05 August 2021

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Cowboy Hall Of Fame Celebrates Inductions

Cowboy Hall Of Fame Celebrates Inductions


The Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame & Western Heritage Center will celebrate the 13th class of inductees into the Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame on Saturday, Aug. 14, at the Heritage Inn in Great Falls. The inductees were selected from a field of candidates nominated by the general public. Inductees are honored for their notable contributions to the history and culture of Montana. Nomination

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William Yellow Robe Jr.

William Yellow Robe Jr.


William Stanley Yellow Robe Jr., Assiniboine playwright, actor, director and teacher, died in Bangor, Maine, on July 19, 2021. He was born Feb. 4, 1960, and raised on the Fort Peck Indian Reservation in Wolf Point. He attended reservation schools and was encouraged early by one of his teachers to become a writer. Becoming a playwright meant leaving the reservation. He attended the University of Montana in Missoula, honing his writing and acting skills, but encountering frustration when directors would cast him only in “Indian” roles, or not at all. He began to write his own plays, using the art form to tell stories of contemporary Native American people. He worked with other young Native American writers and actors all over the country in the budding Native American theatre movement of the 1980s. He was a member of La Mama Theater in New York, founded Wakiknabe Intertribal Theatre Company in Albuquerque, N.M., and became an advisor to Red Eagle Soaring Youth Theatre in Seattle, Wash. He was recognized early in his career as a recipient of a Princess Grace Fellowship and a Jerome Fellowship. He taught theatre and playwriting at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, N.M. Over the years, he was invited to lecture and teach at tribal colleges, Ivy League schools and state universities. Recently, he was a member of the Creative Writing faculty of the University of Montana, and a lecturer and Libra Professor at the University of Maine. He wrote over 70 plays, some of which are published in his three volumes of work: Where the Pavement Ends, Grandchildren of the Buffalo Soldiers and Other Untold stories and Restless Spirits. His plays have been produced around the United States and in Europe, including venues such as AmerLinda, Inc. and The Public Theatre in New York, Penumbra Theatre Company in St. Paul, Minn., Trinity Repertory Theatre in Providence, R.I., the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C., and at the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles, Calif. In December 2006, he married Jeanne Domek in South Dakota. Their time together was very happy, favorite activities included dog walks on the beach at New London, evenings of theater or movies and attending summer powwows hosted by Narragansett, Wampanoag and Pequot communities. Together, they

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29 July 2021

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Passengers’ Numbers Rising For Cape Air

Passengers’ Numbers Rising For Cape Air


With residents becoming more comfortable to traveling after COVID concerns, business is steadily improving for Cape Air for its Montana flights. After having 105,714 enplanements for Montana in January 2021, the figure increased to 109,823 for the month of February and 154,541 for the month of March. Enplanements in May were 174,503 in Montana for Cape Air. “We are delighted to see people

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School Officials Hold  Safe Return Meetings

School Officials Hold Safe Return Meetings


With the start of the school year fast approaching, Wolf Point school officials held public meetings to discuss a safe return from COVID 19 challenges. After one public meeting on July 13, the meeting on July 20 attracted additional community members to voice suggestions. Wolf Point Superintendent of Schools Loverty Erickson explained that one of the requirement of being eligible for COVID

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