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Kewanee-area news briefs
Cambridge offers free play
CAMBRIDGE College Square Park will be the site of the summer theatre performance of Craig Sodaro’s Tom ‘N’ Huck, which will start at 7:30 p.m. On Tuesday, Aug. 3.
The cast is a conglomerate of students from Cambridge and Geneseo Schools and members of the community of Cambridge. The performance is free to the public and will feature a pie/cake raffle to raise funds for future performances.
The play is the first performance of a summer community theatre program, thanks to the support of the summer AIM Program through the Henry Stark Bureau Regional Office of Education. The AIM Program has been a part of Cambridge Schools for over five years, but this is the first public play.
Iconic skincare brand Roc is planning a summertime launch of its new Revive + Glow collection. Creative, media planning and buying, PPC and influencer briefing will be managed by integrated agency Media Bounty.
Published:
20 May 2021 The winners of last year s HR Excellence Awards are proud to have had their hard work during the pandemic recognised.
The impact coronavirus has had on the UK workforce is undisputed, however, from managing the shift to remote work to keeping employee engagement high, HR rose to the challenge. As a result, this year’s theme is celebrating the magic of HR – in times of crisis as well as calm.
To learn more about what last year s accolades meant to them,
HR magazine spoke to some of the winners of the 2020 HR Excellence Awards.
HR team of the year 2020: Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS)
Last modified on Tue 15 Dec 2020 02.02 EST
Another jigsaw piece in the history of female composers has been slotted into place with the discovery of the earliest known Church of England anthem composed by a woman.
At their carol concert on 21 December the girl choristers of Ely Cathedral will sing Jane Savage’s Hymn for Christmas Day, a setting composed around 1785 of the familiar words: “While shepherds watched their flocks by night.” In doing so they will be following in the footsteps of the equally angelic choir of the Asylum for Female Orphans, one of the charity hospitals that offered a way out of destitution in 18th-century London.