• Issue Archive for
  • Jan 28 - Feb 3, 2010
  • Vol. 21, No. 4

News

  • Smog

    Montana eludes regs
  • The long road to victory

    On Dec. 8, 2009, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia settled one of the largest class-action lawsuits in the nation’s history. Cobell v. Salazar was fought for nearly 14 years in federal courts prior to the $3.4 billion settlement, and is now considered the greatest victory people in Indian Country have ever witnessed. We sit down with lead plaintiff Elouise Cobell, a Montana native and member of the Blackfeet Tribe, to discuss her historic victory.
  • Balance of power

    Kudos to Interior Secretary Salazar's new approach
  • Wheels

    Scooterville owners sell
  • Cut off

    Tess Raunig claims the popular gay bar discriminates against people with disabilities. The owner says he's done nothing wrong, and adds, "We're not a gay bar."
  • Beer

    Black Star back on tap
  • The great unwinding

    Rep. Denny Rehberg's announcement that he can't support the wilderness and logging legislation introduced by Sen. Jon Tester should come as no surprise to anyone who has watched Rehberg's political career over the last three decades.

Arts

  • No marrow

    Jackson buries substance in The Lovely Bones
  • Prefuse 73

    Everything She Touched Turned Ampexian
  • Strong words

    Writer Eileen Myles brings her post-punk style to UM
  • Natural women

    Montana Rep times Leading Ladies just right

Blogs

Food


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