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  • Pioneers move from cyberspace to outer space

    Zach White

    About 50 years ago, outer space was the future, with the USA and USSR battling to see who go farther and explore more. After the Soviets went broke and America declared victory and moved on, computers and the Internet ended up fueling scientific and technological progress. Now, the unimaginable mountains of cash that early Internet pioneers earned starting modern giants like PayPal and Google, are fueling a new privately funded and possibly profitable space travel renaissance. Today, possibly as you read this column, a rocket...

  • Small-town post offices: Are you listening, Uncle Sam?

    Sondra Ashton

    "Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds." In my formative years, that level of service was what the post office meant. Ah, sweet memories of a by-gone era. Uncle Sam, in his dubious wisdom, is locking the doors of many of our rural and small town post offices. Sondra Ashton The thought of such misfortune strikes terror in my heart. While Harlem is not on the immediate closure list, ours is a ve...

  • 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...

  • March madness: The burning questions

    Tristan

    I have questions. the deeply disturbing philosophical questions that keep one up in the night, imagining peace on earth and the easing of one's troubles. ——— Why do shoe departments always arrange the boxes of shoes on the shelf starting with the small sizes on the top and working down to the large sizes at the bottom? Pam Burke Pam Burke Wouldn't it be better to put the small shoes lower on the shelf where the short people can reach them, and the larger sizes higher where the tall people don't have to scrunch thems...

  • Thanks for talking with us during power failure

    Zach White

    These are difficult and confusing times in the news industry, with the Internet and social media changing the world, but you, our readers, gave us a glimpse of how it can work. Monday was a difficult and confusing time on the Hi-Line as a sudden blizzard dumped a foot or more of wet heavy snow all over north-central Montana. Courtesy photo/René Brown Havre Daily News Facebook fan René Brown shared this photo of her husband, Tom Brown, calving in the Bear Paw Mountains during Monday's blizzard. Other Facebook fans commented o...

  • Too much to do and not enough time

    Sondra Ashton

    What a week. I had guests from Port Townsend, Wash. David and Vidya arrived Monday afternoon, just in time to walk with me to City Hall for the council meeting. "This was better than theater," they both exclaimed. "It's got comedy, drama and a strong story line, all in one," said David. "I keep telling people," I said, "government meetings offer more entertainment than reality television. Maybe we should set up the meeting room with recliners, remotes and refreshments." I gigg...

  • Ambush elections taking aim at Main Street, Montana

    Riley Johnson

    Small-business owners in our state are struggling: struggling to stay afloat in a lagging economy; struggling to plan for a health care law that will take more money away from their business; struggling with regulations from Washington, D.C., that make running a business second in line to understanding compliance; struggling with a tax burden that is unfair and unjust. And now, word comes from Washington, D.C., via the National Labor Relations Board, that may soon force small-business owners to struggle to maintain the...

  • Last weekend, I was positively pony punked

    Pam Burke

    So I've read a few articles on the power of positive thinking, and I think it's safe to say that when I fell off my pony last weekend, I positively didn't mean to dismount that way. Yes, in an awe-inspiring display of my training ability and current state of physical prowess, I fell off a pony. No, "fell off" is not a understated way of saying "dumped off," "bucked off" or "launched," all terms that create dramatic images of a romanticized rough-and-tumble horse training...

  • Winning a common sense revolution

    State Sen. Ryan Zinke

    I am often asked "why run for office given the present political environment of distrust, misrepresentation, and personal attacks?" The simple answer is that I care about working families and the legacy we leave our children. I care about having better jobs and better education. I care about using our public lands for the benefit of all and developing our resources without harming our environment. I also care about the future of our country and believe the failure of partisan politics has put our nation and our state at...

  • 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...

  • This year, baseball's promises will be kept

    Pat Williams

    Baseball, like the swallows, is again moving north. It is spring and the national pastime with its civility and elegance is arriving in Montana just in time. Our four-month winter is over and, hopefully, so is the recent public frustration shadowing a few of Montana's student athletes. Baseball, despite doping allegations about some of its players, is, nonetheless, a curative played on green fields under warm afternoon high skies. Pat Williams As the majors celebrated opening day, we here in Montana are eager to take our...

  • Fracking is safe for Montanans, good for Montana

    Carl Graham

    So what's all the fuss about fracking? Its most vocal opponents charge that fracking will burn your water, pollute your air and cause the very ground to shift beneath you. The oil and gas industry obviously disagrees. So who's right? Well, not being a scientist I have to base my opinions on information I get from trusted sources, as do most of fracking's detractors. And based on that information my conclusion is that, just like the Keystone XL pipeline opposition isn't about pipelines, coal dust alarmism isn't about coal...

  • 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...

  • The Seed Show, nostalgia and homemade pie

    Sondra Ashton

    Only a few days before the 63rd Montana Seed Show and a nearly palpable excitement shimmers in the Harlem air. It's contagious. As I make my rounds in town, to the post office to pick up my mail, then to city hall to pay my water bill and on around the corner to Albertson's for buttermilk because I have a yen for biscuits in the morning and across the street to the Senior Center to say hello to Katie and whoever is hanging around, I hear, over and over, "See you at the Seed...

  • The plastification of my life, and other woes

    Sondra Aashton

    It seemed that everything happened at once. For one thing the armrest fell off the driver's side door of my aging van (my only vehicle, except for a dilapidated broom that I am grooming to take its place). The armrest is a pitiful specimen of plastification. It was held in place with three plastic pins, which sheared off flush, plus two plastic screws. The plastic washer/spacers had disintegrated into a tiny pile of rubble with a half-life equal to that of nuclear waste. I can get along without an armrest except that it is...

  • A crash course in computer hacking

    Zach White

    Let's talk about hackers. It is a more complicated word than people realize, largely because it is a more complicated word than most reporters realize. Contrary to the popular notion of a greasy, basement-dwelling, malicious nerd trying to guess your email password or trick you into giving over your social security number, a hacker by the most general definition is basically interchangeable with the word programmer or coder. It is just a person who writes computer programs, whether for keeping financial records, infecting...

  • Queen said it best, I want to ride my bicycle!

    Sondra Ashton

    I want to ride my bicycle; I want to ride it where I like. And therein lies the problem. My bicycle doesn't go anywhere. I grew up with a bike. I remember learning to ride, wobbly wheeled when my dad let go and I was on my own. But in no time I was riding my bike up and down our lane by myself. I rode for hours. I liked racing along the roadside. I loved the kiss of the wind in my face. Sondra Ashton When I was 23, I was in a serious automobile wreck that shattered my knee....

  • 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...

  • Guest column: Foster parents help prevent abuse, neglect

    Sarah Corbally

    The Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services is raising awareness this spring about the prevention of child abuse and neglect and the need for foster parents. For most people, child abuse and neglect is difficult to grasp. Yet, it continues to happen all over our nation and Montana is no exception. Thousands of calls are made every year to our toll-free child abuse hotline at (866) 820-KIDS. To raise awareness about the hotline, DPHHS has launched a media campaign called "Raise Your Voice for Montana Kids" that...

  • 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...

  • When the truth itches, it's false

    Pam Burke

    Pam Burke Our bodies — and stop me if you've heard this one — replace all of their cells every seven years. You've heard that one, right? Yeah, me too. It's not true. Some parts of our bodies never replace cells, like our brains and eye lenses, says Dr. Jonas Frisén of Sweden. What we get at birth is what we're stuck with, and it's all getting older every second. Pam Burke On the other hand, the lining of the small intestine replaces itself about once a week, says Quee...

  • When the truth itches, it's false

    Pam Burke

    Our bodies — and stop me if you've heard this one — replace all of their cells every seven years. You've heard that one, right? Yeah, me too. It's not true. Some parts of our bodies never replace cells, like our brains and eye lenses, says Dr. Jonas Frisén of Sweden. What we get at birth is what we're stuck with, and it's all getting older every second. On the other hand, the lining of the small intestine replaces itself about once a week, says QueeLim Ch'ng of King's College...

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