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From left: Dr. Drew Crain, professor of biology; Donna Schmidt Stokes ‘09, community relations director for Efficient Energy of Tennessee; Tommy Hunt, Maryville City Council; Maryville Mayor Tom Taylor ‘70; MC President Dr. Tom Bogart; Duncan Crawford; Bruce Guillaume ‘76, director of Mountain Challenge; Fred Metz, Maryville City Council; and Dr. Mark O’Gorman, associate professor of political science and coordinator of the environmental studies program.
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The exhibition features an array of artifacts and works by artists and design initiatives that raise provocative questions about the dynamics of care, interdependence and diversity of ability. Senses of Care features artists whose work deals with topics ranging from disability fashion to do-it-yourself (DIY) prosthetic to creative modes of reframing sensory experience, for example, foregrounding our bodily sensation of sound by a Deaf performance artist. These projects point us toward a spectrum of possibilities that emerge around what are commonly understood as limits or challenges to ability. The represented artists demonstrate ways of reorienting notions of "challenged" away from individual capability and toward challenges of forging an open and inclusive world.
The Combined Array for Research in Millimeter-wave Astronomy (CARMA) was an astronomical instrument comprising 23 radio telescopes. These telescopes formed an astronomical interferometer where all the signals are combined in a purpose-built computer (a correlator) to produce high-resolution astronomical images. The telescopes ceased operation in April 2015 and were relocated to the Owens Valley Radio Observatory for storage.
The Station Solar Arrays serve a vital function, but also make a lovely mosaic when aligned in concert with the sun. Credit: Chris Hadfield Twitter account