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  • On Thursday, the Hunter Museum of American Art will present a program inspired by the current exhibition on Nellie Mae Rowe. Charlie Newton is an artist, educator, activist and longtime resident of Chattanooga’s Westside. Adera Causey is the Hunter’s curator of education.
  • Rarely performed music composed by Jewish artists during the Holocaust will be heard in Chattanooga this week. The Likht Ensemble will perform “The Shoah Songbook” on Thursday here at UTC and on Friday at The Chattanooga Public Library.
  • “Chattanoogans” - the art exhibit now at CHI Memorial. A small-town sesquicentennial for South Pittsburg, TN. At CTC, a musical adaptation of “The Color Purple.” These voices - and more - on this edition of “Scenic Roots.”
  • Now on display for Black History Month, the Chattanoogans exhibit at CHI Memorial honors the lives of prominent African-Americans in this city. The exhibit is the work of students from our campus, the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga.
  • Known for cast iron cookware and cornbread, the town of South Pittsburg sits in the southwestern end of the Sequatchie Valley between the Cumberland Plateau and the Tennessee River. Ben Benton looks at the town's 150th anniversary for The Chattanooga Times Free Press.
  • Internships give students the chance to learn and grow in the workplace, acquiring hands-on experience that can open the door to a job. Just ask Jaclyn York at the Decosimo Success Center at UTC's Gary W. Rollins College of Business - and Lynn Chestnutt of the TSBDC in Chattanooga.
  • For this Black History Month, Chattanooga Theatre Centre is presenting a musical adaptation of “The Color Purple,” based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Alice Walker - starting Friday at 8 PM. CTC's Ric Morris is the director.
  • Bessie Smith - the “Empress of the Blues” - was born here in Chattanooga more than a century ago, during the era of Jim Crow segregation. Next Monday, a concert at Memorial Auditorium will present full orchestral arrangements of her music.
  • The average lifespan of a child at Auschwitz - the most notorious death camp in world history - was just two weeks. Michael Bornstein was four years old when he arrived at the Nazi camp during the Holocaust. He managed to beat those odds and survive.
  • From a young prisoner at Auschwitz to “Survivors Club.” Kimberly Bowen, senior v.p. of talent & inclusion at Unum. These voices - and more - on this edition of “Scenic Roots.”
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