16 J The Lovell Chronicle J September 30, 2010 www.LovellChronicle.com
Chester Gilliam
(left) and Mike
Kitchen affix
a new sign on
the storefront
of The Ink Spot.
Flo Lawson and
Gilliam recently
purchased the
print shop on Main
Street.
Powell Valley Healthcare welcomes
;eneral Surgeon
Nathaniel M. Rieb, M.D.
>\> Wyoming native from Chugwater
>\> University of Wyoming graduate
> Completed medical school at the
University of Washington School of Medicine
>\> Completed residency at Basset Healthcare
in Cooperstown, NewYork
D rett Val[e00
,/
Healthcare
.... ii iiii!iiil 0 iii'il :!!" iE::J"': i ::!'i iii: ii,i i!:ii:: :!!,, ,i! ::,,, I i,/
For appointments, please call
307-754-7257 or toll-free at 888-284-9308
Compassionate Quality Care
www.pvhc.org
BRAD DEWP.Vx
HEROES grants available
UnitedHealth Group has announced
that grants of up to $1,000 are available for
local organizations and schools looking to
create health-focused programs for youth.
The HEROES grants can be used to
create hands-on, interactive service-lear-
ning programs that reduce the prevalence
of childhood obesity. Previous grant recipi-
ents have used the funds to plant commu-
nity gardens, build fitness tracks and de-
velop healthy cookbooks and more.
Grants will be awarded to programs
that demonstrate a clear understanding of
the health risks associated with childhood
obesity; propose creative solutions to figh-
ting obesity in their schools and communi-
ties; and can be easily implemented, scaled
and measured, according to a press release.
In addition, each grant also engages par-
ticipating youth in service-learning, an ef-
fective teaching and learning strategy that
supports student academic achievement,
and helps students develop their workpla-
ce readiness skills.
In Wyoming, about 25.7 percent of chil-
dren ages 10 to 17 are considered over-
weight or obese, according to the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Visit www.YSA.org/HEROES to ob-
tain an application. The Website also con-
tains more information about the program
as well as "First Responders: Youth Add-
ressing Childhood Obesity Through Ser-
vice-Learning," a step-by-step manual that
helps youth, parents, teachers and other
volunteers deploy YSA service-learning
models to fight childhood obesity in their
communities.
Applications must be submitted online
before midnight, Oct. 22, 2010. Grant re-
cipients will be notified in December and
January.
Jose Aguilar
Jose Aguilar
completes
boot camp
Jose Rodriguez Agui-
lar has completed basic
training at the U.S. Ma-
rine Corps NCR Depot in
San Diego and will soon be
moving on to further train-
ing.
Aguilar, 18, is a 2010
graduate of Lovell High
School and entered boot
camp on June 27. He grad-
uated Sept. 24 in San Di-
ego. He is the son of Eras-
mo and Elizabeth Ventura
of Lovell.
Aguilar will return to
San Diego for further rifle
training on Oct. 5, a three-
month program, then move
on to Camp Pendleton for
two months and on to a
base in Florida for nine to
12 months.
Aguilar has two older
sisters, Shanna Ramirez
of Powell and Lydia Agui-
lar of Lovell and an older
brother, Troy Joiner of Gil-
lette. He is the grandson of
Alex and Santos Rodriguez
of Lovell and also has two
nieces, Shaelyne and Jani-
cia Ramirez of Powell.
Forest schedules
grazing open houses
The Bighorn Nation-
al Forest is proposing to
continue livestock grazing
on 43 grazing allotments
covering approximately
386,000 acres, and con-
duct vegetation manage-
ment, primarily prescribed
burning, on approximately
15,000 acres.
The Draft Environ-
mental Impact Statement
(DEIS), which includes de-
tails on what actions are
proposed and the expected
environmental consequenc-
es of those actions, was re-
leased for public review and
comment on Sept. 3, 2010.
To assist people in under-
standing the proposed ac-
tion, and help people pro-
vide meaningful comments,
Bighorn National For-
est District Rangers have
scheduled two public open
houses.
Open houses are sched-
uled as follows:
• Oct. 5 in Greybull at
the Big Horn County Weed
and Pest Building from 5 to
8 p.m.
• Oct. 6 in Sheridan at
Sheridan College, Watt Ag
Center, Room AG 131 from
5 to 8 p.m.
Comments provided on
the DEIS will be used to
finalize the environmen-
tal impact statement. The
DEIS is a large document
and the analysis covers a
large area. The purpose of
these open houses is to help
people understand how the
document is organized and
provides an opportunity to
ask questions. The dead-
line to submit comments is
Oct. 18, 2010.
For questions regarding
the meetings or for copies
of the DEIS, contact Lau-
rie Waiters-Clark, 307-674-
2627. The documents are
also available on the Big-
horn National Forest web-
site at: http://www.fs.usda.
gov/bighorn. You'll need to
navigate to the documents
through the Land and Re-
sources Management tab on
the left side of the screen.
To provide comments
on the DEIS, you may email
them to Big6_DEIS_Com-
ments@fs.fed.us or mail
them to:
Medicine Wheel/Paintrock
Ranger District
604 E. Main - PO Box 367
Lovell, Wy 82431
Phone: (307) 548-6541
Yeliowtail Dam fall-winter
operations meeting Oct. 7
The Bureau of Recla-
mation will present water
supply conditions in the
Big Horn Basin and discuss
the agency's proposed fall/
winter operating plans for
Yellowtail Dam at a public
meeting on Thursday, Oct.
7, 2010.
The meeting will be held
in the MSU-Billings Down-
town Conference Room lo-
cated at 2804 Third Avenue
North, Billings, starting at
6:30 p.m.
Stakeholders and inter-
ested parties in both Mon-
tana and Wyoming are
encouraged to attend the
meeting and participate in
the discussions.
For additional informa-
tion, please contact Paula
Holwegner of the Montana
Area Office, Bureau of Rec-
lamation, at 406-247-7300.
Monday, October 4, 2010
10 am to 4 pm
6all Traci at
Foster's Hair & Nail Studio
(108 E. Main St., Byron)
to make your
appointment for a
FREE mini-manicure!
307-548-7392
In honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month,
Women's Wellness is partnering with Traci
Foster of Foster's Hair & Nail Studio for an
afternoon of Breast Health Education, and
some much deserved pampering!
In addition to your FREE mini manicure
there will be refreshments and FREE gifts!
Women's Wellness will be available to offer
navigation and appointment services for FREE
well woman exams and mammograms!
* Women's Wellness is a non-profit, grant funded program located in PoweU, Wyoming, that provides navigation for well-
ness services for women who are uninsured or underinsured, and cannot afford to pay for annual breast and cervical cancer
screening. Women's Wellness at Wyoming Migrant Health is administered by the Wyoming Health Council and funded by
Susan G. Komen, Wyoming Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program and the Avon Foundation.
Need your annual exams? Call Women's Wellness at (877) 754-5252
SU
EW
PTION
Big Horn County $25 1 In Wyoming $351 Outside Wyoming $40
Offer good through Oct. 8, 2010
Call today to get your new subscription started!
307-548-2217
thelOVell00_00hl-onil=le
00-'ove"c"ronic'e.°o00
=.d,=. 234 E. Main, Lovell, WY 82431 ] 307-548-2217
Please recycle bTis newspaper
16 J The Lovell Chronicle J September 30, 2010 www.LovellChronicle.com
Chester Gilliam
(left) and Mike
Kitchen affix
a new sign on
the storefront
of The Ink Spot.
Flo Lawson and
Gilliam recently
purchased the
print shop on Main
Street.
Powell Valley Healthcare welcomes
;eneral Surgeon
Nathaniel M. Rieb, M.D.
>\> Wyoming native from Chugwater
>\> University of Wyoming graduate
> Completed medical school at the
University of Washington School of Medicine
>\> Completed residency at Basset Healthcare
in Cooperstown, NewYork
D rett Val[e00
,/
Healthcare
.... ii iiii!iiil 0 iii'il :!!" iE::J"': i ::!'i iii: ii,i i!:ii:: :!!,, ,i! ::,,, I i,/
For appointments, please call
307-754-7257 or toll-free at 888-284-9308
Compassionate Quality Care
www.pvhc.org
BRAD DEWP.Vx
HEROES grants available
UnitedHealth Group has announced
that grants of up to $1,000 are available for
local organizations and schools looking to
create health-focused programs for youth.
The HEROES grants can be used to
create hands-on, interactive service-lear-
ning programs that reduce the prevalence
of childhood obesity. Previous grant recipi-
ents have used the funds to plant commu-
nity gardens, build fitness tracks and de-
velop healthy cookbooks and more.
Grants will be awarded to programs
that demonstrate a clear understanding of
the health risks associated with childhood
obesity; propose creative solutions to figh-
ting obesity in their schools and communi-
ties; and can be easily implemented, scaled
and measured, according to a press release.
In addition, each grant also engages par-
ticipating youth in service-learning, an ef-
fective teaching and learning strategy that
supports student academic achievement,
and helps students develop their workpla-
ce readiness skills.
In Wyoming, about 25.7 percent of chil-
dren ages 10 to 17 are considered over-
weight or obese, according to the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Visit www.YSA.org/HEROES to ob-
tain an application. The Website also con-
tains more information about the program
as well as "First Responders: Youth Add-
ressing Childhood Obesity Through Ser-
vice-Learning," a step-by-step manual that
helps youth, parents, teachers and other
volunteers deploy YSA service-learning
models to fight childhood obesity in their
communities.
Applications must be submitted online
before midnight, Oct. 22, 2010. Grant re-
cipients will be notified in December and
January.
Jose Aguilar
Jose Aguilar
completes
boot camp
Jose Rodriguez Agui-
lar has completed basic
training at the U.S. Ma-
rine Corps NCR Depot in
San Diego and will soon be
moving on to further train-
ing.
Aguilar, 18, is a 2010
graduate of Lovell High
School and entered boot
camp on June 27. He grad-
uated Sept. 24 in San Di-
ego. He is the son of Eras-
mo and Elizabeth Ventura
of Lovell.
Aguilar will return to
San Diego for further rifle
training on Oct. 5, a three-
month program, then move
on to Camp Pendleton for
two months and on to a
base in Florida for nine to
12 months.
Aguilar has two older
sisters, Shanna Ramirez
of Powell and Lydia Agui-
lar of Lovell and an older
brother, Troy Joiner of Gil-
lette. He is the grandson of
Alex and Santos Rodriguez
of Lovell and also has two
nieces, Shaelyne and Jani-
cia Ramirez of Powell.
Forest schedules
grazing open houses
The Bighorn Nation-
al Forest is proposing to
continue livestock grazing
on 43 grazing allotments
covering approximately
386,000 acres, and con-
duct vegetation manage-
ment, primarily prescribed
burning, on approximately
15,000 acres.
The Draft Environ-
mental Impact Statement
(DEIS), which includes de-
tails on what actions are
proposed and the expected
environmental consequenc-
es of those actions, was re-
leased for public review and
comment on Sept. 3, 2010.
To assist people in under-
standing the proposed ac-
tion, and help people pro-
vide meaningful comments,
Bighorn National For-
est District Rangers have
scheduled two public open
houses.
Open houses are sched-
uled as follows:
• Oct. 5 in Greybull at
the Big Horn County Weed
and Pest Building from 5 to
8 p.m.
• Oct. 6 in Sheridan at
Sheridan College, Watt Ag
Center, Room AG 131 from
5 to 8 p.m.
Comments provided on
the DEIS will be used to
finalize the environmen-
tal impact statement. The
DEIS is a large document
and the analysis covers a
large area. The purpose of
these open houses is to help
people understand how the
document is organized and
provides an opportunity to
ask questions. The dead-
line to submit comments is
Oct. 18, 2010.
For questions regarding
the meetings or for copies
of the DEIS, contact Lau-
rie Waiters-Clark, 307-674-
2627. The documents are
also available on the Big-
horn National Forest web-
site at: http://www.fs.usda.
gov/bighorn. You'll need to
navigate to the documents
through the Land and Re-
sources Management tab on
the left side of the screen.
To provide comments
on the DEIS, you may email
them to Big6_DEIS_Com-
ments@fs.fed.us or mail
them to:
Medicine Wheel/Paintrock
Ranger District
604 E. Main - PO Box 367
Lovell, Wy 82431
Phone: (307) 548-6541
Yeliowtail Dam fall-winter
operations meeting Oct. 7
The Bureau of Recla-
mation will present water
supply conditions in the
Big Horn Basin and discuss
the agency's proposed fall/
winter operating plans for
Yellowtail Dam at a public
meeting on Thursday, Oct.
7, 2010.
The meeting will be held
in the MSU-Billings Down-
town Conference Room lo-
cated at 2804 Third Avenue
North, Billings, starting at
6:30 p.m.
Stakeholders and inter-
ested parties in both Mon-
tana and Wyoming are
encouraged to attend the
meeting and participate in
the discussions.
For additional informa-
tion, please contact Paula
Holwegner of the Montana
Area Office, Bureau of Rec-
lamation, at 406-247-7300.
Monday, October 4, 2010
10 am to 4 pm
6all Traci at
Foster's Hair & Nail Studio
(108 E. Main St., Byron)
to make your
appointment for a
FREE mini-manicure!
307-548-7392
In honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month,
Women's Wellness is partnering with Traci
Foster of Foster's Hair & Nail Studio for an
afternoon of Breast Health Education, and
some much deserved pampering!
In addition to your FREE mini manicure
there will be refreshments and FREE gifts!
Women's Wellness will be available to offer
navigation and appointment services for FREE
well woman exams and mammograms!
* Women's Wellness is a non-profit, grant funded program located in PoweU, Wyoming, that provides navigation for well-
ness services for women who are uninsured or underinsured, and cannot afford to pay for annual breast and cervical cancer
screening. Women's Wellness at Wyoming Migrant Health is administered by the Wyoming Health Council and funded by
Susan G. Komen, Wyoming Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program and the Avon Foundation.
Need your annual exams? Call Women's Wellness at (877) 754-5252
SU
EW
PTION
Big Horn County $25 1 In Wyoming $351 Outside Wyoming $40
Offer good through Oct. 8, 2010
Call today to get your new subscription started!
307-548-2217
thelOVell00_00hl-onil=le
00-'ove"c"ronic'e.°o00
=.d,=. 234 E. Main, Lovell, WY 82431 ] 307-548-2217
Please recycle bTis newspaper
16 I The Lovell Chronicle I September 30, 2010 www.LovellChronicle.com
Chester Gilliam
(left) and Mike
Kitchen affix
a new sign on
the storefront
of The ink Spot.
FIG Lawson and
Gillinm recently
pttrchased the
print shop on Main
Street.
Powell Valley Healthcare welcomes
General Surgeon
Nathaniel M. Rieb, M.D.
>\> Wyoming native from Chugwater
University of Wyoming graduate
Completed medical school at the
University of Washington School of Medicine
> Completed residency at Basset Healthcare
in Cooperstown, New York
compas,o.t Quality er
,Nw.pvhc.org
For appointments, please call
307-754-7257 or toil-free at 888-284-9308
HEROES grants available
UnitedHealth Group has announced supports student academic achievement,
that grants of up to $1,000 are available for
local organizations and schools looking to
create health-focused programs for youth.
The HEROES grants can be used to
create hands-on, interactive service-lear-
ding programs that reduce the prevalence
of childhood obesity. Previous grant recipi-
ents have used the funds to plant commu-
nity gardens, build fitness tracks and de-
velop healthy cookbooks and more.
Grants will be awarded to programs
that demonstrate a clear understanding of
the health risks associated with childhood
obesity; propose creative solutions to figh-
ting obesity in their schools and communi-
ties; and can be easily implemented, scaled
and measured, according to a press release.
In addition, each grant also engages par-
ticipating youth in service-learning, an ef-
fective teaching and learning strategy that
Jose Aguilar
Jose Aguilar
completes
boot camp
Jose Redriguez Agui-
lar has completed basic
training at the U.S. Ma-
rine Corps NCR Depot in
San Diego and will soon be
moving on to further train-
ing.
Agullar, 18, is a 2010
graduate of Lovell High
School and entered boot
camp on June 27. He grad-
uated Sept. 24 in San Di-
ego. He is the son of Eras-
mo and Elizabeth Ventura
of Lovell.
Aguilar will return to
San Diego for further rifle
training on Oct. 5, a three-
month program, then move
on to Camp Pendleten for
two months and on to a
base in Florida for nine to
12 months.
Agnilar has two older
sisters, Shanna Ramirez
of Powel] and Lydia Agui-
lar of Loveil and an older
brother, Troy Joiner of Gil-
lette. He is the grandson of
Alex and Santos Rodriguez
of Lovell and also has two
nieces, Shaelyne and Jani-
cia Ramirez of Powell.
and helps students develop their workpla-
ce readiness skills.
In Wyoming, about 25.7 percent of cbil-
dren ages 10 to 17 are considered over-
weight or obese, according to the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Visit www.YSA.org/HEROES to ob-
tain an application. The Webeite also con-
rains more information about the program
as well as *First Responders: Youth Add-
ressing Childhood Obesity Through Ser-
vice-Learning," a step-by-step manual that
helps youth, parents, teachers and other
volunteers deploy YSA service-learning
models to fight childhood obesity in their
communities.
Applications must be submitted online
before midnight, Oct. 22, 2010. Grant re-
cipients will be notified in December and
January.
Forest schedules
grazing open houses
The Bighorn Nation-
al Forest is proposing to
continue livestock grazing
on 48 grazing allotments
covering approximately
386,000 acres, and con-
duct vegetation manage-
ment, primarily prescribed
burning, on apprommately
15,000 acres.
The Draft Environ-
mental Impact Statement
(DEIS), which includes de-
toils on what actions are
proposed and the expected
environmental consequenc-
es of those actions, was re-
leased for public review and
comment on Sept. 3, 2010.
To assist people in under-
standing the proposed ac-
tion, ad help people pro-
vide meaningful comments,
Bighorn National For-
est District Rangers have
scheduled two public open
houses.
Open houses are sched-
uled as follows:
°Oct. 5 in Greybull at
the Big Horn County Weed
and Pest Building from 5 to
8 p.m.
*Oct. 6 in Sheridan at
Sheridan College, Watt Ag
Center, Room AG 131 from
5 in 8 p.m.
Comments provided on
the DEIS will be used to
finalize the environmen-
tal impact statement. The
DEIS is a large document
and the analysis covers a
large area. The purpose of
these open houses is to help
people understand how the
document is organized and
provides an opportunity to
ask questions. The dead-
line to submit comments is
Oct. 18, 2010.
For questions regarding
the meetings or for copies
of the DEIS, contact Lau-
rie Waiters-Clark, 807-674-
2627. The documents are
also available on the Big-
horn National Forest web-
site at: http://www.fs.ueda.
gov/bighorn. You'll need to
navigate to the documents
through the Land and Re-
sources Management tab on
the left side of the screen.
To provide comments
on the DEIS, you may emall
them to BigS_DEIS_Com-
ments@fs.fed.us or mail
them to:
Medicine Wheel/Paintrock
Ranger District
604 E. Main - PO Box 367
Lovell, Wy 82431
Phone: (307) 548-6541
Yellowtail Dam fall.winter
operations meeting Oct. 7
The Bureau of Recla- North, Billings, starting at
mation will present water 6:30 p.m.
supply conditions in the Stakeholders and inter-
Big Horn Basin and discuss ested parties in both Mon-
the agency's proposed fall/ tana and Wyoming are
winter operang plans for encouraged to attend the
Yefiowtdil Dam at a public meeting and participate in
meeting on Thursday, Oct. the discussions.
7, 2010. For additional informa-
Themeetingwillbeheld tion, please contact Paula
in the MSU-Billinge Down- Halwegner of the Montana
town Conference Room 1o- Area Office, Bureau of Rec-
cared at 2804 Third Avenue lamation, at 406-247-7300.
v Monday, October 4, 2010
10 am to 4 pm
Call Tracl at
Foster's Hair & Nail Studio
(108 E. MaN St., Byron)
to make your
appointment
FREE mini-manicure!
3O7-548-7392
In honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month,
Women's WIlness i partnering with 7]'i
bster of Foster's Hair & Nail Studio for an
afternoon of Bt Health Edation, and
some luch desed pampering]
In addition to your FREE mini manicure
there will be refrehmen ts and FREE gifts!
Women's Wellness will he available to offer
navigation and appointment srvices for FREE
well woman exams and mammograms, r
• Wen,s Welln is a n-pmflt, grit landed program lated in Powell, Wyoming, that pmvld vlgafion for well-
n ser for en who uud or undnsured, d cot a ffo to pay for ua] bast d cerca] c
rdng, Wen's Well at Wyoming Migrant HeaRh is administed by the Wyoming Health Councd and funded by
S G. 7Komen, Wying Bt and Cel Can Earl Detecaon pgram and the Avon Foundation
Need your nl e? CalYWomen's Wellness at (877) 754-5252
!
Buy a NEW
Big Horn County $25 I In Vorning $35 ] Outside Wyoming $40
or thmua Oct Sr 20W
Call today to get your new subscription started!
307-548-2217
t.ao00a_Lda'omd,00
234 E. Main, Lovelt WY 82431 1307-548-2217
Please recycle this newspaper