Richard Brautigan During the Week of April 9-13 Poet-Author Richard Brautigan Will Bring His Deeds to the MSU Campus and the Bozeman Community

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Richard Brautigan During the Week of April 9-13 Poet-Author Richard Brautigan Will Bring His Deeds to the MSU Campus and the Bozeman Community Harrisburg incident sparks anti-nuke protests (UPI) Anti-nuclear protestors grave radiation leak accident in crisp, 50-degree weather for a Consumer advocate Ralph Georgians Against Nuc lear around the nation and in Japan the United States. Immediately peaceful protest, listening to anti­ Nader addressed the group, Energy rally. Meanwhile, aoout Sunday demanded a moratoriwn suspend all nuclear power nuclear speeches and songs. calling the American nuclear 75 University of Georgia students on nuclear power and the shut­ generation for the survival of all However, President Carter was power plant program " this marched in the rain from the down of the crippled Three Mile life on earth," a streamer read. at Camp David Sunday. technological Vietnam. Again Athens Georgia power office to Island, Pa., plant or similar The sit-in ended in silent In California, about 7 ,000 and again this form of pernicious the steps of city hall, protesting facilities in their areas. prayers in memory of the persons marched in front of the energy has proved far too the rails shipments of nuclear More than 150 Hiroshima estimated 80,000 persons killed in San Franciso city hall to catastrophic, far too expensive •.....•.............••.....waste through Athens. atomic bomb victims and their August 1945 when American denounce a Pacific Gas and and far too unreliable to have a . supporters staged a sit-in at the planes dropped the world's first Electric Co., nuclear power plant place in the future of this coun­ : Brautigan at MSU Hiroshima Peace Park in Tokyo atomic bomb. scheduled to start operation this try," Nader said. to protest the Three Mile Island Across from the White House in year. The Diablo Valley plant is In the South, about 100 see page 6 nuclear accident. Lafayette Park, about 500 located near San Luis Obispo, on protestors gathered in cold "We saw Hiroshima in the demonstrators gathered in the the central California coast. drizzle at the Atlana Zoo for a .•............•............. EXPONENT Tuesday. April 10. 1979 Vol. 78. No. 39 Bozeman. ~IT Bill nullifies mandatory Native American Studies by Mary Williams teachers had already complied The Mo ntana State Con­ with the requirement, according stitution says that " ... the state of to William Thackery of Havre, a Montana recognizes the distinct 1978 delegate to the Delegate and unique cultural h eritage of Assembly of the Montana Native Americans," and Education Association. ( MEA ) " ... committed to its educational The MEA Board of Directors policy to serve them." According lobbyed in favor of the bill to Bob Peregoy, director for Contrary to the 360 teachers in Native A1n erican Studies at the MEA Delegate Assembly who MsU; H. B. 219 defeated that very have overwhelmingly supported purpose. the mandatory "Indian Studies" House Bill ~ 1 9 nulls a law that law. .\ccording to information made three credits in Indian supplied by Thackery, he feels Studi es mandatory for the MEA Board of Directors were teachers and students of directly r esponsible for the Education. Governor Thomas success of HB 219 . Judge signed H.B. 219 on April HB ~19 now in effect "takes the Thackery gives food for thought; "The Indians had a higher regard for individual freedom than other <.'nd. teeth out of the legislation," said government systems." (As opposed to European systems.) "Where else did Americans get their "Montana is the first to require Peregoy, as the HB 219 makes the original Idea for indepeod_eoce?" Indian studies for its teachers. Indian Studies requirements ernor is the only person voted by none of the historical background There is a little hope left , Other states were considering permissive rather than man­ all of the people; it was his the Indians' identity is lost in the however. according to Bob fo llowin g o ur lead," Bill datory. responsibility!" school system", Silverthorne Peregoy; "The schools that hire Thackery of Havre states. In Gov . Judge's statement, he Joyce Silverthorne, a Native submitted. This fact, she felt was teachers in Montana s hould "Montana was setting a good assured that he would support American and a teacher at Two­ specifically hard on the Indian require o r supply an Indian example for other states where a legislation "that will correct the Eagle River school, stated, children. Studies course." high percentage of the population situation" in 1981 if "teachers " Ninety-five per cent of the is American Indians. Now that abandon courses on Indians." history text books don't even they have reversed the action," Peregoy says that "he is mention Indian contributions or Thackery speaks regretfully, "I evading the issue, it's totally an ownership." Quite unfortunately Taxes help support'"' doubt other states will try to go exoneration!" From a plitical remarkable, she felt, c~nsider!flg ahead with any Indian Studies standpoint, Peregoy ex­ the 150,000 years Indians have program of their own. " plains,"The momentwn came lived in America. ex-presidents Eighty percent of Montana's from a small group, but the gov- "Because the teachers have WASHING TON (UPI) Taxpayers are shelling out close to $800,000 a year to support Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, America's only surviving former presidents, U.S. News and World Report said Sunday. Finance Board The magazine said the expenses cover such items as five color Senate concurs with television sets and repairs to an electric golf cart for Nixon and $23,000 in long-distance phone calls and $2,000 for office greenery by Mary Williams leaving an imageless "zero" on tatives left satisfied, with con­ for Ford. Some very interesting things their behalf. Any organization sideration of the tight financial. Quoting records filed with General Services Administration, the went on during budgeting; some that is "zeroed" from ASMSU's crisis ASMSU is in for the next magazine said Nixon's person al retirement benefits come to things didn't go on at all. budgeting picture cannot year. $86,000 under the Former Presidents Act and about $19,000 for his ASMSU's Student Senate voted resubmit a budget for the next A proud round of applause years in Congress. Ford gets about $106,000 a year in presidential to increase their own budget by two years, according to the awarded Jeanne Agar, director and congressional pensions. $1,580 over Finance Board's senate's constitution. of tbe Day Care Center after the Both former presidents are entitled to lifetime protection by the Recommendation. (FBR) This Spencer Thomas explains, "A sen~te had agreed to the F.B.R. Secret Service, free mailing privileges, health care at military was the highest increase in any of donation can only be made once that would allow for Jeanne's hospitals and use of government-owned townhouses in Washington. the given areas. to an organization that senies the raise of $2,000 next year. The GSA records show, the magazine said, that Nixon spent Approximately $700 will be public, rather than just MsU's jeanne origanally requested $11,329 in federal funds for office and related expenses last year, used for increased telephone fee-paying students." These were $~,000 less than last· year's w ch included $95,658 for eight members of his staff. bills ; $300 was added for the two most signifi.cant budget, thus giving up her own . ord spent $291,685 for offices and staff in 1978, including $150,000 senator's gratuities; $400 will be variations from the finance salary increase to the budgeting fo~ 12 staff members earing between $5,810 and $26,636. used for socializing; and $150 will board recommendations. pool. Unfortunately" she is Nixon has billed the government for only three air tickets, while cover the president's traveling The senate followed 72 per cent already underpaid, and will F d, who often uses aircraft supplied by private individuals, has expenses, according to Spencer of the F.B.R. to the very penny; remain so, despite the attempt to n er requested payment for an air ticket," the magazine said. Thomas, ASMSU's president. with some minor a1terations on repay her for her immense f: though Nixon has been in semi-seclusion at his San Clemente, The l'IBLP Center took the the remaining 28 per cent. amount of time and energy, Calif., his total travel expenses were $14,770, including auto ex­ largest cut $2,000 was eliminated, Most organization represen- and a job well done. penses ·of $518 a month, the magazine said. ~ EXPONENT 2 Tuesday A pril 10. 1979 ( SUBJECTIVELY~~~~~~~@ ] It looks likely that the draft will rise again One of the things remembered a out the 1960's is the A question is also raised regarding the economic increase in government output? draft and fight against it by various groups and rebelous results. Would the reinstatement of the draft boost the The issue is intricate ·and many faceted and com­ young men. Now it looks like the 1980's may also host the economy since it would remove a large number of young plicated by the emotion it generates in the mind of the draft. What started as a rumor is beginning lo look like a adults from the job market, or would it increase inflation general public regarding selective service. [~ prediction, for Congress is indeed contemplating the by increasing government spending with possibly small revival of the selective service draft. Time magazine emphasizes the reluctance of the pentagon to "crank up the old draft machinery", a ~""'· ~~~- reluctance that is well founded. In addition lo the displeasure of draft-age young men are the expense and conplications of finding" ho is eligible and where they are hving. ew issues must be dealt with as well as a more sophisticated, reactionary public.
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