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  • Trapping hurts Montana's economy

    Tom Gignoux|Updated Mar 20, 2014
    4

    Last year a 62-year-old Martin City woman was reduced to thrashing on the ground, covered with blood from her snapping, wounded dog while her 5- and 6-year old grandchildren looked on, crying in terror. The family was out for a walk. Their dogs were both caught in foothold traps hidden within feet of the road the children were running on. The grandmother was trying free her 100-pound dog. She did, finally, with a superhuman effort. The incident was reported to Fish, Wildlife and Parks in November 2013. They told her the set...

  • What if the hokey pokey is what it's all about?

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Mar 20, 2014

    It was close to 4 o’clock when I left my apartment to walk up the street to get a liter of milk, no specific destination in mind, just a purpose — buy milk. I could go to the frutera and buy milk and fruit. Or to the Farmacia for milk and an apple turnover. Or to the Oxxo for milk and pan dulce, a sweet treat for the next morning. Or to any of a dozen other small markets for milk and whatever might catch my eye. Instead, I crossed the street to Tony’s on the Bay, seated mysel...

  • Warrior spirit rises at Rocky Boy

    Carlos Herndon|Updated Mar 17, 2014
    1

    It was an honor to attend the community meeting held at Stone Child College on March 11. An amazing movement is being created by the people from a broad sector of Hi-Line communities. The meeting demonstrated an excellent format by allowing individuals from the communities to take the lead. Proactive and positive change always comes when individuals and communities empower themselves through a passion to see change become a reality. The meeting displayed the following elements commonly found in successful groups which I have...

  • It's still legal to torture plants

    Pam Burke|Updated Mar 14, 2014

    With a high level of self-entertainment and very little sense of self-preservation, my husband told me that I should teach a course on how to effectively torture and kill plants. Everybody’s a comedian. Too bad he isn’t good at it, I say. To be fair, evidence of my, um, expertise in this matter abounds in our household. And to be honest, he did just overhear me in my home office struggling, ineptly, to interview two greenhouse owners and letting slip a few stories of said tor...

  • In my next life, I'm going to be a man

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Mar 13, 2014

    “In my next life, I’m going to be a man. When I’ve punched the time clock, I’ll be off work, done for the day. Go home, grab a brew, the remote, grunt, and wait for dinner to appear. I won’t cook. I won’t clean. I won’t do dishes. Mess, what mess? Do laundry? I’ll wear them again tomorrow. Fold clothes, why? Prepare lunch to take to work? Nope. I’ll buy something at the store. I’ll scratch my privacies in public and grin, think it’s normal. Think burping and passing gas is sex...

  • Understanding Obamacare, and why it will ultimately fail

    Joe Balyeat|Updated Mar 11, 2014

    Since 1990, culminating with Obamacare, progressives progressively destroyed health insurance. How? By switching definitions. Old Definition: Insurance — current fixed, smaller payments to protect yourself from future potential unforeseen larger catastrophic events, based on actuarial equations. The potential future loss times percentage probability of occurrence equals cost of insurance. Example: $1 million catastrophe exposure times 1 percent probability equals $10,000 insurance cost. The equation was a square deal … not...

  • A time to celebrate public access

    John Kelleher|Updated Mar 10, 2014

    Next week is Sunshine Week, a time set aside by the American Society of New Editors to discuss issues of access to public records. Montana has some of the best laws concerning the public’s right to know what state and local governments are up to, but that doesn’t mean it is easy to get access to records that ought to be public. The 1972 constitution and subsequent legislation guarantee the public’s right to information that was closed to the public in Montana. If you want to see what governments are doing, where they are s...

  • The only thing as strange as cats

    Pam Burke|Updated Mar 7, 2014

    I wonder about people. I wonder so much that sometimes I think a childhood accident must have stunted the growth of that brain part that reads body language. I can read animals better than I can people. Except cats. Cats make me wonder, too. Like when my cat sees a bird he’d like to snack on but knows he can’t get to, he drops his mouth open into a stiff, gap-faced smile, emits a raspy chatter and twitches his face so hard his whiskers bounce, all while staring at the bir...

  • The Tasmanian Devil strikes again

    Pam Burke|Updated Feb 28, 2014

    "This is my new horse Taz," says I. "What kind of a name is Taz?" says John. "I dunno," says I. "It's just the one he came with." "I don't like it," says John. "It's just a name," says I. "Sounds like Tasmanian Devil. Doesn't bode well for the future," says John. "Well, maybe he's a Tasmanian Angel," says I. "Ha, ha, haw!" says John, as he ends up getting the last laugh after all. The list of this horse's apparently uncontrollable quirks is long - from his joy of packing...

  • On the edge of possibility

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Feb 27, 2014

    I perch on that edge, jump back and forth across the line, ignore it, bow to it. Some days I refuse to recognize possibility, let inertia carry me like a raft on the Pacific tides, beyond sight of land. Last night I could not sleep. Instead of counting sheep or getting out of bed for a glass of warm milk and a game of solitaire or even arguing with a Higher Power which I could not describe coherently if my life depended on it, and it does, I borrowed a long-time friend’s m...

  • Shine, little glow reindeer, glimmer

    Pam Burke|Updated Feb 21, 2014

    Finland’s Reindeer Herder’s Association is trying something new this year to help save reindeer lives: glow in the dark reindeer. The story was originally reported Monday by Finnish national broadcaster YLE, but the title read “Poroille tarkoitetun heijastinsprayn tehtävänä estää liikenneonnettomuuksia,” so we hear straight from BBC.co.uk translators Tuesday that “Reflective reindeer antlers aim to stop accidents.” Apparently, as many as 4,000 reindeer are killed in traffi...

  • State retirees need to get involved in pension changes

    Patty Mott|Updated Feb 17, 2014

    The Association of Montana Retired Public Employees is standing up to protect the legal rights and pension benefits of thousands of state and local government retirees The association is not a group of highly paid members with a big support staff. Just the opposite. The organization’s leaders are volunteers donating their time because they care about retirement issues affecting all Montana public employees. They care about government not reneging on its promise to those workers. And they have been very busy. The 2013 L...

  • Recycle Hi-Line - 6 years old

    John Kelleher|Updated Feb 17, 2014

    Some day, generations down the road, people will be mining the area where the landfill east of Havre is now located, Hill County Sanitarian Clay Vincent believes. They will be looking for things of value — the cans, bottles, plastics — that we now bury at the landfill. So Vincent, who supervises the landfill for the Unified Disposal District, has an idea. Why don’t we mine those materials today? We should make sure they don’t end up at the landfill. Instead, we should recycle the plastics, glass and other materials that no...

  • Jobs, shmobs, give the stuff back

    Pam Burke|Updated Feb 14, 2014

    I am tired of the gradual short-changing of America. Yes, yes, of course, we’ve heard it all before about how everybody wants a job, a job that pays a decent wage, and everybody who’s anybody knows that the only way that’s going to happen is for the wealthiest of the wealthy and those rotten over-paid CEOs to share the wealth, but I think that’s a little shortsighted. Yes, folks, get those jobs lined out, and the ultrahigh-minimum wage paychecks, too, but make those corporate...

  • Prevention of parvovirus is key

    Bear Paw Veterinary Service|Updated Feb 13, 2014

    Parvovirus is one of the top infectious killers of puppies and young dogs. It can be prevented with proper care and vaccination. The staff at Bear Paw Veterinary Service would like to help the public to understand and prevent this disease. Parvovirus is spread through contact with the feces and vomitus of infected animals. Parvovirus is very resilient and can live several months in the environment. About the only things that can kill this virus in the environment are sunshine and bleach. Dogs infected with parvovirus will...

  • Next year country or mañana country

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Feb 13, 2014

    Living several years in Montana, known as “Next Year Country” because of vagaries of climate and other erratic conditions, was good transitional training for relocating to Mexico, “Mañana Country”. Consider mail delivery. Anyone in a small town on the north-central Montana plains will tell you that a letter from either coast takes four days to arrive. Overnight or express delivery also takes four days. That’s just the way it is. One learns to shrug and compensate. Last week, I...

  • No math for that accounting

    Pam Burke|Updated Feb 7, 2014

    Several years ago, a colleague showed up to work limping. After I asked him about it, he revealed that he’d gotten kicked by a horse, each hind hoof connecting with a corresponding buttock, sending him flying headfirst into a snow drift. It’s worth taking a moment to picture that, a mental image that is equal parts horrifying, rich with sympathy pains and hilarious. OK, mostly hilarious. (That is the sort of thing that happens to Yosemite Sam and Wile E. Coyote all the tim...

  • Feds should ensure snow-free sidewalks

    Rick Dow|Updated Feb 6, 2014
    8

    Our sidewalks are not being cleared of snow to universal approval. Havre’s current ordinance calls for homeowners to clear the sidewalks on their property within 24 hours. Why are the property owners being asked to maintain a public walkway? Are they asked to clear the streets in front of their houses and businesses as well? The answer is, obviously, “No.” This expectation of the citizens to take responsibility for shoveling sidewalks is downright dangerous because it lessens our dependence on government services. Furth...

  • 'Winter in the Blood' celebrates Montana's Hi-Line

    Bill Thackeray|Updated Feb 6, 2014

    The one thing that the producer/directors of the new film "Winter in the Blood" capture in a remarkable way is the stunningly spectacular scenery of the mountains, plains and riverbottoms of north-central Montana. Alex and Andrew Smith, the movie-makers from Missoula who were inspired to make a movie of James Welch's first major novel, lay out the striking region of the Hi-Line in a way that has never been seen in film before. But not only is the natural scenery of the region captured very well in the film but also we get a...

  • If it had been a rattlesnake

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Feb 6, 2014

    Those familiar dangers we learn from childhood on are such a part of our consciousness that they carry instinctual wisdom and warnings that become second nature. Growing up in the Milk River Valley and the foothills and plains beyond, we know to stay away from the river in flood, stay out of the pasture with the mean bull and don’t pick up a baby rattlesnake, cute or not. Such wisdom even tells us if the rattlesnake has just had its head chopped off, leave it for a while. Refl...

  • 'Winter in the Blood' delivers deep, real story

    John Paul Schmidt|Updated Feb 3, 2014

    “Winter in the Blood” is finally showing in Hi-Line theaters after gracing cinemas in Missoula, Minneapolis and London, as well as various film festivals. The film follows Virgil First Raise, played by Chaske Spencer, and his inner turmoil as he drowns in a dream-world of liquor caught in between two worlds, neither of which he feels he belongs in. First Raise struggles with finding a cultural identity after he is told he is a “half-breed,” and begins experiencing disconnect at both his family’s ranch and the towns he freque...

  • Stream access ruling a victory for the people

    John Gibson|Updated Jan 31, 2014

    The recent ruling by the Montana Supreme Court upholding our state’s stream access law and the ability of everyone to get to streams from county roads is a victory of all Montanans and all who enjoy our public waters. It also illustrates the stark difference of views about who should get to enjoy public land and water. The case, Public Access v. Madison County, challenged a landowner’s ability to block off access to the Ruby River at three bridges used by the public for decades. James Cox Kennedy, a Ruby Valley landowner and...

  • Giants among the people

    Evan Barrett|Updated Jan 31, 2014

    All of us see the world through the prism of our own experience. As I look back through that prism, I can still see, hanging on my parents’ hallway wall, three pictures — Jesus Christ, Franklin Delano Roosevelt and John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers Union. These men, these giants, informed my family’s political and life perspective, and mine as well. The values of those three giants led me to a life of political and community activity based upon a belief that the backbone of America is the people — the wor...

  • The devil's earworm made me do it

    Pam Burke|Updated Jan 31, 2014

    I hate to sound all hard-core, fundamentalist, evangelical religious, but it just may be true that music is the instrument of the devil. And if that’s the case, the music website Pandora.com is the devil’s stomping grounds, and the earworm — aka the song stuck in your head — is his irritating little minion. For someone like me who really enjoys music but is not an avid-enough lover of music to keep up on new artists and to actually spend money to buy music, Pandora is an amazi...

  • Ode to spring and the nesting syndrome

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Jan 30, 2014

    Spring lurks around the corner patiently waiting to burst forth into kaleidoscopic glory. Down here in Mexico, while daily temperatures peak in the perfection of the lower 80s and bougainvillea, weighty with color, drape over every upright structure, who can tell from spring! Not much to go by but a calendar. If one has a calendar. When the New Year approached I could not find a new calendar. I’m an old hand at making do. My much-scribbled 2013 calendar is filling the gap. F...

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