In his 1944 story about the death of Capt. Henry T. Waskow, probably the most famous piece of war correspondence since Thucydides, Ernie Pyle described a soldier who looked at the body of the fallen officer and said, “God damn it to hell anyway” before walking off into the darkness. I first read that line when I was barely a teenager, and I used it at times of tragedy and loss for decades before I realized where I had stolen it. It came to mind again this weekend, when my wife and I returned from an emergency trip to Texas to bury her mother only to learn that longtime reporter and Outpost columnist Roger Clawson had died. (An obituary is below this column.) (more…) Continue Reading →
Recent Posts
David Crisp: The Internet and the death of simple pleasures
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I was thinking the other day about how much I hate computers. It’s not just that they have turned every American worker into a computer maintenance technician, or that ads pop up in the middle of the screen while I am trying to read something. It isn’t even that the only language computers seem to understand is profanity, nor that the screen may suddenly go blank at some crucial point. (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: From the Outpost, Billings Gazette, Jeff Welsch, Joshua Benton, Ken Doctor, Nieman Reports
Krakauer’s ‘Missoula’: Rape in a very small place
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Missoula: Rape and the Justice System in a College Town, by Jon Krakauer. Doubleday. 367 pages, hardbound. $28.95. The most notorious thing about Jon Krakauer’s latest book of investigative reporting is the title. Continue Reading →
Filed under: Culture, Fred Van Valkenburg, John Oliver, Jon Krakauer, Jordan Johnson, Kirsten Pabst, Missoula
Landowners plan to close another road into Pryors
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Owners of allotted land on the Crow Indian Reservation say they plan to block a main road leading into the Pryor Mountains beginning next week. Elias Goes Ahead, a member of the group, said allottees planned to meet Wednesday, Sept. 2, to prepare a list of demands. He said that he did not anticipate a response from federal or tribal officials that would prevent blocking Sage Creek Road, which leads into the Custer National Forest and the Pryor Mountains. (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: Montana, Bureau of Indian Affairs, Custer National Forest, Pryor Gap, Pryor Mountains, Sage Creek Road
David Crisp: Sympathy for Cecil? That’s how we’re wired
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When I deliver the Outpost on Thursdays, I have for years listened to conservative talk radio. It probably has made me more liberal than I ought to be. My contrarian streak runs deep. (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: From the Outpost, 'Voices of Montana', Aaron Flint, Cecil, E.B. White, Glenn Beck, ISIS
Tech-business alliance grows, Gianforte hits the road
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As members of the burgeoning Montana High Tech Business Alliance prepared to meet last week in Bozeman, they announced that the alliance includes 200 high-tech firms just a year after it was founded. (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: Montana, Billings Chamber of Commerce, Bob Wilmouth, Greg Gianforte, Montana High Tech Business Alliance, Noah, Steve Arveschoug
Dostoevsky: His art went beyond mere perfection
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The ’60s were a turbulent time. Millions of people had just gained real civil rights for the first time. Government distrust soared because of a failed war. Young people were exploring socialism, communes and free love. Alternative publications flourished. Continue Reading →
Filed under: Culture, Crimean War, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Marxism, Russia, St. Petersburg
David Crisp: Quickly gathering storm dooms Rebel flag
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Driving up North 27th Street on Saturday, I met an oncoming pickup truck with a Confederate battle flag proudly waving from its tailgate. No, wait. Flags can’t wave proudly. Pride, and any other emotion attached to flags, come only from the humans who view them. (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: From the Outpost, Abraham Lincoln, Confederate flag, gay marriage, Jon Stewart, Robert E. Lee, Rush Limbaugh, Supreme Court
Board votes to name middle school after Ben Steele
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The School District 2 Board of Trustees voted unanimously Monday to name a new West End school Ben Steele Middle School following a last-minute petition drive in support of Steele, a World War II veteran and longtime artist and art teacher in Billings. (more…) Continue Reading →
Filed under: Billings, Ben Steele, Jeanette Rankin, Joseph Medicine Crow, Kevin Toohill, School Board Joe Raffiani
David Crisp: Let’s ‘American Idol’-ize the GOP debates
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By weekly newspaper standards, things slow down here a bit in the summer, so I thought I would take a few minutes to solve a pressing national concern. Seriously, no problem, I’m happy to do it. Republicans and Fox News (or do I repeat myself?) are in a bit of a tizzy over how to handle upcoming presidential debates for GOP candidates. The problem is that there are too many candidates to fit on one stage. So Fox plans to let only the top 10 candidates debate, as reflected in current polling. Continue Reading →