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Rotary Club of Wilmington commits to a diverse, equitable culture

WILMINGTON The Rotary Club of Wilmington, Southeastern North Carolina’s oldest and largest civic club, has restated its commitment to a diverse, equitable and inclusive culture, and its intention to encourage people from underrepresented groups to become members. At its Nov. 16, 2020, meeting, the Rotary Club’s Board of Directors endorsed Rotary International’s statement on diversity, equity and inclusion, which reads: As a global network that strives to build a world where people unite and take action to create lasting change, Rotary values diversity and celebrates the contributions of people of all backgrounds, regardless of their age, ethnicity, race, color, abilities, religion, socioeconomic status, culture, sex, sexual orientation, and gender identity.

Australia s Total Control could be your new favorite political TV drama

Australia’s ‘Total Control’ could be your new favorite political TV drama Rachel Griffiths and Deborah Mailman shine as a prime minister and senator, respectively, in this series that begins streaming Dec. 17 on Sundance Now. Cary Darling December 11, 2020Updated: December 11, 2020, 6:50 am Rachel Griffiths and Deborah Mailman in Total Control Photo: The Sundance Channel The deafening drama of the American political system often drowns out everything else to the point that it’s easy to forget that the rest of the world isn’t exactly awash in great deeds and goodwill either. That’s driven home in spectacularly entertaining fashion in “Total Control,” the first season of an Australian series, debuting Dec. 17 on Sundance Now. The show takes the shady shenanigans and double dealings of “House of Cards” and gives them a uniquely antipodean twist. That it also features strong performances especially from Rachel Griffiths (who co-created the show) as a

NRL community: School to Work program, Yarning Circle, how Indigenous initiative connects students

While the COVID-19 pandemic isolated students for parts of the year, the NRL School to Work program kept its participants connected through online Yarning Circles.  Established in 2012, NRL School to Work focuses on helping Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students graduate from high school and find meaningful employment or tertiary education. A record 500 participants finished their Year 12 studies with the assistance of the Government-funded initiative in 2020. When the pandemic forced institutions to close and learning to go online, the NRL School to Work team decided to conduct Yarning Circles over Zoom. An important facet of Aboriginal culture for thousands of years, Yarning Circles help form respectful relationships, preserve and pass on knowledge and provide a safe environment for discussion. 

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