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  • The future in computing is quantum - and that future will unfold here in Chattanooga. Near the end of last year, EPB - the city’s public utility and a trailblazer in high-speed internet - announced the first commercial quantum network in this country, aimed at researchers and entrepreneurs.
  • In the heart of Chattanooga, Broad Street links the downtown with the Riverfront. “Reimagining Broad Street” is a planning process to redevelop the corridor as a - quote - “premier public street.” River City Company - along with the City of Chattanooga and Chattanooga Design Studio - have been soliciting community input.
  • Songwriters Stage is a showcase for the creative spirit of Chattanooga’s music makers. This year’s competition series begins Friday starting at 7 PM at Gate 11 Distillery in the Chattanooga Choo Choo. Mark Anderson of Chattown Stages presents Songwriters Stage.
  • Owners and operators of marinas who want to help protect water quality participate in a Tennessee Valley Authority program to stay clean and green. Our own Justin Turner tells us more.
  • ArtsBuild’s next round of support for diverse local artists. “Something Rotten!” at Artistic Civic Theatre in Dalton. These voices - and more - on this edition of “Scenic Roots.”
  • ArtsBuild - the nonprofit for the arts here in Chattanooga and Hamilton County - supports local artists of color that reflect the diversity of our community through a grant program known as REGIA.
  • “Something Rotten!” is a musical comedy set in the London theater world during the age of William Shakespeare. Next week, it comes to Artistic Civic Theatre in Dalton - premiering on Friday, July 29th. Kate Losh is the director.
  • Elizabeth Fite, reporter for The Chattanooga Times Free Press. Pradip Malde of the University of the South in Sewanee, TN. These voices - and more - on this edition of “Scenic Roots.”
  • The national surge in COVID-19 infections includes nine counties here in the Chattanooga area considered at high risk for infection by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Elizabeth Fite - health care reporter for The Chattanooga Times Free Press - is monitoring the rise of cases and hospitalizations.
  • Pradip Malde chronicles experiences of loss and sacrifice, memory and meaning, with his camera. A child of Indian immigrants to East Africa, he and his family left his native Tanzania more than fifty years ago as refugees during the chaos of the 1970’s. Today, Malde is an art professor at the University of the South in Sewanee - and his recently-released book is titled “From Where Loss Comes."
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