| Saul retired in 2010 after serving 
			more than 22 years as lifestyle editor of The Courier newspaper in 
			Lincoln, where she received numerous awards from the Illinois Press 
			Association and the Associated Press. Prior to her Courier job, she 
			worked as a freelance writer and photographer for numerous central 
			Illinois newspapers. Earlier 
			in her career, she also wrote for the Publications Division of the 
			Indiana Department of Commerce, the Public Information Office of 
			Sangamon State University (now the University of Illinois in 
			Springfield), the Illinois State Journal-Register, the Springfield 
			Sun and the Mattoon Journal-Gazette. She served as editor for the 
			50th anniversary edition of The Progressive Miner. The Central Illinois Branch, NLAPW, 
			meets at 1:30 p.m. on the third Thursday of each month at the 
			Bloomington Public Library. Professional women writers, artists or 
			composers who are interested in visiting a meeting may contact Betty 
			Story, membership chairman, at 309-664-0319 or
			gl-bstory@comcast.net, or 
			contact Saul at 
			loganilphotos@gmail.com.  The League of American Pen Women 
			was organized in June 1897 by Marian Longfellow O'Donoghue, niece of 
			President William McKinley, in protest of the way women writers were 
			treated by their male counterparts. O'Donoghue, who wrote for 
			newspapers in Washington, D.C., and Boston, invited fellow 
			journalists Margaret Sullivan Burke and Anna Sanborne Hamilton to 
			join her in establishing a "progressive press union" for 
			Washington's female writers. The group, including writers, a 
			teacher and an artist, banded together to seek mutual aid, advice 
			and career advancement. Professional credentials were required for 
			membership as they are today, and the women determined that Pen 
			Women should always be paid for their work. [to top of second 
			column] | 
 
			Today, the expanded mission of the 
			organization includes mentoring, encouraging and promoting emerging 
			professional women in the arts. In a time when arts in the classroom 
			are being curtailed or eliminated, the national organization also 
			provides outreach programs that give students a chance to discover 
			and explore their artistic gifts.  Additional information about the 
			league is available at www.nlapw.org.
			 The National League of American Pen 
			Women was founded in 1921 with 35 local branches in various states. 
			The organization is headquartered in the historic Pen Arts Building 
			in the DuPont Circle area of Washington, D.C. First ladies have 
			always been awarded honorary memberships, and in some cases, such as 
			Eleanor Roosevelt, have actively participated in league functions. 
			More than a decade into its second century, league membership has 
			included more than 55,000 professional women writers, artists and 
			musicians. 
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