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Professionally, Nesbitt has participated in the leadership of national and regional organizations for writing, literature, and western Americana. Most notably, Nesbitt served as president of Wyoming Writers, Inc., (2010–2011), [26] president of WyoPoets (1996–1997), [27] and as board member for Western Writers of America (2008–2010).
John receives a letter from an attorney in Cheyenne, Wyoming, stating his brother, D.J., left him The Cheyenne Social Club in his will. Once the pair arrives in Cheyenne, John visits D.J.'s lawyer and discovers the club is a high-class brothel separated from the busy part of town by the railroad tracks. Not keen on running such a business, John ...
Wyoming Attorney General is the title of the senior legal officer of the State of Wyoming. ... John F. Raper: 1963 1965 Republican 21 Dean W. Borthwick 1965
CHEYENNE — More than 100 community members packed a meeting room in the Wyoming State Capitol Extension on Wednesday in support of City Drug, one of Cheyenne’s two independent pharmacies. An ...
Following is a list of justices of the Wyoming Supreme Court, ... John H. Howe: Republican: April 6, 1869: October 14, 1871: April 6, 1869: October 14, 1871
Cecil J. Nesbitt (1912–2001), Canadian-born American mathematician and actuary; Charles H. Nesbitt (born 1947), American politician; Charles R. Nesbitt (1921–2007), American attorney and politician, 9th Attorney General of Oklahoma; Cheyenne Nesbitt (born 1999), American heptathlete; Christine Nesbitt (born 1985), Canadian retired speed skater
While practicing law in Cheyenne, he served in the Wyoming House of Representatives from 1969 to 1971. [1] He ran for Governor of Wyoming in 1970, [4] receiving the nomination of the Democratic party but losing to the incumbent Republican governor Stanley K. Hathaway by a 62.79% to 37.21% margin. [5] He served as Cheyenne City Attorney (1968 ...
In March 2018, Bouchard introduced a bill to the Wyoming Senate to allow a person to use deadly force in order to protect themselves without requiring the person to retreat from the perpetrator and, in the case of a person who shoots an intruder to their home, assumes that the person acted in self-defense. [14] The bill passed into law.