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and now the pleasures of the moment of silence was raining and even the bolsheviks in nineteen seventeen on display at the kansas international museum in downtown topeka museum is actually a form of montgomery wards department store that has been completely renovated this month renovation is so well then a visit as he will smith's providence ago russia in the same place that one shot for the radio's out of the way before anyone gets to see the biggest treasures know this is a show that even to a screening room with a watch a ten minute video that provides a whirlwind history of his ass now after
twenty years now the treasures of the robot all the songs was weighing ending the bloodshed in the hands of the bolsheviks in nineteen seventeen on display at the kansas international museum in downtown topeka the museum is actually a form of montgomery wards department store that has been completely renovated for this five month exhibit that renovation is so well done that visitors would never know i'm looking at the real global logistics for evidence of ownership in the same place they once shopped radios and underwear before anyone gets to see the promised treasures though visitors are shepherded into a screening where they watch a ten minute video provides a whirlwind history your designs therrell
now we have now the treasures of the world with all the songs at the bloodshed hands of the bolsheviks in nineteen seventy one despite the kansas international museum in downtown topeka museum is actually a former wants department store that has been completely renovated for this five month exhibit that renovation is so well done that visitors would never know i'm looking at the real opalescent destroy evidence of old russia in the same place they once shopped for all the radios and underwear before anyone gets to see the promise land as no visitors are shepherded into a screening room where they watch a ten minute video that provides award winning history all the czars
and arab arab militias even williams' know the treasures of the world with all the czars whose reign ended in bloodshed hands of the bolsheviks in nineteen seventeen are on display at the kansas is it they controlled russia three
hundred years now the treasures of the world and all the songs in this raid namely the bloodshed hands of the bolsheviks nineteen seventy are on display at the kansas international museum in downtown topeka the museum is actually a form of montgomery wards department store that has been completely renovated for this five month exhibit immigration is so well done that visitors would never know they were looking at the material oh such extravagance of all russia in the same place they once shopped for car radios and underwear before anyone gets to see the promised measures though visitors are shepherded into a screening where they watch a ten minute video that provides award winning history of disasters once the movie ends visitors a heavy cassette decks with headphones and instead of the traditional museum invited guests other guy did all the ordeal
toward the more than two hundred and seventy objects that make up the exhibit looks straight ahead not about the worldview of that is based on a painted portrait of a charismatic warrior the tape makes a sound effects with detailed narration a combination that makes it easy to appreciate what you're seeing it's a one and a half hour to hour which takes visitors through twelve separate galleries and cost a glittering display bridges and intricate casket cattle used to the burial of saint dimitri the nine year old son of ivan the terrible which is made of almost ten pounds of solid gold there was stunning coronation world's automated with almost every gemstone one can imagine sapphire as animals ruby's diamonds and pearls and as the crumpled by peter the great walk around a reminder for more you can go they can put
on the table most of the ideas is visible see have never even been seen by the russian people themselves during communist rule of the populace was towards displaced as oz so what cultural refinements they enjoyed window displayed except as examples of and wealth the rise and the lead is the exhibit's curator a common is considered much of this artery to be the debris of the revolution or so they said publicly much of it was stolen much of it was destroyed it was no mad the communists were coming in and destroy them just literally hacking into pieces of burning them and taking large icons and making latrines out of them they had committed a great number of atrocities know intimate gathering this gallery has been decorated to resemble for the gravity of ambassador to help you to
remain at the table for five or six dollars it's clear from this exhibit that has on his family lived lives of luxury almost unimaginable there's an ornate translated the show which was created for a tiny salary that that was drawn by police and attended by ba wants to keep everything in scale but sensing the shia wealth of the romanov so up close one cannot help thinking how the rest of the russian people with airing during their reign john daley professor of imperial russian history at kansas state university says the most of the three hundred years of romanov power eighty percent of the russian people were futile sense existence not far removed from slavery you know you we give you away sleep with her daughter before marriage if you wanted to if you were about to serve you could send you off to the army were at the surface for years so it was just a really brutal existence the british miserable existence of most of the russian people during this period is conveniently glossed over in the
narration that accompanies the ordeal to it despite that mine a shortcoming most off critics have given the treasures of the czars rave reviews are russian art expert from the famed christie's auction house says some of the objects in the exhibit represent the most sophisticated works of that date from anywhere in the world the american curator of the exhibit the red espanola says is the best she's ever worked on an espanola has been around in her lifetime of odd experience she's worked at the smithsonian and hematology i have seen magnificent things on my career but this is the most magnificent exhibit at a particular this exhibit isn't a class completely by itself it is sensual cross exhibit some cynics have questioned why is it in topeka are tall and not animal major city kansas capital is only one of two locations in the nation to display the treasures of the czars the other city is st petersburg florida the russian courageous don't isolate anyone reason for topeka success in london the exhibit partly it seems organizers will love to have the show
displayed in a large city what would have to compete with many other major attractions want to be a good thing it would've received top billing another reason given is the persistence of kansas legislators and topeka city officials who took several trips of russia to stake their claim that the senior american curator for the exhibit the red espanola says more important than any of those reasons was the requirement that the final location provide a massive twenty thousand square feet of exhibition space that's more space than most museums or any museum that i know has available for listening and said that certainly the smithsonian institution does not as big as it is helen cohen art critic for the miami herald newspaper has another reason to explain why the treasures of the czars is in topeka i'm not in a museum in chicago new york or boston corwin who visited the exhibit was in florida says is because some of the two hundred and seventy objects that make up the collection of questionable
artistic value but the non professional i walk through about being driven out of russia that some really good and you expect it in that in the church there are the paintings dreadful there were no finding where you wouldn't find the non that the pieces in a real music show in an article calling wrote for the miami herald newspaper at revealing the trenches of the saws calling implied that exhibit organizers seem to be more interested in making money in presenting fine arts to the public that she says was reflected in the gigantic store full of fake foundation eggs in russian dolls visitors were forced to go through before exiting the museum she says the organizers interested money was also highlighted in the decision to set a fifteen dollar commission charged with calling argues is wary about the going rate for the nation's premier museums you can hear audio matchup on the theme of art in new york which is arguably the finest even in that part of the world and seven dollars a day he
did and he gave that actually you can get in or a quarter of that where you have a going rate you have and everything we asked the exhibit's curator to respond to collins comments the right hospital or shrugged off collins remarks about the suspect quality of some of the objects in the exhibit simply the view of one critic as the jibes about the commercialization of the exhibit what appeared espanola seemed uncomfortable with that herself but other show organizers defended the ticket price saying it'll take three hundred and fifty thousand visitors over the next five months just for them to break even espanola says much of the revenue from ticket sales between five hundred thousand and a million dollars will go directly back to the russians never proceeds that they will have learned from this exhibit will go toward a building a restoration laboratory in the mosque around the museum's which is sorely needed when the treasures of the cells went on display in florida earlier
this year it attracted more than six hundred thousand visitors to beat officials hope at least half a million guests will come through the doors at the kansas international museum the treasures of the czars opens to the public this wednesday and runs through the end of december for kansas public radio this is mccain's reporting the gentle stovall says each year the state of kansas spends more than two hundred and fifty thousand dollars defending lawsuits filed by prisoners at a news conference there will intrude david letterman style lifted the top ten list of the most frivolous almost as an inmate to allege is cruel and unusual punishment because the facility distributed the sugar substitute sweet and low teammates a substance the president argues is unknown health hazard another inmate is suing the state because he's been prohibited by prison guards from smoking marijuana did you know i like david letterman we're not have trouble making a hundred weight on a
printer than that oh i don't know and they found it in the government and the taxpayers in the alley when they were the criminal violent lucky run of bell a law passed by the kansas legislature this year means inmates can no longer filed a lawsuit for free instead they must now pay a sixty one dollar bought it features like other state residents still volvo says she intends to beef up a lot even further next action including a proposal that would take away a good time credits from inmates whose cases are dismissed as frivolous or militias by the courts at the state house this is a miserable thing churchill also has served on the kansas court of appeals since nineteen eighty seven a position he was appointed to by then governor mike hayden his elevation out of the states highest court is due to the retirement of chief justice richard holmes at a statehouse news conference governor bill graves said he chose massive who is sixty two because he had more judicial experience than the other two
candidates fellow court of appeals judge robert lewis and johnson county district court judge stephen lieberman graves said judge russell specialization in all and gas issues as an attorney also tipped the balance further in his favorite graves believes that kind of experience is needed on the court larson is known to be a republican but refuses to say whether he stands on key political issues like abortion and the death penalty yeah really i know josh larsen will take a seat on the kansas supreme court at the beginning of september at the statehouse this was mccain's recording fb the theater camp for kids is the biggest program of all the summer activities offered by the johnson county parks and
recreation department for six weeks more than twenty children ages ten to fifteen workers the place stone soup the director of the theater kendrick is marsha norman says every child who wants to be in the play will have a chance for adults as experience will mean more than just acting and we're hoping that we can create their imagination their creativity and we're trying to strike for self esteem and when you get up in front of people who can speak so that's important and then just also the team building experience a giant with theater that all have to work together in the end you had those wonderful production and you get out on the stage and you make all those people that have their privacy you experience it with you know that's a wonderful feeling inside warren says the children always adapted the stage better than adults even those who have no acting experience can recall any disasters as a result the state tried amble is good leadership and play rehearsal help children to acclimate themselves to theatrical surroundings johnson to be less intimidated than we adults and they really enjoy it
and what the six weeks that really helps to get familiar with the parts when to exercise some things like that to help the stage fright or do a great job and we're always there to support them the children are working on an adaptation of the classic stone soup but with a twist in the play there tonight to have slid a dragon in this version of the play the night certain either usual victory backward because it's discovered that they are actually women instead they are certain unusual meal called stone soup the play's director william casey says that working on the play provides an important and humorous experience with a young cast members the very funny way and i have a lot of road that specific characters which is why we chose that i think establish a very memorable part in the play in this scene from a recent rehearsal and i played by megan dracula and she still hiding her identity from a local village are played by trevor mcdonald casey says the children are eager and willing to work for
the two hours of rehearsal each day during the six week period when casey's goals besides tracking the children is to build self esteem and encourage teamwork it has been so much on their own and that one of the air and they're very excited we've got a really be over everyone been very willing to participate it's a good time for inward over two hours later it's time to get things done but it keeps things like to romney's own vanity really a really good time with them so far everyone has been very good wages of eight when i was out the kids be very competent so you try to start with immense mom and romance times on stage and work out but we really found them and let the kids enjoy it and have been shy at all the children have their own unaffected explanations as to why they enjoy participating in the theater kendrick it's cast member sarah johnson then in greenwich village and trevor mcdonald was as
governor you know they only began in its heyday this they did say this is a kind of older and then you have to put that answer to those people and then that it teaches people will work together and be happy with what everyday everybody has everybody's part is like different that's it i think it sort of teaches respect to respect others and let them go at galax and eighty years to the american women who meet so i don't know the production of stone soup will august fourth at
shawnee mission theatre in the park beginning at eight pm edition is free for k n u n john o'hara advocates of marijuana cigarette smoke calls the nausea of chemotherapy and painted multiple sclerosis als or say you could make paper from pot plants rather than trees says the president report on such matters marijuana stock has crept a little higher now comes a market correction like a medical center pediatrics professor has found that marijuana messes with a cell that scours and seven times as our longings that sells demographer agents a big sticky soccer and golson disposes of trash that straddles into our air sacs including decides germans and respects a cigarette or a marijuana leaf three years ago professor michael sherman then at ucla found that the macrophages of syria smokers don't lose the instinct for k and but they do lose them back than golf they're
praying that fail to do it in sherman smokers had used to pack or two cigarettes a day or wanted for joins both for at least a decade the way the chairman mao and macrophages out of people's lungs is a story in itself it was a day to smoke or then throw a tube with a miniature camera down the airways and the lungs next he forced into it to dislodge the macrophages finally he saw the food out and studied the cells as this were perceived sherman noticed something unusual some cells that line the airways and that art macrophages looked like they might be on the verge of cancer so when the microphone is also precancerous he wondered we're going to check as to examine a cell's dna its basic genetic material dna changes with seoul's rodeo cancerous chairman ucla colleague doug attached an established six study group's and examined the dna of the law and macrophages of each members of one group had never smoked three other groups were populated by single substance abusers
tobacco marijuana or crack cocaine only affects group smoke those tobacco and marijuana the sixth tobacco and crack these huge levels of marijuana and tobacco are similar to levels in the earlier study in an article in the journal of science is chairman reports that the low macrophages of the multiple substance smokers suffered the most dna damage the marijuana slash tobacco smokers had fifteen percent more damage than nonsmokers and the cocaine tobacco smokers fourteen percent marijuana smokers had ten percent more damage than nonsmokers tobacco smokers six percent more alert macrophages of cocaine smokers were the least harm the same week that i interviewed cheryl and harvard's westergren spin wrote in the journal of the american medical association that marijuana should be legalized for certain medical purposes sharon agrees that marijuana may indeed benefit those who receive it and a medically supervised short term situation but he also
cautions that while a couple of aspirin may help a headache a bottle will kill you the law macrophages of bill clinton will certainly rise to cheer such a caution now more than ever they must be relieved that the president never inhaled that fabled puff it's been heralded as the most radical transfer of power since the new deal if actions taken by congress this summer are approved states like kansas could buy this fall have almost competition authority to control previously federal run programs like welfare medicaid and job training many of the nation's republican governors are calling it a rebirth of state powell a golden opportunity to unleash high quality reforms that so far alluded the federal government it has been virtually bound and gagged with red tape kansas governor bill graves shares the enthusiasm how beneficial is it wasn't more joy and ensuring that we get federal spending under control and with that
some republicans believe that state's governor state legislators are about a position that may have huge programs in our state and we need to have a festive greater flexibility while congress is willing to give states more responsibility it's also proposing that they manage their newfound obligations with a lot less money than the federal government itself previously felt necessary for two of the most politically charged programs well for medicaid spending would plunge thirty percent or two hundred and seventy billion dollars by the year two thousand and two that's b a congressional republicans hope to balance the budget what are these figures mean for kansas well the national consumer group families usa has totally did that on just the medicaid program alone kansas would lose more than seven hundred and twenty million dollars in federal funding that would be the equivalent of completely eliminating the health care benefits of more than twelve and a half thousand poor and disabled kansans were
currently on the medicaid program families usa did not out at the impact block grants would have on kansas in other programs like food stamps all aid to families with dependent children but in no proposal is congress going to give the states more money or even the same amount of money they've had to spend in the past since today that every time i carried a bed you can't are hedgers something always is the innocent for people suffer virginia white is executive director of the kansas food bank a charitable organization based in wichita that provides food for more than seventy thousand little wink and kansans every month in a study commissioned by her organization last year it was revealed that in kansas one out of every twenty two children under the age of twelve go hungry twenty one thousand children in all it was also found that the average kansas family on food stamps could only get them to last a little over three weeks each month despite those harsh realities it appears most americans favor efforts
by congress to cut welfare programs a survey conducted by time magazine early this summer showed that sixty five percent was supportive of republican efforts to trim welfare benefits those figures are reflective of what many kansans told us in an informal survey on the streets of topeka you click on it and i don't work very hard i do show notes it's clear that many people believed welfare recipients are getting paid for doing nothing kansas house democratic leader tom sawyer says in some cases that's true but he says just because there are abuses it makes no sense for congress to completely dismantle the whole system and advocate its responsibility for the poorer
entirely by making it a state problem my real concern that this isn't this isn't real welfare reform all federal government's going to stay they have a tremendous deficit we need to balance a budget instead of taken a strike to put themselves to make the cuts and raise taxes and he did in the past and on the us sidney harman of the advocacy group kansas action for children says congress is proposing such financially all stevia block grants to states that kansas would be faced with two options either raise taxes which he says isn't likely in the current political climate all cut existing services we either just stop serving a lot of people who have been able to get help in the past or we reduce the amount of help that everybody can receive to a level that everybody is going to be severely hurt kansas governor bill graves though objects to the notion i find it hard to believe that there is a suggestion that public officials or are somehow going to
win the first place are gonna go has used the program's impact children and people in need graves says he plans to make up for shortfalls in federal welfare dollars by ferreting out inefficiencies fraud and waste in the current system still looking to cut programs for needy people important progress people mistakenly think a place where look initially his administrative why doing the things were doing how many people that we're doing there are ways we can do that more efficiently where the governor graves can make up for the entire shortfall in federal dollars through efficiencies alone is highly questionable the failure of kansas legislators to try and cut waste in government last session is proof of that but graves though as already instructed the state welfare department to begin cutting their administration costs the department of social and rehabilitation services is no longer filling vacant positions when employees resign or retire the agency is also examining ways to point to tie certain services to make them cheaper to deliver these are the
best of cotton is reporter john gallagher his press spokesman at the department of social and rehabilitation services he says while the agency is looking forward to running its programs affected by federal intrusion he says no one seems to know with any certainty how the state will be affected and how few federal dollars that actually have to work with hodges says the agency receives a fax a week from different consumer groups detailing how changes in washington will impact kansas the reality as he says no one knows for sure it seems like the rig yeah there's another proposal on the front page a lot of people and i think believe that there is an army of accountants sitting somewhere around here with spreadsheets up on their computers plugged in numbers and try to look at impact that really isn't happening are we concerned about the welfare proposal certainly we are but really it's too early for us to start getting excited about how we're going to do it because they don't even know what we're going to
important things the latest rumour from washington political circles is that congress may now put off a final vote on welfare and medicaid block grants until thanksgiving certainly no one doubts that change will come and that states are going to have to do more with less how much less though it seems is still open for debate at the state house this is mccain's reporting fb folks if you've been between iraq and a hard place and i feel my rock is actually going to rocks and my heart ablaze is tommy burns that tireless promoter of here or that one man chamber of commerce pettigrew covered but featured half pint of a man with thick black horn rimmed glasses a man who not only can't see but who has absolutely no vision is the tommy trash whatever he finds anywhere else he brings back to hear one year he came back from
coffee they'll fall of the bank that's now the dolphin gained museum and you're a cop get robbed once he asked claude anderson back in fifteen i say where's the glamour wasn't just funny but it wasn't hitchcock or that particular smith you robbed me said god it was roy smith small town near here threatened me with a bomb pocket knife i going to put it away gave him a hundred bucks and call his dad never did press charges stills or done it's a robbery that could excite people how about a plaque outside a cock this copper robbed at knifepoint nineteen fifty nine the same year as the rampage of crime in holcomb kansas clubs known tommy hit the road again came back from the plane it's where every year they put toilets on wheels and raise them down what they claim is america's whitest main street you
know said tommy there's no town with more houses encourage use that here we won't put out houses on wheels to promote here i said earlier this summer tommy return from another trip he ever been to florence or nephew of grain of manhattan or organize seventy at about mile marker two hundred and seventy six but this gamma grand pianos yup yup yup i'm probably said what is it why they promote themselves big time with rocks on hillsides said nobody in this here if it was spelled in rocks we have rocks i said we just don't have the hillsides weekend dallas a hillside to tommy burns you can build a hillside on your property i was elected honorary mayor to make sure your schemes stay private folks tommy half off people in his car in the garage to cool off we hoped tommy wood two but when a bulldozer showed up and down we directed it to the burns
place and then tommy put out the call for rocks hundred and fifty of them as close to six inch cubes as possible some of years old man risked her nails to bring works for the hear hillside learning or pickups springs groaning sputtered to town sunday drivers to burns wrote to watch the progress in two months there was a bear down like a huge ant hill dotted with rocks that spell a huge party tommy was awful excited when his first tourists board a teenager climbed out of his car you got something buried in there is something he has not gentlemen it's here that's where you are oh i hope it was something exciting folks tom is planted grass now but he still thinks is rocks will call attention to here that is focused by and wonder out loud if donley has come to praise year
or to bury at a tombstone you know is most always made rock folks that quintessential kansan william allen white was an unabashed advocate for the arts in fact besides being our most prominent journalist white was from eighty ninety six to about nineteen eighteen one of our most prominent writers of poems short stories and novels yet in nineteen twenty two he lamented are blindness to the gorgeous color informal the kansas son sent into the mysterious and moody pranks he lamented are deafness to the list being caught in line and apply it and then when he concluded what we can do and like most came is a sense of beauty and the love of it surely the righteousness which exalts a nation does not also
blinded eyes and cramped its hands and make it don't get the they slip past and skinny yet why is the golden bowl broken the pitcher at the fountain broken and in our heart the wheel at the sister still this question is not particularly he arrives at kansas question is tremendously american you know another prominent fans an advocate of the arts dr carmon appear in nineteen thirty nine and wrote we didn't interview havel staged a state senate but brave intelligent and far and people are intelligence and our vision did not seem to have prevented us from developing a vast inferiority not a real inferiority but a feeling of inferiority we need writers and artists to proclaim the beauty of kansas and to demonstrate the intelligence of the majority and not the eccentricity of the lunatic fringe
the sage of emporia and the psychologist of topeka knew that righteousness is an enemy of art that feelings of inferiority and worthlessness our enemies of art they knew that art celebrates this power build spy develops appreciative and healthy people they knew art would help kansans folks those in the us congress including kansas want to slash the budget of the national endowment for the arts there is right yes indeed nation about the continental art projects a hoot of fiscal conservatives and an inferiority complex that keeps us from celebrating ourselves and our american culture worldwide and manager warn us that righteousness will never support are very jealous of the world empty of art is nothing more than an empty war as joe fiscal conservatism remember that moment or was writing at the end of the great depression and wide in his novel a certain richman follows a
small kansas town through a terrible depression in sycamore age and nearly starving old nathan uses his last dollar to buy flour seeds accused of being a fool a traitor to his knee family he steers his critics down remarking that he is the only one in town with faith in the future we will live through these hard times jesus and celebrate the foresight that created this billy such a man does not feel inferior or powerless folks this national guard's argument is not about money it's about belief in ourselves and confidence in our future it's not about balancing the budget is about balancing our minds and our hearts right new americans are tremendously ambivalent about art kansans are too but as an audience and i remain an
advocate like white and that no matter what happens nationally i hope will listen to their wisdom and beauty of kansas and find on the state level the celebration our past our present and the future but shell says look fine to college unions look santa claus only the family understands her sentences with loads of meaning packed into two or three words or garden baffling the cupboard of her vocabulary is nearly baer she's three and in all other ways typical or different from others is called specific language impairment or as an ally five to ten percent of children suffering so a child's kindergarten meyer deepens she girls incoming language the teacher's orders go unanswered
classmates don't draw near as they will to the globe the paths to success or failure in life diverge early label rice says those with verbal skills who can tell stories in a cozy for our goods are the ones who get talked to by teachers are popular with other students rice a distinguished professor of speech language hearing compares what happens to fly kids to what once happened to her she went to nice to learn french and a school that emphasized conversation that first she hung back and hold socially incompetent but gradually words made sense now she uses conversation and language immersion to help sri kids the idea is that in a language rich environment also cup correct usage the basis for this is a theory that humans are hardwired to learn language as kids we sense the blueprint of syntax or grammar that lies beneath the finished product of talk and then from the blueprint begin to roughly in our own speech for tea and years
rice and colleagues have been running classes for kids ages three five nick's together are those with its ally those developing more typically and so learning english as a second language teachers and aids hang back encouraging talk among the kids the classes have become a support service law school system race and colleague ken wilcox described the set up in volume one of recently published work titled building a language focused curriculum for the preschool classroom by age two rice says parents should expect simple addresses from their children more cookie tonight night the vocabulary should exceed fifty words by three or four the trial should be able to talk with friends and be understood by people other than family if not it's time to have an expert check for s l i juarez provides a few tips for parents anxious about a child's language apparent should ask that the trial was doing at the moment rather than what happened at grandma's house or last week
the parents should avoid questions that fetch yes no answers do i go to the store in favor of open ended ones like what you think we should do now correcting errors out right and the nightmarish repeat after me game are verboten what comes to wine was just doing it as a great teacher rice as meaningful practice can lead to progress children with s l i look just like their peers yet in the great round world of language acquisition they stand on other shore traditionally patiently as you yourself would be treated if you beached on a continent where no one understood you fb the word fiancee thomas and her dog on the yellow labrador are strolling through a city park near downtown was at first glance
they look like any other fans are enjoying themselves on a lazy summer after his death but this is no ordinary election and no ordinary plant and they're not just out there training tariffs rights bank account is empty thomas event of a fire investigator and paul hildreth his reaching out to foreign countries which immediately volunteered only geological formation has evolved and sees constant companion for the last three years is an accelerant detection dog a canine specially trained to investigate arson cases avon is the only dog of its kind in cancer and it's often called on to work in other states like colorado wyoming michigan which have built
a diversion program before she can be a viable path to sniff out the scent of flammable liquids in this case little droplets of gasoline that nancy has secretly pleased in the cracks of the side what you have is water that's all goes well dave on the user goes to mark the exact location of those little droplets have to guess which by now under the hot summer sun have mostly evaporated america america before avon receive surgery she'll have to be very specific and identify gaps and where they're located within reach
yet for a fire safe the water gas tanks out through the fire scene there since lazy dog days of summer are few frames of every day seven three hundred and sixty five days a year says russia is very upset that are likely to be different from the experience discrimination that in three states now teaches
at a fifties romance he draws a paycheck votes have been working for the state fire marshals office for a little more than a year in that short time anc in avon have already helped convict one arsonist a man who burned down a one point four billion dollar business in korea before avon received a shiny new visual arson investigator that she had to undergo eight weeks of training and sent initiation that's the architect in various excel at things like gasoline kerosene lighter fuel and other republicans in the place in addition to training at arsenal defections avon also learn social behaviour steals from the federation series we'll teach them how to be socially responsible we can take it anywhere they can take the escalators elevators many situations
feel comfortable airplanes week as they get into slavery and apparently they behave themselves because of the heat the sense of smell in a sense of one and a half times greater humans boats have been used to track game for more than twenty years but our some dogs are relatively new developments he says it wasn't until nineteen eighty six that the world's first ever are single came on the scene about twelve thousand dollars to purchase grain and stevie vaughan before she was ready to be put into action all paid for by insurance coverage that may sound like a lot of money for assault with the insurance company in kansas fire officials believe the investment has already sells scarves the safest time to save us money we can go in and investigate buyers seen with our and find five minutes where you don't ever it's going to take you a few hours some tense time in many
cases a lot of money otherwise he says besides saving money it's fair to say that a vote to work state laws as well for kansas public radio is because i fb roberts a republican who represents the massive first district congressional seat in western kansas has been rumored for months to be interested in nancy kassebaum senate seat even though the state's junior senator insists she has not made any decisions yet about the future at a statehouse news conference congressman robert said he had held confidential talks with kassebaum and he said rather than
ask her whether she would step down you actually encouraged her to stay on and i'm renee montagne that's right kassebaum says she won't make a final decision until late for about half a dozen republican candidates besides roberts of thought to be interested in kassebaum sleek including former state gop chairman ken wells and what happened
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Various KPR news
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KPR
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cpb-aacip-84b901d118a
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News covering Kansas international museum, government, and marijuana.
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1991-08-01
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Citations
Chicago: “Various KPR news,” 1991-08-01, KPR, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed October 20, 2024, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-84b901d118a.
MLA: “Various KPR news.” 1991-08-01. KPR, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. October 20, 2024. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-84b901d118a>.
APA: Various KPR news. Boston, MA: KPR, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Retrieved from http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-84b901d118a