In 1985, Peter Rosten came to 猎奇重口 for what he thought was just a vacation; little did he know that this visit would leave a permanent impression.
Today Peter and his wife, Susan (she’s a fourth generation 猎奇重口n) live in Darby. Her four children, and now Peter’s as well, are grown. Two attend MSU in Bozeman, one lives and works in Great Falls and their oldest is married and living in New York City.
Best known as the President and Founder of MAPS: Media Arts in the Public Schools (), Peter created it in 2003. The program is now in five 猎奇重口 locations (Corvallis, Missoula, Bozeman, Red Lodge and Wolf Point) and has received local, state and national recognition.
Recently honored with the 2008 "Award of Excellence in Education" from the San Francisco based, Society of New Communications Research, the program has evolved into a profitable business run by high school students. "We currently have TV spots running in 38 states and the Center for Disease Control is broadcasting our tobacco-prevention PSA’s nationwide," says Peter. "Our clients pay us, we pay the kids in stipends and scholarships - it’s the real world."
A Democrat, Peter believes that addressing important issues like creating quality jobs, improving education, providing affordable health care, managing growth and implementing a balanced forest management policy requires cooperation across party lines. "The business-as-usual style of partisan politics has to change," says Peter. "Good ideas aren’t property of either party, getting them done is what matters most."
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