Life


  1. Celebrate the Life of Fred Pierce

    Celebrate the Life of Fred Pierce

  2. Back on the field, back into life

    Melissa Berg tries to stop Natrona County forward Hannah Couldridge during the 4A West Regional Championship game. (Tim Kupsick, Star-Tribune)

  3. Woman devoted life to faith

    Julie Skillman, who died late last year at 67, holds her newborn granddaughter in 1999. Skillman lived with ovarian cancer for 12 1/2 years. Photo courtesy of family.

  4. Bringing ideas to life

    Brois Slavsky, played by Trevor T. Trujillo, embraces his nephew Constantine, played by Eli Stewart, during the opening moments of Seagulls in a Cherry Tree dress rehersal.

  5. Get a life

    Jeanne Leske, left, offers a few cross-country skiing tips to Becky Bulfer, Toni Stanley and Ginny Adent before they head out from the Casper Mountain Trails Center for a morning of adventure. The women recently formed the Get a Life Society to connect with women their age and try new activities that aren't fun to try alone. Photo by DAN CEPEDA, Star-Tribune.

  6. The gunshot that saved a life

    Serena Schrader kisses her daughter, Airieona, to comfort her while her husband, Ryan, sits in the living room of their apartment on Wednesday evening in Casper. Photo by Sarah Beth Barnett/Casper Star-Tribune.

  7. Bringing Killdeer back to life

    The Killdeer wetlands restoration site sits beneath the Palisades and Tollgate Rock formations west of Green River on Friday morning. A city greenbelt group has been working for years to restore the historic wetlands. (Jeff Gearino/Star-Tribune)

  8. Gillette campus comes to life

    Gillette College resident adviser Spencer Hart, left, hands fellow adviser Chris Franco a slice of pizza during a dinner Hart hosted at her apartment in the new Leta Tanner Village residence halls on Friday evening. The new residence halls at the college are designed like apartments, where a smaller number of students share a bathroom, living room, study area and full kitchen. (Kerry Huller/Star-Tribune)

  9. Gillette campus comes to life

    The new 96-bed Leta Tanner Village residence halls are designed like apartments and equipped with 90 cable channels and Internet access. (Kerry Huller/Star-Tribune)

  10. Jackson woman living life in retirement

    Bonnie Brown Koeln, 69, is pictured with her cat, Missy, in her Jackson home. Koeln, who is retired, has started writing her own obituary. All her life she has been teased about being organized. Koeln has marked her address book to show which people should have a copy of her obituary mailed to them. (Bradly J. Boner/Jackson Hole News & Guide via AP)

  11. A Day in the Life: Mike Enzi

    Photo by Dan Cepeda, Star-Tribune

  12. Hundreds mark Sarah Tolin's life

    Vickie and Don Tolin grieve for their daughter, Sarah Dawn Tolin, outside Highland Park Community Church on Monday afternoon following the funeral. Photo by Sarah Beth Barnett/Casper Star-Tribune.

  13. A Day in the Life: Mike Enzi

    Photo by Dan Cepeda, Star-Tribune

  14. 'Changing our Wyoming way of life'

    An angler tries her luck last fall near Squaw Hollow on the Flaming Gorge Reservoir south of Green River. Some residents fear it may be harder to get to their favorite fishing spot under a new motorized travel plan proposed for the lake. (Jeff Gearino/Star-Tribune)

  15. Life on the rim: Bighorn numbers dwindle

    A yearling bighorn sheep makes its way up the mountainside to the feed in early April. Photo by Tim Kupsick, Star-Tribune.

  16. Injecting new life into old wells

    Ed Pearson of Devon Energy Corp., foreground, explains the process of injecting carbon dioxide into the ground to revive aging oil wells at the Beaver Creek CO2 facility just south of Riverton Wednesday. Photo by Chris Merrill, Star-Tribune.

  17. Barbaro fighting for life after developing laminitis

    Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro cools down after a morning workout in Fair Hill, Md., in this May 18, 2006 photo. Barbaro's condition is "potentially serious," and the Kentucky Derby winner's veterinarian said Wednesday July 12, 2006, the colt is "facing tough odds and his condition is guarded." (AP Photo/Garry Jones)

  18. Relay for Life gives support and hope to cancer victims

    Rita Miller answers a question from a Relay for Life participant on Thursday evening at Hilltop National Bank. Miller, the community relationship director for the American Cancer Society and also a cancer survivor, was helping at a "Bank Night" where participants turned in the money they raised and picked up team shirts. Photo by Kerry Huller, Star-Tribune.

  19. LifeSteps Campus needs help

    Dan Cepeda, Star-Tribune Robin Mundell stands in a former storage room at the LifeSteps Campus recently. The room will be converted into office space, one of several improvements in store for the campus.

  20. Casper man rebuilds his life after a tragic explosion destroyed it

    On Nov. 30, 2005, Jim Hyma's house exploded because of a gas leak, killing his wife, Carol, and destroying his home. Three years later, he is thankful for finding someone to spend his life with — his new wife, Diane — and a new home to live in. (Tim Kupsick, Star-Tribune)

  21. Shoshone woman devotes her life to preserving native language

    Roberta Engavo is one of three tribal elders helping Reba Teran assemble a 14,000-word, phonetic dictionary of the Eastern Shoshone language. Photo by CHRIS MERRILL, Star-Tribune.

 
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