(MURFREESBORO) The 2021 Rutherford Athena Award was presented to Patti James at a Thursday (6/3/2021) luncheon at the Embassy Suites Hotel and Conference Center.
2021 ATHENA Chair Julie Lewis notes, “As a leader, coach, and mentor, James inspired fierce advocacy with her collaborative style in business and the community. Patti represents the heart of Athena with her years lifting other women who were also working in male-dominated industries.”
The ATHENA Award recognize .
46-year-old Cynthia Louise Harris, who is listed as a homeless person from Hickory, was arrested by Hickory Police shortly after noon Monday (May 24) on one fel
Local towns face increased state housing requirements almanacnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from almanacnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Eighth Annual Rutherford ATHENA Awards is June 3 Apr 19, 2021 at 10:30 am by WGNS
MURFREESBORO, Tennessee. - RUTHERFORD Cable, founding sponsor of the ATHENA International Leadership Award for Rutherford County, announces the 2021 nominees for this year’s award; 15 area women representing 15 Rutherford County organizations have been nominated, along with 12 young professional women (see page 2 and beyond for a complete listing and bio of each nominee). The nominees were introduced at RUTHERFORD Cable’s April 13 breakfast meeting.
The community-wide celebration of this year’s nominees is open to the public and will be held Thursday, June 3, at the Embassy Suites Hotel, 1200 Conference Center Boulevard. The luncheon event begins at 11:30 a.m. Tickets are $65 per person or $600 for a table of ten. To reserve a seat at the luncheon, please go to rutherfordcable.org/Athena to register.
With conVERGEnce, Verge Theater Company Imagines a More Equitable Theater Industry The online discussion series continues on March 15 Tweet
Lisa Troi Thomas, Daniel Jones and Beth Thielman
A play ends. The lights come on. Spectators gather their belongings. And then, a crew member brings several chairs onstage, and the actors and director come walking out.
Shit, you think.
Can I get out of here without anyone noticing?
You’ve just entered a talkback the post-play discussion that you never asked for, but nonetheless keeps happening.
Tessa Bryant has worked on multiple programming teams and has orchestrated many such after-show discussions. “Talkbacks are almost universally terrible,” Bryant says. She doesn’t blame the programmers, the actors or the play. “The format doesn’t give people much, and I think it’s because we weren’t able to focus on those topics.”