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  • (aired Mon 5/02/22) Richard Winham speaks with the band Eleusis, part of the lineup for this month’s Wanderlinger Music and Arts Festival in Chattanooga.
  • (aired Mon 5/02/22) Most weekdays, you might hear the notes of bagpipes emanating from the Citizen Cemetery near our campus, the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. The bagpiper works for UTC as a senior instructional designer - and you can trace his family back to Scotland.
  • On this special edition of "Scenic Roots," listen to the student storytellers of Rising Rock from the Spring 2022 semester here on our campus, the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga.
  • Volkswagen Chattanooga’s EV push to fill 1,000 new jobs. For a career in IT, the place to be is a tech job fair at UTC. “Voices of MLK” at EPB’s 10th St. substation in Chattanooga. These voices - and more - on this edition of “Scenic Roots."
  • Isaiah 117 House is a nonprofit based in East Tennessee that serves children and teens entering state custody and awaiting foster care placement. Here in Hamilton County, it partners with Chambliss Center for Children.
  • (aired Mon 5/02/22) When the pandemic hit, comedy clubs were among the shuttered venues. A few comics who left New York City and came to Chattanooga have recreated the scene they know at the Bode - with Carpetbaggers Comedy Night.
  • (aired Mon 5/02/22) Skuid is a tech startup here in Chattanooga that helps companies develop customer-friendly apps for its workers. Ken McElrath launched Skuid - an acronym for Scalable Kit for User Interface Design - in 2013.
  • Richard Winham shares a performance by Jeremy Pinnell - a country singer from Northern Kentucky described by Rolling Stone as “hardscrabble honky-tonk at its best” - at The Woodshop on St. Elmo Avenue in Chattanooga. (First aired Tues 4/05/22)
  • (aired Weds 6/22/22) Blood Assurance welcomed its first blood donor fifty years ago. The nonprofit was formed by medical professionals and concerned citizens in 1972 when the Chattanooga area at that time faced an urgent need for blood collections.
  • The finale for this year’s Chattanooga Festival of Black Arts and Ideas. Carmen Nesbitt, reporter for The Chattanooga Times Free Press. Tembi Locke, author of the memoir “From Scratch,” on caregiving. These voices - and more - on this edition of “Scenic Roots.”
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