CATALYST Magazine September 2014

Page 1

CATALYST

FREE

RESOURCES FOR CREATIVE LIVING

SEPTEMBER 2014 VOLUME 33 NUMBER 9

Community Resource Directory, Calendar of events and more!

• 5 ways bees bestow health • Notes from an extremophile • Dance season preview • Sex ed taboos & teen moms

by Edie Roberson

140 S MCCLELLAND ST. SALT LAKE CITY, UT 84102

Come on let’s go


The

GOLDEN BRAID Join us for a special event Sunday, September 14th Two courageous women, Sue Allison and her daughter Staci Tye return to Salt Lake City to share about a Near Death Experience Sue Allison had while being held hostage in the Salt Lake City Library. Locals will gather to celebrate and to listen to the strong message this experience gave both Sue and her daughter.

September Psychic Fair, Wednesday, September 17th from 6-9pm (20 minute reading just $25) Call today to reserve your appointment with one of our talented intuitive readers.

The Patio is Open! 151 South 500 East 801-322-1162 oasiscafeslc.com

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CATALYST RESOURCES FOR CREATIVE LIVING

NEW MOON PRESS, INC. PUBLISHER & EDITOR Greta Belanger deJong ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER John deJong ART DIRECTOR Polly P. Mottonen WEB MEISTER & TECH WRANGLER Pax Rasmussen PROMOTIONS & DISPLAY ADVERTISING Jane Laird ACCOUNTING, BOOKKEEPING Carol Koleman, Suzy Edmunds PRODUCTION Polly P. Mottonen, John deJong, Rocky Lindgren PHOTOGRAPHY & ART Polly Mottonen, Jane Laird, John deJong STAFF WRITER Katherine Pioli ASSISTANT Sophie Silverstone INTERNS Jeannette Culas, Katy Yeakey, Yitan (Chloe) Zeng, India Hodges CONTRIBUTORS Charlotte Bell, Ben Bombard, Amy Brunvand, Adele Flail, Dennis Hinkamp, Jane Laird, Todd Mangum, Heather May, Marjorie McCloy, Diane Olson, Margaret Ruth, Dan Schmidt, Barry Scholl, Suzanne Wagner DISTRIBUTION John deJong (manager) Brent & Kristy Johnson

How to reach us

Mail:

140 S. McClelland St. SLC, UT 84102 Phone: 801.363.1505 Email: CONTACT@CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET Web: WWW.CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET

CATALYST

is proud to be a part of these fine civic efforts:


4

Edie Roberson

ON THE COVER Come on let’s go 1993

I N I M M E R S I V E T R A N S F O R M AT I O N

Tarot and Spiritual Transformation Learn to use Tarot as a tool for insight and discovery in this 2-DAY program led by Robert Place, a preeminent master of the Tarot and creator of The Alchemical Tarot.

C

over artist and my friend Edie Roberson passed away last week. She is widely known as one of Salt Lake’s most esteemed painters. Her body of work is extraordinary and I invite you to take a minute or two to pop through the gallery archive on her website for a real treat. Many of her paintings feel familiar. Characters of nostagia; antique toys, cartoon personalities, historic figures, often juxtaposed and always meticulously rendered but if you look closely, her interpretations tease out a more complex story. You are left wondering “What is he up to? Why are they together? Where is this headed?”

Edie and I traded works a while back. She gave me a haunting portrait of an antique doll, Passing Time about which she explained, “Look at her eyes. They are exactly the same as the day she was made one hundred years ago. While the rest of her has peeled away, she still sees as well as the day she was made.” Edie’s request to me in making her stained glass window was to “not let one drop of stress into it. Make what you want and enjoy every minute of it.” Hence Edie’s Joy Ride replete with little yellow lady riding a big blue marble into the sky. N To learn more about Edie and her work go to WWW.EDIEROBERSON.COM.

Sept. 6 & 7 • Officers Club, U of U

Edie in her studio with her hundred- year-old doll that was the model for “Passing Time”

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Energy Centers and Spiritual Transformation A 2-day in-depth exploration of the chakras, vital energy (kundalini), and how they express in your life. With noted writer, yoga teacher, thought leader, therapist and spiritual teacher Dr. Anodea Judith.

Nov. 15 & 16 • Louland Falls in SLC Sat. & Sun. 9am–5pm • $325 in advance / $350 day-of

Visit RisingPathways.com to reserve Info at 801-674-7162. Ask about pkg prices for both events.

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Edie and I clowning around after installing “Miss Edie’s joy ride” stained glass window.


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8 September 2014 CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET

BY AMY BRUNVAND

ENVIRONEWS

Our incomparable Chesler Park Canyonlands

It makes sense that Wilderness is a Virgo — a loner, uncomfortable in crowds, annoyed by vulgarity, stupidity and carelessness, a realist full of serious thought and clear purpose, quiet, steady and dedicated to service.

In celebration of the 50th birthday of the Wilderness Act, the Natural History Museum of Utah is showing a special exhibit of 50 photographs of Utah public lands. The exhibit opens September 3, 2014. Look for other events to celebrate wilderness as the date approaches. Natural History Museum of Utah: NHMU.UTAH.EDU/WILDERNESS50

Happy birthday to Canyonlands National Park, established September 12, 1964. The Greater Canyonlands Coalition (a group of familiar environmental organizations) is ramping up a national campaign encouraging President Obama to designate 1.8 million acres of public lands surrounding the park as a Greater Canyonlands National Monument. As a lame-duck president, Obama has a chance to use the Antiquities Act to designate new national monuments before he leaves office as President Clinton did when he designated Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument (GSENM) in 1996. Whenever new National Parks and Monuments are created, the local communities scream like it’s the end of the world, but after a bit of time passes the benefits become too obvious to deny. In 1996, the outcry from communities near GSENM

was loud and resentful, but 10 years later a poll showed that 69% Utah citizens loved the new monument. Jobs and income in the area grew significantly after monument designation, according to a report published by the independent research group Headwaters Economics. The economic value of National Parks was proven beyond a doubt during the Republican-led government shutdown, October 1-16, 2013. A government report shows that at Arches National Park alone, visitor spending declined by $3.9 million dollars despite state funds used to re-open the park . However, one of the best arguments for creating the Greater Canyonlands National Monument is simply that the boundaries of Canyonlands National Park should have been bigger in the first place. Fifty years ago when the park was created, the usual suspects complained that it would ruin the economy. Due to political wrangling, the size was reduced. In 1971 the park was expanded to include the Maze, Land of Standing Rocks and Davis and Lavender Canyons. This past July 14 Senators wrote a letter to President Obama urging him to designate a Greater Canyonlands Monument. Utah Governor Gary Herbert has invited those 14 to come visit Utah so that they can see “what we are doing preserve these iconic vistas and venues and optimize the use of our public lands.” [I don’t know about you, but that word “optimize” sound ominous to me.] Herbert wants conservationists to get behind Representative Rob Bishop’s (R-1-UT) Public Lands Initiative, but Bishop has a long history of opposition to conservation management of public lands. You can bet that Utah’s antienvironmental congressional delegation is in Washington D.C. telling their colleagues that Utahns don’t want a new monument. It’s time to raise our voices to say, yes, we do! It’s time to make the protected landscape of Canyonlands complete.

NPS Visitor Spending Effects: NATURE.NPS.GOV/ SOCIALSCIENCE/ECONOMICS.CFM. Grand StaircseEscalante N.M: HEADWATERSECONOMICS.ORG/ WPHW/WP-CONTENT/UPLOADS/ESCALANTE.PDF. Greater Canyonlands Coalition: GREATERCANYONLANDS.ORG

Last month Salt Lake County Mayor Ben McAdams and Sandy Mayor Tom Dolan launched a new bicycle network plan with two projects to improve commuter bike routes in Sandy. Salt Lake County has developed plans for a future 1,500-mile bicycle commuter network that will make biking to work more practical throughout the whole Salt Lake Valley. The commuter network will first be roughed out along existing routes. Money from a bike transportation development fund will be available to create trail connections and other improvements. According to U.S. Census data, Provo and Salt Lake City are among the top 15 medium-sized cities for bicycle commuting. A census report notes that bicycle commuting is growing by leaps and bounds: “Between 2000 and 2008–2012, the number of workers who traveled to work by bicycle increased by 60.8%, from about 488,000 in 2000 to about 786,000.” That’s still only 0.6% of the population, but the trend is clear: As more bicycle infrastructure is built more people choose to bike to work. SLCo Bicycle Commuter Network: SLCO.ORG/REGIONAL-DEVELOPMENT/BICYCLE-COMMUTER-NETWORK/; Modes Less Travelled (U.S. Census Bureau) CENSUS.GOV/PROD/2014PUBS/ACS-25.PDF

The Utah Rivers Council says that a new government report calling for $32 billion in in new taxes and public debt to finance large water projects in Utah is

nothing but a scare tactic. The report “Utah’s Water Dependent Economy” was prepared by a Las Vegas consultant (not by objective economists) and it seems intended to keep tax dollars flowing to oversized water projects like the illadvised Lake Powell Pipeline. “The report claims Utah will face economic disaster if a massive tide of government spending is not initiated,” says xxthe Council. “The report doesn’t mention that Utahns have the highest water use in the U.S., or that all four water districts encourage Utahns to waste water by lowering the price of water through property tax collections on homes and businesses.” Utah Rivers Council: utahrivers.org

The Utah Department of Transportation (UDOT) has at least temporarily put the brakes on the West Davis Corridor, a new freeway project that would extend the Legacy Highway and slice into Great Salt Lake wetlands and migratory bird habitat. UDOT says it needs more time to evaluate the options; the current goal is to reach a record of decision on the project by the summer of 2015. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has threatened to deny permits for the proposed freeway due to negative environmental impacts, but an alternate proposed route would destroy homes, businesses and farmland. Utahns for Better Transportation says the best option is not to build a freeway at all. They have written a “shared solution” that would provide congestion relief while reducing air pollution, and preserving farmlands, communities and wildlife habitat. So the good news is, it is still possible that UDOT could adopt the shared solution instead of building an unnecessary freeway. Utahns for Better Transportation: HUTAHNSFORBETTERTRANSPORTATION.ORG


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The future

T

BY DENNIS HINKAMP

he news headlines have been so depressing lately I’m thinking positive thoughts and focusing on a brighter future. This is the headline news I predict we’ll see in the near future.

Center for Transpersonal Therapy, LC

Amazon and Google Merge and Launch Previous-Day Delivery (PDD) Prime. After years of spying on our spending habits, browser history and other intimate behavior, the two corporate predators have perfected a system of delivering things you want or need the day before you want or need them. They, for instance, have been tracking your shaving habits and can thus deliver new blades precisely one day before the old ones lose their sharpness. You never have to run out of coffee or filters again because PDD Prime knows your consumption patterns. With access to the processor in all your electronic devices they can send replacements, parts or batteries just before the thing goes dead and you are forced to read a book.

Transpersonal Therapy is an approach to healing which integrates body, mind and spirit. It addresses basic human needs for self-esteem, satisfying relationships and spiritual growth. The Center offers psychotherapy, training, social support groups, workshops and retreats.

Sherry Lynn Zemlick, PhD Chris Robertson, LCSW • Lynda Steele, LCSW Denise Boelens PhD • Wil Dredge LCSW Heidi Ford MS, LCSW • Nick Tsandes, LCSW

The aforementioned would be simple to do, but by using advance psycho-social algorithms, PDD Prime can also track other life indicators and anticipate your needs.Having discovered that your child did not get admitted to Harvard, they could send you that new car you can now afford a day before the rejection letter hits your mailbox. Planning an affair? Make sure an expensive distracting gift is sent to your spouse the day before you embark on your tryst. There still are some bugs to work out regarding healthrelated products. Your PDD Prime could go terribly wrong, should you start receiving medications before your doctor has presented you with your latest test results. Exercise equipment could start piling up on your doorstep if PDD mistook your donut orders for the church with your personal donut consumption.

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FOX Announces Two New Shows for Fall Lineup ‘The Loop” is described as “a groundbreaking new reality television show about the making of the making of a reality TV show.” This will be followed by a new news show called “Angry White People Yelling Stuff” which they describe as “self-explanatory.”

GoPro Rolls Out a New Safer Camera Tired of being blamed for people doing risky, stupid extreme things, GoPro has added a new line of cameras made out of actual egg shells. Users are advised to walk slowly and not to jump too much when using the camera. It comes with a variety of accessories that allow you to attach it to a pillow, air mattress or a bowl of sand.

Drones Temporally Deemed Legal The FAA approves drones for any and all uses but within a week the EPA reverses the decision claiming the drones are blotting out the sun and causing excessive global cooling.

Burning Man Was Better Last Year Burning Man Festival organizers citing a shortage of hippies and continued gentrification of the event have decided on a new, edgier image. Next year the festival will be rebranded Epic Burning Man. N Dennis Hinkamp believes all these predictions are possible if we really work on it.

Pay the local farmer or pay the health system. It’s that simple. Eat from local farmers and you’ll be healthier. And you’ll make your family, community, and world healthier. Become a member-owner of Wasatch Cooperative Market and help us create a sustainable business where you invest in health instead of health care.

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10

September 2014

CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET

Sex ed taboos and teen moms Ignorance breeds babies BY JEANNETTE CULAS

A

t 16 I found myself taking that shaming walk to the school principal’s office, a place I had never been before. I was always a good student, and never talked back to my teachers or other students. The reason for this trip was a mystery to me. However, when it was my turn to face the beast within, I found that my summons was due to an article I had written for the school paper. This article was about sex education. I had written an article similar to the one here. However, because it contained the word “condom,” it was not allowed to print. Here in Utah, sex may seem like a taboo topic to many teens. Questions can be left unanswered by teachers and parents which can lead teens

and young adults to seek other sources to answer those questions. The Fog Zone, polling data conducted by the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, states, “22% of the unmarried young adults [between the ages of 18-29] surveyed reported they never had sex education in school and of those who had, more than one-quarter had it before they were 15 years old.” Information about sex can be seen by a click of a button through online resources. Whether the information is correct is another question. Misinformation about a topic so important is harmful when the consequences are life changing. Educating teens about safe practices and the consequences of ignoring them should be a higher priority than it currently is. In Utah’s Sexuality Education Law and Policy, teachers are not allowed to teach about “the intricacies of intercourse … the advocacy or encouragement of the use of contraceptive methods or devices or the advocacy of sexual activity outside of marriage.” However, for every 1,000 Utah births, 23.1 occur to teen-agers, ranking Utah #10 in the nation. Abstinence is an effective tool. However, it’s no secret that teens and young adults are having sex. To some people, teaching them safe practices is seen as encouraging them to have sex. This does not have to be the case. Education is meant to make teens aware. Having proper education can inform their decision. According to Annabel Sheinberg, Director of Education at Planned Parenthood of Utah, 50% of high school students have had sex. By age 19, that number grows to 70%. Many of these teens are not getting the proper education about sex. The Fog Zone shows that 30% of unmarried young adults age 18 to 29 say they know little or nothing about condoms, 63% say they know little or nothing about birth control pills, and 56% say they have not heard of the birth control implant. These statistics also don’t cover other methods that many teens and young adults also try and may also have little knowledge of such as the rhythm method, in which a woman tracks her mentrual history to predict ovulation (a form of natural family planning which involves diligence and careful record keeping, as well as self-control or a backup barrier method).

HEALTHY LIVING Many teens and young adults don’t know at what time during the month a woman is most fertile, or commonly available information such as side effects of birth control pills and the proper way to use condoms. “They underestimate the effectiveness and overestimate the risk of many methods. Many are afraid that serious side effects from some of the most effective methods are highly likely, which in turn reduces the chance of their using them,” stated authors of The Fog Zone.

Making teens and young adults afraid of using contraceptive methods does not mean they will quit having sex. For this reason education about safe practices is necessary. Making teens and young adults afraid of using contraceptive methods does not mean they will quit having sex. For this reason education about safe practices is necessary. Sheinberg talks about sex education as a positive part of life. “I would like to see comprehensive sex education,” she says. A comprehensive education includes teaching abstinence as the best method for avoiding STDs and unintended pregnancy; however, it includes facts about condoms and contraception to reduce the risk of pregnancy, STDs, infection and HIV. It can also teach interpersonal and communication skills that can help teens and young adults explore their own values, goals and options. Educators and parents should be willing to talk to teens and young adults about sex and relationships. Sheinberg urges parents to share their thoughts and values with their children, and let them know they care. It’s important when teaching about sex to correctly portray what can go wrong and what can be dangerous. Parents should be willing to listen to their children to find out what questions they may have and how to appropriately answer them. These can be steps to improving

education in homes and schools. Simply having “the sex talk” with your child may not be enough. Sheinberg says, “It’s not one big talk. There are many learning opportunities that can come up.” Leaving it with just one talk can leave questions unanswered and it can be difficult for teens to approach parents when it’s not talked about often. Something as simple as a scene in a movie can become a teaching moment. With today’s society becoming more and more sexualized, teaching moments can pop up every day. These moments don’t have to be awkward or uncomfortable. Talking about sex with confidence and factual knowledge can help ease the awkwardness. It can also help with the “myth” problem that continues to occur. There is no better source for teens and young adults to hear the truths about sex than from the people they trust most. Their parents. Planned Parenthood has a threestep plan to help parents educate their children. These steps are: Talk health, Think social, and Stay involved. Essentially it urges parents to first talk about sex and healthy relationships. Second, think about how their child sees it. Think about the “everyone’s doing it” mentality and how you can put it to an end. Finally, be involved in their child’s life. Know what their child is up to and set rules and boundaries. Planned Parenthood also has a number of resources to help answer questions anyone may have. These include lectures at nearby colleges, live chat and text programs, and walk-in appointments at their nine health centers. Information about sex should not be swept under the rug. Teens and young adults need information to not only keep them safe but also to help guide their decision making. N Jeannette Culas was a CATALYST intern this past summer. She is a sophomore at the University of Utah. Wasatch Clinic- Express; 728 W. 100 S. #1; Heber. Logan Clinic; 550 N. Main #17; Clock Tower Plaza. Ogden Clinic: 4387 Harrison Blvd., Suite D-8.. Utah Valley Clinic, 1086 N. 1200 W. Orem. Metro Health Center: 160 S. 1000 E. Ste 120, SLC. Salt Lake Clinic: 654 South 900 E. South Jordan Center: 1091 W. South Jordan Parkway, Suite 100 St. George Clinic: 595 South Bluff Street Suite 1. West Valley Clinic: 1906 West 3600 S. For chat hours: WWW.PLANNEDPARENTHOOD.ORG/ALLACCESS/CHAT. Call: 877.4ME.2ASK Chat: WWW.PLANNEDPARENTHOODCHAT.ORG/ Text: 53634.



12 September 2014

CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET

NOTES FROM AN EXTREMOPHILE

Biting the culture I’ve come from and walking away in search of something new BY PAX RASMUSSEN

I

’ve always thought of myself as an outsider, in the general sense, if not the particular. I’ve usually had a small circle of friends, in which I definitely felt included, but I’ve seen myself as “outside” of society as a whole. More than an outsider, in fact: an active resister, a dissident, sometimes a crank. My whole life I’ve seen mainstream culture as uninteresting, distasteful, even downright evil. From oligarchy to a militarized police state, from Britney Spears to Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?, one can justify that viewpoint. Instead, I’m here to consider how these thoughts and feelings have brought me to a major life decision. In September, Adele and I will be moving to Albuquerque, New Mexico, to work as apprentices at Skarsgard Farms. After that, we’ll probably apprentice on a farm back east somewhere. This is a big change from what I’m doing now: managing accounts and writing posts on the intranet for Health Sciences at the University of Utah.

My wife and I are about to abandon our safe, comfortable lives for something unknown. Frankly, I’m terrified. I’ll be trading in stable, well-paid employment for a low-paid apprenticeship, with no real clear plans on what we’ll be doing after that apprenticeship ends. We have some ideas for starting a small farm or homestead, or maybe a weird cabin-based hospitality thing, or maybe teaching adjunct. Whatever we do, it’ll be improvisational, lowincome, small-footprint, and probably pretty far outside what most people in our culture do: chase a paycheck, buy stuff, repeat. This weekend, I took a load of our stuff down to Cedar City, where my parents live, to put into storage. I

picked up a conversation with my father about all of this, a conversation we’ve been having for a while now. I expressed my growing sense of futility in living a life centered around work and stuff-acquisition. What he said to me this weekend put a lot of these thoughts and feelings into a new perspective. I think a lot about what I want and what I feel, and a lot about all of this stuff I’ve just outlined. But I’ve never much considered why I feel these things. Or, rather, why I feel them in a historical or sociological context. I’ve always seen myself as separate from our culture. But what my dad said made me reframe those thoughts: Am I, in fact, not separate, but rather a product, of our culture? Of course I am. We all are. It’s rather egoistic and solipsistic to think otherwise. What I am (what we all are) is wholly dependent on the when and where of my birth.

While my parents were probably the greatest influencers of who I am today, they are aspects of that where and when. Who they are is determined by that web, that interconnected system of individuals and events, that makes up a culture. It seems obvious, even sophomoric, as I write this, but I suppose once you realize something about yourself, it seems obvious—after all, it’s been there all along. But here’s the really interesting part. My dad argued that this culture which I find so abhorrent is what it is because it has to be what it is—like me, it grew out of a complicated web of circumstance, a context. We can trace the roots of our culture all the way back (it’s turtles all the way down), but let’s just stick with the “recent” past: At the founding of our country, we were facing a vast, relatively unexploited continent. These people saw in front of

them an enormous natural world (empty, from a White Christian perspective) that dwarfed their civilization. They wanted to grow, to build, to prosper. Capitalism is great for the efficient exploitation of raw resources, and there was a collective sense of purpose. They were building a nation, a culture, a civilization. Now, however, we have entered a period where growth is no longer “good.” We have far exceeded the carrying capacity of the land, and each increase in GDP just shortens the time until we pay a reckoning for the deficit we’ve been running on that carrying capacity. The model of “success” in our culture is now empty, meaningless and, worse, harmful. We’re done building! No wonder some of us feel chasing the American Dream has no future. No wonder some of us are craving something different. I am not the first person, and by no means the last, to feel this way. I’m not offering answers. I’m not saying I know what is needed next. I am saying that the way of the mainstream is over. Yeah, it’ll hang on, maybe for a long time, but that’s what cultures do, and they really hate to change, especially if it means sacrifice by the people at the top. It’s important to acknowledge that my ability to make these kinds of observations and judgments about our culture is a condition of my place in that culture: As a middle-class white male, I have the luxury of feeling like an outsider and making life decisions that involve stepping outside the mainstream path. Recognizing privilege is important, no matter who you are. There are maps out there for what’s coming next, but they’re not the slick Rand McNallys you find at the gas station: They’re hand-drawn on the backs of coffee-stained envelopes (or maybe artistically rendered in a limited-edition print); they have not been verified by a thousand checks and rechecks and satellite images, then mass-produced by a cartographical company that knows what it’s doing. They’re full of blank spaces, with “Here Be Dragons” in the margins. And every one of us who heads out that direction gets to fill in spots, or maybe just add some more detail. Sounds like fun. I’m ready. N Pax Rasmussen remains part of the CATALYST clan, though he be a state away. His “Green Bits” column returns next month. Follow his and Adele’s adventures at WWW.HALOPHILE.NET


LETTERS Cosmic Aeroplane addendum: Bruce Roberts

13

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July CATALYST’s story on Salt Lake’s iconic bookstore, the Cosmic Aeroplane, (“Cosmic Aeroplane: A Love Story,” a memoir by James Taylor) stirred many memories among the over-40 locals, and was a counterculture history lesson for everyone else. One player who was inadequately addressed in the story was coowner Bruce Roberts. His sister, Becky, shares with us the role Bruce played in the store and in the broader community: Bruce Roberts’ financial investment and guidance in developing the bookstore component, and eventually expanding to other departments, was pivotal in the success of the first alternative bookstore in Salt Lake City. Bruce had an early interest in writing, journalism and current events. He served as sports editor for his high school paper and attended the University of Utah on academic journalism scholarships. While on the university's Daily Utah Chronicle he wrote as sports editor, and later as rock editor. As a member of the Student Activities Center at the University of Utah, Bruce brought such musical groups as Cold Blood, Joy of Cooking, Joan Baez and The Grateful Dead to various campus venues. He became a political activist, AKA rabble rouser [as referenced in the story], at an early age helping to organize rallies, and various protest events to include the Stop the MX Missile movement, rallies against the US involvement in Central American civil wars, and assisting a myriad of environmental organizations. He later maintained and shared that political awareness through products and events at the bookstore.

Bruce was responsible for all print ads, (indeed most of those displayed in the Taylor article), radio ad content and, after 1982, the annual Cosmic Aeroplane calander given free to customers. While at the Aeroplane he brought a number of significant musical artists to the Fairground Coliseum and other venues, introducing reggae and punk music to Salt Lake City. He arranged for a number of popular authors to participate in book-signing events at the bookstore. As a former employee wrote at the time of Bruce’s death: “Bruce was a great boss. He paid fair wages. He provided ‘Cadillac’ insurance before the term was coined. As a matter of course, he practiced tolerance and promoted diversity and transparency ...Bruce never micromanaged, he led—with courage, confidence, and charisma.” The closing of the Cosmic Aeroplane was indeed due to financial contraints as noted, but also due to competition from the first large bookstore chain, Walden Books, opening in Salt Lake City. Following the end of Cosmic Aeroplane, Bruce purchased and operated Wasatch Book Distribution. He later worked in sales for Fulcrum Books, and Nancy Suib Wholesale Distribution. He owned and operated Big Moon Traders, his own publishing and distribution business. At the time of his death Bruce was employed as sales manager for the University of Utah Press. He was proud of landing this position as “an old white guy.” Chosen because of his expansive knowledge of the book trade, he was and is sorely missed there. Indeed, his impact on the book industry and small business in Salt Lake City has been deemed significant enough by the University of Utah Marriott Library to archive his papers in their Special Collections Department. And, as correctly stated, the occult was not a priority for Bruce, nor most of the other Cosmic staff members. N —Becky S. Roberts

Cost of Retreat Includes: - Daily, rejuvenating treatments & hand-crafted herbal medicines from Ayurvedic physician, Dr. Sathya -Basic-single or Deluxe-double accommodations - Fresh healing Ayurvedic meals - Daily yoga practice with Peter Francyk - Lectures & discussions on Ayurveda and Yoga - Local cultural events, including traditional dance & theatre, special pujas, and kalari demos - Extended stay available

Early bird special: $1800 by 11/15/14 Reg Price: $1950 *Airfare is not included

Visit our website for more information...

www.PeterFrancyk.com


14 September 2014

HEALTHY LIVING

CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET

Ancient folk medicine, modern practices Five ways bees bestow health and healing BY KATY YEAKY AND KATHERINE PIOLI

B

ee-created products, more than just honey, have been used by humans for millennium as healing remedies. Called apitherapy, this alternative medicine encompasses the use of pollen, propolis, raw honey, royal jelly, and bee venom. None of these products or practices have been widely tested or promoted by modern Western medical science and rarely are they even addressed by the complementary medical community, but apitherapy practices are ancient—Hippocrates wrote about apitherapy as did the Chinese in texts dating back 2,000 years. Many traditional folk medicines based on bee-products are still widely used today. Propolis, for instance, remains a fairly common form of self-medication for seasonal colds and boosting the immune systems, and is found on the shelves of most natural grocery stores. BEE POLLEN, considered a “superfood,” starts with granules of flower pollen selectively gathered by bees, which the insects then mix with saliva and nectar from the plant. This magical food cannot be reproduced in a laboratory. Composed of 40% protein, it is also full of vitamins (A,C,E), trace minerals, essential fatty acids and carbohydrates. Collection “traps” set at the entrance to a hive brush off about 60% of the pollen as a bee enters, harvesting a portion for humans while leaving enough to feed the colony. Though a few double-blind placebo-controlled studies don’t support the health claims associated with bee pollen, many people including ath-

letes take it as a natural energy enhancer. It is used to treat allergies, to reduce the risk of adult-onset asthma, to treat addiction and, because it contains the antioxidant rutin, known to strengthen capillaries and correct circulatory problems, is also used to support the cardiovascular system. Those who eat pollen, available in capsules, powder and granule form, usually consume a tablespoon or two daily. Try soaking it over night to make it more digestible, dissolving it in water or tea, mixing it into drinks and smoothies, or sprinkling it over cereal. A warning for those with known pollen allergies: there are reports of severe allergic reactions, including anaphylaxis, resulting from the ingestion of even small amounts of bee pollen, less than a teaspoon. Even if you don’t have known allergies, start by eating a single granule and wait for signs of reaction—itchy eyes, nose, throat, shortness of breath, hives. Slowly increase your dose each day while continuing to monitor for an allergic response. Propolis, a sticky substance bees place around the inside of their hive, is made of beeswax and other secretions with resins from the buds of poplar and conifer trees. Propolis is a hive’s defense against disease. It’s highly antimicrobial, which means that it’s antibacterial, antifungal and antiviral. Centuries ago, people used propolis as an ointment to rub on wounds, to relax

intense itching, or for skin diseases such as eczema. Today, propolis is commonly found in chewing gum, face cream, lozenges, ointments and cosmetics. Internally, some use propolis as an immune booster to prevent colds, as an anti-inflamatory agent, or to treat throat and nose cancer. Externally applied, some use it to treat genital herpes and cold sores (the National Institutes of Health lists propolis as a “potentially” effective external treatment for herpes and cold sores). RAW HONEY. Whereas most store-bought honey has been tampered with, cut

Common folk uses for royal jelly claim benefits such as reducing wrinkles; stimulating hair growth; easing asthma, hay fever, PMS and menopause symptoms; and increasing energy and sexual vitality. with water and enhanced with sugar, this is the real deal—no additives, preservatives, pasteurization or processing. Spreading honey on a piece of toast or adding it to a cup of tea is more beneficial than you might

think. Honey has powerful antioxidants that can keep your immune system strong, stabilize blood pressure, relieve pain and calm nerves. Some even eat honey to combat seasonal allergies. But, while honey does contain trace amounts of pollen, it is mostly pollen from flowers and would not address grass or tree allergies. Also, if building immunity to pollen is your goal, only locally produced honey with local pollens would likely be effective. Scientific studies do not support the use of honey as an effective treatment for allergies. Because it’s antimicrobial, raw honey, and only unheated raw honey, can be helpful when applied topically to wounds, rashes or burns. The power of honey comes from its high concentration of sugar, which sucks water from microbes killing them through dehydration, and from its acidity, which in the pH range from 3.2 to 4.5 is just strong enough to disable certain microbes. Also, when combined with salt, say from the sweat on your skin, honey will produce small amounts of hydrogen peroxide killing any pathogens it touches. These same antibacterial qualities make raw honey a great beauty product useful for treating acne, slowing aging, moisturizing and opening pores. Treating your face with honey, according to some beauty experts, is as easy as applying a thin layer of raw honey to damp skin. Leave on for 30 minutes, then rinse off. For a cleansing boost, add some tea tree or lavender oil to the honey, or mix in some coconut


oil and a dash of nutmeg to make a gentle makeup remover. ROYAL JELLY, a milky substance produced by worker bees to feed a colony’s larvae, is composed of water, proteins, sugars, fats, vitamins, salts and amino acids. It is the source of sustenance for all bee larvae—workers, drones and potential queens—and is not collected in the hive but rather fed directly to the larvae from glands in the heads of worker (nurse) bees. The jelly only collects in harvestable amounts in the cells of queen larvae, which are given the largest amounts of jelly. This excessive force-feeding triggers in the larvae the development of queen morphology such as the ovaries needed to lay eggs. The most productive hives will make up to a pound of jelly in a six-month season. Royal jelly can be eaten in raw jelly form, half a teaspoon twice a day, but it’s most often consumed in capsule or tablet form. To receive the full effect of the supplement, it’s recommended to take without water and before eating. Taking a digestive enzyme supplement with the royal jelly may also increase absorption into the body, but as with bee pollen, royal jelly has been known to cause allergic reactions. Take the necessary precautions. Common folk uses for royal jelly claim benefits both internal and external—reducing wrinkles, stimulating hair growth, easing asthma, hay fever, PMS, menopause and increasing energy and sexual vitality. Some studies of royal jelly conducted on lab animals have shown antitumor, antibacterial and antiinflammatory properties. Tests conducted on both animals and humans have demonstrated that 50-100 mg of royal jelly taken daily can lower cholesterol. BEE STING THERAPY (OR BEE VENOM THERAPY (BVT), the most illusive form of apitherapy, is embraced by folk medicine and dabbled in by the medical community. It is difficult to find practitioners and even more difficult to determine if the health claims are valid. The first clinical study of BVT, conducted by the Austrian physician Phillip Terc in 1888, explored the therapy as a treatment for rheumatism. The practice never gained great popularity, but it did take hold as a folk remedy in the United States due mostly to the work of Charles Mraz, founder of the American Apitherapy Society. Conducting bee venom treatments out of his home in Vermont, Mraz

claimed to have treated thousands of people primarily for autoimmune disorders. He also initiated many clinical studies of the therapy and established standards for the medical use of venom, supplying medical-grade venom to pharmaceutical companies around the world. According to the American Apitherapy Society, bee venom is an effective treatment for a long list of diseases and ailments including: immune system problems such as arthritis and multiple sclerosis, cardiovascular diseases such as hypertension, endocrine disorders (irregular periods and menstrual cramps) as well as mood swings, depression, rheumatoid arthritis, eczema and warts. Honey bee venom has more than 40 active substances, but the key to its purported medical benefits likely lies in its abundance of melittin. This agent causes the body to naturally produce cortisol, a steroid hormone used in medicine to suppress the immune system and activate anti-stress and anti-inflammatory pathways. Methods of treatment vary depending on whether they are administered at home or in a clinic. As a home remedy, BVT treatments are most often delivered by holding a bee with a pair of tweezers and allowing it to directly sting the body —for arthritic patients the sting occurs on the arthritis trigger point. The stinger may then be left in place for 10 to 15 minutes. The number and frequency of sessions vary depending on the reason for treatment. In a trained medical setting, physicians administer BVT via syringe with an injectable form of venom inserted just under the skin. Allergic reactions to the treatment are a serious concern and treatments are usually started in small test doses with epinephrine on hand. Bee venom therapy could well some day become a tool used by modern Western medicine. Curiosity on the subject has already led to some research, including one study funded by the National Multiple Sclerosis Society and conducted by Georgetown University Medical Center in Washington, D.C. The results of the study, released in 2005, concluded that out of nine patients “three had subjective amelioration of symptoms and two showed objective improvement” leading the research team to report no conclusive evidence supporting the therapy but recommending larger follow-up studies. N

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1

September 2014

DANCE

CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET

A new season of 2014-15 season preview

Dance BY AMY BRUNVAND

the Ballet West II company, is sure to delight the kids, and Innovations always offers something new and wonderful.

Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company is opening the Fall Season with a program that includes Storm, a work by the new Artistic Director Daniel Charon so Salt Lake modern dance fans will get a chance to become better acquainted with him. The company is also offering a reprise of Tandy Beal’s Flabbergast (January) a family-friendly show full of circus magic. If you didn’t see it last year, don’t miss it this time. The dancers had to have special training in order to be able to safely perform the acrobatics. Definitely take the kids, and don’t worry if you have a big family because RirieWoodbury offers a family discount ticket that is a great deal . Check the website for details. The Utah Symphony is also getting into the circus act with the Cirque de la Symphonie (Oct-Nov) featuring aerial dance and

time in the usual silence of Abravanel Hall, symphonic music often has a kind of repressed energy, and unless you are an absolute purist it Trokadero de Monte Carlo can be a delight to watch that energy emerge in a dance performance for a change of pace. Repertory Dance Theater is also doing a family-friendly show called Surprise Packages While we are waiting for (November) which is an our new Broadway-style amusing exploration of the theatre to open on Main Street, Broadway Across America is still performing at the Capitol Theatre and although they are not a local company, you might still want to check out season tickets because the much anticipated Book of Mormon Musical (JulyAugust) is on the program. Speaking of traveling

T

he chill of fall is in the air and it’s time to order your season tickets. I know that sounds like a big commitment, but you should do it anyway. When you buy season tickets, performing arts companies will love you because subscribers are the people willing to take a chance that whatever the company produces will be amazing and wonderful. Season ticket holders really get to know the character of the performers and the strengths of the company. Instead of just sitting in the audience watching, you gradually become part of a community. What’s more, when arts organizations apply for grants, the number of subscribers is a measure of community support. So even if you can’t afford to donate money, you can help your favorite company stay afloat just by enjoying an evening out. How cool is that? Here are some highlights of the upcoming 2014-2015 dance season:

In October SB Dance is presenting a new Halloween show, though be warned: the content of Cannibal: A Love Story is for mature audiences only (Last year’s show, Of Meat and Marrow was terrific, but don’t even think about bringing little kids).

Knowing SB Dance, the new show is bound to be irreverent, funny, and genuinely disturbing. You can buy tickets for an add-on Afterlife Afterparty backstage, which is chance for the whole community of performers and audience to mingle and decompress from the performance they just saw. Ballet West: has a program of favorites for the upcoming season including Giselle (Nov); Swan Lake (Feb); Aladdin (April, Ballet West II); Almost Tango (April) and Innovations (May). I’m particularly delighted that Giselle is on the program because I have always loved the weirdness of the zombie-like willies. I have been reading up on willies lately and it turns out that they belong to a long European tradition of dancing female water spirits. The swan girls in Swan Lake are their soul sisters. So, it’s time to order Black Swan on Netflix to get in the spirit to appreciate the slightly sinister dancing goddesses of classical ballet. Aladdin, performed by

infinite possibilities of empty cardboard boxes (ask your cat or your six year old). My own kid also absolutely loves the annual fundraiser Charette (February) with its rollicking Iron Choreographer competition. She likes watching the dances being made, but it’s also an event with a wonderful sense of community as audience members mingle and talk dance. Reunion (April) is a kick-off for the 50-year anniversary celebration of the company (which is actually next season, but why not start early?) and it will feature revivals of pieces choreographed by alumni RDT dancers, including current Artistic/Executive Director Linda Smith, Bill Evans, and Kay Clark, names that will trigger nostalgia in anyone old enough to remember Salt Lake’s dance history.

acrobatics choreographed to classical masterpieces. If you think classical music and circus is a doubtful combination, think of the manic energy of those old Bugs Bunny cartoons, or the hallucinogenic images in Fantasia (1940). I wouldn’t want every symphony to have a circus or a ballet going on because I love the intense focus you get listening to unadorned symphony music, but at the same


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223 South 700 East Season ticket holders really get to know the character of the performers and the strengths of the company. Instead of just sitting in the audience watching, you gradually become part of a community. shows, the Ballets Trokadero de Monte Carlo is performing at Kingsbury Hall in February. This allmale ballet company offers a hilarious spoof of classical ballet by real dancers. They are making fun of ballet because they love ballet. Their publicity photo, which shows male ballerinas dressed as zombie willies in white tutus, makes me laugh just to look at it. This is just a small sample of what’s coming. Aren’t we lucky that it’s all happening right here in Salt Lake City? N

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Amy Brunvand is a librarian at the University of Utah and a dance enthusiast.Ballet West: BALLETWEST.ORG

Broadway Across America: SALTLAKECITY.BROADWAY.COM Kingsbury Hall: HTTP://KINGSBURYHALL.UTAH.EDU SB Dance: WWW.SBDANCE.COM Repertory Dance Theater: RDTUTAH.ORG Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company: RIRIEWOODBURY.COM Utah Symphony: UTAHSYMPHONY.ORG

Dr. Todd Cameron, Naturopathic Physician 1945 S. 1100 E. #100, Sugar House 801-486-4226 www.CameronWellnessCenter.net


18 September 2014 CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET Art, Health, Spirit, Natural World, Music, Events/Festivals, Meetings, Exhibits, Education/Workshops. See the full list of events and the ongoing calendar at WWW.CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET/EVENTS serve unique varieties of heirloom tomatoes grown in their Youth Gardens, with pesto made from their homegrown basil, and fresh locally made bread. There will also be live music and fun activities for kids, so bring the whole family. You’ll be hard pressed to find a better tomato sandwich party in the city! Grateful Tomato Garden, 800 S 600 E. Free. EATLOCALWEEK.ORG

CALENDAR BY LACEY ELLEN KNIEP

Through Sept. 14: Saturday’s Voyeur. 7:30-10:30p. Saturday’s Voyeur is Salt Lake Acting Company’s only cabaret show of the season. Food and drink are allowed in the theatre for this production. Shows run Thursday to Sunday, afternoon and evening performances. Salt Lake Acting Company, 168 West 500 North, SALTLAKEACTINGCOMPNAY.ORG Sept. 5 & 6: Transfusion Hype Dance Company Presents: Lucid Jubilee. SLCbased Transfusion Hype Dance Company is a coalition of dance artists who combine contemporary, jazz, hip-hop, ballet, and modern dance genres to create their work. Check out their YouTube Channel. Sugar Space, 8pm. $12. 618 E. Wilmington Avenue.

Through Sept. 28: Creation and Erasure: Art of the Bingham Canyon Mine. 12a-6p. Northern Utah’s Bingham Canyon Mine, the largest manmade excavation on Earth, has been a source of fascination and inspiration for artists around the country since the mine’s earliest days. Spanning 1873 to the present, this exhibition presents paintings, drawings, prints, and photographs that examine the mine from a variety of perspectives, tracing its physical development as well as its effects on the local economy, culture, environment, and people. Featured artists include Jonas Lie, William Rittase, Andreas Feininger, Jean Arnold, Edward Burtynsky, and the Center for Land Use Interpretation, among others. The exhibition also includes photographs of the mine after the massive landslide of spring 2013, the effects of which continue to impact the mine’s operations. Utah Museum of Fine Arts, 301 Wakara Way. $7-$9/members free. UMFA.UTAH.EDU Through Sept 31: Tomato Days. Tomato Days is a celebration of tomato season and our community. Its not-so-secret agenda is to interest you in growing and eating healthy, organic, local food. It is also a great way to raise awareness and support for Wasatch Community Gardens’ community programs. Tomato Days events include two tomato-themed contests, the Tomato Days Dine-Around, Tomato Sandwich Party, & Eat Local Week. WASATCHGARDENS.ORG

Through Nov. 20: Krishna: Lord of Vrindavan. 12a-9p. This exhibit explores the Hindu god Krishna through sacred and secular artworks, dating from the 11th century to the 20th, from the Museum’s Asian art collection. Krishna promised followers that through bhakti (devotion) to him, one could gain moksha (salvation). Emma Eccles Jones Education Gallery, in the Utah Museum of Fine Arts, 301 Wakara Way. UMFA.UTAH.EDU

Sept. 6: 12th Annual Celebration of Cultural Diversity. 10a-2:30p. Performances by Irish, Asian and East Indian dancers, and other performances. See website for complete line-up and schedule. Funding provided by Salt Lake County Zoo, Arts, & Parks, Utah Division of Arts & Museums, & Salt Lake City Arts Council. Pioneer Park, 300 S 300 W. SALTLAKEAMERICANMUSLIM.COM September 6: Alta Ski Area Tree Planting. 8a-1p. Trees are vital not only to the beauty of the mountains, but to the health of our watersheds and the operation

Sept. 6: RDT’S Dance Center on Broadway Open House. 9a-3p.Try a new class or an old favorite for only $10 all day (7 classes for less than the price of one), or free with purchase of a 10-class punch card. If you buy a 10-class punch card at the open house pay the special price of $90 (regularly $100—$30 savings overall). Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center, 138 W 300, RDTUTAH.ORG Sept. 6: Pagan Pride Day. 10a-6p (see story, this issue). Murray Park Pavilions 1, 2, & 3, 5175 S. Parkside Dr., Murray, UT. SALTLAKEPPD.ORG Sept. 6: From the Horse’s Mouth: Don Walker presents Boot Making. 2-4p. It takes more than 100 steps to produce one pair of boots. Join skilled craftsman Don Walker to discover the art of custom boot making. Learn how boots are made, see boot-making tools. Natural History Museum of Utah, 301 Wakara Way, Salt Lake City. NHMU.UTAH.EDU Sept. 6: 21st Annual Tomato Sandwich Party. 11a-2p. The kick-off for Eat Local Week. Start your Eat Local Challenge right at the Tomato Sandwich Party. Enjoy an afternoon at the Grateful Tomato Garden with friends and neighbors and sample their amazing heirloom tomato harvest. They will

Farmers Markets Saturdays through October: SLC Downtown Farmers Market. 8a-2p. Pioneer Park, 300 W 400 S. Free admission. slcfarmersmarket.org Sundays through October: 9th West Farmers Market. 9a-2p. 900 W 1000 S. Free admission. 9thwestfarmersmarket.org Tuesdays through October: SLC Downtown Harvest Market 4p to dusk. Pioneer Park, 300 W 400 S. Fri. & Sat. Through October: Murray City Park Farmers Market. 200 E 5200 S. slcfarmersmarket.org Through October: Wasatch Front Farmer’s Market, 9a-2p. Wheeler Farm, 6351 S 900 E


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Sept 6: Salt Lake City Pagan Pride Day Since 2002, The Salt Lake Chapter of the nationally based nonprofit Pagan Pride Project has celebrated Pagan Pride Day every September. Emulating the success of the Gay Pride movement, the mission of Pagan Pride’s community festival of entertainment, music, food, workshops and crafts is to foster a better understanding of the Pagan identity and reduce prejudice against religious beliefs. Plus, just simply having a great time. Everyone is invited. “We want to instill pride in the fact that practicing Pagans are an authentic, constructive, and continuing presence in the community,” says PPD board member Christian Roberts. “They are perfectly ordinary, fun, eclectic, colorful people. They are your neighbors, your bankers, your pizza delivery drivers,” Pagans are not characters from popular ’90s movies about witches and spells. In his perception, getting the truth out to the larger community about Paganism has helped. Roberts, an active Pagan and an interfaith minister, has been on the organizing board for four years. He adds that another purpose of the festival is to help the community, so there is always a food drive for The Road Home. Admission is a non-perishable food item (or not; you won't be turned away). Paganism is an umbrella term under which many paths fall, such as Druids, Heathens, Wiccans, practitioners of the Traditional Craft and followers of ancient Celtic or Egyptian practices. Roberts explains that common threads would be practices that revere natural cycles, the Earth, the universe. About 400-500 people attended last year, and the event grows steadily every year. There will be entertainment, workshops and hand-crafted goods, and more. Attend the opening Rite at 10:30am, too. Roberts says this is really fun if you have never attended a real Pagan ritual. —Margaret Ruth Murray Park Pavilions 1,2,3. 5175 S. Parkside Dr., Murray, UT. Admission is a nonperishable food item for The Road Home. WWW.SALTLAKEPPD.ORG of resorts like Alta Ski Area. Discover a whole new side of Alta Ski Area by helping plant 2,000 trees in one day. Both rugged and rewarding; this will be a fun day to enjoy and give back to the beautiful Little Cottonwood Canyon. Albion Grill, Alta Ski Area, 10520 East Day Lodge Road. Free. TREEUTAH.ORG

regional harvest, promotes local agriculture and the preservation of Utah’s agricultural heritage, and brings people together as a community. Eat Local Week educates the community about resources for eating locally, and increases awareness around food production, transportation and access to healthy food. EATLOCALWEEK.ORG

Sept. 6-7: The Tarot & Spiritual Transformation Weekend Workshop. 9a5p. This workshop, ideal for both newcomers to the Tarot as well as seasoned experts, will revolutionize your understanding of the Tarot. Robert M. Place, renowned authority on the Tarot and creator of The Alchemical Tarot and The Tarot of the Sevenfold Mystery will be leading the workshop. The Officer’s Club at the University of Utah, 150 Fort Douglas Blvd. $250. RISINGPATHWAYS.COM

Sept. 7: 9th West Farmer’s Market. 9a2p. Eat Local Challenge, Grandparents Day info booths, & Multicultural performances throughout the day. 900 W 1000 S. 9THWESTFARMERSMARKET.ORG

Sept. 6-13: Eat Local Week Utah 2014. 12a-11:45p. Eat Local Week celebrates the

Sept. 8: Eating Alabama. 7p. In search of a simpler life, a young couple returns home to Alabama where they set out to eat the way their grandparents did – locally and seasonally. But as they navigate the agroindustrial gastronomical complex, they soon realize that nearly everything about the food system has changed since farmers once

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20 September 2014 CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET crackerjack writer crossed the globe in an epic quest to discover what makes us laugh. Vieve Gore Concert Hall in the Emma Eccles Jones Conservatory, Westminster College,1840 S 1300 E. Free. WESTMINSTERCOLLEGE.EDU Sept. 11: Wonder Women! The Untold Stories of American Superheroines. 7p. The films that traces the fascinating birth, evolution, and legacy of Wonder Woman and introduces audiences to a dynamic group of fictional and real-life superheroines. Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center, 138 W 300 S. Free. UTAHFILMCENTER.ORG

Sept. 13: Jai Uttal Concert. 8p. Enjoy an evening of chanting and music with Grammynominated recording artist Jai Uttal. Jai Uttal is a rocker who gives 1,000-year old chants from India some modern pep. He blends a practice of meditation and yoga with call-andresponse singing, called Kirtan. Krishna Temple, 3300 S 900 E. $50 adv/$60 door. populated their family histories. A thoughtful and often funny essay on community, the South and sustainability. Presented in partnership with Utah Film Center, the Downtown Farmers Market and the Downtown Alliance. Brewvies Cinema Pub, 677 S 200 W. Free. EATLOCALWEEK.ORG Sept. 8-Nov. 6 (Mondays): Foundations of Mindfulness—Meditation Course with Charlotte Bell (preregister). 7:15-8:30p. Mindfulness Meditation is based in the traditional practice of vipassana meditation. Vipassana means “clear seeing.” Mindfulness practice teaches us how to see and be with our lives as they are. We learn to be present without thoughts, emotions and conditioned patterns. Mindful Yoga Collective, 223 S 700 E. CHARLOTTEBELLYOGA.COM

Sept. 9: Utah’s Own Funeral Potato Contest. 7p. Plan to enter the cook-off, to win a grocery-store gift card. Each participant must use a minimum of three local products in their dish. Prizes are $150 for first, $100 for second and $75 for third. Utah State Fair Park, Zion Building, 155 N 1000 W. Free. UTAHSTATEFAIR.COM Sept. 9-Oct. 14 (Tuesdays): Inner Light Institute Presents: “Exploring Your Personal Mythology—Discovering the guiding stories of your past. Create a Vision of your Future. 7-9:30p. In this sixweek workshop, which is a blend of group process and personal reflection, you will experience and become a witness to a redefinition of your personal perceptions. Taught by Sarah Rose. Inner Light Center, 4408 S 500 E. $120. INNERLIGTCENTER.NET

Sept. 12-28: Downtown SLC Dine O’Round. Featuring the top downtown restaurants, Dine O’ Round is a fun way for restaurant-goers to try new dining locations and/or return to favorites. Participating restaurants offer $5 or $10 two-item lunches, as well as $15 or $30 three-course dinners in addition to their existing menus. DOWNTOWNSLC.ORG Sept. 12-14: Fed By Wild Nature. 7p (2p. Sun). An opportunity to reconnect with yourself, health and well-being while immersed in the beautiful landscape of Grand Staircase National Monument and surrounding areas. This will be an entirely experiential retreat enveloping each of us into a full body/mind/spirit while learning and experiencing what constitutes a healthy holistic lifestyle. Topics covered will include organic, whole foods diet and nutrition; healthy foods cooperative buying in your community; medicinal plants and remedies; yoga; and nature awareness walks, while deepening into our relationships with Self, each other, and our more-than-human community. Boulder Mountain Guest Ranch, UT. 3621 Hells Backbone Road. WASATCHGARDENS.ORG. $185 (does not included lodging). Sept. 12: 8th Annual Birds & the Bees & the Flowers & the Trees—Cheese & Beer Lovers Party. 6-9p. Beehive Cheese teams

up with Rooster’s Brewing Company for this year’s event to benefit Red Butte Garden. Stroll through the Garden and enjoy craft brews and cheeses. Red Butte Garden, 300 Wakara Way. $60. BEEHIVECHEESE.COM Sept. 13: Intro to Map and Compass Navigation. 8a-2p. Learn to read map contour lines and translate them to the actual terrain. Class size limited to 6 participants. Pre-registration required. $60 members/$80 non-members. 230 W 10400 S, Sandy. REI.COM Sept. 13: Avenues Street Fair. 9a-6p. Local artists, food vendors, government agencies and nonprofit organizations. There is a children’s parade at 9am and free allday art activities for kids. Live music plays throughout the day on two stages. Fourth Avenue between I and N streets Free. SLC-AVENUES.ORG Sept. 14: 4th Annual Urban Flea Market. 9a-3p. Over 80 vendors, music by KRCL DJ Bad Brad Wheeler, local food trucks. Rescue Rovers are the featured animal rescue and will have dogs available for adoption. 600 S Main St. FLEAMARKETSLC.COM Sept. 16: Food Talks: The Global Imperative for the Local Garden. 7-8:30p. Join Wasatch Community Gardens and special guest speaker Fred Montague for a discussion about making big changes in our world one garden at a time. Main City Library, 210 E 400 S. Free. SLCPL.UT.US Sept. 16: TELOS: The Fantastic World of Eugene Tssui. 7p. TELOS chronicles the unorthodox life and revolutionary work of Eugene Tssui, an eccentric visionary and a maverick architect. Tssui questions traditional building standards and put nature and the environment at the forefront of his designs long before “green” and “eco-friendly” became buzzwords. Main City Library, 210 E 400 S. Free. UTAHFILMCENTER.ORG

Sept. 11: Evening Exploration: Garden Tour. 6-7p. Join a trained volunteer guide for an exploration of what’s blooming throughout the Garden. Registration required. Red Butte Garden, 300 Wakara Way. REDBUTTEGARDEN.ORG Sept. 11: Lecture: “Cracking the Humor Code” by Peter McGraw. 7p. Drawing on cutting-edge behavioral research and observations from his global travels, psychology professor Peter McGraw will discuss the secrets to what makes things funny and how to live a happier, healthier, and more humorous life. McGraw recently coauthored The Humor Code: A Global Search for What Makes Things Funny with journalist Joel Warner. The madcap scientist and

Sept. 13: 28th Annual India Fest. 5p. Pageant of the Ramayana. Indian food, dance, music, dramas and fireworks. Krishna Temple, Spanish Fork. 311 W 8500 S. $3. UTAHKRISHNAS.ORG


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22 September 2014 CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET Sept. 19: Swaner Star Party 2014. 8p. Celebrate and learn about deep space observation! Paul Ricketts and staff from the University of Utah South Physics Observatory will instruct telescope use on the Swaner EcoCenter pier. Swaner EcoCenter, 1258 Center Drive, Park City, UT. SWANERECOCENTER.ORG

for a night of local food and live performances. The Leonardo, 209 E 500 S.$20/$25. TEDXSALTLAKECITY.COM Sept. 20: Third Saturday Contra Dance. 7-10:30p. Featuring music by regional band “bandage a Trois.” All dances are taught and called. Come alone or with a partner. Firsttime dancers welcome. Montessori Community School, 2415 E 1700 S. $8. WASATCHCONTRAS.ORG Sept. 20: Paul Oakenfold at Park City Live. 9p. Three-time Grammy-nominated DJ and producer Paul Oakenfold returns to his roots as the original pioneer and icon of the global trance scene with his Trance Mission album and begins his new North American Tour in Fall of 2014. Park City Live, 427 S Main Park City. $25-$40. PARKCITYLIVE.NET Sept. 21: 9th West Farmer’s Market— Pet Day and UMOCA Art Truck. 9a-2p. A great animal appreciation day with many animal rescue groups at the market with UMOCA Art. 1000 S 900 W. Free. 9THWESTFARMERSMARKET.ORG

Sept. 20: Second Annual Utah Clean Air Fair. 12-5p. Solutions at over 20 new idea booths (best idea voted on by you). Organizations working on current solutions. Live local music. Utah artist displays & booths. Keynote speakers. Alternative energy solutions. A kid parade. Bike rallys to the fair. Re-skilling workshops. Family games. Fun and relevant activities. Prizes. Electric car and bike show. Got a bike? Ride it! Library Square Plaza, 210 E 400 S. UTCLEANAIRFAIR.ORG Sept. 17: Best Local Fall Hikes. 7p. Join REI’s experts as they reveal their favorite fall hikes and help you plan an escape to cooler temperatures and fall colors on a day-hike. You will learn about trip planning, essential items, safety precautions, local resources and places to go. Registration required. 3285 E 3300 S. Free. REI.COM Sept. 18: 25 Years of GROW, EAT, REPEAT—Wasatch Community Gardens Fundraiser. 5-8p. See the urban farm Frog Bench Farms firsthand while supporting Wasatch Community Gardens. $50 (includes bites from Pago, libations from Epic Brewing Co., High West Distillery and The Hive Winery). RSVP at WASATCHGARDENS.ORG Sept. 18: Renaissance Man: The Art and Science of Andreas Vesalius by Mark Nielsen, Dept of Biology. 6:30p. Mark Nielsen, a professor in the U’s Dept. of Biology, will speak about the contributions of 16th century scientist Andreas Vesalius to medicine, anatomy, and education. Tours of the exhibition will start at 5:30 outside the Gould Auditorium. J. Willard Marriott Library. Reception to follow. LIB.UTAH.ED

Sept. 19: Alfred Lambourne Prize to be awarded tonight by Friends of Great Salt Lake. In 2014, FRIENDS of Great Salt Lake established this prize, an annual recognition and celebration of regional creativity inspired by our inland sea. FRIENDS invited creative work inspired by the Lake in the forms of visual arts, writing, sound and dance. Community professionals Will Bagley, Meri DeCaria and Steve “Doc” Floor served as jurists to select the best three works from dozens of submissions. FRIENDS will award one prize of $1,000 to a work that most speaks to the inspiration and wonder that our Lake evokes. Written and musical submittals will be read and performed from 6-7:30 pm. Visual arts submittals will be on display all evening and through October 9. Prize will be awarded at 7:30. Alderwood Fine Art, 641 E So. Temple. HTTP://WWW.FOGSL.ORG/ Sept. 19 & 20: Movement Forum presents Mine Goes to 11: The MoFo Show. 7:15p. Each performance will be unique, showcasing the company’s exceptional ability to create 11 years of spontaneous art. Marriott Center for Dance, 330 S 1500 E. $20. UTAH.EDU

Sept. 19: Gallery Stroll. 6-9p. Join on the 3rd Friday of each month (except in December it is the first) for a stroll through galleries and businesses promoting visual art. Downtown Salt Lake. GALLERYSTROLL.ORG Sept. 20: TEDx Salt Lake City – Simulcast. 9a. Tickets for TEDxSaltLakeCity are sold out, but several locations are still available for the simulcast. Watch talks and win TEDx prizes all while communicating seamlessly in real time with the speakers, sponsors, and other attendees tuning in. TEDXSALTLAKECITY.COM/SIMULCAST-SITES Sept. 20: E.A.T. Bike Tour. 1p. Eat Art Together (E.A.T.) is a community outreach initiative now through October that connects art and food, reimagining our relationships with the land, city and each other. Partnering with Wasatch Community Gardens, Neighborhood House and Real Food Rising, UMOCA will host events and sponsor art projects to promote sustainable urban farming and build our relationship with the land that surrounds us. This bike tour of community gardens around the city and the Salt Lake City Farmer’s Market ends with a stop at a local eatery. This relaxed five-mile ride will help you get acquainted with local farming. UTAHMOCA.ORG Sept. 20: 2014 Rumi Festival. 2-4:30p. A gathering of poetry, art, music and contemplation. Anderson-Foothill Library, 1135 S 2100 E. RUMIFESTIVAL.ORG SEPT. 20: After Glow—TEDxSalt Lake City 2014. 6:30-10p. Celebrate with our speakers, sponsors, planning committee and other SLC innovators and host Deena Marie

Sept. 23: Dog Park and Trail Etiquette: Keeping your dog safe and Protecting the Environment. 7p. REI 3285 E 3300 E. REI.COM Sept. 23: Utah Film Center Free Film Screenings: American Meat. 7p. American Meat explores the meat industry with a solutions-based approach. Featuring interviews with farmers from across the country, the film provides a historical and current look at large scale industrial farming and the revolutionary response some farmers are taking to change the system. Main City Library, 210 E 400 S. Free. UTAHFILMCENTER.ORG Sept. 24: Band of Heathens at State Room. 8p. Band of Heathens has built a potent body of recorded work that’s won the Austin, Texas ensemble a fiercely loyal fan base and a reputation as one of its hometown’s most vital musical resources. The State Room, 638 S State. $15. THESTATEROOM.COM Sept. 25: Create What You Crave: Gastronomy @ the Leo. 6:30p. A gourmet boot camp with The Leonardo’s executive chef Zanetta Jones. The Leonardo, 209 E 400 S. $35/ member $25. THELEONARDO.ORG September 26-28. Gem Faire. 10a-6p (10a-5p Sun). South Towne Exposition Center, 9575 S State. $7 weekend pass. GEMFAIRE.COM Sept. 26: Fall Plant Sale: Annual Garden Fundraiser. Fri: 4-7:30p, 9a-7:40p. Flowering Bulbs, Water-Wise and Native Plants. Red Butte Garden, 300 Wakara Way. $6-$10/members free. REDBUTTEGARDEN.ORG


CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET 23

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Sept. 25: Ririe Woodbury Presents: Fall Season. 7:30p. Choreographed by Jonah Bokaer, Johannes Wieland and Daniel Charon. Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center, 138 W 300 S. $35. RIRIEWOODBURY.COM

Sept. 26: Beat the Bomb: First International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons. 6p. A family-friendly event, featuring Congolese, West African and Japanese Taiko Drummers. Presented in partnership with the Gandhi Alliance for Peace, United Nations Association of Utah, and the Utah Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons. Take a lawn chair or blanket. Sugar House Park, Fabian Pavilion, 1400 E 2100 S. Free. UTAHCAN.ORG Sept. 27: Poetry SLAM. 2p. Slam Poetry is a competitive spoken word event where poets will step up to the microphone to have their hearts judged by five random people in the audience. Cheering, hissing, clapping, and booing are encouraged. Main City Library, 210 E 400 S. $5. POETRYSLAM.COM Sept. 28: 9th West Farmer’s MarketYard Sale Day. 9a-2p. Bring your yard sale items. Only $5 for a spot.1000 S 900 W. Free. 9THWESTFARMERSMARKET.ORG Sept. 29: 2014 Horticulture Spotlight Lecture Series: “Maintaining Low-Water Landscapes.” 6:30-7:30p. Fifth in a series of six free lectures sponsored by the Utah State University Cooperative Extension. Red Butte Garden, 300 Wakara Way. Free (register at extension.usu.edu) REDBUTTEGARDEN.ORG Sept. 30: Moose in Utah: The Latest Research. 6-8p. Dr. Dan MacNulty, assistant professor of Wildlife Ecology at Utah State University, will speak about his research studying the population ecology of moose in northern Utah. Preceding Dr. MacNulty, Wild Aware Utah, a local collaborative educational program whose mission is to minimize human-wildlife conflicts, will briefly present safety information related to encountering moose. Swaner EcoCenter, 1258 Center Dr, Park City. $5/Free. SWANERECOCENTER.ORG

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Oct. 1: Artist Workshop with Marcee Blackerby. 7p. Join local artist and storyteller Marcee Blackerby to learn how to make your own Halloween wreath using animal bones, seedpods and other items found in Utah. Marcee will help you create festive fall wreaths just in time for the holiday season. Natural History Museum of Utah, 301 Wakara Way. $16-18. NHMU.UTAH.EDU Oct. 2: Life in the Bee-Have State. 6p. An Evening with Pat Bagley, 2014 Pulitzer Prize finalist & award-winning editorial cartoonist from the Salt Lake Tribune. Ticket includes dinner and all humor. Proceeds benefit Utah Rivers Council. Frida Bistro, 545 W 700 S. $75. UTAHRIVERS.ORG Oct. 2-30: Intermediate Tarot at Lifelong Learning. 6:30-9p. This fun, enlightening and interactive class will strongly enhance the development of personal reading style and heighten intuition. Drawing upon the best array of Tarot authors, experts and resources available, this course will give you a highly individual, yet group-interactive, experience that will generate the skills necessary to be an advanced Tarotist. Taught by Margaret Ruth. Lifelong Learning, Murray Site, 5282 S 320 W. $135. CONTINUE.UTAH.EDU Oct. 2: “Celebrate the Bounty”—Local First’s Annual Fundraiser. 7p. An annual celebration of all things local, Celebrate the Bounty features more than 20 locally owned awardwinning restaurants. These restaurateurs and fellow food artisans are leaders in Salt Lake City’s emerging food community. Grand Hall at Union Pacific Depot, 400 W South Temple. $65 (general)-$125 (VIP). THEDEPOTSLC.COM Oct. 3: “Living More with Less” Conference. 1:30-6:30p. A free conference to hear world-class speakers/educators Richard Heinberg, Robert Davies, Warner Woodworth, and Erin Silva. Science Building of the Utah Valley University, Room SB134, 800 W University Parkway, UVU, Orem. Free. (see event online on Facebook).

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CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET

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rtspace Solar Gardens, 850 South 400 West, spans a city block on the west side of downtown Salt Lake City. This mixed use building has over 100 tenants and includes residential and commercial space. The residents of this building enjoy the benefit of not paying a monthly power bill. In 2013 Sunlight Solar, a Utahbased solar installation company that installed the solar platforms along UTA’s airport light rail, and a highly skilled and experienced construction team was hired to design and build Utah’s first Mixed-Use Net Zero Building. (“Net zero” means it produces as much, or more, energy than it uses.) The design incorporates over 900 solar panels on the roof, carport and awnings. The result is a building that produces more energy than it consumes. On any given day, you can see the property’s electrical meter spinning backwards as the sun shines on the solar array. This gives the tenants peace of mind knowing that the power used to heat and cool their homes is being produced directly from the sun. Because of space restraints on the roof, Sunlight Solar used top-of-theline SunPower 435-watt solar panels that stand seven feet tall and operate at over 21% efficiency (which is very high for solar panels). This 338kilowatt system uses a distributed inverter design with over 50 individual American-made inverters that are harvesting the sun’s energy and

channeling it throughout the building and back into the grid. This building serves as an example of what can be done when power generation is addressed during the design phase of construction. With careful planning, qualified personnel and an owner who truly cares about renewable energy the question is no longer “why solar?” but “why not solar?” Artspace is a not-for-profit corporation that has provided affordable housing and commercial spaces for artists, nonprofits and small retailers for the past 34 years, focusing on revitalizing neighborhoods. Artspace Solar Gardens received the Most Outstanding Project of 2013 award from Utah Construction & Design Magazine for its sustainable features. N —Cammy Staker. Cammy is affiliated with Sunlight Solar.

Some Like it Hot: 9/27 Solar Day Salt Lake 2014 Saturday, September 27, Noon-6pm Utah’s biggest day in the solar industry. • Get your questions answered. • 100% solar-powered live music • Solar industry leaders • Murray Park, 5100 S. State St. More info at: SOLARDAYSALTLAKE.COM, SOLAR@XMISSION.COM, 801.833.4865. Sponsored by the Utah Interfaith Power & Light, Salt Lake Community College Green Academy, Green News Utah, Wells Fargo Bank and several solar contractors.


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CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET

COMINGS & GOINGS

What’s New Around Town BY SOPHIE SILVERSTONE AND JIM HENSLER

mote inner equilibrium. For more information on how Healthy Cycles can help you, talk with a Wellness Counselor at one of Dave’s Health stores or schedule a consultation with Dave Card himself. -S Dave’s Health & Nutrition, 880 E. 3900 South, tel. 801.268.3000. West Jordan: 1817 W. 9000 South, tel. 801.446.0499. DAVESHEALTH.COM

Our favorite dentist’s office expands

Muralists, paint, and community support needed to help save Sugar House artist warehouses, Wasa Laza The warehouses tucked away between 500 E. and 600 E. on 2100 S., deemed "Wasa Laza," have provided Salt Lake artists affordable studio space since the 1970’s. Now that the Sugar House Streetcar runs past this block, the warehouses are drawing more attention to the area, and decades of citations and building violations on the place have drained the City's patience on the situation. The City is threatening to close the artist workspaces down for good. Neighbor complaints include that the buildings are unsightly and unsafe. Unfortunately, the elderly landlord is not in any state to take action. As city-issued red tags appear on the warehouse doors, many artists are beginning to move their studios elsewhere. One local artist, Barabara Roller (aka Barbarella), who has a work space in the warehouse, sees “a space with such a rich history and community of artists dissolving.” But not if she can help it. While in talks with the city the last two weeks, Barbarella proposed one possible solution that seems to have garnered a more favorable response than any other negotiation thus far: “What if we painted murals on these buildings?” Yes, apparently the City would love that. The problem is, we’re not talking about one building exterior, we’re talking about an entire city block of warehouse wall murals. Love art, artists, and want to keep the City from destroying an artistic cultural commons, and (perhaps) repeating history of the corner in Sugar House on 2100 S. and 1100 E.? Want to save Wasa Laza from becoming an unsightly hole in the ground? Email freewasalaza@gmail.com. -S

New Holistic Wellness Center at Dave’s Health Dave’s Health and Nutrition has opened a holistic wellness center that offers chiropractic, hypnotherapy, massage therapy, nutrition, and acupuncture treatments. The team includes Terrilee H. Rydalch CMSCHt, Jeanne M Chadwick, NMT, Anne Dorsey and Dr. Shannon Parisi, D.C. To celebrate the opening, Dave’s Health will host an open house during their storewide sale September 18-20. All sessions for the Wellness Center booked at the Open House will receive a 30% off the regular price (limit three per person, other discounts and coupons do not apply).

There will also be a drawing for some great giveaways. -S Wellness Center, 880 E. 3900 So., 801.337.3967. WWW.WELLNESSCENTERATDAVES.COM. (Dave’s Health & Nutrition, 880 E. 3900 South, tel. 801.268.3000. West Jordan: 1817 W. 9000 South, tel. 801.446.0499. DAVESHEALTH.COM.)

Also new from Dave’s: hormone balancer Dave Card, founder of Dave’s Health, has formulated Healthy Cycles, to help support healthy hormone balance for pre-menopausal women. The custom-made and locally produced herbal combination contains vitex, white peony, raspberry leaf, yarrow, dong quai, blessed thistle and licorice root to pro-

Natural Smiles Dentistry, home to Dr. Brickey and his team, welcomes back Dr. Laura Provine, who recently received her DMD from Midwestern University College of Dental Medicine in Glendale, Arizona. Dr. Provine worked at Natural Smiles five years ago, and not only is she now returning as a dentist, she is actually Dr. Brickey’s dentist! Dr. Provine is a nature lover and enjoys biking, hiking, and downhill skiing. Welcome back, Dr. Laura! -S Natural Smiles Dentistry, 3191 S. Valley St. #101. 801-463-6657. www.NATURALSMILESDENTISTRY.COM

New fall dinner menu items at Oasis Café Not only does Chef Efren Benitez offer new starter and entrée options on Oasis Café’s dinner menu, General Manager Will Keesen is pleased to announce an all-new wine list, as well as their first real cocktail program. They have some fun concoctions like the Manmosa (Wasatch White Label white ale, orange and cranberry juice) and a delightful, but not heavy Chocalate Espresso Martini (Stoli vodka, kahlua, Ghirardelli chocolate and espresso). “In addition, our wine list has been completely re-tooled to best complement our new menu, but also to help stretch our diners’ palates a bit,” says Keesen. These new dishes include starter courses of a grilled shrimp dish with eggplant, a new antipasto plate of meats and local cheeses, and a caprese salad. New dinner entrée courses include a pan-roasted halibut, sea bass, pork chili verde, paprika crusted chicken, and a tiger prawn penne pasta. -S 151 So. 500 East. Reservations suggested, 801-322-0404 or on OPENTABLE.COM. WWW.OASISCAFESLC.COM.

Downtown construction UPDATE There’s a lot of construction activity downtown these days. Here’s the lowdown on a few of them, in case you’re wondering what all the chaos is about. The end result for some of these will be pretty interesting. 3rd & 3rd UnCommons Project: The former antique store on the NW corner of 300 South & 300 East is being renovated into a multiple-use location, to include a market, focusing on fresh, local produce and a restaurant featuring natural foods. Ballet Center: Construction is nearing completion on the Ballet Training & Practice Center extension to the Capitol Theater. The project requires closing a portion of the roadway through the summer on 200 South. Accommodations are being made to keep adjacent businesses fully accessible during this time. Completion is set for fall of 2014. Plaza on State Street: Construction is underway on The Plaza on State Street, between 200 & 300 South. It is a mixed-use project with residential housing and ground floor retail space. The project should be completed by late spring of 2015. Broadway Media Center: Wasatch Partners is near completion in the process of retrofitting the bottom two floors of the 50 West Broadway Office Tower to accommodate a full service restaurant and Wise Guys comedy club, planned to open in September. The sky bridge connecting the Tower to the former Key Bank Building to the west is also being converted to house a Simmons Broadcast Company radio station. Air Center: Construction on the worldclass night club and event center will begin soon on the corner of West Temple and 400 South. The first building in this project is completed and Evern T. Brown relocated to the new building. Eccles Theatre: Demolition of the Metro Building has been completed and is now underway on the former home of Braza Grill building immediately south of the Neumont University. This demolition will provide the opening for a future mid-block crossing from Main Street to Regent Street. Regent Street will remain closed to through traffic at midblock throughout the duration of the project. Both Walker and Regent Street Parking garages will remain open and accessible. The project is expected to last two-plus years. A 24/7 hotline has been established to respond to any emergency issues or concerns: 801-831-5991. Source: Bill Knowles, Construction Mitigation Ombudsman


CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET While created by Salt Lake locals, seekers and posters can select any state or area, down to the zip code, to search or post opportunities. Listings can be either paid or unpaid, include brief descriptions of what the poster is seeking, and all postings are separated into categories for easy perusal. With the motto of "For the artist, by the artist" this community-based site will be an invaluable resource for the talented looking for opportunities to utilize their skills and for those looking for artists to find the talent that our state has to offer. -J WWW.ARTSPOST.ORG

40% off at Dancing Cranes Dancing Cranes Imports invites CATALYST readers to the big September Summer Clothing Sale. Get 40% off an array of creative, relaxed and breezy apparel: skirts, tank tops, blouses, shawls and more. Discover a colorful Earth-friendly and people-friendly collection, with features such as organic cotton, low-impact dyes or fair-trade items. If you haven’t been to Dancing Cranes yet, this is a great time to enjoy the beautiful atmosphere, carefully sourced global products, popular class offerings, and the ever-delicious and always-nourishing Cafe Solstice menu while you shop. Open daily. 673 E. Simpson Ave (2240 So.). 801.486.1129. WWW.DANCINGCRANESIMPORTS.COM

Download Philip Bimstein’s Refuge-inspired quartet Refuge is also the name of Philip Bimstein’s composition, performed by the Abramyan String Quartet (members of the Utah Symphony), which features Williams reading phrases of passages of her book. "If someone came and expected to hear it as if in an opera or play, from beginning to end, even in skeletal form, they would be disappointed," Bimstein said. Rather, "it's the essence of what Terry writes about. . . . I added a musical dimension to it, not that it didn't have one already." 25% of all proceeds from the sale of this EP will be donated to the Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge; the Utah refuge that was first threatened, and then healed, in Williams’ book. You may download the recording on iTunes or CDBaby.com. -S WWW.BIMSTEIN.COM

Artistic opportunities Arts post is a newly launched website created by Sugar Space and with the support of Salt Lake City with the intention of bringing artists together. On the site, artists can both find and post artistic opportunities in their area. Openings in organizations, those seeking collaborators, and artistic job opportunities of all kinds are posted on an easy-to-read list that can be browsed and refined to suit whatever it is an artist, aspiring, struggling, established or other, may be seeking.

STONEGROUND KITCHEN

Now Serving Sunday Brunch 11-3pm

SPECIAL EVENT: SEP 19 | 8-9 PM

Progress for parking strip plantings

Glimpse

On the corner of 3rd Avenue and I street in the historic Avenues neighborhood, Heidi Keilbaugh constructed 7 planters in the park strips between her home and the street. She used the planters to grow flowers and vegetables for her own use. Heidi was issued a citation on April 10th for the planters. This led to a Historic Landmark Commission meeting. Despite community concerns over maintenance of the planters and the beds "not being consistent with the character of surrounding properties in the Avenues Historic District" the commission ruled that Heidi's planters could stay. Even more exciting for Salt Lake urban gardeners is that this case is being used as the basis for The Historic Landmark Commission in writing up guidelines for park strip planters for all of Salt Lake. -J

Inspired by UMOCA’s exhibition Bikuben, Danish choreographer Charlotte Boye-Christensen from NOW-ID captures themes of home, belonging and identity in this one night performance.

“Our Town” awards The Sorenson Unity Center and Salt Lake City Arts Council were recently announced as the recipients of $75,000 from the National Endowments for the Arts "Our Town" project. This money will be used primarily to support community engagement and arts programming in west-side neighborhoods of SLC, including commissioning public artwork, implementing guidelines and standards for public art, and engaging youth and community in arts throughout the neighborhoods. -J

Get out of debt free Powerpay is a new app based on a PCbased financial tool designed to help debtors become savers. Co-developed by USU staff Margie Memmott and Dean Miner, the app allows users to enter balances, payment amounts and interest rates for each of their debts and the app will calculate the best repayment schedule to save time and money. The app is for the iphone/ipad and has been downloaded in 11 countries. -J To download the free iPhone/iPad PowerPay app, visit the iTunes app store. For a more comprehensive version of PowerPay and additional debt elimination tools, visit www.POWERPAY.ORG

Experience captivating movement performed to the eclectic sound of Figura, a Danish music collective.

Join us for Sunday Supper 5-9pm

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28 September 2014

CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET

Barre to blankets Baddha Konasana BY CHARLOTTE BELL

D

uring grade school, my sisters and I took ballet classes. We studied at the Cincinnati Conservatory with a lovely young dancer named Donna Ficker. A year or two into our lessons we had to find a new teacher when Donna’s mother moved the family to New York, where Donna’s younger sister Suzi changed her name to Suzanne Farrell and joined George Balanchine in the New York City Ballet. I remember watching Suzi practice at the studio amid excited murmurs about her already burgeoning career. During our brief ballet career my dad, a gymnast with an eye for form, installed a barre in our basement and led us through our ballet warm-ups every morning. None of us was star material, but I thought the whole thing was pretty fun—the jumping around, the costumes, of course, and even the warm-ups. I haven’t performed a plié in many years, but one exercise we practiced

toward the center) in the groin and inner thigh. In yoga, Butterfly is touted for its internal benefits: It stimulates the abdominal organs, improves circulation, soothes menstrual discomfort and sciatica, and helps relieve menopause symptoms. To practice Baddha Konasana, have a few blankets handy. Sit on a folded blanket. Sitting on a blanket instead of a mat cushions your anklebones. Bend both knees and place the soles of your feet together, allowing the legs to release out to the sides. Reach back and check your lumbar spine by placing a few fingers on the spine. If your vertebrae are poking out in your low back, this means that your back is rounded (in flexion). Fold your blanket and sit on it with your pelvis on the blanket and feet on the floor. If your vertebrae are still poking out, you might want to try sitting up even a little higher. Depending on flexibility, you may not be able to sit up high enough for your spine to draw into your

Unlike ballet, yoga is not about performance. Like other yoga asanas, Baddha Konasana can be beneficial no matter what your pose looks like. daily remained in my repertoire long after ballet lessons ended and before I discovered yoga in 1982: Butterfly, aka Baddha Konasana. or Bound Angle Pose. With ballet’s huge emphasis on turnout, Butterfly is one of its important warm-up exercises. More than anything, Baddha Konasana requires and develops outward rotation of the hip joints—that is, if the hip joints are shaped in such a way that outward rotation is even possible. The pose develops outward rotation by stretching the adductors (the muscles that draw the leg in

back. If this is the case, place your hands behind you and use your arms to help you sit up straight. I recommend not bending forward if your vertebrae are poking out in your back, as this can stress the discs at the base of your spine. Another possible restriction you might encounter is knee discomfort. If this is the case, you can elevate your leg(s) by placing a folded blanket or yoga blocks under your thigh(s). If your legs release easily and your spine dips into your low back, you can practice Baddha Konasana sitting

YOGA POSE OF THE MONTH upright or you can bend forward, as always beginning by tipping your pelvis forward. Whichever variation you choose, take five to 10 breaths in the pose, creating space in your body as you inhale, and softening into that space on the exhale. A common misunderstanding is that Baddha Konasana is about pushing your legs down to the floor. I cringe when I remember zealous teachers 20 years ago pushing or even standing on my thighs to drive them down. Fortunately, my body could take the abuse back then, and I didn’t know better. Others have not been so lucky. If you push down even lightly on your thighs, you may notice that your pelvis tilts back, pushing your lumbar spine into flexion, not a healthy action for your back in this pose. Instead, think about the thighs lengthening outward from your pelvis. This is true whether your knees are millimeters from the floor or a foot above. Speaking of which, if your knees have been way up off the floor for years in Baddha Konasana and have barely budged, it’s likely not an issue of flexibility. No two hip joints are alike. Some of our hip joints are oriented such that outer rotation is really easy. Others are formed to favor inner rotation. Occasionally, someone’s hip joints accommodate both actions, but most of the time, if we rotate easily one direction, we probably won’t rotate so easily the other way. You may be part of the inward rotation camp. So, as with all yoga asanas, please let go of the idea that your knees being high in the air in Bound Angle makes you a bad yogi. It often doesn’t even mean anything about your flexibility, let alone your strength of character. It’s all about how your hip joints are formed, and “normal” and “healthy” look different for different people. Unlike ballet, yoga is not about performance. Like other yoga asanas, Baddha Konasana can be beneficial no matter what your pose looks like. After you spend a few breaths in the pose, stretch your legs out in front of you and feel how your body has changed. It is these moments, when we pause to let a pose integrate into our bodies and give our minds a chance to absorb what we feel, that truly define yoga practice. N Charlotte Bell is a yoga teacher at Mindful Yoga Collective, an author of two books, and plays oboe with the Salt Lake Symphony and Red Rock Rondo. She lives in Salt Lake City.


CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET

September 2014

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COMMUNITYRESOURCE DIRECTORY Abode • Health & Bodywork • Misc. • Movement & Sport • Pets • Psychic Arts & Intuitive Sciences • Psychotherapy & Personal Growth • Retail • Spiritual Practice

Support our

ABODE AUTOMOTIVE Clark’s Green Auto Garage DA 801.485-2858. 506 E. 1700 So. Clark’s auto is a local family-owned full service automotive repair facility. We are committed to doing our part to minimize the environmental impact of automotive service and repair, and to incorporating sustainability principles throughout our operation. SLC-certified E2 business. WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/CLARKSAUTO Schneider Auto Karosserie YES 801.484.9400. Fax 801.484.6623. 1180 S. 400 W., SLC. Utah’s first green body shop. Making customers happy since 1984! We are a friendly, full-service collision repair shop in SLC. Your satisfaction is our goal. We’ll act as your advocate with your insurance company to ensure proper repairs and give you a lifetime warranty. WWW.SCHNEIDERAUTO.NET DESIGN, CONSTRUCTION Amoss Construction L.L.C. 10/14 With more than 30 years in the industry of commercial and residential building, we can assure a professional, timely and value-conscious project. From kitchen and bath remodel to custom homes. Fully licensed and insured. Dee, 801-652-3217. DEE.AMOSSCONSTRUCTION@GMAIL.COM Jody Johnson Architect REinvent + REstructure your house. Environmentally sensitive + Modern design. Specializing in the integration of outdoor + indoor space. Remodels, additions + new. 801355-2536. WWW.JODYJOHNSONARCHITECT.COM

Residential Design DA 801-322-5122. Ann Larson. GREEN PRODUCTS Underfoot Floors DA 801-467-6636. 1900 S. 300 W., SLC We offer innovative & earth friendly floors including bamboo, cork, marmoleum, hardwoods, natural fiber carpets as well as sand and finishing hardwood. Free in home estimates. Please visit our showroom. WWW.UNDERFOOTFLOORS.NET, KE@UNDERFOOTFLOORS.COM.

CATALYST community HOUSING Wasatch Commons Cohousing 3/14 Vicky 801-908-0388. 1411 S. Utah St. (1605 W.) An environmentally sensitive community promoting neighborliness, consensus & diversity. Balancing privacy needs with community living. Homes for sale. Tours available upon request. FACEBOOK.COM/WASATCHCOMMONSCOHOUSING PETCARE/VETERINARIANS Animal Communicator. 651-492-1079 7/14 Effectively relating to your animal through muscle testing. Identifying current problems. Relaying messages to/from animals. Stress releasing. Walter at HIGHMOUNTAINHEALER.COM

Dancing Cats Feline Center. 801-467-0799. 1760 S 1100 E, DANCINGCATSVET.COM. DA Pet Insights by Jennafer 4/14 801-810-4392. Gain insight into your pet’s moods, motives and needs from a reading with pet psychic Jennafer Martin. In-person and remote readings are available to help you better bond with your pet. PETINSIGHTSBYJENNAFER.COM

DINING Café Solstice DA Cafe Solstice inside Dancing Cranes Imports offers a variety of loose teas, speciality coffee drinks and herbal smoothies in a relaxing atmosphere. Lunch features veggie wraps, sandwiches, salads, soups and more. Our dressings, spreads, salsa, hummus and baked goods are all made in house with love! Enjoy a refreshing Violet Mocha or Mango & Basil smoothie with your delicious homemade lunch. SOLCAFE999@GMAIL.COM. Coffee Garden DA 254 S. Main, inside the former Sam Weller’s Books and 900 E. 900 S. 355-4425. High-end espresso, delectable pastries & desserts. Great

places to people watch. M-Thur 6a-11p; Fri 6a12p, Sat 7a-12p, Sun 7a-11p. Wifi. Finca DA 1291 So. 900 East. 801.487.0699. Tapas, asador, cocktails. From the creators of Pago. FINCASLC.COM Himalayan Kitchen DA 360 S. State St. 801-328-2077. Nepali, Indian and Tibetan cuisine. Spicy curries, savory grilled meats, vegetarian specialities and our famous award-winning naan bread, accompanied by a thoughtul beer and wine list. Service with namaste and a smile await you! Banquet room available for private events. M-Sat 11:30 am10p; Sun 5p-10p. HIMALAYANKITCHEN.COM Omar’s Rawtopia DA 2148 S.Highland Dr. 801-486-0332. Raw, organic, vegan & scrumptious. From Chocolate Goji Berry smoothies to Vegan Hummus Pizza, every dish is made with highest quality ingredients and prepared with love. Nutrient dense and delectable are Rawtopia’s theme words. We are an oasis of gourmet health, creating peace through food. M-Th 12-8p, F-Sat. 12-9p. Pago DA 878 S. 900 E. 801-532-0777. Featuring seasonal cuisine from local producers & 20 artisan wines by the glass, complemented by an intimate eco-chic setting. Best Lunch—SL Mag, Best Brunch—City Weekly, Best Wine List— City Weekly & SL Mag, Best New American— Best of State. Tue-Sun 11a-3p, 5p-close. PAGOSLC.COM. Sage’s DA 234 W. 900 S. 801-322-3790.

SAGESCAFE.COM.

Stoneground Kitchen DA 249 E. 400 S. 801-364-1368. Overlooking the city, Stoneground offers rustic Italian cuisine with an intimate setting. Thin-crust pizzas, pastas and breads are always fresh and homemade. Try the juicy pork tenderloin, calamari or lasagna. Enjoy a slice of the mouthwatering tiramisu! M-W 11a-10p, Th-Sat 11a-11p, Sun 11a-3p, 5p-9p. STONEGROUNDSLC.COM.

HEALTH & BODYWORK ACUPUNCTURE Keith Stevens Acupuncture 1/15 Dr. Keith Stevens, OMD, 8728 S 120 E in old Sandy. 801 255-7016. 209.617-7379 (cell). Specializing in chronic pain treatment, stressrelated insomnia, fatigue, headaches, sports medicine, traumatic injury and post-operative recovery. Board-certified for hep-c treatment. National Acupuncture Detox Association (NADA)-certified for treatment of addiction. Women’s health, menopausal syndromes. STEVENSACUCLINIC.COM

SLC Qi Community Acupuncture 12/14 177 E. 900 S. Ste 101, 801-521-3337. Affordable Acupuncture! Sliding scale rates ($15-40). Open weekends. Grab a recliner and relax in a safe, comfortable, and healing space. We help with pain, fertility, digestion, allergies, arthritis, sleep and stress disorders, cardiac/respiratory conditions, metabolism, and more. WWW.SLCQI.COM AYURVEDA

Vedic Harmony 3/15 801-942-5876. Learn how Ayurveda can help you harmonize your lifestyle and well being. Primordial Sound meditation,Perfect Health & Wellness counseling. Georgia Clark, Certified Deepak Chopra Center Vedic Master, has trained in the US with Dr. Chopra, Dr. V.D. Lad, Jai Dev Singh, David Crow & in India with Dr. A.P. Deshpande. TARAJAGA@EARTHLINK.NET CHIROPRACTIC Salt Lake Chiropractic 4/14 801.907.1894. Dr. Suzanne Cronin. 1088 S 11th E, SLC. Have you heard that Salt Lake Chiropractic is the least invasive way to increase your quality of life? Our gentle, efficient, and affordable care can reduce pain and improve your body’s functionality. Call to schedule an appointment. WWW.CHIROSALTLAKE.COM. CRANIOSACRAL Sheryl Seliger, LCSW 6/14 801-556-8760. 1446 S. 900 E. Powerful healing through dialogue & gentle-touch energy

To list your business or service email: CRD@CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET Prices: 6 months ( $210), 12 months ( $360). Listings must be prepaid in full and are non-refundable. Word Limit: 45. Deadline for changes/reservations: 15th of preceeding month.


Can we crash at your place? Try fostering!

30

COMMUNITY

work. Adults: Deep relaxation, stress reduction & spiritual renewal, chronic pain & illness, head & spinal injuries, anxiety, PTSD, relationship skills, life strategies. Infants and children: colic, feeding & sleep issues, bonding, birth trauma. Birth preparation & prenatal CST. SELIGERS@GMAIL.COM

Please email utahfoster@bestfriends.org or call 801-574-2417 bestfriends.org/utah

Do you want healing, not just surviving? HEALING PATHWAYS THERAPY CENTER Mental Health Counseling and Medication Management Services for Individuals, Couples and Families dealing with; Depression • Anxiety • Phobias • Trauma • Mood Disorders Addictive Behaviors • Life Transitions • Relationship Issues 1174 E. Graystone Way (2760 S), Ste 8, Sugarhouse Counseling: 435-248-2089 Medical: 435-287-4099 info@pathwaysutah.com www.healingpathwaystherapy.com

Inner Light Center We are a metaphysical, mystical, spiritual community of seekers, students, teachers, ministers and friends who gather together to heal, to learn, to grow, to share, to be self-empowered and to be inspired by Spirit. Join us for Sunday Celebrations 10:00 am 4408 S. 500 E; Salt Lake City, Utah

The Inner Light Institute . . .

Is a school for the Soul and Spirit, and is the education arm of the Inner Light Center. New courses begin in September. “Sacred Pathways - Embodying Higher Consciousness and Expressing our Inner Light” - In this 10-week experience we will learn to access inner wisdom and use spiritual principles, codes and keys to create the life we choose. Mondays beginning Sept 8, 7:00pm. “Exploring Your Personal Mythology” - In this 6-week course you will become a witness to a redefinition of your personal perceptions. Tuesdays, beginning Sep 9, 7pm. “Writing as a Sacred Art” - This 10-week series teaches you potent tools for accessing your genius and spiritual insights through an embodied writing practice. Wednesdays, beginning Sep 10, 7pm. All courses taught at the Inner Light Center; 4408 S 500 E.; SLC For more information, call JoAnne Casey (801-571-2888); or visit www.innerlightcenter.net

FELDENKRAIS Open Hand Bodywork. Dan Schmidt, GCFP, LMT. 244 W. 700 S. 801.694.4086 WWW.OPENHANDSLC.COM. DA Carl Rabke LMT, GCFP FOG 801-671-4533. Somatic education and bodywork. Erin Geesaman Rabke Somatic Educator. 801-898-0478. BODYHAPPY.COM MASSAGE Aspen Bodywork 6/14 801-913-9579. Learn to give your partner the gift of therapeutic touch. Offering Partner Massage classes and Thai Yoga massage. WWW.ASPENBODYWORK.COM

Healing Mountain Massage School DA 801-355-6300. 363 S. 500 East, Ste. 210 (enter off of 500 East). HEALINGMOUNTAINSPA.COM

RESOURCE DIRECTORY

This unique form of therapy identifies sources of pain and assists the body with self-corrective mechanisms to alleviate pain and restore mobility and function. UofU provider. WWW.PRECISIONPHYSICALTHERAPYUT.COM REFLEXOLOGY: Paula Powell, ARCB, Nationally Certified Reflexologist. 828-707-8547. 1399 S. 700 E. #14F Paula integrates Eastern, Western, and European techniques for deeply effective and relaxing sessions. Reflexology is an excellent choice of self-care to help strengthen body systems and enhance total wellness. Immediate and long lasting stress relief. www.feetforpeace.com REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH Planned Parenthood of Utah 6/14 1-800-230-PLAN, 801-532-1586. Planned Parenthood provides affordable and confidential healthcare for men, women and teens. Services include birth control, emergency contraception (EC/PlanB/ morning after pill), testing and treatment for sexually transmitted infection including HIV, vaccines including the HPV vaccine, pregnancy testing and referrals, condoms, education programs and more. PPAU.ORG

MD PHYSICIANS Web of Life Wellness Center FOG Todd Mangum, MD. 801-531-8340. 508 E. So. Temple, #102. Dr. Mangum is a family practice physician who uses acupuncture, massage, herbs & nutrition to treat a wide range of conditions including chronic fatigue, HIV infection, allergies, digestive disturbances and fibromyalgia. He also designs programs to maintain health & wellness. WWW.WEBOFLIFEWC.COM

ROLFING/STRUCTURAL INTEGRATION Carl Rabke LMT, GCFP FOG 801-671-4533. Somatic education and bodywork. WWW.BODYHAPPY.COM

MISC. HEALTH Boundless Sky – Integrative Health and Wellness Donna Dinsdale, Integrative Health and Wellness Practitioner. 801-979-0111. 336 E 900 S. Bringing ease and possibilities forward for better health and optimal wellness, moment by moment, step by step. Offering integrative health coaching (Duke Integrative Medicine), meditation for wellness classes, Ayurvedic health guidance and massage therapy. WWW.BOUNDLESSSKYHEALTH.COM

ACCOUNTING Chart Bookkeeping 8/14 801.718-1235. M’Lisa Patterson. Qualified and dependable small- to medium-sized business bookkeeping services. QuickBooks expert. My office or yours. MPATTERSON@CHARTBOOKKEEPING.COM

NATUROPATHIC PHYSICIANS Cameron Wellness Center 4/15 801-486-4226. Dr Todd Cameron, Naturopathic Physician. 1945 S. 1100 E. #100. When you visit the Cameron Wellness Center, you’ll have new allies in your health care efforts. You’ll know you’ve been heard. You’ll have a clear, individual plan for gaining health and wellness. Our practitioners will be with you through your journey to feeling good again—and staying well. CAMERONWELLNESSCENTER.NET

Eastside Natural Health Clinic 9/14 Uli Knorr, ND 801.474.3684; 2188 S. Highland Dr. #207. Dr. Knorr will create a Natural Medicine plan for you to optimize your health and live more vibrantly. He likes to educate his patients and offers comprehensive medical testing options. He focuses on hormonal balancing, including thyroid, adrenal, women’s hormones, blood sugar regulation, gastrointestinal disorders and food allergies. EASTSIDENATURALHEALTH.COM 2/14 PHYSICAL THERAPY Precision Physical Therapy 9/14 801-557-6733. Jane Glaser-Gormally, MS, PT. 3098 S Highland Dr. Ste. 371. (Also Park City and Heber.) Specializing in holistic integrated manual therapy (IMT). Safe, gentle, effective techniques for pain and tissue dysfunction.

MISCELLANEOUS

ARTS & CRAFTS Learn to hand spin wool and fibres in Sugar House 6/14 801.550.4232. Beginners workshops. $30. Simple to learn, fun, gentle and relaxing. Life long, sustainable and self-sufficient art. Participants receive a complete spindle kit to keep. Make yarns for crochet, knitting, weaving and other crafts. WWW.FAIRYSPINDLES.COM LEGAL ASSISTANCE Schumann Law. 801.631.7811, ESTATEPLANNINGFORUTAH.COM. DA FB MUSICIANS FOR HIRE Idlewild 10/14 801-268-4789, WWW.IDLEWILDRECORDINGS.COM. David and Carol Sharp. Duo up to six-piece ensemble. Celtic, European, World and Old Time American music. A variety of instruments. Storytelling and dance caller. CDs and downloads, traditional and original. IDLEWILD@IDLEWILDRECORDINGS.COM PROFESSIONAL TRAINING Healing Mountain Massage School SLC campus: 363 South 500 East, ste 210, 801355-6300. Cedar City campus: 297 N. Cove Dr., 435-586-8222. Morning and evening programs. Four start dates per year, 8-14 students to a class. Mentor w/seasoned professionals. Practice w/license therapists in a live day spa setting. Graduate in as little as 8 months. ABHES accredited. Financial aid available for those who qualify. WWW.HEALINGMOUNTAIN.EDU


SCHUMANN LAW WEALTH MANAGEMENT Harrington Wealth Services 4/14 801.673.1294; 801.871.0840 office. Robert Harrington, Wealth Advisor. Client-centered wealth management, retirement planning, IRA rollovers, ROTH IRA’s, 401(k) plans & investing, life insurance. Securities offered through LPL Financial, Member FINRA/SIPC8899 S. 700 E. Ste. 225, Sandy, UT 84070. ROBERT.HARRINGTON@ LPL.COM; WWW.HARRINGTONWEALTHSERVICES.COM

MOVEMENT, MEDITATION DANCE RDT Community School. 801-534-1000. 138 W. Broadway. FB MARTIAL ARTS Red Lotus School of Movement 8/14 740 S 300 W, SLC, UT, 84101. 801-355-6375. Established in 1994 by Sifu Jerry Gardner and Jean LaSarre Gardner. Traditional-style training in the classical martial arts of T’ai Chi, Wing Chun Kung-Fu, and T’ai Chi Chih (qi gong exercises). Children’s classes in Wing Chun KungFu. Located downstairs from Urgyen Samten Ling Tibetan Buddhist Temple. WWW.REDLOTUSSCHOOL.COM, REDLOTUS@REDLOTUS.CNC.NET MEDITATION PRACTICES Rumi Teachings 6/15 Good poetry enriches our culture and nourishes our soul. Rumi Poetry Club (founded in 2007) celebrates spiritual poetry of Rumi and other masters as a form of meditation. Free meetings first Tuesday (7 pm) of month at AndersonFoothill Library, 1135 S 2100 E. WWW.RUMIPOETRYCLUB.COM PILATES YOLO Pilates‌Building Beautiful, Balanced Bodies 10/14 1615 Foothill Drive. 385.321.0190 Dedicated to educate, inspire and transform bodies by integrating strength and flexibility, freedom of movement, resilience to injury and core stamina for improved overall health. Offering private sessions, reformer and mat classes by certified instructors. We love working with beginners & seasoned athletes alike. WWW.YOLOPILATES.COM YOGA INSTRUCTORS Mindful Yoga: Charlotte Bell FOG 801-355-2617. E-RYT-500 & Iyengar certified. Cultivate strength, vitality, serenity, wisdom and grace. Combining clear, well-informed instruction with ample quiet time, these classes encourage each student to discover his/her own yoga. Classes include meditation, pranayama (breath awareness) and yoga nidra (yogic sleep) as well as physical practice of asana. Public & private classes, workshops in a supportive, noncompetitive environment since 1986. WWW.CHARLOTTEBELLYOGA.COM Private Yoga Instruction with Kate Overholt 801-450-7246; Kate Overholt, BA; Dance and Theater Arts~ Loyola Marymount University. With over 2,000 hours in training through Yoga Vidya Gurukul in India, YogaWorks in Los Angeles, and Centered City Yoga in Salt Lake City, Kate’s sessions encompass intuitive healing with a strong foundation & light-hearted approach. KATE.OVERHOLT@GMAIL.COM. Oops YOGA STUDIOS Avenues Yoga 12/14 68 K Street, SLC. 801-872-YOGA (9642). Avenues Yoga is a friendly, down-to-earth place where all are welcome. Our knowledgeable,

Penniann J. Schumann, J.D., LL.M.

experienced teachers offer classes for all body types and ability levels from Restorative to Power, Yoga Basics to Hot Vinyasa to Yin and Para. First class is free for Utah residents. Introductory Special $39 one month unlimited. WWW.AVENUESYOGA.COM

Excellence and Understanding Wills • Trusts • Administration • Elder Law • Mediation

Mountain Yoga—Sandy 801.501.YOGA [9642]. 9343 S 1300 E. Offering hot yoga classes to the Salt Lake Valley for the past 10 years. We now also offer Vinyasa, Restorative, Pre/Post-Natal, Kids Yoga and Mat/Barre Pilates Classes in our NEW studio room. Whether you like it hot and intense, calm and restorative, or somewhere in-between, Mountain Yoga Sandy has a class for you. WWW.MOUNTAINYOGASANDY.COM 3/14

Centered City Yoga 9/14 801-521-YOGA (9642). 926 E. 900 S. Centered City Yoga is often likened to that famous TV “hangout� where everybody knows your name, sans Norm (and the beer, of course). We offer more than 100 classes a week, 1,000 hourteacher trainings, monthly retreats and workshops to keep Salt Lake City CENTERED and SANE. WWW.CENTEREDCITYYOGA.COM

PSYCHIC ARTS & INTUITIVE SCIENCES ANGEL READINGS Lisa Rasmussen, ATPÂŽ 11/14 951-234-4422. Angel Therapy PractitionerÂŽ certified by Doreen Virtue, Ph D. Offering intuitive counseling and energy work to assist you in clearing life challenges with loving guidance from your angels, guides and loved ones. Over 20 years experiences. Sessions can be done in person or via Skype. LISA_RAS1@YAHOO.COM

penni.schumann@comcast.net Tel: 801-631-7811 2150 S. 1300 E., Ste 500, Salt Lake City, Ut 84106

Integrative Health and Wellness Next Meditation for Wellness courses

- Integrative Health Coaching

- Meditation for Wellness

www.boundlessskyhealth.com kyhealth.co th@ boundlessskyhealth@gmail.com (801) 979-0111 336 E 900 S, Salt Lake City, Utah 84111

Thursday Evenings Sept 11 – Nov 13 7pm – 8:30 pm $120 Saturday Mornings Sept 13 – Nov 15 8 am – 9:30 am $120

Himalayan Kitchen NEPALI & INDIAN CUISINE

ASTROLOGY Hands On Astrology 7/14 Jerre Wroble. 801-232-4988. Tired of guessing what you’re here to do? Start 2014 out with renewed enthusiasm while zeroing in on your soul purpose. Astrology and hand analysis, when combined, offer a deeper awareness. Gift certificates available. HANDSONASTROLOGY@GMAIL.COM

Nepali and Indian Cuisine

Transformational Astrology FB Ralfee Finn. 800-915-5584. Catalyst’s astrology columnist for 10 years! Visit her website at WWW.AQUARIUMAGE.COM or e-mail her at RALFEE@AQUARIUMAGE.COM

360 S. State St., Salt Lake City

801-328-2077 www.himalayankitchen.com

Vedic Harmony—Jyotish Astrology 942-5876. TARAJAGA@EARTHLINK.NET ENERGY HEALING EmilySpirit, Transformational and Holistic Therapist 11/14 801-512-5319. Intuitive sessions illuminate and empower your individual soul language. Chakra Drawings interpret your unique blueprint. Vocal toning and energy work brings internal harmony, allowing healing and soul awareness. Learn your soul-body language, soul purpose or how to incorporate the enlightened 5th dimension into your everyday life. Readings, guidance, metaphysical teachings, workshops, classes. WWW.EMILYSPIRIT.COM Kristen Dalzen, LMT 8/14 801.467.3306. 1569 So. 1100 East. IGNITE YOUR DIVINE SPARK! Traditional Usui Reiki Master Teacher practicing in Salt Lake since

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32

September 2014

1996. Offering a dynamic array of healing services and classes designed to create a balanced, expansive and vivacious life. WWW.TURIYAS.COM Shari Philpott-Marsh 9/14 Energy Medicine / Shamanic Healer 801-599-8222. Overwhelmed? Stuck? Pushed and pulled by forces that interfere with your peace of mind? Shamanic healing cuts to the root of the problem. I intuitively unwind the core issues, recalibrate your energy body, and bring you to a place of strength and clarity. Core emotional clearing; mental reprogramming; soul retrieval; past life reconciliation; spirit guide activation; elimination of dark forces / interdimensional interference. I also love mentoring healers. WWW.RADIANCEYOGA.ORG PSYCHIC/TAROT READINGS Michael Ingleby 801-864-7870. Divination through Tarot, Runes, Palmistry, Pendulum, and Oracle cards. Spiritual forecasts provide direction and insight to allow preparation for events yet to happen. 1st level Reiki Master, Certified Hypnotherapist, Akashic Channeler, Shamanic and Energy Medium. By appointment. MICH_ING13@YAHOO.COM

Spanish Winemaker Dinner September 13th 3 winemakers 3 regions 6 wines 5 courses Go to our website now for details!

www.fincaslc.com

Taste the summer!

Ann Larsen Residential Design Experienced, reasonable, references CONSULTATION AND DESIGN OF Remodeling • Additions • New Homes Decks and outdoor Structures Specializing in historically sensitive design solutions and adding charm to the ordinary houseworks4@yahoo.com

Ann Larsen • 604-3721

Margaret Ruth FOG 801-575-7103. My psychic and tarot readings are a conversation with your guides. Enjoy MR’s blog at WWW.CATALYSTMAGAZINE.NET & send me your ideas and suggestions. WWW.MARGARETRUTH.COM Nicholas Stark 7/14 801-394-6287; 801-721-2779 cell. Shamanic Intuitive Readings and Energy Work . Ogden Canyon. Suzanne Wagner. 707-354-1019. WWW.SUZWAGNER.COM. FOG

PSYCHOTHERAPY & PERSONAL GROWTH HYPNOSIS Holly Stokes, The Brain Trainer 801.810.9406. 1111 E. Brickyard Rd, Suite 109. 2nd Thurs. of every month: Self Hypnosis Class 6-7:30 pm. $10. Private hypnosis sessions for weight loss, cravings, anxiety, depression, motivation, stress, confidence and self sabotage. Find your health, happiness and success. Free consultations. WWW.BRAINTRAINERCOACH.COM, HOLLY@BRAINTRAINERCOACH.COM THERAPY/COUNSELING ABC-Advanced Behavioral Counseling 5/14 801-268-1199. 997 E. 3900 South/rear, We are a treatment agency for mental health, relationships, anxiety, depression, addictions, substance abuse, grief/loss, divorce, domestic violence, for adults and children. Individual and men’s, women’s and mixed groups, some insurances accepted, Several counselors available. Sliding fee scale available. WWW.ABCSLC.COM Healing Pathways Therapy Center 8/14 435-248-2089. Clinical Director: Kristan Warnick, CMHC. 1174 E. Graystone Way (2760 S.), Ste. 8, Sugarhouse. Integrated counseling and medical services for anxiety, depression, trauma, relationship, life adjustment issues. Focusing on clients’ innate capacity to heal and resolve past and current obstacles, rather than just cope. Modalities include EMDR, EFT, Mindfulness, Feminist/Multicultural. Individuals, Couples, Families. WWW.HEALINGPATHWAYSTHERAPY.COM

COMMUNITY

RESOURCE DIRECTORY

Jill B. Jones, PhD, LCSW 10/14 775 848-3561.Areas of practice include eating disorders; identity, relationship, grief-related adjustment issues; and sexual abuse and trauma. Also provides support for life-course development and aging issues. Works with adults and adolescents in a private home office near Sugar House.9/14

Cali’s Natural Foods. 389 W 1700 S, 801.483.2254, CALISNATURALFOODS.COM. DA

Marianne Felt, CMHC, MT-BC 801-524-0560, ext. 3. 150 S. 600 E. Ste. 7C. Certified Mental Health Counselor, Board certified music therapist, certified Gestalt therapist, Mountain Lotus Counseling. Transpersonal psychotherapy, Gestalt therapy, EMDR. Open gateways to change through experience of authentic contact. Integrate body, mind and spirit through creative exploration of losses, conflicts and relationships that challenge and inspire our lives. MOUNTAINLOTUSCOUNSELING.COM

Golden Braid Books. 801-322-1162. 151 S 500 E, GOLDENBRAIDBOOKS.COM DA

Jan Magdalen, LCSW 3/15 801-582-2705, 2071 Ashton Circle, SLC. Offering a transpersonal approach to the experiences and challenges of our life cycles, including: individuation-identity, sexuality and sexual orientation, partnership, work, parenting, divorce, aging, illness, death and other loss, meaning and spiritual awareness. Individuals, couples and groups. Clinical consultation and supervision. Stephen Proskauer, MD, Integrative Psychiatry 10/14 801-631-8426. Sanctuary for Healing and Integration, 860 E. 4500 S., Ste. 302. Steve is a seasoned psychiatrist, Zen priest and shamanic healer. He sees kids, teens, adults, couples and families, integrating psychotherapy, meditation and soul work with judicious use of medication to relieve emotional pain and problem behavior. Steve specializes in creative treatment of bipolar disorders. STEVE@KARMASHRINK.COM. Blog: WWW.KARMASHRINK .COM

GIFTS & TREASURES Blue Boutique. WWW.BLUEBOUTIQUE.COM DA Dancing Cranes. 673 E Simpson Ave, 801.486.1129, DANCINGCRANESIMPORTS.COM DA

Healing Mountain Crystal Co.DA363 S. 500 E. #210, SLC. 800-811-0468, HEALINGMOUNTAIN.ORG. Lotus. 801.333.3777. Everything from Angels to Zen. 12896 Pony Express Rd. #200, Draper, WWW.ILOVELOTUS.COM DA Turiya's Gifts 8/14 DA 1569 So. 1100 E. 801.531.7823. M-F 11-7, Sat 11-6, Sun 12-5. Turiya's is a metaphysical gift and crystal store. We have an exquisite array of crystals and minerals, jewelry, drums, sage and sweet grass, angels, fairies, greeting cards and meditation tools. Come in and let us help you create your sanctuary. WWW.TURIYAS.COM RESALE/OUTDOOR GEAR & CLOTHING fun & frolic consignment shop 8/14 DA?? 801-487-6393 2066 S. 2100 E. Consigns everything for travel /outdoor recreational experiences. Fun seekers can buy and consign high-quality, gently used outdoor gear and clothing, making fun time less expensive. Call to consign your items. FACEBOOK @ FUN & FROLIC CONSIGNMENT SHOP; in the 21st & 21st business district. INFO@MYFUNANDFROLIC.COM

SPIRITUAL PRACTICE line goes here ORGANIZATIONS

Salt Lake Wellness Center, Michelle Murphy, LCSW 2/15 4190 So. Highland Dr., #226. 801-680-7842. Salt Lake Wellness Center provides therapeutic services to individuals. We maintain a holistic approach. We are an Amen Method Provider. We provide traditional therapeutic interventions and education in vitamin and nutrition therapy to create a state of wellness.

Inner Light Center Spiritual Community 10/14

SHAMANIC PRACTICE Sarah Sifers, Ph.D., LCSW, Shamanic Practitioner 3/15 801-531-8051. Shamanic Counseling. Shamanic Healing, Minister of the Circle of the Sacred Earth. Mentoring for people called to the Shaman’s Path. Explore health or mental health issues using the ways of the shaman. Sarah’s extensive training includes shamanic extraction healing, soul retrieval healing, psychopomp work for death and dying, shamanic counseling and shamanic divination. Sarah has studied with Celtic, Brazilian, Tuvan, Mongolian, Tibetan and Nepali Shamans.

801-328-4629. 740 S. 300 W. Urgyen Samten Ling Gonpa offers an open environment for the study, contemplation, and practice of Tibetan Buddhist teachings. The community is welcome to our Sunday service (puja), group practices, meditation classes and introductory courses. WWW.URGYENSAMTENLING.ORG

RETAIL line goes here GROCERIES, SPECIALTY FOODS, KITCHEN SUPPLIES Beer Nut. 1200 S State St, 801.531.8182, BEERNUT.COM. DA

801.462.1800. 4408 S. 500 E., SLC. An interspiritual sanctuary that goes beyond religion into mystical realms. Access inner wisdom, deepen divine connection, enjoy an accepting, friendly community. Events & classes. Sunday Celebration: 10 a.m.; WWW.INNERLIGHTCENTER.NET

Urgyen Samten Ling Gonpa Tibetan Buddhist Temple 8/14 DA??

INSTRUCTION

Two Arrows Zen Center (formerly Boulder Mountain Zendo). 230 S. 500 W., #155, SLC. 801.532.4975. WWW.BOULDERMOUNTAINZENDO.ORG

Be in the CATALYST Community Resource Directory! Call 801-363-1505


METAPHORS FOR THE MONTHH BY SUZANNE WAGNER Osho Zen Tarot: Turning In, Possibilities

Medicine Cards: Grouse, Mountain Lion Mayan Oracle: Cimi, Ik, Organic Balance Ancient Egyptian Tarot: The Moon, Four of Cups Aleister Crowley Deck: Sorrow, The Magus, Princess of Cups Healing Earth Tarot: Ten of Pipes, Seven of Rainbows Words of Truth: Domain Shift, Boundaries, Rebellion

Seaweed n’Noodles

Highly mineralized superfood for optimal nutritional value!

It is difficult to stay centered right now. Do it anyway.

Suzanne Wagner is the author of numerous books and CDs on the tarot and creator of the Wild Women app. She now lives in California, but visits Utah for classes and readings frequently. SUZWAGNER.COM

FREE FILM SCREENINGS WEDNESDAY /// SEPTEMBER 3 @ 7PM È THE KILL TEAM

2148 Highland Drive, Salt Lake City 801-486-0332 www.omarsrawtopia.com

T

he cards for this month show much darkness. The mood is heavy and filled with confusion. Our inner child is frightened and feeling uncertain. The desire for movement is there but the restrictions remain. That may feel as if, energetically, you are exhausted. And you are; but it is from emotional turmoil. The planets are always in motion and they constantly give us options to choose from. We place value on certain positions and chose directions for our world. Options are always available to us in more positive directions and more negative ones. It is essential that, in this volatile period, calm heads prevail. The current global crises correlate to the end of the squares between Uranus in Aries and Pluto in Capricorn. The last two are December 15, 2014 and March 16-17, 2015. This painful backand-forth between the old and the new reality is what is causing so much upset. We are heading toward another big month in October with eclipses in Aries, October 8, and the last solar eclipse in Scorpio on October 23. I mention them here because you will be feeling a buildup throughout September. No, you are not going crazy. On September 4, Mars finally comes out of a conjunction with Saturn. Mars does not like discipline and Saturn is all about structure, authority and limitation. The outcome is conflict. Attempt to keep those energies conscious and stay in communication with each other in your relationships and within your own being. Turn this energy into great precision and determination to get a job done. Old realities and illusions are coming down, exposing the anger, violence, greed and hatred boiling below the surface. These issues are an unbalanced part of humanity, caused by and spreading the illness of separation. Take a look at where you feel separated and find a way back to oneness. In that way, you heal your small part of the greater whole. It is difficult to stay centered right now. Do it anyway. We may not be able to fix the world but we can fix the small part of our own world. That can create an energetic shift that goes out to the world in supportive ways. We can no longer afford to be lazy in our understanding of the interconnectedness of all of us. The voice of love will overcome the loud voices of petty tyrants. But, just like a parent dealing with a demanding child, there has to be a clear line and a lot of love to make anything stick. N

SEPTEMBER

2014

September 2014

ROSE WAGNER 138 W. 300 S.

SATURDAY /// SEPTEMBER 6 @ 11AM È PARANORMAN CITY LIBRARY 210 E. 400 S.

BREWVIES 677 S. 200 W.

9th & 9th 801.532.0777 PagoSLC.com

Upon returning home to Alabama, a young couple set out to eat like their grandparents did—locally and seasonally.

TUESDAY /// SEPTEMBER 9 @ 7PM È NOTES ON BLINDNESS / DUK COUNTY

Proudly featuring local produce from:

M&M Farms, Keep it Real Farms, Parker Farms, Pago Farm, New Roots & Clifford Farms

Despite being misunderstood, Norman demonstrates courage and compassion when his town is confronted by a septet of Zombies and a centuries-old witch’s curse.

MONDAY /// SEPTEMBER 8 @ 7:30PM È E ATING ALABAMA

Artisan. Local. Farm Fresh “Voted Best Restaurant in SLC!” Salt Lake Magazine 2014

The Kill Team tells the story of Adam Winfield, a 21-year-old infantryman in Afghanistan who attempted to alert the military to heinous war crimes his platoon was committing.

CITY LIBRARY 210 E. 400 S.

A special two-film screening presentation of Notes on Blindness and Duk County. The films deal with (respectively) the experience and affliction of blindness, and the quest to restore sight to those in need across the globe.

THURSDAY /// SEPTEMBER 11 @ 7PM È WONDER WOMEN! The Untold Stories of American Superheroines

ROSE WAGNER 138 W. 300 S.

Traces the legacy of Wonder Woman and introduces audiences to a group of fictional & real-life superheroines.

TUESDAY /// SEPTEMBER 16 @ 7PM È TELOS: The Fantastic World

of Eugene Tssui

CITY LIBRARY 210 E. 400 S.

Telos chronicles the life and revolutionary work of Eugene Tssui, an eccentric visionary and a maverick architect.

THURSDAY /// SEPTEMBER 18 @ 7PM È LILTING BREWVIES 677 S. 200 W.

A mother mourns over the death of her son, but then her world is suddenly disrupted by the presence of a stranger.

THURSDAY /// SEPTEMBER 18 @ DUSK È SOMETHING FROM NOTHING: U OF U UNION BLDG LAWN

The Art of Rap

Drenched with beats and freestyles by some of the masters, The Art of Rap explores the history and craft of hip-hop.

TUESDAY /// SEPTEMBER 23 @ 7PM È AMERICAN MEAT CITY LIBRARY 210 E. 400 S.

Featuring interviews with farmers from across the country, the film provides a look at large scale industrial farming and the response some are taking to change the system.

WEDNESDAY /// SEPTEMBER 24 @ 7PM

È WATERMARK UTAH MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS

Stories from around the globe about our relationship with water: how we are drawn to it, what we learn from it, how we use it and the consequences of that use.

TUESDAY /// SEPTEMBER 30 @ 7PM È THE EXPEDITION TO THE END

OF THE WORLD

CITY LIBRARY 210 E. 400 S.

In this 21st century adventure film, brave sailors set sail for northeast Greenland to find rapidly melting massifs.

W W W . U TA H F I L M C E N T E R . O R G

UTAH FILM CENTER GENEROUSLY SUPPORTED BY

/// GEORGE S. AND DOLORES DORÉ ECCLES FOUNDATION /// SORENSON LEGACY FOUNDATION /// ZOO, ARTS AND PARKS /// ZIONS BANK


Ask for the Dine O’Round menu at these participating restaurants. Alamexo Bambara Benihana Bistro 222 Bocata Bodega Caffe Molise Caffe Niche Canella’s Cedars of Lebanon Christopher’s Prime Patio & Bar Christopher’s Prime Steakhouse Copper Onion Cucina Toscana Eva's Bakery Even Stevens Faustina Gourmandise Gracie’s Green Pig Pub Happy Sumo Iggy’s Sports Grill J. Wong’s Asian Bistro Les Madeleines Market Street Grill Market Street Oyster Bar Martine Maxwell’s Melting Pot New Yorker Nordstrom 6th and Pine Oasis Café Pallet Red Rock Brewing Co. R&R BBQ Ruth's Chris Steakhouse Salt Bistro Salt Flats Grill & Taproom Settebello Pizzeria Napoletana Spitz Squatters Pub Brewery Star of India Stoneground Taco Taco Takashi Texas de Brazil The Garden Restaurant Tin Angel Café Toasters (3 locations) Tony Caputo’s Washington Square Café Whiskey Street Wild Grape Bistro



awesome all autumn!


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