<p>Glaciers 130-pound wrestler Kaleb Mitchell (top) tries to pin
Cooper Ryan during the Wolfpacks victory over Helena High Saturday
night at Glacier High School.</p>
<p>Glacier's Amy Lybeck (23) drives past a Helena Capital defender
during Friday night's Western AA game at Glacier High School.</p>
<p>Jerry Brosten looks out on his property in the lower Flathead
Valley.</p>
<p>Kolton Nevins, 8, works to take of his snowshoes at Big Mountain
Friday morning. Elrod students snowshoe Friday morning at Big
Mountain as part of the Junior Snow Ranger Forest Service
program.</p>
<p>People working with their Kindle's on Wednesday, January 18, at
the Learning your iPad and Kindle Class at the Whitefish Community
Library.</p>
<p>Author Kathy Dunnehoff teaches a screenwriting class at Flathead
Valley Community College. She's among local writers who have good
results from publishing their novels online.</p>
<p>Diane Dwyer, victim impact program coordinator for the Center
for Restorative Youth Justice, stands by a wall covered in art work
from children she has worked with. The art was created as a
reflection exercise where the child was given a "Victim Impact
Statement" and told to create a collage based on the statement.</p>
<p>Douglas Smith, of Monster Electric, hooks up outlets in the new
judges chambers Thursday afternoon at the Public Safety
Building.</p>
<p>Whitefish guard Cooper Olson (30) fights his way past Bigfork
Vikings defender Austin Jordt Thursday night at Bigfork High
School.</p>
<p>Smith Valley fifth-grader Camicia Douglas, right, shows off a
fish she caught at Peterson Lake near Bigfork Thursday morning. In
the background is fellow fifth-grader Kalea Quinby. The students
were part of a group of about 55 fourth- and fifth-graders from
Smith Valley participating in the Hooked on Fishing program put on
by Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks.</p>
<p>Ashlee Buller, Levi Proctor, Decon Zander, Andy Walling and
Jaclyn Rensel, clockwise from bottom, listen to suggestions from
Josh Munroe during practice for partner debates Tuesday afternoon
at Glacier High School while practicing for the state speech and
debate tournament.</p>
<p>Valkyrie center Tessa Robertson (right) looks to pass the ball
while being guarded by Twyla Hogge Tuesday night during the
Valkyries' victory over Mission at Bigfork High School.</p>
<p>Columbia Falls sophomores Mary Gross, left, and Allison Foust
prepare Tuesday afternoon at the high school for the Class A speech
and debate competition in Polson. The state tourney starts
Friday.</p>
<p>A young gray hawk keeps close watch on a field alongside Rose
Crossing on Tuesdaya afternoon north of Kalispell.</p>
<p>Cindi Martin, airport director at Glacier International talks
with the crowd following the announcment at Allegiant will add
nonstop flights to Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday morning, January
24.</p>
<p>Eric Teal, a concrete finisher with Big Sky Concrete Work Inc.,
uses a float to smooth out the last of the freshly poured concrete
on the roof of Kalispell Regional Medical Center's Sugical Services
addition Monday morning. Monday's pouring covered the final 3,400
feet of the 60,000-square-foot roof. The concrete slab is designed
to serve as the roof, but it is also capable of supporting two
additional floors in the future.</p>
<p>Glacier's Amy Lybeck (23) drives past a Helena Capital defender
during Friday night's Western AA game at Glacier High School.</p>
<p>Jerry Brosten looks out on his property in the lower Flathead
Valley.</p>
<p>Kolton Nevins, 8, works to take of his snowshoes at Big Mountain
Friday morning. Elrod students snowshoe Friday morning at Big
Mountain as part of the Junior Snow Ranger Forest Service
program.</p>
<p>People working with their Kindle's on Wednesday, January 18, at
the Learning your iPad and Kindle Class at the Whitefish Community
Library.</p>
<p>Author Kathy Dunnehoff teaches a screenwriting class at Flathead
Valley Community College. She's among local writers who have good
results from publishing their novels online.</p>
<p>Diane Dwyer, victim impact program coordinator for the Center
for Restorative Youth Justice, stands by a wall covered in art work
from children she has worked with. The art was created as a
reflection exercise where the child was given a "Victim Impact
Statement" and told to create a collage based on the statement.</p>
<p>Douglas Smith, of Monster Electric, hooks up outlets in the new
judges chambers Thursday afternoon at the Public Safety
Building.</p>
<p>Whitefish guard Cooper Olson (30) fights his way past Bigfork
Vikings defender Austin Jordt Thursday night at Bigfork High
School.</p>
<p>Smith Valley fifth-grader Camicia Douglas, right, shows off a
fish she caught at Peterson Lake near Bigfork Thursday morning. In
the background is fellow fifth-grader Kalea Quinby. The students
were part of a group of about 55 fourth- and fifth-graders from
Smith Valley participating in the Hooked on Fishing program put on
by Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks.</p>
<p>Ashlee Buller, Levi Proctor, Decon Zander, Andy Walling and
Jaclyn Rensel, clockwise from bottom, listen to suggestions from
Josh Munroe during practice for partner debates Tuesday afternoon
at Glacier High School while practicing for the state speech and
debate tournament.</p>
<p>Valkyrie center Tessa Robertson (right) looks to pass the ball
while being guarded by Twyla Hogge Tuesday night during the
Valkyries' victory over Mission at Bigfork High School.</p>
<p>Columbia Falls sophomores Mary Gross, left, and Allison Foust
prepare Tuesday afternoon at the high school for the Class A speech
and debate competition in Polson. The state tourney starts
Friday.</p>
<p>A young gray hawk keeps close watch on a field alongside Rose
Crossing on Tuesdaya afternoon north of Kalispell.</p>
<p>Cindi Martin, airport director at Glacier International talks
with the crowd following the announcment at Allegiant will add
nonstop flights to Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday morning, January
24.</p>
<p>Eric Teal, a concrete finisher with Big Sky Concrete Work Inc.,
uses a float to smooth out the last of the freshly poured concrete
on the roof of Kalispell Regional Medical Center's Sugical Services
addition Monday morning. Monday's pouring covered the final 3,400
feet of the 60,000-square-foot roof. The concrete slab is designed
to serve as the roof, but it is also capable of supporting two
additional floors in the future.</p>