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     CA to KS Author, Local Artists, KS Senators and Representatives Discussing
    President Reagan
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trexler move to saliva from california about ten years ago since moving to so i know how much of her time is spent as a poet in residence she's also a teacher at area schools and colleges since that time i've lived every year devoted a little bit more time to my writing again when i first moved here i had already published one book of poetry and had won a literary competition that to europe and had done a number of things are in the world but when i moved here i found myself on retrieving a little bit from world war on the things and i love partly because it's very seductive hear a noun for a writer or any kind of a solitary honest because you find yourself not bothered by people he's the people here are wonderful but they don't intrude you don't want to see anybody you have a lot of time you know working you can just you can just do your homework when i got out in the world working and after about five years of not sending my workout and losing a lot of contacts in the publishing world i am little by little every year started to spend more time with my
writing and still didn't send my workout it wasn't until i've been here almost ten years that i realized that i had completely killed my connection to the outside world by writers connection to the outside world but in that time i had written another book of poetry published in and have raised my kids and had written a novel and so it i know i never think that it was wasted time but i do realize that i did things i didn't do things that would be helpful to my professional life and so i started to send my work at again about a year ago and discovered that i guess i had changed to live in all this time here and my writing was different and it was and i was different i was more call about the world i i was hiding in the world so much in california when i lived there before i came here and i felt they were after me every time somebody would ask me to give a reading or do something i might get all paranoid and think they're going to get to take over my
life in that i will be able to be a writer but now i feel more ready because i know i can hold people turn me into something else a trip my life into something else in california traxler screw was moving along well by some people's standards but not by herders when i won the hemingway competition on jean stapleton from all in the family read my piece in the la times it was humor is a parody of ernest hemingway and she called norman lear's was at the time when all in the family was having trouble she was talking about leaving because she felt they were making her come off as immediate as templeton and when she really felt the character edith bunker should be more naive then stupid and she she thought it was time they had a young funny woman write some of her part so they got a hold of me and got me here and for a while i flew back avoids i did a little bit of consulting and and i got really scared because i had a chance
to be a script writer on the show if i did this and if i did that and during that time i got very very scared because i'm a poet and fiction writer but i'm not a person who wants to write something that has to be done in twenty six minutes with commercials on certain rates at certain times and to prescribe formula that bothered me but then right around that time also i got a call from the publicist of the hemingway competition heat margaret e coli from la and told me that he said in the publicist i'll sit down and is sitting down and i have news for you don't waste called me and now they've been working on a story about a woman writer for so long was a who's married and has children and then suddenly mason and they read about you in the la times and they've decided they want a base the movie and your story so called him back years the woman's name and of course he said i want you to sign a contract with me and then we will get to london and on the talk shows and things and i said he'll be great i know you'll be great and i said but
if i sign a contract with you doesn't that mean that you'll see you'll be able to say yes she'll be there on his nineties without asking me and he said well sure that's that's how it works and i i i said the time i would know my own life anymore it scared me it really scared me and so i never called the number and something like six months after that time when my marriage started to come apart i decided maybe i article that number and this is the signal this test and how hollywood is i called and ask for the same woman and they wouldn't return my call by then he was only six months later and i was already old news and then i won't say what movie but the movie came out about four five years ago the one that they did and had so many elements of my story in it it was very very funny that i mean so many personal things that some people had known for the story and things i get
that i guess they went on without me at me but i was glad i didn't want to see that was the whole commercial aspect of writing that i didn't want to encourage didn't want to get into but what she does want to encourage in her life is to be able to publish her novel titled a published more books of poetry and to feel good about being a bunting fellow people have this funny attitude about writing they think that a lot of people think that if you write anything you are you are a writer and they say somebody writes articles about home decorating and someone else writes poetry they'll say oh you're both writers it's not the same thing it's like somebody does portrait painting and somebody has no walls just beautifully inside a house they built will the brush but it's not one isn't better than the other but the same thing and i had to reach a point where i can explain to people the right thing india's not across the board all
one thing i wanted to write poetry and i wanted to write a novel that was kind of strange and unusual in an interesting to me as a poet to write in it was a matter of my family get used to it and that's that's where i have to admit my life to reflect what i really was what i really wanted to tax lawyer says she plans to finish her third book of poetry during her fellowship the book is called a measured see poems in the voice is that american women real and imagined one poem that i wrote in that it surprised me just got a prize in boston as the best policy you're ploughshares is a polish you know you work with a lot of older women here and so i know a lot of them were former farm wives and a number of them had never read anything in their lives beyond not saying all of them but a number of them had only written letters and grocery lists and suddenly they were writing their own stories and
the hunger to tell the stories caught me know moved me and i learned so much of these people and out this poem is called the winner's words and it's a long i think about eight nine page pawn all in the voice of an old midwestern widow who's looking back on her life and it deals a lot with language i would love that with children in laundry at double sextet imagination and it's just a very it's a composite of all of these women then i man and that's that that comment was part of the package that i sent to record but it hadn't been published yet at that time and what hadn't received any prizes and there's another another poem in the bunch that i'm working on now i don't know it's going to be really hard i read about a ukrainian woman who was found wandering the streets in the twenties in some bigger than say some urban plays i forget where i think it was
detroit arm and eight she was battling incoherently and so they put her away in on not they didn't even bother to wonder what she was saying they just assumed she was incoherent and so they locked her away for fifty years and at the end of his fifty years was she was still locked away someone walking through his home realize that she was speaking ukrainian all that i'm an sat in interview her and discovered that the reason she was crying and babbling incoherently that night she was found wandering the streets of this big city was because her husband and baby had been killed in a fire and she lives grief stricken and all these years she was locked into silence because of the language and so i i've been down there's somebody in boston this week ukrainian and i'm gonna work with him a little bit and try to imagine how wise how was for her entire life or mid twenties until five years before she died she was institutionalized for new crime nothing other than the fact that she didn't speak english so i'm a poet pictures or
trucks or has accepted an appointment as a binding fellow at the lending institute of radcliffe college in cambridge massachusetts her appointment concluded in june of nineteen ninety one at which time she plans to return to the lineup trexler move to saliva from california about ten years ago since moving to so why not much of a poet is that she's not a teacher at area schools and colleges first moved here i had already published one book of poetry and had won a literary competition that europe and had done a number of things are in the world but when i moved here i re tweeting or anything partly because it's very seductive hear a horror writer or any kind of solitary honest because you find yourself not bothered by people he says the people here are wonderful but they don't we don't want to see anybody you have a lot of time
you know working you can just you can just do your own work when you got out of the world war ii and after about five years of my work out and leaving a lot of contacts in the publishing world i am little by little every year started to spend more time with my writing and i'm still looking for my workout it was until i'd been here almost ten years that i realized that i had completely killed my connection to the outside world by writers connection to the outside world but in that time i had written another book of poetry published in and have raised my kids and had written a novel and so it i no i never did think that was wasted time but i do realize that i did things i didn't do things that would be helpful to have my professional life and so i started to feel my we're getting into very year ago and they've covered that i get it to live in all of
the time here and my writing with different and it was and i would develop more call about the world i i was part of the world so much in california when i lived there before i came here and i felt they were after me every time somebody would actually give a reading or do something i might get are paranoid and think they're going to they're going to take over my life and i will be able to be a writer but now i feel more ready because i know i can hold people turn me into something of a traveler like a different view in california chaplin's career was moving along well by some people's standards but not by herders what won the hemingway competition on jean stapleton from on the family read my piece for the la times interview with a parody of ernest hemingway and she called norman lear at the time when all of the family was having trouble she was talking about leaving because she felt they were making her come off
immediately and when she really felt the character edith bunker should be more naive then stupid and she is she kind of time they had a young funny i feel a little bit consulting and and i got really scared because i had a chance to be a script writer on the show if i get this and if i get that and during that time i got very very scared because i'm a poet and fiction writer but i'm not a person who wants to write something that have to be done in twenty fifteen it would commercial that certain break the third time and prescribed formula that bothered me but then right around that time also i got a call from the public health of the hemingway competition heat margaret be called a criminal and told me that he'd feared it's the public face than anything down the normally called me and now they've been working on a story about a woman writer or a fellow law who's
married and have children family make it and they read about you in the la times and they decided they would be if the movie and your story for cotton back here the woman named and of course he said i want you to find a contract with me and then we will get you on that on a talk show and i couldn't really great i know you'll be great and i have that if i find a contractor you don't have that mean that you you'll be able to stay here she'll be there on august nineteenth without asking me any fiddle sure that that's how i i think that i would know my own life anymore i can't be a relief to me and so i never called the number and something like six months after that time when my marriage started to come apart i decided maybe i ought to call that number and the signal that tells you how hollywood is i called in after the fame woman age and they wouldn't return my call by then only fixed monthly
radio you know with the whole commercial aspect of writing that i didn't want to encourage but what you don't want to encourage in her life and to be able to publish her novel published more books of poetry and to feel good about being a bunch of people have the attitude about writing they think that a lot of people think that if you write anything you you are a writer and i think somebody writes article about home decorating and someone else writes poetry of a o u boat writers it's not the same thing it's like somebody that portrait painting and family i had no wall beautifully about how they build will oblige but it's not one even better than the end of the thing and i have a point where i couldn't find people that live it's not across the board all one thing i wanted to write poetry and i wanted to write a novel that was kind of strange and unusual in an interesting to me and a poet i
am it was a matter of my family getting to it and get back where i had to integrate my life with clay what i really was really really wanted to actually stay she went to finishing third book of poetry during her fellowship the book is called a measure the on the voice of the american women real and imagined one poem that i wrote head back and you can i mean you've got a private buyer at that poem of your subconscious you know you look at a lot of old i lived alone live your life a letter that go to live and i believe and the hunted tell the story caught the new collection of people and out this poem of public would get along and i think about ninety eight point are in the voice of an old
man you know looking back on her life children in laundry at the facts their imagination and it's just a very active become part of all of the levee and i write about it a ukrainian woman who was found wandering the streets over twenty years become bigger than income of and played i forget where people in detroit and they were battling in coherently and how they put her away you know and not they didn't even bother to wonder what she was a major potential of incoherence of a locked away for fifteen years and at the end of the weekend it was you have to walk away from walking real life that you have a ukrainian all the time and that i needed her and i've got to believe and she was crying and babbling
incoherently that night you're wondering if you can be at what becomes her husband and baby had been killed in a fire and stealing the chicken and always usually locked into violence the kind of language and so i i've been down this family and biden speak ukrainian and i'm gonna work with him a little bit and try to imagine how wide how long as her entire life from a twenty ten coal five years before he died she was going through july when you find nothing other than the fact that he didn't speak english the line a poet pitchers are trapped there have expected employment of the lending fellow at the lending institute of radcliffe college in cambridge letter to that point and conclude in june of nineteen ninety one at which time she planned to return to the lineup he's been in nineteen sixty six at
the age of forty one kremlin says he began making art twelve years later kremlin had his first official exhibit and in that catalog he wrote i managed to keep this new activity free from personal conflict and worldly striving for over a decade no anxiety market know despair no guilt no competition no conflict and you're a church thank you
laughter it really really is oh yeah i know i really am i really do kevin some papers to go there aren't
converting they actually offered and six houses and howling masses thirteenth this is hungary there's no unity you know bigger faith
i always carry is black you're welcome little pieces i'm trying the exhibit at the art museum at wichita includes essentially three shows sculptures collages from his general works and is only dramatic series of collages called lead which in hebrew means see kremlin says these galoshes the group of them are to the victims of the holocaust
oh seven in a five years along our work was with marcia that suggest a procession won't the penn camp the neck festival is the yearly festival and at those vivid colors that language there were all kinds of activities the great celebration of open market nations us and elgin marbles in the british museum the older models are representational of the recession and the bowls of animals and the riders that kagan honor of apple not great and glorious works of western art as coherent and ethnic that's all i have for making the title
is here our march that looked like a procession and if they go from right to left at the less there is to work until seventy five the numbers is that the n and that suggest the tech toilet on the idea of the concentration is that those they'd all had at my article five people were ok with that more significant number letter numbers that identify numbers the numbers was that this was a sanatorium so this is a very ironic that her title and also find it says the great glorious creation of which
don't know a normal war were these ruins the start helen i respect from there the procession arrived at the crematorium has a compost association when asked about what his hopes are when viewers look at his work he says with the exception being the holocaust series he helps only that viewers get excited about what they see he is insistent that viewers should not look at art for association for example he has a collage and blues blues he says many people oh we'll look at an automatic and say oh that looks like a canvas sky but his point is his collages are not of the canvas sky or of any other concrete image he's seen and is trying to duplicate for him he says huge collage is something he's never experienced before and that newness of something he hopes viewers experience as well as from air a growth of self then
paid discovery of what was already there are not sure that for me of ways i'm like apart for any artist for me at least that i'm throwing something out of my gaps and climate than an hour in the cars on the paper about that in making something i become something more in over the course of making that is truly exciting discovery is then but becoming an experience yes now that is available for any viewer if the viewer does not insist on placing or at least he was past associations and on and on
because allowing this to be a fresh and new experience the air when krugman show continues at the woodstock museum now through february twenty fifth in hutchinson i'm nancy finken fb having a better qualified than a woman for the job and thirty out of the usual work as a complete surprise thurgood marshall and that one candidate be carried out it's totally partisan but my view is you got it and i got a democratic president but i think if health care failed a point where you find a determinant of withstanding his own partisan bias that need better step aside while wishing the best for me was very important civil rights movement that with a litigator think he made more money in the litigator arguing brown versus board of education allegation that is made on the bench but that we all wish
him well i'm surprised that president bush has as senator if president bush of points out black justice to succeed marshall oh that's a beetle that how he feels about the quarter bill that he's been for the the idea of the quarter that he's been so adamantly opposed to well i think that and thought about that the role that i think the press will be looking for the best qualified person to be a lot of pressure to keep that he actually coming out of a little tiny island and he would be different groups and only on average person the person on the bench that you know the one on the bench another now into the quiet except that if the president does not believe in quotas that's why i think that and certainly he's going to try to find the best man or a woman for the job but keep in mind he knew you log into my office we're going to just surprised i get to be a potter and they ever thought about it you know i'm totally
missed the ten seconds to go one away about a lot of preparation i think he does that beautifully artistic a little quotas on the supreme court and about earth senator bob on the resignation of thurgood marshall from the supreme court doyle says there's some good news for kansas base in wichita that was damaged heavily by the april twenty seven tornado will probably get some hefty federal funds to start rebuilding this year we've been working with the automation a budget that mr garment her i'm not vermont trying to get the money they hear it not a lot i've talked with a k buy the mission that the press is important and i called the director of automotive industry jay and mr behrman tournament fifty five million dollars in what we call an actual criminal appropriation or mcconnell when a very difficult year that a divide millions not only complicated here because i know that going forward any activity
by millions for all of them to get money over go public money but wait ugly buildings were destroyed in the tornado are your times wrote that time that may not be the three million dollars inheritance we read all of my prose and poetry cooperation we waited about thirteen and began on a lot of the only people calling them an a the commander of the call air force base last saturday in wichita carla my ankles where the breeding by colonel miles we know they wanted to start a remember the other american they killed an ornate kelley they're likely get their money will quickly get those built back in july for them it had been available but number so it's not as something starts to go through congress a bet that it will harm or more had a problem and we would hope that we can get additional money been
they call it was really neat now i can move your question about two million republicans and the president had requested to five million a year for a call i don't know a lot of money but my news and wrote a column for an ordinary very important national security in autumn you rebuild we rebuild it here and that one other than a lot of the new element here that are looking for air bases that closed no i don't senator dole says president bush once again has demonstrated his genuine concern for the losses in our state and the time
bill called him hours after the tornado struck to today's welcome announcement president dole says and his administration gave it demonstrated a real commitment to getting the job done deal says as for the crime package in particular the seven day waiting period on handguns he and senator george mitchell the majority leader of the senate will have to work out a compromise had been staying up until two in the morning the past few days to work one out they were going to do i think something like the brady bill and a bentley at the minute your brain development not be nominated maybe five day but i mean there is no org senator dole as co sponsoring a bill giving states the authority to regulate or to reject out of state trash this issue is a hot one mcpherson right now as trash from the east coast as being hauled to the old
city landfill there again the department of the environment has just given the ok to teenagers economy to continue to dump bill gives an update on where the bill is in the senate here i am a little bit i mean and now i don't believe is their strength and numbers because the new jersey delegation has been able in the past to block any kind of legislation banning trash hauling from state to state now he thinks that's going to change i think initially was shorter than goat out there by itself and here's bill bradley and and frank lautenberg the two democratic senators from under your feet and of course they have mentors and then ali came up late night and all your family is now and put it off and put it off with my view that here becomes the other hand i have to be able to sustain a
filibuster and with the talk of inclusion of something well the idea that i would go bill says he doubts this issue could result in a landmark filibuster he hopes that those in favor of trash dump him about a new regulations will understand what it would mean to their states if the situation were in reverse to understand that the art that we gotta have some protection we've got to get our state to write our governor and legislature it up to take a look at what's been done in our state building a nuclear weapon they were for profit program that they weren't dealt with somewhere else but my view is that i think it can be done i can't believe we couldn't shut off
debate and i don't think they're enough senators who would make the position up to buy the new jersey senators not all that reflect their constituents that we got a reflector is our goal mm hmm that effect of their sentencing recommendations and what your grades were to see a large number of violent criminals and those involved an answer is drug transactions going to be going to prison with more regularity and staying for a longer period of time and correspondingly we're have probably criminal who are not considered and he did not have violent adult criminal histories serving less common in some cases not solving any common although being taken care of so
the speaker being dealt with in a non prison setting such as intensely the community corrections and can see the house arrest of the local or what have you the overall effect of what texans information was was coming up with is about an overall eight percent reduction and in a prison population of the state this is something we were also looking for because we have to build our first new maximum security prison since abe lincoln's days and we don't we want that that the president's base to last us for many many years to come we don't want to simply have to be in position bill in prisons all over iraq if we look at some of the issues with the truth in sentencing as you going to do about hannigan who is the warden and state facilities to contaminated and asked his opinion about that kind of seventeen he said that he thought it
had some positives but one of the names that he was concerned about pussy riot the maximum security facility is that he'll get a lot of long term people that your crimes against people those violent criminals who will be in the system for a long period of time and he was concerned that our programming but funding for certain programs they go by the wayside sometimes in budget talks because the wabash these policemen are going to be in here for at least twelve years we won't have the program start for quite a while and then he can't deal with the kinds of problems with the management of those inmates who are idler who are not getting education and that's what his concerns have not been something that you've got that yeah as in fact he's absolutely right i think some of the fears that alibaba has will be realized i'm not sure that what what there is that we can do about that because now or a situation the ideal president you know if you ask bob barr hannigan what the ideal person would be it would be out of a facility in which you have a mix
of maximum security means security and a minimum security individuals to help run the prison people are true think that prison is run by guards are mistaken other supervised by gardener prisons are basically run by armed a lot of inmates are with intensive parisian who because of their security status and the need for rehabilitation and the need to be active in the need to be productive do a lot of work around that assad may well be a problem or that that causes is that as you mentioned is aimed at a feeling by the state who had been interested in programming these individuals who can be quote unquote saved i'm a protective it now have the temptation to use that money elsewhere because if people nervous in a lot of big immigrant hard for a lot of people never believed in the seaport for forty years and i think that's a real concern and i think
unfortunately that those years will be realized i think some of that money is going to be different barbaro max security facilities are or aren't going to be that there are empty warehouses where to get away from the idea that our sentencing is rehabilitation they're not headed to a crippled those who are committing the same kind of things robert you know the non violent non crimes against people who wield those you mentioned earlier than those people who are maybe going into corrections in the community about where those who are not violent but nonetheless we have committing robberies over and over again what happened to an actual criminal committing crimes against people you know that the turnout interesting enough to be a bit more controversial topic and how we deal with the murder because the concept that the sentencing commission of going to that nonviolent criminals will be dollar and a less
confining environment like new corrections will or even third time lawyers will probably be dealt with and als confining that type of a terrible situation and the public is not going to be happy with that because they see the person that violated their home as being ever been a dangerous as the person that assault of somebody across team and because it it happened to them and and what what would've happened had begun home when a burglar broke in or maybe they were home when a burglar broke in and that sort of thing but that there was no personal injury mean how's that any less of a danger then had a pentagon had an assortment of the peoples of that is completely risk of a hard idea to sell because basically veto an illustrious one most readers say i walked up ah because you know asking the
question of are you willing to pay to have them walk not mean they're ready for soccer glazes of if a person commits a crime they need to be dealt with appropriately and the hardest thing is going to sell her native the third time are now having said that the sentencing guidelines do take into consideration and the grains take into consideration a repeat offenses and criminal history such that if you have three like three non violent felonies eagles one violent felony originally sort of a formula that can be used and so it will it will kick of natural non violent property offenders into a higher category if they continue to to commit those types of crimes and there are sensors will be higher proportion why would fit within them what their history the controversies go and they held many times and they have to do that before kick into a higher category and i think we're leaving too or three probably caught my guide to burglarize asked three
times or three different houses before he really gets kicked into a higher category you're going to find that their time offender a bellwether may have community corrections proper setting and actually invented some people but we know that work with a certain amount of dollars we want that very expensive prison space occupied by somebody who has committed a crime against a person or in the other got philosophical decision we've made is we're not concerned about the the problem of campus but that that would that that high security expensive that will pull more times than not be occupied by a drug dealer and not that they're calmer now susan silverstone have to toss well that's what they want what about the idea the first time burglar and i go to the penitentiary in angola kid hard to formally known here in hutchinson that it's so awful that i'm not going to comeback vs i going to get a correction
i can work right where clyde barrow i know nobody on it and do it again and again i'm going to that for a number of years and i thought that made a lot of sense and i saw that the film scared straight which was a program of getting people in and they were just tip toeing into the criminal area and you go out going to have a real shock to her and maybe the shocks day at one of these maximum security facilities and you're so scared no well menino was her place to get into a nice clean life thereafter statistically as well what's happening and that's at and even the ones with the shortest days what one event for chile is that when we put them in or where they were hardened criminal they come out a better criminal state representative mike go the element and then a member of the special committee on judiciary one of the thing the committee and looking out this summer and funding guidelines to be taken up by the full house already been passed by the senate event that he
anticipates it will cost in half and could be employed as early as january of nineteen ninety three for radio campaigns as bell issues nancy that'll be coming up its world are concerned about the rising death rate in store infant children arm and we've been i think the statisticians have been taking for ransom limerick and now are having some concern that there may be a more sinister element going on the case done during say probably is the more notorious war we have a number of deaths in the family morales kagan is as sudden infant death syndrome or whatever and tom cole porter gershwin suspicion toward earlier recommendations is going to be that we form a
team of experts that would take a look at some of these suspicious deaths in her column desk lot of you will take a look and see him for is something going on with regard to children's deaths i'm the other issue that we're looking at liam laughter there's a concern that we're having that younger younger children are in trouble and committing violent crimes we have created jewel known law and what we're looking at mail is one argument pension facilities are doing what they need to be kind to prevent those kids from ending up in our adult humans to patients as or a lot of juvenile detention issues and programming and cried one is that they do not detention facilities are more or less holding tanks right now we're not keeping those
kids from getting in an old system or make them and keeping them often strayed they pay gap david kilgour given probation where it is how we see him again and they'll quote entering that impact in our prison system so a wonderful programming and russell per year to look at the status of our juvenile detention facilities in the state were now as you know mandated separation of june old journals from adults or we can even have segregation ended in the adult jails would simply go to remove them from the buildings it mandated that will also have money to do it but we have to do it anyway and so there's a commission that has picked up for one moment into the story regional slides across the state of course rio can easily up and going wild and we've got to love these were planning on on how they would be
financed and make sure that they get online or quickly because we need space very quickly right now you have been sending us adults and you put all that together that is a separate facilities we we've had to have cited sounds or edition which really yours and and we do have that i don't think that there is there really any jails mistake and is now around a client and for women on that point but we're having to go completely off side with those juveniles and them and that's really causing promptly will kansas weren't at the jails that are enabling time that may have plenty of space for adult incarceration and would have plenty of space for foreign sounds irrigation jewels but that it doesn't meet federal mandates that are going to have to get together with the regional group of cyber city balance i'm going to save it will handle twenty killings douglas county is is gonna be a side
arm an illinois at helping people who were shown the recount or show will carry heavy wet head johnson county jewels healthier sea and there's a lot of movement of sinners possible one that i think it really love to looking at the protection of the identity and you're not in certain violent crimes that probably from the standpoint of the press is that as the hottest topic of the year illegally to be honest i'm not sure and this in my own thinking because we you know we believe it's important in iran in june a law to give that youngster best opportunity to be successful in society as as possible that has traditionally involved a veil of confidentiality around around you will push me and they are not considered in the criminal
proceedings and the we bought into the theory or the years that if you keep it confidential and he don't stigmatize that particular youngster that he or she has a better chance he didn't want to give her adolescent problem and if we have in general paul muldoon on that publicized that statement edges to them if you want the looters they feel like their life is when that article and that a lighter than be able to succeed as in a criminal and they usually that's exactly what happened well concerns though they were having a melting that the proportional protection with the eu the public's right to know what's going on their community and of course the whole issue came to head with ours growing tragedy i think there may be some people listening who don't know i haven't heard of that very publicized drilling case where a couple boys
for family members yes and them and had these were hard core while the names that we now know of a wormhole and them oh very type of boeing have happened because that it was finally deal it's a family has taken a lot of family members under circumstances where you're not really sure what the motive was and what what i have found over the years is sometimes the press will take a different angle well with some of these types of stories and will actually see our law enforcement role in your blog portion of the final years as the press gets in the way and they sometimes them i don't understand the theory that the law enforcement using and that law enforcement it is intensely keeping
certain evidence confidential because they don't want the us suspects to know what they know and that sort of thing of the press leaks it than men are sometimes a frustration an investigation that does happen that doesn't always happen and down and take your arm i think we all benefited in the slum sterling case with very very fine article is written by benji comes home from from the what's going on the conference of chief was able to get some information and update your case with weaker benefit i think from having no pressure poem were involved from the beginning we needed to have some mechanism in place to make sure that we're we are working together and are cross purposes to that extent i favor more disclosure of the information are not willing to say at this point that we simply open looks like we do in an adult the prosecution but once i think we get into the juvenile form or an aunt
remind listeners that we created jewel of the law last year and it said allow if a forty or fifty year old magic on the bible would be a class they'll be calm and know the more serious of violent patrick on swimmers the kidnapping rates that's one thing that the court has jurisdiction to consider in an upbeat view morning more would consider them adult subject into adult prosecution and i think we don't know records on on both prosecution is once they get to the stage with him where the judges made at her vacation state representative mike o'neill a pageant that a member of the special interim committee on judiciary mr o'neill talk about the campaign and the debate commission or radio can i think again it's been i mean people might be bad for the modern an excellent program when i think
about my life i like the goal that would've funded the margin now writer matt the name martin of actually spot on the shore have been very useful the past where we will use that phrase a moral we will looking for more funding because we think we have some good programs and us investment in her educational with all of that swept really asking for increased funding next year that are requests from state general fund about thirty three million dollars in greece plus these things come to about forty six million dollars increase only asking for or four ninety three and so we will continue to he won in the world a recall parliament once were lost in the last two years we've been on a live mike mcguire memory how many years that when you're reading
it is that it would it take to get carried through the kreeger program are planning about sixteen or seventeen minority or lose we are here sixty two men and xavier know sixteen plus original songs and it was to be a three year program that that will hopefully was going to get the stories of our own professors and apartments that up to ninety five percent of parity with b appears to be well we got up and had buried by schools the the regionals riddle schools about which we call recalls a hasan pittsburgh and emporia a varied family got those ninety five percent at the re certification which gone kansas state and consumers are willing to quite there were olive byrne between about eighty eight nine two percent how have the
year's gop or the pill because you you lose some professors that you really pay too there's an immigration matter what you do get any on research grants and an argument that people have and probably aren't going on and graced a lot of states for a while because we're really only doing y'all oh boy i'll want to north carolina where was paroled we're slowly roi of those and she was an actual research element in the way a loser barrows a caseworker they read a tomboy just like that and the remarkable records we're not a replica money leaving
and another depression and maybe that will go into that money we're looking at budget cuts oh my i'm wondering what kind of that that will have on the regent university thing from statements by president has a cat they're going to be bigger work study programs that we are going to be offered one candidate that i can think of the budget going to have on the region school coming here well i know i have well you know your goal and are quiet and until people are in the church a nationwide chorus of them really are our facilities more hours of course we do and for her critically wichita or they all our nontraditional students are alumni chorizo which boy humor state
university of course amid the others are a quick and brutal that but the national flag we don't know yet how much the governor has not polish work on a recession she's going to the decidedly more money in the kitty and i thought and wade we are prepared with ever plan to make her to never said recently that maybe down to push a lot of nevada's the hyde i think we we we the universe it's your big there are no local legislator forget we need more funding where paul newman and in so it's it's a good idea to remind the only lose more years of that when that happened if we go we'll increase jewish urine for a four night to a model where the
conclusion and we have tremendous tuition increases year and that amount to eleven million dollars and most of the increase though we got for forty year over the previous year or so and the tuition and that is a factor on the other hand he had to issue a little that i know where a bargain and then the widow of catching up to do so i don't apologize for the criminal division agrees a lot i'm sure that a lot of kids wait and make a lot of time one student loan funding is sort of under current law for you either saw loved we don't know exactly the only two that really is will that all right that's the effect that i'm concerned about is his effect on on learning i am concerned about the effect on professors and all added important that was
a bubble how you measure whether the quality choice rhino on oil we haven't outcomes evaluation that we started two years ago and though we test people really were is in the third year and then again after they've graduated parishioner carmen skilled just heard general knowledge thinking skills and also their major and that process to really not grounded in the place where we all crack repertory you're collecting data you know you don't know it yet or didn't and rubin graduated so we are world what they got and evaluations are all important thing in an audio only been to pursue and we will and it about the brain drain bank where that time i love letters from school
school her or are you going to a job for a flute or invalid for a national merit scholars and kyrgyzstan an example of this increase they used to get maybe five merit scholars twenty five or thirty of thank you receive jesus saw them creeping up on the rickety of those oregon lot more insulated gotten there on the wall and they're only brought kids in armored cars and joe torre as a volunteer well the current thought at the competition among our universities for a bright kid and really increased their great deal of problems and so we feel are one thing we feel are probably of all the merits cars there a war in a nice cool that a little
oil jack and then the chairman of the border region where radio can i think again
Series
News reports
Episode
CA to KS Author, Local Artists, KS Senators and Representatives Discussing President Reagan
Producing Organization
KHCC
Contributing Organization
Radio Kansas (Hutchinson, Kansas)
AAPB ID
cpb-aacip-1dbe84e44f9
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Description
Series Description
Compilation of Nancy Finken interviews with notable people in KS in the late 1980s.
Clip Description
Author Patricia Traxler and her experiences moving from California to Kansas, Artist Irwin Kremen talks about his sculpture work and collages, Senator Bob Dole talks to Nancy Finken about President Reagan, State Representative Mike O'Neil talks about a new jail and how he is on the special interim committee, Stories about infant death rate, student success and merit scholars with Jack Samson, Chairman Board of Regents.
Asset type
Compilation
Genres
Interview
News
Topics
Local Communities
News
Journalism
Subjects
Local News Interviews
Media type
Sound
Duration
01:03:37.080
Embed Code
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Credits
Producing Organization: KHCC
Publisher: KHCC
AAPB Contributor Holdings
KHCC
Identifier: cpb-aacip-065aab45c30 (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: “News reports; CA to KS Author, Local Artists, KS Senators and Representatives Discussing President Reagan ,” Radio Kansas, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC, accessed May 18, 2024, http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-1dbe84e44f9.
MLA: “News reports; CA to KS Author, Local Artists, KS Senators and Representatives Discussing President Reagan .” Radio Kansas, American Archive of Public Broadcasting (GBH and the Library of Congress), Boston, MA and Washington, DC. Web. May 18, 2024. <http://americanarchive.org/catalog/cpb-aacip-1dbe84e44f9>.
APA: News reports; CA to KS Author, Local Artists, KS Senators and Representatives Discussing President Reagan . 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-1dbe84e44f9