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Austin Hatcher Foundation Announces New Automotive Project “Keiki Cobra” Monday, March 8, 2021 The Austin Hatcher Foundation announces their next automotive project, the “Keiki Cobra” Factory Five MK4 Roadster. The assembly is part of the Foundation’s STEM-based Industrial Arts Education/Therapy programming at their all-new Education Advancement Center at 1705 S. Holtzclaw Ave. The project is funded in part by a grant from the Kawasaki Family Foundation and all proceeds from the sale of the finished project will go to help families dealing with the effects of pediatric cancer. “Learning your child has cancer is devastating to a family in so many ways,” says Rose Kawasaki, Austin Hatcher board member. “The effect of chemotherapy on the child causes degeneration of cognitive and dexterity abilities, and the Industrial Arts Program is designed to help rebuild those abilities while also engaging the whole family in a fun and educational project. That ....
Austin Hatcher Foundation For Pediatric Cancer Adds 2 New Staff Members Friday, March 5, 2021 Murphee McDowell Two new staff members have joined the Austin Hatcher Foundation for Pediatric Cancer team. Murphee McDowell has joined the team as the foundation’s development coordinator and Becky Lyle has joined as the foundation s patient navigator. Ms. McDowell graduated from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga with a B.S. in Political Science and Public Service with a concentration in Public Administration and Nonprofit Management. She minored in Child and Family Studies. Ms. McDowell also has nonprofit development experience from internships in the Chattanooga area. “Because I went to UTC, I knew there were several nonprofit organizations in Chattanooga where I could pursue my goals,” said Ms. McDowell. “But when I found the Austin Hatcher Foundation, I could tell it was different, and that’s where I wanted to be. I am more than e ....
While many art forms have hit a dead end during the pandemic, murals have continued to spread across Colorado. But if you want to venture out to see street-art paintings past and present, good luck: It s not easy to track them down much less trace their historic roots. There s no map or guidebook that tells the story of the art on walls and buildings around the state. No cultural institution preserves its history, either. Not History Colorado. Not the Western History Collection at the Denver Public Library. Not the Denver Art Museum. That makes it difficult to determine what s been painted, who did it when.and why. Sometimes, the where disappears altogether. ....