thumbnail of Nancy Finken Interviews; 
     Supreme Court American Flag Desecration Decision, Low-income housing,
    Educating Inmates, Soviet Union Donates Space Suit to Kansas Cosmosphere
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the supreme court decided a texas case involving burning the american flag the court decided it was within the constitutional boundaries to burn the flag says that decision president bush has publicly expressed his disagreement with the court's decision and has asked for a constitutional amendment making flag desecration a criminal offense judge fred benson at wichita state university says he was surprised by the ruling yeah i mean i was surprised at the five to four decision i've thought to be about three and i was surprised because i had thought that the court would use which they did a balancing of the interests of fact that it that the interest of the individual for freedom of speech are much greater than the desecration of our national symbol and i thought the court would decide that the main priority and i thought they would decide that the freedom of speech is dead include congo like the burning of fighter jets yelling fire in a crowded theater history
immigration treatment of age at which a private the majority that the agreement include the right to get a grip in a little more than when they withdrew to encrypt i was your private victory and in favor of having keeping the law that you can get a great president bush's call now for a constitutional amendment well i think it's the only way to go but i don't think that a constitutional amendment i haven't checked on the senate candidate karen carter court initially course the classic battle of the legislature and judicial branch where are your judicial branch government and i think that i think they go away but the crucial moment anyone who might take time i think it will have bands and says he expects future supreme court decisions to be just as close as the flight burning issue was and we're going to try to avoid that label
i know that in her confirmation they pledge to handle each case individually and not long ago the label and i think that's what we trying to do nothing close decisions that everyone when he went into that that sixteen and seventeen year olds can be put to death without filing the constitutional clause and cruel unusual punishment which was that to three decision i think and i think that abortion more close decision on these important issues he is an assistant professor in which the state administration of justice department for reaction we talk to the kansas american legion the health care is the director of public relations we were appalled by the decision and we probably reaching out waterways by year by extending that and bring it into electrical and applause and we couldn't believe it and along with a lot of
other people we've had numerous calls and from our members and an outside people also wanting to know what the problem is we can do about it is america we've got and attorney general and there were starting working with attorney general is working with the us will go to any way we are going to start a petition to amend the constitution to make it a curse as the american flag is assembled to servicemen anyone have served in the united states military and no matter what brand of this fight is their symbol and america the united states of america free country it stands for freedom and democracy and they used to fly when they went into battle that was their symbol to follow
and degrading after having and you have to think well what these are mothers our mother of course this is a mother who lost her daughter in the war and you can imagine how they are feeling not every veteran feels as dale kerr does john connolly is a columnist with the harris news service he is a veteran and he believes that people should have the right to burn the flag you know i will be no idea has been politically and the japanese and the japanese i wake up everyone in the japanese and we're not there
oh no for how well they would do in his administration what they labeled by two hundred billion dollars worth of america has got to be outrageous mcculley says politicians in washington are simply wrapping themselves in the flag to avoid the really tough issues facing the united states now here's what some kansans have said about the issue of burning the flag i'm not an extremely patriotic person delivering like is why generally surprises intrigue more than held that position i don't approve of the running and you know thanks to the internet they can purchase know it's i really don't feel like it should have respect for and then to turn its own special are sacred and i think it has some
of the emotional brain five kari abate is right i think it's fun for this country the human laborer five caregivers out of america no foreigners shouldn't be held to i don't think it's right my father fun vietnam and i think he fight for the right of that flag it is so more and i think roosevelt said it best because he said to do so can you give him a very nice and they'd asked in the end came it was president as this one kenny king cameo at an assistance for attention with fraud for and i don't think that gets right to the comments from hutchinson library patrons and hutchinson all patrons i'm nancy finken president bush has asked congress to pass a measure that would ban the acceptance of honorary at common cause the congressional watchdog group has also urged congress to ban honorary out however many members of congress continue to accept
speaking fees well some senators and representatives have personally been honoraria others continue to accept it j headland is a grassroots lobbyist with common cause in washington good morning you know what you're welcome lynn fiorelli and women
and giving it another we have members in over two hundred dollars a year and these deadlines and common causes of you are not last riyadh here's what worried about loyalty to go into full time job and income from the special interest groups that are going to appear before they're very next day out looking forward to go work
and wait headland has a list of the kansas delegations iran four nineteen eighty eight mr mcgee yeah maybe and maybe what is it
and again senator kassebaum and representative goodman no longer accept honoraria and needed as representative my ears goodman says members of congress as a general rule don't accept honorary in their home states that now he won't accept it anywhere i'm with honorary and speech making these particularly one for members of congress going and making speeches to groups that have an interest in legislation of giving up your payment for that so i just decided that it was time to stop taking those feelings most members of congress i'm not very comfortable with them and i decided that my money for public service are to be from the taxpayers and not from private interest who have an extra grind of legislation
i also believe that there is a growing feeling of this country witnessed recently by president bush's read a statement on ahmad fatah members of congress ought to not take its honorary anymore so i decided now the time to do it maybe also a little bit of a trend and maybe pretty soon will allow law by statute goodman says his decision might have a minor effect on the number of speeches he gets as for senator bob dole from kansas the powerful republican leader in the senate spokesmen wall reichert offends dolls acceptance of honor area that's ridiculous and anybody who thinks bob jones board is going to be bought for a speech december at a luncheon group of washington for instance you just spoke to the support information's directors of america as best we can know no one was at me that the sports information directors of america of water bottles opponents of the issue because he spoke to the middle option on a sunday afternoon at a ridiculous this
is common cause and common cause grease is going around the country trying to smear the integrity of the vote senators like nancy kassebaum are or bob dole and yet common cause is one of the biggest lobby groups only underscore that lobby groups they are a full time professional spencer special interest lobby group that spent millions and millions and millions of dollars we want to spend the money for so either you know you know i have time you get out there to get to radio stations in kansas wherever it might be and they're so this is there are bad people because they're speaking to sports information directors of america whatever the group that got a ridiculous it's really a shame that they have to get as much attention as they do because there are very well heeled powerful
special interests were broader group that spent a lot of money but in point congress is if they do it when there's an interval for a ban on our area maybe you would know where your father was perhaps some kind of adjustment across the board in and some adjustment route normally congress the executive branch and the judiciary as well rutgers says one of the main reasons don't like sub speaking fees is because from nineteen eighty four to nineteen eighty eight more than four hundred thousand dollars of dolls honore of funds went to charities many here in kansas but rye grass was as dull would in fact support legislation banning our area so then what happens to the money the charities had been counting on i guess what i'm asking is if we somehow adjust salary increases as you are just hours as you mentioned and somehow phaseout honoraria and bob dole would be in support of
that then where do the charity's fit in if he's in support of sometime phasing out our area while adjusting salaries i just i say cherries probably suffer senegal certainly a rule continued you know all the good work that we can do but again if there is that limiting or omitting honoraria or you're talking about sure you know you're right gerry hadden with common cause in washington says his group supports reasonable regular pay raises for congress but feels the honorary up with or without a pay hike should be banned he says it's going to take more than just his group to encourage congress to pass legislation this continuing our area and on our
country i do oh you mean money are we going to do what you need gerry hadden and that is the
grassroots lobbyist with common cause and national organization based in washington dc in hutchinson i'm nancy finken hud secretary jack kemp has recently suspended revised or restricted for programs after an investigation that showed widespread abuse and mismanagement during the reagan years so what affect did these changes have on kansas at this point it seems to have no direct impact but with investigations ongoing the future could hold some problems in our state the housing and urban development federal agency provides funds in a variety of ways in kansas some of the money goes through the state agency for disbursement a local communities and other firms go more directly from hud to the community the state agency that handles a big chunk of her dollars is the kansas department of commerce that fans under this branch of higher that fall under the small cities program funds are given to cities of fifty thousand or less in population
bill montgomery is the small cities blog development grant administrator i am we get off work community improvement grants the news for senior centers or almost all are eligible and then we go into it part of our committee approved a cycle and we get anywhere from a hundred and fifty three hundred applications so it's highly competitive then we all vegetable industry okay we got it all and we can't talk
and we have a large event actually in the end of the men who are running the added attention the golden age montgomery says another part of the program it is for economic development finds head against the state money to be used for economic development unless the creation of jobs is the focus of that program cities can apply for grants through the state agency the department of commerce and they can turn around and loan the money to existing businesses or the creation of jobs right now the total sum going through the port of commerce from hyde is about forty million dollars and emery says he isn't
too concerned about the effects that investigation might have on kansas programs here's why well mainly because we're talking about all the record low income housing that we didn't have an image that doesn't mean that we do we do welding rehabilitation are what a lot of talk about this is it baldwin has been making headlines lately that katie dippold paul goes into wherever and those ok i will if i get a grant or will it can go away on our department that will be portable and apparently there's been doing wonderfully or whatever the end as
owen i mean that may be the wichita what they call it would not talk about it and cities are categorized as larger than fifty thousand in population the cities don't go through the commerce department for funding but they do go through the federal head office in kansas city bill nichols is with the kansas city office at this point nichols says the state shouldn't be feeling any effects of the head shakeups but like many people he still a little bit confused reading but what they're going to do what you want you're going to retain would win one year old angel that one you know you didn't get
the moderate we have now was a definition of that news rehab program building housing program which is a thing that needs to be rehabilitated he'll be elected by a local housing authority you to rehabilitate that they're guaranteed one hundred percent of the time a contract or housing contract killings are interchangeable and where the housing authority will get him a contract to sell one hundred percent of their unity will
rehabilitate a rehab program and clean air nichols says he has no reason to believe any kansas communities that participate in this moderate program would be under investigation for any wrongdoing it's a line that really good art is the supervisor of this online community development block program although like many others he hasn't seen any of his programs cat he is concerned about what the future may hold maybe you're spending a brawl at a program and build some bombs are corrected and then you don't know what the guidelines and speculation will that was a lot of that spending in which we go and for him and then you know we knew where the restrictions are regulations that
engine so we all know about the second part of that bill ray do dark is the supervisor of the salon a community development block program hud secretary jack kemp has recently suspended revised or restricted for programs after an investigation has shown widespread abuse and mismanagement during the reagan years so in kansas right now it looks like no programs have been affected by each person involved seems to be adopting the wait and see attitude in hutchinson i'm nancy finken we have the temperament completely separate systems one that car transmission system that runs from the southwest part of the state near ulysses and then a round up do you agree and then over around junction city in
abilene in manhattan and north korea religion southwestern through the central part of the state that are completely separate system from another system that we have in eastern kansas and missouri served with big ears of topeka kansas city st joe louis source of supply our transmission system mainly in the producers in southwestern kansas and the largest source of climate system is that makes a limited partnership and mesa serves about thirty three percent of the guests on the first such incident in the immediate area and so its very large portions of the supply and that area and this is based in texas are maybe a quarter emerald the company that is run by boone pickens i think in a lot more publicly prominent been made probably now i understand that there's a new
contract before kate el and may set into the next several years it's going on our work we have to get a twenty year contract with madonna that expires at the end of this year and had contracted head of the lowest price gets anywhere in the united states and that's why we've been able to serve customers on that main transmission system that prices are generally have been anywhere from thirty to forty percent below the national average we have been very concerned in the past but when that contract ran out and we have negotiated a contract with a very dramatic increase in price in fact they've been predicting that it could double the price we've been able to deal with it that will result in a price increase of about five percent five the five and a half percent and that although not likely to increase forest and w right
it's reliable and when about won't be able to keep it so much below the national conference of the location and upright and again and ordered by the pipeline on back there nolan ryan and more and more and more money and that we are very fortunate in the midwest to live close to the two to be a pretty steep hills and that legacy of that i guess in a much lower cost than the most aggressive countries paying for it so while there's five percent increase means for the average household
and in virginia is about thirty five dollars under the new contract we would see an increase of the same amount of food thirty six dollars and seventy five cents though over the pier here about twenty three dollar a year increase in the annual guest bill emmott about a five and a half percent increase he said his contractors for five years on that's not very long overdue a twenty year contract can you look past those first five years of this new contract anticipate that maybe you'll have continued to have maybe a five or six percent increase or you still fearful that the next time you have to renew your contract it may be that doubling price that you were fearful of before the contract also applied for a five year period actually will renew automatically at that time
for another five years another five years as long as neither party wants to pull our totally renegotiated or something so we do it will be based on the current market prices that are in the field and those can lead to a chemical up a little bit that they come down a little bit further the control but at least they're going to be paying prices that most other people and the campaign tom taylor is a spokesperson for kbr gas service he says the new prices under the new contract will go into effect january first of nineteen ninety in hutchinson i'm nancy finken statistics show a huge number of people entering kansas correctional facilities are under educated many have less than a seventh grade education and guess
i are in hutchinson bernard smith the school superintendent hutchinson community college and assigned to k s i r hopes he and his staff are making a difference report is designed primarily for those men who do not have a ged or a high school diploma and peace with the variety of educational backgrounds and a variety of functional levels based on their previous experience in education and outside his hesitation and of course the ultimate goal for the majority of our students who aren't achieving are working to achieve literacy is to our gdp in some cases didn't succumb to us briggs says non readers and being on readers and not having some very basic math skills and another academic skills necessary to be successful we have to start those appropriate levels we accomplish like x which means that does forza students are concerned there is no beginning or into
our school year every monday morning of the calendar year can't be the first day of school for any inmate who ms and so every monday morning we're injecting have anywhere from as many as twelve or fifty new students because we do tests on alternate weeks throughout the year we see students leaving its own every other friday or so as they complete their programs or move onto an approach where as the yam day school is broken into three components in order to accomplish this task the ged program itself requires the inmate to be functioning at about a seventh grade fifth month level or above academically in order to do that we feel or be successful if he is below the seventh grade fifth month on standardized testing point zero and then he is admitted into the preachy and all of his great level of achievement there into our basic
education program we're not exclusionary so good and regardless of his educational background or for that matter any other handy gadget he might have that that interfere with foreign and learn snus that's presently thirty seven percent of the men entering k s i r i b low the fifth grade level and we use either are in the reading math achievement about sixty percent of the new permits come to us without a high school diploma or ged now the statistics that i was having a high school drama ged from somewhere else or those who did not go as a result we do have those of men who may have graduated from high school many years ago you may have heard some type of handicapping condition of the border the math said it would
consider a good literacy level of an eighth grader above those men as well during the past year about six hundred men have participated in a basic education or adding more of this as the waiting list has been quite fortunately for us so the usual long waiting lists close to four five years and that's due to a large part of the foresight of a good administration hear t s ira and former corrections level who has been on to something seven openings last summer in the education department three of those openings were in positions granted by the legislature to compensate for the potential bottlenecks on neeson you have programming to meet their needs in the last twelve months so i have with a great deal of certainty that i would say to most any inmate whose desires are coming to school with the west
and in most cases if it's anything different in that it's probably less students most of the time it's easy to see that smith doesn't have a hard time finding students and sounds it doesn't have a hard time finding teachers either the attention has been focused on the education for her kiss i are over the last three years this has made that task much i've been here almost twelve years in the earlier days education in a correctional facility was an unknown quantity and carried with it a certain amount of anxiety and fear and may and maybe a little bit of a stigma that that is where a teacher would want to be in contrast within the last three years this program has been recognized by corrections through some independent research as one of the top fine educational programs in the united states out of a broadly two hundred and seventy five such facilities that along with the fact that we've had a lot of success stories over the last ten to twelve years
in terms of the structure well the number of the associate arts degree of the types of academic gains reflected where students see that high level of individual stations necessary to make it as the ritz is jewish and teachers being interesting dramatically last summer was the first time in almost three years and i even have an opening we are not deployed some are going to initially screen through fifty seven applicants are to fill seven positions in his department and we consider that extremely gratifying we result was that result of all their fire a single inexperienced teacher the teacher we hired with the least amount of experience had five years in
public schools smith says his staff of the education department doesn't concern about singing it opening education department may be a bit safer than out in public schools artist originally schools are worried we do not in my opinion devote an inordinate amount of time we do we do spend a considerable time with her students and social issues simply expecting kinds of behaviors anytime adults interact but in terms of a bubble over discipline problems of disruptive be yours or threats dangers in such those are very far into between internet very easy readily identified an exclusively related to one or two students and serving as much in terms of the
movie the safety of a danger factor and how it impacts on the teacher i think for one's own choice and that is that we are in very very close proximity to a highly professional security staff who can respond to emergency situation and both the students and the teachers are aware of their reality and so i suspect that that in turn to someone who may consider causing a problem one comfort and peace of mind to the individual who works in the situation that allows a teacher to concentrate more on and it is a teacher and supporters if you were talking about in statistical terms this is a safer environment to teach them a lot of our metropolitan high schools in the streets in this country the other one hundred forty four graduates i k s ira will have completed a program since july first of nineteen eighty eight one hundred thirty have completed the ged
requirements and fourteen have completed requirements for the hutchinson community college associate of arts degree associate large degree that we were to the image is essentially a journalist program and it's the same so why the same textbooks in many cases a second instructor we do have certain limitations by virtue of our environment and that requires us to make some adjustments for example if you get into your physical education if you do not have access to a gymnasium to the track to get into certain areas were you need certain specialized equipment and you have to compensate by by going with more of a textbook lecture type course to two accomplices singles likewise anthony courses require a laboratory type work to clean the science is becoming difficult to say that we don't have those signs entirely but we simply do not have the
space and the equipment to to do those sorts of things and much of the equipment is necessary for that type of love we're going to change ought to both staff the cost for providing education to k s ira mates is about six hundred thousand dollars a year for the state to tackle that's no guarantee that inmates who've completed their education you going to write it and it happens all the time but smith says he still has hope there is a tendency i think for all of us we see the need to come back to to want to share a certain element of failure because most quality educators episode justen and right see the educational process that is a two way street is not solely the responsibility of the learner to get the education and if he fails it's his fault normally see it is
as more of a lot of issues of famous duel within our two to reach for but they do share and i think a number of us wonder if there's something else something different i suspect that someone in some ways the idealism interferes a little bit with some of the basic realities that i've had to adjust to not so much as a way of rationalizing it and saying well this isn't our problem but i think too to help maintain the kind of enthusiasm in the kind of straight work environment of this intensity and that is to recognize that one reality which we cannot control we cannot change that is that many of these inmates were negatively affected by their environments as they were growing up and what they learned from their environments had something to do with the behaviors that brought him to prison the process for all practical purposes it tends to return them
back to that environment brad smith is the superintendent of education that chaos i i went in today the twelfth annual commencement ceremony for a ged that's the high school equivalency and college graduates at hutchinson community college education program at the kansas state industrial a former tory takes place at one o'clock in hutchinson yes but how will the drought affect state coffers that's a question governor hayden is concerned about and so is the state budget director michael o'keefe the approved budget for the year that starts july first and expenditures that are about a hundred and seventy five million dollars to greater than the revenue that we're going to take him are in that year the reason that's possible is we we had them are fairly healthy kind of reversed that general fund that we've been saving up for a rainy day when it happened it
is three hundred and twenty five million dollars cheney will end this year without a trigger twenty five million dollars based upon revenue the expenditures that the nineteen ninety budget which they are we would end with a hundred and fifty million dollars if you if you if your expenses it's huge revenues to a great extent it clearly you're going to have the difficulty some point down the road either have to raise revenues or decrease your expenditures in the drain and he would tell us that we're not going to have a normal economic growth and so there's just going to have to be cut back expenditures as we enter the untold legend for his career nineteen ninety one okie says ander hayden's administration a pool of money for a question of sorts is always
being kept as christian days may be dwindling go we we are pushing our pitchers in the bank recover the day to day cash only were the day joe entered that situation additionally covers try to build an additional five percent for those period that the economy goes through the downturn that held to those that period now we're now down to have a cash flow ago in a clear direction or anyone is that show he says kevin haden is very concerned but it's too early to take any action he grew up with his budget next january it obviously is monitoring very closely monitoring the economy very
politically weak mccune formed a time to change the world flight that your ballot in the wrong project to start with but eventually as we were down the budget plan any kind it is very much aware that it was going to be a tight budget that weekend oh keith explains how the economy in kansas or at least a prediction of the economy is going to change because of the drought all the confidence right for years defending our way and for the religion ninety we had estimated pursell income groups are splinter group of the top twenty percent for county are going to be able to translate that into revenues and lord
owen well we did you well on that length about the drought is that this hack can stretch over three three years you know they feel a lot of the capper lack of a lot of harm or continue to thicken it could take awhile before all this the state's office for crop reporting agency the cancer's agricultural statistics estimates damage to the wheat crop will cost farmers eight hundred million dollars in income the agency also estimates that farmers will abandon twenty six percent of the twelve point four million acres of
wheat they ceded last year that would make this one of the smallest harvested in twenty three years state budget director michael o'keefe says he can't help but then make an early prediction that personal income growth for the nineteen ninety one but it will be quite miller and the economy and right now only add up and it's a problem norman clifford is with the institute for public policy and business research at the university of kansas he's recently published a report on the economic outlook for kansas the economy grew a moderately well is people work at the end at the end arn not grow as rapidly us economy than most forecasters were predicting but
that can turn a moderately good year in the week at a day well here in april eighty nine the economic growth or an agreement that we're not in ukraine well you can you're right consumers are spending less become a lot more cautiousness here and taking the money isn't why would try to interest rate economic activity of the major factors export goal will
continue to grow healthy rate will not grow last year that you get into it clifford says the ag industry directly affect the economy in kansas but we're becoming more diversified now so when the ag industry is how well it's still drastically hurts the state's economy there are other industries now to help you get this larger portions william blake norman clifford is with the institute for public policy and
business research at the university of kansas is new report is called the economic outlook for kansas and for the nation in hutchinson i'm nancy finken what color don't worry oh lord
on the program are people that are going through all of this and all the i wanted to be a lawyer and the real moment recreate republic their downtown area here in one which involved a lot of people is well we called our cultural cradle which one or are you sad rob's participation is that and so the presentation when we the people and what we were
saying in that people have the participation of the public private financing becker really helpful honestly a great deal in a short period of time and not a lot of marriageable we get and we really believe in competition with poland and in that ruling the middle of the country and i'm covering when they are in the country but they're only good thing going on about that a bit about the country when you know many cities real incumbent is in wait and wait and the same size it's a line application form the one hundred ninth
and final one two of that with the goal of all of them trying to get into the place from cleveland ohio north carolina oh really someone hands mm hmm one two hundred and twenty
we will with a three hundred and we really identified with many of the current and then of course the wild card so now you have that designation what's the city going to do with it i know in hutchinson they received it last year and there's a mural at the mile in their letterhead changed other things that were around i guess promotional the intent is of the same types of things i'm grateful
oh really i mean really tomorrow you were completely different the program
how many people from saliva were able to go to chicago and what is the mood there before and after you found out that you want we have a lot of people began linking to presentations prior to ours really struck at the high caliber just been tremendous competitions that we've faced we knew right away that beforehand the ira ended great opportunity one will just wear that i would just leave the country mm hmm oh really
oh yeah thank you no more you know i know one in the world and the conflict in that occurred in the glory and four and i think the
idea here early on have expressed a pride going and implied that are continuing to realize that he is quite an honor and they're older and many will oh really all right you know because you have to work and they can really run the problems we have are a fervent community to realize that we will begin in chapel hill north carolina we feel very
very good about i knew pieces been added to the collection at the kansas cosmos appear in hutchinson for the first time the soviet union has donated a phone soviet space suit for united states museum puzzles for executive director max ary had wanted for several years to get some soviet space artifacts and now his dream has come true as usual areas connections have paid off one of his friends from new york recently went to moscow to discuss a business with a soviet cosmonaut georgia grass grow while he was there he invited glasgow to visit the cultural sphere what's to everyone's surprise it rides go except it not only to visit kansas but also donate the phone space suit friday afternoon the museum was buzzing with over twenty second graders from mccandless school in hutchinson they were all standing in a semi circle waiting to greet the russian cosmonauts and a soviet space
suit designer with some of the words they've learned about russia this teacher dorothy fox has been teaching the children some russian words and what about their cultures and september the world is so small people can travel easier and we get news every day every single day there's something on paper from moscow and even other countries so the job should be aware that there were all these people are struggling trying to get through this life and that we have under different circumstances and in different places and these differences are what make us was interesting to each other folk says the children say several words or phrases that don't quite understand that everyone doesn't or can't say those words there's diamonds invokes classic also in writing letters to seventy children in a sort of pen pal arrangement standing in the
green light and the children of carnations for them then and letters for them to take back for rush and schoolchildren grace go seemed thrilled to take the flowers and the letters and to listen to the americans recite their greetings and russian he then also gave them something in return max ary explains the photographs are friends joke in space of a very big space station so you think he took this picture point at you is this you
jeanne zaino on saturday because monsieur officially received that soviet space suit at a later date the soviet union will be receiving from the us and apollo suit that is so he's traveled without government supervision in fact when the troupe details were trying to be worked out because was fair had a little trouble arranging the details with the saudi government but it was the united states government putting in all the stops groucho was quick to tell us that the united states needed to try to be more open oh it's all this growth through its view so this program about four months was the sidekick is goes to have the vote news
gies severini the spacesuit designer from russia said if we want to have a joint us and ussr space exploration project we're going to start by making our systems compatible this is an omission and author of what associate of martin emergency situations in space those nations that you need you need you and we must work to make the systems and the connections and so forth on the spacesuits compatible with them to make so consistently both americans and european systems to make them universal smu the origins of munitions is both letters in a decent and well over much
women are going up in armenia there was the polish woman in the moment as possible because on the airport in armenia and you're going to land yes you you know if there is a problem on the mayor's position on the shuttle the novel's canal but isn't it and the space program of the country or when he says and it's really time that we start thinking about the unification of our safety systems in space submarine he was asked what the possibility when before i joined us ussr mission wait wait he says that he's not a politician but that he is sure
that the public but not a politician but also that the technicians are both countries are more than ready to embark on such a kind of reserve a space flight to the us has to occur in blue jasmine and in nineteen seventy five of the men who took part in the apollo soyuz program and which went very launch of the first amendment here so we have experience that shows that the most promising us a question he's the anointed to take over a court order to do what to tomorrow's we should we should sign it jesus did it let's here is obama an extended the extent of the nixon has notified about fifty billion dollars do
they come and so george egress go a soviet cosmonauts and he saw the rainy a soviet her designs soviet space it's following a trip this weekend to the cosmos appear in hutchinson the group traveled to houston to the johnson space center in hutchinson yes but
Series
Nancy Finken Interviews
Episode
Supreme Court American Flag Desecration Decision, Low-income housing, Educating Inmates, Soviet Union Donates Space Suit to Kansas Cosmosphere
Producing Organization
KHCC
Contributing Organization
Radio Kansas (Hutchinson, Kansas)
AAPB ID
cpb-aacip-649774ea1cd
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Description
Series Description
Compilation of Nancy Finken interviews with notable people in KS in the late 1980s.
Clip Description
Supreme Court decision to allow national flag desecration and different opinions, Many urge Congress to refuse and discontinue honoraria, Low income housing bills effect on Kansas, Program designed to educate undereducated inmates in KSIR, drought affecting coffers.
Asset type
Compilation
Genres
Interview
News
Topics
Local Communities
News
Journalism
Subjects
Local News Interviews and Reports
Media type
Sound
Duration
01:08:40.080
Embed Code
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Credits
Producing Organization: KHCC
Publisher: KHCC
AAPB Contributor Holdings
KHCC
Identifier: cpb-aacip-f2c5646af8a (Filename)
Format: 1/4 inch audio tape
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Citations
Chicago: “Nancy Finken Interviews; Supreme Court American Flag Desecration Decision, Low-income housing, Educating Inmates, Soviet Union Donates Space Suit to Kansas Cosmosphere ,” Radio Kansas, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed October 5, 2024, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-649774ea1cd.
MLA: “Nancy Finken Interviews; Supreme Court American Flag Desecration Decision, Low-income housing, Educating Inmates, Soviet Union Donates Space Suit to Kansas Cosmosphere .” Radio Kansas, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. October 5, 2024. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-649774ea1cd>.
APA: Nancy Finken Interviews; Supreme Court American Flag Desecration Decision, Low-income housing, Educating Inmates, Soviet Union Donates Space Suit to Kansas Cosmosphere . Boston, MA: Radio Kansas, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Retrieved from http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-649774ea1cd