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  • A perfect world is a doubt-free world

    Pam Burke

    I wish I were one of those people who is totally self-assured — you know, the kind who never starts a sentence with "I wish." They always think in absolutes and speak in declarative sentences that start with phrases like "I will" and "This is." They say "I am the answer to all the questions worth asking." Usually not out loud, of course, except maybe into the mirror in the morning. Pam Burke "Would you ... ?" "Could you ... ?" "Should you ... ?" do not enter into their c...

  • Affordable Care Act protects Montanans

    Bishop Jessica Crist

    In the coming weeks and months, the Supreme Court will decide the fate of the Affordable Care Act. This law has been debated contentiously and has become subject to partisan politics. Through all of the debate, however, it seems we've lost sight of the urgent problems that drove Washington to seek a solution in the first place. The new law is not perfect and still needs work, but we believe it is the right thing to do for the people of our country and Montana. As members of the faith community and leaders in our churches, we...

  • Why I support the Keystone XL Pipeline

    Sen. Jon Tester

    Eastern Montana's oil fields are leading the way to better American energy security, more Montana jobs and a stronger economy. But Montana needs the Keystone XL pipeline to expand our market opportunities, our energy security and our economy by getting our oil to refineries and to the market. Energy development in the Bakken oil fields started decades ago. Today, the region produces 500,000 barrels of oil per day. Since 2005, production has grown 150 percent. I recently visited Richland County to tour its oil rigs and see...

  • Schools deserve better support from OPI

    Sandy Welch

    Few things are more important to a community than well-run and locally controlled schools. Virtually all school districts, along with teachers, parents, and community leaders, strive to provide the education and training our children deserve with less money than in times past. While local communities band together, however, State Superintendent Denise Juneau and the Office of Public Instruction have proven themselves to be unreliable partners. Sandy Welch Building a new school is no small decision. Responsible and engaged com...

  • I flinch in the face of motivation

    Tristan

    Pam Burke As strange at it may seem to read about me, I had an interesting conversation with a health professional about fitness a while back — of course, it wasn't like I was setting up an exercise regimen or something crazy like that, so no worries. We were actually talking about motivation, and the pro told me about adopting the inspiring motto of a competitor he'd met; she'd had it tattooed on her arm: "Never Weaken." "I've been doing more cardio," he said, "and when I'm ready to quit, but know I need to go a few more m...

  • Cleaning house: This is how I roll

    Pam Burke

    Two weeks ago I received that call that everyone who is me dreads — "Hi, honey, your dad and I will be there to visit over the holiday weekend" — the call to emergency action of the dusting, vacuuming and sterilizing kind. Don't get me wrong, I absolutely love my parents and have been wanting them to visit for quite a while, but honestly, how foolish can they be to come stay with me before spring-cleaning season? Pam Burke I thought I raised my parents to make healthier cho...

  • When a coffee snob gets her comeuppance

    Sondra Aashton

    After years of living in Seattle, it is no surprise that I developed a taste for exotic coffee. Certainly more exotic than everyday Folgers. I'm not rigid about my coffee. I'll drink any kind of coffee as long as it is hot. Coffee at the diner, coffee with friends, coffee while traveling; I'll drink it without complaint. But, I confess, behind the closed doors of my own home, I am a coffee snob. Each morning I grind my designer coffee beans fresh. I carefully bring water not quite to the boil. I measure an exact heap of groun...

  • Trying to shortchange the IRS

    Joe Barnhart

    During every tax season it becomes painfully obvious there are two types of American taxpayers: those who know the federal government wastes millions of dollars and those who are, for lack of a better word, dead. Yet, the living actually believe they can short-change the IRS. Such optimism is rather refreshing — stupid — but refreshing. If I filled out our tax returns I'd be writing this from prison. My wife, who excels at such things as thinking, does them. Thank goodness. She also helps with the Volunteer Income Tax Assista...

  • Montana sportsmen support roadless areas

    Tim Aldrich

    We live in Montana for a number of good reasons; one huge one is that our state is home to the best hunting and fishing in the United States. That is why many sportsmen and women across Montana are standing up for backcountry roadless lands by strongly opposing The Wilderness and Roadless Area Release Act (House Resolution 1581). Tim Aldrich This bill would harm critically important wildlife habitat, adversely effecting hunting and fishing opportunities by removing protections and opening the door for new road construction...

  • The joy of socks: My little addiction

    Sondra Ashton

    After living 25 years in Washington, after moving back home to Montana, I found myself unpacking boxes of socks. I stuffed, crammed and shoved socks into four large dresser drawers. Dress socks, floral socks, striped socks, plain socks. Cotton socks, woolen socks, rayon socks, flocked socks. Theme socks, purple socks, white socks, colored socks. Boot socks, sports socks, fuzzy socks, fussy socks. Thick socks, thin socks, long socks, short socks. I realized I might have a...

  • Gary Marbut column was 'void of facts'

    Randy Newberg

    A recent rant submitted by Gary Marbut of Montana Shooting Sports Association is so void of fact that it requires rebuttal. If left unchallenged, stories can be accepted as the truth, so I provide some facts to balance his attack on common sense. His claim of Fish, Wildlife and Parks' "shocking tolerance and support for large predators," stems from a federal reintroduction of gray wolves and federal courts treating wildlife management as abstract legal theory rather than science. Fact is there was nothing FWP could do to chan...

  • Local government should be transparent

    Robert Freeman

    We hear about transparency frequently. It's become a buzz word used by politicians, and especially by their critics, so frequently that it seems too often to have lost its meaning. Everyone wants transparency, but we've learned that achieving it is rare. I am among the fortunate few to be employed by the government to promote open government. The New York Committee on Open Government was created in 1974 (when I was loaned, temporarily, to get this new office off the ground) as part of the state's Freedom of Information Law,...

  • There are consequences when children go hungry

    Thale Dillon

    Few people would consider it right to let a child go hungry, though odds are many do not consider the implications of such hunger beyond the discomfort of a growling stomach. However, the cumulative consequences of children growing up without proper nourishment are much more far-reaching and serious. Food influences a child's health, beginning during pregnancy. When a mother lacks nutritious food during gestation, there is an increased risk of the baby being born at low birth weight, perhaps with cognitive and physical...

  • Plastic bags aren't just ugly, they're costly to taxpayers

    Candi Zion

    I recently read Pam Burke's column titled "Confessions of a former plastic bag fan" (page 4, April 27) with great interest as parts of our property are located directly west and directly east of the new landfill. Our east property fence and coulees have become increasingly impacted by and filled with blowing debris, mostly plastic, which has also moved into the pastures and trees. It's a horrible sight. The beautiful landscape now cruelly punctuated by man's plastic creation. One of my favorite places is the pasture benches...

  • 24/7 Sobriety Program makes our roads safer

    Steve Bullock

    One year ago, on May 6, 2011, Gov. Brian Schweitzer signed House Bill 106 into law. That law authorized a new program — the 24/7 Sobriety Program — and heralded a new attitude toward repeat drunk drivers in Montana. The bill was sponsored by Rep. Steve Lavin, R-Kalispell, a Highway Patrol sergeant who had recently lost two colleagues to drunken drivers. Under the 24/7 Sobriety Program, anyone arrested for a second or subsequent DUI is required to submit to a breath test, twice a day, every day — paid for by the offen...

  • Join AARP and the letter carriers to help Stamp Out Hunger in Montana

    Joy Bruck

    Every day more than 20,000 older Montanans face the risk of hunger. They're our friends, our neighbors and our family, and they don't want to be a burden, so they suffer in silence. That's why AARP Montana has teamed up with the National Association of Letter Carriers to fight hunger in local communities throughout the state. What can you do in a single day to help us fight hunger in Montana? On Saturday, there's an easy answer: Donate nonperishable food products to Stamp Out Hunger, the nation's largest one-day food drive....

  • Weather delayed but didn't stop Havre Pride

    Tristan

    Editor: Mother Nature really didn't cooperate with our first Havre Pride cleanup on April 28. And, she came back the next weekend with a not so nice day to clean up Havre. In spite of the weather, though, we had folks out on both weekends, and to them a big thank-you. The many partnerships that have been developed recently to make the Havre Area Chamber of Commerce's Havre Pride community cleanup an even bigger event have been great. Thank you to all the partners: - Opportunity Link Inc. - Energy Corp. - Recycle Hi-Line -...

  • Culture has always been freely shared

    Zach White

    From a diatribe of mine a few weeks ago, some readers may have gotten the impression that I have disdain for media companies, copyrights and associated law. But that's not it. I respect those companies a lot. They create opportunities for creative people to share their vision. They are culture creators. Zach White It is because of these companies and their products that the entire world shares a base of knowledge that allows us to relate, reaching beyond ethnic or national boundaries, with iconic characters, images or stories...

  • Be prepared: It ain't just for Scouts anymore

    Pam Burke

    I am planning a train trip to North Dakota and — as hard as it is for me to contemplate going to an exotic foreign country without my husband, my dog and that herd of four-legged free-loaders — it's the thought of traveling by public transportation that is really disturbing me. You've read the headlines. You know what happens when a bunch of strangers are crammed together in a vehicle of mass conveyance. Mental switches that are better left in their upright and locked pos...

  • Plastic sacks cause damage to environment

    Clay Vincent

    For many years now, I have been hearing comments from many Havre and Hill County residents concerning the visual problems associated with blowing plastic sacks throughout the county. Plastic sacks that are used to carry various items from local stores have a brief life of service, and then they are disposed of. I have seen many people purchase large volumes of groceries, collect 8 to 10 plastic sacks to carry the items to the car or their home. Then the bags are discarded. As...

  • When grandparents go wild

    Pam Burke

    Grandparents Paul and Belinda Berloni were arrested Sunday by Sarasota County Florida sheriff's deputies for driving their SUV down a public access road while drunk ... and towing their 7-year-old granddaughter in her toy plastic car. A good time was being had by all, reports NBCMiami.com, with drunken Paul driving the SUV, drunken Belinda in the SUV's cargo area shouting encouragement through the open hatch and the presumably sober little girl wheeling along in the toy car....

  • On the cutting edge of dieting technology

    Joe Barnhart

    NEWS FLASH: Japanese researchers discover "diet-glasses!" Island nation sinks under piles of uneaten "raw squid, wrapped in beef entrails" sushi. Researchers, who graduated at the bottom of their class, are experimenting with food bloating spectacles that make rodent hairs in your corndog visible. The revolutionary glasses snap the food's picture and then replay an increased image. Food increases but bodily appendages, like warts, remain the same size tricking your brain into thinking you're either gorging yourself or are...

  • Exploring the importance of the internet

    Zach White

    Zach White The Internet is the most significant human invention since the printing press, at least. In the 20 years that the World Wide Web has been used publicly, it has already caused drastic changes in how people live, work, and play. At its most basic, the Internet is a tool for exchanging ideas. Some of those ideas are as simple as "This cat is funny." Others, as seen in the Middle East in the past two years, can be ideas that a government or media outlet can't or won't share about secret oppression and brutality. I...

  • Combining church and state precipitates a higher sewer rate

    Rick Dow

    The United States has a long tradition of keeping church and state separate. The U.S. Declaration of Independence was based on Virginia's Declaration of Rights, which was written by George Mason. When it became clear that the Bill of Rights would not be in the U.S. Constitution, Mason refused to sign it. He wanted to make sure that our country did not have an established religion. Fortunately for all Americans the Bill of Rights, the first 10 amendments to the Constitution, was ratified just three short years after the...

  • Pamville: Free speech vs visual learning

    Pam Burke

    As the Pamville News editor I stand four-square in favor of our First Amendment rights to free speech, but I worry that a recent court ruling will leave our country's visual learners at an horrific disadvantage. U. S. District Judge Richard Leon ruled Wednesday that government requirements for tobacco companies to label their products with graphic images — like rotting teeth and cancerous lungs which are intended to illustrate the dangers of smoking — violates free speech law...

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