Sustainability was the focus of UTC’s 2010 Convocation, with alumnus Brad McAllister encouraging students to find common ground between business objectives and protecting the environment.
Commemorate Constitution Day September 17
Constitution Day was established by Congress in 2004 in an attempt to increase students’ knowledge about the constitution. Constitution Day is observed on September 17 because the delegates of the Constitutional Convention met for the last time on September 17, 1787 to sign the United States Constitution and present it to the American Public. Click…
Sustainability highlights Convocation presentation on September 15
The campus is invited to celebrate Convocation 2010 on September 15 at noon in the Hayes Concert Hall of the UTC Fine Arts Center.
Money management help available
Anthony Doyley is UTC’s new Financial Literacy Advisor. See what the Mocs Money Management Center offers students.
Mocs spirits high
Chattanooga fans enjoyed an exciting home opener when the Football Mocs battled mightily against Appalachian State.
View Cress Gallery exhibit through October 12
The UTC Cress Gallery of Art is showing “Whispering Sisters and the Female Figurative Image” Paintings by Rose Freymuth-Frazier (New York, New York) and “What Comes With the Territory” Paintings by Michael Vasquez (Miami, Florida) through Tuesday, October 12. Artists’ lectures will follow a public reception Tuesday, September 14, 5:30 p.m., Room 356 UTC Fine…
So what’s with the green dots?
Green Dot Week creates awareness for a safe campus for all students.
UTC students, faculty dance at Tennessee Aquarium
Several students and one faculty member broke out in dance that seemed to spontaneously occur outside the Tennessee Aquarium on Sunday, September 5th.
Professor researches state’s rare plant life
Media reports draw attention to the plights of species fighting extinction—such as polar bears, bald eagles, tigers, and manatees—but a UTC professor is watching endangered flora a lot closer to home. Though Tennessee is a floristically rich state with 2,439 native plant species, more than any other landlocked eastern state, the Tennessee Natural Heritage Program…
Restoring an American treasure
Dr. Hill Craddock, Davenport professor of biology, biological and environmental sciences, calls restoring the American chestnut tree “the right thing to do,” especially since the blight that destroyed the US population of the American chestnut tree was caused by human carelessness.