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Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Announces Harold Brown as First Chief Diversity & Inclusion Officer

Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Announces Harold Brown as First Chief Diversity & Inclusion Officer Newly created senior management position will catalyze DE&I initiatives throughout the organization and community.by BWW News Desk The Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra has announced the appointment of Harold Brown as its first Chief Diversity and Inclusion Officer, a new executive leadership position created to catalyze, guide and implement the organization s ongoing DE&I initiatives and practices across the organization and in the community. Brown will report directly to CSO President & CEO Jonathan Martin, leading the organization s DE&I department and serving as a key member of the senior management team. Brown was selected through a rigorous local and national search facilitated by Bridge Partners LLC, a certified minority supplier and Minority Business Enterprise (MBE).

Department of Health says Covid-19 antibody survey is legitimate

Department of Health says Covid-19 antibody survey is legitimate
iol.co.za - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from iol.co.za Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

CASEY: When will the mail woes end in Roanoke and across the country?

The sad, sometimes costly saga of late mail continues to dog readers both in Virginia and around the country. Yet another who’s experienced it personally is Herb Detweiler of Roanoke. “You can add my experience to your long list of sabotaged mail,” he wrote me Feb. 9. “I sent the water company a check for $38.19 on December 28. It never cleared and I had to send a check for $82 to cover December and January last month. “Guess what? The December check finally cleared today! It only took almost six weeks to go to Greensboro and back to wherever water checks go!”

Tumultuous Pleasure: 2020 in Review by Arley Sorg

Arley Sorg As rough as the year has been for the country, it’s been a great time for reading. As if in response to the year itself, a slew of powerful books came out, expanding the scope of genre and engaging in conversations long overdue. Tochi Onyebuchi’s Riot Baby kicked things off in January, on the heels of his excellent late-2019 release War Girls. The story follows Ella as her powers develop, and Kev, who was promising as a kid but ends up in prison. They negotiate their fragile relationship with each other and with their mother, who seems to seek to stifle Ella, all while the potential for Ella to accidentally hurt everyone around her increases. Ultimately, Ella has to figure out what to do with all that power. It’s a searing critique of systemic racism and the justice system, but it’s also a complex book about community, family, and anger.

Notes from a Year Spent Indoors… by Jonathan Strahan

Jonathan Strahan (by Francesca Myman) I started the year with good intentions. I intended to read every piece of short fiction that I could lay my hands on, every major novel, every exciting debut or anthology or short story collection and more. I would read all the things. This is the story of how I did not read all the things. I did not even read most of the things. Way back in January, everything seemed simple. I hadn’t heard of a growing problem in China; I’d just delivered my Year’s Best SF anthology to the pub­lisher and finished my part in

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