press releases
Are We All Shenandoah? on the Next State of Pennsylvania on WVIA-TV
Guests include John Szczyglak, Shenandoah borough council member; Neil Reese, former chief of police of Shenandoah; Amilcar Arroyo, editor El Mensajero Media, Hazleton; Anna Arias, community liaison-Hazleton Hispanic Community; and Dr. Stanley G. Rakowsky, superintendent of schools for Shenandoah Valley School District.
To be part of WVIA's live studio audience in the region's only High Definition Theater Studio, call (570) 602-1150 or visit www.wvia.org.
Viewers may call in questions during the show at 1-800-326-9842 or go to www.wvia.org to submit questions online.
Learn more, www.wvia.org.
© Copyright 2012, wvia
(2010-03-12)
PITTSTON, PA
(wvia) -
Weeks after our first show detailing the murder in Shenandoah, allegedly motivated by race, a new incident occurred to ignite a community already on edge. On the next State of Pennsylvania, Correspondent Suzanne Kapral-Kelly discusses the new incident, its effects on the town and its residents, and examines if and how Shenandoah residents are portrayed as racists in local media, including WVIA, and national media. The show airs live Thursday, March 18 at 7 p.m. on WVIA-TV.Guests include John Szczyglak, Shenandoah borough council member; Neil Reese, former chief of police of Shenandoah; Amilcar Arroyo, editor El Mensajero Media, Hazleton; Anna Arias, community liaison-Hazleton Hispanic Community; and Dr. Stanley G. Rakowsky, superintendent of schools for Shenandoah Valley School District.
To be part of WVIA's live studio audience in the region's only High Definition Theater Studio, call (570) 602-1150 or visit www.wvia.org.
Viewers may call in questions during the show at 1-800-326-9842 or go to www.wvia.org to submit questions online.
Learn more, www.wvia.org.
© Copyright 2012, wvia
