Nancy Finken Interviews; Simulcasting Dog and Horse Racing, AIDS Education, Bill to Decrease Highschool Dropout Rates, Wheat Conditions, Sexual Abuse Treatment
- Transcript
sen ben richardson of salon is drafting a bill that would give the racing commission the authority to allow sign will cast dogon horsepower mutual racing in kansas an absence bill would not ask for specific regulation as the house i'm a casting would be carried out but rather would give the racing commission a chance to consider it if someone castrating is allowed by the racing commission patrons for example of the wichita dog track could bet on the dogs in wichita and the horses in kansas city all at the same time the horses in kansas city will be watched on tv screens by the patrons in wichita well i remember it they would be between tribes with that would help industry and of course the big competition colorado and add another and at the end
and they are undoubtedly encountered that erickson explains now some other states have set aside the castro and things that those and that would be repeating track would actually operate their items on the national level race would operate with their own prayer vigil now if you're like in kansas city then maybe and
i am an island let me paint according to a point a plane they are to me that they claim to the people in those particular areas it would not be just going to bed in the area that would be in their own care make a call it would go into people i am the texan says he looks at their mutual racing as strictly entertainment but does acknowledge this i will cast in the races would increase revenue into the state through their mutual betting the revenue and those will will increase primarily belgrade late at every race track and that during the rangers you will bet on in those races
i don't know sen biden the dirksen of saliva jim graves is the executive director of the kansas racing commission he says at this point the racing commission has not endorsed the idea simon passed racing because a number of patients would need to be studied oregon cricket would be that the people who provide the apportionment greyhound trainers were people a portion of them or what portions of the earth to green says statistics from other states show the double dating is too at first but
quickly wears off senator good reasons bill will be introduced within the next week or so and graham says he's sure they're racing commission will continue to discuss the pros and cons of simon passed racing in hutchinson i'm nancy finken it's been most college campuses today all over the nation are addressing at least one subject not in textbooks a few years ago aids acquired immune deficiency syndrome has become one subject to talk about in health classes in orientation classes and even that door meetings hutchinson community college as ben educating instance about aids for a few years now but most recently has decided to take a more aggressive stance here's one of the reasons why stephen severely need to be encouraged to be careful in their sexual activity as seen by one other h c c student well i think i'm afraid i know i want the party scene is like around campus and probably most colleges i think that most young people are leaving concerned about it and they
should be they just can't have the attitude that you know oh i'm too young or is it the diseases to new it won't affect me at our especially our live in kansas you know that's that doesn't happen here and i think they ought to be more concerned about it than the more cautious cause i see a lot of my friends being really careless end sometimes that concerns me one only has to talk to the state health department to find out the apes does happen here in kansas mark houser is against training specialist she says and statistics have been kept beginning in nineteen eighty three parent mattel of two hundred fifteen kansans with aids including symptoms of the disease not included in this number are some three hundred people who have been tested and carry the virus with out any symptoms here's a break down of how those two hundred fifteen people who have rather full blown aids got the disease and making an important we have one hundred and forty eight hundred actually actual male and forty nine eight
hundred and forty five and they're quite poor five hundred well it's a huge and really care about with a category which we go beyond any other categories that a lot of the bolivar died when an education this year really isn't anybody else there's carla graham has implemented an aids education program where each incoming freshman goes through a semester long freshman orientation class part of that class covers sexually transmitted diseases including aids as necessarily the best policy and that's how we permit that when a study showed that most prisons in this age group are sexually active so we tell them what they need to do to protect themselves when they are ready to be sexually active graham says talking about
contraception doesn't necessarily encourage young people to have sex in fact she believes discussing sexually transmitted diseases that causes some people to decide to be abstinent well graeme feels good about an aids education program an htc she sees a broader program in the near future i think that we do have the support the faculty staff here at the college but in order for a program to be effective it needs to be somewhat controversy alicia it be so watered day on in week and they were afraid of an event someone that we don't get the message across to the students i was didn't seem to be involved also on the program they should be involved in the planning and implementing the program because they know what their needs are as they should be involved in a prevention program and as an agenda for integrating into other campus activities go into the dorm and getting into small group discussions with the stevens talking about how to support each other i am in their choices if they choose not to be socially active that thats okay
i had to choose to use a condom that's great if they leave our relationship because the partner wouldn't use a condom then those people need to be supported that they need to have i learned how to develop some of these skills and how to talk to their partners than a day we need to keep going back and meeting with him and reinforcing these new behaviors her in supporting him in those types of things graham says some small group discussions have been done already but her goal is to read about the issue more frequently in hutchinson i'm nancy finken mr haden ordered a study done on drug abuse prevention programs the state has been endorsing the governor after reading the results says kansas schools that have implemented anti substance abuse programs have fewer problems with drug abuse than their counterparts at release those results this week at a conference in
wichita during davis's the governor's special assistant on drug and alcohol abuse so and what we've failed to those schools who implemented at a compliment and approachable at that point our students training educators in their parents can get that frequently and in the winter oh yet oh oh
our way or we can be assured the survey was taken of over one thousand students all across the state in over one hundred forty elementary and secondary schools students range from grade five to grade twelve the state board of education and the kansas legislature this time did not require prevention programs in schools however davis says schools are doing it on their own we believe that hard education or preschool program i think initially sure they offered funding for school districts to begin daily collegian implementing new programs only about six percent of the school districts are actually it will be
increased to about eight davis says the governor's office hopes that was statistics like this one funding will come through for anti simpsons abuse programs in more school i went to one of the governors manages one that we've come up with the funding plan as well as a formula that we would encourage to get involved with the funding plan which we are now even more money the new year yours is ranger kelly says in the long run these prevention programs at a young age can help save the state a lot of money in the future we
mention that drug abuse one billion dollars a year the kitchen it is just a tremendous general acceptance that what we inherited and prevention will start rolling payback in terms of the fund will be launched in early intervention having a comprehensive approach that you can't just invest in programs you must also a community program but you must also have treatment are you imitate people understand that the nation cameron davis is governor hadn't special
assistant on drug and alcohol abuse in hutchinson i'm nancy finken i got word that required that i think that they we're going to call it at the program what's the group is when we need to like this and they went and got it out i panned it got bought a lot i get them and that had they in law oh yeah they did
right right i'm glad they have a great deal more power wheel and i played it that they in their wedding bye bye oh god yeah whenever the blind but how the idea that when you have the idea that we banned that cool well you're
right we believe that a five hundred billion dollars hit on a lot of all that i want like two billion dollars they get kind and by that we often eat and that had the great good that daylight a goal of the border thank you when they really needs engines to this rule going to come out at school i can say that a ha the light requirement that they would be able
to look at and they do it quite apparent either become other legitimately that they would be a panel i like that representative donna weitman we asked the superintendent of the wichita public schools and dr stuart river wide will he try to do are like but i think it's at the pier bate approach to real problem is it really going to like it never be encouraged to get to fundamentally change and we cannot berger says the dropout rate in which a double big schools is about twenty percent
for another reaction we talk to keith right now he's the principal at the senior high school in mcpherson and i'm here with then it will grow to become a situation whether public debate over virtually anyway keith wright moore is the principal at the senior high school and the first and right now and dr berger agree that in order to prevent a student from dropping out in high school the extra help needs to start an elementary school in hutchinson i'm nancy finken after the dry summer of nineteen eighty eight and the considerable a dry fall and winter and eighty nine the wheat crop in kansas is suffering from roberts is with the wheat quality council in manhattan more about alligators and all it would be early that good we can have look there are a number of yours
personally and to my knowledge i don't remember being in bed and it looked last month italy when you go out in the galilee village full equality to make it good or bad well i'll end of the population population or referring to that word they are in a particular order i'll lead go ahead then oftentimes when people refer to it is a big family eleven writing down below that get there roberts says the state of kansas is the number one producer of wheat in the united states and fated to fall twelve point four million acres which is twenty two percent more than the nineteen eighty eight
crop and then we expect that to yield in areas from three hundred to four hundred million bushels which no one we like a good amount of significant economic reforms began as hero projection changed now that that the weather's bad bad and you've seen some of the fields are you still expecting as video author and that's what everybody is concerned about whether the supply and current demand of us weekly over the world wheat crop that we get for the world standpoint the crop is significant in and planning for the coming week on the aisle well right now the prospects in all or are not very good we get your award case scenario and hardly be below three hundred billion
figure well we don't anticipate from everything we could read and recovery and more secure that would allow it to recover much more than three hundred if worse comes to worse emily krug is is that as some people think it will be robert says there is a chance that the state or federal government could help out but that's all up in the air until we actually see what the crumpled doing what it sells for the middle of the summer that would relate to a number of factors certainly how everything appears that it would be a situation which would need to have been made in and help help a lot of the money a lot of it until we know more factor and germany will be something that would be divided for a number of months here that night by a number of months of legal july robert set us who really did an impossible mission we will get this summer he has kind of a mixed emotions are current us apply
is rather precarious you know now that we need a cop or you are weak and the world for that matter on the other and then you so he heard old publication of factors that indicate that there were sitting on quite a large week rob were allied the old german robert says because we don't have the reserves of wheat we had last year he thinks the price of wheat will be significantly higher in hutchinson i'm nancy finken statistics show an eighty five percent of child sexual abuse cases their mosque there was someone that child you are from the molester as easy access to the child because he or she is a relative a friend of the family or is associated with a child's daycare which line with horizon the mental health center and
hutchinson says treatment for victims of abuses recommended for most but not necessary for all it was discovered that what would happen would be very quickly they would begin to believe that they had cause this somehow that it was their responsibility to ensure their own safety and so they would begin to feel guilty about some contrived misbehavior in order to have some control over their environment children that are molested frequently get that and so the first problem is dealing with a child is getting a child understand that they were not responsible for what happened to him that was pretty bizarre to think that like a six year old is going to feel like they caused that or uncle or grandma to molest them but they do pass or trolls also believers scuse me thrills believe that the world revolves around them that they in fact are the center of the universe and therefore anything that happens is there a responsibility by being molested they have to believe that they've caused
it in order to stay sane during that time you're being molested if you do not believe that you are in control of this somehow that essentially are living in a situation where you have no power to protect yourself and the people who are to protect you going to make your image like there's an identification with their peers confused using your class are talking a locker room about their date and someone did this or someone did that were talking about their first sexual experience when they're talking about their relationships with other people that's all old in significant information for the skit they've been having sex for a long time children have been molested for a long period of timelines as well sometimes experience an out of body experience where they leave their body and witnessed the abuse from another poke out crawling into the water column and training at the ceiling watching with loans were common you
said sue tells belief that they're insane that sounds like a very insane thing to have happened but in fact it's a very normal defense mechanism people that had been in worse frequently discuss watching the battle take place from a different perspective while they in fact could see themselves during the fighting is a very common thing what kind of adults do children who are abused me come do they abuse their own children line says not necessarily he says many are handling their past and leading healthy productive lives but some boys do have a greater risk of growing up to be a rapist as for the issue of homosexuality line says that correlation has not been proven that's a major concern for adult males would be wasted and the reasons they don't help but i don't i don't know where homosexuality comes
from and i don't believe that's the connection i don't believe there's a very strong connection there are procedures on social behavior lesbian behavior in children and adults who were molested as children is probably higher than the general population but i don't think it's overwhelming lives as active treatment for incest victims is only about ten to fifteen years old he says he believes the treatment for these adults who were child victims of sexual abuse is going well but it's hard to tell for example a woman who is now thirty six year old daughter seems to be doing ok bennett out of my turned seven and that's when she was a beauty so she has some conflict or if she was abused by her father she might cause problems with her husband and her child having a healthy father daughter relationship to remember victims line says involves not just the victim but family members as well and as for molesters line says ninety percent is the national average of people molest children that are treatable locally it's
about eighty percent ok sleazy engage cd it and the finger instances of sexual abuse cross all socioeconomic backgrounds it happens in rich families and in poorer ones it happened that small daycare centers and large once new ones and well established ones because it's hard to predict who say for children is not experts say it's essential to teach children how to communicate in reno county a program called personal safety awareness teaches children how sexual abuse occurs the forms it takes and how to respond to situations that confuse or make them uncomfortable larry rice with social and rehabilitative services and hutchinson says in the first year of the program in nineteen eighty four the number of reports of sexual abuse rose over one hundred percent we know that people are very in the classroom explaining about good tension that tent afterwards them that they can't have the
time to write down at the paper without finding and a lion what has happened to them or if they have any questions and then we can figure out from their wings chopped liver of that day on and try to go back and talk to the second time to an end the whole idea for their numbers for the class a union and in front of their classmates and so that we can talk to them and get to the bottom of it that the problem with the actual abuses dead the town has to be old enough to be able to tell if it's happening very seldom can we get a documented today a physical exam that the child's been sexually abused life says between january and april there are an average of thirty calls reporting sexual abuse of children that her agency investigates for young children who may have a more difficult time determining what body parts are off limits to others the program uses a
coloring book and the idea that anything covered by a swimsuit is a private party line with her eyes and mental health interventions with this today and children have reacted very well to the information and haven't seen crying we teach them who they would tell how they would tell me to use foam books that are consistent with their area so they know which numbers to look up so if kids know that intel they'll tell and they just needed and we also explain to them that there's no way in the world a child their ages going to molest somebody who's older that what happens is that those big people are going into them they're not doing it to the people we try to convince them to take away those concerns about this is somehow my fault that i've done something wrong three people emotionally more clients as one of the tactics and abusing uses as saying it i think i don't tell anyone i will
board game trouble <unk> was to be secrets there's good secrets what you bought barry for christmas whether or not there's a surprise party for a birthday that there's all kinds of good to great and kids can be can and that this was something they can should keep because it's for the good of the family well we joke is when they're told this is a secret and they're hooked into promising before it happened they won't tell is that yes in fact that is the secret that it's not your secret there's hickory and what happened to you you can talk about and will go bhutto and hotel will appeal the question about race is how did this abuse go on for so long and no one knew that no one detail particularly acute abuse going on within the household the theory was in the past that if if a father or a stepfather was molesting a child that the mother knew
about it and was somehow not contributing to that by allowing that to happen in order to not be involved in sex with that person in reality of what i found out what i believe is that that isn't true all the children are direct about what's going on they have a big investment in keeping the secret with the molester for fear of losing all those things income a sick family support love those type of things and so they worked just about as hard trying to keep an issue because the mustard i don't think most of the most of the mothers in particular seems to be mostly men and the last thing most mothers sure i'm aware of that tomorrow the conclusion of my series on sexual abuse when we talk about treatment for children who have been sexually assaulted and also for adults who were abused as children for kate sleazy engage the dea and nancy finken i studied and between nineteen eighty three and nineteen eighty five by the family
research laboratory at the university of new hampshire shows only that three year period there were about five hundred twenty five day cares sanders went substantiated cases of sexual abuse that affected about twenty five hundred children although this is a large number it must be remembered that this is twenty five hundred added seven million children and over two hundred thirty thousand day care centers nationwide nonetheless parents who are subjecting their children to someone else's care whether at a day care center or home care situation need to be aware that there are problems that some centers regardless of city sides reports that the estimate risk for children of getting sexually abused at a daycare center not a home care center is almost six or ten thousand it doesn't mean it doesn't happen at home care centers this report did not have those statistics available as danny says it's more frequent in the child's own house or giving the risk they're at it and their ethics
rich line with licensed mental health center says in reno and four surrounding counties that three people at his agency to work with child sexual abuse cases almost fulltime he says those reports seemed to be true more children are victims of sexual abuse at home they're at daycare centers to a parent and say i don't want to i don't want to go with them to the grocery store i went with mom to the grocery store because their molesting me what they would say it would be like to be with this person this baby sitter this person this person this person whoever gets out like this and they would complain about that a little bit parents take its daycare centers frequently are told us he cries louder she cries a lot when she comes here but essentially there are things ok kids for it really threw fits not going to day care centers mean that's a very common thing there's a very fine line between when the kids throwing a fit because are being molested there and when the kids are in the film because
they don't want the separation and i don't know how people read that and there's no magical way to determine if the kit is protesting because are being molested or kids will tell other the opposite parent that you're being molested in the sequel always like we have them and that many situations were week we try to find out because kids always believe they've told the other parent but we try to find out how did they do that and they'll say things like i wonder that her shoe store i don't like to play horsley or c in most people's opinion has a game were some issues on their hands and knees to kids on their back we're seeing this particular situation was intercourse and the girl told i don't apply were sick or say at one point orson the normal response would be what's a fun game you'll enjoy it when daycare centers are reported to have a problem because of sexual abuse the department of social and rehabilitation services and sometimes the law enforcement agency investigate that claim because recent
allegations of sexual abuse at daycare centers warren holmes the issue of the woman running the daycare with her husband having access to the children becomes a concern it should be noted that not all abuses that by then of course but it is more common very rice with as iris imagine says its appearance right to ask for references they should also ask questions concerning other family members who would be around their children these these questions are not going to prevent sexually abuse that they are going to probably make the parents feel better about where they feel like they checked it out as much as they came and sexual abuse can can just happen that people dont have horns and i don't i ran around with a sign on them that it's hard to tell so you're just going to have to watch for signs of your child sexual abuse at daycare centers or at
home within the family crosses all socioeconomic backgrounds and rice says that's what makes your job so hard next time more about children affected by sexual abuse how to prevent it and what treatment is available at a prius has already occurred forty eight c c e n t h c d i'm nancy finken we'll build tune in tonight at seven o'clock for thinking about drinking the topic is a social history of any relation american experience within the creation dates back to the mayflower itself the pilgrims on route to massachusetts drank mostly beer for water was so easily contaminated on a long voyage and according to mark landler author of drinking in america or ancestors consumed the strange brew we're talking a relatively thick relatively full bodied show
fashion world for years american string playing thank you gave one was really structured as reporters are really ails to an american today inside that you can find one in ten within of lives and gender of the attack a local tavern by all accounts use of intoxicates in early america was rife estimated at two to three times the rate of todays per capita consumption lush green fields on our agricultural landscape supply domestic production of gin whisky and other's spirits will hear an historical account of the temperance movement across the country and we'll hear a great deal about a man all right temperance advocate and feminist susan b
anthony i cannot remember anything about the absolute closing of the solo a group of women crusaders and at seventy three try to close down every saloon in the town of hillsborough ohio by staging prayer meetings in the bar is male patrons mocked the intruders but it led to the founding of the woman's christian temperance union the union's offices today in evanston illinois w c t u president martha edgar looks back proudly my parents were both campaigns minded and they're anonymous and the beseeching member but we believe that the bible teaches that turns out anything in the way an alcoholic beverages is not good because you know he brings distraction and evil is a narcotic getting poison and down why would you put something into your body that might cause i'm here health there's just something i was
always in our family and we just know lisa except that is then you find art center at hutchinson community college is finally getting some applause rather than to boos and hisses the building that opened a short time ago has been a thorn in the side of the college's board of trustees who built the buildings much to the dismay of many reno county citizens but this weekend the association of kansas theater ordered its outstanding achievement in theater to richard parker parker was the chairman of the board when the construction of the building was located parker is still a member of the board of trustees perhaps the nicest part of it was the fact that there is somebody has not come forward so we think this is just great respect for the college and the community involvement of the state intact and how we've heard so many negative comments that you don't know are many positive ones building i think there's been a great many positive comments from people want one side is based on the fact that
we have had a so many new students to her two a college enrollment and the students be allowed to tula college to work and to hutchison reno county in an economic impact that they offer to us parker says he shares the award with the entire board of trustees and the community college teresa's does is the chairman of the association of kansas theater awards committee is association recently held their annual convention that age cc oh i get it i did parker was nominated by the
board of directors of the hutchinson theatre guild for his work on the htc board of trustees and his personal efforts in behalf of the creation of the newer fine arts building and the creation of the robert can't parker finance library which will be located in the building in hutchinson i'm nancy finken and a month undercover investigation into the narrow resulted in the week and the rest of twenty one people on drug charges but right now there is an investigator with the sheriff's department in harney county says they're still looking for six people most trailer with increased cocaine marijuana and methamphetamine around the retail street value that we've been beaten also purchased or they weren't totaled forty nine hundred with the price of these drugs on the street it doesn't take long to add up to over forty thousand dollars ok norway from eighteen to nineteen hundred dollars an ounce for coke marijuana around this area
so unlike three eighty to four hundred dollars for quote alan mutter says the following law enforcement agencies were involved in the drug raids the harney county sheriff's department the kansas bureau of investigation and the police department's host ed newton heston and sedgwick county also insisted a warrant over eighty eight with great investigation has made possible through a grant from hayden's state local market an orphan program and waited five percent of the fund came from state and one percent came from local units of government and our account it was a pretty expensive them to do an investigation it's very expensive so far we have spent roughly thirty thousand dollars and the process of investigation includes a special prosecutor investigating the quote minimal so the person that was an affirmation wagner says three arrests were made in sedgwick
county to in marion county and the remaining sixteen in harney county program we get at them individually were connected arrest them or just drug traffickers and the area just on their own whether they get their supplies that's a good question that we always try to go beyond the local dealer and get a supplier i think we've done that in two instances and there's no escape arrest home where i don't know who their suppliers roeder says they were only able to get this point trace the cocaine in harney county back to suppliers in a wichita area lawyer says the drug problem in harney county may not be any bigger than any other campus community of that same size however he still thinks it's a serious problem we have a problem and articulate very community less drug raid that we did have was in october twenty second nineteen eighty seven which meant his twenty eight arrests i believe we know that didn't stop it or really be included in and to switch to another operation want to get the
message across that we are working on a problem of drug traffickers will not be tolerated in this county were wonderfully we can put a stop to that moulder says through contacts in the drug circle of sorts begins now that they've made a dent but there's still more did you know we have a good line of information that you've come into it and we love the names of three hundred per person users and that candidate will still be working on my lover is an investigator with the sheriff's department in harney county in hutchinson i'm nancy finken well we've heard that the farmers are going to be hurt this year with their crop because of the dry weather but what about people in town maybe just try to grow a garden or flowers and omar andres they need to need water just as bad as the wheat crop that was the situation here in a lot of garden and trees that you can do
something about it we dont have to wait for rain and we can water from what i've seen on the weathered air week from imagines and from october her first walked over and through the end of december we were only had twelve percent of normal rainfall i've met him in the head january through now has been very dry also and so i think we've had less than an inch of rain in town here since first of october if you haven't been ordering on water and deep that i really bad and had to get rid of them going and doing it going well this or no ticket great app will have clean water they're careening up really battled the fescue grass lawns and so we we supposed to wait until i'm really one centralized and go ahead and water now on trees and shrubs especially
ones that had been planted last fall you have not been wandering through the winter and a plant die that is not the nurse treatable but your own plants need to be watered they are targeting of rainfall unusual the way we have not established will this world are the ones most susceptible to stress what it's really doing fine lines this time anything well kurt coming up around first of april is the time to put our pre emergence crab grass control these are products that will keep the crab grass from coming up they go on around first april and you repeat that again early june bud put the product on and be sure and watery and right after you put it on it except there without being watered in it does not work so those products must be watered and they give good crab grass control drugs are also toward in the april early may have excellent time to be fertilizing cruelties of lawyers also want his long letter b is orange or
buffalo in may is the most important timely or fertilize those and ayers says this is also a time to pay attention to your house plans they've been in a rather dormancy stage throughout the winter but it's springtime they'll start needing fertilizer and more water to in hutchinson i'm nancy finken look for that silly label when buying fruit at the grocery store these days the food and drug administration says you shouldn't eat any produce from that country because traces of cyanide were found in some see less red grapes from chile fda commissioner frank young says it's not known how widespread the taking is that there's no cause for panic the cyanide was discovered in philadelphia after an anonymous threat to play essentially the fruit was telephone to the us embassy in the capital of the south american nation the fda urged that all chilean fruit be removed from the us market or more tests continue or chile all the fresh graves
sold in the us at this time of the year come from chile karen brown a spokeswoman for the food marketing institute which represents supermarket says those companies that actually improved are responding to the fda request and are withdrawing the product from their stores her comments came in an interview with the associated press in kansas the largest grocery store chain dylan's has cleared all chilean fruit from its proteins departments and kiefer is a company spokesman he says there are sixty one believes tours in kansas and it was a big job mm hmm
i mean and it's not just parents pretty good kiefer says all of the effort is being stored and has not yet been destroyed it is at this point right up in the air in terms of how the lost revenue will be handled the government thank you he says they've been hearing from some
customers have already purchased some chili community and yet you know and keefer is the spokesperson for dylan's fda is or need and consuming any fruit imported from chile is includes red white and black grapes peaches nectarines two varieties of plums and three kinds of pears in hutchinson i'm nancy finken bottling began this week at one of the first commercial wineries in kansas since the days of prohibition the winery near the pot a lot of accounting community of saint george's called feels unfair to fair says he his wife and two of his sons are in the business together
we don't know ferry began his vineyard in nineteen eighty one two years prior to the state legislature making wineries legal i don't know thank you
the political arena fair says the amount of flak from those opposed to alcohol and wineries been real estate is quite minimal however he has had some protestors talk to him it was really nice both the winery is made up of about fifty five acres about ten to fifty acres of that actually had a lakeside home one of baker's is the recreation of the study there says everything is done right there on site who knew
it is well that's right he's right states if you notice a lot of them two months
ago oh oh man can be a good job but they weren't oh well chimp there is one of the owners of the field of fire winery near st george this is the first winery in kansas since the days of prohibition the wine will be on sale may twentieth and is going for eight dollars a bottle in hutchinson i'm nancy finken time and that still is the director of the smoky your museum in saliva he wants to know if you or anyone you know we're connected with kevin phillips the prisoner of war camp or the smoky army airfield during world war two because if you were this movie elysium is looking for information photos and artifacts on all three
tiers of a summer exhibit ken phillips was an army installation cam built in mid nineteen forty two and used in tally of forty four it was an advanced military training post located southwest of some i have on about forty five thousand acres of ground the military condemned of the property the area and then purchase most of the nearby farm land from farmers can't housed about forty thousand troops and several thousand civilians they were trained there and then sent to europe and he still says since the air force didn't exist at the time the army had controlled the air combat and so like that was a significant airbase and the b twenty nine was brought here to slide into the mahdi army airfield or our reviews and the plane because it was not better than it was brought two different locations for field and revisions remained at the bikers we past that in the plain at the location across the country in line was one other locations with
the army airfield the b twenty nine went from lima directly to the campaign to bomb jet the polling over and china and burma and a lot of on the job it may land when the first flights were were taken from china over to bomb available japan very quick rush into asian and blind had a really key role in an ad for tuition and that we are not only looking for old photographs artifacts and information but all home those same types of things for the army airfield which would later change locally chilling air force base and was deactivated i believe sixty five oh no
and who haven't heard from an impact on what lincoln in the surrounding community what the prisoner of war can tell us why you are working aboard to look at the jihad to a lot of working out with an issue and how the galleon prisoners they were eventually moved further south and he goes you can't that was located here than ours thousand german non commissioned officers and they were here also four hour period i believe almost two years to roughly the republic and korea which german officers who attend a fairly close proximity to their work thousands of german prisoners of war on the line or the pit of the camp that was
attacked and have a what i would term at headquarters area because there were a number of smaller communities for and then annie lee boyd pebbly others around our area that some of these prisoners were farmed out to speak and that we remain camp for the non commissioned officers than by valerie jarrett that we've been doing and people we've got two hundred and lucius appeared of these were used to work out on the farms and ranches of things around the area on that day and day out we're farmers would need extra farmhand or extra help they would just contact with people with an acute and he can't they get ten or fifteen or twenty or a handful of prisoners and they would go out and call handler cultural or so
i'm jewish tampa's still is the director of the smoky your museum in some line and if you have information about cantaloupes the prisoner of war camp or the smoky army airfield please contact time at the smoky your museum eight to seventy three nine five eight area code is nine one three in hutchinson i'm nancy finken
- Series
- Nancy Finken Interviews
- Producing Organization
- KHCC
- Contributing Organization
- Radio Kansas (Hutchinson, Kansas)
- AAPB ID
- cpb-aacip-95ab219b7e3
If you have more information about this item than what is given here, or if you have concerns about this record, we want to know! Contact us, indicating the AAPB ID (cpb-aacip-95ab219b7e3).
- Description
- Series Description
- Compilation of Nancy Finken interviews with notable people in KS in the late 1980s.
- Clip Description
- Salina Senator Ben Vidrickson on signing a bill to give simulcasting dog and horse racing commissions, Executive director of Kansas Racing Commission Jim Grins on double betting for simulcasting racing commission, AIDS training specialist Barb Howser discusses the number of Kansans with confirmed AIDs, Governor's special assistant Gaylen Davis discusses drug and alcohol abuse programs in KS schools, Representative Donna Whiteman on her bill to enforce students to go to school and reduce dropout rates by revoking their drivers' license if they don't attend, Superintendent of Wichita Public Schools Dr. Stewart Burger on Whiteman's idea, Principal of Senior High School in McPherson Keith Richner says this bill won't make a massive difference to students who drop out, Wheat Quality Commissioner of Manhattan Tom Roberts on suffering wheat crops, Horizons Mental Health Center Hutchinson Rich Line on child sexual abuse treatment, Social and Rehabilitated Server in Hutchinson Mary Rice on reports of child sexual abuse, Mark Lender host Thinking About Drinking show about the history of alcohol.
- Asset type
- Compilation
- Topics
- Journalism
- Local Communities
- News
- Subjects
- Local News Interviews and Reports
- Media type
- Sound
- Duration
- 01:01:45.288
- Credits
-
-
Producing Organization: KHCC
Publisher: KHCC
- AAPB Contributor Holdings
-
KHCC
Identifier: cpb-aacip-7cf1e7cc2f1 (Filename)
Format: 1/4 inch audio tape
If you have a copy of this asset and would like us to add it to our catalog, please contact us.
- Citations
- Chicago: “Nancy Finken Interviews; Simulcasting Dog and Horse Racing, AIDS Education, Bill to Decrease Highschool Dropout Rates, Wheat Conditions, Sexual Abuse Treatment ,” Radio Kansas, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed November 29, 2024, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-95ab219b7e3.
- MLA: “Nancy Finken Interviews; Simulcasting Dog and Horse Racing, AIDS Education, Bill to Decrease Highschool Dropout Rates, Wheat Conditions, Sexual Abuse Treatment .” Radio Kansas, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. November 29, 2024. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-95ab219b7e3>.
- APA: Nancy Finken Interviews; Simulcasting Dog and Horse Racing, AIDS Education, Bill to Decrease Highschool Dropout Rates, Wheat Conditions, Sexual Abuse Treatment . 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-95ab219b7e3