should be brought to the attention of the City Council,” he said. If the city did not have a control structure in place to record and report expenditures, Dahill said that would have constituted a material weakness. Since one exists, the auditors categorized the mistake as a significant deficiency, but not a material weakness. The city does have a good control structure in place, Dahill said, but it simply needs to be tightened. He said Rock Springs Finance and Administration Director Lisa Tarufelli agreed with the audit report, which said the two construction expenditures should have been included with the June 30, 2012 data. The city responded to the significant deficiency. “The city sends out letters to contractors before fiscal year end asking them to invoice the city for work performed up to June 30th so staff can more easily determine what portion of the expenditures are to be included in the proper period. Staff also reviews invoices to determine the fiscal year in which the expenditures belong. In order to strengthen internal controls, the city will send additional reminders to contractors and those responsible for administration of contracts to facili- BY THE NUMBERS Rock Springs audit figures as of June 30 Governmental fund Total assets: $43,775,019 Total liabilities: $7,389,841 Total liabilities and fund balance: $43,775,019 Net assets Total current assets: $80,339,043 Total noncurrent assets: $139,745,722 Total assets: $220,084,765 Total current liabilities: $9,199,209 Total noncurrent liabilities: $15,221,704 Total liabilities: $24,420,913 Total 2011-12 net assets: $195,663,852 Total 2010-11 net assets: $187,980,000 Source: Rock Springs, McGee, Hearne and Paiz, LLP tate invoicing promptly for work performed before fiscal year end. Staff will also perform more in-depth reviews of large invoices submitted after year end,” the city response said. Tarufelli said the oversight referred to retrofit work at the wastewater treatment plant to control the smell and miscellaneous sewer work. The money came out of the sewer fund, not the city’s general fund. Because some of the work done by the contractor started in May 2012 and continued past the start of the new fiscal year on July 1, 2012, the bill did not come in prior to the start of the new fiscal year. As a result, the city did not apportion the cost between the 2012 and 2013 fiscal years. Tarufelli said steps have been taken to ensure there is no repeat of any similar mistakes. Contractors doing business with the city will be more strongly reminded to submit invoices prior to the end of the fiscal year when work was so costs can be included in the audit. A complete copy of the audit report on the Rock Springs Web site at www.rswy.net. The information is listed under the finance and administration department. Financial and compliance reports for 2006-07 to 2011-12 are listed under related pages. HOLIDAYS Sweetwater County updates fire code JOEL GALLOB Rocket-Miner News Reporter GREEN RIVER — New fire code standards passed the Sweetwater County Commission. The changes replaced the 2006 version of the code. The revised code does not include a board of appeals. Instead, people who claim the code does not apply or the true intent has been misconstrued can appeal a fire code official decision to the Wyoming Council on Fire Prevention and Electrical Safety within 30 days of the decision. The new code said anyone who violates a fire code provision will be fined up to $750 for each day the violation is discovered and remains uncorrected. In addition, anyone who does not obey a county stop work order, except work to correct a violation or unsafe condition, will face a $50 to $750 fine. Commissioners Wally Johnson, Gary Bailiff, Reid West, Don Van Matre and John Kolb voted to adopt the 2012 fire code as amended by Sweetwater County Enforcement Officer Jim Zimmerman. Marijuana law introduced to Uruguay congress MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) — Uruguay came one step closer to turning the government into the country’s leading pot dealer on Thursday, as lawmakers formally introduced to Congress a framework for regulating the production, sale and consumption of marijuana. The proposal is much more liberal than what Uruguay’s government initially proposed months ago, when President Jose Mujica said only the government would be allowed to sell pot. The draft law would instead create a National Cannabis Institute with the power to license individuals and companies to produce and sell marijuana for recreational, medicinal or indus- trial uses. It would foster marijuana growing clubs to provide the weed to their members. And most significantly, it would allow anyone to grow a limited amount of marijuana in their own homes, and possess marijuana for their own consumption. “The thrust is the same, to create state-controlled markets. This provides the legal framework,” Colette Youngers, a drug policy expert at the Washington Office on Latin America, told The Associated Press. “The main difference is that they have incorporated the idea of cultivation for personal use, and also the cannabis clubs, which was not in the initial proposal.” Parade organizers said participants cannot throw candy from floats. They said if candy is offered, it must be handed out by walkers. They also require all parade participants be secured to the float, no graffiti and all entries must be in good taste and represent the spirit of the season. Any float not in good taste can be disqualified at check-in. In addition, there can be no live fires or flames associated with a float. There is an entry fee. The parade will begin on C Street, turn east on South Main and turn right on Broadway. It will proceed under the underpass to M Street, turn left onto Pilot Butte to K Street and take a right on North Front. The route will continue on Elk Street and turn left to Grant Street before floats can disperse into the parking lot of Vase Funeral Home or over the A Street viaduct. 2013 CHOCOLATE FESTIVAL Looking ahead, the 2013 Chocolate Festival is scheduled for Friday, Feb. 8, and Saturday, Feb. 9. The Rock Springs Civic Center will again host the event. Chocolate Festival chairman Jodie Barnum hosted the first organizational meeting for the event on Nov. 13. Barnum said the second day will be kids’ day at the festival. She said no decision has been made for the theme of the first day. “After Dec. 1 is when we’ll really get going,” Barnum said. During the next Chocolate Festival meeting in a couple of WOLVES are in Montana are considered Montana animals once they cross the border, regardless,” Jones said. Hunters, she added, are allowed to call for wolves to draw them close enough for a shot. Electronic calls are prohibited in the state, but hunters can use verbal calls just like they can when hunting other species such as elk. Hunters have killed at least 61 wolves in Montana, 96 in Idaho and 34 in Wyoming this hunting season. That’s a combined 191 wolves out a regionwide population of at least 1,774 animals at the end of 2011. Government biologists say there are more than enough animals to sustain the species, but wildlife advocates and conservation groups have warned state-sanctioned hunts could again imperil the animals. SUIT Their concerns about the Forest Service’s approval of the North Porcupine tract are essentially identical to those they harbor about the South Porcupine tract, third-year law student Jon Lavallee argued for the groups. “The decisions are quite hard to tell apart,” Lavallee told the judge. The Forest Service argued that the concerns over the separate tracts warrant separate complaints. “There are differences that, when we get to the nitty-gritty, will matter,” attorney Marissa Ann Piropato, representing the Forest Service, told the court. She said combining the groups’ concerns about the two tracts under the same lawsuit wouldn’t necessarily be more efficient for the system. The lawsuit was originally filed in U.S. District Court in Denver. A Colorado judge granted a Forest Service request to transfer the case to Wyoming in April. Intervenors in the case on the side of the Forest Service include the state of Wyoming, Wyoming Mining Association, National Mining Association and BTU Western Resources. Three other lawsuits WildEarth Guardians has filed against the BLM to contest Wyoming coal leases are still pending before federal judges in Washington, D.C. weeks, the group will break into committees. Although there is a solid core group of workers already, Barnum said additional helpers will be needed. 12515091.qxp 11/15/2012 7:50 PM Page 4 LIFESTYLES rocketminer.com Your local news source since 1881 Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 NEWS TIPS: Call the news department with your local news ideas, events and organizational updates 362-3736 Page 4A COMMUNITY BULLETIN BOARD Around Sweetwater County the Girl Scouts, Uinta County New Hope Baptist Concert Series, a medical clinChurch hosting ic in Farson, a 4-H Club meat judging team and the Bridger dinner on Nov. 18 Valley Food Pantry. It has also ROCK SPRINGS — New Hope Baptist Church is hosting a pre-Thanksgiving dinner on Nov. 18. Dinner will be served from 13 p.m. Sunday at the New Hope Baptist Church, 513 G St., Rock Springs. Organizers said anyone is welcome and there is no charge. “This dinner is our way of giving back to the community, for those who may be less fortunate and even those who don’t want to cook,” New Hope Pastor Elwood Stewart said. For more information, contact Kent Porenta. Operation Roundup is in full swing ROCK SPRINGS — Bridger Valley Electric is raising money for those in need and community projects and programs through the Operation Roundup Program. This program gives Bridger Valley Electric members the option to round up electric bills and send the spare change for donations. Monetary donations are also accepted. Organizers said participants donate about $11.88 a year, which adds up with the number of participating co-op members. Past beneficiaries include Military News Joshua Barry promoted to specialist ROCK SPRINGS — Joshua Barry of Laramie was recently promoted to the rank of specialist in the Wyoming Army National Guard. Barry is a bridge crew member in the 1041st Engineer Company in Rock Springs. He has been a member of the Wyoming Army National Guard for two years. In addition to serving in the Wyoming Army National Guard, Barry is a drilling engineer with Encana Oil and Gas in Denver. Richard Wilson awarded Meritorious Service Medal ROCK SPRINGS — Staff Sgt. Richard Wilson of Jackson was awarded the Meritorious Service Medal on Nov. 3. Wilson is a senior boat operator assigned to the Wyoming National Guard’s 1041st Engineer Company in Rock Springs. Lt. Col. Steve Alkire, the commander of the 94th Troop Command, presented Wilson the award for meritorious service for more than 15 years, distinguishing himself in all positions served. In addition to serving in the Wyoming Army National Guard, Wilson is a highway Birth Pehlke-Johnson boy born ROCK SPRINGS — A boy, Ash Anders Pehlke-Johnson, was born June 10, 2012, to Joe Fibbers vie for World’s Biggest Liar crown LONDON (AP) — Fantastic fibbers vied at a remote pub in northwestern England on Thursday for the title of helped pay bills due to illness, death or other important needs. To donate, round up your electric bill or send a check by mail to Bridger Valley Electric’s Operation Roundup Program. Baker, Willoughby win pinochle games ROCK SPRINGS — James Baker won the Nov. 8 pinochle game played at the Young at Heart Recreational Center. Frank Willoughby placed second, and Gary Jensen came in third. Other pinochle players included Jim Rafferty, Lorraine Hill, Betty DuPape and Joi Jensen. Besso, Melvin and Willoughby win cribbage games ROCK SPRINGS — Barbara Besso and the pair of Don Melvin and Frank Willoughby won their respective tables at the Nov. 14 cribbage games played at the Young at Heart Recreational Center. Other cribbage players included Jim Rafferty, Dorothy Logan and Joe Kruljac. maintenance professional with the Wyoming Department of Transportation. Seneca Phelps promoted to private ROCK SPRINGS — Seneca Phelps of Green River was recently promoted to the rank of private in the Wyoming Army National Guard. Phelps is a bridge crew member in the 1041st Engineer Company in Rock Springs. She was a member of the Wyoming Army National Guard for one year. In addition to serving in the Wyoming Army National Guard, Phelps is a maintenance worker with the Sweetwater County Events Complex in Rock Springs. Matthew Wilks promoted to sergeant ROCK SPRINGS — Matthew Wilks of Laramie was recently promoted to the rank of sergeant in the Wyoming Army National Guard. Wilks is a bridge crew member in the 1041st Engineer Company in Rock Springs. He has been a member of the Wyoming Army National Guard for six years. In addition to serving in the Wyoming Army National Guard, Barry is a student at the University of Wyoming in Laramie. Johnson and Joy Pehlke in Ann Arbor, Mich. He is the brother of Austin Aran Pehlke-Johnson. His grandparents are Dave and Karen Pehlke of St George, Utah. world’s biggest liar. Judges were deliberating into the night after two hours of competition at the Bridge Inn in the Lake District hamlet of Santon Bridge. Contestants had five minutes to impress the judges with a whopping but convincing lie. Participants at the recognition dinner for volunteers at the Young at Heart Recreational Center include, from left, Mardell and John Pieper. Volunteers, from left, Mary and Ray Hardy received recognition for supporting the Young at Heart Recreational Center. Young at Heart recognizes volunteers at special event ROCK SPRINGS — About 250 community volunteers were recognized by the Young at Heart Recreational Center’s volunteer recognition dinner on Friday, Oct. 26. Approximately 250 volunteers, who gave a minimum of one hour each month volunteer time, were honored. On average volunteers give more than 2,500 hours per month to help the center run daily operations. When asked why they volunteer, one volunteer wrote, “I get a lot of satisfaction and pleasure out of volunteering. I love to help other people. It’s good for the soul.” Volunteers must complete an application. Once approved they go through orientation and receive a job description. Volunteers will do all things, such as serve their fellow seniors, help with fundraising activities and help with other programs in the community. “YAH could not operate as smoothly as it does without volunteers,” Director Jeanine Cox said. “There is more than money involved. Volunteers show how much they care with every hour they volunteer. There isn’t a big enough ‘thank you’ that can be said.” Many volunteer opportunities are available for community members looking to help out. Receptionists man the telephones, sell meal tickets and greet people and may be asked to help with paperwork. Volunteers who are able to drive are needed to deliver home-delivered meals. The task takes about 90 minutes and volunteers generally deliver the same day each week, one time each week and the same route. Kitchen aides are needed at different times in the kitchen. Members of the activity committee donate one hour for a meeting, usually at the end of every month. Help may include making posters, putting together items for noontime activities and preparing mailers. Members of the dance committee generally meet each month to plan Oktoberfest, New Year’s Dance, Spring Fling dance and others. Young at Heart Recreational Center volunteers include, from left, Chuck and Betty Jean Carter. Other ways to help include making phone calls for outreach programs, entering computer data, filing, janitor/cleaning work and organizing mailings. Anyone interested may contact the Young at Heart Recreational Center. ‘Star Wars’ figures in Toy Hall of Fame ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) — Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia outmuscled little green army men for a spot in the National Toy Hall of Fame. “Star Wars” action figures join centuries-old dominoes in the class of 2012, which was announced by the Rochester hall Thursday. A national selection committee chose them from among 12 finalists, plucking the most ancient and most modern toys from the list. “Star Wars” action figures went on the market in 1978, following the 1977 release of the 20th Century Fox movie. The 3 3/4-inch figures of Han Solo, Chewbacca, R2-D2 and company were sold until 1985 and again from the mid-1990s to today. Museum officials say their phenomenal popularity inspired other toy makers to tie their products to movies and television series and they note the toys’ appeal extends to adults who continue to collect them. “They are a force to be reckoned with,” said Patricia Hogan, curator at The Strong museum, which houses the Toy Hall of Fame. More than 20 lines of “Star Wars” figures have launched, propelling the film series’ merchandise sales to $20 billion over the past 35 years. The action figures were first made by Kenner, which was bought by Tonka and later Hasbro. Dominoes originated in China in the 1300s and appeared later in Europe in a slightly different form. A standard set of 28 tiles represents all possible results when rolling a pair of six-sided dice, with the addition of two blank sides. Although there’s a variety of ways to play with them, the cascading toppling of lined-up tiles put the “domino effect” into the American lexicon. The toys beat out plastic green army men, the board game Clue, the Fisher-Price Corn Popper, Lite-Brite, the Magic 8 Ball, the pogo stick, sidewalk chalk, the electronic game Simon, the tea set and Twister. Officials at the Toy Hall of Fame say anyone can nominate a toy and thousands of suggestions come in every year. An internal committee of curators, educators and historians chooses the finalists and then a national selection committee votes for the winners. To date, 49 toys have made the cut. They range from classics, like Play-Doh and Slinky, to the less obvious, like the stick and cardboard box. Longevity is a key criterion for getting into the 14-year-old hall. Each toy must be widely recog- nized, foster learning, creativity or discovery through play, and endure in popularity over generations. “Play is an essential activity, critical to learning and to human development,” said Christopher Bensch, The Strong’s vice president of collections. “Play is also a window into understanding American culture.” 12515092.qxp 11/15/2012 8:09 PM Page 5 rocketminer.com Diabetes rates rocket in Oklahoma MIKE STOBBE AP Medical Writer NEW YORK (AP) — The nation’s diabetes problem is getting worse, and the biggest jump over 15 years was in Oklahoma, according to a new federal report issued Thursday. The diabetes rate in Oklahoma more than tripled, and Kentucky, Georgia and Alabama also saw dramatic increases since 1995, the study showed. The South’s growing weight problem is the main explanation, said Linda Geiss, lead author of the report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study. “The rise in diabetes has really gone hand in hand with the rise in obesity,” she said. Bolstering the numbers is the fact that more people with diabetes are living longer because better treatments are available. The disease exploded in the United States in the last 50 years, with the vast majority from obesity-related Type 2 diabetes. In 1958, fewer than 1 in 100 Americans had been diagnosed with diabetes. In 2010, it was about 1 in 14. Most of the increase has happened since 1990. Diabetes is a disease in which the body has trouble processing sugar; it’s the nation’s seventh leading cause of death. Complications include poor circulation, heart and kidney problems and nerve damage. The new study is the CDC’s first in more than a decade to look at how the nationwide boom has played out in different states. It’s based on telephone surveys of at least 1,000 adults in each state in 1995 and 2010. Participants were asked if a doctor had ever told them they have diabetes. Not surprisingly, Mississippi — the state with the largest proportion of residents who are obese — has the highest diabetes rate. Nearly 12 percent of Mississippians say they have diabetes, compared to the national average of 7 percent. Ancestry.com adds military burial sites SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Genealogy web site Ancestry.com launched an online, searchable collection of the burial sites of more than 500,000 members of the military on Monday, Veterans Day. The project, a partnership with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the National Archives and Records Administration, allows people to search by name — for a fee — through an online collection of military burial sites at Ancestry.com. The collection includes burial information for prominent figures in history, including President Abraham Lincoln and Gen. George Armstrong Custer, who died with more than 200 of his men in the 1876 Battle of the Little Bighorn against a coalition of Native American tribes. “We are excited to be able to share this wealth of primary documentation,” Steve L. Muro, the VA’s undersecretary for memorial affairs, said in a statement. “With the help of Ancestry.com, we have opened the doors to thousands of service members’ histories through the information contained in these burial ledgers.” The National Cemetery Administration has overseen U.S. military burial documents for 82 national cemeteries since 1973. Concerned for the fragility of the documents and wanting to expand public access to the contents, the administration scanned about 60 handwritten ledgers to produce more than 9,344 pages of high-quality digital images. However, those images couldn’t be searched, making it difficult to find records. In 2011, the administration partnered with Ancestry.com to index the pages so users can search them more easily. Holiday Hosting 101 CEDAR BURNETT Associated Press Not everyone can be Martha Stewart. For the mere mortal hosts among us, holiday party planning can whip up stress and anxiety: Is my house inviting? Do I have enough chairs? What about food? If the thought of entertaining sends you to the nearest couch with a bottle of aspirin, relax — we’ve compiled advice from some of the best party experts around. SETTING THE MOOD “Parties give us the chance to suspend what’s going on in our lives and give us space to be merry,” says Danielle Rollins, the Atlanta-based author of the new “Soiree: Entertaining with Style” (Rizzoli). The best way to create that space, she says, is to build tradition into your party and make it something people can look forward to year after year. Decide on a theme or an anchor activity — gingerbread decorating, caroling, ugly holiday sweaters — and specify a dress code on the invitation. “It’s fun to have an excuse to dress up,” Rollins says. “You’ll build excitement around the event if guests know what to expect.” Decor should echo the theme and reinforce the style of party you want to have. But don’t feel you have to stick with a traditional holiday color palette or decorations. “Thanksgiving doesn’t have to mean orange and Christmas doesn’t have to mean red and green,” says Rollins. Lyric Turner, the owner of Red House Staging and Interiors in Washington, D.C., suggests introducing a warm color palette — burgundy, chocolate brown, purple and orange — through accent pillows, throws or curtains to create a festive look in an unexpected way. “If you are going to bring in red and green elements to your decorating, keep the rest of your space neutral. A cacophony of color is too much,” says Turner. SETTING THE STAGE Whether your party is large or small, deciding where to put the guests can be tricky. Many people make the mistake of removing all the furniture for a cocktail party, says Rollins, but it’s important to have places to sit. “Your living space should be structured for conversation,” says Turner. She recommends creating seating clusters around the house. “Anywhere you have a little extra room — an entryway, an office — you can group a few chairs around a small table.” Rollins emphasizes the need for tables and stools spread throughout the gathering spaces. “Pretend you’re a drink,” she says. “Where will you go?” Too much furniture, however, can feel claustrophobic. “Some editing is necessary,” says Turner, to allow for traffic flow. “You’re adding a lot with holiday decor,” she adds. “If you’re not taking anything out, you’re just adding clutter.” SETTING THE LIGHTS The right lighting makes your home (and your guests) look their best. Our experts agreed that overhead lighting has no place in a party; place lamps on multiple levels throughout your rooms, dim the lights and add candles wherever you can. “Avoid candles by the bar and the buffet, though,” cautions Rollins. “You don’t want your guests going up in flames.” She also suggests skipping scented candles because they compete with the scent of the food.And while lighting should be low in conversation areas, keep bathrooms and food areas better lit. SETTING THE TABLE Food can make or break a party, but Rollins insists, “It’s not about what you’re serving, it’s how it’s displayed.” For buffets, she suggests using smaller dishes and refilling them frequently. Push the dining table against the wall to create more space for mingling around the food, Turner recommends. And a signature cocktail adds a festive touch, and can streamline bar mess and bar costs. Report: Steps can reduce preterm births — a little LAURAN NEERGAARD AP Medical Writer WASHINGTON (AP) — For all the miracle stories of tiny preemies who survive, the sad reality is that scientists know far too little about what triggers premature birth and how to prevent it. And despite some recent progress, the U.S. has a far higher rate of preterm births than other similar nations. On Thursday, an international coalition said there are a handful of proven protections — and if the U.S. and other developed countries do a better job of using them, together they could keep 58,000 babies a year from being born too soon. That’s a blip in the global epidemic of prematurity: About 15 million preterm babies are born every year, most of them in Africa and parts of Asia where the priority is to improve care of these fragile newborns. More than 1 million premature infants die, mostly in developing countries, and survivors can suffer lifelong disabilities. But in wealthier countries, where sophisticated medical care already keeps most preemies alive, the focus is shifting to how to prevent these births in the first place. Nearly 1 in 10 births across the developed world are preterm, and about 1 in 8 in the U.S. Only recently have rates begun leveling off or dropping in many of these countries after years of steady increases. Thursday’s report makes clear just how hard additional progress on that front will be — projecting an average 5 percent drop in preterm birth rates across the highest-income countries by 2015, if they follow the new advice. “Shockingly, very little reduction is currently possible,” specialists with the World Health Organization, Save the Children, U.S. National Institutes of Health, March of Dimes and other groups reported in The Lancet. But even that improvement would translate into about $3 billion in annual savings from medical bills and lost productivity, the group calculated. Nearly half that savings would be in the U.S. The bigger message: It’s time for a major scientific push to figure out the causes of preterm birth and find some better ways to intervene. “I don’t think it’s hopeless at all,” said report co-author Dr. Catherine Spong, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at NIH who points to clues that infections and inflammation affecting the mother play a yet-to-be-understood role. Because healthier babies grow into healthier adults, “if you could improve pregnancy outcomes, you could improve the health of the nation, quite honestly,” she added. Over half a million U.S. babies are born premature, before completion of the 37th week of pregnancy. That’s 11.7 percent of the babies born in 2011, the lowest rate of preterm birth in a decade and down from a peak of 12.8 percent in 2006, the March of Dimes reported earlier this week. Contrast that with Japan and Sweden, where fewer than 6 percent of births are premature, or Canada and Britain where fewer than 8 percent are. Last spring, this same international coalition provided the first country-by-country estimates of preterm births and recommended some inexpensive steps that developing countries could take to improve preemie survival. Thursday’s follow-up analyzed trends in developed countries, to come up with advice on preventing prematurity. The report recommends: • Nearly eliminating the practice of inducing labor and C-sections scheduled much ahead of mom’s due date unless they’re medically necessary. Much of the recent U.S. improvement comes from reducing elective early deliveries, leading to a drop in “late preemies,” babies born a few weeks early. • Helping women to quit smoking. Smoking at some point during pregnancy varies widely, from 10 percent in Canada to 23 percent in the U.S. and 30 percent in Spain, the report found. Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 5A Machining class powers Gillette KATHY BROWN Gillette News-Record GILLETTE (AP) — There are some big bonuses coming out of a combined Gillette CollegeCampbell County High School machining class that’s the first of its kind in the community and perhaps the state. • Students in the class figure they save $1,000 toward a college certificate or degree. • They are introduced to a college-level program and can earn eight free college credits. • And the program puts to use a full-service shop at Campbell County High School (CCHS) that was gathering a bit of dust. Eventually, organizers hope the program at CCHS will grow to the point that students can graduate with a high school diploma and receive a college certificate in machining on the same day. “I like it,” said senior Ben Choate, 18, who was working on grinding and tapering a handle for a hammer. “I like to be creative, just hands-on.” He is aiming toward a career in welding, but his experience in machining — making tools and metal parts on lathes — will help. “I get eight college credits, so if I go to college, I don’t have to do this,” Choate said. “Getting it done now saves me about $1,000,” added Ben Roberts, 18, a senior who hopes to become a diesel mechanic. He will work on oil rigs with his dad this summer, and said the ability to create needed parts on site will just make him that more employable. “I’m saving myself about a year and three months,” said Alex Del Valle, 17, a senior who is looking at a career in welding or becoming an airplane mechanic. The combined CCHS-Gillette College class is a marriage between two schools with common goals, said CCHS Principal Kirby Eisenhauer. The college recently announced its strategy to increase its number of graduates to 1,000 by 2020. This class will help that effort. “I think it’s working really well,” Eisenhauer said. “We both have the same goals, to make kids career ready, and the earlier the better. “The kids seem to enjoy it and the parents enjoy it, especially when you say it’s free credits. It gives the kids a taste of college. “I could see it growing. I hope it does.” The program seems to be a natural. CCHS had a shop that was unused most of each school day, although teacher Brandon Cone would bring some of his students over from time to time to work on projects. “We’re real fortunate with the facilities we have,” Eisenhauer said. “We have some machinery you don’t find in professional shops.” Both Eisenhauer and college officials had seen signs outside of businesses in Gillette advertising the need for general machinists. That’s when the light bulb went off. “I thought, why can’t we grow our own kids for that?” Eisenhauer said. “It’s not a piece of cake. (The program) is rigorous. The kids come in with some high expectations on them. This is a college course.” Now the high school facilities are being put to use by instructor Paul Plourde and his students. Plourde’s salary is paid by Gillette College. But he works at CCHS. “It’s a new concept, a college instructor who teaches at a high school,” Eisenhauer said. “This is a good partnership. This will only help the college. It will be nice one day to hand off a diploma and a (college) certificate at the same time.” That day may not be too much further down the road, said Jed Jensen, the new director of career technical programs in the Northern Wyoming Community College District. He will be based out of the Technical Education Center at Gillette College. “It’s a good partnership. If Paul (Plourde) wasn’t here, this would sit empty,” Jensen said, pointing to the “beautiful” equipment that was standing idle. “The brainchild was an empty shop,” he added. “We want students to walk out with a high school diploma and tell local businesses ‘I’ve got experience or go on to get an associate’s degree,” Jensen said. The machining classes also work well for students continuing in the college’s welding or diesel mechanics programs. Plourde, 27, is son of Mike Plourde, a ceramics teacher at the CCHS South Campus. He also is a 2004 graduate of CCHS who was introduced to machining at Sheridan College. After completing his two years of instruction at Sheridan College, the biking enthusiast worked for a bike shop in Boulder, Colo. When work in that field declined, he moved back to Gillette and machined with local shops for four years. The past two years, he’s worked full time while pursuing a bachelor’s degree in secondary education. He’d heard hints about a machining program this past spring, and applied in August when Gillette College opened the position for applications. 12515094.qxp 11/15/2012 10:02 PM Page 6 SPORTS rocketminer.com Your local news source since 1881 NEWS TIPS: Call the news department with your local news ideas, events and organizational updates 362-3736 Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 Page 6A GYMNASTICS RESULTS Athlete: Vault; Bars; Beam; Floor; Overall LEVEL 3 Kyla Henry: 8; 6.5; 4.8; 5.8; 25.1 Breanna Macy: 7.75; 4.3; 6.25; 5.45; 23.75 Damaris Ruiz: 8.3; 3.8; 5.25; 5.45; 22.8 Kierra Levina Bell: 7.9; 3.8; 4.9; 5.6; 22.2 LEVEL 4 Alison Wheeler: 8; 3.7; 4.5; 6.8; 23 Payton Sweet: 8.4; 3.6; 5.4; 5.2; 22.6 Gabriela Torres: 8.1; 3.75; 2; 5; 18.85 First Competition ROCK SPRINGS: Gymnasts from Legacy Gym, such as Damaris Ruiz on the beam, competed at the 2012 Wyoming Invitational Meet on Nov. 10. It was the first time Legacy gymnasts competed since the gym opened in October 2012. The Level 7 team won a third-place team award. Selig reviewing pending Marlins-Blue Jays deal JAY COHEN AP Sports Writer ROSEMONT, Ill. (AP) — Bud Selig was on hand when the Miami Marlins played their first regular-season game in their swanky new ballpark in April. The commissioner provided a glowing review of the $634 million project and boldly declared that opposition to the facility would fade away within five years. So far, it’s not looking so good for that last prediction. Selig said Thursday he is examining the pending blockbuster trade that sends at least three of Miami’s best players to Toronto for a package of prospects just seven months after the Marlins moved into their new home, which was financed primarily with tax money. Speaking at the conclusion of the owners’ meetings, Selig said he also is aware of fan anger in South Florida but is going to do what’s in the best interests of the sport. “People have different views of that as to what you should do and how you should do it, but I think I’ve been able to come through all these situations and the sport’s been stronger and better as a result,” he said, pointing to his recent experience with the Texas Rangers and Los Angeles Dodgers going through bankruptcy proceedings. “So when I say I have this matter under review and I’ve talked to a lot of our people and I’ve spent a lot of time here in between all the other meetings — this is a tough place to do it — that’s exactly what I mean. It is under review. I am aware of the anger, I am. I’m also aware that in Toronto they’re very happy.” The Blue Jays, who finished fourth in the loaded AL East last season, are bringing in All-Star shortstop Jose Reyes, left-hander Mark Buehrle and right-hander Josh Johnson under the deal, which is contingent on physicals for the players. Selig also said there is money going from Miami to Toronto, but did not offer any details and said the trade hadn’t been officially presented to his office yet. Reyes and Buehrle signed lucrative free-agent contracts with the Marlins last offseason, and Johnson has been Miami’s best pitcher when healthy. The Marlins get infielders Yunel Escobar and Adeiny Hechavarria, right-hander Henderson Alvarez and several top prospects, a nice haul but certainly not enough to satisfy a fan base that went through similar rebuilding after the franchise won the World Series in 1997 and 2003. “I’ve talked to two baseball people — I have a lot of people that I check with and talk to — who have, actually, an interesting view on the trade,” Selig said at an airport hotel just outside of Chicago. “They think that (Miami), in terms of young players, did very well. These are two independent baseball people. These are not chefs in these kitchens here. “So I want to think about all of it and I want to review everything. I want to be my usual painstaking, cautious, slow, conservative self in analyzing it. ... There’s a lot of variables here.” Paul Beeston, the president and CEO of the Blue Jays, rushed by a group of reporters as he left the owners’ meetings. Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria was seen in the lobby at the hotel but did not make himself available to media. Loria went on a spending spree last offseason, also signing freeagent closer Heath Bell. The Marlins thought they would contend for the NL East title and draw 3 million fans in the first year of their ballpark. But they flopped, finishing last in the division. Bell was traded to Arizona in October, with the Marlins agreeing to pay $8 million of the remaining $21 million owed to the reliever. Asked Thursday if it’s in the best interests of baseball for Loria to continue to own a franchise, Selig said he wasn’t going to comment any further other than saying the trade is under review. “I know what the commissioner can do, can’t do, what his legal responsibilities are,” he said. “I understand the feeling and in the end I’ll do what I’ve done in the other past situations. People always ask me, ‘Boy, don’t you wish SPORTS BRIEF Martinez leads Wyoming over South Dakota 71-51 LARAMIE (AP) — Luke Martinez drilled 7 of 9 shots from 3point range and scored 21 points to lead Wyoming over South Dakota 71-51 in the Global Sports Hoops Showcase on Thursday night. Leonard Washington added 17 points and 11 rebounds, while Larry Nance Jr. scored 12 for Wyoming (3-0). Casey Kasper- bauer had 12 to lead South Dakota (0-2), while Juevol Myles added 11 and Tyler Flack 10. Martinez’s fifth 3 of the game put the Cowboys ahead 46-26 early in the second half. Washington keyed an early 9-1 run and his NBA-length 3-pointer put Wyoming up 28-16 at the 5:40 mark of the first half. The lead never shrank below single digits after that. The Coyotes shot only 30 percent from the floor (18 of 53), while the Cowboys hit 46 percent (26 of 57). The Blue Jays, who finished fourth in the loaded AL East last season, are bringing in All-Star shortstop Jose Reyes. it didn’t happen?’ Well, there are a lot of situations I wish hadn’t happened, but they have, and then I have to try to do what I have to do.” OTHER THURSDAY DEVELOPMENTS • Owners approved new television deals with ESPN, Turner Sports and Fox worth about $12.4 billion from 2014-21, according to Selig. • Joe Torre, MLB’s executive vice president for baseball operations, said the league still is looking into expanded use of instant replay. “Whether we do something for next season or not, I think by the time we start next season I’m confident we’ll have a plan,” he said. • There was no update on the situation in Northern California, where Oakland wants to build a ballpark in San Jose — an area that is part of the San Francisco Giants’ territory. “I know people say ‘Gee, it should be easy to do,’” Selig said. “Well, the more they’ve gotten into it, the more complicated it’s gotten. But we’re headed for resolution.” • Selig is planning to travel to next month’s winter meetings to speak to team doctors and trainers about drug testing, and he reiterated his support for baseball’s drug program and its penalties. LEVEL 7 Ali Lange: 8.18; 4.6; 6.45; 7.55; 26.78 Dumervil plans to practice Friday and play Sunday ARNIE STAPLETON AP Pro Football Writer ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — If Elvis Dumervil and D.J. Williams get their way, they’ll both spend Sunday harassing San Diego quarterback Philip Rivers. Dumervil first has to show he’s healthy enough to play and Williams has to prove he’s knocked off the rust. Dumervil hasn’t practiced all week but plans to test his sprained left shoulder at practice Friday in hopes the Broncos (6-3) will clear him to face the Chargers (4-5). The twotime Pro Bowl defensive end was injured at Carolina last weekend but medical tests this week showed no torn muscles or ligaments. “My goal is to play,” Dumervil said. “That’s what I’ve got to look toward tomorrow, coming out and getting a good practice in and getting ready.” Dumervil had a similar injury to the same shoulder that sidelined him for two games and most of a third last season, but he said this injury is “nowhere near” as serious or as painful as that one was. He leads the AFC with five forced fumbles and has seven sacks. “I do miss him being out here,” cornerback Champ Bailey said Thursday. “I don’t want him to miss any time.” Neither does Von Miller, the other half of Denver’s “Doom & Gloom” pass-rushing duo, although he still had a monster game when Dumervil went out and was replaced by Robert Ayers and rookie Malik Jackson. Williams returned this week from two suspensions that kept him out of the first nine games. “He’s been looking good in practice,” Miller said. “He’s in shape. He’s right on point, he’s looking sharp. I’m sure he’ll have fresh legs on Sunday. I’m quite confident he’ll have a good game on Sunday.” He’ll have to return to the roster first and then get activated on game day. At any rate, it could be some time before Williams returns to a heavy load because Wesley Woodyard, Keith Brooking and Miller have played so well in his absence, as has rookie Danny Trevathan in the nickel packages. Barring injury, Williams, the team’s leading tackler in four of the last five seasons, will likely have to make his mark on special teams and in sub packages early on. Still, his teammates expect him to quickly work his way back into a prominent role. 12515095.qxp 11/15/2012 10:33 PM Page 7 rocketminer.com Felton, unbeaten Knicks rally past Spurs 104-100 SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Raymond Felton scored 25 points and the New York Knicks stayed undefeated by rallying to beat the San Antonio Spurs 104-100 on Thursday night. J.R. Smith added 17 points, Jason Kidd had 14 and Tyson Chandler 13 for the Knicks (60), who closed on a 22-11 run to remain the NBA’s lone unbeaten team. Tony Parker led San Antonio (7-2) with 19 points and 12 assists. Kawhi Leonard added 16 points and Tim Duncan had 14 points and 14 rebounds. Smith and Kidd hit consecutive 3-pointers to give the Knicks a 100-95 lead with a minute left. San Antonio missed seven of its last nine shots and had two turnovers in the final 2 minutes. The Spurs had won 18 of 19 regular-season games against New York. The late defensive push offset an uncharacteristic start by the Knicks. After holding their first five opponents to 87.8 points per game, the Knicks allowed the Spurs to set a quick tone when Danny Green opened with consecutive backdoor layups off assists from Parker and Duncan. The Knicks kept pace behind Felton, who had nine points and two assists in the opening period while shooting 3 for 5 from the field. Felton’s first 3-pointer gave the Knicks a 29-24 lead with 2 minutes left in the first period. Steve Novak and Rasheed Wallace hit back-to-back 3s to extend New York’s lead to 45-38 with 7:21 left in the first half. New York opened 6 for 7 on 3s. DeJuan Blair smiled at Spurs coach Gregg Popovich and gave him a double fist bump before taking the court for his first start of the season. The move paid off. Blair had two points and an assist while Nets beat Rondo-less Celtics, 102-97 BRIAN MAHONEY AP Basketball Writer NEW YORK (AP) — Joe Johnson made the tiebreaking basket with 3:03 left, Deron Williams and Brook Lopez each scored 24 points, and the Brooklyn Nets beat the Boston Celtics 102-97 on Thursday night for their fourth-straight victory. Williams had eight assists and made all nine free throws on a night Paul Pierce had two huge misses in the final minute for the Celtics, who played without injured point guard Rajon Rondo. Johnson finished with 19 points and eight rebounds for the Nets in front of a sold-out crowd of 17,732 that was divided but certainly loud in the tense, final minutes. Pierce scored 22 points and Leandro Barbosa had 17 in place of Rondo, who was out with a sprained right ankle. Kevin Garnett added 14 points but Boston had its three-game win streak snapped and lost to the Nets for just the third time in the last 21 meetings. Boston led 79-74 after three before the Nets evened it up at 85 on Jerry Stackhouse’s 3-pointer with 6:21 to play. It was still tied before Johnson made consecutive jumpers and Lopez scored on a follow shot for a six-point lead, and the Celtics could never catch up — especially when Pierce missed two free throws with 34.5 seconds left and Boston trailing by three. Rondo was hurt in the third quarter Wednesday night in a home victory over Utah. Without the NBA leader in assists, averaging 12.6, coach Doc Rivers said the playbook would be reduced because Barbosa didn’t fully know the offense yet. But the speedy Brazilian created for himself just fine, blowing by defenders for layups denying Carmelo Anthony the ball defensively and hounding the Knicks All-Star into missing his only attempt in the opening 8 minutes. Anthony appeared frustrated by the lack of touches, shaking his head and laughing when the Knicks rotated the ball away from him late in the second though finishing with just two assists. Nets coach Avery Johnson said the Nets needed a breakthrough against a quality opponent such as Boston and was interested to see how far his team had come since the Celtics smashed them 115-85 here in the preseason, a night he felt the longtime Atlantic Division rulers were trying to send a message to his team. The Nets have definitely closed the gap. They had led by 20 or more in their last three home games and opened a 13-point cushion early in the third quarter of this one. But Pierce, who had a quiet six-point first half, suddenly got going midway through the period with a 3pointer and basket as the Celtics fans — still noticeable around the arena though not nearly to the extent as when the Nets played in New Jersey — became more vocal. When he picked up his fourth foul and Rivers sent Jeff Green to the table to check in for him, Pierce pleaded to stay, Rivers agreed, and Pierce made the gamble pay off with consecutive baskets that gave Boston a 73-71 lead. The Nets shot out to a quick 11-point lead that was trimmed to 31-26 after one quarter. Brooklyn kept its lead throughout the second quarter, using 15 offensive rebounds in the first half to score 19 second-chance points and build a 5950 advantage. NOTES • The Nets made their first regular-season appearance on TNT since Jan. 24, 2008, against Golden State. Marv Albert, who is from Brooklyn and worked for the Dodgers when he was young before later calling games for both the Knicks and the Nets, was the lead announcer. • Lopez came in averaging 8.2 points in the first quarter and shooting 69.7 percent. He shot 5 of 7 Thursday. quarter. Anthony got aggressive after that possession, taking four shots in the final 3 minutes of the first half. He was blocked twice by Duncan under the basket. The first block resulted in Anthony’s own follow-up basket and the second led to a 3-pointer by Green with 0.8 seconds that gave the Spurs a 57-55 lead at halftime. NOTES • Including the playoffs, San Antonio has won 23 of 26 games at home. • Duncan had his 736th career double-double, extending his lead among active players. Reunited with Fox, Del Rio charges up Denver defense EDDIE PELLS AP National Writer ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — There are a few more lines around the eyes, each of them a symbol of some lesson learned during a head-coaching tenure that lasted nearly a decade, had its share of success but ended badly for Jack Del Rio in Jacksonville. Some things, however, haven’t changed. The Broncos defensive coordinator, now 49 and reunited with John Fox in the same role he had a decade ago in Carolina, is still a formidable presence whenever he walks onto a football field. And the schemes the NFL linebacker-turned-coach crafts still make life very difficult for offenses around the league. Asked to describe his approach to defense without using the word “aggressive” — because, really, what defensive coordinator doesn’t want to be aggressive? — Del Rio laughed. “Aggressive,” he said. “I don’t know. There are a lot of good people out there doing a lot of good things. From my standpoint, the No. 1 thing we want to do is create a culture where players understand the things they’re being asked to do. That they build a confidence playing for each other, with each other. And that in the end, you play fast.” Denver’s seventh defensive coordinator in seven years has the Broncos (6-3) playing fast, and at a level this defense hasn’t reached in a while. Yes, they are ranked a more-than-respectable sixth in yards allowed and 10th in points allowed, in the running to finish with the best statistics in those categories since the mid-2000s. But they are also ranked second in sacks per pass play and, with four touchdowns and a pair of safeties, are making the kind of plays that swing games. They are building a reputation as a swarming, playmaking and, yes, aggressive group, which is just how Del Rio coaches it, especially when the talent is there to make it happen. Had it worked this well in Jacksonville over the past few years, the coach might still be there. Instead, he got released 11 games into last season with a 69-73 career record. Some might have sat it out for a while, let some wounds heal and, in Del Rio’s case, collected some easy paychecks, which could have totaled up to around $5 million. Not this coach, who Thursday was standing in the midst of his defenders at the start of practice, shouting, listening, correcting and at one point, insisting the players “get this (expletive) down” by the end of the day. “I love coaching,” he said. “And this was a good opportunity for me to get hooked up with a guy I respect and a program that’s first class.” Indeed, when Fox came calling, Del Rio knew he could get right back into his comfort zone: coaching defense alongside one of the men he came up with; working in the room with players; getting back to the kind of routine that wasn’t available as much when he was a head coach, where PR, delegating to staff and big-picture decision-making often overshadows the X’s and O’s. “That’s something you probably kind of miss after a while,” Fox said. “It kind of re-energizes you. I think he’s having fun doing it.” No doubt, Del Rio said. “When we interviewed, I said, ‘Hey, I don’t mind being an assistant strength coach again,”‘ Del Rio said. “I love ball with the right people, right organization. I love to be a member on the staff and going through the grind and having my feet in the grass and having a chance to touch some players. That’s what I have a passion for.” Del Rio’s last two stops in his 11-year NFL playing career were in Dallas, where he played for Jimmy Johnson, and Minnesota, where Tony Dungy was the de- fensive coordinator. It was Johnson’s “all-in mentality,” as Del Rio called it, and Dungy’s ability to coach, teach but not dwell on failure that got Del Rio thinking about the kind of coach he’d like to be someday. He started in New Orleans as, yes, the assistant strength coach, then moved to Baltimore to coach the linebackers from 1999-2001. Led by Ray Lewis, the Ravens won the Super Bowl in 2001. Del Rio left Baltimore to join Fox in Carolina in 2002, where he transformed the defense from 32nd-ranked to second in the span of a season. Impressed with that sudden bout of success, and looking to inject some new, young energy into the franchise after firing Tom Coughlin, Jaguars owner Wayne Weaver bypassed coaches with more experience and took a chance on Del Rio, who with blue eyes, blond hair, standing 6-foot-4 and still close to his 240-pound playing weight was a made-for-TV presence in a city looking for a football star. Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 7A Buffalo defense stuffs Miami in 19-14 win JOHN WAWROW AP Sports Writer ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) — Mario Williams and the Buffalo Bills high-priced defense finally flexed its collective muscle, stuffing the Miami Dolphins in a 19-14 victory Thursday night. Safety Jairus Byrd forced a fumble and had an interception, while Bryan Scott sealed the victory with his second interception to end the Dolphins’ last-gasp drive in the final minute. Williams had one of three sacks for a Buffalo defense that limited the Dolphins to 184 yards and 16. That more than made up for an offense that lacked finish. Rian Lindell hit four field goals, including a 42-yarder, as Buffalo failed to score an offensive touchdown despite four trips inside the Dolphins 20. Leodis McKelvin opened the scoring 90 seconds in by returning a punt 79 yards for a touchdown in a game the Bills never trailed. The Bills (4-6) snapped a three-game skid and won for only the second time in seven games to stay on the fringes of the AFC playoff hunt. Buffalo also ended several other inglorious skids, by beating a division rival for the first time in nine meetings, and snapping an 11-game prime-time drought that dated to 2001. Marcus Thigpen scored on a 96-yard kickoff return and Davone Bess had a 2-yard touch- down catch for Miami (4-6), which has lost three straight. Rookie quarterback Ryan Tannehill continued to struggle for Miami. He finished going 14 of 28 for 141 yards with a touchdown and two interceptions. He was coming off a dreadful outing in which he threw three interceptions in a 37-3 loss to Tennessee last week. The No. 8 pick out of Texas A&M has thrown six TD passes and 11 interceptions. It wasn’t all Tannehill’s fault as the usually sturdy Dolphins defense gave up 120 yards rushing, including 91 to C.J. Spiller, who took over the bulk of the rushing duties in place of Fred Jackson (concussion). After allowing 307 yards rushing in its first five games, Miami’s now given up 661 in its past five. For Buffalo, it was a long-awaited breakout performance for a high-priced defense that entered the game among the NFL’s worst. Buffalo had ranked 31st in yards allowed and last in allowing an average 31.67 points per game. Williams was supposed to be the defense’s centerpiece after signing a six-year, $100 million contract March. He’s finally starting to play up to the deal, and his sack gave him a team-leading 5 1/2. The unit forced three turnovers after failing to produce one its past three games. Buffalo didn’t allow the Dolphins to cross midfield until their eighth drive, 11 minutes into the third quarter. Hope fading for deal to save NHL TORONTO (AP) — Negotiations had already hit a wall in the ongoing hockey labor fight, and now the NHL has suggested the sides take an official two-week break before getting back to the bargaining table. NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman floated the idea of a break to players’ association executive director Donald Fehr. The union hasn’t responded to the league yet, but the players maintained their position on Thursday night that they are ready and willing to meet at any time, and the only way to reach a deal to end the long lockout is to keep talking and negotiating. “Gary suggested the possibility of a two-week moratorium,” NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly wrote in an email to The Associated Press on Thursday night. “I’m disappointed because we don’t have a negotiating partner that has any genuine interest in reaching an agreement. Zero interest.” The suggestion of a break was first reported by The Canadian Press on Thursday night. With no new negotiations scheduled, and communication in general shutting down, the NHL appears to be getting closer to calling off more games, putting the entire hockey season in jeopardy. “I hope not, but I’m more discouraged now than I have been at any point in the process,” Daly said. “I responded to Don saying he did not know how to proceed from here.” The sides put on a push to make an agreement last week when they met over six consecutive days in New York. However, Friday’s session ended with a heated exchange, and talks lasted only about an hour on Sunday. The 61-day lockout has already claimed 327 regular-season games, including the New Year’s Day outdoor Winter Classic, and more could be wiped out within a week. It is believed that an agreement would need to be in place by the end of next week for the season to get under way on Dec. 1. That is starting to look unlikely because of the mere fact that the sides are unable to find common ground on the big issues keeping them apart. It is more than just finances preventing a deal. The disagreements over player contract terms have emerged as just big an impasse. The NHL wants to limit contracts to five years, make rules to prohibit back-diving contracts the league feels circumvent the salary cap, keep players ineligible for unrestricted free agency until they are 28 or have eight years of professional service time, cut entrylevel deals to two years, and make salary arbitration after five years. A few hours into last Friday’s session, negotiations broke down over the core economic differences that separate the sides. A lockout wiped out the entire 2004-05 season. 12515096.qxp 8A 11/15/2012 9:11 PM Page 8 Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 rocketminer.com Miguel Cabrera, Buster Posey win MVP awards RONALD BLUM AP Sports Writer Photo courtesy of WyoSports The University of Wyoming punter, Tim Gleeson, kicks one away in practice. Gleeson has averaged 43.5 and 44.3 yards per punt in the last two games using mostly the rugby approach. Cowboys’ punter is learning on the fly LARAMIE — For Tim Gleeson, the motion is familiar but COWBOYS the action is new. GAME DAY But the true freshman punter for the University of Wyoming Game: Wyoming (3-7 overhas made the rugby-style punt all, 2-4 Mountain West) at look easy the last couple of UNLV (2-9, 2-4) weeks. When: 2 p.m. Saturday He has averaged 43.5 and 44.3 yards in the last two games Where: Sam Boyd Stadium, — both UW wins — using mostLas Vegas ly the rugby approach. Gleeson, who is from Melbourne, Australia, is third in the “I thought I knew what to exMountain West and 24th na- pect from talking to people,” tionally with a 43-yard average. Gleeson said. “But kicking, the Not bad for a guy who first protection and guys running at tried punting less than you is a different experitwo years ago. ence.” December 2010 was Then came his debut Gleeson’s first experiat Texas this past Sept. ence putting foot to 1. ball. After that, he didThe Longhorns were n’t pick up a football ranked 15th at the time, again until March of and there were 101,142 2011. fans in the stadium. After he graduated Gleeson described high school, he wasn’t the experience as sure what he wanted to “daunting.” So were his do. By that July he first few punts. wanted to give punting ROBERT His initial effort was a GAGLIARDI a try. respectable 42 yards, About a year later, he but his next two went 19 landed in Laramie. and 20 yards. Those The first contact from UW short kicks enabled Texas to came last November from for- score 10 points, and the Longmer assistant coach Alex horns went on for a 37-17 victoGrinch, who is now at Missouri. ry. At that time, Gleeson said he Gleeson’s last two punts were had seen maybe 10 American 50-plus yards. football games on TV. “I had never really kicked One thing led to another and against a rush before,” he said. coach Dave Christensen offered “I tried to keep calm, but when him a scholarship. defenders are coming at you Gleeson worked with Nathan pretty fast, you have to think Chapman in Australia. He is a quickly. former Australian Football “I wasn’t kicking as well as I League player who briefly punt- would have liked. I was rushing ed in the NFL for the Green it.” Bay Packers. As for the rugby punt, Glee- Views Junior earns the first honor of her career COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Wyoming Cowgirls swimmer Morgan Hartigan has been named the Mountain West swimmer of the week. The weekly honor is the first of Hartigan’s UW career. Hartigan, a native of Cheyenne, was a key to the Cowgirls’ dominating 189.5-110.5 victory over Air Force on Saturday, Nov. 10. Hartigan won all four events she entered, including three individual events and one relay. Hartigan placed first and posted a MW season-best time of 51.61 in the 100-yard freestyle. She also touched the wall first in the 50 freestyle, with a 23.70, and the 200 individual medley, with a 2:07.27, which are both the third-best times in the MW this season. son said the motion of the kick goes back to his days of playing Australian football. But doing it in one motion on the run and making sure the ball has enough height and distance is tricky. But Gleeson has made it look easy. Christensen said, “We felt the last couple of weeks (that CSU and New Mexico) had guys back there who have done a nice job and that if we could do something that was difficult, that would help us. “For the returner, it’s being more like a shortstop back there and we’re able to get our coverage team down there. “(Gleeson has) done a nice job of placing the football in the last couple of weeks. Is that what we’re going to do all the time? No. It will be based on where at on field, their returner and things like that.” Gleeson said he is comfortable with any type of punt that he’s asked to do, and he has a lot more confidence in his protection than earlier. He was a track athlete in Australia, where he competed in the jumps and sprints. But Gleeson said that’s nothing compared to what he sees from the athletes who play college football. “I didn’t know 6-foot-7, 300pound guys could be so agile.” CLOSE BATTLE UNLV’s senior punter, Chase Lansford, is two-tenths of a yard ahead of Gleeson for second place in the MW (43.2 yards per punt). The leader is CSU senior Pete Kontodiakos with a 46.8yard average. NEW YORK (AP) — Miguel Cabrera has a Most Valuable Player award to go with his Triple Crown. And Buster Posey has an MVP prize to put alongside his second World Series ring. The pair of batting champions won baseball’s top individual honors Thursday by large margins. Cabrera, the first Triple Crown winner in 45 years, won the AL MVP by receiving 22 of 28 first-place votes and 362 points from a panel of Baseball Writers’ Association of America. The Detroit third baseman easily beat Los Angeles Angels rookie center fielder Mike Trout, who had six firsts and 281 points. Cabrera hit .330 with 44 homers and 139 RBIs to become the first Triple Crown winner since Boston’s Carl Yastrzemski in 1967. Cabrera also led the league with a .606 slugging percentage for the AL champion Tigers. Some of the more sabermetric-focused fans supported Trout, who hit .326 with 30 homers and 83 RBIs, and he led the majors with 129 runs and 49 steals and topped all players in WAR — Wins Above Replacement. Trout won AL Rookie of the Year earlier in the week. “I was a little concerned. I thought the new thing about computer stuff, I thought Trout’s going to win because they put his numbers over me,” Cabrera said. “I was like relax. ... if he wins, it’s going to be fair because he had a great season.” His victory is a win for the traditional statistics. “At the end of the game, it’s going to be the same baseball played back in the day,” Cabrera said. Posey, at a charity event at his mother’s school in Leesburg, Va., followed the AL debate and Googled to find out the winner. “I think it intrigued everybody,” he said. “As a fan of the game, it was a fun race to watch.” With three fewer hits or two less homers, Cabrera would have fallen short of the Triple Crown. The last four Triple Crown winners have been voted MVP, including Mickey Mantle in 1956 and Frank Robinson in 1966. “I think winning the Triple Crown had a lot to do with me winning this honor,” he said. Cabrera became the secondstraight Detroit player voted MVP, following pitcher Justin Verlander in 2011, and was the first Venezuelan to earn the honor. Countryman Pablo Sandoval took home World Series MVP honors last month. Before the season, Cabrera switched from first base to third to make way for Prince Fielder, who signed with Detroit as a free agent. “I focused too much in spring training about defense, defense, defense,” Cabrera said. “I forgot a little bit about hitting, about getting in the cage like I normally do.” In spring training, Posey’s focus was just to get back on the field. His 2011 season was cut short by a collision with the Marlins’ Scott Cousins on May 25 that resulted in a fractured bone in Posey’s lower left leg and three torn ankle ligaments. On crutches, Mike D’Antoni takes over the Lakers EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) — Mike D’Antoni circled the court 2 feet at a time, moving smoothly on crutches while his Los Angeles Lakers went through drills orchestrated by his assistant coach and brother, Dan. Although D’Antoni’s surgically replaced knee is slowing him down a bit, he couldn’t wait any longer to get the Lakers rolling. D’Antoni formally took over the Lakers on Thursday, four days after the slow-starting club hired him to replace Mike Brown. The former Knicks and Suns coach is still on crutches and pain medication after surgery earlier this month, but thinks he’ll soon be back to normal while he attempts to transform the Lakers into his vision of an up-tempo, high-scoring team. “I’m really happy to be here — excited,” D’Antoni said. “(We’re) starting to put stuff in now. Might take a little bit, but ... we’re built to win this year. This is not a fiveyear project. We have a window, and we’re going to try to get through it.” Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak welcomed D’Antoni after practice at a news conference packed with dozens of media members. Given his limited mobility, D’Antoni isn’t likely to make his sideline debut until Sunday night against Houston, with interim coach Bernie Bickerstaff probably manning the bench again Friday night against Phoenix. “This is a great city to have an up-tempo, exciting game that has a legitimate shot to win a championship,” D’Antoni said. “I can’t ask for anything more.” D’Antoni’s affable charm immediately worked on the Lakers, who praised their new coach’s demeanor during their first few hours together. 12515100.qxp 11/15/2012 5:19 PM Page 9 rocketminer.com DEAR ABBY WONDERWORD By David Ouellet Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 MOMMA by Mel Lazarus By Abigail Van Buren DEAR ABBY: My boyfriend, “Richard,” and I are a mature couple who have been seeing each other for three years. I love him. My dog is the issue. “Princess” is a 2-year-old rat terrier/mini-pinscher mix. She weighs 9 pounds and is spoiled. (I admit I’m a softy when it comes to discipline.) She barks at anyone and anything she sees. Her barks are shrill and can be annoying. But I live alone and feel she is protecting me. Richard can no longer tolerate Princess’ barking and has curbed his visits considerably. Except for this issue, he is my dream guy, and I feel lucky to have found him. I feel Richard should understand my attachment to Princess, especially when he’s not around. Am I being selfish? Why can’t I have them both? Is there a future for us, or have we reached an impasse? — WON’T GIVE UP THE PUP, LAFAYETTE, LA. DEAR WON’T GIVE UP: Loving one’s dog is not being selfish. You COULD have them both if you would contact a dog trainer and start giving Princess a doggy education that includes boundaries. Incessant barking should not be allowed. Perhaps once Richard sees that Princess no longer regards him as a hostile intruder, he will feel more welcome. But that could take some work on the part of all three of you, if he’s still willing. DEAR ABBY: My grandpa remarried when I was a child. He and Grandma “Ella” each have five children. She is a wonderful woman. When the holidays roll around, especially Thanksgiving and Christmas, my grandparents always host at their home. They spend all day fixing up the house and preparing the food. When it’s time to eat, Grandma Ella’s children think they should be first in the line. When the dinner is over, it’s always my mom, one of my two aunts and me doing the dishes and cleaning up. Grandma Ella’s family never help. Any advice? — STRESSED IN ADVANCE IN IOWA DEAR STRESSED: Gladly! This Thanksgiving when everyone arrives, Grandma and Grandpa should cheerfully inform the happy revelers that small children will be fed first, regardless of whose side of the family they come from. At the same time, each of the adults should be ASSIGNED a cleanup chore so one side of the family isn’t stuck with the entire burden. GARFIELD by Jim Davis DOG EAT DOUG by Ryan Anderson BECKER BRIDGE Bidding Quiz AGNES by Morrie Turner ZACK HILL by J. Deering and J. Macintosh JANRIC CLASSIC SUDOKU BLONDIE by Dean Young and Dennis Lebrun HOROSCOPE By Holiday FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2012 ARIES (March 21-April 19) Random scattered efforts can at times be magically effective, but not now. The result you desire is best attained with a methodical approach. Create or obtain a checklist and use it. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Don’t believe what you hear about other people. You’ll keep friends if you steer clear of gossip and make up your own mind about people. Base your opinions on your personal experience instead of hearsay. ONE BIG HAPPY... by Rick Detorie CROSSWORD By Thomas Joseph GEMINI (May 21-June 21) Doing something correctly once is not enough to constitute success. What if it was a fluke? Truly successful actions can be repeated. You’ll practice until you can create the desired effect time and again. CANCER (June 22-July 22) You’re a kind of social director now, so create social scenarios in which you can shine. The friends you invite to experience your brand of fun will become enamored of you. FLO AND FRIENDS by John Gibel and Jenny LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Is good enough really good enough? In certain jobs, you feel that you must go beyond the expectation for your efforts to really count. The trick is in deciding which jobs warrant the extra effort. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It is far easier for you to accept others as imperfect than to accept yourself as a work in progress. Keep in mind that you bond with your fellow man through your vulnerabilities, not through your strengths. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) Self-confidence takes time. You may feel that there is some area of your life in which you are underperforming. Expect to continue to build on a positive experience SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21) There will be a bit of inner turmoil to contend with, so anything you can do to bring a sense of calm to your inner world will be extremely helpful. An earth-sign friend, which would be Taurus, Virgo or Capricorn, will ground you. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You are in such a laid-back mood that others feel instantly relaxed when they are around you. Suddenly they can be themselves without judgment or worry. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) To be human is to sometimes fear that you’re not going to be good enough to handle the task at hand. Don’t believe the doubting voices; instead let them trigger an extra flow of fuel to your nervous system. The jolt helps. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You are fully aware that what works for you won’t work for everyone. But that awareness won’t keep you from sharing your opinions and stories just in case someone else can benefit from what you’ve already figured out. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You will be praised for your talent and skill. As wonderful as this is, it’s not why you do what you do. The personal satisfaction you get from doing your best is your strongest motivation. CRYPTOQUOTE STRANGE BREW 9A 12515102.qxp 11/15/2012 7:27 PM Page 10 BUSINESS rocketminer.com Super-sized sales? CMRG Wall Street anticipates Casual Male’s sales improved in the third quarter. The clothing chain, which caters to big and tall men, is expected to report $95 million in revenue for the quarter today. That would beat the $89.4 million in revenue it posted a year earlier. The company has been focusing less on its traditional Casual Male XL stores and opening more profitable DestinationXL stores. Fitness favorite $3.31 Brisk demand for athletic shoes and apparel has Foot Locker off to a strong start this year. The retailer's earnings are up 43 percent through the first half of 2012, while revenue is up 8 percent. The company, which reports financial results for the third quarter today, is benefiting from growing sales at stores in North America and Europe. $5 $3.99 4 3 ’12 2 Operating EPS $-0.03 est. $0.00 3Q ’11 3Q ’12 Price-earnings ratio: Your local news source since 1881 5 based on past 12 months’ results Dividend: none Source: FactSet FL $31.85 $40 $22.86 30 ’12 20 Operating EPS 52-WK RANGE HI YTD 1YR VOL CLOSE CHG %CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) TICKER LO AK Steel AKS 4.01 1 10.33 3.63 -.39 -9.7 t t t -56.1 AT&T Inc T 27.41 6 38.58 33.42 -.36 -1.1 t t t Anadarko APC 56.42 5 88.70 70.38 +1.05 +1.5 t t s Annaly NLY 14.01 1 17.75 14.22 +1.1 t t Apple Inc AAPL 363.32 -2.1 t BP PLC BP 36.25 4 48.34 40.30 +.14 +0.3 t BakrHu BHI 37.08 2 59.84 39.87 +.23 +0.6 t 9 5 705.07 +.15 525.62 -11.26 -54.9 42810 +10.5 +21.8 -7.8 -12.1 t -10.9 t t t t t t P/E DIV ... 25827 43 1.80f 3961 dd 0.36 -0.5 25993 10 2.17e +29.8 +43.0 27630 12 10.60 -5.7 -3.3 7178 6 1.92a -18.0 -29.7 5549 12 0.60 BAC 4.92 10.10 9.09 +.10 +1.1 t t s +63.5 +49.3 138261 24 0.04 CVX 92.29 4 118.53 101.62 -.88 -0.9 t t t -4.5 +0.6 9675 8 3.60 ChurchDwt CHD 42.26 6 59.27 50.97 +.39 +0.8 s t t +11.4 +17.4 1468 22 0.96 Cisco CSCO 14.96 5 21.30 17.94 +.28 +1.6 s t t -0.4 -4.9 54666 12 0.56 Citigroup C 23.30 8 38.72 35.21 +.19 +0.5 t t s +33.8 +23.5 38934 11 0.04 Dell Inc DELL 9.11 1 18.36 9.56 -.02 -0.2 s t t -34.7 -36.9 33671 6 0.32 ExxonMbl XOM 73.90 7 93.67 86.14 +.07 +0.1 t t t +1.6 +11.8 13627 11 2.28 FMC Cp s FMC 38.06 7 59.41 51.44 +.04 +0.1 t t t +19.6 +25.8 706 18 0.36 Facebook n FB 17.55 2 45.00 22.17 -.19 -0.8 s s s -42.0 ... 76491 FordM F 8.82 5 13.05 10.57 -.10 -0.9 t s s -1.8 -1.4 48032 9 0.20 GenElec GE 14.68 7 23.18 20.06 +.05 +0.2 t t t +12.0 +28.5 50835 15 0.68 Hallibrtn HAL 26.28 3 40.43 30.36 +.41 +1.4 t t t -12.0 -21.3 13127 9 0.36 HewlettP HPQ 13.07 1 30.00 13.08 -.06 -0.4 t t t -49.2 -50.1 24373 5 0.53 HonwllIntl HON 48.82 7 63.89 59.33 -.63 -1.1 t t t +9.2 +12.3 5430 20 1.64f Intel INTC 19.95 1 29.27 20.03 +.07 +0.4 t t t -17.4 -15.4 45388 9 0.90 IBM IBM 177.06 3 211.79 185.85 +.34 +0.2 t t t +1.1 +0.8 3358 13 3.40 Microsoft MSFT 24.30 3 32.95 26.66 -.18 -0.7 t t t +2.7 +4.1 48848 14 0.92f Oracle ORCL 24.91 7 33.29 29.95 +.37 +1.3 t t t +16.8 -7.7 26144 15 0.24 Pfizer PFE 18.15 7 26.09 23.66 -.15 -0.6 t t t +9.3 +24.8 27058 14 0.88 PulteGrp PHM 5.08 8 18.30 15.24 +.01 ... t t t +141.5 +175.0 20975 36 ... Questar STR 17.20 4 21.47 18.50 -.25 -1.3 t t t -6.8 -0.1 1038 16 0.68f RegionsFn RF 3.51 7 7.73 6.30 +.05 +0.8 t t t +46.5 +56.5 25178 11 0.04 Saks SKS 8.49 4 12.14 9.90 -.03 -0.3 t t t +1.5 -2.6 3503 23 ... SandRdge SD 4.81 2 9.04 5.32 +.13 +2.5 t t t -34.8 -28.3 27147 dd ... Schlmbrg SLB 59.12 5 80.78 69.16 +1.33 +2.0 s t t +1.2 -8.5 7336 17 1.10 SiriusXM SIRI 1.65 8 2.97 2.65 -.05 -1.9 t t s +45.6 +60.7 120811 5 ... SprintNex S 2.10 9 6.04 5.54 +.05 +0.9 t t s +136.8 +92.0 29154 dd ... Staples SPLS 10.57 3 16.93 11.92 +.38 +3.2 s s s -14.2 -22.1 34458 dd 0.44 UnionPac UNP 95.15 7 129.27 117.99 +.53 +0.5 t t t +11.4 +16.4 2004 15 2.76f WmsCos WMB 23.78 6 37.56 30.97 -.22 -0.7 t t t +14.9 +29.3 6947 20 1.30f Xerox XRX 6.26 1 8.84 6.28 -.01 -0.2 t t t -21.1 -20.7 9721 7 0.17 Yahoo YHOO 14.35 0 18.08 17.89 +.07 +0.4 s s s +10.9 +11.4 35323 5 ... ... Dividend Footnotes: a - Extra dividends were paid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amount declared or paid in last 12 months. f - Current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement. i - Sum of dividends paid after stock split, no regular rate. j - Sum of dividends paid this year. Most recent dividend was omitted or deferred. k - Declared or paid this year, a cumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r - Declared or paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date. PE Footnotes: q - Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc - P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months. Commodities PVS. 86.32 2.34 2.99 3.76 2.68 %CHG %YTD -1.01 -13.5 ... +6.1 -0.49 +1.3 -1.52 +23.9 +0.64 +0.4 PVS. 1729.50 32.87 1591.60 3.46 640.75 %CHG %YTD -0.94 +9.4 -0.63 +17.2 -1.15 +12.4 +0.26 +1.0 -4.42 -6.6 %CHG %YTD CLOSE 1713.30 32.67 1573.30 3.46 612.40 AGRICULTURE CLOSE PVS. Cattle (lb) 1.26 Coffee (lb) 1.49 Corn (bu) 7.21 Cotton (lb) 0.74 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 324.00 Orange Juice (lb) 1.16 Soybeans (bu) 14.02 Wheat (bu) 8.46 1.25 1.48 7.26 0.72 320.10 1.13 14.33 8.49 +0.14 +0.88 -0.62 +3.25 +1.22 +3.06 -1.19 -0.38 +2.2 -34.3 +11.6 -19.4 +31.1 -31.2 +17.0 +29.5 Stocks Recap 1,440 S&P 500 3,040 Nasdaq composite 1,380 Close: 1,353.33 Change: -2.16 (-0.2%) 2,920 Close: 2,836.94 Change: -9.87 (-0.3%) 1,320 2,800 10 DAYS 1,500 3,200 1,450 3,100 1,400 3,000 1,350 2,900 1,300 2,800 1,250 M J J A S O N 2,700 Where or how do you watch most movies? A. in the theater B. DVD rental service C. pay-cable TV D. online streaming Quick click your answers at 15 Source: FactSet dd METALS Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (lb) Palladium (oz) 3Q ’12 Dividend: $0.72 Div. yield: 2.3% Chevron FUELS CLOSE Crude Oil (bbl) 85.45 Ethanol (gal) 2.34 Heating Oil (gal) 2.97 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.70 Unleaded Gas (gal) 2.70 3Q ’11 based on past 12 months’ results BkofAm Platinum fell after workers at a South African mine returned to work following an eight-week strike. Platinum had earlier risen on worries that the strike would affect supply. est. $0.54 Price-earnings ratio: Local Stocks NAME $0.43 10 DAYS J J A S O Cracker Barrel nearly doubled its earnings in the final quarter of its fiscal year, which ended in early August. The company benefited from rising customer traffic, which helped drive stronger sales. Investors will be watching today to see if the restaurant chain was able to follow up that performance in its fiscal first quarter. AP Business Writer NEW YORK (AP) — Stock indexes closed lower Thursday, a third straight decline, after U.S. retailers issued weak forecasts for earnings and more people filed claims for unemployment benefits. Wal-Mart, Ross Stores and Limited Brands, the owner of Victoria’s Secret, all fell after issuing forecasts that disappointed financial analysts. Wal-Mart fell $2.59, or 3.6 percent, to $68.72. The Dow Jones industrial average wavered between small gains and losses shortly after the opening bell, then moved lower at midmorning. It closed down 28.57 points at 12,542.38. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index dropped 2.16 points to 1,353.33 and the Nasdaq composite finished 9.87 points lower at 2,836.94. Stocks have fallen steadily since voters returned President Barack Obama and a divided Congress to power. The Dow has lost 5 percent from Election Day, Nov. 6. Investors are worried that S&P 500 1,353.33 DOW 12,542.38 CRUDE OIL $85.45 30-YR T-BONDS 2.73% q q q n -2.16 NASDAQ 2,836.94 -28.57 GOLD $1,713.30 -.87 EURO $1.2773 ... 6-MO T-BILLS .13% q q p q -9.87 -16.20 +.0028 -.01 U.S. leaders may not reach a deal before tax increases and government spending cuts take effect Jan. 1. The impact would total $700 billion for 2013 and could send the country back into recession. Bill Stone, chief investment strategist at PNC Asset Management Group in Philadelphia, said the bargaining in Washington would likely drag on until next year, weighing on stocks. “It’s hard to see the market getting a whole ton of traction until that gets settled.” President Obama will meet with congressional leaders Friday to talk about the budget, but he appeared to suggest Thursday that he would insist on an increase in tax rates for the wealthy. T. Dale, a portfolio manager at Security Ballew Wealth Management in Jackson, Miss., said that stocks are more likely to fall than rise, partly because of slowing global economic growth and the U.S. budget impasse. “The market has gotten well ahead of itself,” Dale said. Superstorm Sandy drove the number of people seek- ing unemployment benefits up to 439,000 last week, the Labor Department reported. Applications for benefits rose 78,000, mostly because a large number were filed in storm-damaged states. The European Union’s statistics agency confirmed that the euro zone, the group of 17 countries that use the euro currency, is in recession. The economy in the region shrank 0.1 percent in the third quarter from the previous threemonth period. Among the retailers disappointing Wall Street with lower earnings forecasts, Ross Stores, whose stores includes Ross Dress for Less, fell 70 cents, or 1.3 percent, to $54.44. Limited Brands dropped $1.10, or 2.4 percent, to $45.50. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note was little changed at 1.59 percent. STOCKS MAKING BIG MOVES • NetApp, a data storage business, jumped $3.08, or 11.3 percent, to $30.20 after the company reported earnings that were higher than analysts were expecting. • Viacom, the owner of Nickelodeon, MTV and the Paramount movie and TV studio, rose $1.24, or 2.6 percent, to $49.23. The media conglomerate did better than investors had expected thanks to lower costs and higher fees from cable and satellite companies for carrying its cable networks. • Petsmart, a specialty pet retailer, jumped $2.63, or 4.1 percent, to $67.48 after raising its full-year outlook. • Target rose $1.06, or 1.7 percent, to $62.44 after reporting that its profit rose more than analysts had forecast. The company also issued a strong outlook heading into the critical holiday season. • Dollar Tree, a discount retailer that sells items for $1 or less, gained $1.94, or 5.1 percent, to $39.70 after the company said its net income rose 49 percent in the third quarter. • Apple’s market value fell below $500 million for the first time since May, as the maker of smartphones and tablets dropped $11.26, or 2.1 percent, to $525.62. The company’s market value climbed as high as $658 million Sept. 19, according to FactSet data. Senate health chair wants new drug compound rules MATTHEW PERRONE AP Health Writer WASHINGTON (AP) — The chairman of the Senate’s health committee pledged Thursday to move ahead with legislation to tighten oversight of compounding pharmacies, amid a deadly outbreak caused by tainted specialty medications. But a top lobbyist for the compounding industry, and some fellow senators, argued that existing state and federal laws could have prevented the wave of fungal meningitis that has killed 32 people. In the second hearing on the issue this week, members of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions sought accountability for the contaminated steroid shots which have sickened N How will the proposed changes to capital gains taxes affect your portfolio? slightly 0% Encore performance? STEVE ROTHWELL YESTERDAY’S POLL greatly 33% Page 10A Stock indexes close lower after weak retail reports See us online www. rocket miner.com M Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 not at all 67% more than 460 people in 19 states. “This committee will forge ahead in developing legislation,” said committee chairman Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa. But after more than three hours of testimony from federal and state regulators and industry representatives, there was little consensus on what form new regulations should take. The International Academy of Compounding Pharmacists’ CEO David Miller condemned the New England Compounding Center, the company at the center of the incident, calling it “a pharmacy hiding behind that license and acting as an illegal drug manufacturer.” Miller pledged to cooperate with lawmakers, but stressed that existing state and federal laws could have been used to shut the com- pany down years ago. “There is no question about who has the authority to immediately shut down an illegal drug manufacturer, and that rests with the FDA,” Miller told lawmakers. Compounding pharmacies, which mix customized medications based on prescriptions, are traditionally overseen by state pharmacy boards. But in recent years larger compounders like the NECC have emerged, massproducing thousands of vials of drugs that can be shipped nationwide. That trend has prompted calls for tighter oversight. Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Margaret Hamburg said her agency needs clearer authority to go after largescale compounders, who have challenged the agency’s authority in court since the 1990s. In her second congressional appearance this week, Hamburg described a “crazy quilt” of conflicting laws and court rulings that limit the agency’s ability to take action. Hamburg suggested Congress set up a two-tier system in which traditional compounding pharmacies continue to be regulated at the state level, but larger pharmacies would be subject to FDA oversight. But some senators questioned why they should give the FDA more authority when it did not appear to fully exercise its existing powers. Sen. Pat Roberts, RKan., pointed out that the FDA inspected the NECC three times before the latest outbreak and issued a warning letter to the company in 2006, but never shut the operation down. 12515103.qxp 11/15/2012 4:44 PM Page B1 rocketminer.com Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 REGIONAL 1B The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission is looking at tougher rules for how close drilling wells can be to buildings such as roads and schools. Drilling regulators hear from critics at meeting KRISTEN WYATT Associated Press DENVER (AP) — Colorado drilling regulators got an earful Wednesday from critics who want more say in how gas and oil can be drilled in their jurisdictions. The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission was meeting to consider expanded rules for sampling and monitoring of groundwater near new oil and gas wells. The commission also was looking at tougher rules for how close drilling wells can be to buildings such as roads and schools. No decisions were made, but the meeting turned into something of a public hearing on the overall mood of those affected by drilling. It was the commission’s first meeting since Longmont residents voted overwhelmingly to ban hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking,” despite Lawmakers hear report on Wyo. education department BOB MOEN Associated Press CHEYENNE (AP) — Consultants hired by the Legislature gave the Wyoming Department of Education poor marks in implementing state education reforms, saying the agency failed in some of its responsibilities and hindered other entities involved in the state’s initiative to better prepare students for college and careers. Their report presented Wednesday to the Select Committee on Statewide Education Accountability blames much of the agency’s failings on the loss of too many key personnel in the last two years. State schools Superintendent Cindy Hill, who was elected two years ago, told the committee the report contained much misinformation but declined to respond in detail before the committee. She said she would like to do so when the panel meets in December. Over her objection, the committee then approved drafting legislation to reassign some duties from her agency to other boards and committees involved in the reform effort. After the meeting, Hill criticized the consultants’ work and said there was an agenda other than school reform involved. “This isn’t about children,” Hill said. “This is about making this superintendent’s position an appointed position. It’s pure and simple. And let me tell you the good ol’ boys are at work and they’re pretty, pretty nasty.” Sen. Hank Coe, co-chairman of the committee, noted that two separate consultants came to the same conclusions about the department’s performance. warnings from state officials including Gov. John Hickenlooper that a single statewide drilling regulatory scheme is necessary. The commission meeting was charged from the start, when eight environmental activists seeking entry were wrongly told the hearing was closed to the public. They eventually were allowed in, but not with their signs decrying fracking as dangerous to the public. One of the testifiers was Jonnie Westerop, who handed commissioners photos of a playground with wells visible in the background. “Do you think the citizens are just going to sit back and say that’s fine? ... What are we doing to our state? Beautiful Colorado?” she asked. Most of the testifiers opposed fracking near homes and schools, but some called on the commission to uphold current drilling law. John Moser, who owns 100 oil and gas wells in northern Colorado, told commissioners that onerous regulations harm the entire state tax base. The Greeley well owner said after his testimony that Colorado must stick with its current regulatory scheme. “Otherwise you’d have a hodgepodge,” Moser said. “It would be a disaster.” Commissioners asked few questions during the public testimony. They got a lengthy briefing on proposed new groundwater testing rules, which commission director Matt Lepore said would be the first in the nation to require groundwater sampling at all new drilling locations. Lepore said he was “confident” that disputes over the groundwater and setback regulations could be resolved in coming weeks. The commission is expected to vote on both sets of rules as soon as next month. State fund reaches out to crime victims KELSEY BRAY Wyoming Truman Eagle CHEYENNE — Most people have to pay bills, and most people would agree they don’t like to, especially if they are unexpected. For victims of crime, these unexpected bills can add to an already stressful situation. Along with medical costs, there are expenses like gas to drive to court, lost wages and relocation. Fortunately for some, the state can help. The crime victim compensation fund has been in place for about 15 years. It helps victims by paying expenses associated with a crime. The fund has helped many victims pay bills. It can help them move past a traumatic event debt-free. But with recent federal grant funding cuts, employees in the Wyoming Office of the Attorney General’s Division of Victim Services are feeling the squeeze. “Programs like the Violence Against Women Act money and other federal grants that my office receives money from are considered discretionary non-defense funds,” said division director Cara Chambers. “And those are going to be the first funds to take a hit.” Despite the cuts, division and other victim service employees around the state believe the fund is a necessity. “The simple answer is it’s the right thing to do,” Chambers said. “No one asks to be a victim, no one deserves to be a victim. We, as a state, have a responsibility to our citizens to do whatever we can to aid in their restoration.” WHAT IS IT? The victim compensation fund was established in 1997 through the Wyoming Legislature. Money is received from several sources, including federal grant money. The amount of the federal grant changes from year to year. Chambers said in 2011 the division received about $253,000. “That has dropped significantly,” she said. “It has dropped threefold from 2009.” Another source of money is a surcharge fund. The surcharge money comes from criminal convictions. Chambers said anyone who pleads guilty or no contest is required to pay into the fund, whether they are convicted of a misdemeanor or a felony. (A nocontest plea literally means, “I will not contest it,” but has the same effect as a guilty plea.) “They have to pay no less than ($100), and the amount is up to the discretion of a judge,” Chambers said. “The amount varies by the type of crime.” She said the division collects roughly $3.5 million in surcharge money for the two-year budget period. This money covers victim compensation, as well as other expenses like wages for division employees. “(The $3.5 million) doesn’t all go to victim’s compensation, but the lion’s share of it does,” Chambers said. Each victim has a $15,000 cap for services, although an extra $10,000 can be added in case of catastrophic injury. “Catastrophic is very specific,” division benefits and eligibility specialist Jean Courts said. “It can cover lost wages, a prosthetic, adapting a car or building a ramp.” Last year, about $1.4 million was paid to victims. And the need for these services is increasing, Chambers said. “What we paid out in 2011 was almost double what we paid out in 2010,” she said. “So it’s ever-growing.” Also in 2011, 611 new claims were submitted to the division, and 511 were approved. Only certain victims are eligible to receive funds because of the restrictions of the statute, Chambers said. WHO DOES IT HELP? To file a claim, a person must meet certain criteria. “For example, there has to be an actual physical or mental injury,” Chambers said. “In other words, if you went on vacation, your house was robbed and they took all your stuff, we wouldn’t be able to compensate that.” Most people who receive the compensation are victims of physical assault, followed by victims of child abuse and sexual assault. As for what the fund covers, Courts said it varies from victim to victim. It can help cover medical bills, funeral expenses and personal property taken as evidence. “And mental health counseling, thank goodness, is growing,” Courts said. It can also go to other expenses, said Laramie County Sheriff’s Department victim/witness coordinator Dory Clark. Recently, she received a call from a domestic violence victim whose partner broke her arm. During the assault, her eyeglasses were also broken. “She was not going to be able to see or drive,” Clark said. The compensation fund can help cover the woman’s eyeglasses because they are an emergency need. According to the statute, up to $1,000 can be paid out to an emergency expense. This would be deducted from the final amount given. “They may need help with rent,” Clark said. “Or they may need to go to work, but their car windshield is broken out. We are able to help them with those things.” For Pinedale resident Jacie Rose, the fund helped cover expensive medical bills. “It was so helpful to me,” she said. In the summer of 2010, Rose was sleeping at home when someone broke into her house. The person hit her over the head with a piece of weightlifting equipment. “Luckily my roommates came home from camping and found me,” she said. The incident left Rose with extensive physical damage, including hearing loss. “I had to get a bunch of stitches and staples in my head, and it caused hearing loss in my ear,” she said. “I also had to have neck surgery because it bulged two of my discs.” She was told the first hit knocked her out. Judging from the number of stitches, doctors estimated she was hit about four times. The new liberties of Amendment 64 apply to people 21 or older. People can grow up to three immature and three mature cannabis plants privately in a locked space, legally possess up to one ounce of cannabis and give as a gift up to one ounce to other citizens 21 years of age or older. With all the ways for adults to share and consume marijuana, police are worrying how it will effect safety on the road. With pot legal, police worry about road safety KRISTEN WYATT AND GENE JOHNSON Associated Press DENVER (AP) — It’s settled. Pot, at least certain amounts of it, will soon be legal under state laws in Washington and Colorado. Now, officials in both states are trying to figure out how to keep stoned drivers off the road. Colorado’s measure doesn’t make any changes to the state’s driving-under-the-influence laws, leaving lawmakers and police to worry about its effect on road safety. “We’re going to have more impaired drivers,” warned John Jackson, police chief in the Denver suburb of Greenwood Village. Washington’s law does change DUI provisions by setting a new blood-test limit for marijuana — a limit police are training to enforce, and which some lawyers are already gearing up to challenge. “We’ve had decades of studies and experience with alcohol,” said Washington State Patrol spokesman Dan Coon. “Marijuana is new, so it’s going to take some time to figure out how the courts and prosecutors are going to handle it. But the key is impairment: We will arrest drivers who drive impaired, whether it be drugs or alcohol.” Drugged driving is illegal, and nothing in the measures that Washington and Colorado voters passed this month to tax and regulate the sale of pot for recreational use by adults over 21 changes that. But law enforcement officials wonder about whether the ability to buy or possess marijuana legally will bring about an increase of marijuana users on the roads. Statistics gathered for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration showed that in 2009, a third of fatally injured drivers with known drug test results were positive for drugs other than alcohol. Among randomly stopped weekend nighttime drivers in 2007, more than 16 percent were positive for drugs. Marijuana can cause dizziness and slowed reaction time, and drivers are more likely to drift and swerve while they’re high. Marijuana legalization activists agree people shouldn’t smoke and drive. But setting a standard comparable to bloodalcohol limits has sparked intense disagreement, said Betty Aldworth, outreach director for Colorado’s Campaign to Regulate Marijuana Like Alcohol. Most convictions for drugged driving currently are based on police observations, followed later by a blood test. “There is not yet a consensus about the standard rate for THC impairment,” Aldworth said, referring to the psychoactive chemical in marijuana. Unlike portable breath tests for alcohol, there’s no easily available way to determine whether someone is impaired from recent pot use. There are different types of tests for marijuana. Many workplaces test for an inactive THC metabolite that can be stored in body fat and remain detectable weeks after use. But tests for current impairment measure for active THC in the blood, and those levels typically drop within hours. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, peak THC concentrations are reached during the act of smoking, and within three hours, they generally fall to less than 5 nanograms per milliliter of blood — the same standard in Washington’s law, one supporters describe as roughly equivalent to the .08 limit for alcohol. Two other states — Ohio and the medical marijuana state of Nevada — have a limit of 2 nanograms of THC per milliliter. Pennsylvania’s health department has a 5-nanogram guideline that can be introduced in driving violation cases, and a dozen states, including Illinois, Arizona, and Rhode Island, have zero-tolerance policies. In Washington, police still have to observe signs of impaired driving before pulling someone over, Coon said. The blood would be drawn by a medical professional, and tests above 5 nanograms would automatically subject the driver to a DUI conviction. Supporters of Washington’s measure said they included the standard to allay fears that legalization could prompt a druggeddriving epidemic, but critics call it arbitrarily strict. They insist that medical patients who regularly use cannabis would likely fail even if they weren’t impaired. They also worry about the law’s zero-tolerance policy for those under 21. College students who wind up convicted even if they weren’t impaired could lose college loans, they argue. Jon Fox, a Seattle-area DUI attorney, said he’s interested in challenging Washington’s new standard as unconstitutional. Under due process principles, he said, people are entitled to know what activity is prohibited. If scientists can’t tell someone how much marijuana it will take for him or her to test over the threshold, how is the average pot user supposed to know? 11-16-12.qxp 11/15/2012 5:42 PM Page 1 CLASSIFIED rocketminer.com ROCKET- MINER GIVE US A CALL TO GET STARTED 307-362-3736 • 1-888-443-3736 advertising@rocketminer.com CLASSIFIED RULES, RATES $1.05 1 or 2 days .95¢ 3 to 5 days .85¢ 6 or more days - Ads are per line per day consecutive days - Add one-time $1.00 for a mandatory web site charge - Minimum Ad: 2 lines - Minimum Charges: $3.10 Ad Size 1 Day 3 Days 6 Days 2 lines 3 lines 4 lines 5 lines 6 lines 7 lines $3.10 4.15 5.20 6.25 7.30 8.35 $6.70 9.55 12.40 15.25 18.10 20.95 $11.20 16.30 21.40 26.50 31.60 36.70 * prices include $1.00 web site charge Figure four average-length words per line, but give us a call for exact info. Deadlines: Line ads accepted daily until 2 p.m. for following morning’s Rocket-Miner. Cancellations and corrections will be accepted until 2 p.m. Deadline for Saturday and Sunday papers is 2 p.m. Friday. Check your ad: The Rocket-Miner will not be responsible for errors appearing in ads after first publication. Box numbers: An additional charge of $5.00 is required on all Rocket-Miner Box Numbers. $10.00, if mailed. Non-local rate: $1.05 Per Line Per Day Flat. Non-local rates apply to advertisements of firms outside of Southwestern Wyoming. Add $1.00 for web site charge. Classified Display Ad Rates, Deadlines: Per Inch: $9.55. Advertisements accepted daily until 12 noon for following morning’s Rocket-Miner. Cancellations and corrections accepted until 12 noon. PICK YOUR FORMAT Choose what works best for your ad. We also offer centering of text and Garage Sale Kits. Call for details. WITHIN ROCK SPRINGS, 1992 three bed, two bath, with swamp cooler, fenced yard. $850/month, $850/ de-posit, lot rent included. FREE water, garbage, sewer. One year lease, no pets. 555-5555, 555-5555. 1 Good. Simple, multi-line ad. 2 WITHIN ROCK SPRINGS, 1992 three bed, two bath, with swamp cooler, fenced yard. $850 /month, $850/ deposit, lot rent included. FREE water, garbage, sewer. One year lease, no pets. 555-5555, 555-5555. Better. Add an icon or an attention getter. Your local news source since 1881 FOUND - YOUNG gray and white cat, corner of E Street and Ludvig Street. Call 362-7245. CARPET INSTALLER - New, Used, Repairs. Free Estimates. Henry, 389-4250. JAMES BROTHERS - Since 1947. Professional painting, paper hanging, residential, commercial. For estimates, 389-6745. CALL MONTE Vista Construction for all your roofing needs. 30 year Architectural shingles, quality service and installation, (307) 382-0767. TOWING: Cars, Trucks, Semis. Also private property towing. Call 389-9225. ELECTRICIANS ON CALL 24 hour, 389-5069 IMMACULATE CLEANING LLC. Residential, commercial - regular clean, deep clean, carpet cleaning. 307-371-3640. INTERIOR and EXTERIOR Painting/Texturing. Locally Owned, excellent references. Pablo and Picasso Painting, 362-4589, 371-2002 MONTE VISTA construction is now seeking commercial/business interior remodels and residential full bathroom remodels. (307) 382-0767. CARPENTRY Cabinets, Doors, Hardwood Flooring, Decks, Windows, Tile, Additions, Garages. Rocky, 307-389-5473 S&E PROFESSIONAL Cleaning. Insured and licensed. For all your cleaning needs, 307-389-7062. QUICK, CLEAN Home cleaning, 354-6391. LOOKING FOR a contractor that does his own work? HOLP CONSTRUCTION has your on-the-job contractor. Now doing estimates for remodeling projects: additions, basement, kitchens and baths. Call Terry, 362-6680. holp-construction.com. SHEILA’S DETAILING - Cars, Trucks, Semis. Gift certificates available. (307) 922-3520. 3 Best. Customize your ad! Upgrade to a display ad. Add photos, borders or logos for maximum impact. Professional DJ Services Wide variety of music and lighting for your holiday party, wedding or event. Packages available. Call 307-922-1574. JEWELRY REPAIR, sizing, custom work, guaranteed in my home. Gold and silver jewelry, pickup and delivery, 382-2547. HANDYMAN Dry wall, interior/exterior, plastering, texturing, painting, tile repair, plumbing. Twenty years experience. Call Randy, 307- 871-3633. PET SITTING in your home. $20 per visit, in Rock Springs. References available. 307-212-6095. NEED ANY kind of work done, call (307) 448-0880. SPEED BUMP BY DAVE COVERLY KELLY’S Convenience Center is looking for experienced Clerks. You must be 21, honest, dependable and drug free. Apply in person at 1652 9th Street, 1900 Yellowstone Road, or 1645 Sunset Drive. I WILL BE RETIRING and closing the Unique Boutique Store on January 25, 2013. There will be three payouts, one in each month, November, December and January. If you would like to pick up your merchandise, you must do so before January 25, 2013. Things that are left after this date will be donated to charity. Payout money will be mailed to people who have payout money coming and who have not picked it up. A fee of $1 will charged for postage and handling. COME ON in to Daily Knead. Now taking orders for dinner rolls and pies for the holiday. Stop by 176 E. Flaming Gorge Way, Green River or call 875-8278. MACHINIST NEEDED! Hoerbiger Service is looking for a Machinist with mechanical background in our NEW Rock Springs, WY location. We will train! Experience with compression technology, manual lathe, CNC, Mill and Drill Press operation a plus but not required. Please fax resumes to (720)258-9939 or email to hsna.jobs@hoerbiger.com EXPERIENCED FINISH Carpenter. 382-0011. PART-TIME CUSTODIAN needed for a small office building in Green River. Six - eight hours per week in the evenings after 8 p.m. Pre-employment background check is required. $10.24 per hour. Please apply at www.swcounseling.org or for more information and access to applications please contact the Human Resources Manager at Southwest Counseling Service, (307) 352-6677. HAMPTON INN and Suites, Green River seeking Director of Sales. Salary depends on experience. Benefits. Apply in person, 1055 Wild Horse Canyon Rd., Green River, (307) 875-5300. SIMPLOT PHOSPHATES, LLC, located in Rock Springs, WY has openings for Operator Trainees. These are regular, full time positions with shift work. Interested applicants must apply at Wyoming Workforce Services Department located at the White Mountain Mall. Please direct all phone calls to Wyoming Workforce Services for information regarding the job description. The job posting will be open until November 30, 2012. Applications will not be provided at the plant site. Simplot Phosphates is an Equal Employment Opportunity Company. HOERBIGER IS looking for a Service Operations Specialist in our NEW Rock Springs location. Experience with customer service, sales/parts orders, maintaining records and inventory required. Experience working in the Service or Oil/Gas industry preferred. Must be proficient in the use of computers, SAP experience a plus. Please fax resumes to (720)258-9939 or email hsna.jobs@hoerbiger.com SIMPLOT PHOSPHATES, LLC, located in Rock Springs, WY has openings for Mechanics. These are regular, full time positions. Interested applicants must apply at Wyoming Workforce Services Department located at the White Mountain Mall. Please direct all phone calls to Wyoming Workforce Services for information regarding the job description. The job posting will be open until November 30, 2012. Applications will not be provided at the plant site. Simplot Phosphates is an Equal Employment Opportunity Company. Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 EXPERIENCED HOT Oil Operator with minimum of three years experience, for local work with set schedule and guaranteed days off. Seeking safe, dependable individual with clean driving record and CDL with X endorsement. Confined space, H2S and First Aid/CPR training preferred, but not required. Great company offers benefits and competitive pay based on experience. Apply in person at 16 Second Street, Reliance, or send resume to Human Resources, PO Box 1974, Rock Springs, WY 82902. CASPER - Field Service Tech (Mechanic). Maintain and repair heavy equipment. Must have two plus years crane experience. CDL preferred. Full benefits. Visit us at: www.honnen.com to apply. EXPERIENCED CLASS A CDL Flatbed Driver needed, one year driving and oilfield experience a plus. Call Mike, (307) 212-2240 or Lori, (307) 371-5083. PART-TIME Merchandiser needed to service Magazines in Rock Springs to apply: www.apply2jobs.com/selectmerchandising ervices. Apply to Requisition number (ME2803). SMALL MOTEL in Rock Springs is hiring a Live-in Manager. Must have good people skills, some clerical abilities and maintenance skills a plus. Honest, clean and dependable. Great job for semi-retired or retired couple. Send resume to Manager position, 75 Center Street, Rock Springs, Wyoming 82901 or call 307-362-6675 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. SALES PROFESSIONAL Looking for a self-disciplined, process oriented person to fill a professional sales position. Compensation: base plus commission with quick start incentives. Must have excellent computer, sales, people and customer service skills. 307-362-4111. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT for Golden Hour Senior Center. 30 hours a week. Perform clerical duties, computer knowledge a must. If interested, pick up job application at 550 Uinta Drive, Suite A, Green River. (872-3223). SOS WELL SERVICES, LLC has an immediate opening for a Workover Rig Mechanic. Must have minimum three years of experience or technical diploma in related mechanical fields. PLEASE ONLY APPLY if you have a valid drivers license. PLEASE SUBMIT APPLICATION ONLINE AT www.soswellservices.com, resume must be included! **Good wages, and full benefit package**. Page 2B 11-16-12.qxp 11/15/2012 5:42 PM Page 2 rocketminer.com IMMACULATE TWO bedroom with washer and dryer, storage shed included. No smokers, no pets, references and credit check required, $800 per month plus utilities. Call 382-6451. LUXURY THREE bedroom, two bath apartment, great location in Green River, $945/month. 875-3909. GREEN RIVER - townhome, three bedroom, 1.5 bath, $1225 per month includes water, sewer and trash. Call Amanda at (605) 939-4686. FOUR BEDROOM, 1.75 bath, yard, garage, RV parking, no pets, 389-9639. TWO BEDROOM, 1.5 bath 1200 sq. ft. townhouse, excellent condition, great location, one car attached garage, well done decor. Available December 1st. $1250 rent, $1250 deposit, one year lease. Pets accepted with reasonable pet deposit. For information call 389-8135. TWO BEDROOM, one bath house, 128 L St. Washer/ dryer hookups, no smoking, no pets, $635/month, $635 deposit. 371-6759. FIVE BED, two bath, fenced yard, utilities paid, $1900. Call 307-677-0848. OPEN HOUSE 700 Arrowhead and 716 Arrowhead, Rock Springs. Saturday, November 17th, 1 p.m. - 3 p.m. Turnkey Properties, 307-871-2772. ONE BEDROOM RV’s for rent. Short term, long term, $500/month. 307-382-7482. ONE BEDROOM, one bath, recently renovated. All utilities included. No pets. $675 per month, $675 security deposit. 389-0843. ***NEW LUXURY CONDO*** ***FREE RENT*** Three bedroom, two bath. Tile, granite counter tops, air conditioning, garages. Must see! First, last, plus deposit. One year lease. New, behind Smith’s, Green River. (801) 368-8660. GREEN RIVER, two bedroom, 1.5 bath, $800 per month with one year lease, deposit $1000, shorter leases available. Owner pays heat. No smoking, no pets. Clean. 389-4039. ONE BEDROOM studio house in Green River, no pets, no smoking. First, last plus deposit, utilities extra, $650. Available December 1st. 875-4004 or 871-1789. TWO BEDROOM, one bath, hardwood and tile in living areas, new oak kitchen with counter tops. $800 plus electric, no pets. (307)350-0128, 382-6542. 716 ARROWHEAD, newer three bedroom, 2.5 bath, two-car garage, no smoking, $1800 plus utilities. Turnkey Properties, (307) 871-2772. THREE BEDROOM furnished, all utilities paid, free Wi-Fi. Absolutely No Pets! (307) 705-1336. TWO AND Three Bedrooms located in Green River, all include on site storage unit, starting at $725. No pets. 875-4296. GREEN RIVER, three bedroom, 1.5 bath, pets okay. $1200/month plus utilities, $1200 security deposit, one year lease, pet deposit $200. 371-5495 anytime or 371-8265 after 4 p.m. TWO BEDROOM, one bath. No smoking, no pets. Call 362-7141. STUDIO APARTMENT, no smoking, no pets, $550 plus deposit, one year lease, 362-2205. TWO BEDROOM mobile home. No pets, no smoking. First, last, and deposit due at signing of lease. $800 per month, with discount for paying on time. Call 389-4026 for application. TWO BED, one bath, fenced yard, storage, $650 rent, $300 deposit. 252-7776. ONE BED, one bath, all utilities paid. $650 per month, $650 deposit. No smoking, no pets. 307-705-2075. OFFICE/RETAIL Space, 500 sq. ft., all utilities included. First Month Rent FREE. 307-389-6579. CUTE THREE Bedroom, two bath, one year lease, $1000 per month. Available December 1st, 2027 Carter. No pets, no smoking. Credit check. Call Tom Fossen at AAA Properties, 389-5180. Owner/Agent. TWO BEDROOM, you pay all utilities, first, last and deposit, $800/month. Call 382-7030. THREE BED, two bath, two car garage, Garden City, Utah, $800. (307) 677-0848. FIREWOOD, $200 per cord. Call Shawn, 307-389-8550. TOOL BOX tank combo with electric pump, DEE ZEE Gold, perfect for RV trailer, $400; Steel gangboxes, excellent condition, $125 each. 389-7965. CRAFTSMAN Snowblower, 24 inches, electric start, like new, $400, 362-5508. MISCELLANEOUS FURNITURE: dining set, 21 inch TV, two matching lamps, wood burning inset for fireplace, queen size futon, 389-4086, 389-6562. GREAT CHRISTMAS present. New set Roxy skis, sweetheart design with Roxy girls bindings, bindings not mounted, ski length 140, radius 13, $180. 371-6734. FLATBED, 11 ft. 7 inches x 8 ft., off of F450, $1000. 871-4782. WORK SHED, insulated; Piano, $600/best. 705-4960. TWO AND three bed townhouse in Green River. One year lease. NO PETS. 389-1077, 871-1351. http://landlrentals.weebly.c om SUPER CLEAN three bedroom 1.5 bath, 1406 Raindance. $875/month plus deposit, one year lease. No pets, no smoking. Credit check. Call Tom Fossen at AAA properties, 389-5180. Owner/Agent. LIBERTY GUN SAFES. Protect your valuables from fire or theft, call 362-8356, 389-2629. BEAUTIFUL THREE bedroom, two bath, and two bedroom, two bath available now. For more information call 382-7482. OVER 4000 sq. ft. building for lease, with three 12 ft. high overhead doors, located on Gannett Street, zoned I-1. Owner is Real Estate Broker. Call Margie Smith, Rock Springs Realty, 307-382-2995, 307- 350-7981. COMPLETELY FURNISHED, beautifully decorated home. Four bedroom, two bath, two-car garage, landscaped, fenced yard, no smoking, no pets. Six month lease, $1500 per month. 389-7629. 300 POUND Olympic weight and bench set, $250 or best. 382-2547. FIREWOOD - $200 per cord, blocked or split. Call (307) 212-0701. THREE BED, two bath doublewide. $1000 per month and $1000 deposit. No smoking and no pets. 389-3053. STORAGE AND shop units, Green River. 12x24 and 48x48, overhead doors. (307) 875-2848. 6 BEVERLY Hills Dr., Rock Springs, Friday and Saturday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Chin-up station, small refrigerator, stained glass scraps, green house items, teen girl’s and women’s clothes, toys, decor, costumes, truck trailer, work bench with outlets, 2009 Jeep Rubicon bumper with driving lights, and lots of great quality miscellaneous. 105 K St. Rock Springs, New Life. Friday, Saturday 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Lots of clothes, miscellaneous, Christmas. 504 RAMPART Dr., Rock Springs. Friday and Saturday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Squat rack with lat attachment and incline bench. 300 pound Olympic weight set with other assorted weights, weight racks and dumbbell bars. 633 BRIDGER Ave., Rock Springs, across from SCM Parish. Saturday, Sunday 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Youth Fund raiser. Household items, clothes, Louis Lamour hard cover set, china. Come and see, and support local youth too! 3B 1348 COTTONWOOD Dr., Rock Springs. AFTER THE RENO SALE! Saturday, November 17th, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. New and used tools, flooring, lighting, shelving, miscellaneous. NORTH OF Rock Springs, three bed, one bath, $825 per month, $825 deposit, tenant pays gas and electric, one year lease. NO PETS. 389-1077, 871-1351, http://landlrentals.weebly.c om 2316 BIG SKY Trail - Large three bedroom, 2.5 bath house behind Home Depot. Two-car garage, six appliances. No smoking, No pets. $1550 per month, $1550 down. Available immediately. (307) 371-8082. GREEN RIVER, large townhome. Two bedroom, 1.5 bath, grassed yard. No pets, $900. 875-5036. TOWNHOUSES, TWO bedroom, 1.5 bath, garage. NO PETS. Good references. For appointments, call (307) 875-2848, Green River. RV LOT for rent. $295/month includes water and garbage. 307-705-0586. Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 KENMORE ELITE DeLuxe clothes dryer, red, 2 years old, excellent condition, $600 or best. 307-382-5844. GOING OUT OF BUSINESS. After 18 years Special FX Darts and Pool, 758 Pilot Butte Ave., Rock Springs WY, 362-5062. Open Monday-Friday 1:30 p.m. - 5:30 p.m. and Saturday 11 a.m. 3 p.m. Everything 20 percent - 50 percent Off. Last day November 25th. (Closed Nov 21st and 22nd.) Fixtures will also be sold. Hurry in for the best selection and supplies. Christmas is coming, get it now. ARROWHEADS: 50 years of collecting by A.J. Dolene. Out of print, no more. I have some new never used copies. $40 plus tax each. Price break for 10 or more. 307-362-4807. WANTED - your unwanted horses. 307-690-0916. HORSESHOEING Mike Murphy 362-6602 MATTRESSES - New and used, lots to choose from. Come see us at 520 Creek Ave. - the old Taylor’s Furniture. 389-2758. FOR SALE - Tan sofa and loveseat. New, not broken in yet. Moving must sell. $750 for the pair. (307) 871-8825. WHIRLPOOL GAS $75. 307-677-0848. dryer, 1973 TWO bed, one bath, good condition, $8500 or make offer. 371-8359. ADMIRAL 3.2 super capacity washer. 3 years old, seldom used, $200. Call (307) 922-1921. 1982 24x65 Nashua, new gas fireplace, siding, windows. Must meet park requirements. Call 389-4086 or 389-6562. BLAINES APPLIANCES will be closed November 18th through November 26th. Open by appointment only. 307-212-2432. WOODEN TABLE and six chairs, really nice, like new, $900. Call 307-212-2432. ALFALFA HAY, small bales. Applequist Ranch, (307) 273-9311, (307) 350-9331. GOATS, WITHERS and nannies, $75. (307) 922-3473. 2007 16x80 Friendship. Three bed, two bath, sunken living room, garden tub and skylight. Large deck, nice yard, shed. Must See! $39,900/best. (307) 389-9611 or (307) 389-9606. FOR SALE by Owner: 2006 Champion 16x80 mobile home. Three bed, two bath, new appliances, in Green River. Will owner-finance to right person(s), asking $36,000. Contact Oscar, (307) 371-0788. SINGLEWIDE TRAILER for sale, Desert Village. Possible financing available. Asking what is owed on it. 350-1112. 2001 FORD Focus five speed. AM/FM/Cassette, 193,000 miles, new timing belt and fuel pump, 32 plus MPG, $2200/best. (541) 263-2277, leave message. ANIMAL CONTROL has some really great pets. Some Pit mix puppies, 7 month old Hound, Pointer/ Dalmatian mix, super nice adult cats, 350-1455. YORKIES - Darling AKC male and female Yorkies in time for Christmas. Call 371-9474. 1995 SKYLINE, three bedroom, two bath. $20,000 or best offer. 307-871-9000. ONE BEDROOM, newly refurbished 14x60, large living room, fenced yard, $4000 or best offer. Does not have to be moved. 307-448-0874. STEEL BUILDINGS, prices reduced. Wholesale/factory offers on discounted deals. Big and small. Source#18x, 800-964-8335. RED HEELER puppies, 6 weeks old, ready to go. Call 362-9233 or 382-2211. FIVE ACRES in Watford City, North Dakota. 40x80 building, 15 lot RV campground. Ideal for small trucking company. (701) 580-4726. $200. BUYING JUNK Cars, Trucks, Machinery. Prices from $35 to $2000. 389-9225. GOLDEN RETRIEVER puppies. AKC, dew claws, first shots, $500. 307-321-2315. QUALITY OFFICE SPACE For Sale/Lease. 2500 plus sq. ft. with reception area and five offices, conference room. Great location Postal Square. Agent Interest All Seasons Realty (307) 362-7575 GE GAS stove, 307-677-0848. MAPEX MARS Series drum kit and Ludwig drum kit. Make offer, 970-216-1193. CUTE BLACK-TRI male Australian Shepherd puppy. Current on shots, micro chipped, tail and dew claws done, AKC and ASCA registrable, ready for a good home. Call (435) 640-4042 or (307) 786-4433 POWERHOUSE COMMERCIAL unit. 2200 sq. ft., 16 ft. door. Office and shop. For lease. Call Century 21 Rocky Mountain 362-9990. 1927 PROJECT RatRod pickup, roller. 1990 GMC Suburban. 1980 Skeeter bass boat. For information call (307) 707-3008. 2324 BIG SKY Trail- $164,900 TWIN HOME - TWO CAR ATTACHED GARAGE, THREE BEDROOMS AND 2.5 BATHS! Call Mary Manatos at High Country Realty (307) 382-2652. MOUNTAIN VIEW, newly remodeled home on extra large lot, in great neighborhood. Four bedroom, three bath, two car garage, 12x48 patio. For more information contact Jim or Lynn Moretti. 307-782-6732. HOME IN SUPERIOR - three bedroom, 1.5 bath house. 95 percent remodeled new roof, windows, deck, granite countertops in kitchen, new appliances. Sits on two lots with two additional lots available. (307) 371-5495 or 371-8265. 2006 F-350 King ranch dually, 53,000 miles, $26,000. Call 871-5562. 2003 DURANGO RT, 90,000 miles, $3800. 371-6030. 2005 CHEVY TAHOE, low miles. Asking $17,000. Call 307-350-2476. 2006 GMC Envoy, 76,000 miles, air, 4x4, sunroof, towing package, $11,000. 389-6748 or (307) 705-1195. 12 FT. FLATBED trailer, $1750/best . (307) 371-3691. 2001 TWO-PLACE four wheeler trailer, side load, $500. Call 389-3223. 11-16-12.qxp 4B 11/15/2012 5:42 PM Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 Page 3 rocketminer.com Sweetwater School District Sweetwater School District Number One in amounts exceeding $500 published in accordance with Chapter 3, Section 110, of the education code, 1969 were as follows: CHECK_KEY 0100049920 0100049924 0100049927 0100049928 0100049931 0100049933 0100049936 0100049937 0100049942 0100049943 0100049944 0100049948 0100049949 0100049952 0100049957 0100049958 0100049959 0100049960 0100049961 0100049962 0100049965 0100049966 0100049967 0100049972 0100049974 0100049979 0100049980 0100049981 0100049983 0100049984 0100049985 0100049986 0100049987 0100049990 0100049991 0100049992 0100049996 0100050001 0100050004 0100050005 0100050010 0100050011 0100050023 0100050025 0100050032 0100050035 0100050039 0100050042 0100050044 0100050045 0100050047 0100050048 0100050049 0100050050 0100050056 0100050059 0100050063 0100050067 0100050070 0100050072 0100050075 0100050077 0100050080 0100050081 0100050082 0100050084 0100050085 0100050086 0100050087 0100050088 0100050089 0100050092 0100050096 0100050099 0100050100 0100050103 0100050105 0100050107 0100050108 0100050109 0100050112 0100050114 0100050115 9200005974 0100050119 0100050121 0100050125 0100050126 0100050127 0100050128 0100050129 0100050130 0100050131 0100050133 0100050134 0100050135 0100050140 0100050142 0100050145 0100050146 0100050150 0100050151 0100050153 0100050154 0100050155 0100050156 0100050157 0100050159 0200082738 0100050161 0100050163 3100018225 9200005975 8200003887 8400000560 8200003888 2100003543 5100004946 0100050165 0200082739 0100050166 0100050167 0100050168 8004004749 8200003889 0100050169 0100050170 0100050171 0100050172 0100050173 0100050174 0100050176 0100050181 0100050185 0100050193 0100050194 0100050196 0100050197 0100050198 0100050200 0100050201 0100050202 0100050203 0100050204 0100050207 0100050208 0100050210 0100050219 0100050220 0100050223 0100050225 0100050228 0100050229 0100050230 0100050234 MAILING_NAME CHRISTIANSEN, WHITNEY LETS GO LEARN INC. SMITH'S FOOD & DRUG SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU CDW-G, INC. CLOSING THE GAP DOUBLE TREE- BLOOMINGTON-MINNEAPOLIS S FIRST BANKCARD- BRIAN KAUMO FIRST BANKCARD- BRIAN KAUMO FRANKLIN LEARNING RESOURCES GRAND HYATT DENVER SOLUTION TREE STAPLES WILSON LANGUAGE TRAINING CAMCO FIELD SERVICES, INC. CASPER STAR TRIBUNE ADVERTISING DEPT. JOHN P. ELLBOGEN FOUNDATION KONE, INC. NBPTS C/O BANK OF AMERICA, ILLINOIS PDQ CONTRACTORS SULLIVAN AND ASSOCIATES T-GRAPHICS WEST NBPTS C/O BANK OF AMERICA, ILLINOIS NICHOLAS & COMPANY, INC. ROCK SPRINGS MUNICIPAL UTILITY HEAD STAR CALICO INDUSTRIES, INC. CONTROL TEMPERATURE SPECIALISTS (CTS) EARTHGRAINS COMPANY HORIZON SOFTWARE INTERNATION, LLC MCFADDEN WHOLESALE MEADOW GOLD NICHOLAS & COMPANY, INC. PAPA MURPHY'S SMITH'S FOOD & DRUG WYOMING DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, HEALTH ACE HARDWARE APPLE COMPUTER, INC. BRAINPOP CDW-G, INC. CEM AQUATICS COMPUNET, INC. CONTROL TEMPERATURE SPECIALISTS (CTS) ELDER EQUIPMENT LEASING EVERWHITE HALL ASSOCIATES FLYING EFFECTS HARCOURT SCHOOL PUBLISHERS HOLIDAY INN HUECKSTAEDT, TERRI INTERSTATE BATTERY SYSTEM OF NORTHWEST C INTERSTATE BUSINESS PRODUCTS JACKSON CONSULTING JME FIRE PROTECTION 1ST BANK - FISCAL MANAGEMENT ALPINE PURE WATER HYDE, BRAD LEMICH LAW CENTER MACY'S TRUCK REPAIR, INC. MCGRAW-HILL PUBLISHING MITCHELSON, PATTY NASCO NCS PEARSON INC. PERKINS RESTAURANT SUGARLAND ENTERPRISES PROJECT ADVENTURE, INC. QUALITY INN QUESTAR GAS RESERVE ACCOUNT POSTAGE MACHINE ROADWAY INN & SUITES ROCK SPRINGS MUNICIPAL UTILITY SEWER FEE ROCK SPRINGS MUNICIPAL UTILITY WATER FEE ROCK SPRINGS NEWSPAPER, INC. PUBLICATION ROCKY MOUNTAIN POWER RYNO DESIGNS SMITH DETROIT DIESEL STAPLES STEVENS, J. MICHAEL SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 COMMUNITY TOWN OF WAMSUTTER UNIVERSAL ATHLETIC VERIZON WIRELESS WAL-MART WINGATE INN WYOMING SCHOOL SUPPORT SERVICE XEROX CORPORATION SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU AMERICAN FAMILY LIFE AMERICAN FUNDS SERVICE COMPANY DISTRICT DIRECTOR OF INTERNAL REVENUE, F DISTRICT DIRECTOR OF INTERNAL REVENUE, F DISTRICT DIRECTOR OF INTERNAL REVENUE, M FIDELITY INVESTMENTS FRANKLIN TEMPLETON INVESTOR SERV.INC., R GREAT AMERICAN LIFE INSURANCE HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE CO. GROUP BENEFI INDIANAPOLIS LIFE INSURANCE CO. NYLIAC ORCHARD TRUST COMPANY SECURITY BENEFIT LIFE INS. CO. SECURITY SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 DEPENDENT SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 RENT SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 UNREIMBURS UNITED WAY OF SWEETWATER COUNTY VANGUARD GROUP SPECIALIZED SERVICES WADDELL AND REED WADDELL AND REED, INC. WORKERS' COMPENSATION DEPARTMENT OF EMPL WYOMING CHILD SUPPORT ENFORCEMENT WYOMING EDUCATION ASSOCIATION WYOMING RETIREMENT SYSTEM TEACHERS' RETI WELLS FARGO BANK OF WYOMING AMERICAN EXPRESS SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 IMPREST FU SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 IMPREST FU WELLS FARGO BANK OF WYOMING HUGHES GENERAL CONTRACTOR RETAINAGE-345-HUGHES SWEETWATER SCHOOL DIST #1 CAPITAL CONST. SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 FEDERAL FU JOB, RAE LYNN PLAN ONE / ARCHITECTS ROCK SPRINGS NEWSPAPER, INC. PUBLICATION ROCKY MOUNTAIN FIRE SYSTEMS PACIFIC CORP. SIMPLEX GRINNELL LP BELLI, JEANNE, RN DEBERNARDI APARTMENT COMPANY HILTON SALT LAKE CITY CENTER 1ST BANK - FISCAL MANAGEMENT 1ST BANK - FISCAL MANAGEMENT ACADEMIC DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE B.E. PUBLISHING BARNES & NOBLE GEOMOTION GROUP KAGAN PUBLISHING LEADERSHIP LEARNING CENTER MARZANO RESEARCH LABORATORY MIRAVIA, LLC SHERATON FORT WORTH SIMSBURRY INN, THE SOLUTION TREE GARLAND, MARY NAZARENO, LORI COMPASSLEARNING ACE HARDWARE AIRGAS INTERMOUNTAIN, INC. ALLDATA APPLE COMPUTER, INC. AUTO PARTS UNLIMITED CHECK_AMOUNT $734.53 $4,500.00 $623.20 $1,137.00 $516.00 $3,870.00 $3,540.24 $995.89 $532.00 $1,199.85 $582.94 $609.00 $637.62 $5,814.90 $2,870.25 $561.80 $837.00 $7,075.00 $24,000.00 $11,850.00 $2,606.90 $1,552.60 $1,000.00 $1,406.18 $563.63 $3,744.00 $1,507.13 $1,846.33 $6,672.00 $3,085.52 $7,645.58 $37,813.03 $1,426.00 $2,142.52 $3,057.68 $858.55 $267,020.71 $8,353.20 $17,730.37 $2,366.00 $19,563.32 $2,098.20 $1,907.67 $1,124.00 $3,370.00 $2,689.41 $1,200.00 $754.00 $1,085.55 $658.00 $49,000.00 $1,042.80 $861.78 $1,097.68 $1,500.00 $3,976.86 $825.00 $2,072.80 $544.70 $1,256.44 $3,628.30 $593.61 $3,420.41 $594.93 $1,518.88 $2,141.00 $700.93 $6,073.41 $23,937.68 $5,562.62 $18,785.77 $1,058.25 $606.15 $859.98 $1,500.00 $595.00 $986.20 $3,224.87 $1,841.75 $1,026.43 $948.00 $6,951.66 $536.30 $576.65 $6,193.37 $960.00 $120,119.88 $155,325.92 $33,495.00 $550.00 $3,249.99 $700.00 $5,190.37 $799.80 $625.00 $4,667.50 $1,491.00 $856.90 $891.34 $3,397.79 $563.41 $1,000.00 $1,037.50 $6,679.50 $2,232.30 $772.13 $15,843.94 $169,531.47 $1,000,000.00 $4,959.20 $2,594.82 $17,923.60 $5,518.56 $233,908.28 $105,964.38 $11,201.55 $2,362.07 $1,217.91 $4,258.90 $1,500,000.00 $701,065.70 $12,956.30 $89,252.75 $15,376.55 $89,658.52 $12,175.00 $31,560.97 $1,221.90 $715.00 $48,520.02 $2,670.56 $535.00 $1,300.00 $1,088.85 $6,277.20 $3,059.04 $2,500.00 $1,675.73 $722.97 $5,455.00 $1,023.91 $2,037.00 $4,728.40 $2,625.00 $1,542.15 $2,173.00 $2,450.20 $9,182.63 $574.47 $2,535.00 $1,146.00 $1,270.45 $975.00 $15,859.85 $1,683.06 0100050235 0100050242 0100050244 0100050245 0100050250 0100050251 0100050254 0100050256 0100050257 0100050260 0100050262 0100050267 0100050268 0100050270 0100050276 0100050278 0100050292 0100050294 0100050299 0100050300 0100050313 0100050314 0100050315 0100050316 0100050317 0100050319 0100050320 0100050321 0100050325 0100050326 0100050327 0100050332 0100050333 0100050334 0100050335 0100050336 0100050337 0100050343 0100050344 0100050345 0100050346 0100050349 0100050350 0100050351 0100050355 0100050363 0100050368 0100050373 0100050374 0100050378 0100050380 0100050389 0100050390 0100050391 0100050394 0100050396 0100050398 0100050399 0100050400 0100050401 0100050407 0100050409 0100050410 0100050413 0100050418 0100050419 0100050420 0100050421 0100050425 0100050427 0100050428 0100050429 0100050430 0100050433 0100050434 0100050436 0100050437 0100050438 0100050440 0100050443 0100050444 0100050445 0100050460 0100050461 0100050462 0100050466 0100050467 0100050471 0100050475 0100050476 0100050477 0100050479 0100050481 0100050483 0100050487 0100050488 0100050490 0100050491 0100050494 0100050496 0100050497 0100050500 0100050501 0100050502 0100050503 0100050504 0100050505 0100050506 0100050507 0100050508 0100050524 0100050527 0200082740 0200082741 0100050535 0100050536 0100050537 0100050538 0100050540 0100050541 0100050543 0100050544 0100050545 0100050546 0100050547 0100050548 0100050549 0100050550 0100050551 0100050554 0100050555 0100050556 0100050557 0100050558 0100050559 0100050563 0100050565 0100050566 0100050568 0100050569 0100050570 0100050572 0100050574 0100050575 0100050577 0100050578 0100050579 0100050580 0100050581 0100050582 0100050583 0100050584 0100050592 0100050593 0100050595 0100050596 0100050598 9800001049 9200005976 8400000562 9200005977 NOV. 16 B M I SYSTEMS GROUP BOSCHETTO'S BRC FAMILY HEARING SOLUTIONS BUSH WELLS SPORTING GOODS CARDWELL DISTRIBUTING CDW-G, INC. COMFORT INN RAWLINS COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES CONTRACT PAPER GROUP, INC. CUMMINS INTERNATIONAL, INC. DAKOTA BACKUP DELL COMPUTER CORPORATION DELTA EDUCATION, INC. DICK BLICK COMPANY EDUCATIONAL RESOURCE SERVICES, INC. ELDER EQUIPMENT LEASING HAMPTON INN & SUITES HARCOURT SCHOOL PUBLISHERS HOLIDAY INN HOLT MCDOUGAL INFORMATION SYSTEMS CONSULTING INSULATION, INC. J.W. PEPPER EARTHGRAINS COMPANY HORIZON SOFTWARE INTERNATION, LLC MEADOW GOLD NICHOLAS & COMPANY, INC. PAPA MURPHY'S WAL-MART WESTERN WYOMING BEVERAGE WYOMING FOOD BANK OF THE ROCKIES 1ST BANK - FISCAL MANAGEMENT 1ST BANK - FISCAL MANAGEMENT 1ST BANK - FISCAL MANAGEMENT 1ST BANK - FISCAL MANAGEMENT 1ST BANK - FISCAL MANAGEMENT 1ST BANK - FISCAL MANAGEMENT 1ST BANK - FISCAL MANAGEMENT BRIDGER VALLEY ELECTRIC CENTURYLINK CENTURYLINK FIRST BANKCARD DR. RON KALICKI FIRST BANKCARD DR. RON KALICKI FIRST BANKCARD TERI HANSEN/FOUNDATION FLEET SERVICES LARIAT INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS LEWIS PAPER MHS MACBEATH HARDWOOD COMPANY MCFADDEN WHOLESALE MCGRAW-HILL PUBLISHING NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC FOR KIDS NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC LEARNING NENDZA, DANIEL NYSTROM CUSTOMER SERVICE OFFICE SHOP OFFICE SHOP, INC. OFFICE SHOP, INC. LEASING (OSL) OREGON TRAIL PECOLAR, MELANIE PENCE AND MACMILLAN LLC PEPPARD, DARRIN PITNEY BOWES, INC. PYRAMID SCHOOL PRODUCTS QUALITY INN QUESTAR GAS QUILL CORPORATION #118624 REAL KLEEN, INC. RED HORSE OIL RENAISSANCE LEARNING, INC. RENAISSANCE LEARNING, INC. RESERVE ACCOUNT POSTAGE MACHINE ROCK SPRINGS MUNICIPAL UTILITY WATER FEE ROCK SPRINGS NEWSPAPER, INC. PUBLICATION ROCK SPRINGS WINNELSON ROCKY MOUNTAIN POWER ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEXTBOOK ROSETTE, SKIP SARATOGA INN SCHOLASTIC CLASSROOM MAGAZINES SCHOLASTIC MAGAZINE STAPLES STATE OF WYOMING - A & I TELECOMMUNICATI STUDENT PLANNER, THE SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 INSURANCE TEGELER & ASSOCIATES - R.S. TIRE DEN, THE TROXELL COMMUNICATIONS TYPING AGENT IIc U.S. MATH RECOVERY COUNCIL UINTA NETWORK SERVICES UNIVERSAL ATHLETIC VANDYKE SOFTWARE WAEMSP WAL-MART WAMSUTTER CONOCO WAXIE SANITARY SUPPLY WESTECH EQUIPMENT WESTERN WYOMING BEVERAGE WESTERN WYOMING COLLEGE BOOKSTORE WINGATE INN WYOMING EMBROIDERY WYOMING ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES WYOMING STATE LIBRARY SUPREME COURT & LI WYOMING TRIBUNE-EAGLE WYOMING.COM XEROX CORPORATION XPEDX ZANER BLOSER EDUCATIONAL PUBLISHERS NICHOLAS & COMPANY, INC. ROCKY MOUNTAIN POWER SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 FEDERAL FU WELLS FARGO BANK OF WYOMING SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 IMPREST FU AMERICAN FAMILY LIFE AMERICAN FAMILY LIFE (AFLAC) REMITTANCE AMERICAN FUNDS SERVICE COMPANY AXA EQUITABLE LIFE INS. EQUI-VEST ANNUIT CAPITAL BANK AND TRUST CO. DEALER SERVIC CLERK OF CIRCUIT COURT CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT GARNISHMENTS DISTRICT DIRECTOR OF INTERNAL REVENUE, F DISTRICT DIRECTOR OF INTERNAL REVENUE, F DISTRICT DIRECTOR OF INTERNAL REVENUE, M FIDELITY INVESTMENTS FRANKLIN TEMPLETON INVESTOR SERV.INC., R GREAT AMERICAN LIFE INSURANCE HARTFORD LIFE INSURANCE CO. GROUP BENEFI INDIANAPOLIS LIFE INSURANCE CO. NYLIAC ORCHARD TRUST COMPANY PACIFIC LIFE INSURANCE ANNUITIES PENN MUTUAL LIFE PRIMERICA SHAREHOLDER SERVICES SECURITY BENEFIT LIFE INS. CO. SECURITY SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 DEPENDENT SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 OPTIONAL M SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 RENT SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 UNREIMBURS U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION UNITED WAY OF SWEETWATER COUNTY VANGUARD GROUP SPECIALIZED SERVICES WADDELL AND REED WADDELL AND REED, INC. WORKERS' COMPENSATION DEPARTMENT OF EMPL WYOMING CHILD SUPPORT ENFORCEMENT WYOMING EDUCATION ASSOCIATION NCPERS WYOMING WYOMING RETIREMENT SYSTEM TEACHERS' RETI WYOMING SCHOOL SUPPORT SERVICE HARD ROCK HOTEL HOME DEPOT R & D SWEEPING, LC RENAISSANCE NASHVILLE HOTEL WYOMING SCHOOL SUPPORT SERVICE SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU SWEETWATER SCHOOL DISTRICT #1 GENERAL FU $613.00 $3,630.90 $2,444.45 $1,504.00 $35,169.67 $6,846.40 $534.00 $2,260.25 $46,681.30 $4,676.72 $2,748.89 $546.95 $2,259.56 $731.91 $1,045.00 $1,195.58 $1,424.00 $107,830.53 $600.00 $4,324.90 $4,555.70 $595.00 $798.74 $1,780.31 $25,945.50 $7,333.19 $9,064.80 $1,959.20 $869.28 $1,387.50 $750.48 $657.38 $1,713.00 $995.00 $1,052.50 $720.00 $1,682.00 $668.70 $2,842.05 $2,706.62 $894.76 $2,350.00 $994.60 $1,181.97 $3,967.47 $3,230.09 $4,677.73 $2,668.42 $2,043.16 $791.05 $2,292.48 $721.27 $1,017.99 $77,163.19 $1,320.00 $673.56 $4,629.87 $5,909.61 $14,886.82 $702.50 $522.80 $13,321.43 $770.57 $637.50 $1,071.24 $1,614.81 $6,992.47 $885.12 $1,691.20 $18,055.00 $936.60 $869.80 $2,224.00 $2,173.96 $1,276.40 $1,813.54 $39,657.62 $1,167.57 $1,122.84 $675.00 $2,281.56 $986.71 $2,504.75 $2,501.80 $1,983.45 $500,000.00 $610.00 $2,430.74 $15,225.00 $1,975.00 $12,441.00 $20,687.48 $860.94 $516.00 $800.00 $1,577.98 $3,169.13 $768.55 $1,556.41 $1,272.95 $651.80 $2,607.00 $1,334.00 $4,553.59 $1,400.00 $564.88 $2,197.35 $8,017.33 $1,729.00 $1,706.88 $629.67 $980.44 $15,376.55 $1,600,000.00 $2,091.98 $15,032.58 $740.83 $960.00 $737.50 $750.00 $1,064.19 $2,757.05 $269,133.64 $307,331.39 $75,505.16 $700.00 $7,249.99 $1,700.00 $8,262.72 $1,049.80 $2,500.00 $12,347.50 $600.00 $3,225.00 $800.00 $1,581.00 $856.90 $1,365.00 $8,391.54 $2,164.64 $5,703.22 $637.42 $1,225.82 $2,684.09 $1,087.50 $11,814.50 $35,141.32 $2,580.13 $15,998.73 $704.00 $363,540.88 $829.39 $6,615.00 $960.94 $625.00 $5,258.88 $6,951.94 $5,148.19 $4,264.17 $98,922.38 $72,041.77 1997 SKAMPER brand slide-in over tab pop-top camper, with brackets, $850/best. 970-216-1193. DON’S RV AND REPAIR Monday - Friday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. 362-7646, 1901 Foothill Boulevard, Rock Springs. 2004 POLARIS 500 HO in green with snowplow and rack bag, $3500; 1996 Polaris 400 Scrambler 4x4, $2000, both in excellent condition. 307-871-6881 2007 YAMAHA 400 Big Bear. After market skid plates, winch, snow plow, excellent condition, low miles, $3500/best offer. 389-5142. 2003 ARCTIC Cat Mountain Cat 900, low miles, $3000 or best offer. 350-7667. SNOWMOBILE - 2010 Arctic Cat M8 Snow pro, 162 inch, track, asking $6800. Like new, only 1469 miles, call or text 307-871-3766 for more information. PUBLIC NOTICE The Rock Springs, Green River, Sweetwater County Combined Communications Joint Powers Board will hold its regular meeting on Monday, November 19, 2012 at 2:30 p.m. at 212 D Street, Rock Springs, WY. Nov. 16_____________________ STATE OF WYOMING Department of Environmental Quality/Division of Air Quality PUBLIC NOTICE Chapter 6, Section 2(m) of the Wyoming Air Quality Standards and Regulations provides that prior to a final determination on an application to construct a new source, opportunity be given for public comment and/or public hearing on the information submitted by the owner or operator and on the analysis underlying the proposed approval or disapproval. The regulation further requires that such information be made available in at least one location in the affected air quality control region, and that the public be allowed a period of thirty (30) days in which to submit comments. A public hearing will be conducted only if in the opinion of the administrator sufficient interest is generated or if an aggrieved party so requests. Notice is hereby given that the State of Wyoming, Department of Environmental Quality, Division of Air Quality, proposes to approve a request by the following applicant to construct a new source in Sweetwater County, Wyoming. QEP Field Services Company 1050 17th Street, Suite 500 Denver, CO 80265 The applicant has requested permission to install a 15.0 MMCFD TEG dehydration unit at the Trail 56 Pad, with one (1) reboiler overheads condenser, one (1) TEG flash tank separator and one (1) smokeless combustion device to control volatile organic compounds and hazardous air pollutant emissions associated with the dehydration unit still vent, located in the SW1/4SE1/4 of Section 15, T13N, R100W, approximately thirty-nine (39) miles south-southwest of Table Rock, in Sweetwater County, Wyoming. A copy of the permit application and the agency’s analysis is available for public inspection at the Sweetwater County Clerk’s Office, Green River, Wyoming. In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, special assistance or alternate formats will be made available upon request for individuals with disabilities. Written comments may be directed to Steven A. Dietrich, Administrator, Division of Air Quality, Department of Environmental Quality, 122 W. 25th St., Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002 or by fax (307) 777-5616. Please reference AP-13921 in your comment. Comments submitted by email will not be included in the public record. All comments received by 5:00 p.m., Monday, December 17, 2012 will be considered in the final determination on this application. Nov. 16___________________________________________________ CITY OF ROCK SPRINGS, WYOMING NOTICE OF ACCEPTANCE AND FINAL SETTLEMENT To all persons, firms or corporations who have any claims for work done for or any materials furnished to: DeBernardi Construction Co, Inc. 514 G Street Rock Springs, Wyoming 82901 General Contractors for: 2012 ADA Upgrades Project That is located in the City of Rock Springs, Wyoming. You are hereby notified that the City of Rock Springs, Sweetwater County, Wyoming, has accepted as completed, according to the plans and specifications and rules set forth in the contract between the City of Rock Springs and the aforesaid contractor, the work in connection with the 2012 ADA Upgrades Project and that the said contractor is entitled to final settlement therefore. You are further notified that upon the 27th day of December, 2012, being the 41st day after the first publication of this notice, the City of Rock Springs will pay to DeBernardi Construction Co., Inc. (Contractor) the full amount due under said contract; and in the event your claim is not filed with the City of Rock Springs prior to said 27th day of December, 2012, the same shall be waived. This notice is given pursuant to Section 16-6-116, Wyoming Statutes. Dated this 16th day of November, 2012 City of Rock Springs Sweetwater County Wyoming Nov. 16, 24, Dec. 1, 22_______________________________________ PUBLIC HEARING SALE OF MUNICIPAL PROPERTY The Rock Springs City Council will hear public comments on the proposed sale of a 1999 Dodge PU, VIN#3B7KF26Z9XM587069, valued at more than $500.00, to Rock Springs Resident Council for $1.00, and a 2001 Dodge PU, VIN#1B7GL22X21S207622, valued at more than $500.00, to Rock Springs Resident Council for $1.00. The hearing will take place at the regular council meeting on Tuesday, December 4, 2012, at 7 p.m. in the Rock Springs City Council Chambers, 212 D Street, Rock Springs, Wyoming. This notice is made pursuant to Wyoming Statute 15-1-112. Nov. 16, 22, 30_____________________________________________ NOTICE OF ACCEPTANCE AND FINAL PAYMENT TO CONTRACTOR Notice is hereby given that the Eden Valley Irrigation & Drainage District has accepted, as completed according to the plans, specifications and rules governing the same, the work performed under that contract dated September 14, 2012, between Eden Valley Irrigation & Drainage District, Farson, Wyoming and McKinsey Fencing of Boulder, Wyoming, the contractor; that work under said contract, known as the Habitat Replacement Fencing Plan, is complete, and the Contractor is entitled to final payment. Notice is further given that subsequent to the forty-first (41st) day after the first publication of this notice, as provided by Wyoming Statute 16-06-106, to wit, (December 20, 2012). Eden Valley Irrigation & Drainage District will pay to said contractor the full amount under the contract. Nov. 9, 16, 30, Dec. 7, 14, 18__________________________________ 11-16-12.qxp 11/15/2012 5:42 PM Page 4 rocketminer.com Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 5B Hamas targets Tel Aviv as part of rocket barrage KARIN LAUB AND IBRAHIM BARZAK Associated Press France explores idea of arming Syrian rebels ELAINE GANLEY Associated Press Let The Classifieds Work For You 362-3736 HARLEY-DAVIDSON Dyna Wide Glide, 90th Anniversary Edition. 47,000 miles, customized with Harley Davidson Trailer. (435) 513-0638, (307) 382-9999; natej@jeppsenlaw.com $5900 or best offer. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE WHEREAS, default in the payment of principal and interest has occurred under the terms of a promissory note dated February 7, 2008 executed and delivered by Denese H. McDonald to Quicken Loans, Inc., and a real estate mortgage of the same date securing the Note, which Mortgage was recorded February 12, 2008 as Instrument No. 1526185, Book 1113, Page 0964 in the public records in the office of the county Clerk of Sweetwater County, Wyoming which Mortgage was the subject of an Assignment to Green Tree Servicing LLC, as recorded in 1621358, Book 1996, Page 6172. The premises that are described in the Mortgage are as follows: Lot Numbered Fifty-Five (55) of the Windriver Addition, Phase No. 3, to the City of Rock Springs, Sweetwater County, Wyoming with an address of 2010 Arthur Avenue, Rock Springs, Wyoming 82901. Green Tree Servicing LLC, as assignee, has served a written Notice Intent to Foreclose the Mortgage by Advertisement and Sale pursuant the terms of the Mortgage to the record owner or party in possession accordance with the statute ten (10) days prior to the first publication the sale. of to in of The amount due and owing on the date of the first publication is $161,801.20, which includes the unpaid principal and accrued but unpaid interest. Interest continues to accrue on the unpaid balance at the rate of $ 32.97 per day. The property being foreclosed upon may be subject to other liens and encumbrances that will not be extinguished at the sale and any prospective purchaser should research the status of title before submitting a bid. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to W.S.§ 34-3-101 et seq., (1977 Republished Edition) that the above described property will be at public venue sold by the Sheriff of Sweetwater County, to the highest bidder at the hour of 10:00 o’clock A.M. on the 7th day of December, 2012, on the courthouse steps of Sweetwater County. DATED this 31st day of October, 2012. BY: ruce S. Asay Associated Legal Group, LLC 1807 Capitol Ave Suite 203 Cheyenne, WY 82001 (307) 632-2888 Attorney for Green Tree Servicing LLC Nov. 2, 9, 16, 24___________________________________________ CITY OF ROCK SPRINGS, WYOMING NOTICE OF ACCEPTANCE AND FINAL SETTLEMENT To all persons, firms or corporations who have any claims for work done for or any materials furnished to: DeBernardi Construction Co., Inc. 514 G Street Rock Springs, Wyoming 82901 General Contractors for: 2012 Concrete Replacement, Phase 1 That is located in the City of Rock Springs, Wyoming. You are hereby notified that the City of Rock Springs, Sweetwater County, Wyoming, has accepted as completed, according to the plans and specifications and rules set forth in the contract between the City of Rock Springs and the aforesaid contractor, the work in connection with the 2012 Concrete Replacement, Phase 1 Project and that the said contractor is entitled to final settlement therefore. You are further notified that upon the 27th day of December, 2012, being the 41st day after the first publication of this notice, the City of Rock Springs will pay to DeBernardi Construction Co., Inc. (Contractor) the full amount due under said contract; and in the event your claim is not filed with the City of Rock Springs prior to said 27th day of December, 2012, the same shall be waived. This notice is given pursuant to Section 16-6-116, Wyoming Statutes. Dated this 16th day of November, 2012 City of Rock Springs Sweetwater County Wyoming Nov. 16, 24, Dec. 1, 22_______________________________________ See us online: www.rocketminer.com PARIS (AP) — France raised the possibility Thursday of sending “defensive weapons” to Syria’s rebels, but Russia warned that such a move would violate international law. French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said his country will ask the European Union to consider lifting the Syrian arms embargo, which prevents weapons from being sent to either side. “We must not militarize the conflict ... but it’s obviously unacceptable that there are liberated zones and they’re bombed” by President Bashar Assad’s regime, Fabius said in an interview with RTL radio. “We have to find a good balance.” The civil war in Syria, which began as an uprising against Assad’s regime, has killed more than 36,000 Syrians since March 2011, according to anti-government activists. The fighting and flood of refugees seeking safety have also spilled over into several of Syria’s neighbors, including Israel, Lebanon, Turkey and Jordan. The fighting has descended into a bloody stalemate, and rebels say they desperately need weapons to turn the tide. “The question of defensive arms will be raised,” Fabius said, without providing details about what such arms would be. “This cannot be done without coordination between Europeans.” The topic of Syria is sure to be on the agenda at the EU foreign ministers meeting Monday in Brussels. France has taken a leading role among Western countries in supporting Syria’s rebels. On Tuesday, it became the first Western nation to formally recognize Syria’s newly formed opposition coalition as the sole legitimate representative of the Syrian people. On Saturday, the president of the new opposition coalition, the 52-year-old preacher-turned activist Mouaz al-Khatib, is to visit Paris and meet with President Francois Hollande. AlKhatib is scheduled to hold talks a day earlier in London with British officials, who have said they will urge the opposition to set out a strategy to halt the conflict. Syria’s splintered rebel factions agreed to a U.S.backed plan to unite last weekend under the new umbrella group, which seeks a common voice and strategy against the regime. A French diplomatic official said Thursday that Paris sees quick recognition as a primary way to assure success for the opposition. “There won’t be many other occasions like this,” said the official who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter and asked not to be named. “We have a collective responsibility, to the Syrians and ourselves, to make this live.” Turkey, which shares a long border with Syria and is a major backer of the opposition, followed suit on Thursday, with Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu saying Ankara recognized the Syrian National Coalition as “the only legal representative” of Syria, the Anadolu news agency reported. The six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council already has recognized the new broad-based Syrian opposition group. GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — Palestinian militants targeted densely populated Tel Aviv in Israel’s heartland with rockets for the first time Thursday, part of an unprecedented barrage that threatened to provoke an Israeli ground assault on Gaza. Three Israelis were killed. Air raid sirens wailed and panicked residents ran for cover in Tel Aviv, Israel’s commercial and cultural capital. Israel responded by moving troops and heavy weapons toward Gaza and authorizing the call-up of tens of thousands of reservists. There was no word on where the two rockets aimed at Tel Aviv landed, raising the possibility they fell into the Mediterranean. A third rocket landed in an open area on the southern outskirts of Tel Aviv. The fighting, the heaviest in four years, came after Israel launched a ferocious air assault Wednesday to stop repeated rocket fire from Gaza. The powerful Hamas military chief was killed in that strike, and another 18 Palestinians have died over two days, including five children. Some 100 Palestinians have been wounded. Israeli warplanes struck dozens of Hamas-linked targets in Gaza on Thursday, sending loud booms echoing across the narrow Mediterranean coastal strip at regular intervals, followed by gray columns of smoke. After nightfall, several explosions shook Gaza City several minutes apart, a sign the strikes were not letting up, and the military said the targets were about 70 underground rocketlaunching sites. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the army was hitting Hamas hard with what he called surgical strikes, and warned of a “significant widening” of the Gaza operation. Israel will “continue to take whatever action is necessary to defend our people,” said Netanyahu, who is up for re-election in January. There were mounting signs of a ground operation. At least 12 trucks were seen transporting tanks and armored personnel carriers toward Gaza late Thursday, and a number of buses carrying soldiers arrived. Israeli TV stations said a Gaza incursion was expected on Friday, though military officials said no decision had been made. Defense Minister Ehud Barak said he authorized the call-up of reservists, and the army said up to 30,000 additional troops could be drafted. “We will continue the attacks and we will increase the attacks, and I believe we will obtain our objectives,” said Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz, Israel’s military chief. Hamas, meanwhile, warned it would strike deeper inside Israel with Iranian-made Fajr-5 rockets, acknowledging for the first time it has such longer-range weapons capable of hitting targets some 47 miles (75 kilometers) away. Tel Aviv is 40 miles (70 kilometers) from Gaza. By nightfall Thursday, Hamas said it had fired more than 350 rockets into Israel. Israel, which estimates Gaza militants have as many as 12,000 rockets, said some 220 rockets struck the Jewish state and another 130 were intercepted by an anti-missile shield. Israel believes Hamas has significantly boosted its arsenal since the last Gaza war four years ago, including with weapons from Iran and from Libyan stockpiles plundered after the 2011 fall of the regime there. “After four years, we became stronger, we have a strategy and we became united with all the military wings in Gaza,” said Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum, referring to Hamas’ setbacks during Israel’s last major offensive in late 2008. In the current round of fighting, Israel is facing an emboldened Hamas with a stronger arsenal and greater regional backing. Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi, like Hamas a member of the region-wide Muslim Brotherhood, said he was sending a high-level delegation to Gaza on Friday in a show of support for the fellow Islamists there. Both Israel and Hamas had largely observed an informal truce over the last four years, marred by occasional flare-ups. In recent days, however, border tensions escalated, then exploded into major violence Wednesday when Israel assassinated Hamas’ secretive military chief, Ahmed Jabari, with a missile strike on his car. Jabari led Hamas’ 2007 takeover of the territory, turning small squads of Hamas gunmen into a fighting force and supervising Gaza’s fledgling arms industry, including rocket production. He was long No. 1 on Israel’s most-wanted list, particularly for his role in capturing Israeli Sgt. Gilad Schalit and holding him for more than five years. On Thursday, Hamas gunmen fired machine guns in the air as frenzied mourners carried Jabari’s body, wrapped in a white burial shroud, through the streets of Gaza City on a wooden stretcher. At the cemetery, young men surged toward the corpse, trying to touch Jabari’s face before he was lowered into the grave in a chaotic scene. Hamas’ top leaders have dropped out of sight since the assassination, but it was not clear if they would be targets. The Hamas prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, said in a televised speech Thursday that the group “will not forget and not forgive” the killing of Jabari. Xi takes China’s helm with tough challenges ahead CHARLES HUTZLER Associated Press BEIJING (AP) — Longanointed successor Xi Jinping assumes the leadership of China at a time when the ruling Communist Party is confronting slower economic growth, a public clamor to end corruption and demands for change that threaten its hold on power. The country’s political elite named Xi to the top party post on Thursday, and unexpectedly put him in charge of the military too, after a weeklong party congress and months of divisive bargaining. The appointments give him broad authority, but not the luxury of time. After decades of juggernaut growth, China sits on the cusp of global pre-eminence as the second largest economy and newest power, but it also has urgent domestic troubles that could frustrate its rise. Problems that have long festered — from the sputtering economy to friction with the U.S. and territorial spats with Japan and other neighbors — have worsened in recent months as the leadership focused on the power transfer. Impatience has grown among entrepreneurs, others in the new middle class and migrant workers — all wired by social media and conditioned by two decades of rising living standards to expect better government, if not democracy. All along, police have continued to harass and jail a lengthening list of political foes, dissidents, civil rights lawyers and labor activists. A 14-year-old Tibetan set himself on fire in western China on Thursday, in the latest of more than 70 self-immolations Tibetans have staged over the past 20 months in desperate protests against Chinese rule. In his first address to the nation, Xi, a 59-year-old son of a revolutionary hero, acknowledged the lengthy agenda for what should be the first of two five-year terms in office. He promised to deliver better social services while making sure China stands tall in the world and the party continues to rule. “Our responsibility now is to rally and lead the entire party and the people of all ethnic groups in China in taking over the historic baton and in making continued efforts to achieve the great renewal of the Chinese nation,” a confident Xi said in nationally televised remarks in the Great Hall of the People. He later said “we are not complacent, and we will never rest on our laurels” in confronting challenges — corruption chief among them. By his side stood the six other newly appointed members of the Politburo Standing Committee: Li Keqiang, the presumptive premier and chief economic official; Vice Premier Zhang Dejiang; Shanghai party secretary Yu Zhengsheng; propaganda chief Liu Yunshan; Tianjin party secretary Zhang Gaoli; and Vice Premier Wang Qishan, once the leadership’s top troubleshooter who will head the party’s internal watchdog panel. Xi gave no hint of new thinking to address the problems. The lack of specifics and the new leadership heavy with conservative technocrats deflated expectations for change in some quarters. “We should be expecting more of the same, not some fundamental break from the past,” said Dali Yang of the University of Chicago. Fundamental for the leadership is to maintain the party’s rule, he said. “They are not interested in introducing China’s Gorbachev” — the Soviet leader whose reforms hastened the end of the Soviet Union — Yang said. Many of the challenges Xi confronts are legacies of his predecessor, Hu Jintao. In addition to relinquishing his role as party chief, having reached the two-term maximum, Hu also stepped down from the party commission that oversees the military. The move is a break from the past in which exiting party leaders kept hold of the military portfolio for several years. During Hu’s 10 years in office, policies to open up China to trade and foreign investment begun by his predecessors gathered momentum, turning China into a manufacturing powerhouse and drawing tens of millions of rural migrants into cities. Easy credit fueled a building boom, the Beijing Olympics and the world’s longest high-speed rail network. At the same time, Hu relied on an ever-larger security apparatus to suppress protests, even as demonstrations continued to rise. “More and more citizens are beginning to awaken to their rights and they are constantly asking for political reform,” said rights activist Hu Jia, who has previously been jailed for campaigning for AIDS patients and orphans. “The Communist Party does not have legitimacy. It is a party of dictatorship that uses violence to obtain political power. What we need now is for this country’s people to have the right to choose who they are governed by.” Chief among the problems Xi and his team will have to tackle is the economy. Though Hu pledged more balanced development, inequality has risen and housing costs have soared. Over the past year, the economy has flagged, dragged down by anemic demand in Europe and the U.S. for Chinese products and an overhang from excessive lending for factories and infrastructure. With state banks prefer- ring to lend to state-run companies or not at all, private entrepreneurs have had to turn to unofficial money-lenders. “The bank just asked me to wait,” said Deng Mingxin, who runs a zipper factory with 10 employees in Jiangsu province. “Maybe it’s because I didn’t offer enough ‘red envelopes”‘ — a reference to bribes. The World Bank warns that without quick action, growth that fell to a threeyear low of 7.4 percent in the latest quarter may fall to 5 percent by 2015 — a low rate for generating the employment and funding the social programs Beijing holds as key to keeping a lid on unrest. Analysts and Beijing’s own advisers have said it needs to overhaul its strategy and nurture consumer spending and services to meet its pledge of doubling incomes by 2020. “China will need a very different economy in the next decade,” said Citigroup economist Minggao Shen. In foreign policy, the U.S. and other partners are looking for reassurance that China’s policy remains one of peaceful integration into the world community. Tensions have flared in recent months between China, Japan and the Philippines over contested islets in the East and South China Seas. Mistrust has also grown with the U.S. as it diverts more military and diplomatic resources to Asia in what Chinese leaders see as containment. Fresh in office, Xi can illafford to bow to foreigners, crossing a nationalistic public and a military that may still be uncertain about his leadership. “The leaders can’t look like they are being soft on the U.S. or foreign policy because they will lose power in terms of people,” said Robert Lawrence Kuhn, a business consultant and author of the book “How China’s Leaders Think.” 12515104.qxp 6B 11/15/2012 5:41 PM Page B6 NATIONAL Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 rocketminer.com Some states warming up to health care law RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) — From the South to the heartland, cracks are appearing in the oncesolid wall of Republican resistance to President Barack Obama’s health care law. Ahead of a federal deadline Friday for states to declare their intentions, Associated Press reporters interviewed governors and state officials around the country, finding surprising openness to the changes in some cases. Opposition persists in others, and there is a widespread, urgent desire for answers on key unresolved details. The law that Republicans have derided as “Obamacare” was devised in Washington, but it’s in the states that Americans will find out if it works, delivering promised coverage to more than 30 million uninsured people. States have a major role to play in two of the overhaul’s main components: new online insurance markets for individuals and small businesses to shop for subsidized private coverage, and an expanded Medicaid program for low-income people. Friday is the day states must declare if they’ll build the new insurance markets, called exchanges, or let Washington do it for them. States can also opt for a partnership with the feds to run their exchanges, and they have until February to decide on that option. Some glimpses of grudging acceptance across a shifting scene: • One of the most visible opponents of Obama’s overhaul, Florida Republican Gov. Rick Scott, now says “if I can get to ‘yes,’ I want to get to ‘yes.”’ Florida was a leader in the failed effort to overturn the law in the Supreme Court, and a group formed by Scott ran TV ads opposing it before it passed Congress. But the governor told the AP this week he wants to negotiate with the federal government to try to help the nearly 4 million uninsured people in his state. • In Iowa, GOP Gov. Terry Branstad says he is postponing a decision because Washington has not provided enough information about key details. But his spokesman, Tim Albrecht, said Iowa is exploring a partnership exchange that could include several states. Albrecht said they’re confident they can get to a state option if needed. Ohio, like Florida and Iowa a state Obama carried in the election, is leaning toward a partnership with the federal government despite GOP officials’ continued misgivings about the law. • In Mississippi, Republican insurance commissioner Mike OBAMACARE IMPLEMENTATION BY STATE An early look at the routes states are taking to implement President Barack Obama’s health care law, along with the number of people in each state who don’t have health insurance: STATE Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Washington, D.C. Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming EXCHANGE OPTION Federal exchange Federal exchange Decision pending Federal-state partnership State exchange State exchange State exchange Federal-state partnership State exchange Decision pending Decision pending State exchange Decision pending Federal-state partnership Decision pending Decision pending Federal exchange State exchange Federal exchange Federal exchange State exchange State exchange Federal-state partnership State exchange State exchange Federal exchange Decision pending Decision pending State exchange Federal exchange Decision pending State exchange State exchange Federal-statepartnership Decision pending Decision pending Federal exchange State exchange Decision pending State exchange Federal exchange Federal exchange Decision pending Federal exchange Decision pending State exchange Federal exchange State exchange Decision pending Decision pending Federal exchange UNINSURED RESIDENTS 696,000 128,000 1,306,000 545,000 7,471,000 817,000 391,000 115,000 65,000 3,952,000 1,992,000 102,000 239,000 1,795,000 856,000 292,000 361,000 727,000 811,000 146,000 734,000 215,000 1,336,000 453,000 530,000 780,000 179,000 226,000 555,000 136,000 1,334,000 506,000 2,780,000 1,583,000 74,000 1,578,000 597,000 678,000 1,319,000 122,000 754,000 108,000 982,000 6,654,000 424,000 61,000 1,023,000 812,000 266,000 562,000 84,000 Source: Associated Press Research, U.S. Health and Human Services Department and the Urban Institute Chaney formally notified Washington on Wednesday that his agency will proceed with a staterun exchange, disappointing GOP Gov. Phil Bryant, who remains staunchly opposed to Obama’s law. Chaney, too, says he wishes the law could be repealed, but he worries that “if you default to the federal government, you forever give the keys to the state’s health insurance market to the federal government.” As for trying to fight the Feds, Chaney observed: “We tried that 150 years ago in the South, and it doesn’t work.” • In New Mexico, the adminis- tration of Republican Gov. Susana Martinez had been quietly working to put the law into place as the political storm swirled. With a fifth of its population uninsured, the state is planning to run its own exchange. “The party is over. The opposition is over,” New Mexico Human Services Secretary Sidonie Squier told the AP. “Whatever states didn’t think they were going to do it, I think they’re going to have to do it whether they like it or not. It’s a done deal now.” Policy experts in Washington are noticing the shift. “I think it’s a very practical decision for states now,” said Alan Weil, executive director of the nonpartisan National Academy for State Health Policy. “We are going to have a significant number of states running their own exchanges, a significant number where the federal government is running the exchange, and a significant number of partnerships. The bottom line is we are going to have to figure out how to make all three models work.” Although the public remains divided about the health care law, the idea of states running the new insurance markets is popular, especially with Republicans and political independents. A recent AP poll found that 63 percent of Americans would prefer states to run the exchanges, with 32 percent favoring federal control. The breakdown among Republicans was 81-17 in favor of state control, while independents lined up 65-28 for states taking the lead. Democrats were almost evenly divided, with a slim majority favoring state control. There are several potential benefits to a state operating its own exchange, experts say. The biggest advantage may be that states would be more closely involved in coordinating between the exchanges and Medicaid programs. Because many people are going to be going back and forth between Medicaid and private coverage in the exchanges, states would probably be better served by a hands-on role. States can also decide whether to allow open access to all insurers, or work only with a panel of pre-screened companies that meet certain requirements. Also, the exchanges will offer coverage to people buying in the individual and small business markets, areas that states have traditionally regulated. Without a state-run exchange, states could be dealing their own regulators out of the equation, as Mississippi’s insurance commissioner Chaney noted. When the legislation was being considered in Congress, Democrats in the House wanted to have a national exchange administered by the federal government. But they lost the argument with their centrist Democratic counterparts in the Senate, who wanted state exchanges in order to preserve a state role. Despite signs of movement toward going along with implementation of the overhaul, some major Republican-led states are holding fast. In Texas, the election results did not change any of the opposition to expanding Medicaid or to setting up insurance exchanges. The same holds for Louisiana, South Carolina, Missouri, Kansas and others. More American workers to pick their insurance TOM MURPHY AP Business Writer For some American workers, picking the right health insurance is becoming more like hunting for the perfect business suit: It takes some shopping around to find a good fit and avoid sticker shock. In a major shift in employer-sponsored health insurance coverage, companies such as Sears Holdings Corp. and Darden Restaurants Inc. are giving employees a fixed amount of money and allowing them to choose their own coverage based on their individual needs. The approach, called defined contribution health insurance, contrasts to the decades-old practice by most U.S. employers of offering workers a one-size-fits-all plan with benefits they may not want. It also means American workers who’ve grown accustomed to having their benefits chosen for them could wind up with bigger bills and inadequate coverage if they don’t choose wisely. “It’s a big, big change in the nature of what it means to have health insurance,” says David Cutler, a Harvard University economist. Until now, defined contribution health insurance plans have been largely limited to small businesses and retirees. But more employers are considering them as a way to control their rising health care costs. After all, the average annual premium — or cost for insurance coverage — for an employer-sponsored family health plan has almost doubled in the past decade to nearly $16,000, according to the nonprofit Kaiser Family Foundation. And companies generally foot at least 70 percent of that bill. But now the plans are catching on. Benefits consultant Mercer found that 45 percent of the 2,809 employers it surveyed earlier this year are either using or are considering a defined contribution approach. As a result, insurers and benefits companies are rolling out online exchanges where workers can buy insurance coverage roughly similar to how they buy plane tickets on travel Web sites. The private sites are similar to the public online exchanges that will enable people to buy insurance starting late next year as part of President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul. Aon Hewitt, a benefits consulting giant, expects 200,000 people to enroll this fall in coverage offered through its online exchange. Darden, which operates the Red Lobster and Olive Garden chains, and Sears are offering their defined contribution plans through Aon’s exchange site. WellPoint Inc., the nation’s second-largest health insurer that runs Blue Cross Blue Shield plans in several states, plans to debut its exchange next year. The insurer has an ownership stake in Bloom Health, a Minnesota company that expects the number of people covered by plans through its exchange to more than triple to about 100,000 people next year. MORE CHOICES Defined contribution health programs can differ greatly from the typical coverage offered by U.S. employers. Most coverage that companies currently offer gives employees the option of one plan or maybe two. With defined contribution plans, the company gives the employee a set contribution toward coverage, and the worker then picks the plan. That may involve choosing from among a few plans the employer offers or using an exchange to sort through dozens of choices offered by several insurers. The employer’s contribution may cover the entire premium or a smaller slice of it, depending on the coverage that the worker choses. A young, healthy, single worker, for instance, may pick a plan that balances a smaller premium with a higher deductible, which is the annual out-of-pocket amount a patient pays before most of his or her coverage kicks in. The plans are an attractive option for companies that want more predictable health care costs or more choices for their workers. Neither Sears nor Darden would say how much they’re planning to give employees so that they can buy health insurance. Sears, the Hoffman Estates, Ill.-based retail chain, said 90,000 of its employees will be eligible for its new approach, and they will have 15 choices for health insurance instead of about 4. Darden, which has 45,000 full-time employees, said its workers will be able to go online and pick from five medical plans, four dental plans and three that provide vision coverage. The Orlando, Fla., company had previously just offered one health insurance plan. The company said that the sum Darden will give workers to cover costs for their insurance will rise as health care costs climb. Ultimately, it said workers will have about the same out-of-pocket costs that they currently have for about the same level of coverage — but they’ll have more flexibility. “One of the things (employees) asked for was more choice in their health care,” says Ron DeFeo, a spokesman for Darden. “As we looked for a way to do it, this was the best option.” Obama vows not to forget storm victims rebuilding MATTHEW DALY Associated Press NEW YORK (AP) — President Barack Obama vowed Thursday to stick with New Yorkers still struggling 17 days after Superstorm Sandy “until the rebuilding is complete” after getting an upclose look at devastated neighborhoods rendered unlivable. Obama brought the spotlight to people still without heat or electricity and hugged many of those trying to rebuild their lives. He also delivered a postelection message of unity, nine days after a closely divided America gave him a second term. “During difficult times like this, we’re reminded that we’re bound together and we have to look out for each other,” Obama said from a Staten Island street that was demolished by the storm. “And a lot of the things that seem important, the petty differences, melt away.” Obama announced that Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan, a former chief of New York’s Housing Authority, will be his point person to oversee long-term redevelopment in the region. On a three-hour tour, the president encountered many still suffering in Sandy’s aftermath and waiting in lines for food, supplies and other help. He also met privately with parents whose two young boys, Brandon and Connor Moore, were swept away by the powerful storm. Damien and Glenda Moore’s children were among more than 100 people whose deaths were blamed on Sandy. “I expressed to them, as a father, as a parent, my heartbreak over what they went through,” Obama said. He said the Moores were “still obviously a little shellshocked” but wanted to thank the New York City police lieutenant who stayed with them until the bodies were found. “That spirit and sense of togetherness and looking out for one another, that’s what’s going to carry us through this tragedy,” Obama said. Before arriving on Staten Island, his helicopter flew over Rockaway Peninsula in Queens, including the waterfront community of Breezy Point, where roughly 100 homes burned to the ground in a massive wind-swept fire. On Staten Island, Obama met with residents waiting in line at an emergency response center at New Dorp High School, where the Federal Emergency Management Agency, Small Business Administration, IRS, Red Cross and city agencies have set up tents to help survivors. Photo courtesy of Randy Lemoine/Flickr This is a picture of some of the destruction that took place in Rockaway Peninsula in Queens, N.Y. After Hurricane Sandy, roughly 100 homes burned to the ground in the area in a massive wind-swept fire. 12515107.qxp 11/15/2012 5:19 PM Page B7 rocketminer.com Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 NATIONAL 7B BP agrees to pay $4.5B; 3 employees charged Post office reports record loss of $15.9B for year MICHAEL KUNZELMAN HOPE YEN Associated Press Associated Press NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A day of reckoning arrived for BP on Thursday as the oil giant agreed to plead guilty to a raft of criminal charges and pay a record $4.5 billion in a settlement with the government over the deadly 2010 disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. Three BP employees were also charged, two of them with manslaughter. The settlement and the indictments came 2 years after the fiery drilling-rig explosion that killed 11 workers and set off the biggest offshore oil spill in U.S. history. The settlement includes nearly $1.3 billion in fines, the largest criminal penalty in the nation’s history. As part of the deal, BP will plead guilty to charges involving the 11 deaths and lying to Congress about how much oil was spewing from the blown-out well. “We believe this resolution is in the best interest of BP and its shareholders,” said Carl-Henric Svanberg, BP chairman. “It removes two significant legal risks and allows us to vigorously defend the company against the remaining civil claims.” Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer said the deaths and the oil spill “resulted from BP’s culture of privileging profit over prudence.” Separately, BP rig workers Robert Kaluza and Donald Vidrine were indicted on federal charges of manslaughter and involuntary manslaughter, accused of repeatedly disregarding abnormal high-pressure readings that should have been glaring indications of trouble just before the blowout. In addition, David Rainey, BP’s former vice president of exploration for the Gulf of Mexico, was charged with obstruction of Congress and making false statements. Prosecutors said he withheld information that more oil was gushing from the well than he let on. Rainey’s lawyers said he did “absolutely nothing wrong.” And attorneys for the two rig workers accused the Justice Department of making scapegoats out of them. Both men are still with BP. “Bob was not an executive or high-level BP official. He was a dedicated rig worker who mourns his fallen co-workers every day,” Kaluza attorneys Shaun Clarke and David Gerger said in a statement. “No one should take any satisfaction in this indictment of an innocent man. This is not justice.” The settlement, which is subject to approval by a federal judge, includes payments of nearly $2.4 billion to the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, $350 million to the National Academy of Sciences and about $500 million to the Securities and Exchange Commission. The SEC accused BP of misleading investors by lowballing the amount of crude that was spilling. “This marks the largest single criminal fine and the largest total criminal resolution in the history of the United States,” Attorney General Eric Holder said at a news conference in New Orleans. He said much of the money will be used to restore the Gulf. WASHINGTON (AP) — The struggling U.S. Postal Service on Thursday reported an annual loss of a record $15.9 billion and forecast more red ink in 2013, capping a tumultuous year in which it was forced to default on billions in payments to avert bankruptcy. The financial losses for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30 were more than triple the $5.1 billion loss in the previous year. Having reached its borrowing limit, the mail agency is operating with little cash on hand, putting it at risk in the event of an unexpectedly large downturn in the economy. “It’s critical that Congress do its part and pass comprehensive legislation before they adjourn this year to move the Postal Service further down the path toward financial health,” said Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe, calling the situation “our own postal fiscal cliff.” Much of the red ink in 2012 was due to mounting mandatory costs for future retiree health benefits, which made up $11.1 billion of the losses. Without that and other related labor expenses, the mail agency sustained an operating loss of $2.4 billion, lower than the previous year. Donahoe said the post office has been able to reduce costs significantly by boosting worker productivity. But he said the mail agency has been hampered by congressional inaction on a postal overhaul bill that would allow it to eliminate Saturday mail delivery and reduce its $5 billion annual payment for future health benefits. “We cannot sustain large losses indefinitely. Major defaults are unsettling,” said Donahoe, who made clear that the Postal Service would now be profitable had Congress acted earlier this year. Earlier this year, the post office defaulted on two of the health prepayments for the first time in its history. The Postal Service, an independent agency, does not receive tax money for its day-today operations but is subject to congressional control. The Senate passed a postal bill in April that would have provided financial relief in part by reducing the annual health payments and providing a multibillion-dollar cash infusion, basically a refund of overpayments the Postal Service made to a federal pension fund. The House, however, remains stalled over its own legislation that Rocket-Miner file photo The settlement against BP came 2 years after the fiery drilling-rig explosion that killed 11 workers and set off the biggest offshore oil spill in U.S. history. Holder said the criminal investigation is still going on. Before Thursday, the only person charged in the disaster was a former BP engineer who was arrested in April on obstruction of justice charges, accused of deleting text messages about the company’s handling of the spill. The settlement appears to be well within BP’s means, considering the oil giant made a record $25.8 billion in profits last year. And it will be given five years to pay. But the company still faces huge additional claims. For one thing, the U.S. government and the Gulf states are still seeking billions of dollars in civil penalties against BP over the environmental damage. Also, a federal judge in New Orleans is deciding whether to approve an estimated $7.8 billion settlement between BP and more than 100,000 businesses and individuals who say they were harmed by the spill. They include fishermen, charter boat captains, restaurants, hotels and property owners. Under the settlement with the U.S. government, BP will plead guilty to 11 felony counts of misconduct or neglect of a vessel’s officers, one felony count of obstruction of Congress and one misdemeanor count each under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the Clean Water Act. The workers’ deaths were prosecuted under a federal law that protects seamen. The largest previous corporate criminal penalty assessed by the Justice Department was a $1.2 billion fine against drugmaker Pfizer in 2009. Greenpeace blasted the settle- ment as a slap on the wrist. “This fine amounts to a rounding error for a corporation the size of BP,” the environmental group said. Nick McGregor, an oil analyst at Redmayne-Bentley Stockbrokers, said the settlement would be seen as “an expensive positive.” “This scale of bill is unpleasant,” he said. But “the worst-case scenario for BP would be an Exxon Valdez-style decade of litigation. I think that is the outcome they are trying to avoid.” The Deepwater Horizon rig blew up 50 miles off Louisiana on April 20, 2010, in an explosion that investigators blamed on time-saving, cost-cutting decisions by BP and its drilling partners in cementing the well shaft. Following several failed attempts that introduced the American public to such industry terms as “top kill” and “junk shot,” BP finally capped the well on the sea floor after more than 85 days. By then, the well had spewed an estimated 172 million gallons of crude into the Gulf, fouling marshes and beaches, killing wildlife and closing vast areas to fishing. Nelda Winslette’s grandson Adam Weise of Yorktown, Texas, was killed in the blast. She said somebody needs to be held accountable. “It just bothers me so bad when I see the commercials on TV and they brag about how the Gulf is back, but they never say anything about the 11 lives that were lost. They want us to forget about it, but they don’t know what they’ve done to the families that lost someone,” she said. Sherri Revette, who lost her husband of 26 years, Dewey Revette, of State Line, Miss., said the indictments against the employees brought mixed emotions. “I’m saddened, but I’m also happy at the same time that they will be prosecuted. I feel for them, of course. You never know what impact your actions will have on others,” she said. Frank Parker, a shrimper from Biloxi, Miss., said: “I just hope the money gets down to the people who need it.” Scientists warn that the spill’s full effect on the Gulf food chain may not be known for years. But they have reported oil-coated coral reefs that were dying, and fish have been showing up in nets with lesions and illnesses that biologists fear could be oil-related. Oil churned up by storms could be washing up for years. The spill exposed lax government oversight and led to a temporary ban on deep-water drilling while officials and the industry studied the risks and worked to make it safer. BP’s environmentally friendly image was tarnished, and CEO Tony Hayward stepped down after some gaffes that included lamenting at the height of the crisis: “I’d like my life back.” The cost of the spill far surpassed that of the Exxon Valdez disaster in 1989. Exxon ultimately settled with the government for $1 billion, which would be about $1.8 billion today. The government and plaintiffs’ attorneys have also sued Transocean Ltd., the rig’s owner, and cement contractor Halliburton, but a string of pretrial rulings by a federal judge undermined BP’s strategy of pinning blame on them. CIA deputy: Rice got initial assessment on Libya WASHINGTON (AP) — Five days after the attack on the U.S. Consulate in Libya, U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice described what precipitated the deadly incident based on initial intelligence that later proved incorrect, the deputy CIA director told Congress on Thursday. In a closed-door session with the House Intelligence committee, Mike Morell said Rice was provided with an unclassified version of events at the U.S. mission in Benghazi that left American Ambassador Chris Stevens and three others dead, according to Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., a member of the panel. The assessment concluded that a spontaneous protest over an anti-Muslim video had evolved into an attack on the American consulate, a description that Rice presented in television interviews the Sunday morning after the attack. Schiff told reporters that he didn’t think the intelligence community had politicized the information. “They gave us the best initial assessments, and those proved inaccurate, but they warned us those assessments were subject to change as they got more information,” he said. Rice’s comments on national television have drawn fierce criticism, with some Senate Republicans promising to block her nomination if President Barack Obama taps her to replace Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. Obama angrily defended Rice on Wednesday at a White House news conference and called the complaints outrageous attempts to besmirch her reputation. Rep. C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger of Maryland, the top Democrat on the Intelligence panel, said Rice “was given that same information we received from the administration through the intelligence community. And that’s the information she testified to, end of story.” In one of her TV interviews, Rice said she was providing the “best information and the best assessment we have today.” “In fact this was not a preplanned, premeditated attack. That what happened initially was that it was a spontaneous reaction to what had just transpired in Cairo as a consequence of the video,” she said. “People gathered outside the embassy and then it grew very violent. Those with extremist ties joined the fray and came with heavy weapons, which unfortunately are quite common in post-revolutionary Libya, and that then spun out of control.” That answer has drawn constant criticism from Republicans, who question why Rice failed to call the event a terrorist attack. Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said they would work to defeat Rice’s selection if she is nominated to be the nation’s top diplomat. Graham said Wednesday that he couldn’t back anyone who is “up to their eyeballs in the Benghazi debacle.” Ruppersberger said the initial attack on the consulate was chaotic, with “a lot of people running around,” while the second attack, on a CIA annex near the consulate, “seemed a lot more sophisticated,” with the use of mortars, more clearly pointing to terrorist training and tactics. would allow for aggressive cuts, including an immediate end to Saturday delivery. It remained unclear whether House leadership would take up the postal bill in its current lame-duck session. Rural lawmakers are resisting action, worried about closures of postal facilities in their communities. Congress is focused now on a Jan. 1 deadline to avert acrossthe-board tax increases and spending cuts known as the “fiscal cliff.” While urging quick congressional action, the Postal Service acknowledged the uncertainty in its legal filings on Thursday, which anticipate that Congress will fail to act. But Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., who chairs the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee and is a sponsor of the House bill, has said he believes postal legislation can be passed this year. “The U.S. Postal Service is clearly marching toward a financial collapse of its own,” said Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., a sponsor of the Senate bill. “I am hopeful that now that the elections are over, my colleagues and I can come together and pass postal reform legislation so that a final bill can be signed into law by the end of the year.” Overall, the post office had operating revenue of $65.2 billion in fiscal 2012, down $500 million from the previous year. Expenses climbed to $81 billion, up from $70.6 billion, largely due to the health prepayments. The annual payment of roughly $5.6 billion had been deferred for a year in 2011, resulting in a double payment totaling $11.1 billion that became due this year. The Postal Service is the only government agency required to make such payments. The post office also has been rocked by declining mail volume as people and businesses continue switching to email and other online options in place of letters and paper bills. The number of items mailed in the last year was 159.9 billion pieces, a 5 percent decrease. Much of the decline came in first-class mail. On the plus side, the mail agency reported that its fastgrowing shipping services, which include express and priority mail, grew by 9 percent, helping to offset much of the declining revenue from first-class mail. Donahoe said package volume also is expected to jump by 20 percent this holiday season compared to the same period last year, boosted by increased consumer purchases on eBay, Amazon.com and other Internet shopping sites. Questions on sex scandal: Top gov. officials testify ROBERT BURNS AND NANCY BENAC Associated Press WASHINGTON (AP) — Top national security officials trudged to Capitol Hill on Thursday to grapple with fallout from the David Petraeus sex scandal as Defense Secretary Leon Panetta asked service chiefs to review ethics training for military officers. He said he was unaware of any other top brass who could turn out to be ensnared in the debacle. One person missing from the tableau: Afghan war chief Gen. John Allen, whose nomination to take over in Europe is on hold because of suggestive e-mails turned up in the investigation. Legislators went forward with a hearing on the nomination of Gen. Joseph Dunford to replace Allen in Afghanistan. But with Allen’s own future uncertain, they put off consideration of his promotion to U.S. European Command chief and NATO supreme allied commander. Allen had initially been scheduled to testify. Panetta, speaking at a news conference in Bangkok, gave new words of support to Allen, voicing “tremendous confi- dence” in the general. Citing a string of ethical lapses by senior military officers, however, Panetta asked the Joint Chiefs of Staff to review ethics training and look for ways to help officers stay out of trouble. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., opened Dunford’s hearing with kind words for Allen, saying, “I continue to believe that General Allen is one of our best military leaders. And I continue to have confidence in his ability to lead the war in Afghanistan.” Leading administration officials, meanwhile, met privately with lawmakers for a thirdstraight day to explain how the Petraeus investigation was handled and explore its national security implications. Among those appearing before the House Intelligence Committee: Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and Acting CIA Director Michael Morell. Maryland Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger, the committee’s top Democrat, said after the hearing he was satisfied that the FBI had behaved properly in not notifying the White House or lawmakers about the inquiry sooner, in keeping with post-Watergate rules set up to prevent interference in criminal investigations. 12515108.qxp 11/15/2012 5:39 PM Page B8 OPINIONS rocketminer.com Your local news source since 1881 “I disapprove of what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.” – VO LTA I R E GET INVOLVED: Send your signed opinions to P.O. Box 98 Rock Springs, WY 82902 Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 Page 8B Mandate to raise taxes on the ‘rich’ SUSAN ESTRICH Within days of winning the election, President Obama announced that his victory gave him a mandate to raise taxes on the “rich.” Come again? This was a twoand-a-half-point election. It reflected a painfully divided electorate. The only mandate I saw was to unite a divided country. I voted for Obama. I voted for him because I know how hard it is to buy health insurance for a single person with even a minor pre-existing condition. In the case of my nanny/housekeeper/dear friend, it was gastritis. Thank God for Kaiser, which sold me the insurance that some years later saved her life when she was diagnosed with cancer. So call it what you will, but I did not want to see Obamacare repealed. Years after I stopped worrying about unwanted pregnancies, I did not want to risk Roe v. Wade. I was appalled that contraception could even be an issue. I believe that whoever wants to marry should have a right to do so regardless of their sexual orientation. I voted for Obama because I worry about cutting back on environmental regulation. I voted for Obama because I believe local schools need help from the federal government, because I believe we are one country, and that if there is an earthquake in California, we will need as much help from our fellow states — which is to say the federal government — as New York and New Jersey do in dealing with the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy. I voted for Obama because he ended the war in Iraq and is committed to ending the war in Afghanistan. I did not vote for Obama because I think I am paying too little in taxes. Like many people I know, I am “rich” by Obama’s standards. I pay more taxes, percentage wise, than Mitt Romney and Warren Buffett, because I earn virtually every penny of my income. I work. And yes, all those deductions that allow the truly rich to not work, or at least to not work all the jobs I do, make me angry. I am all for closing loopholes. I am all for ending deductions for things I don’t even understand. But I am not for putting a low cap on deductions that would make it all but impossible for the charities I support to raise funds. I am not for putting a limit on the mortgage deduction that would mean, as a practical matter, that “middle class” (not rich) people in California would be priced out of the housing market, and the charities I support would not be able to raise what they need to survive. And frankly, I don’t think I’m alone. As a matter of fact, on this one, I don’t think 51 percent of all Americans are to my “left” — if that’s how you define the higher tax constituency. Obama needs to be very careful. Yes, he was re-elected. But so were all those folks who blocked the extension of the Bush tax cuts if they excluded individuals and small businesses who make enough money to qualify as rich — but not enough to send their kids to college, or help their aging parents, or buy a home in a decent neighborhood. We need to avoid going over the fiscal cliff. But Obama must also avoid the political cliff. One of the amazing things about this country is that the middle class doesn’t hate the rich. We are not a society divided by economic castes. Yes, there are real issues as the gap between the top and the middle, between CEOs and those in good but not great jobs, grows. But beginning a new term with what will look to many like a class war is not the way to fulfill the real mandate of this election, which is to bring us together, not turn us against each other. To find out more about Susan Estrich and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web site at www.creators.com. Tips can help make presentations effective A weekly look at Wyoming business questions from the Wyoming Small Business Development Center, part of WyomingEntrepreneur.Biz, a collection of business assistance programs at the University of Wyoming. BRETT HOUSHOLDER, WyomingEntrepreneur.Biz market researcher “I don’t like giving presentations but, when I do, it seems like PowerPoint is pretty much the standard tool. If I absolutely have to do a PowerPoint presentation, what can I do to make my presentation more effective?” Jerry, Casper “Just put together a quick PowerPoint.” How many times have we heard this advice when preparing for a presentation? By now, PowerPoint should be included in thesauruses as a synonym for presentation. Despite being overused, sometimes it really is the only choice when presenting. When given no other options, there are always some basic, but powerful ways to make a PowerPoint presentation even better: • Keep slides brief. Do not fill a slide with text. Slides crowded with text are difficult to read and draw the audience’s attention away from what they should be paying attention to — you. If using bullet points, which I prefer, limit to four or five at most. • Don’t read to the audience. The information on slides should serve as a cue for to elaborate on the topic, not as the presentation’s script. Highlight main points and use slides as note cards to keep on track. • Use large text. Depending on how large the audience is, it may be difficult to read slides from the back of the room. Use 28- to 32point size font, which is recommended. This helps keep slides brief as well. • Don’t be afraid to use different, interesting or creative formats. All slides don’t have to follow the typical “title-subheading-bullet points” format. In fact, varying the style of slides can keep the audience more engaged. Using something different — such as one picture or a single word — enables the audience to refocus on what is being said instead of what is on the slide. • Don’t get caught up in using effects. There are plenty of choices for slide transition effects — sounds and graphics to spice up slides — but resist the urge to overuse them. Simple fades in and out of slides are fine, but some transitions are distracting and unprofessional. Also, along with sounds and graphics, they can draw attention away from an actual presentation. The content of a presentation, not the effects, should be the audience’s focus. Whether you like it or not, giving a presentation with PowerPoint is probably unavoidable. So, as long as you are going to use it at some point, it is worth learning a few simple tips to help make the presentation more effective and enjoyable for the audience. The WSBDC is a partnership of the U.S. Small Business Administration, the Wyoming Business Council and the University of Wyoming. To ask a question, call, e-mail wsbdc@uwyo.edu or write 1000 E. University Ave., Dept. 3922, Laramie, WY, 82071-3922. Let’s hear it for The Rat’s tree planting efforts ROBERT LEO HEILMAN Writers on the Range The Arbor Day Foundation sent me a Tree Survey a few months ago. At least it called itself a survey, but it turned out to be more of a pitch for donations in the form of a questionnaire. Still, I decided to finish reading the thing before I tossed it in the wood burner with the other junk mail. Living as I do in a southern Oregon forest, I found questions like, Are trees important to you? amusing. Reading along, I came to a question that gave me pause: Have you ever planted a tree? I thought first of the 150,000 trees that I planted while reforesting clear-cuts in the Cascades and Coast Range, about enough to cover 300 acres of mountain slopes. That sounds like more than what it was, though. I have friends who were serious tree planters. My pal Darlene told me that she must have planted about a half-million of the little things during her winters on the slopes. And there are three of my ex-tree planter buddies — Johnny Escovido, Bruce Gordon and Les Moore — who slammed over 1 million trees in the ground apiece. I’m sure there are others among my acquaintances who have surpassed that impressive number, though most tree planters dont talk about how many trees they’ve planted. They talk about their chronically sore backs. One million trees sounds like a much bigger deal than it is. It only takes about 40 seconds to plant a seedling conifer eight feet away from the last one you planted. Reforestation crews generally plant about 500 seedlings to the acre, so a million trees would only replant about 2,000 acres of logged-off land, about enough to, someday, provide habitat for a single nesting pair of northern spotted owls. I’ve worked on corporate clear-cuts here in Oregon that were that big, while up north in British Columbia there are cuts that are measured in square miles rather than acres. A few weeks later, I ran across Lester “The Rat” Moore, and I got to wondering about when and where he planted his onemillionth tree. He was busy stealing firewood off of some timber company land at the time, buzzing up an old buckskin-colored seasoned madrone log and tossing the rounds into his pick-up to haul back to the tar-papered shack he lives in. He was in a hurry, and I was on my way into town, so we “howdied” but didn’t stop to talk. The Rat isn’t exactly the sort of guy you’d see in a TV commercial. He’s not the square-jawed handsome woodsman type the corporations like to promote, nor the caring sort who could serve as a poster child for an Arbor Day celebration. He’s a small, wiry, snaggly-toothed guy who chews tobacco and drinks whiskey straight from the bottle. If you saw him on a city street, you’d probably try your best to walk past him without making eye contact. But when it comes to tree planting, he was the genuine article, good for a steady 1,000 trees every day, five days per week, 20 to 30 weeks a year for 20-something years. It’s a tough way to earn a paycheck, humping up and down mountains in the rain all winter. The State Employment Office in Eugene, Ore., once posted a warning notice about tree planting: It is the hardest physical work known to this office. The most comparative physical requirement is that of a five mile cross-mountain run, daily. Most people would consider logging a tough job; tree planting is a logger’s idea of hard work. That one-millionth tree of The Rat’s career might have been planted in Oregon or Washington, Montana, Idaho, British Columbia, Alaska, Arizona or Colorado. I doubt he remembers it. It was probably a lot like the 20,000 others he planted that month, and I’m sure that nobody handed him a golden shovel or took his picture for the occasion. Nobody gives out awards for stoop labor, which is really a shame. It is difficult work, demanding both physically and mentally. I have seen many a fine physical specimen give up the attempt to plant trees after a day or two because they lacked the necessary gumption (or the desperation, which is just as useful) to see it through to payday. It seems that the people who actually bend down and touch the earth in order to do the work of healing the world are always the least honored of all. Robert Leo Heilman is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of High Country News (hcn.org). He lives in Myrtle Creek, Oregon, and he is the author of “Overstory: Zero, Real Life in Timber Country.” ABOUT LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The Daily Rocket-Miner welcomes letters to the editor on subjects of interest to our readers. Letters selected for publication do not necessarily reflect the editorial policies or beliefs of the Daily Rocket-Miner, however. Short letters are most likely to DOONESBURY be chosen for publication, but the use of any material is at the discretion of the editor. All letters must be legibly handwritten or typed with double spacing and on one side of the paper only. Editing may be necessary for space or clarity or By Garry Trudeau to avoid obscenity, libel or invasion of privacy, but ideas will not be altered. All letters must bear the handwritten signature of the writer and include correct name, address and telephone number(s) for verification purposes. The address and phone numbers will not be printed. Anonymous letters will not be considered. As of Aug. 1, 2007, people will be limited to having one letter to the editor published during a six-week period. 12515109.qxp 11/15/2012 5:01 PM Page B9 rocketminer.com Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 REGIONAL 9B Parents happy to find businesses autism-aware WENDY LEONARD Deseret News Philkon Phil Konstantin Utah Field House of Natural History State Park Museum has packed up 33,000 dinosaur fossils, rock samples and other specimens for the move from an aging building to a stateof-the-art repository two blocks away. Vernal history museum moving dinosaur fossils to new home VERNAL, Utah (AP) — Workers at the Utah Field House of Natural History State Park Museum in Vernal are ready for a major move. They’ve packed some 33,000 dinosaur fossils, rock samples and other specimens for the move from an aging building to a state-of-the-art repository two blocks away. The pieces of the region’s prehistoric past will be moved beginning this week, officials said, and the bulk of them should be at their new home by the end of this month. Employees began preparing for the move in August. “If you were to move an entire ‘If you were to move an entire neighborhood of houses, you’re kind of looking at what we’re up against here at the museum.’ Mary Beth Bennis-Bottomley neighborhood of houses, you’re kind of looking at what we’re up against here at the museum,” said Mary Beth Bennis-Bottomley, the park’s curator of education. The $1.5 million for the new 11,664-square-foot fossil repository and laboratory building came from the Uintah Impact Mitigation Special Service District, which is funded by mineral lease money paid by oil and natural gas companies in Utah, the Deseret News reported. It will allow museum staff to properly store and prepare fossils and artifacts that have been discovered in eastern Utah’s Uintah Basin. Without the new facility, many of the fossils and artifacts were destined for six museums in cities from San Diego to Pittsburgh. The specimens have been stored in the dilapidated, 63year-old building that used to be home to the Field House before the current museum opened in 2004. The new repository, which is located next to the existing museum, is a cavernous, climate-controlled space capable of housing decades of fossil discoveries, said Steve Sroka, park manager at the museum. “This room is about 8,600 square feet, which gives us about 2,000 to 3,000 more square feet of space (than the old building) for storage of specimens,” Sroka told the Deseret News. The laboratory space features floor-to-ceiling windows along one wall, which look out onto the museum’s main hall. They will allow visitors to watch park staff and volunteers work on finds in the museum’s vast collection. “People can come and see how fossils are prepped, how they are cared for and what the real work entails to get a bone from out in the field into the exhibits for display,” Bennis-Bottomley said. Prosecutor: Cancer hoax may not violate law Retired Wyoming game warden reflects on his 30-year tenure GYPSUM, Colo. (AP) — The story began circulating in October: A boy with leukemia had moved with his family to spend his final days in the Colorado mountains. The Eagle Valley High School team in Gypsum drew inspiration from the tale and dedicated a game to the 9year-old boy known as Alex. A radio station took up the cause, and a Facebook page bearing his picture drew more than 1,000 followers. However, the story began to unravel when he failed to show up at the game, and the woman spreading the story said he suffered a seizure and could not attend. It wasn’t long before she said he had died. She submitted an obituary to local media, but no one could find a death certificate, The Vail Daily reported. Police are now calling the story a hoax and investigating whether it violated any laws. “This story just shows the best of human nature and the worst of human nature,” said Holli Snyder, general manager of NRC Broadcasting, parent company of KSKE, which broadcast the story. Authorities are trying to determine if the 22-year-old woman who spread the story collected any money from the hoax, Eagle County District Attorney Mark Hurlbert said Thursday. So far, they haven’t found any evidence that she did. “It hinges on whether any money was taken,” Hurlbert said about the possibility of charges. The woman has not been identified by authorities. The photo of the boy was traced to a Kids Cancer Crusade Web site and turned out to a South African boy who is still alive. Laramie Boomerang EVE NEWMAN LARAMIE (AP) — When you spend almost 30 years driving empty back roads across Wyoming, you might start to measure time differently. Retired game warden Roger Bredehoft measures the years with a list of four names: Chase, Data, Bruin and Bear. “That’s 30 years’ worth of dogs,” he said. Two yellow Labs and two chocolate Labs. “Great dogs, all. They’d listen to you all day long and never say a word. They were good company,” he said. Bredehoft retired from the Wyoming Game and Fish Department this fall after working as a game warden since 1983, most recently in northern Albany County. That’s a couple thousand square miles of sagebrush, mountains and big game. It’s about 125 miles to the community of Esterbrook by mostly dirt roads, which marked the northern tip of Bredehoft’s jurisdiction. “They give you a truck, a gun and a law book and say, ‘Go get her and never worry.’ It’s the best job in the world,” he said. Bredehoft grew up in northeastern Colorado, earning an education degree from the University of Northern Colorado. He went back to school intending to earn a degree in speech pathology, but he changed his mind at the last minute and decided to study zoology instead. After finishing his degree at the University of Wyoming, he worked for the Wyoming Game and Fish Department as a biologist. After spending a couple years working on short-term projects, he took the game warden’s exam as a way to move into a full-time position. When a full- time biologist position came open a few years later, he decided being a game warden suited him just fine. Bredehoft was based in Green River, Jeffrey City and Wheatland before becoming the North Laramie game warden. Back in the day, game wardens weren’t restricted to how many miles they could drive or how many hours they could work, and Bredehoft remembers logging more than 300 hours a month during hunting or watercraft season (if you do the math, that’s 30-straight 10hour days). He remembers a professional seminar he attended where the speaker warned about the No. 1 way law enforcement officials steal from their employers: They log time they don’t actually work. The game wardens in the crowd had a nice chuckle about that one. “Most guys are like me, and the only reason they’ve got supervisors is to try and slow them down,” he said. Laramie Region wildlife supervisor Rick King agreed that Bredehoft has logged the hours over the years. “Roger has displayed an admirable level of commitment and ability fulfilling the wildlife management responsibilities in each of the districts he has been assigned,” King said in a press release. Bredehoft is still an active member of the legislative arm of the Wyoming Game Wardens Association, which lobbied to influence wildlife laws. He said he’s proud of the association’s work to increase the punishment for taking big game on their winter range. Before the implementation of a statute known as 102(d), the fine for taking an animal out of season was $450. During Wyoming winters, big game herds congregate where food is still available, usually because the area is open and blown free of snow. The animals are concentrated in larger groups, and they’re highly visible. “People go out there and they see these huge bucks and bulls like they’ve never seen in their life, and they kill them. They kill them for the horns. That’s the only reason. They’re not shooting them for the meat that time of year. That’s all trophy,” Bredehoft said. When a hunter might pay several thousand dollars to an outfitter in an attempt to harvest the same trophy animal during the regular season, a fine of a few hundred dollars is nothing. The Game and Fish Department even had evidence of a group that regularly traveled from California to take winterrange prizes. “It just didn’t seem like enough,” Bredehoft said. With the implementation of 102(d), anyone who takes big game out of season or without a license faces a minimum fine of $5,000, up to $10,000, and possibly a year in jail. They could lose their hunting privileges for life. Additionally, the department can seize anything used in the crime, such as guns, knives and vehicles. “In one case in Cody, we seized a helicopter,” he said. “It got their attention.” In many places across the state, the game warden is the public’s main connection to the department that regulates hunting seasons and manages the state’s wildlife. “My house was the office; my wife was the secretary. If people had questions, they came to my house or they called me on the phone,” he said. Game wardens enforce the state’s wildlife laws, but their role extends beyond checking hunters for licenses. “The most important thing you can do in any district is to get your landowner relationships good,” Bredehoft said. As the department works to open more private land for hunting access, the process can go more smoothly if the landowner already knows the local game warden. For Bredehoft, building relationships sometimes meant settling in for a visit. “They hardly ever get to town. They’re on their ranches. You’ve got to plan on spending a little time. They want to talk and they love to talk,” Bredehoft said. King said Bredehoft has worked hard to maintain public access for hunting and fishing. “Roger was the Wheatland game warden when the department’s Private Land Public Wildlife program started. The work he did in getting this program up and going in Platte County helped ensure the program’s long-term success,” he said. Ask Bredehoft about his dogs, and he might tear up. But ask him about dealing with a crime scene, and he’ll stress the importance of keeping his emotions in check. “The important thing is you don’t let the moment overtake you,” he said. “The main thing you want to do is make sure everything’s in line and that you’ve got all the facts right.” Game wardens protect Wyoming’s wildlife, and that’s what motivated Bredehoft to leave his house at 4 a.m., push through a snowstorm or spend a dozen hours patrolling a reservoir. “That drives enforcement, that drives your seasons, that drives your being out there to see what’s going on. And that’s really important,” he said. MURRAY, Utah (AP) — Hagen Dickinson took in as much of his surroundings as he could bear on a Friday. The bright lights, fancy decor and plethora of attention directed at him was almost too much for the 4-yearold autistic boy, as he clung tightly to his mother’s hand and then made his way into her arms. The staff at BRIO Tuscan Grille, however, did all they could to make him and four other autistic children and their mothers feel comfortable while enjoying a lunch date. “I’ve never dealt with autism personally, so I really don’t understand it,” said Steve Rose, BRIO’s general manager. “But they’re really no different than kids we have ourselves. They just need a little bit of special attention to have a great experience.” Rose said he wants the restaurant to be a safe, comfortable environment for everyone — no exceptions. The Fashion Place Mall location is one of the first establishments in Utah to earn the Autism AWARE status, meaning it has trained employees and can provide an environment to accommodate families with autistic children in an atmosphere where autism is welcomed, accepted and respected. “I don’t like going around telling everyone that my son has special needs, but going someplace where they are used to it and can handle it will make it more normal for us,” said Cobilynn Dickinson, Hagen’s mom. “These are incredible kids,” she said. “We need the opportunity to get them to grow and reach their potential.” Autism is a mental condition that produces a range of abilities and disabilities in each individual who has it. It can be limiting, especially in social situations. Sights, sounds, smells and textures can provoke out-of-the-blue responses from individuals with autism, and “you never know when you’re going to have a meltdown,” said Amy Baker, mother of two children with autism spectrum disorder. Baker said she wishes the general public wasn’t “so quick to judge.” “If we take them away from the situation, they will not learn,” she said. “We have to fight through it and would love more support than the look that we’re not doing our job as parents.” Baker wouldn’t typically think of BRIO as a childfriendly place, but she was pleasantly surprised when servers helped her sons, Braden, 7, and Bryson, 8, make their own pizzas at the restaurant’s brick oven. Recent Wyoming grizzly bear deaths human-caused JACKSON (AP) — Six recent grizzly bear deaths in the Wyoming portion of the Yellowstone ecosystem are being investigated as human-caused. Because the incidents are being investigated, Wyoming Game and Fish Department officials are revealing few details but they come at a time when grizzly-hunter encounters are most frequent. The grizzly bear is protected under federal law. The string marks the 40th through 45th grizzly deaths in the ecosystem this year. Mark Bruscino, of the Wyoming Game and Fish Department, says it is about an average year for grizzly deaths in Wyoming. Bruscino says the string of bear deaths has little bearing on the overall health of the ecosystem’s grizzlies. He tells the Jackson Hole News & Guide that the grizzly population continues to grow. 12515112.qxp 11/15/2012 4:53 PM Page B10 10B Friday, Nov. 16, 2012 rocketminer.com