loaf-n-jug gives backclean line hearing continued to march 1-3 · 1/3/2011  · from jerusalem to...

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Volume 112 No. 43 75 Cents Thursday January 27, 2011 P.O. Box 278 •105 W. Main Street • Boise City, Oklahoma 73933-0278 • Cimarron County Phone 580-544-2222 • Fax 580-544-3281 • e-mail [email protected] Visit The Boise City News online at it’s Website at boisecitynews.org Or it’s new Weblog at boisecitynews2.wordpress.com BOISE CITY WEATHER Hi Lo rn Tue. Jan. 18 59 28 Wed. Jan. 19 43 19 Thurs. Jan. 20 31 09 .04 Fri. Jan. 21 46 18 Sat. Jan. 22 58 19 Sun. Jan. 23 48 22 Mon. Jan. 24 40 15 MARKETS Wheat $ Milo $ Corn $ (spot prices subject to change) BORN ON JAN. 27 DEATHS-PG. 3 THIS DAY IN HISTORY JAN. 27 CIMARRON COUNTY JAIL BLOTTER THIS DAY IN MUSIC ROBERT MATHEWS-84 JERRY GARRISON-25 VICKIE TAYLOR-88 JACK WILLIAMS-90 1756 Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Austria, musical prodigy/composer (Figaro) 1828 Louis Schubert com- poser 1832 Lewis Carroll [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson], author (Alice in Wonderland) 1834 Dmitri Mendeleev chemist (discovered peri- odic table of the elements) 1900 Hyman G Rickover US Admiral (father of mod- ern nuclear navy) 1919 David Seville [Ross Bagdasarian], Fresno CA, (Alvin & Chipmunks) 1785 1st US state univer- sity chartered, Athens GA 1870 After accepting 15th amendment, Virginia is re- admitted to Union 1880 Thomas Edison pat- ents electric incandescent lamp 1927 Harlem Globetrotters play their 1st game 1943 1st US air attack on Germany (Wilhelmshafen) 1948 1st tape recorder sold 1951 US begins 126 nuclear tests at Nevada Test Site 1967 Apollo 1 fire kills as- tronauts Grissom, White & Chaffee 1973 US & Vietnam sign cease-fire, ending longest US war & military draft 1-23 Orlando Davilla- posses- sion of marijuana and para- phernalia. 1956, Elvis Presley’s single, ‘Heartbreak Hotel’ was released by RCA Records, who had just pur- chased Presley’s contract from Sun Records for $35,000. The song sold 300,000 copies in its first week and would eventually sell over a million, becom- ing Elvis’ first Gold record. 1958, Little Richard en- tered The Oakwood Theo- logical College in Hunts- ville, where he was or- dained as a seventh day Adventist Minister. 1962, The Beatles ap- peared at Aintree Institute in Aintree, Liverpool. The group had played here many times before but this was their last performance at the venue. Brian Epstein became infuriated when the promoter paid The Beatles’ fee (£15 pounds) with handfuls of loose change. Epstein took this as an insult to the group, and made sure that The Beatles never played for that promoter (Brian Kelly) again. 1968, The Bee Gees made their live debut in the US when they played at the Anaheim Centre, Califor- nia. LOAF-N-JUG GIVES BACK Loaf-N-Jug’s District Manager, Robert Gump, makes a presentation to the Soutar Memorial Library last Wednes- day. The Boise City Christian Church’s Minister, David Massey, reads to the children during the Loaf-N-Jug pre- sentation. By C.F. David (I traveled to Oklahoma City with the intention of at- tending hearings on Thurs- day Jan. 20 about service charges by West Texas Gas, and Clean Line Energy’s ap- plication for utility status. I woke up Thursday morning with 1/8 inch of ice on my car windows and mechanical problems. After repeated unanswered calls to the capi- tal building, I assumed every- one had stayed home. I was wrong. The meetings were held and attended; just not by me. My apologies-Ed.) The Administrative Law Judge hearing the Oklahoma Corporation Commission’s Pub- lic Utility Division’s, cause of the purchased gas adjustment cause has agreed and taken to review complaints against West Texas Gas’ fuel delivery charges. Representative Gus Blackwell and Corp. Comm. Public Information Officer Matt Skinner explained that WTG is not a gas production company, but instead a fuel delivery com- pany. In that capacity, and by Oklahoma law, the company cannot charge anymore for the fuel than what they paid for it. The company’s profit comes with a fuel delivery charge, a fig- ure that in some instances in the past has been seventy percent of the cost of the fuel. (In De- cember my home used about $43 in fuel. The delivery charge was $50 or slightly more-Ed.) Blackwell said he received 42 calls to his office the first month after WTG raised their delivery charges, and had re- ceived 12 this month. (In the first month at least one Boise City business saw its fuel bill go from $200 to $600, al- though it has never peaked that high again.) “They, (the Corp. Comm.), will go back and look to see if it is within the tariff,” (allowed), Blackwell said. Blackwell also explained that several Cimarron County citi- zens had friends and family liv- ing outside the county yet served by WTG, who had never seen that level of a rise on their bill. Another source of irritation with county customers is that with the higher bills, WTG made the decision to take their pres- ence out of the county, close the office and hire another employee in Stratford, Texas to do the job. Skinner told The Boise City News that while an Administra- tive Law Judge cannot make law, they can make yes or no recommendations to the Corpo- ration Commission. Part of the need for the high fuel delivery charges Skinner explained was due in part to the unaccounted loss of fuel gas. He continued that the loss, due in part to the inherent problems of maintaining long transmission lines with unavoidable leaks mean that some of that loss will be passed on to the customer(s). The judge will make her rec- ommendations to the Corpora- tion Commission at a later date, but some in the know that her taking it under advisement sig- nals that she will recommend some kind of downward adjust- ment. By C.F. David According to Matt Skin- ner, Public Information Of- ficer for the Oklahoma Com- merce Commission, the hearing on granting Clean Line Energy Utility status in Oklahoma has been contin- ued to March 1-3. The application had been opposed among others, by Oklahoma Gas and Electric. The company is planning a delivery line from near Hitchland, Texas to Mem- phis, Tenn., and utility status is desired because eminent domain would very likely be needed and used so that the line(s) could move the wind- powered electricity with the cheapest investment. However, OG&E, along with others have signed off on a settlement with Clean Line. OG&E’s most obvious objection was for the utility status since if Clean Line obtained such status OG&E would have more competi- tion. In the settlement, Clean Line agreed to among other things; A. To obtain all envi- ronmental and other permits required; B. Operate facili- ties in accordance with NERC and regional require- ments; provide annual re- ports to the Public Utility Division; C. Notify the PUD of any connection of Clean Line to the Southwest Power Pool. With these stipulations the commission could decide that it is in the public interest that Clean Line be a utility with Clean Line and prop- erty owners reserving rights under the law. Further stipulations were made involving private prop- erty, pointing out that issues involving private property were not under the commission’s jurisdiction but instead under the Oklahoma courts. By this Clean Line has agreed to abide by the Land- owners code of conduct, and further obligates them when negotiating reasonable settlements for rights-of- way, offering reasonable easement agreement with at least two options, a one-time up front with annual pay- Clean Line Hearing Continued to March 1-3 ments when the line goes into ser- vice, or one that provides a single payment; that if the two are able to reach an agreement on the kind of easement agreement but not the compensation Clean Line will enter binding arbitration before seeking other possible remedies. (This docu- ment may be seen on-line at: http:// imaging.occeweb.com/AP/ CaseFiles/02FDF0BC.pdf ) LOCALS VOCAL IN OPPOSITION TO CLEAN LINE Some locals, led by Mrs. Dallas Meyer, a Texas County rancher, met with the Cimarron County Commis- sion on Monday Morning. Mrs. Meyer told The Boise City News that she and her husband had been successful in getting the Texas County Commissioners to withdraw their support for Clean Line obtain- ing Utility status and she hoped to do the same with the Cimarron County Commission. Meyer told the commission that her concern began with an article she read in a Woodward paper last summer about a man whose prop- erty had been rendered useless by transmission lines. County Commissioner John Freeman pointed out that any prob- lems around Woodward were with OG&E lines, not Clean Line. Meyer agreed but insisted she was suspicious of Clean Line, she added that radiated lines spreading all over property is what happens when a company has utility status with the right to eminent domain. She then read Article 23 of The Oklahoma State Constitution, ex- plaining the rights of property own- ers. Meyer referred to eminent do- main as “coming in the back door” and reiterated that she and the oth- ers present were against it. Commissioner Freeman told the group that eminent domain was a tool needed by all utilities in order to secure funding, since anyone think- ing of loaning money would need to know that the line wouldn’t be held up with inability to obtain right- away. “Do you have any idea what the economy is like in Cimarron County?” Freeman asked “We can’t wait 15 or 20 years out here.” He added that Cimarron County was in dire straits, that one school was closing due to a tax-base law- suit and that wind energy was the county’s best chance at economic development. Meyer answered that the utility needed to have funding in place so that eminent domain wasn’t necessary, that she wanted land- owners to be able to negotiate their price. “I know we need transmis- sion lines for wind power.” “My price is my economic development,” she explained. “I’m concerned about my Constutional rights.” “Before you condemn them talk to them,” Freeman said. Meyer then said that she had talked to them through the Southern Great Plains Property Rights Coalition of which she was a former board member. Freeman responded that that group had signed off on the settlement of Nov. 24. In passing, Meyer threw in two off hand statements about Clean Line, the first that the company was under investiga- tion in New York, for hedge funds. Robert White, a Cimarron County landowner and unpaid consultant for The Boise City News, said his research shows that Clean Line investors aren’t under indictment, but rather the Security and Exchange Com- mission questioned them about the possible insider trading of other parties. The second remark was that Clean Line’s owner had been born in Baghdad, (Iraq), this is true. According to what The Boise City News has been able to learn, Selim Zilkha, was born in Iraq…his family is Jewish, established there when King Nebuchadnezzar brought Jews from Jerusalem to Babylonia, and his forebears stayed when most returned years later. The Zilkhas left Iraq in the mid-20 th century, by way of Lebanon and Egypt. Selim is an American citizen and served, in 1945, in the U.S. Army. He and his son Michael, age 48, created a start-up oil explo- ration company in Houston and turned it into the company with the most successful drill rate in the history of the Gulf of Mexico. The company is now part of the El Paso Corporation, of which Zilkha is a major stockholder. Son Michael, does however, play his cards close to the vest, and refuses all interviews about Zilkha Renewable Energy, a bio- mass company. (there is a website however.) (Developing) Boise City FFA Stands and Delivers! Members of the Boise City FFA Chapter traveled to Fairview, Oklahoma to participate in the stand and de- liver workshop. Members received training on writing speeches, choosing topics, and stepping outside of their comfort zone. Members also had the opportunity to meet fellow FFA members from other chapters. The confer- ence helps to prepare for the upcoming speech season which will kick off in April. Members in attendance were Evan Thornton, Frank Twombly, Cabe Embry, Rebecca Milbern, Rhianoon Toon, Kayla Mizer, and Megan Trantham. Goodwell—Oklahoma Panhandle State Univer- sity president Dr. Dave Bryant announced today that Jon Lyles has accepted the position of head foot- ball coach. Lyles, 34, has coached for 11 years and has enjoyed success at the high school, collegiate and arena league levels. Lyles replaces Mike Wyatt who passed away in December, shortly after completing his fourth sea- son as the head coach of the Aggies. A Texan from Arp (near Tyler), Lyles is a 1999 graduate of OPSU where he received his BS degree in Health, Physical Educa- tion and Recreation and he also completed his Masters degree at West Texas Jon Lyles Named Head Football Coach at Oklahoma Panhandle State, Goodwell JON LYLES by Scott Puryear, Sports Information Director A&M University in Canyon in 2004. Lyles began his coaching career at OPSU in 1999 and served two years as an assistant before mov- ing on to coach the wide receivers at Guymon High School for a year. He then moved on to West Texas A&M to do his graduate work while also serving as a graduate assistant there, handling the wide receivers in 2002 and 2003. For the next several years, Lyles succe tball, and in 2008 was named Arena Football 2 Assistant Coach of the Year. In 2010 as the head coach of the Amarillo Venom, he guided the team to a 12-4 record and a berth in the conference semi- finals. Prior to accepting the position with OPSU, Lyles was serving as the Associate Head Coach/Offen- sive Coordinator and Director of Football Operations for the New Orleans VooDoo arena football team. An excellent athlete, Lyles starred in both football and baseball at Arp High School as well as with the Aggies. At OPSU as a wide receiver, he had career numbers of over 170 receptions, 2,400 receiv- ing yards, and 20 touchdowns. Per- forming on the baseball diamond for th st Valuable Player as a senior in 1999 when he led the team in bat- ting average, stolen bases, and on- base percentage. Lyles also played professional football with the Shreveport- Bossier City Battlewings (in 2001), and the Louisiana Rang- ers (2002) of the Indoor Foot- ball League. Bryant said, “Jon Lyles has the coaching experience, matu- rity, and familiarity with OPSU to continue to enhance the posi- tive football program developed by the late Mike Wyatt.” The Aggies were 6-5 in the 2010 campai ill be returning from that squad. At present, the team members are working on con- ditioning in preparation for spring football drills. Lyles said, “I’m over- whelmed with emotion right now and I’m very glad to be coming back to OPSU. I’m get- ting everything into perspective and very much looking forward to it.” The appointment of Lyles is contingent upon the approval of the Oklahoma A&M Board of Regents. On Friday, February 11, Lyles will be on the OPSU campus for a “Meet the Coach&q will be held at 6:00 p.m. in the OPSU Ballroom located inside the Stu- dent Union Building. GO AGGIES!!!

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Page 1: LOAF-N-JUG GIVES BACKClean Line Hearing Continued to March 1-3 · 1/3/2011  · from Jerusalem to Babylonia, and his forebears stayed when most returned years later. The Zilkhas left

Volume 112 No. 43 75 Cents Thursday January 27, 2011P.O. Box 278 •105 W. Main Street • Boise City, Oklahoma 73933-0278 • Cimarron CountyPhone 580-544-2222 • Fax 580-544-3281 • e-mail [email protected]

Visit The Boise City News online at it’s Website at boisecitynews.orgOr it’s new Weblog at boisecitynews2.wordpress.com

BOISE CITY WEATHER Hi Lo rn

Tue. Jan. 18 59 28Wed. Jan. 19 43 19Thurs. Jan. 20 31 09 .04Fri. Jan. 21 46 18Sat. Jan. 22 58 19Sun. Jan. 23 48 22Mon. Jan. 24 40 15MARKETSWheat $Milo $Corn $ (spot prices subject to change)

BORN ON JAN. 27

DEATHS-PG. 3

THIS DAY IN HISTORYJAN. 27

CIMARRON COUNTYJAIL BLOTTER

THIS DAY IN MUSIC

ROBERT MATHEWS-84JERRY GARRISON-25VICKIE TAYLOR-88JACK WILLIAMS-90

1756 Wolfgang AmadeusMozart Austria, musicalprodigy/composer (Figaro)1828 Louis Schubert com-poser1832 Lewis Carroll[Charles LutwidgeDodgson], author (Alice inWonderland)1834 Dmitri Mendeleevchemist (discovered peri-odic table of the elements)1900 Hyman G RickoverUS Admiral (father of mod-ern nuclear navy)1919 David Seville [RossBagdasarian], Fresno CA,(Alvin & Chipmunks)

1785 1st US state univer-sity chartered, Athens GA1870 After accepting 15thamendment, Virginia is re-admitted to Union1880 Thomas Edison pat-ents electric incandescentlamp1927 Harlem Globetrottersplay their 1st game1943 1st US air attack onGermany (Wilhelmshafen)1948 1st tape recorder sold1951 US begins 126nuclear tests at NevadaTest Site1967 Apollo 1 fire kills as-tronauts Grissom, White &Chaffee1973 US & Vietnam signcease-fire, ending longestUS war & military draft

1-23Orlando Davilla- posses-sion of marijuana and para-phernalia.

1956, Elvis Presley’ssingle, ‘Heartbreak Hotel’was released by RCARecords, who had just pur-chased Presley’s contractfrom Sun Records for$35,000. The song sold300,000 copies in its firstweek and would eventuallysell over a million, becom-ing Elvis’ first Gold record.1958, Little Richard en-tered The Oakwood Theo-logical College in Hunts-ville, where he was or-dained as a seventh dayAdventist Minister.1962, The Beatles ap-peared at Aintree Institutein Aintree, Liverpool. Thegroup had played heremany times before but thiswas their last performanceat the venue. Brian Epsteinbecame infuriated whenthe promoter paid TheBeatles’ fee (£15 pounds)with handfuls of loosechange. Epstein took thisas an insult to the group,and made sure that TheBeatles never played forthat promoter (Brian Kelly)again.1968, The Bee Gees madetheir live debut in the USwhen they played at theAnaheim Centre, Califor-nia.

LOAF-N-JUG GIVES BACK

Loaf-N-Jug’s District Manager, Robert Gump, makes apresentation to the Soutar Memorial Library last Wednes-day.

The Boise City Christian Church’s Minister, DavidMassey, reads to the children during the Loaf-N-Jug pre-sentation.

By C.F. David(I traveled to Oklahoma

City with the intention of at-tending hearings on Thurs-day Jan. 20 about servicecharges by West Texas Gas,and Clean Line Energy’s ap-plication for utility status. Iwoke up Thursday morningwith 1/8 inch of ice on my carwindows and mechanicalproblems. After repeatedunanswered calls to the capi-tal building, I assumed every-one had stayed home. I waswrong. The meetings wereheld and attended; just notby me. My apologies-Ed.)

The Administrative LawJudge hearing the OklahomaCorporation Commission’s Pub-lic Utility Division’s, cause of thepurchased gas adjustment causehas agreed and taken to reviewcomplaints against West TexasGas’ fuel delivery charges.

Representative GusBlackwell and Corp. Comm.Public Information Officer MattSkinner explained that WTG isnot a gas production company,but instead a fuel delivery com-pany. In that capacity, and byOklahoma law, the companycannot charge anymore for thefuel than what they paid for it.The company’s profit comeswith a fuel delivery charge, a fig-ure that in some instances in thepast has been seventy percentof the cost of the fuel. (In De-cember my home used about$43 in fuel. The delivery chargewas $50 or slightly more-Ed.)

Blackwell said he received42 calls to his office the firstmonth after WTG raised theirdelivery charges, and had re-

ceived 12 this month.(In the first month at least one

Boise City business saw its fuelbill go from $200 to $600, al-though it has never peaked thathigh again.)

“They, (the Corp. Comm.),will go back and look to see if itis within the tariff,” (allowed),Blackwell said.

Blackwell also explained thatseveral Cimarron County citi-zens had friends and family liv-ing outside the county yet servedby WTG, who had never seenthat level of a rise on their bill.

Another source of irritationwith county customers is thatwith the higher bills, WTG madethe decision to take their pres-ence out of the county, close theoffice and hire another employeein Stratford, Texas to do the job.

Skinner told The Boise CityNews that while an Administra-tive Law Judge cannot makelaw, they can make yes or norecommendations to the Corpo-ration Commission.

Part of the need for the highfuel delivery charges Skinnerexplained was due in part to theunaccounted loss of fuel gas. Hecontinued that the loss, due inpart to the inherent problems ofmaintaining long transmissionlines with unavoidable leaksmean that some of that loss willbe passed on to thecustomer(s).

The judge will make her rec-ommendations to the Corpora-tion Commission at a later date,but some in the know that hertaking it under advisement sig-nals that she will recommendsome kind of downward adjust-ment.

By C.F. DavidAccording to Matt Skin-

ner, Public Information Of-ficer for the Oklahoma Com-merce Commission, thehearing on granting CleanLine Energy Utility status inOklahoma has been contin-ued to March 1-3.

The application had beenopposed among others, byOklahoma Gas and Electric.

The company is planninga delivery line from nearHitchland, Texas to Mem-phis, Tenn., and utility statusis desired because eminentdomain would very likely beneeded and used so that theline(s) could move the wind-powered electricity with thecheapest investment.

However, OG&E, alongwith others have signed offon a settlement with CleanLine. OG&E’s most obviousobjection was for the utilitystatus since if Clean Lineobtained such status OG&Ewould have more competi-tion.

In the settlement, CleanLine agreed to among otherthings; A. To obtain all envi-ronmental and other permitsrequired; B. Operate facili-ties in accordance withNERC and regional require-ments; provide annual re-ports to the Public UtilityDivision; C. Notify the PUDof any connection of CleanLine to the SouthwestPower Pool.

With these stipulations thecommission could decidethat it is in the public interestthat Clean Line be a utilitywith Clean Line and prop-erty owners reserving rightsunder the law.

Further stipulations weremade involving private prop-erty, pointing out that issuesinvolving private propertywere not under thecommission’s jurisdiction butinstead under the Oklahomacourts.

By this Clean Line hasagreed to abide by the Land-owners code of conduct, andfurther obligates them whennegotiating reasonablesettlements for rights-of-way, offering reasonableeasement agreement with atleast two options, a one-timeup front with annual pay-

Clean Line Hearing Continued to March 1-3ments when the line goes into ser-vice, or one that provides a singlepayment; that if the two are able toreach an agreement on the kind ofeasement agreement but not thecompensation Clean Line will enterbinding arbitration before seekingother possible remedies. (This docu-ment may be seen on-line at: http://imaging .occeweb.com/AP/CaseFiles/02FDF0BC.pdf )

LOCALS VOCAL INOPPOSITION TO CLEAN LINE

Some locals, led by Mrs. DallasMeyer, a Texas County rancher, metwith the Cimarron County Commis-sion on Monday Morning. Mrs.Meyer told The Boise City Newsthat she and her husband had beensuccessful in getting the TexasCounty Commissioners to withdrawtheir support for Clean Line obtain-ing Utility status and she hoped todo the same with the CimarronCounty Commission.

Meyer told the commission thather concern began with an articleshe read in a Woodward paper lastsummer about a man whose prop-erty had been rendered useless bytransmission lines.

County Commissioner JohnFreeman pointed out that any prob-lems around Woodward were withOG&E lines, not Clean Line.

Meyer agreed but insisted shewas suspicious of Clean Line, sheadded that radiated lines spreadingall over property is what happenswhen a company has utility statuswith the right to eminent domain.

She then read Article 23 of TheOklahoma State Constitution, ex-plaining the rights of property own-ers.

Meyer referred to eminent do-main as “coming in the back door”and reiterated that she and the oth-ers present were against it.

Commissioner Freeman told thegroup that eminent domain was atool needed by all utilities in order tosecure funding, since anyone think-ing of loaning money would need toknow that the line wouldn’t be heldup with inability to obtain right-away.

“Do you have any idea what theeconomy is like in CimarronCounty?” Freeman asked “Wecan’t wait 15 or 20 years out here.”

He added that Cimarron Countywas in dire straits, that one schoolwas closing due to a tax-base law-suit and that wind energy was thecounty’s best chance at economicdevelopment.

Meyer answered that the utilityneeded to have funding in place so

that eminent domain wasn’tnecessary, that she wanted land-owners to be able to negotiatetheir price.

“I know we need transmis-sion lines for wind power.”

“My price is my economicdevelopment,” she explained.

“I’m concerned about myConstutional rights.”

“Before you condemn themtalk to them,” Freeman said.

Meyer then said that she hadtalked to them through theSouthern Great Plains PropertyRights Coalition of which shewas a former board member.

Freeman responded that thatgroup had signed off on thesettlement of Nov. 24.

In passing, Meyer threw intwo off hand statements aboutClean Line, the first that thecompany was under investiga-tion in New York, for hedgefunds.

Robert White, a CimarronCounty landowner and unpaidconsultant for The Boise CityNews, said his research showsthat Clean Line investors aren’tunder indictment, but rather theSecurity and Exchange Com-mission questioned them aboutthe possible insider trading ofother parties.

The second remark was thatClean Line’s owner had beenborn in Baghdad, (Iraq), this istrue. According to what TheBoise City News has been ableto learn, Selim Zilkha, was bornin Iraq…his family is Jewish,established there when KingNebuchadnezzar brought Jewsfrom Jerusalem to Babylonia,and his forebears stayed whenmost returned years later.

The Zilkhas left Iraq in themid-20th century, by way ofLebanon and Egypt. Selim is anAmerican citizen and served, in1945, in the U.S. Army.

He and his son Michael, age48, created a start-up oil explo-ration company in Houston andturned it into the company withthe most successful drill rate inthe history of the Gulf of Mexico.The company is now part of theEl Paso Corporation, of whichZilkha is a major stockholder.

Son Michael, does however,play his cards close to the vest,and refuses all interviews aboutZilkha Renewable Energy, a bio-mass company. (there is awebsite however.)

(Developing)

Boise City FFA Stands and Delivers!Members of the Boise City FFA Chapter traveled toFairview, Oklahoma to participate in the stand and de-liver workshop. Members received training on writingspeeches, choosing topics, and stepping outside of theircomfort zone. Members also had the opportunity to meetfellow FFA members from other chapters. The confer-ence helps to prepare for the upcoming speech seasonwhich will kick off in April. Members in attendance wereEvan Thornton, Frank Twombly, Cabe Embry, RebeccaMilbern, Rhianoon Toon, Kayla Mizer, and MeganTrantham.

Goodwell—OklahomaPanhandle State Univer-sity president Dr. DaveBryant announced todaythat Jon Lyles has acceptedthe position of head foot-ball coach. Lyles, 34, hascoached for 11 years andhas enjoyed success at thehigh school, collegiate andarena league levels.

Lyles replaces MikeWyatt who passed away inDecember, shortly aftercompleting his fourth sea-son as the head coach ofthe Aggies.

A Texan from Arp(near Tyler), Lyles is a 1999graduate of OPSU wherehe received his BS degreein Health, Physical Educa-tion and Recreation and healso completed his Mastersdegree at West Texas

Jon Lyles Named Head Football Coach atOklahoma Panhandle State, Goodwell

JON LYLESby Scott Puryear, SportsInformation Director

A&M University in Canyon in 2004.Lyles began his coaching career

at OPSU in 1999 and served twoyears as an assistant before mov-ing on to coach the wide receiversat Guymon High School for a year.He then moved on to West TexasA&M to do his graduate work whilealso serving as a graduate assistantthere, handling the wide receiversin 2002 and 2003.

For the next several years, Lylessucce tball, and in 2008 was namedArena Football 2 Assistant Coachof the Year. In 2010 as the headcoach of the Amarillo Venom, heguided the team to a 12-4 recordand a berth in the conference semi-finals.

Prior to accepting the positionwith OPSU, Lyles was serving asthe Associate Head Coach/Offen-sive Coordinator and Director ofFootball Operations for the NewOrleans VooDoo arena footballteam.

An excellent athlete, Lylesstarred in both football and baseballat Arp High School as well as withthe Aggies. At OPSU as a widereceiver, he had career numbers ofover 170 receptions, 2,400 receiv-ing yards, and 20 touchdowns. Per-forming on the baseball diamond forth st Valuable Player as a senior in1999 when he led the team in bat-ting average, stolen bases, and on-base percentage.

Lyles also played professional

football with the Shreveport-Bossier City Battlewings (in2001), and the Louisiana Rang-ers (2002) of the Indoor Foot-ball League.

Bryant said, “Jon Lyles hasthe coaching experience, matu-rity, and familiarity with OPSUto continue to enhance the posi-tive football program developedby the late Mike Wyatt.”

The Aggies were 6-5 in the2010 campai ill be returning fromthat squad. At present, the teammembers are working on con-ditioning in preparation for springfootball drills.

Lyles said, “I’m over-whelmed with emotion rightnow and I’m very glad to becoming back to OPSU. I’m get-ting everything into perspectiveand very much looking forwardto it.”

The appointment of Lyles iscontingent upon the approval ofthe Oklahoma A&M Board ofRegents.

On Friday, February 11, Lyleswill be on the OPSU campus fora “Meet the Coach&q will beheld at 6:00 p.m. in the OPSUBallroom located inside the Stu-dent Union Building.

GO AGGIES!!!