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Kansas Authors Club Meets Saturday, July 24

Kansas Authors Club Meets Saturday, July 24 From News Reports A panel of three writers from the Kansas Authors Club, District 6, will meet virtually on Zoom to discuss religious writing, writing on religion, and/or spiritual faith on Saturday, July 24 at 1:30 p.m. The meeting is free and open to the public. You don’t have to be an ordained minister to write on or about religion or faith.  Miriam Iwashige, Christian (Amish Mennonite), Najiyah Maxfield, Muslim, and Phil Wood, Baha’i; will discuss their writing. There will be an opportunity for questions and answers.  Contact Jim Potter for further details at jim@copintheclassroom.com or 620-899-3144.

Kansas Authors Club District 7 to meet April 17

Kansas Authors Club District 7 to meet April 17 The Salina Journal Members of District 7 of Kansas Authors Club will be meeting at the Clarion Inn, 1911 E. Kansas Ave., Garden City, at 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, April 17 for their Spring Convention. They invite other interested writers/authors to join the meeting to hear Janice Northerns, Liberal, review her new book “Some Electric Hum.” Northerns, a native of Texas, is a retired professor of literature. She and her husband taught English and Creative Writing at Seward County Community College. Her poems range from Texas to Kansas. She will also entertain questions from the audience.

The mid-1970s brought unimaginable horror and unmasked evil to Lincoln

Dan Tackett The mid-1970s brought unimaginable horror and unmasked evil to Lincoln.  It was a time when Russell Smrekar and Michael Drabing became household names, spoken in quiet voices at the dinner table, in angry rants at barber shops and taverns. Smrekar was convicted of the shotgun slayings of a young Lincoln couple in their home. Drabing was sent to prison for the stabbing deaths of a rural Lincoln farm couple and one of their daughters.  People who lived in Logan County at the time undoubtedly still remember their names and the bloody carnage they caused. Mike Harnett, a Lawrence, Kan., resident, certainly recalls the horror of the time. Those indelible memories led Harnett to write a book, “And I Cried, Too: Confronting Evil In A Small Town.”  It was not an overnight project.

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