Weather in: Buffalo
Fair
Temperature: 30.0 °F
Humidity: 70 %
Wind Speed: 3 mph SSW
Pressure: NA "
Dew Point: 21 °F
Gusts: 7 mph WSW
Rain Today: 0.00 "
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Buffalo News Local news for Buffalo, WY continually updated from thousands of sources on the web.
- Rollo E. Greimann
Services for Rollo E. Greimann, 82, of Buffalo, Wyo., formerly of Blue Earth, are pending at Patton Funeral Home and Cremation Service, Blue Earth.
- Kids Reconnect to Nature at Paradise Ranch in Wyoming
Kids are increasingly disconnected from nature. Paradise Ranch in Buffalo, Wyoming is striving to change this trend by offering programs that encourage children to get back to nature through hiking, fishing and ...
- Fatalities climb to 122
Fatals #119 to 122 have been reported by the Wyoming Highway Patrol. This first accident occurred 12 miles north of Buffalo on I-90, on Friday, October 10.
- Chronic wasting disease shows up near Buffalo
State game officials have discovered mule deer infected with chronic wasting disease for the first time in two hunting areas near Buffalo and Kaycee.
- Sheridan boy killed in crash
A Sheridan boy is dead following a rollover accident north of Buffalo, Wyoming Friday night.
- Totals, Photos: West Gets Four Feet of Snow
Parts of the Rocky Mountains got over four feet of snow this weekend. Here's a picture from Buffalo, Wyoming, courtesy Dougm on the AccuWeather.com Photo Gallery: Here's a list of totals over three feet from ...
- Note six more fatalities
Six more fatality reports have been reported by the Wyoming Highway Patrol. Fatality #110 occurred 5.5 miles west of Buffalo, on September 23.
- Brown-Stewart wedding
Laura Brown and Brandon Stewart, both of Buffalo, were married at 3 p.m. Aug. 8 at Little Bell Wedding Chapel in Harrison, Ark.
- Really packed in a lot of stuff today - Buffalo, Wyoming, United States
Started out before dawn in Badlands National Park. The scenery was "otherworldly". Saw deer, mountain goats, prairie dogs, chipmunks, antelope, eagles and an owl.
- Wyoming wool mill would share with ranchers
BUFFALO, Wyo. - Two businesswomen are looking for a cut of the wool market by opening the first wool mill in Wyoming and sharing profits with local sheep ranchers.
- Pesky weed got rancher's goat - so he got goats
For years, rancher Ryan Fieldgrove could only watch as leafy spurge spread across his land unchecked, forcing thousands of grazing acres out of production and costing his family a fortune.
- Alicia Harrison: Life's mergers have strengthened her ability to cope
Alicia Harrison, executive vice president at Wells Fargo Southwest Commercial Banking Office, knows something about mergers.
- WyoGuide
Sunday, August 31, 2008 Local events Mackey Barrel Race. East Pavilion, Cam-Plex, Gillette.
- Schiffer wins handily; Patton takes Republican slot to replace Iekel
Legislative veteran John Schiffer, R-Kaycee, appears to have hung on to the Senate District 22 seat for another term.
- What's Cooking
Calling all foodies! Join us Tuesdays at noon for What's Cooking , our live online culinary hour with Kim O'Donnel . It's Day 15 of Kim's road trip as she checks in from Buffalo, Wyo., after having spent a ...
- Banks donate to Red Cross
The American Red Cross Wyoming Chapter recently announced a donation of $50,000 from several First Interstate Banks across Wyoming.
- State sues to restore scenic trust
The Wyoming attorney general's office has sued the Johnson County Commission and others seeking to reverse a 2002 county action intended to extinguish a conservation easement on a private ranch east of Buffalo.
- Deployment ceremony to take place in Buffalo for reservists
Army reservists are being deployed Wednesday in Buffalo. A ceremony for the 353rd Transportation Company of the U. S. Army Reserve will take place Wednesday at 10 a.m. Approximately 170 reservists will leave ...
- Motor home crashes into Buffalo store, man killed
An Arkansas man was killed when a motor home lost its brakes and crashed into a storefront in downtown Buffalo, Wyoming.
Buffalo Classifieds Local classifieds for Buffalo, WY
Questions Possibly Related to Buffalo, WyomingProvided By Y! Answers
what is the value of a buffalo shaped decanter with state of Wyoming printed on it? Question: My husband collects mini liquor bottles and decanters. I have come across bourbon decanters with the states of wyoming and oregon spelled out. Wyoming is shaped like a buffalo and oregon looks like a beaver or muskrat.The bidding starts at 25.00 and I would like to find there true value.
Answer:
Well if you know how old they are they maybe worth more then what you pay for them. My advice is you need to look it up on some web site find the name of the company or who made it and look up some back ground on it you never know might be realy old!
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where can I see wild buffalo in wyoming?
Answer:
Of course Yellowstone Nat'l Park, but also:
"Sojourn North from Gillette, Wyoming through South Dakota" "Nearly 1,600 buffalo, one of the largest herds anywhere, roam free in the foothills of these 73,000 acres." Ref: http://www.rvtimes.com/arch/RVT83HTML/83gillette5.html
There are Buffalo scattered here and there throughout the state. I know I have seen buffalo around Thermopolis, Wyoming!
Misc:
http://www.cherryh.com/www/images/trippix/bu ffalo.jpg
http://www.cherryh.com/www/wyoming.htm
http://www.bob bundy.com/ToHomer/Wyoming.JPG
http://www.mjgkramer.com/animals/b uffalo1.jpg
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Cell phone coverage in Wyoming and Montana, I-90? Question: Hello. I'm going to be driving from Indiana to Portland, OR at the end of the month, and I had a question about cell phone reception in Wyoming and Montana, particularly Wyoming. If anybody has driven I-90 through northern Wyoming (Gilette, Buffalo, Sheridan) into Billings, MT please let me know whether:
•you had problems getting any reception, or if you were able to make calls;
•how long ago you drove the route; and
•which cell-phone service provider you were using.
After Billings, I'm not as worried, as most major providers tend to have some sort of coverage along I-90. I'm mostly worried about the trip from the South Dakota border to Billings, MT.
Thanks!
Please, if you've never driven through Wyoming along I-90, or you don't live along I-90 in either state, don't answer. I'll report jokers and spam.
You were able to roam, however, ignatious?
And were/are you on the National SingleRate plan?
Answer:
I drove that stretch of road three years ago on my way to Washington/Oregon. Reception is spotty and roaming is frequent through large swaths of Wyoming and i'm/was with Verizon.
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The Wyoming quarter? Question: ok i know there's a town in wyoming called "Cody" (which is my name too n i love it) and that town was named after Buffalo Bill cody, now on the 25 cent quarter it shows like a cowboy or whatever on a horse, is that buffalo bill cody?
Answer:
No, its not Bill Cody, the design is described as "bucking horse and rider" officially.
AKA bucking bronco
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In football, do you think it's ugly when teams wear the same color jerseys and pants? Question: The Redskins wore maroon pants and jerseys on MNF. The Broncos have wore blue jerseys and pants before.
In college, Wyoming wore yellow jerseys and pants this weekend. Tonight, in the Miami (OH) v. Buffalo game, both teams are wearing same color jerseys and pants.
I have never liked this look. Its seems like it has really caught on with teams this decade. Do you think that it's as ugly as I do?
Answer:
Depends on the uni. Some look good, some don't. Texas and Penn State white on white looks good.
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Yellowstone national park wyoming!!!!!!!? Question: ok im going to yellowstone in about 2 weeks
and my aunt has been there and she said that buffalo, bison or wutver there called walk on the streets wenever they want
so if u have been there culd u tell me how often they do
cuz it wuld be soooooo kool to see
thanks
:)
Answer:
How often? Whenever they want to. You can just be driving from your camping area to the falls or to Mammoth Springs or to the paint pots and there they will be. Also Elk or antelope. very cool. And take pictures. But seriously. They are NOT tame. Do NOT get too close because they will charge at you very fast if they feel threatened.
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Do ranchers in Wyoming, Montana, & other western states own all the land their cattle graze on? Question: After returning from the Grand Tetons & Yellowstone, and hearing all the stories about ranchers (and the hunters they employ) killing wolves and coyotes (and the gov't killing Buffalo and elk) for being on the the property the cattle were on, I was extremely angry. Reasons aside, I have been informed that many of the ranchers around the national parks areas (Yellowstone & Grand tetons, also assuming Rocky Mountain area) do NOT own or are in any way making payments for the property that the cattle are grazing on. I was informed the property is owned by either the department of the interior (federal) or department of natural resources (state) government. Is this true? Note, this is not a question about whether or not the animals should be killed - that will be a separate issue. The only question is to exactly who owns the land.
Ranchers ARE compensated for each animal killed by a predator
If you are lease a car and someone breaks into it, are you allowed to kill them?
There are PROVEN vaccinations for the disease in cattle
The disease was initially transmitted FROM cattlle TO bison
There have been no PROVEN cases of cattle infection from bison in US- only elk
Risk of HUMAN infection is EXTREMELY rare in US
National parks are supposed to protect NATIVE WILDLIFE, not kill it
Coyotes are shot on sight by ranchers, or hunters they employ, even if not killing an animal.
NPS acknowledges too many bison were killed last year
Bison are killed many times for ONLY having the antibodies, NOT having the disease
Safari parks in US have bison you can feed directly by hand
Was in Yellowstone 11 days and nights - wolves seen =0? Wow they must be overpopulated. 2.2 million acres = .000727 wolves/acre
Sources - pluralism.org, cdc.gov, Jackson hole chamber of commerce, jacksonholeradio.
Per the CDC, it is rare to pass this disease on from anything other than direct contact. You can move to another state that does not have NATIVE wildlife (there before YOU or your ancestors were) and still be a rancher. Any animal killed by NATIVE wildlife is just a cost of doing business...nothing more. You have to accept the fact a certain number will die from disease or be killed. If you don't like it, maintain tighter control of your herd, instead of using government (tax payer supported) land. Buffalo and other NATIVE wildlife got the disease from cattle. Anyone who had chickenpox 20 years ago will test positive for it now - it does not mean they have it, will get it again, or will spread it - same thing applies. According to the CDC, the vaccine is HIGHLY effective. Local govt's are only protecting self interests (cattle industry) or they would end the killing. Have a public slaughter in Yellowstone and see how fast the policy changes, instead of doing it in private.
Per Greateryellowstone.org, there are approx 400 wolves in greater yellowstone area - equal to .000182 wolves per acre. Again an insignificant number. We spent 11 days, drove 1500+ miles, easilly spoke with over 200 people on the side of the road, at rest stops..NONE had seen a wolf. We had been to all the spots you are "supposed" to see one, early, late, mid day. Some people sat for 2 days watching a bison that just died, waiting for the wolves that never came. I will send you a check, when you figure out how to build a SECURE place to store animals for the night. Floor to ceiling walls, on a concrete pad, made of corregated steel or aluminum, with a door that closes all the way. Let them out in AM, bring them ALL in PM, and lock the door. And I guarantee you will have NO losses at night. They don't want to spend that kind of money, so they let them wander all night, with no protection. Or keep them in some crude area. Good Plan - don't protect them and wonder why they are killed.
One more note - wildlife management is just that, management. It does not mean killing. Killing should be an ultimate last resort. On the one hand, ranchers and hunters argue that we should NOT get involved with supplemental feedings of animals, because that is human interventtion. So when wolves, or bison, or bear, or moose are starving due to whatever reason, they won't advocate feeding. However, as soon an animal goes beyond some boundary (which an animal would never know), it should be killed. Then animals a rancher owns, should be allowed to go whereever they want, but a native animal should only be allowed to go within a national park. Talk about the supreme example of having your cake and eating it too. Maybe if the congressional leaders from those states bordering GTNP and YNP weren't getting contributions and lobbying from the ranchers (special interest groups), we might have some changes to forest service policy.
Answer:
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How Many people want to report illegal immigration violation? Well here's some number's.? Question: How Many people want to report illegal immigration violation? Well here's some number's.?
Office of Detention and Removal Operations Offices
Headquarters
Director, Office of Detention and Removal Operations
801 I St, NW
Suite 900
Washington, DC 20536
Phone: 202-305-2734
Field Offices
Field Office Director, Atlanta
77 Forsyth St., SW, Suite 117
Atlanta, GA 30303
Phone: 404-331-2765
Area of Responsibility: Georgia, North Carolina, Puerto Rico, South Carolina, and U.S. Virgin Islands
Field Office Director, Baltimore
31 Hopkins Plaza, Suite 630
Baltimore, MD 21201
Phone: 410-962-2037
Area of Responsibility: Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, West Virginia
Field Office Director, Boston
John F. Kennedy, Federal Bldg.
Govt. Center, 17th Flr.
Room 1775
Boston, MA 02203
Phone: 617-565-3304
Area of Responsibility: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont
Field Office Director, Buffalo
130 Delaware Avenue
Buffalo, NY 14202
Phone: 716-551-4741
Area of Responsibility: Upstate New York
Field Office Director, Chicago
10 W. Jackson Blvd.
Chicago, IL 60604
Phone: 312-385-1701
Area of Responsibility: Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, Wisconsin
Field Office Director, Dallas
8101 N. Stemmons Frwy
Dallas, TX 75247
Phone: 214-905-5860
Area of Responsibility: North Texas, Oklahoma
Field Office Director, Denver
4730 Paris Street
Denver, CO 80239
Phone: 303-371-1067
Area of Responsibility: Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming
Field Office Director, Detroit
333 Mt. Elliott St.
Detroit, MI 48207
Phone: 313-568-6049
Area of Responsibility: Michigan, Ohio
Field Office Director, El Paso
6451 Boeing Drive
El Paso, TX 79925
Phone: 915-881-5603
Area of Responsibility: Southwest Texas, New Mexico
Field Office Director, Houston
126 Northpoint Drive
Houston, TX 77060
Phone: 281-774-4783
Area of Responsibility: Southeast Texas
Field Office Director, Los Angeles
300 North Los Angeles St.
Los Angeles, CA 90012
Phone: 213-830-7900
Area of Responsibility: Central California, Southern Nevada
Field Office Director, Miami
7880 Biscayne Blvd.
Miami, FL 33138
Phone: 305-762-3622
Area of Responsibility: Florida
Field Office Director, Newark
Hemisphere Building, Suite 512
Routes 1 and 9 South
Newark, NJ 07114
Phone: 973-645-3666
Area of Responsibility: New Jersey
Field Office Director, New Orleans
DHS/ICE 701 Loyola Ave.
Rm. T-8011
New Orleans, LA 70113
Phone: 504-599-7845
Area of Responsibility: Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee
Field Office Director, New York
26 Federal Plaza, Rm. 1105
New York, NY 10278
Phone: 212-264-5854
Area of Responsibility: The five boroughs (counties of NYC) and the following counties:
Westchester, Putnam, Dutchess, Ulster, Rockland, Nassau and Suffolk
Field Office Director, Philadelphia
1600 Callowhill St., 6th Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19130
Phone: Phone: 215-656-7164
Area of Responsibility: Delaware, Pennsylvania, West Virginia
Field Office Director, Phoenix
2035 N. Central Avenue
Phoenix, AZ 85004
Phone: 602-379-3426
Area of Responsibility: Arizona
Field Office Director, San Antonio
8940 Fourwinds Drive
San Antonio, TX 78239
Phone: 210-967-7175
Area of Responsibility: Central South Texas
Field Office Director, San Diego
880 Front Street, #2232
San Diego, CA 92188
Phone: 619-557-6117
Area of Responsibility: Southern California
Field Office Director, San Francisco
630 Sansome Street, Rm 590
San Francisco, CA 94111
Phone: 415-844-5512
Area of Responsibility: Northern California, Central and Northern Nevada, Utah, Hawaii, Guam
Field Office Director, Seattle
1000 2nd Avenue, Suite 2650
Seattle, WA 98104
Phone: 206-553-4147
Area of Responsibility: Alaska, Oregon, Washington
Field Office Director, St. Paul
2901 Metro Dr., Suite 100
Bloomington, MN 55425
Phone: 952-853-2960
Area of Responsibility: Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota
Field Office Director, Washington
2675 Prosperity Avenue
Fairfax, VA 22031
Phone: 703-285-6200
Area of Responsibility: District of Columbia and Virginia
Additional Details
18 minutes ago
I know I am going to get reported for this.
Because I wrote about illegal immigration an plus Im Anti-illegal immigration
YEA I got REPORTED
Answer:
I read alot of pesimist answers but as for me we have to report all illegal aliens and if we call and call and call the INS they got to get sick and tired of it and do something.
You got reported, big deal do not let that intimidate what you know in your heart is right.
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TRAVEL HELP I REALLY NEED it PLEASE!!? Question: IM 12 I NEED A FLIGHT FROM BUFFALO NEW YORK TO LARAMIE WYOMING LEAVING AT 3PM ON JULY 16 GOING BACK TO NY ON THE 26 AND HELP?? has to be very cheap like 700 through 900 dollors total!!!
thanks
Answer:
I found these flights
you have to change planes twice once in Phily and again in Denever
Airline Departure Time Arrival Time Total Travel Time Roundtrip Price
includes taxes and fees
United
United
Flight 2299 operated by US Airways / 2010 operated by US Airways / Flight 5181 operated by Great Lakes Aviation
7:15am
Buffalo, NY (BUF)
2:05pm
Laramie, WY (LAR)
8hrs 50min - 2 Stops
Change planes in Philadelphia, PA (PHL)
Change planes in Denver, CO (DEN)
$636
per person
Total $683
returning
nited
Flight 5140 operated by Great Lakes Aviation / Flight 244 / 1142
8:17am
Laramie, WY (LAR)
4:50pm
Buffalo, NY (BUF)
6hrs 33min - 2 Stops
Change planes in Denver, CO (DEN)
Change planes in Chicago, IL (ORD)
$636
per person
Total $685
Select
Bag Fees May Apply more
Turboprop Service more
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teen club in ny? Question: Is there any teen nightclubs in catt county, wyoming county, or erie county in Ny state? i reaally wanna kno cuz Passions in franklynville (catt county) mostly has 13 years olds and I'm 16, 17 may 1 this year. Please help!!!!!! the farthest away i can go is buffalo and rochester(i live an hour south of buffalo)
Answer:
i say yes. i live in CT, but i could go to NY for a day or two and check in out. that wood be sick!
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Which could happen...? Question: TCU over OU
Rice over Texas
Troy over Ohio State
Buffalo over Missouri
FIU over South Florida
Massachusetts over Texas Tech
Wyoming over BYU
Ect...
Answer:
Rice over Texas... Owls could win big in this one!
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do our american friends agree? Question: When the white man found wyoming and arizona,Red Indians were running these places
There were:
- No Taxes
- No Debt
- Plenty buffalo
- Plenty beaver
- Medicine man free
- Women did all the work
- Men hunted and fished all the time
The white man was dumb enough to think he could improve on that system!
Answer:
Sounds like a fun community, but can I join the men while they fish?
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Grammar Check please? (It's not to long...)? Question: Native American Group Name: Shoshone Indians (Also known as the Snake Nation)
Culture: In the culture of the Shoshone Indians, all Shoshone men and women must cut their hair at the neck in a show of mourning. The Shoshone Indians have a rich culture to teach their children the history, language, and values of their ancestors. Every two years, the Shoshone Indians elected a new leader for the tribe. The Shoshones also hold cultural ceremonies, very similar to dances.
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Clothing: It was a culture that Shoshone clothing changed with the seasons, ranging from a simple a Breechcloth held on by a belt fastened around the waist for the men and aprons for the women to rabbit fur pants and jackets, and larger animal hides used as capes and coverings.The Shoshone indians wore clothing made of deer hides, and in very cold weather they wore robes made of buffalo.
Language: The Shoshonians spoke a language today called, Shoshoni. It is a Uto-Aztecan language of the western plateau. Shoshone is spoken across such a broad geographical region that it forms a 'dialect chain'--speakers of one Shoshone dialect can always understand the dialects of their neighbors, but not necessarily a more distant dialect. Taken together there are more than a thousand speakers of Shoshone dialects, which are still being learned by children today.
Art: Shoshone beadwork is well known on the contemporary powwow circuit, but the talents of numerous Shoshone artisans also includes basketry, games and toys, tools and weapons, hide paintings, and parfleche envelopes. As in all cultures, their art reflected their environment and the contacts they had with other cultures. Thus, art forms, materials, colors, patterns, etc., all changed and developed over time.
Food: The Shoshone diet included groundhog, jack rabbit, and other small mammals. Sometimes they had bird eggs. They used over 100 different types of seeds and plants. After the Shoshone got horses, they began hunting large game, such as deer, antelope, mountain sheep and bears. Because of horses they could go further to dig camas and other roots. The Shoshone-Bannock almost hunted the southeastern-Idaho bison to the point of extinction. When they ran out of bison in Idaho, they went to Wyoming and Montana to hunt bison. The Shoshone hunted mostly in the spring and the summer. Women gathered berries, roots, nuts, seeds, and insects. The men hunted for deer, squirrels, antelope, rabbits and water birds. When they hunted antelope and rabbits, they would surround the animals and herd them into nets to kill them. The Shoshone used snares and spring-pole traps, and pitfalls to trap animals. They used wooden and horn-bow and arrows to kill larger animals. Their arrows were made of obsidian.
Religion: The basis of the Shoshone religion was a belief in dreams, visions, and a Creator; and fostered individual self-reliance, courage, and the wisdom to meet life's problems in a difficult environment. Most of the Shoshone ceremonies are dances similar to the Great Basin Round Dances. The Bannocks shared the warfare practices of the Plains Indians, which included counting coups and taking scalps of enemies. They adopted the Scalp Dance from the plains tribes and during the reservation period began dancing the Sun Dance. Today the Sun Dance, a very important event especially to the Shoshone tribes of today, is held each summer.
Terrain: The Shoshone occupied what is today know as the states of California, Idaho, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming, although most of them seemed to be settled in the Snake river area in Idaho. Historical documents from the Lewis & Clark expedition often refer to the Shoshone as the "Snake Indians"; the actual name "Shoshone" means "The Valley People" . The name means “inland”, or "in the valley". The terrain varied, but it went from high snow covered mountains in the northern Rockies, up to the flat land and valleys, where herds of buffalo's awaited their extinction. It was typically rainy, making the soil more fertile, but still, flat.
Answer:
Not too long...?
o.O
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college pick'em week one winner gets 10 free points...winner and spread...there ya go!? Question: u dont have to answer them all it just lowers your chance of winning
Northeastern at Ball State
UTEP at Buffalo
Eastern Illinois at Central Michigan
Indiana State at Eastern Michigan
Hofstra at Connecticut
Jacksonville State at Georgia Tech
Vanderbilt at Miami (OH)
Eastern Kentucky at Cincinnati
Charleston Southern at Miami (FL)
Troy at Middle Tennessee
South Dakota State at Iowa State
North Carolina State at South Carolina
No. 23 Wake Forest at Baylor
Oregon State at Stanford
Temple at Army
Southern Methodist at Rice
Youngstown State at No. 2 Ohio State
Akron at No. 13 Wisconsin
No. 17 Virginia Tech at East Carolina
Coastal Carolina at No. 22 Penn State
Bowling Green at No. 25 Pittsburgh
Syracuse at Northwestern
Western Kentucky at Indiana
Maine at Iowa
Georgia Southern at No. 1 Georgia
Hawaii at No. 5 Florida
Southern Utah at Air Force
Ohio at Wyoming
No. 3 USC at Virginia
Villanova at No. 8 West Virginia
Utah at Michigan
Oklahoma State at Washington State
Towson at Navy
Delaware at Maryland
Tulsa at UAB
Illinois State at Marshall
Appalachian State at No. 7 LSU
Northern Iowa at No. 16 Brigham Young
McNeese State at North Carolina
TCU at New Mexico
South Carolina State at UCF
Mississippi State at Louisiana Tech
Chattanooga at No. 4 Oklahoma
Louisiana-Monroe at No. 10 Auburn
Florida Atlantic at No. 11 Texas
Eastern Washington at No. 12 Texas Tech
Florida International at No. 14 Kansas
Western Illinois at Arkansas
Northern Illinois at Minnesota
Memphis at Mississippi
James Madison at Duke
Western Michigan at Nebraska
Arkansas State at Texas A&M
Southern University at Houston
Louisiana-Lafayette at Southern Miss
North Texas at Kansas State
Tennessee-Martin at No. 19 South Florida
Boston College at Kent State
No. 24 Alabama at No. 9 Clemson
UC Davis at San Jose State
Answer:
It's too early in the season to know how ANY of these teams is going to do, so I'll just pick ALL HOME TEAMS (by at least 1) this week.
EDIT to Beachbabe: WHICH OSU?? There are THREE of them on this list!! (Oregon State, Ohio State, Oklahoma State) and I dare say, at least one of them is going to lose. (Oklahoma State to Washington State). (WHOOPS! Congrats to Okla. St. for proving me wrong on that one!)
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