Apparently, they don't teach spelling or humility in Fargo, or at least Bozonation didn't absorb them in Fargo.
I don't know how many times we've been on TV during our "existence," but since we were in the playoffs for something like 19 consecutive years and played in 7 NC games, it is quite a few, more than 14. And that's not to mention all of the regular-season games played on both local Montana TV and ROOT Sports--that's the regional Pacific NW sports' network for Bison fans that also features the Big Sky, PAC-12, Mariner's games, and coverage of the Seahawks as well as pro soccer and broadcasts in the Pacific NW: Montana, Idaho, Washington, and Oregon.
The scene is June 24-25, 1976. The US Army's 7th Cavalry is camped in the Wolf Mountains in SE Montana Territory. The command staff and scouts, commanded by Civil War veteran Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer, are at the Crow's Nest in the very early morning hours of the 25th, a low peak from which Custer and his scouts, led by Mitch Bouyer, a 39 year-old man whose father was a French Canadian fur trapper and whose mother was a Santee Sioux, are conferring about a huge Lakota and Cheyenne village in the Little Big Horn Valley. Custer and his men have been on the move since May, when they left Fort Abraham Lincoln near present-day Bismarck, North Dakota to force the Lakota Sioux and Northern Cheyenne back onto their reservation in Dakota Territory.
Bouyer: General Custer, that village is huge--I have never seen a larger Indian village in all of the years I have been a scout.
Custer: I don't know, Bouyer, I couldn't see the village clearly. We are going to attack--there's only supposed to be 800 total--women, children, old people and maybe 200 warriors.
Bouyer: In that case, General I have good news and bad news.
Custer: Give me the bad news first, Bouyer.
Bouyer: There are 10-12,000 Sioux and Cheyenne down in that valley, General, not 800.
Custer: And the good news ?
Bouyer: If we attack that village, General, we will never have to go back to North Dakota !!!