The Department of Psychology and Psi Chi invite the UTC and Chattanooga community to hear Lapsley’s powerful perspective on trauma and healing.
UTC Department of Performing Arts presents REEDS, STRINGS, and HAMMERS: Music for Clarinet, Violin, and Piano
With performers Wendy Case, Tim Hinck, and Nikolasa Tejero, this dynamic and diverse program features composers who blurred the stylistic line between concert and popular music idioms.
Join Us: November Events
A list of selected public events for November, 2017 at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga.
University Career Services hosts Fall Career Days, offers workshops to prepare
For the University Career Services, its tagline is their mission: Our services. Your achievement.
Beyond the stars: NASA engineer inspires students
“To do what mankind has not done before.” Sounds a bit like the opening to a science fiction series, but Dr. Paul McConnaughey sees it more as a vision statement.
Award-winning author Andrea Wulf to speak on Oct. 5
Andrea Wulf, historian and author of The Invention of Nature: Alexander von Humboldt’s New World, will visit UTC on Oct. 5 to give a lecture, sign books and interact with students, faculty, staff and Chattanooga community members.
U.S. Navy quintet comes to UTC for class and concert
The U.S. Navy Band Brass Quintet hosted a class for UTC students then performed a concert that night.
Cafe Avatar: Chicago arts couple coming for Marek Series
If You Go What: Café Avatar, art exhibition by Nadine Nakanishi and Nick Butcher, visiting artists for Fall 2017 Diane Marek Visiting Artists program. When: Sept. 25 through Nov. 3. Where: Cress Gallery, inside the UTC Fine Arts Building, 752 Vine St., corner of Vine and Palmetto streets. Admission: Free Gallery hours: 9:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m.…
EnVaGe: Non-stodgy, non-snobby classical ensemble makes Chattanooga debut at UTC
EnVaGe wants to remove the perception of classical music only being stodgy and snobbish.
Seventh Annual Constitution Day Lecture on Sept. 21: ‘Humility, Moral Virtue and the Constitution’
Ben Franklin once said, “Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom.” “What did that statement mean for America’s early days, and what does it mean for us today?” asks David Bobb in his lecture.









