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If you have eyes, plagiarize : When borrowing a sermon goes too far

NASHVILLE (RNS) Colleen Reese was ticked at her preacher. Listening to the minister’s sermon at Franklin Christian Church, south of Nashville, she took exception when he began to criticize parents for passing bad habits and bad genes on to their children. He included a joke about mothers passing on mental illness to their kids. Reese, who deals with depression, thought the joke was in poor taste and had little to do with Christianity. When Reese typed the sermon title into Google, a link to her pastor’s latest sermon series popped up. But so did a three-year-old series from a church in Kentucky. The Kentucky sermon was almost identical to the sermon her pastor had preached.

Virginia Kostol

Baker City, 1926-2020 Virginia Lee Kostol, 94, of Baker City, died suddenly on Dec. 13, 2020, at her home in Baker City. Services will be scheduled at a later date, when the COVID-19 restrictions have been lifted. Virginia was born on July 18, 1926, at Hoquiam, Washington, to Arthur and Mavie (Olson) Benson. She began first grade a year early, to stop her habit of running off to follow her sister Frances to school. She spent many happy summers with loads of cousins at Lake Quinault. She could swim like a fish. Virginia was valedictorian of the Hoquiam High School Class of 1943, and her speech topic was “Women in the War Effort.” Then she was off to the University of Washington, where she was a member of the Chi Omega sorority, and earned a bachelor of science degree in Home Economics and Education and a fifth-year certificate in Education. In her senior year she met Carl Kostol at a sorority/fraternity exchange. She taught home economics at Hoquiam High School for one y

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