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siemon says named third place winner of a contest for fantasy and science fiction writers present story monsters as ballast in a book presented by l ron hubbard i have been writing a lot and you have to write a law because it takes a lot of afghans in a science fiction isaac asimov science fiction fantasy and it's just that you could send in your entry and it was in charge of anything which is a lot different from artwork from our work when you an entertaining show you have to pay an interview that this was very odd questions the postage and he said that the entries would be judged by well known authors which was that appealing to me because it's nice to have you were looked at by people who are professionals in the field whatsoever husband went to new york last spring to attend an award ceremony and with also spent some time attending professional ride workshops i treat it more as an education i'm making this is done for me in wanting the workshops did for me was to me realize that i rushed to
myself seriously because the people who are doing workshops or professional writers and we take themselves very seriously can the consumer an obligation to do their best to look at good quality piece of work in downton it that's one thing i really took away from the workshop i work there half days on writing have guys on our rights as monsters is fantasy which takes the real world and expands it as compared to science fiction which does more with gadgets or machinery and sometimes about other planets well basically the story starts with a salesman who's going to western kansas his fellow well fed up with this life and he gets job is to sail what he's selling is look at those two store again it goes to the stores see as unfair so he has to kill some time so he goes over to local coffee shop which you generally find upstairs to see i think i called it in the
book that lesser known for the stars or something of the sort of egos actually chris what he finds there is the heart of the story i don't think i'm one thompson it's about that it debt but something beautiful something he doesn't expect to see in the course of the hit show the beautiful thing is destroyed the shock of singing something that he's so it can find out up with destroyed that is an ally but not so much that it is illegal that i could see it happen again that explains why she chose western kansas as the setting where nothing is people getting to western kansas continue to complain that there's nothing to see here and part of the idea for the story worries that in all that open space there might be some very interesting things to see there if people we'd stop and take the time to work in human affairs notice even just reveals itself to you know at first glance here and i think there's also the idea that an all diesel trains that they're all buildings there's lots of stories and things behind the door is
that if we only had a way to get into them and find out what was going on when it surprise and it was a story i heard on television of a young a neighborhood where murders someone else and the whole neighborhood knew about it and kept within themselves to themselves and he wasn't that prosecutor mode instead that's repeated seven or eight years it was sort of an open secret and that's what i thought was happening with a certain coffee shop arrangement in this little town that there was that this kind of thing can go on and everyone who live there would know about it and it would be kind of an open secret that no one detail i find it kind of it is fascinating minutes and two other painters at the upstairs gallery in saliva chooses it to friends help or critique or writing generally everything i write i bring it here and that's your and barbara looking at there but critics and i had a writer's group that want to his sworn in which is
that i didn't start with that it is a tax lawyer who was and i think i am got started we continue to meet she doesn't meet with this anymore but the people who are in the workshops continue to meet other people from time to time we have some people who come from and spurred into it about once a month to end messenger stirs a lot of poets and we just read each other's work and driving it can encourage each other and damage other markets in them things like air but says she has a book that should be ready to submit to publishers and about six months although she declined to elaborate on the plot she said it is fantasy writing is i had about five different ideas but i wanted to go up on the same time and i can sing and so i decided i would find a way to link them and connect them and then i could work on it all at the same time ritz says right now she's concentrating on just finishing the revision in the book is what she hopes for in the future and of the book doesn't sell says as she was when her newly
purchased word processor just yet i continue to rise a lot because i was winning ideas and having started and i know what it's like it's a wonderful feeling to put down a collection of words and have someone else we didn't understand what you trying to say or even better yet find something in it that you don't even know it's in her unifying relationships and ideas and you really be inspired to do something else a known that they would've thought of it you haven't written your story that is such a wonderful feeling that ability to communicate have a poem in your quiet i'm already getting ideas for another book like most artists either painters submitting their work in shows or either submitting their work to publishers rights has also seen some rejection slips but not every rejection is discouraging i don't know you know i've heard people have like five thousand
mine but i've got plenty of these and just keep writing and sending things out and he cried and sending things out and you'll get better or you wear out better it's that she can see the relationship between her writing and her painting my ideas are beginning to work like the same direction i find my paintings are becoming more and more like stories all the time i'm what i'm working on right now is that canceled line with some cows it because coulson very much part of the kansas landscape i'm far as ideas that act as though they're all bad fantasy in mary imaginative colors and you know start with a very realistic what i understand from photographs that it myself i started a very realistic image and it usually takes off on sunday in just sort of them does the colors run together and things
happen on page twenty one happen and i just sort of what that usually turns out wright says of being an artist and a small midwestern city as compared to a large city on the coast isn't quite as bad as it used to be so it just came out injured show at the modern art museum in topeka senate passed when he said that i was in kansas are no less creative original pages long it gets kind of lonely lonely as it used to be i think there's more recognition of regional are there used to be i don't think there's as much of the sands it if you want to make a lot of money you have to be on either coast but if you're willing to put up with less less of an income and as an artist i have to say that the main pleasure you get from being an artist is being able to get away our self because otherwise you know one would be easily don't do it for the wonderful benefits fringe benefits for vacations are there retirement or
any of that it's the process itself is so involving and so wonderful that it's worth putting up with a lot of the other hassell it's just plain hard work putting up and taking additional means touring around a lot of big heavy paintings with a lot of glass man that sometimes breaks and companion is a lot of framing his light using sick along with it too grandparents apparent older adults can for other older adults and adult soap and caring for older relatives or so the first one grandparents and parents or in the grand canyon and then
generation elaborate a little bit on some of the particular problems and stress for situations that result from is there an interracial family
besides mission and that's thursday march seventeenth from two to four pm and the location for the seminars is where her and moving onto thursday march twenty four the same time to avoid the afternoon older adults can for other older adults a generation here is one word the patients i imagine sometimes
it's of a struggle between loyalty to a friend or a relative and then really needing to care for yourself or so no it's good a relative and then on tuesday march twenty nine in the evening from seventy nine pm adult children caring for older relatives this seems to be something we're hearing a lot about lately on reverse mr parker right
and again i imagined gjelten is an emotion or a feeling that accompanies these children when they're getting tired of it why give up but they feel guilty and they think they have to be you're right oh yeah i am once again these seminars began on march seventeenth there's one among seventeen four grandparents and parents a march twenty fourth older adults caring for older older adults and on the twenty nine adult children caring for older relatives now once again the address of where they're taking place and how someone can get involved ok go camping adventure at three
in wichita kan for more information on the phone the line terry wohlers aging specialist with prairie view of wichita and newton for okc see engage cd i'm nancy finken located near bethany college humans book gallery as a stop for several thousand people throughout the year as one gallery opened in november of nineteen fifty seven as a memorial to the late budgets and sane a painter teacher and crusader for art from sweden sensing died at the age of eighty three after teaching for fifty two years at bethany college
the galleries director larry grover says the current exhibition will be up now through may first we're very pleased to have the midwest art exhibition that was our exhibition was down along with burgess insane and two other well known best new teachers in the air at ninety nine as a celebrated exhibition has always presented at easter time on campus events and ecology in conjunction with the messiah festival this year the show features a team local artist interior painter show and designers from wichita and lawrence as well as a lens for potter rate came under the guest artists are rubber said lola painter recent retiree from the faculty at ut was the sculpture we're showing these years but they'll rutherford a wichita amanda's whimsical metal sculptures that are great deal of fantasy because of kinetic and moving parts and make a myers pottery also deserves praise he's been on the faculty for many years and as a student of angelo garro is your kansas state university and we're very proud of race were
among the he's doing exhibitions this month we have a show a prince and the corporate collection of the lutheran brotherhood of minneapolis minnesota the prince or religious prince from their religious art collection are by old masters as well as more and more contemporary printmakers and on all the thirty four prince represent a fine show of work for large corporations collection of the painter's represent everyone from local studio artist to teachers in the high schools in the area as well as great schools and bethany faculty members entertainers in addition to the midwest exhibit glyphosate is the gallery always features where i said say well the number of paintings by syncing is interesting he produced about four hundred water colors and we don't know exactly how many was introduced that we keep a confidential research file on his oil paintings and we have constantly two thousand eight hundred and ninety some paintings and we feel by the time we stop learning about a new painting will represent a collection of oils by the artist about his
work and about three thousand oil change grant says before becoming the director of the gallery taught school well it's a refreshing experience is the director of the small gallery and coming from the classroom aside as a classroom teacher i find that working with the beautiful collection we have here in the interesting guests on shows and traveling exhibitions we get him i had i guess you can equate it with her child working in a candy store because you're your own they'll be around or looking at beautiful work by sand saying as well as as learning more about her work by other artists throughout the state of kansas and even outside of kansas when we have special exhibitions and come from out of state wanting to gary goodman pointed out the number of paintings that featured the outdoors he really enjoyed kansas for its landscapes and also to discover the rocky mountain national parks and spent many enjoyable summers in the area near colorado springs are meant to colorado and as a man era and as a young man he enjoys getting those kinds of rock formations in his geology class in sweden and this
interest in sketching roxanne information carried over and always work throughout the rest of his life he enjoys representing rock formations in both kansas and colorado in his oils watercolors is and also is prince landscapes were definitely his favorite but not for every season no no us insane detested the winter probably because he grew up in sweden where the winners were very cold and i'm from la and so most of his landscapes then in this country are either spring summer for that sturdy really didn't care for our winter is a season of the year and it did very little to representative of the paintings is that you could probably count the number of paintings that are winner seems bus and saying on one hand at the age of ten cents a montana boys school in sweden where he studied drawing and painting following graduation he attended university and soon after he went to stockholm to pursue his career as a painter very early work is
what we call point is i'm using the tip of the brash and the pallet of the post impressionist good painters of europe's and same presents a very colorful and a lively palette of colors in his paintings and his early work required just the tip of oppression and most of his work is at a breast work at me he enjoys oil painting that many watercolors and produced over three hundred and twenty eight different prince to during his lifetime glasses says some sense things really work because of the style has to be protected we've had a good many unfortunately under glass as we walk to the gallery today you probably noticed that a lot of the oil paintings were under glass especially the smaller ones because there's a tendency for people to want to touch or on their hands over the surface of the hotel's any pressure of the finger trip to excuse me we're either cause the heavy thick coils to crack we're world saw the paintings so we've had to cover some just enforce a way to protect
them we hope that people can still see the colors and enjoy them that their spin and then that has a preventive job too the possible damage to a painting on campus and there are many paintings on the road that are not covered with question of course when the artist painted on barbell take the pressure of the finger tip our hand without causing damage to the heavy thick paint this as having a sensing valerie evans is a good location to sell area talent we're fortunate in that they appealed to show represents were biting local artists among which sailor college faculty we have is large oil paintings by jude burns mccrae who teaches at bethany and some good figure paintings by jeff were and who also teaches on the faculty at bentley college we have studio artist represented lenz board including by name lester raymer sally johnson john rogers bob walker and i hope i'm not leaving someone out and we have some good people from
mcpherson robert smith from mcpherson marian robinson from mcpherson marianne used to teach mcpherson college until recently retiring we also have worked but matthew richer is not only a fine artist but a commercial artist from mcpherson and then we have work by a grade school and high school teachers in the area credible years he's represented he teaches in the school district who in sports and also we have work by elizabeth loder graham who teaches on the faculty of mcpherson high school teaches art we're very proud of all of them are new this artist in the show's pilot lemon and this is a layman's has been is the director of the only a museum here that's more than iowa has watercolor is in the show this year she's our newest artist i was earnest would be less terrain her and he's now in his early eighties and he's the senior artist here in town are well known studio artist to those paintings and prints and it has been successful on all the armies try and we have several examples of leicester in his work in that show this sends a memorial gallery was bill
primarily by sen same slate's mr charles poem poems wife margaret is in saint only daughter and bridges attended sir with much of the success of the gallery today she serves on the board of directors of the berges stands a memorial foundation she also helps with the operation of the sand saying gallery and she's she's wonderful in arranging shows we often get difficult shows where we have to plan a rumor considerably different paintings knitted by different artists in different manners of painting and she studies the situation is excellent at arranging loans for exhibitions in the gallery when the certain inability to come over more often her bed that condition limits her activity now on her feet to where she can leave her home much here in town the larger sense a memorial gallery and then sprint will be showing the midwest art exhibition now through may second a sense a collection is always on display ok dc and cage cd i'm nancy finken the tickets were different their different colors and different name on a match three but it's
basically the same idea you scratch off the playing surface and you see if you win and you win and if you match three amounts and the amount that is that the three matches the menu we have the prices are the same dr odds of winning are saying and again now you have a special promotion to a pontiac dealers in kansas city has that it's kind of neat because the lottery money forty five percent of the proceeds goes for economic development in kansas the lottery staff thought that it would be odd good to get involved in a kansas project in the in this kickoff event and they got to find a to a honeywell been discovered that the pontiac grand prix is the only car made in kansas it's making kansas city kansas and that is the only place in the world that the grand prismatic so in connection with that they got as with pontiac and ask if some of the dealers would have gay led to celebrations on this first dave the new game in thirty four
pontiac dealers around the state said yes we've got to do that so tonight at thirty four par yet dealerships all across the state there is a gala drawing and many of them have entertainment scheduled kind of like the affair we have an advocate at convention hall in november twelfth with the first game on the dealers will then draw from a big hopper which they have all had to construct a ticket and that person who has to be present at the dealership when thousand dollars then are of those persons that when the thousand dollars will go to topeka a week but this coming monday january fourth at two o'clock and dale sharp seven or the us or pontiac in topeka there is a drawing for a new pontiac grand prix know you're starting a new game a bit earlier than you had anticipated why is that the reason for that is because the sails up the first game tickets went faster than anticipated
initially the office had predicted the lottery office had predicted that eighteen million tickets will be sold by the end of the first game which was projected to run for ten weeks the brits because the start of every twelve with a bit about the end of january well as our december twenty thirty days before christmas at night ninety million one hundred thousand tickets had been sold so over one million or had been sold by that time way before the projected in the day and we were frankly many have tickets and rather than ordering the tickets it was decided to go ahead and start the new game of course a new game hopefully elwood will generate excitement and of course with that kicked off celebrations we're hoping that will generate excitement now does this mean that i went to the first guy and those things will be available where the people who were holding those tickets at that might have winners of cagney describes those tickets before one hundred and eighty days from november twelfth which was the first day sales
the lottery rules state that you have to kind of prize with one hundred and eighty days at the first day of the game so they have that long to do that and those other way tickets you will continue to see those at some retail locations until they run out so you may actually see two tickets available in some locations now there was an opposition group or did that have any kind of an impact on our very it has not and yet as far as we have been advised in the commission on the lotteries feeling about reverend taylor and his position is certainly that he has the right to express his views and an eid there's no doubt that he believes very strongly in his opinions but on the other hand the kansas did vote on this lottery and sixty four percent of the voters wanted a lottery and i think you have to counter balance the fact that the voters overwhelmingly voted eighteen so there hasn't been any
retailers who've decided not to sell tickets because of its opposition to your knowledge knowing that the retailer participation has been tremendous and that is has a lot to do with a good ticket sales we have twenty nine hundred retailers but his painting around the stadium as about a thousand more than them that staff anticipated now you mentioned earlier that forty percent of the profits from the game is going to economic development have any say as a person on the lottery commission how that is there's no we don't if i didn't i would certify that is determined by the legislature and i'm carla cradle is very actively involved in that he's the secretary of commerce he was at a news conference monday that i attended and announced that aig a corporation and as kansas ain't has been heavily working on some suggestions on what to do with the money and of course there'll be more money that we projected available for economic development again because of the ticket
sales so i don't have inside information on that and i think you'll be seeing a lot more about that during the spring when the legislature gets back in session what's the latest on the multi state lottery the multi state will begin so the last i heard was in early february we would see them on state which is what we call the online type of game that computer operating game where you pick several members when you buy a ticket now that the difference that you'll see there is that you won't be able to find that answer as many retailers because not as many retailers as sell the instant tickets will have the computer printouts for the online multi state but you will see that starting in early february and you'll see instant take again sales right alongside their small tasting twist my ears of the lottery commission for gates's easy i'm nancy finken for
the kansas side patrol has five airplanes accuses jefferson leaders i caught up with the group was working here stayed on highway fifty three man crew is based in wichita covers over twenty counties all three have licenses and they take turns in the air and on the ground on this particular day the help of the pilot of the plane well sergeant the shooter and mike can overcome along side of highway fifty to issue warnings in tickets that are in the areas his stopwatch is to time the drivers on the highway driving on the highways such as fifty you may have noticed and white lines that about every night he says that's how the trooper in the sky measures the speed of a car today when we get to the airplane each day is richard waters inside nearby waters that we haven't airplanes day here some of which are on this night on the standards and sort of color to make sure they're right we read about three minute check
if anyone watch has a problem with that we'll take any service institute jennifer rieger drawdown they are going to use what we call a fifty three hundred mile values we try not to use five thousand two and a full market which run they got almost five thousand homeless gentleman who usually is due to watch is only one was before the meeting is to divert more will start to say i don't want the story is the site of our budget the first one first walked off every square the second on benefits or what we do go to the driver was he says after he stopped to watch on a cot it's imperative to get that i'm sorry for that reason we did a series of laughter terrence circling a small stretch of highway fifty if we're exceeding the speed limit over sixty miles an hour i'll see radioed the other two troopers on the ground didn't flag the car down sometimes issuing warnings and sometimes the dreaded ticket there's a lot of cars that
they collected for victims of speeches about that much of it is the ones that are really moving down a highway overpass it because i was in his team spend a lot of time between cost and burden ozzie says he's confident some drivers are looking for then we do frequently as eric what are you especially going for example this year the fair trade and served in places that don't know better during the hour i was aboard the troopers plane he radioed for about six cars to be stopped that he had caught exceeding sixty miles an hour harvey says the average number of cars they stop depends on the highway and also the time of year summer is the time when there's more traffic which also means more speeders to mike on over says the average is about
six to ten tickets per hour but as for a quote of the troopers are responsible for there is none quite often you know in the dacha quarters of the truck drivers get back to forty hours that we're going to work because you got them whether you know but that the smuggling case which is one of course we see if you do your job you know have more of a system a point system so much of their week again on what it is to have a process that you're going to get probably a one point that abolishes out there next time hauser says despite warning signs some spears are in shock when they get pulled over and you come into the state to save a plane that's on there's a piece of the job we've done this event is about the better players on the weekend and then find out that you know and people get
upset and climbing to the top or to the two per se usually the person receiving the ticket does not find it but if the driver does take the issue into the court room also says the stopwatch method of cockiness years usually stands not only give the pilot as well as the truth but the pilot nearby has to have all the testimonies on the age of the politicians and the second trip and they're finding that proper information and the court of appeals said that were a little more fair or you want a more measured mile wasn't for a work that one out of five means seven mile which is a radar yet to make it more than his decision it's just everything that really everything that they might be visited
by ten speed up but as a schoolgirl and still a city badly might have joked that one individual sometimes the chamber's get dirty looks or verbal abuse that after being on for smith for ten years and i went to jail for seven years housing has learned how to handle not been the most popular person around joy when people across the planet that's defined as though ongoing command are one gentleman speaking on and nobody's trying to achieve this big ticket issues for the job are a party put aside as extravagant was just because of the traffic laws and that's our job the troopers agree that sometimes being the one on the ground is more
dangerous than being a pilot in the air also explains why her client records into your harness and they have been in the world's dangerous but you still have that element out there that you could bring a corridor and now we've had instances when those that were stolen and that has caused many a rhythm guitarist jason them that's just a speeding ticket although the day i accompanied the troopers they were looking for speeders policy says that's not all the parts do and says we don't have one it
measures genes so gently schuller algebra pilot for twenty years says the kansas division of the highway patrol began in the late nineteen fifties on the turnpike and served as a model for other states air traveler programs now most states are finding cancers including missouri iowa and colorado have pilots in the hair cutting travelers on the roadways for okc see and kate cd i'm nancy finken actions are more powerful than words i think that's something that that evidence of literature that even that's really true it so very much so a lot of research is coming out there showing that we need to communicate more by a body lying reach and nonverbal communicators and we do better the words we use of the researchers
started about seven percent of maine that means seven percent of media and communication is by the words that we use approximately thirty percent of communication is through what we call nonverbal communicators in other words how we use those words but what is the pitch what is the tempo whether it's loud whether it's soft those kinds of things and then about fifty five percent of communication is what we call pun language which means you're your body position your facial expression the gestures that you might use an end to like if you look at the statistics then know over ninety percent of communication of meaning is true what we call non verbal communicators the lawyers that i've ever seen that particular statistic says about sixty five percent yet that that's awesome so sixty five percent over by ninety three percent of communication is what we call nonverbal communicators images our components being pitch and dynamics what are some other person well if we look at the little wary of
literary of nonverbal communicators i wouldn't look for solid body motion and for example some examples of this would be what we call emblems of them is a soaring or on a us it freezes it's a symbol that we were afraid for example if i were to put my thumb and my index finger on in a condo that's you know how did everything go again you might put your finger you know put up with it and it represents an old paid for ok you probably i see people who are on the why give the victory sign of fever victory and under fire were outside and i wanted to write i might put out my thumb you know having a check i might do i think probably the greatest the mold we've probably seen this as in terms of the hearing impaired or sign language is based on multiple albums using your hands for meaning of words and phrases another area that we call her illustrator jules tree wood is brutally said use your hands to describe you see this way or i got a present in a box as long as high had a pretty ribbon on top and you using your hands to kind of put out the size and dimensions as the
president and he was as tall and maybe this have a you know in your ear your hands or being you and you know the thing is this story via kut has this long and only get right down to it is about six inches you know it might be so we call his nose to you demonstrate what is brutally brutally so i think wasn't going on although little body lotion types of things are what we call our own ethic displays you see your facial configurations in terms of do you have a smile on your face do you have a frown on your face do what kind of a look to have in your face and if i were for example to say you cannot me and that is the sea committee said how are you basically spell and i said to you today is a sensitive my life no i if you could see me right not very sad look i'm afraid no seven minutes it isn't that is that my wife and i said that you get my body is as israel said look and then i said dude i've never been so happy in fact i'm doubling over with enthusiasm a great joy and you see all my body lying to mean very having depressive know look you say this person's crazy as the other side the coin if you cannot be news to highlight a sister could tell my city today pop
pop pop pop up a meeting today is the saddest day of my life i really never been so sad we say get the job and she has got to go because when you're eating in reality you are reading my body language you know taking my work seriously and if your child is is crying and two years ago and it is at a two year trial honey what's wrong in the kid says no we didn't know you know that's not truthful if your spouse comes home and slams a door throws a coat on the chair and sits down has a grudge you in the face and you say to your spouse did anything happened to be a neo nazi what makes you think that say but the whole body language that loan with the tone of voice in how it's said that the consciousness you know that empty the crispness of it you mean the body language and i think that's another form of recall regulators you regulate one has really set off the lead not to the head you know suicide you're not in that time either will become regulators are they and so this is one time we also have another kind of
nonverbal communicators on that we young when i'm sorry your physical appearance is a very popular communicator of that scene resemble that if you were under assad give this an example you're a nurse you need to take your first patient a day not exaggerate as you've got to come in here you forget you're not doing deodorant you didn't break your tv ads but in uniform to go back east stockings and are issues that you say you're patient today mr jones i'm going to give you why aren't more scare your listeners can do have you because you have defined utmost care by the caribbean coastal birds it's a sign of what you mean by it will scare another very important part of our nonverbal communicators are what we call parallel each house and in the senate the pitch the temple the tone of voice and i'm a great believer that the most important individual to come in contact with your school or your church or your business wherever it might be the hospital is that person who answers the telephone and says good morning this is you know such a such a place and the way some people young man you know this kind of like he's not really
saying and please you think that this ties in swing out of wine you know from one side to the other and so the words and the tone of what you express we missed the telephone is a powerful powerful communicator another important thing and environmental factors communicate all when you walk into a place so is it clean and is it what about the decor and so forth and so on another very particularly here is the space that space to speak and there are different job categories that space closed her boys is called intimate space well very few people in her intimate space or in its early images from the body i think it all experiences we'd been an elevator a very crowded elevator very uncomfortable why because some amazing intimate space below very few people in that area it's a crowded can control this when the elevator door opened you go out and you get your bubble back we call this an invisible bubble it and they may not be aware of that we were talking to somebody
standing close to you you were just i've come to the us to get into a comfortable are you i most people are aware of the things that you carry the ideas that you've done stories that i'd know what i think one and i don't think they're that much where i think one of my roles as a lecture others around the country has to to drop what i think people are aware of the recession i've thought about it on to bring up to order a conscious level and to make people more sensitive to the impact of body language and some people will say why do people walk alone like it isn't so it may be no mike if the army have just come in here you know that the way they carried themselves in and so on and so what i try to do is make people conscious of all of those things most of the power of touching communication we have to get away from the idea that there's two ways you wouldn't touch don't touch or its actual touch and when the sound of a portfolio of communication the way you shake someone's hand odd that hand on the shoulder that the beautiful color of a wonderful hunk of its london for phil strong
sexual intentions are and the like you know in these things that we discuss sister lanka's down macaluso as sister of mercy issues affiliated with the college of saint mary in omaha forty eight c c e and k eight cd i'm nancy finken
Series
Series of news reports
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KHCDC
KHCC
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Radio Kansas (Hutchinson, Kansas)
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cpb-aacip-a0dd1baf070
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Description
Segment Description
News reports on writers, taking care of elders or family members (primary care-givers), art memorial for Birger Sandzen at Bethel College, the lottery, speeding tickets / law enforcement by airplane, and 'actions speak louder than words'.
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News Report
News
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News
Literature
News
Fine Arts
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A series of News Reports.
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00:45:49.800
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Host: Finken, Nancy
Producing Organization: KHCDC
Producing Organization: KHCC
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KHCC
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Citations
Chicago: “Series of news reports,” Radio Kansas, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed October 3, 2024, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-a0dd1baf070.
MLA: “Series of news reports.” Radio Kansas, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. October 3, 2024. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-a0dd1baf070>.
APA: Series of news reports. 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-a0dd1baf070