{"@context":"http://iiif.io/api/presentation/3/context.json","id":"https://uoregon.aviaryplatform.com/iiif/t43hx16s5p/manifest","type":"Manifest","label":{"en":["Tape 0013, circa 1979"]},"logo":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/organizations/logo_images/000/000/029/original/uo-logo-hires.png?1580744881","metadata":[{"label":{"en":["Subject"]},"value":{"en":["KEZI","TV news","Chambers Communications"]}},{"label":{"en":["Identifier"]},"value":{"en":["Coll 427 (Collection Call Number)","Coll427_tape0013 (Digital Object ID)"]}},{"label":{"en":["Date"]},"value":{"en":["circa 1979 (Creation)"]}},{"label":{"en":["Rights Statement"]},"value":{"en":["\u003ca href=\"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/\"\u003eCreative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US\u003c/a\u003e Please contact Special Collections and University Archives at spcarref@uoregon.edu for commercial publication requests."]}},{"label":{"en":["Source Metadata URI"]},"value":{"en":["https://scua.uoregon.edu/repositories/2/archival_objects/674682"]}}],"requiredStatement":{"label":{"en":["Attribution"]},"value":{"en":["\u003ca href=\"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/\"\u003eCreative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US\u003c/a\u003e Please contact Special Collections and University Archives at spcarref@uoregon.edu for commercial publication requests."]}},"provider":[{"id":"https://uoregon.aviaryplatform.com/aboutus","type":"Agent","label":{"en":["University of Oregon Libraries"]},"homepage":[{"id":"https://uoregon.aviaryplatform.com/","type":"Text","label":{"en":["University of Oregon Libraries"]},"format":"text/html"}],"logo":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/organizations/logo_images/000/000/029/original/uo-logo-hires.png?1580744881","type":"Image"}]}],"thumbnail":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/collection_resource_files/thumbnails/000/156/122/small/open-uri20220405-1382-pyuzwe_1649167816.jpg?1649153422","type":"Image","format":"image/jpeg"}],"items":[{"id":"https://uoregon.aviaryplatform.com/collections/1635/collection_resources/70179/file/156122","type":"Canvas","label":{"en":["Media File 1 of 1 - open-uri20220405-1382-pyuzwe.mp4"]},"duration":3367.645,"width":640,"height":360,"thumbnail":[{"id":"https://d9jk7wjtjpu5g.cloudfront.net/collection_resource_files/thumbnails/000/156/122/small/open-uri20220405-1382-pyuzwe_1649167816.jpg?1649153422","type":"Image","format":"image/jpeg"}],"items":[{"id":"https://uoregon.aviaryplatform.com/collections/1635/collection_resources/70179/file/156122/content/1","type":"AnnotationPage","items":[{"id":"https://uoregon.aviaryplatform.com/collections/1635/collection_resources/70179/file/156122/content/1/annotation/1","type":"Annotation","motivation":"painting","body":{"id":"https://aviary-p-universityoforegonlibraries.s3.wasabisys.com/collection_resource_files/resource_files/000/156/122/original/open-uri20220405-1382-pyuzwe.mp4?1649153402","type":"Video","format":"video/mp4","duration":3367.645,"width":640,"height":360},"target":"https://uoregon.aviaryplatform.com/collections/1635/collection_resources/70179/file/156122","metadata":[]}]}],"annotations":[{"id":"https://uoregon.aviaryplatform.com/collections/1635/collection_resources/70179/file/156122/transcript/86243","type":"AnnotationPage","label":{"en":["AUTO_TRINT_Coll427_0013.mp4 [Transcript]"]},"items":[{"id":"https://uoregon.aviaryplatform.com/collections/1635/collection_resources/70179/file/156122/transcript/86243/annotation/1","type":"Annotation","motivation":"transcribing","body":{"type":"TextualBody","value":"\u003cstrong\u003eUnidentified:\u003c/strong\u003e There's the summation of what you said there. N-O-R-M-S-T-O... E-Web recommends that Christmas lighting displays be kept conservative. If possible, use lighting strings that have smaller or flashing bulbs. They use less electricity. Also consider placing lights inside the windows so that the heat the heat they release will go toward warming your home. Only turn on Christmas lights including those on the tree when someone is there to appreciate them. And turn off outdoor lights before going to bed. No one likes to come across like Scrooge, so E-Web says that the decision to use Christmas lighting displays is an individual choice, but please do remember that there are alternatives. And they're safe. For Eyewitness News, this is Rosemary Reed. So, Ziribanda is a lot like Amazon, giving time, and Brooke's parents have really put a lot of time and energy into Zirabanda. It's just an hour for an hour rather than trying to figure out how much money your time's worth. If I care for Brooke for an an hour, then I know that his parents kind of will take care of Aiden for an hours. Files, files with parents' names, and we've been in the business of It's maybe a long time coming. Maybe it's not right around the corner, but it's certainly going to happen sooner or later. Do you know yet? Thank you. Now, if you don't have a building right now... Bye-bye. Come on, come on, I'm back to tell them why it's over. But I also think a lot of parents feel kind of guilty leaving their child, and this way you're totally involved in your child's education. You help hire the teacher, you help with the curriculum, plus you get to see your child with the other children, with the teachers. It makes you feel good. You're not just dumping your child off and picking him up at the end of the day. What about Safeway is your savings place? Do you have a title or just a cooperative parent? The board of directors and I'm also a cook and I've done teaching. Just been totally involved. Okay, thank you. Runway out, 11 and 12. John George, strength 210. Northwest Medical Volunteers in Thailand. We took you inside their improvised medical ward at the Sakow Refugee Center. Tonight, we're going to take you outside of the medical ward and into the surrounding camp. They are two very different environments, as you will see. Sakao was the first of Thailand's refugee holding centers and it was also the worst. Even now, it is little more than a crude attempt to catch up with a human disaster. At best, it remains a potential breeding ground for epidemic disease and ethnic hostility. It is the place where the sickest people have been taken and they were brought here by the thousands before there were any facilities to care for them. Few elderly people survived that initial period. And this gentleman was one of the lucky ones. Officials tell us that there is one square meter per person here in this camp. That is ten times below the minimum standard set by the United Nations. The camp population of 35,000 lives jammed together in a sea of tents. All packed so close it's almost impossible to get a stretcher in to carry out the sick. Open trenches like this one, filled with reeking garbage, criss-cross the compound. Open toilets stand only a few feet away from where people eat and sleep. And everyone stands under the watchful eye of Thai army guards because beyond the barbed wire these people are not welcome here. Salem physician Earl Van Valkenburg fears that camp conditions will reverse much of the progress that patients make in the medical wards. All the patients have a heavy load of parasites, you know, which are a type of worm they acquire through their food, through the dirt, which they'll probably all reacquire once we discharge them from the hospital. The camp's medical coordinator, Hans Nordriff, a German, agrees that the overcrowding poses a constant health hazard. All sorts of sanitation and overcrowding may induce an epidemic outbreak of all sorts of diseases and so we would like to spread these people over a larger area. Up to now no decision has been made yet about this but we are trying on different levels to get more space for these people here. As long as you're overcrowded like this you're kind of sitting on a medical time aren't you? That's right, yes. Just now we had the first cases of measles and in a tropical country like this measles are very dangerous and life endangering for small children. Outbreak that Nordra feared hit while we were there 20 cases the first day 40 cases the next 80 cases the day We left and the vaccine arrived on the positive side Helicopters ferry in a constant stream of influential officials in this case Lisa Ostergaard the foreign minister of Denmark here to take the same tour that stunned Rosalind Carter only a few weeks ago a A score of relief agencies and church organizations are now on the scene, bringing with them all kinds of aid. New buildings are going up, and from the time the first foundation holes are dug, it only takes three days until workmen are up on the roof laying down the final layer of thatch. Adequate firewood is brought in each day to fuel the thousands of campfires. Water is trucked in daily, enough for thousands to bathe and wash and take care of basic domestic needs. Amazingly, the death rate has been cut to a mere handful a day, sometimes even fewer. And most encouraging, everywhere you look, children are at play. The children's kite struck me as the most hopeful sign of recovery, especially the ones that soared high above the camp squalor. But back on the ground, this crude barbed wire fence symbolized the deepest problem in the camp, for it separates two warring factions of the Cambodian people, the Khmer Rouge, or Red Khmeers, and the Khmeer Seri, or Free Khmears, who for years have been locked in a battle to the death. Officials fear once their respective soldiers regain their health, They'll begin fighting again right here in the camp. It was rumored that some cameers were threatening to sneak into the medical wards at night and kill their American benefactors. California nurse Irene Vatekas heard those rumors and ventured out into the camp to make friends of her enemies with a strategic game of hacky sack. Ironically, each night at sundown, the homeless Kameers gather to hear their national anthem. The irony is that political observers are warning that unless these people put aside their ethnic hatreds and unite against their common foes, the sun may well set forever on them as a nation and upon their whole way of life. Don Clark, Eyewitness News in Thailand. Tomorrow night we will take you to what promises to be the largest of the Refugee Holding Centers at Khowi Dung, just nine miles from the Cambodian border. Because Okay, Judge Frey, if you had. The pick of anything in the whole world for Christmas, what would it be? Well, I'm a lucky lady so I really don't want anything for myself but what I'd really like would be to have the 50 hostages come back from Iran and that mess resolved. I think you're so late. If you had your wish for anything this Christmas, what would it be? I think peace all over the world. No fliers. You know, if you have fires, you're not having peace. I would like to see everyone have a safe and happy Christmas. So the parent will be involved with... I like to see you too. And then I just start collecting. What happened? What happened to my bird? My bird? It probably is because of the decorations that you have, the Christmas presents, the wrappings and everything, and that Christmas tree. If that Christmas is not kept good and moist with water in it or being sprayed with some retardant like flocking the tree, then that Christmas Tree is a real, real danger in that house. We talked about a little bit with the guys. Our goal is January 4th or 5th when we have our first league game after Christmas. We have two league games next week. But our goal is to try to have them pretty much in shape and going by about January 5th. It'll take about that long for them to be really ready to roll. But we're looking to beat them. It's our turn. And I think we have a great shot at them. I think that we have some more quickness, maybe, than they have. Obviously, they have a pretty great player. And they have some good supporting players, too. But our kids will have a lot of emotion come Friday night. And if we can get some people on that stands yelling for the Lancers and get them down here in our home court, I think it'll be heck of a ball game. Thank you by the way. Has been called the holocaust of this generation. Millions of Cambodians have already perished in that country, first at the hands of a homegrown dictator named Paul Pot, and now at the hands of the Vietnamese. As many as a million more are being driven across their own border into neighboring Thailand. Yesterday we showed you what has been, what began as the worst of the refugee camps in Thailand, the camp at Sakow, where Northwest Medical Volunteers are now at work. Tonight, we want to show you what is perhaps the best of the camps, one that lies only nine miles from the Cambodian border. This is Khowi Dung, a camp just a few miles from the Cambodian border. It will probably become the largest of the refugee camps, and it's a striking contrast of what we left behind at Sakow. The population of this camp is drawn from the so-called free Khmeris of Cambodia, and they are better fed and better educated when they arrive than their communist counterparts in other camps. They are arriving by the thousands every day on busses and trucks which bring them in from their border hideaways. The Thai government does not call this a refugee camp, but a mere holding center, supposedly until they can move the people on to someplace else. More than 45,000 people are now in Khao Yidung, and they are spread out over 2,000 acres, as opposed to the tiny 12-acre compound at Sakow. The well-spaced medical facilities boast 1,000 beds. The medical staff has reported to be more than adequate to handle the current number of cases. Nutritional standards are high with people getting lots of bananas, oranges, fish, vegetables and rice. Children fly their kites everywhere and the Khmer women wear colorful clothes as opposed to the black uniforms of their Khmer Rouge enemies. In the evening, when smoke rises from a thousand campfires here, the camp has almost a tranquil feeling. But the paths these people had to travel to get this far were anything but tranquil. We spent some time in the tent of an English-speaking Cambodian teacher, and with simple phrases he described far better than we can what he had to do to escape. I have to get here by the car. They are transporting the rice to Batam Bong. And then we have to pay money for a driver, and then we come to Batambong. Later on, we can get pay some for the bicycle, motor bicycles, and to get to Swai. Okay, and have to leave Swai to the border maybe at night, because there are many Vietnamese troops. They are God for them. They don't give up, they don't allow us to give to the borders. And so, all the people, they have to get to the border. Through many difficulties at night but they don't mind every dangerous to get through all many dangers to get to the border and then to go in the new camps for the refugees because they was told that most of the people have lived long pain to the new refugee camps can get a very good life and sufficient rice to eat, so they have never mind all the difficulties. Sir, is this a good life here? Yes, I think it is a very good place for the refugees. They are very sufficiently enough good food and medicine for them, so they are very satisfied. Do you want to go back to Cambodia? For I myself, I think maybe I can go get contact with my friends or my relations in the United States, I will go there. I don't want to go back to Phnom Penh. So the unanswered question remains, where do these people go from here? Officials closest to the problem admit they don't know, and that leaves most of these people caught in a cruel limbo. Don Clark, Eyewitness News at the Khao Wai Dung Refugee Center in Thailand. Tomorrow night, we will take you directly to the Cambodian border, and we will give you a glimpse of life in a guerrilla base camp, and will show you some of the terrible alternatives that are facing the people who are making their stand there. Were you able to talk to any others? Did you get a sense of what they would like to do? Are there other people like him who would like come here? We did talk to a lot of others and they just said some of them said we don't want to fight for the Khmer Rouge We don't wanna fight for The Khmer Sharia. We don't want to find anybody anymore. We just want to go where we can have peace Well, where would it all end for the Portland Trail Blazers, not in Kansas City? They have a lot of areas which they can improve themselves and so we're certainly not satisfied with their progress. We think it's been well let's say satisfactory to a point but if they stand still and don't continue now to develop further they're still going to run into problems before the season is over and as I've said all along our goal is simply ourselves in learning to do the things that we have to do as athletes to have a winning ball club. The challenge is with us, not the opponents. The two parties have been arguing for years on the best way to preserve the industry while maintaining air quality standards in the Willamette Valley. Both sides finally agreed that acreage limits are not the most effective way to handle the situation. The new document calls for control through specific performance standards. This means that growers will be allowed to burn an unlimited amount of land as long as they don't violate air quality standards in Eugene Springfield area. Data will be taken from monitors such as this one so that particulates can be measured on a continuous basis. Mayor Keller said the issue has been a political football for many years, but praised the new policy as a fair solution. There are advantages and risks for both parties, but it is fair and reasonable compromised based on the objective scientific approach to a problem that has plagued us far too long. Bob Davis representing the grass seed dealers echoed Keller's sentiments and seemed relieved to be erasing some long standing animosity. We started off in our discussions with the mayor and with Mr. Long agreeing that we would lay aside all of the emotional rhetoric that had taken place in the past and sit down and discuss the matter scientifically and try to arrive at a solution. I think we've done that. Both parties thanked Governor Atiyah for his intervention and continuous support, then made the agreement final by signing the official papers. The field burning battle may have ended today. The balance struck between the growers and the environmentalists now depends on technology, a commitment by both sides, and the hope that today's agreement does not go up in smoke. In Salem, this is Peggy Jo Abraham for Eyewitness News. I think there have clearly been a number of things in which their responsibilities have not been carried forward with diligence. The Department of Environmental Quality says Oregon has a unique problem. There are so many different wood stove manufacturers in Oregon that the department is worried about improper burning and the resultant pollution. Researchers are calling homes in Eugene and Springfield, asking them if wood stoves are in use inside the home. The results of that study will be used to find out how serious the burning problem is. When oxygen is limited inside an airtight burn... The Department of Environmental Quality says Oregon has a unique problem. There are so many different wood stove manufacturers in Oregon that the department is worried about improper burning and the resultant pollution. Researchers are calling homes in Eugene and Springfield asking them if wood stoves are in use inside the home. The results of that study were... Flue fires are quite common about this time of the year when you get a real hot fire. One of the ways to control this flue fire is to turn your dampers all down on your wood stoves and not the fireplace. You're going to have a problem with the fireplace, although if you have doors on that fireplace, you can close those doors and it will retard the action in that it'll make it cool down more, it won't burn extremely hot. Tonight, we are ready to show you the fourth part of our special five-part series on Northwest medical volunteers in Cambodian refugee camps in Thailand. In this report, we will break away entirely from the medical team and take you directly to a guerrilla base camp on the Cambodians border. The Vietnamese Army has been mounting major attacks in that area that we're about to show you and the situation there may have changed drastically since our visit. But as of one week ago, here's what you would have seen. This is Ban-Nan-Samet on the Thai-Cambodian border. It's a bamboo and thatched city of almost 200,000 people, and it's only one of a cluster of such makeshift villages strung out all along the Cambodian Border. These people are part of the human hemorrhage that has become Cambodia. They're lucky they made it this far, and their fate from here is anything but certain. The uncertainty is that these are a people marked for extermination, first by their Khmer Rouge countrymen, and now by the advancing Vietnamese Army. Everywhere you look in this border hideaway, there are guerrilla soldiers, almost all of them very young. Their leaders don't want them to cross over into the refugee centers for fear of never again being able to mount a fighting force. Experts think the Vietnamese plan is to strike hard at these bases with Soviet weaponry, kill as many as possible, then seal the border. These young troops may be game for the fight, but no one expects them to match the 70,000-man Vietnamese force maneuvering nearby for the kill. But life goes on in the camp, even if it's only getting a haircut. Open-air food vendors do a brisk business, and the customers seem to have learned to ignore the swarms of hungry flies. Educated Khmer's marked for death under Paul Potts regime are regrouping out here in the wilds. Khmer women, another target of oppression under Paul Pott, are organizing here. Just step up, sign your name at the counter. The United Nations transports water into the base, but is cutting off food to try to force the people to cross the border and go to the refugee centers. So, young boys carry what food they can barter on the black market from nearby villagers and take it back to the camp. There. It is often resold at the bottom line of what has become a very profitable trade. Things like cigarettes and soap, eggs and lettuce, beer and blankets. Many Cameres used ox carts to make their way to these border bases. Other refugees told us stories of trading diamonds for gasoline, and some bartered gold for bicycles. It's no wonder at those prices that a shade tree bike repair shop was doing a booming business. The American official in charge of Khmer resettlement is a 35-year-old Harvard man, Lionel Rosenblatt. He thinks the final solution may be to ship these people to a new land and actually create a new Cambodia. I believe we have to look at impractical, but nevertheless, perhaps the only idea is we're going to be able to fall back on several months hence, and then one idea that we've had here is that we need to find a place for perhaps several hundred thousand Cambodians who cannot go back and can't stay for the long term in Thailand. That would mean developing areas that are not arable now, perhaps as a permanent refuge for Cambodian who can't return to their own country, looking at islands in the region. Looking at mainland slices that need water development and economic development. These people would be an excellent work cadre. What disturbs us is that nobody in government and nobody in the private sector is really taking that particular idea seriously. We're still caught up with the present crisis and not looking at the long-term question mark, which you've just underlined. And they're still in limbo. And the people are still in the limbo on the border and more of them are coming every day. The two largest cities in Cambodia are now along the Thai-Cambodian border under nobody's protection or authority or control. This is one of the main crossover points on the Cambodian border. All these people are still within easy shelling range of their enemies. The Vietnamese army has pushed these people across their own country like a bulldozer, pushing dirt across a landscape. That's why they're boarding these trucks and busses at the rate of thousands a day. But after all we've seen, one wonders if they're not boarding busses to nowhere. Don Clark, Eyewitness News on the Cambodia border. Tomorrow night, we will present the concluding feature in this series, a special photographic essay by my cameraman, Rick Cullis. I don't think you'll want to miss it. So far, Don, you've brought back just beautiful film. How are the filming conditions there? Praise highly enough Rick's efforts over there. He filmed in hot, humid conditions carrying a 30 pound camera around until his shoulder rubbed raw. He got up one morning, he had a scorpion in his sock, had to shake that out. But he really did a wonderful job and I think he deserves every possible credit. Indeed, it was a great job. And then you have to get out there and educate each other. Women, you have learn how to fight. We have to teach each other how to find. Amazon Come Crew is one institution that does that. There are many others. Process. Patrol team, more affectionately known as the cop team. Next is Hump. We will be asking each of the panel members to very briefly, in less than five minutes... I've heard a lot of times that women have been told by law enforcement agencies not to fight back and I think that's a terrible mistake. My sister was attacked with a knife and was able to take the knife away from the man and chase him out of the house. I think oftentimes battered wives are raped and we still don't have an attitude in this country that understands the fact that just because you have a marriage license is not a license to be or to rape. See you next time. Thank you, and next we will hear from Judge Gordon Cottrell from Lane County Circuit Court. Uh, join me if you want. We both agree that what's involved is unsound educational practice in permitting students to take courses that are not under the supervision of this faculty or a faculty that is known to be of good quality. And so John is taking steps. And even before he took them, he had been assured by Rich Brooks. Spontaneously that Rich wanted just such protection against any unsound academic practice to see to it that when any student needs to take, some will work to comply with the 36- He stretched out... He stretched out his arms upon the cross and offered himself an oedipus. 25,000. Drinking his arms. This is MBC News. This is my blood. What did God want me to do? And then I came to the belief that God wanted me to be a priest. And that took a lot of internal working out. Do you feel comfortable with that decision? I do now. I didn't then when I first heard it. It took some deliberate and intentional work on my part to come to grips with that. Not that women shouldn't be priests, that wasn't the issue. It was that my spouse shouldn't a priest. That was something that took a lot of hard, intentional work to come to grips. I didn't want it to rain on my parade. And have raised him to the new life of grace. To save Mary, Lord, in your holy spirit. Here view in unity, and constancy, and peace. And at the last, your infinite love you made for yourself. And with resurrection and ascension. . . . Well, it's put together as cast iron and put together with a pin in a similar fashion to the old erector sets. And it's outlived its usefulness? Yes, the bridge has. The line has been abandoned and the bridge now is probably in the category of an attractive nuisance. This part of the year of the iron horse is going the way of the old horse and buggy. Progress has caught up with it and it's being auctioned off. But if you're a nostalgia buff, there is hope. You can bid on this lovely old structure, buy it, and put it up in your own backyard. Peter Murphy, Iowitas News, over at the McKenzie River. You don't want to be on the right. Like flying in and getting out, and there was fog around it. And there's a smell in the air, almost like CS gas or something. It was a chemical odor in the ear, and it hurt the throat, hurt the eyes. And I had no idea what it was. I knew they were spraying something, and I just let it go as that. I was fighting a war. And to open up boundaries to find our defensive positions and fire support bases. I also understand that Dow, at the same time... Yeah. Yeah! What difference does it make? Nice picture. A nice picture of this for weather. I had said repeatedly that I have absolute confidence in the integrity of John Cain, and everything about this incident has supported that confidence, and it continues. Here we are, we're at, near the door. We're away from this confusion in here. I don't like that part. Lonely life. Well, we didn't do too much in the country. Oh, we did at the churches. We always had the programs. Like what? Children's programs, singing and like that, and that big tree. We used to take our gifts to the church, and they would call them off and give them where they belong. That's the way they, that's where we had our kids. This isn't my city, but my first room was, we were just children, you might say. He was 18 and 21, and he was about 28 when he died. Just straight living. What do you mean by straight? Living. Look to the Lord for so many, many, all things, and thank the Lord every day for what we have. And I think that's the main thing that takes us through. Thank you guys. Ladies and gentlemen, Ladies and Gentlemen, Donald Sicken. For the past four nights, we have done our best to show you the work of Northwest medical volunteers in Thailand, and also to show some of the massive problems that have created the current crisis for the people of Cambodia. On Friday, December the 28th, we will expand these reports and present to you a special one-hour program on these same subjects. But tonight, and our final part of this series, is not a report by me, but a very moving film essay by my cameraman, Rick Cullis. And if a picture is worth a thousand words, then Rick Cullis... Has said it all. It's Brett. Fair going on at the facility market. I think they have the fair. No, it's any child. That's why the system of food for expansion program. It's just like another game for us. It was good to know that there was two teams in the Oregon area besides one. But it's just another game. We just have to play harder than every team we play. Yeah, I was quite surprised because... Everybody was saying, Steve Johnson, Steve Johnson is control of Boris. But we worked on blocking the big man out. In practice, we worked five on six, that extra man in there. Block him out, block him out. 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