Veteran AP journalist Sally Buzbee is appointed editor of the Washington Post - the first woman to hold the job in the paper s 144-year history
The Washington Post named Sally Buzbee, a veteran journalist with the Associated Press, as executive editor on Tuesday
It s the first time in the paper s 144-year history a woman has been named to head the role
Buzbee will oversee the Washington Posts expansion plans, with owner and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos opening new bureau in Sydney and Bogota
Her appointment was welcomed by Washington Post staff and former colleagues on Twitter, where she was described as an incomparable leader
Release date: Jul 06, 2021
Enter for a chance to win one of ten copies of Kelly Irvin s newest Amish romance novel! Enter for a chance to win one of ten copies of Kelly Irvin s newest Amish romance novel! .more
Cassie Yoder loves her job as a housekeeper for elderly couple Job and Dinah Keim. Their only children, a son and daughter, left the Haven, Kansas, di Cassie Yoder loves her job as a housekeeper for elderly couple Job and Dinah Keim. Their only children, a son and daughter, left the Haven, Kansas, district and their faith more than twenty years earlier with no contact. Cassie feels for the Keims because her own parentsâ infertility struggles left her an only child in a community where big families are a blessing.
Giveaway dates: Jan 18 - Jan 25, 2021
Countries available: U.S.
Kelly s newest Amish romance series, Amish of Sky Country includes Mountains of Grace, followed by The Long Bridge Home, and Peace in the Valley. The series explores Amish communities in northwest Montana and how they are impacted by wildfires.
Her Every Move, her latest romantic suspense novel, debuted in March. Publishers Weekly called it gripping suspense and said, loving descriptions of San An Kelly s newest Amish romance series, Amish of Sky Country includes Mountains of Grace, followed by The Long Bridge Home, and Peace in the Valley. The series explores Amish communities in northwest Montana and how they are impacted by wildfires.
Thu, 12/10/2020
LAWRENCE The fall 2020 photojournalism class in the University of Kansas William Allen White School of Journalism & Mass Communications faced a challenge. The pandemic shut down nearly everything that typically would yield good photography: events, sports, social activities even just normal life.
So Eric Thomas’ JOUR 410 students decided to turn the challenge into opportunity: to document a semester in 2020, the year of the pandemic, the best they could. Now they are turning their project into a book, “The New Normal: A Semester at KU Amid the Coronavirus in 2020.” It s a good slice of what life was like this semester,” Thomas said. From mask-wearing students hanging out at Potter Lake to classrooms seats blocked off, an empty Jayhawk Boulevard, and of course, so many Zoom calls, the students’ photos illustrate a year that will forever stand out in the course of history.