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  • On Gunbarrel Road here in Chattanooga, you’ll now find a place that offers sound therapy for healing and stress relief. Our own Richard Winham tells us more.
  • How to build bridges between cultures? Our own Justin Turner talked to a few practitioners here in Chattanooga.
  • Here in Tennessee, between 7,000 and 12,000 children live with epilepsy. In this area, the Epilepsy Foundation of Southeast Tennessee is one nonprofit that tries to help them through art, as our own Cameron McClain tells us.
  • Maryanne Cunningham of Chattanooga’s Ochs Center. Entrepreneurship in theatre – and for veterans – at UTC. The door opens to “No Exit” at Back Alley Productions.
  • Sixty years ago, what became the Ochs Center was founded here in Chattanooga. In 2015, the urban research nonprofit closed its doors - but its story did not end there. Today, the Center has refocused its mission with a new funding model.
  • This fall, students on our campus - the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga - will have the chance to enroll in a new concentration in theatre entrepreneurship, thanks to a collaboration between UTC’s Department of Performing Arts and the Gary W. Rollins College of Business.
  • Jack Jacobs is a retired U.S. Army colonel who served in Vietnam. He is a recipient of the Medal of Honor, this nation’s highest military award for valor. A few days ago, Col. Jacobs came to Chattanooga.
  • If you’re feeling existential these days, there’s a play for you in Northwest Georgia. On Friday at 8 PM, “No Exit” - by Jean-Paul Sartre - premieres at Back Alley Productions in LaFayette.
  • Woodson Carpenter speaks with Maeghan Jones and Dwayne Marshall in the latest episode of “One for All” - a storytelling partnership between the Community Foundation of Greater Chattanooga and “Scenic Roots.”
  • Yesterday afternoon, Chattanooga Mayor Tim Kelly visited our new space here at WUTC - and facing a panorama view of downtown Chattanooga, we sat down for our latest monthly conversation.
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