Ray Bassett
Editorial DirectorRay is the host and producer of Scenic Roots, Mondays - Thursdays at 3 PM ET on WUTC.
ray-bassett@utc.edu
423-425-2224
To contact Scenic Roots, click here for ways to connect.
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For this episode, we talk about financial stability with Jessica Pilcher, Director of United for Working Families - and Brittany Lockwood, Program Manager - both at United Way of Greater Chattanooga.
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For this episode, we talk about financial stability with Jessica Pilcher, Director of United for Working Families - and Brittany Lockwood, Program Manager - both at United Way of Greater Chattanooga.
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Here in Chattanooga, Keelah Jackson is known as “The Mastercreative.” At the heart of her latest work is a new self-help book: “I Am the Gospel of Me," filled with art therapy, anecdotes of encouragement and moral support.
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Here in Chattanooga, Keelah Jackson is known as “The Mastercreative.” At the heart of her latest work is a new self-help book: “I Am the Gospel of Me," filled with art therapy, anecdotes of encouragement and moral support.
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Art, Life & Soul: Keelah Jackson’s “I Am The Gospel Of Me.” United for Working Families, Episode 10: Financial Stability. These voices - and more - on this edition of “Scenic Roots.”
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Art, Life & Soul: Keelah Jackson’s “I Am The Gospel Of Me.” United for Working Families, Episode 10: Financial Stability. These voices - and more - on this edition of “Scenic Roots.”
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For this episode, we talk about financial stability with Jessica Pilcher, Director of United for Working Families - and Brittany Lockwood, Program Manager - both at United Way of Greater Chattanooga.
-
Here in Chattanooga, Keelah Jackson is known as “The Mastercreative.” At the heart of her latest work is a new self-help book: “I Am the Gospel of Me," filled with art therapy, anecdotes of encouragement and moral support.
-
Art, Life & Soul: Keelah Jackson’s “I Am The Gospel Of Me.” United for Working Families, Episode 10: Financial Stability. These voices - and more - on this edition of “Scenic Roots.”
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Every year, students in a class here on our campus - the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga - focus their senior thesis projects on a historic building. This year, the students in UTC’s Interior Architecture and Design program revisited The Jazzy Buildings - stretching from Market to Broad Streets.