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  • Changing perspectives

    April S. Kelley, Reporter & Photographer|Apr 14, 2016

    There’s nothing quite like an equilibrium shift to put everything into perspective. Saturday evening, after a long day of covering local events — which were all enjoyable — I decided to hike up Roundtop Mountain. It was an area in town that I had yet to explore. Plus, after hearing Joe Doak’s “Growing Up in Thermopolis” presentation at the Hot Springs County Museum, I was even more curious about the mountain that my daughter constantly proclaims is a “volcano.” Doak mentioned how as a youth,...

  • Sense of community

    Mark Dykes, Assistant Editor|Apr 7, 2016

    My first experience in Thermopolis I can barely recollect if I concentrate hard enough. Of course, that was when I was eight years old, and most of my memories center around yelling my heart out at the exhilaration I felt going down a spiraling slide that went in and out of a tower, as well as eating at a restaurant filled with animal heads. Had the dinosaur center been around at the time, it certainly would've been added among them. Twenty-five years later and a few feet taller, my perspective...

  • Remembering the WRC Boat Race

    Apr 7, 2016

    I remember that one time after the Wind River Canyon Boat Race, Hollywood came to Thermopolis. Bob White won the boat race that year in a canoe with an outrigger. He tipped over once and did a 360 degree turn. When he came back up, Bob still had his cigar in his mouth. At some point people from Hollywood asked him to canoe the rapids in the Columbia River for the movie "The Wild North" starring Stewart Granger and Cyd Charisse. Bob did a great white water scene. The movie played here at the Tepee Theater. The canoe was displayed in front of...

  • The power of running water

    Apr 7, 2016

    I enjoyed reading about the canyon in the Independent Record. Having lived here for 40 years, I've driven through it countless times through hot, cold, wet and dry seasons. The wettest I can remember was in 1979 when landslides blocked it seven times on one side and five on the other. I don't remember which was which. Even in the wettest season it never dug small canyons like it did the last time the road and railroad were blocked. Those, I understand, were dug in two days or less. Also on Mt. Saint Helens in 1982, two years after it first blew...

  • ProStart Tangy Chicken Tacos recipe

    Apr 7, 2016

    This recipe for Tangy Chicken Tacos is the entree ProStart competitors from Thermopolis made for the state competition. Ingredients: Boneless, skinless, chicken breast-1 lb Hickory Smoked bacon-4 slices Sea salt-½ t Black pepper-½ t Coca-Cola-1 ½ c All-purpose flour-1 t Sugar-¼ t Cider vinegar-1 T Dijon mustard-½ t Extra-Virgin olive oil-2 T divided Cabbage-½ c Granny Smith apple-¼ c Slivered almonds-2 T Mint-1 T Yellow onion sliced-1/3 c Orange bell pepper sliced-1/3 c Firm Sheep Milk Cheese-4...

  • Discovering Native American radio

    April S. Kelley, Reporter & Photographer|Mar 31, 2016

    It wasn’t until I moved to Wyoming that I discovered Native American radio and music. Subconsciously, I knew it existed. But I never really thought about it. Music moves me in ways few other things can, and I have quite the eclectic taste. I love everything from Bob Dylan to Neutral Milk Hotel to The Notorious B.I.G. There isn’t really a genre I dislike. My vinyl collection alone is evidence of this wide variety of artists I absolutely love. Now, I have discovered something new or new to me any...

  • Keep the hospital under local control

    Mar 31, 2016

    We have needed the services of our local health care facilities recently. This has included our local doctors, Hot Springs County Memorial Hospital, Home Health Care, EMS and Gottsche for home physical therapy. We would have to say that “better care” anywhere in the country would be hard to find. Everyone involved in the medical field, from support services to doctors and nurses, have gone way beyond what is expected. Most of us don’t really know what we have until we need it. We feel the hospital board and health care professionals are doing t...

  • Our lonely and amazing roads provide vital links to citizens

    Bill Sniffin|Mar 24, 2016

    Last week, we took our time cruising through that amazing labyrinth known as Wind River Canyon between Shoshoni and Thermopolis. The narrow towering walls staring down on you _sometimes through the sunroof _ can make a person feel pretty small. It took Mother Nature millions of years to carve that gorge through the Owl Creek Mountains, sometimes gouging out less than an inch a year. Over time, you get this impressive cut in the mountains. And how important is this cut? It is a primary route for folks trying to get north or south through west,...

  • A new homeopolis

    April S. Kelley, Reporter|Mar 17, 2016

    Coming from Louisiana, over 1,400 miles southeast of Thermopolis, I had no idea what to expect when I accepted the reporter position at the Independent Record. Prior to moving here, the furthest north I had been was Denver, Colo. I had never been to Wyoming. The only knowledge I had of Wyoming or Thermopolis was what I found via Google. The images alone made me yearn to live here. I must admit, the small population of Thermopolis worried me a bit. I had never lived in a town so small. I worried...

  • Searching for safety from the evilness

    Mar 10, 2016

    When I was a boy, I once walked near a wasp nest in a clothes line pole at which time one pesky inhabitant took umbrage and stung me on the jaw. I swatted him away but he evidently thought once was not enough and returned to sting again slightly below the initial attack...another swat and a third attack. Now, there were two very angry parties involved in a unpleasant dialogue, and I doubt that that wasp understood that crazy entity chasing it around the yard until he landed and met his doom. Somehow the end game took some of the sting out of...

  • Combine with bigger entity for better facility

    Mar 10, 2016

    For some months now I have been following the debate regarding the creation of a Hospital District and feel compelled to share my opinion on this important matter. My company is one of the largest private employers in the county, and, I am a frequent consumer of health care services myself as a stage four cancer survivor. I am concerned that lives may be on the line if both sides continue to view the issue simply in terms of local control and higher taxes versus the affiliation or merger with a larger health care entity. Our community leaders s...

  • The new guy in town

    Mark Dykes, Assistant Editor|Mar 3, 2016

    You might have seen me in town already. I’m not hard to miss with my Nebraska license plates, and my red, white and black jacket that betrays my love for the Nebraska Cornhuskers. For the past couple weekends, myself, along with my wife Louise and two boys Michael and Mason, visited Thermopolis as we prepared to join the community. We immediately fell in love with the small-town atmosphere and beautiful scenery, as well as the hospitality shown to us. My hometown of Alliance, Nebraska has j...

  • Greater Learning Foundation honored

    Mar 3, 2016

    Thermopolis and Hot Springs County people should be bursting with pride at the honors accorded to the Hot Springs Greater Learning Foundation at Gov. Matt Mead’s Arts Awards Gala Friday night. In front of hundreds of people in attendance, the Foundation and five individual Wyoming artists received their 2015 Governor’s Arts Awards. The Thermopolis portion of the ceremony featured a video prepared by the state that showed just a few of the many events and activities the Foundation sponsors for people of all ages at sites ranging from the pos...

  • Cell phones in the classrooms

    Lane Randall, The Predator|Mar 3, 2016

    Is the increased use of cell phones becoming a serious problem in our class rooms? Some people think that it is, and others say it isn’t. But what do the students and staff of our very own school have to say about it? When asked if cell phones are a distraction in class, Jaydon Weaver said, “I think that if people won’t stay off their phones, let them be on them. They will start to fail and realize.” Hannah Hurley also shared her opinion. “My opinion on cell phones in classroom is simply that they are a distraction to certain people. There are...

  • Sweetening your grapes

    Jill Pertler, Guest Column|Feb 25, 2016

    It can seem overwhelming sometimes – this thing called life. You awaken at 4 a.m. because it is a “migraine day,” and roll over while trying not to move your head, just hoping to get back to sleep for another hour or two. You discover the furnace needs repairs and the washing machine needs replacing – all in the same day. The morning alarm didn’t go off and no one had time to make coffee. You are out of ketchup and you’d planned on having hamburgers for supper. There’s dog hair all over the carpet and muddy cat paw prints across the newly cle...

  • Changing guidelines

    Feb 18, 2016

    by Trudy Lieberman, Rural Health News Service A few months ago came some alarming health news. “Diabetes nation? Half of Americans have diabetes or pre-diabetes,” screamed a Los Angeles Times headline. WebMD weighed in with “Diabetes a Concern for Half of Americans.” NBC News announced, “Half of Americans Have Diabetes or High Blood Sugar.” What was missing from these stories was the fact that the definition of who has the disease has been expanding, and a new disease called pre-diabetes has arisen from the changing definitions. That means,...

  • Thank you for slowing down

    Feb 18, 2016

    As a crossing guard in Thermopolis I would like to thank all of you who are slowing down on Sixth Street and making it a safer highway for everyone. A young boy came from school to the crossing this past week. I thanked him for crossing where it was safer. He said, “We need to lead by example. A little child may be watching!” We could all learn from him. Dorothy Knighten...

  • Slow down in school zones

    Lara Love, Publisher & Editor|Feb 11, 2016

    School zones are put in place to help ensure the safety of children going to and from schools and walking around schools. Drivers are responsible for maintaining safety and awareness in a school zone. All children deserve a safe school environment, including both in and around their school. Keep your eyes on the road and our mind on the task at hand. We are navigating a large vehicle in close proximity to small children. Don't let the fact that you are a little sleepy, distracted by your cell...

  • Support for our local hospital and board

    Feb 11, 2016

    We want to express our support of our local hospital, hospital board members and the county commissioners. They have worked tirelessly looking at various options to improve our hospital and update it to meet the needs of the community. From what we read in the Independent Record and talking to board members, we feel they are on the right track. We feel it is very important to keep local control of the hospital and health care facilities in this community. Giving up control to an outside entity means their main interest is for themselves, not...

  • Declaring a cease to the Tarantino banter

    Feb 11, 2016

    Gee, may I sit on your knee to be enlightened by blissful mores stories of yore? Dames knew their place, coloreds held on the back of the bus by police dogs and fire hoses, queers judged, scorned, and invisible. Sarcasm aimed at you trivializing the concerns of others makes you no martyr. Stop feigning victim like a lily-livered liberal. Your Daily Caller conveniently made my point. Simply yeller journalism click-bait founded yesterday by a guy making easy money planting seeds of paranoia and fear while donning bow ties for pseudo-intellectual...

  • Access to health care is tough in a rural community

    Feb 11, 2016

    Perhaps Mr. Williams could supply the exact numbers to clarify the issue about how much the hospital spends on management and CEO wages. The point is, how can we manage our hospital without the expensive overhead and administrative fees? In our neighboring community, the company leases the hospital, and these fees are paying for the 15-year construction bond. There are options, and the board needs to explore them. The hospital’s community assessment in 2013 was on obesity. The news was hardly news to anyone. One third of Americans, and T...

  • Caregivers are superheroes

    Feb 4, 2016

    by Tim Summers, State Director AARP Wyoming When someone says they are family, it carries weight. It means that you have a bond, a harmony and a responsibility for other people. It does not have to be by blood, but by conviction of a kinship. There is no greater demonstration of what family means than being a caregiver. In Wyoming, more than 66,000 people personally exemplify being family each day by taking care of a loved one, whether it be their child, parent, friend, spouse or any other person that they consider family. Someone so important...

  • Clarification of hospital statistics

    Feb 4, 2016

    Ms. Picket’s letter to the editor in last week's Independent Record deserves a follow up to clarify a few statistics she included in her letter. The board, medical staff, and public are not considering building a 16 bed hospital. The actual number will probably be 10, with two additional OB/delivery rooms. The management company (Health TechS3) fees are considerably less than the $750,000 quoted by Ms. Picket, and those fees include not only the management services and CEO salary, but ancillary services such as recruitment of professionals w...

  • Long standing IR policy

    Lara Love, Publisher & Editor|Jan 28, 2016

    This year a number of local, state and national political candidates will be vying for votes in media outlets locally and across the country. Because of space limitations and fairness to candidates, the Thermopolis Independent Record has had a long standing policy of not accepting letters to the editor endorsing or opposing political candidates. This policy was in effect when I joined the IR in 1998. I believe the policy was implemented a number of years prior to that. Over the years, this...

  • Submit your ideas for future dinosaur facility

    Jan 28, 2016

    Thermopolis has amazing paleontological and geological wonders and is host to the 6th best dinosaur museum in the world. This last nomination was made by CNN.com and over the past few years we have been given many accolades, including 100 of the world’s best vacations by LIFE Books. Thermopolis is very lucky to have such a world-class treasure. What makes us unique is the proximity to our dig sites. With one of the wealthiest dinosaur bone finds in the world, we offer many digging programs such as Dig for the Day and Shovel Ready digs. The W...

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