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  • Rehberg's homeland security bill is scary

    Vic Miller

    The U.S. House of Representatives is considering a dangerous bill that should have all of us in Montana — and especially those of us in the northern tier — on high alert. It's called the National Security and Federal Lands Protection Act (House Resolution 1505 if you want to look it up yourself), and it gives the federal government sweeping new power to shut down our public lands. The National Security and Federal Lands Protection Act is co-sponsored by Rep. Denny Rehberg, and it is exactly the kind of Big Government Mon...

  • Rifling through the pages of the Internet

    Pam Burke

    "I read the dictionary once. I thought it was a poem about everything." — Steven Wright, comedian. When my parents retired early, sold off most of their stuff and went on the road in their fifth-wheel trailer and pickup, I said fine, good riddance, but I want my inheritance now: The 6-inch thick tome of a dictionary that they'd had since I was a toddler. I have loved that book since my earliest memories. When I was too young to read, but asking my dad what words meant, he'd s...

  • Cuts to preventive health care would be costly and would cause deaths

    Hillary Hanson, Alicia Thompson, Ellen Leahy, Melanie Reynolds

    By Hillary Hanson, Alicia Thompson, Ellen Leahy, Melanie Reynolds The United States is having a furious debate about how best to address the nation's financial problems. A variety of proposals have been suggested, but we need to be careful. Making poor decisions now could result in even worse problems down the road. This is the case with proposed cuts to federal funds for preventive health programs in Montana. Do you remember Benjamin Franklin's quote, "An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure"? This is precisely the c...

  • The completely harmless horsehair worm

    Sondra Ashton

    Sondra Ashton As one of my duties as a Harlem city councilperson, I serve on the Unified Disposal Board. Every fall this board meets at the landfill rather than in our usual meeting room at the courthouse. This fall, we met at the new landfill. After the meeting, while we were putting away chairs and wandering around admiring the pristine new facility, occupied with chit-chat and discussion of the football season, Clay Vincent spotted a cricket skittering across the sparkling...

  • Secrets? We don't need no stinkin' secrets

    Pam Burke

    I don't like secrets. The whole point of a secret isn't to keep information from people; the point is to let them know that you know something they don't know, usually for some ulterior motive. If someone really wants to keep information confidential, they simply don't say anything, right? You don't know they know something worth knowing because they know how to keep their pie hole shut. Y'know? Pam Burke If, for example, you walked into your neighbor Darwin's home office and...

  • Leaving - but with wonderful memories

    Martin Cody

    I have moved many times over the years; it is the price you pay when you decide early on that you want a career in newspapers. However, it never gets easy saying goodbye to friends and relationships that developed over this time. This Saturday, the movers will roll up to my house and by the end of the day I will be leaving Havre for Ottumwa, Iowa. I have accepted the position as president and publisher of the Ottumwa Courier. Martin Cody Yes, I will be leaving, but I will be taking with me the memories of the two years I...

  • Stealing chokecherries from the birds

    Sondra Ashton

    I planted chokecherry bushes in my yard. I don't know what I was thinking. Certainly I had not intended to create a chokecherry plantation. They were given to me, those desiccated branches. I stuck the dozen bare-naked sticks into the gumbo. I wasn't sure any would survive. I hoped one chokecherry might live which I would keep pruned into a bush. Each August I would be able to go out into my back yard, fight off the birds with flailing arms and pick enough of the puny little...

  • Bring troops home from Iraq by year's end

    Sen. Jon Tester

    As of this week, 4,475 American servicemen and women have paid the ultimate price in Iraq. Among them: 28 Montanans who died as heroes. More than 32,000 other U.S. troops have returned home wounded. And we may never be able to fully count those who struggle with injuries we cannot see. Our nation has been at war in Iraq for nearly nine years — longer than our involvement in both world wars combined. In addition to the sacrifice of thousands of Americans, the price tag is approaching $1 trillion — as much as $60 billion of...

  • The truth about HB 198 - eminent domain

    John Fitzpatrick, NorthWestern Energy

    The 2011 Montana Legislature is over. House Bill 198, the eminent domain bill, passed and is now law. The bill did NOT expand the traditional scope of eminent domain in Montana. Since Montana's early days, eminent domain has been an essential (but rarely used) tool to build important infrastructure. HB 198 simply clarified that this would still be the case in the future. HB 198 faced strenuous opposition from groups in north-central and southwestern Montana attempting to obstruct construction of the Montana Alberta Tie...

  • Land swap in the Breaks Monument a bad idea

    Ron Poertner

    The last thing landowners operating in the shadow of the Missouri Breaks Monument wanted to hear is that Gov. Brian Schweitzer and BLM Director Bob Abbey are reportedly in lock step over plans to swap out all the state land in the Monument. Landowners are aware that monuments have a way of morphing into national parks and the removal of state and private land holdings could be a step toward that end. At present, there is little chance a national park in the Breaks would be approved because parks cost money to run and our...

  • Montana exports warrant commercial status for Wild Horse

    Paul Tuss

    Montana's economy is fueled by the dynamic interplay of many sectors that are dependent on one another in order to be successful. One area of our economy that involves several industries and has been a bright spot for our state is exporting. In 2010 alone, Montana exported $1.96 billion in goods to other countries, making last year our second most successful year ever for exports. Only 2008 was a better year for Montana in this important category. In order for our state's export-dependent industries to continue to grow, it...

  • I started out with nothing, I still have most of it

    Sondra Ashton

    Sondra Ashton Without trying to eavesdrop, it is funny what one overhears. A couple weeks ago, on my way to Washington, I stopped for a fish sandwich at a diner in Ritzville. As my order to-go was being prepared, I stood back out of the way. I wasn't really paying attention to anything, when I overheard a conversation from behind the counter. The pony-tailed manager harangued his youthful employee. "The orders are backing up. Ya gotta work harder. How ya gonna get anywhere in...

  • Support your local Bullhook Community Health Center

    Tristan

    Essie St. Dennis and members of the Bullhook Clinic Board of Directors A leaner federal budget might be the order of the day in the nation's capital, but in our corner of rural America the solution is not so simple. Cutting programs that provide vital services to vulnerable populations — and specifically the federal Community Health Centers program — might actually increase the costs borne by all taxpayers. In our experience as Community Health Center board members serving our community here in Havre, we see firsthand wha...

  • Pamville News: We've got a study for that

    Tristan

    The public is feeling a little light-headed from the deluge of recent news about economic turmoil, and Pamville News is here to continue sucking the oxygen out of the topic with these news items. Pamville News reporters have discovered that www.msnbc.com contributor Brian Alexander has discovered that psychologist and social scientist Dacher Keltner has discovered this shocking information: Rich people are different from poor folk — different in a not good way. Pam Burke Keltner and his team have "done 12 separate studies mea...

  • The long, hot road trip down memory lane

    Tristan

    The recent fouling of Montana's Yellowstone River is a warning alarm that we must be more diligent to secure the integrity of our priceless waterways. Yesterday's farmers, ranchers, miners and honyockers needed the rivers. Now, under increasing industrial and population pressures, the rivers need us. As with other states, Montana once mistreated many of our rivers, using them as public sewage dumps and mine waste depositories. Early-day farmers and ranchers dewatered the springs and creeks, grazers ruined the riparian...

  • Reach out and touch someone: a meditation on communication

    Tristan

    Sondra Ashton A friend and I were having lunch. "Listen, I've got to show you this." From his pocket he extracted a slim rectangle, about the size of five credit cards clumped together. "My new smart phone," he bragged. "I've joined the brave new world of multiple communications. I can know immediately what goes on anywhere in the world. Let me show you the things it can do. The only thing I haven't figured out is how to get it to serve me breakfast in bed." "With your job that makes sense. But I'm not that important," I...

  • The rust-bird of happiness has ruined everything

    Pam Burke

    Pam Burke We ought to just call the vet and have me put down and out of misery, give me the long sleep goodnight — now that I don't have anything else to live for, it seems like the humane thing to do. It's a tragic tale. I was going along breathing in and out just fine and then my husband took a photograph of the bird that's been eluding our identification for almost 20 years. Now look at me. I'm directionless. Afloat in a sea of life rendered moot (as in deprived of all p...

  • Back to the Border Bar - and memories of street dances

    Sondra Ashton

    The other day I was at Harlem City Hall for a swimming pool committee meeting. I don't know how I got on the pool committee. I don't know how to swim. I have tried numerous times to learn. The city has a great team of lifeguards this year, and they promised me that they can teach me to swim. I wouldn't put money on it. But this is not about swimming. Sondra Ashton Before I left the office, I ran into a friend from Malta. "Have you been out to pick asparagus this year?" he...

  • Dining out on the town at Little Rockies Center

    Sondra Ashton

    My friend Katie recently became manager (that is probably not her official title) at the Little Rockies Center here in Harlem. The Little Rockies Sondra Ashton Center houses the Sweet Medical Clinic in several rooms, a number of apartments for senior residents, and a gathering place for senior citizens and other community members. The facility includes a well-stocked kitchen and large dining room with comfortable chairs around huge tables. Although Katie had insisted that I...

  • A voice of reason in a world gone absurd

    Pam Burke

    Call off the Border Patrol, send home the National Guard, I am the front line against terrorism 'round these parts. In fact, according to Nepal Airlines' standards, I should be getting a Congressional Medal of Honor for carrying on every day, fighting the good fight, battling the forces of evil in a world gone mad, for I am the mighty mouse killer. The Associated Press reported Monday that flight attendants on a Nepal Airlines flight to Bangkok saw a mouse in the pantry and...

  • My mystical experience with birds and other flying objects

    Tristan

    I consider myself to be a somewhat mystical person. Some days I am opti-mystic and other times I revert to pessi-mystic. Last Friday I drove to Conrad to visit friends. It was a Friday much like any other Friday. I had not even crossed the county line when a gull flew at me, skirted my windshield and flew on. I thought it looked me in the eye as it flew across the hood. Sondra Ashton I have long had a special relationship to many birds, but especially crows. Once when I had been having a rough day and was driving along in a...

  • If you care about fairness, you should care about unions

    Al Ekblad

    Think the war against workers is only about union members? Think again. One of the story lines that the anti-worker, corporate agenda is trying to sell is the idea that unions did a lot of good a long time ago but they are no longer needed because now we have laws. Well across this nation, anti-worker forces are not only trying to destroy collective bargaining rights, they have launched an all-out assault on the laws that protect all workers and their children. As a result, the political climate is worse now for working...

  • Extending Wild Horse hours show visitor spending potential

    Debbie Vandeberg

    It is safe to say that the reason we love Montana and choose to live here are the same reasons that 10.5 million people choose to visit our state for a long weekend or their vacation. While research from the UM's Institute for Tourism and Recreation Research shows that non-residents visiting our state are certainly attracted to our two national parks, many enjoy our open spaces, friendly faces and small towns. Nearly 8 percent of Montana's non-resident visitors are from Canada, with 57 percent coming from Alberta and 13...

  • Don't ask, and don't tell me either

    Pam Burke

    A friend commented to me the other day that she'd seen someone she knew in town who looked like he'd lost weight, but my friend was embarrassed to ask about any weight loss because she didn't want the guy to feel uncomfortable. Obviously, my friend is socially inept. Who wouldn't want to be asked if they've lost weight? Because "Hey, have you lost weight?" sounds a lot like "You look hot, babe." Even if they say no, they've gained weight, you could say: "Well, you must be...

  • 70 years after Pearl Harbor, he's still fighting

    John Kelleher

    Alvin "Bud" Christopherson, 86, last week was back in the town where he spent much of his youth. Bud came to Havre from his home in Salem, Ore. to attend his younger brother's funeral. Hank Christopherson, 85, died Oct. 22, marking the passing of another from the Greatest Generation that won World War II for the United States and for civilization. The Christophersons were born and raised in Montana, following their father, who work for the Burlington Northern Railway, up and down the Hi-Line. Havre Daily News/Nikki Carlson...

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