[Elected] UCA Newsletter April 21, 2008

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Author: Beth Jones
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Subject: [Elected] UCA Newsletter April 21, 2008
Utah Cultural Alliance E-Newsletter

April 21, 2008



If you are not yet a member of the Utah Cultural Alliance, please consider
joining.

Visit our website www.utahculturalalliance.org for a membership application.
Questions, comments, concerns, please e-mail staff@???



Having trouble viewing this document?

Go to http://www.utahculturalalliance.org/ENewsWeb.html to view our
newsletter online.




Dear Colleagues,



In this issue you will find:



* Utah Cultural Events and Information *



1) Shape, Scrape and Paint: Altering Surfaces and Cracking the Code<#scrape>

2) Babcock Performing Readers Presents May 8, 2008 "Poetry & Prose
Potluck"<#prose>

3) Ririe-Woodbury closes its season with REWIND <#closes>

4) Museum Initiative Offers Grant for Exhibition Interpretation <#offer>

5) Weber State University the AAT are pleased to present "The Blower,"<#blower>

6) Renowned Author and Lecturer to Give Keynote Conference Speech <#speech>

7) Odyssey Dance Theatre's Fourth Annual Tour of Germany <#germanu>

8) Big River opens at the Grand Theatre <#grand>

9) Special advance screening of Sundance Award Winner HEAR AND NOW <#hear>**

10) It's Time To "Party For The Planet" At Utah's Hogle Zoo-Granola Is
Optional <#planet>**

* *

*Articles Of Interest <#article>*

*Resources <#resource>*

*Submission Guidelines <#guidelines>*

*Acknowledgments <#acknowledge>*

* *

*Utah Cultural Events and Information *



1) *Shape, Scrape and Paint: Altering Surfaces and Cracking the Code*



This year we are offering two summer intensive workshops, Shape, Scrape and
Paint: Altering Surfaces with Don Glaister and Cracking the Code with
Mixmaster Scrap aka Tim Ely. This is your chance to spend 4 days each
learning from two great masters. Get your spots while you can!



For more information: bookartsprogram@??? or 801.585.9191



Shape, Scrape and Paint: Altering Surfaces June 4th through 7th Wednesday
through Saturday, 9:00-5:00

For as long as there have been books, bookmakers have applied distinctive,
expressive designs to the covers of their creations. This two-part workshop
explores historic decorative techniques in conjunction with modern
possibilities: gold and blind tooling alongside applications of plastics,
wood veneers, metals and other surface alterations. Get ready to sand,
shape, scrape, paint, draw, emboss, deboss, and craft the tools required for
the execution of these techniques. Design and produce several plaquettes for
use as examples in future book projects. Participants work primarily on
leather surfaces, so experience in gold tooling and leather binding is
helpful but not necessary.



Celebrated book artist Don Glaister lives and works on Vashon Island,
Washington. Don incorporates unexpected materials, visual humor, and
spontaneous expression in book forms structured around classical, European,
binding traditions. His recent work includes two editions of artists' books,
Brooklyn Bridge: A Love Song and Angelique and the Pearl

Necklace. Partial funding provided by the Utah Arts Council.



Instructor: Don Glaister, Washington

Place: Book Arts Program at the J. Willard Marriott Library, University of
Utah, Salt Lake City, UT Workshop fee: $300; Materials fee: $55



Cracking the Code with Mixmaster Scrap

June 10th & 11th; June 13th&14th

Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday & Saturday, 9:00-5:00

Get your swerve on with this inquiry into the uses and utility of the
artist's sketchbook, a venerable tool with the dexterity to act as planner,
journal and muse. Produce a single section structure by fusing principles of
basic bookbinding with generation of IDEA and OBSERVATION. Manipulate
content to enhance flow and connection, and expand the notion of the book as
a free-form object. A second, more formal structure, built from the ground
up, incorporates more advanced techniques and allows the flexibility needed
for spontaneous play. Count on getting down with drawing by confronting that
specter that often paralyzes intentions.



Timothy Ely-aka, Mixmaster Scrap-began making books as an errant child.
Interest in UFOs, alchemy, comic books, bones, and arcane religious
artifacts led him from painting and design work to bookbinding. He received
an MFA in Design from the University of Washington in 1975. Presently, Tim
makes unique manuscript books and teaches the art of the book nationally. He
is represented by Granary Books in New York City. His books are in public,
private, and secret collections planet-wide.



Instructor: Tim Ely, Washington

Place: ART 362, Art and Architecture Building, University of Utah

Workshop fee: $300; Materials fee: $55



Back to Utah Cultural Events <#events>

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2)* **Babcock Performing Readers Presents May 8, 2008 "Poetry & Prose
Potluck"*



Hosted by Mark Merkley

Rather than food, members bring a short poem or prose piece, original or by
a favored author, to read before an appreciative audience. This evening is a
perennial favorite. At this event, talent is discovered and shared, so leave
shyness at home and become a star.



Because many come forward, you will need to limit your selection to under
five minutes Public invited, members only may read.



University of Utah

Olpin Union, Little Theater

7:30-9:00 pm

Free parking, free admission, free refreshments.



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3) *Ririe-Woodbury closes its season with REWIND*



Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company

REWIND

April 24-26, 2008

7:30 p.m.

Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center

138 West 300 South



REWIND brings back powerful works by choreographers including Della Davidson
and Charlotte Boye-Christensen. Using poetry and dance, "Night Story" by
Della Davidson captures the tension of unrequited love and the fine lines
between fantasy and reality. Based on Isabel Allende's "Wicked Girl," this
story celebrates a young girl's coming of age in the mysterious world of her
mother's boardinghouse. The dance includes narration in both English and
Spanish to illustrate the cultural universality of the subject matter while
honoring the richness of the Spanish language from the original writings.
"As I've worked with these stories, I've come to realize that the Spanish
words are very different," said Davidson, "They're much richer, more
poetic."



Charlotte Boye-Christensen will also restage her 2006 work "Anatomies" which
takes its inspiration from the anatomical drawings of Renaissance physician
Andreas Vesalius. The dance recreates these haunting images physically in a
three-dimensional space with a commissioned score by Danish composer Jens
Hørsving. "Jens and I divided the work into seven distinct sections:
Skeleton, Muscle, Veins, Nerves, Head, Intestines and Heart to stay true to
Vesalius' view," explains Boye-Christensen, "We've attempted to redraw
physically and aurally what Vesalius managed to achieve visually through his
evocative imagery."



Adults: $30

Students/Seniors: $15

For tickets call 355-ARTS or visit www.ririewoodbury.com.



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4) *Museum Initiative Offers Grant for Exhibition Interpretation*



The Utah Office of Museum Services, in partnership with the Utah Humanities
Council, and the Utah Museums Association, announces the first stage of the
Museum Interpretation Initiative: the Museum Interpretation Grant. The grant
will provide qualifying Utah museums with financial assistance for the
development of interpretive tools. These tools will help convey the
significance and context of museum collections in a clearer, more
informative and compelling format. Grant applications must be turned into
the Utah Humanities Council by May 1, 2008.



"Hidden away in many of Utah's museums is a wealth of fascinating cultural
material, but not many people know about it. We're very excited about the
possibilities this program holds for helping museums tell the stories of
these artifacts. I think the Museum Interpretation Grant program will help a
lot of museums take the next step in realizing their potential," said
Brandon Johnson, Program Officer for the Utah Humanities Council.



Any Utah museum dedicated to the display of collections or exhibits, with at
least one full-time staff member dedicated to the care, exhibition, and/or
interpretation of the museum collection, an annual budget under $200,000,
and, 501(c)3 status is welcome to apply. Grants up to $3,000 will be
awarded. A 1:1 cash or in-kind match is required.



Application materials and guidelines are available on the Utah Office of
Museum Services website at www.museums.utah.gov and on the Utah Humanities
Council website at www.utahhumanities.org. Applications will be processed by
the Utah Humanities Council at 202 West 300 North, Salt Lake City, Utah
84103.



For more information, please contact: Brandon Johnson, Program Officer, Utah
Humanities Council, 801.359.9670 ext. 110, johnson@???.



The Office of Museum Services is part of the Division of Arts and Museums
within the Utah Department of Community and Culture.



Back to Utah Cultural Events <#events>

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5) *Weber State University the AAT are pleased to present "The Blower,"*



Who: Associated Actors And Technicians (Aat)

What: The Blower

Where: Eccles Theater Val A. Browning Center For The Performing Arts

When: April 24, 24, 26 7:30 Pm

Cost: $5 at the door



Weber State University student organization the Associated Actors and
Technicians are pleased to present the premiere performance of "The Blower,"
opening Thursday, April 24, at 7:30 in the Eccles Theater, Val A. Browning
Center for the Performing Arts. It continues Friday and Saturday, April 25
and 26. The play, written by WSU student Clayton Gerrard and directed by WSU
student Becca Dupaix. is entirely a student-run production.



It contains explicit materials and situations. Tickets are $5 general
admission.



"The Blower" is about a dysfunctional family who are trying to get through
their daily life. "The play is a micro symbol of American life in a
capitalist society where the only way we can survive is to destroy
everything around us," said Gerrard.



Director Dupaix comments, "The characters of "The Blower" are truly modern
Americans. They have capitulated to the false impression that responsibility
for the course of their ives belongs to someone, anyone, but themselves.
They are craven, manipulative, spiteful, ugly people.



"More than anything I think "The Blower" is about hope. That might seem odd
because the Burton family looses a set of grandparents, gets evicted from
their home and have their most gruesome secrets revealed. "The Blower" is a
play about hope, not because it is hopeful, but because it shows us what
happens when hope cease to be a present or motivating force in people's
lives. The Burton family experiences the harshest degradation, from the
intimacy of the family, as their aspirations of attaining the old-fashioned
American dream are crushed under the political-industrial compound."



The play, as Dupaix points out, deals with many modern demons such as
poverty, governmental encroachment on personal freedom, consumerism, the
cult of the individual, educational elitism, the mortgage crisis and a
myriad of taboos surrounding debt and money management. After seeing this
Dupaix adds, "We are left with hope for the next generation of America. It
is the hope and anticipation that the generation that has grown up in the
shadow of those demons will be able shape their lives and our nation in as
dramatic a fashion as the youth of the 1960s, as courageously as the
soldiers and factory women of WWII, and with as much vision as those who
founded this great nation. It is the hope that we will escape the trap and
satiate the craving for security, finding the beautiful ideal of freedom the
American Dream promises."



Dupaix continues, "Working collaboratively with my cast, designers and the
writer it is my hope that we will be able to examine the current state of
America through the story of the Burton family and share our insights, humor
and pain with our audience."



"The ending of the Blower is completely ambiguous," said Gerrard, "I wanted
to get the audience to think about their lives."



Dupaix is a graduating Theatre Major, with emphasis in Stage Management. She
is currently in Washington D.C. receiving recognition for Excellence in
Stage Management at the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival
2008 for her work on WSU's fall semester production of "Musical of Musicals:
The Musical." That production is also being featured in a special
presentation at the festival.



Gerrard is a graduating English Major, with a Minor in Theatre. He intends
to pursue graduate studies as a playwright.



Back to Utah Cultural Events <#events>

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6) *Renowned Author and Lecturer to Give Keynote Conference Speech*



The Utah Arts Council is honored to announce that internationally renowned
poet, author, and lecturer David Whyte will be the keynote speaker for the
2008 Mountain West Conference on the Arts. Whyte will lead a workshop
entitled Life at the Frontier: Leadership through Courageous Conversation.
He will also give a speech titled "Crossing the Unknown Sea: Work as a
Pilgrimage of Identity," at the Governor's Leadership in the Arts Awards
Luncheon. Both events will take place on Friday, May 9, 2008 at the Utah
Cultural Celebration Center in West Valley City.



"I have been acquainted with Whyte's work for several years now, having
first learned about him when I worked for Utah Power. I continue to be
impressed and inspired by his body of work, as well as his fresh and
compelling insights into daily life. He was a natural choice for this
conference and I am confident conference attendees will walk away from his
speech with a new sense of purpose towards not only their work, but their
own lives as well," said Margaret Hunt, Executive Director of the Utah Arts
Council.



Whyte, a native of Yorkshire, England, is a professional speaker who
utilizes a blend of poetry and commentary. He applies his perspectives on
creativity to the field of organizational development, where he works with a
wide and diverse international clientele including major corporations and
firms, governments, nonprofits, and educational institutions. He holds a
degree in Marine Zoology, and is an Associate Fellow of the Said Business
School at the University of Oxford. His extensive travel includes work as a
naturalist guide and leading anthropological and natural history expeditions
in the Galapagos, the Andes, and the Himalayas. Whyte is the author of six
volumes of poetry and two bestselling books of prose.



For information on Mountain West Conference on the Arts events and
registration, visit www.arts.utah.gov or contact Jason Bowcutt at
801.236.7554 or jbowcutt@???. For more information on David Whyte,
visit his website at www.davidwhyte.com.



The Utah Arts Council is part of the Division of Arts and Museums within the
Utah Department of Community and Culture.



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7) *Odyssey Dance Theatre's Fourth Annual Tour of Germany*



Odyssey Dance Theatre has returned to Germany for its fourth consecutive
annual tour. Presenter Andreas Pfeifer of AP – ARTE Berlin keeps bringing
Odyssey back because they fill 16 theatres, a different one each night,
throughout Germany. "They leave the audiences, without exception, on their
feet, applauding wildly and demanding encores," says Pfeifer.



Odyssey will perform Moulin Rouge!, which had its premiere at Kingsbury Hall
in 2007, and was part of the recently concluded Shut Up and Dance, Odyssey's
Spring Repertory Season that closed the company's 14th year, along with a
few other pieces from its varied repertoire.



"I thought Moulin Rouge! would be a popular piece, because it has
everything: excitement, love, humor, tragedy, the wonderful movie score and
of course, fantastic dancing, but in only its second year, it's already
developed quite a phenomenal following," said Odyssey Artistic Director
Derryl Yeager. "European audiences loved it last year, and clamored for its
return."



The critics have been wildly enthusiastic, too. Niederösterreichische
Nachrichten said, "The company features polished technique and execution,
excellent body control, power and vigor. ... Absolute expressive
presentation is one of the company's greatest triumphs. The end: thunders
of applause and frenetic euphoria for a top notch evening of dance!"



Odyssey Dance Theatre is funded, in part, by Zoo, Arts & Parks. Best of
State in Dance 2006 and 2007 and Best of State in Arts and Entertainment
2007, Odyssey Dance Theatre performs to critical acclaim and standing
ovations at home and on tour, nationally and internationally.



Odyssey is rapidly becoming one of Utah's artistic crown jewels around the
world and is proud to represent the best that Utah has to offer.



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8) *Big River opens at the Grand Theatre*



The Grand Theatre is proud to present the musical Big River, May 2-17th,
2008



About the Show:

A rousing, high spirited show that sets your hands to clapping, your feet
stomping, and your heart to rise within you!



Based on Mark Twain's incredible story of Huck Finn, Big River takes place
along the Mississippi River Valley sometime in the late 1840's. It was one
of the most robust and shameful times in our history. The country was
expanding and the practice of slavery had reached historical levels. Big
River celebrates the story of a young white boy and a run a-away slave and
their friendship against all odds!



Directed by Jim Christian. Musical Direction by Kevin Mathie



Featuring Gary Neilson as Mark Twain, Andrew Marshall as Huck Finn and Greg
Boarden as Jim.



With a delightfully melodic score, Big River is a joyful show for the whole
family!



Performance Dates:

May 2,3,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,&17th at 7:30 pm

Matinees on May 10th & 17th at 2:00 pm



Ticket Prices:

Adults: $24/18/10

Seniors: $22/16/8

Students: $12/9/5

Family Passes: $55.00 for 2 adults and up to four kids (Good for Section A
seats only)



Group Rates also available. Call for details.



Box office:

To purchase tickets call the Box office at 801-957-3322 or online at
www.the-grand.org



Other Related Events;

"Talk Back" – A Post-Show Discussion



Saturday, May 17th at 4:00 pm (directly after the matinee) Join us for the
opportunity to talk with the Producer, Director and Actors about the
production! The play maintains the usage of antiquated racial language
which can be offensive to contemporary audiences. We recommend that
appropriate dialogue occur as to the pernicious nature of that language.



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9) *The SLC Film Center and HBO Documentary Films are pleased to announce a
special advance screening of Sundance Award Winner HEAR AND NOW.*



HEAR AND NOW tells the personal story of two people who journey into a world
of sound together after surgery ends 65 years of silence.



HEAR AND NOW will premiere on HBO May 8, 2008



A deeply personal memoir by Emmy(R) winner Irene Taylor Brodsky, HEAR AND NOW
chronicles her deaf parents' decision to undergo risky cochlear implant
surgery, following their touching journey from a comfortable marriage of
silence into new, complex and challenging world of sound.



Winner of an Audience Award at last year's Sundance Film Festival!



"Irene Taylor Brodsky's documentary about her parents' late-in-life decision
to undergo cochlear-implant surgery is a moving tribute to her folks and
their accomplishments, and an engrossing emotional roller-coaster for
filmgoers." Bonnie Fazio, Reel.com

"Like the wrenching personal accounts of cancer survivors, HEAR AND NOW
unlocks the psychological side of their experience, with raw emotion
smoothing over the intimate picture's less cinematic qualities." Peter
Debruge, Variety



WHAT: HEAR AND NOW


WHEN: 7pm, May 7, 2008

W HERE: Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center, 138 W 300 S,
SLC

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC



For more information, please visit www.slcfilmcenter.org



About the Film:

Directed by Irene Taylor Brodsky 85 min USA Not Rated



Both age 65 and deaf since birth, husband and wife Paul and Sally Taylor led
rich lives filled with jobs, hobbies, passions and the support of a devoted
four-generation family, including their own three hearing children. Pioneers
in the deaf community, Sally worked as a teacher and a college secretary and
lent her expert lip-reading skills to law enforcement investigations, while
Paul, an engineer and retired professor, helped develop the TTY, a
widely-used telecommunication device for the hearing-impaired.



When the Taylor's announced just before retirement that they planned to get
cochlear implants — a breakthrough technology that could restore their
ability to hear – their decision was met with mixed feelings by their
daughter. "After this surgery, who will they be?" she asks. "Will they
still be deaf people, or hearing people, or will they be something in
between? What if the implant doesn't work? What if one of them can hear
and the other one can't?



The film raises compelling questions about the ease of obtaining cochlear
implant surgery. No psychological evaluations were required of the couple —
just medical insurance and proof of a working auditory nerve. Likewise, as
people age, the elasticity in the brain tends to decrease, making implant
surgery for people 65 or older less than successful in many cases. In the
end, there are highs, such as a family Christmas when Paul winds up on his
back playing air guitar to a CD he's received. There are also lows, like
the couple's follow-up visit to their audiologist, when they discover they
cannot hear any of the test words read to them. As time passes, Paul and
Sally struggle with their newfound hearing and begin to wonder if it's
better to live in their familiar silent world or face the frustrations of
their new, sound-filled one.



HEAR AND NOW is Irene Taylor Brodsky's first feature-length film. As a
producer and cinematographer, she filmed polygamist Alex Joseph and his nine
wives in the Utah desert, investigated the fragile state of American health
care, followed a fetish clothing designer (HBO's "Real Sex") and produced TV
documentaries and shorts on subjects ranging from Bollywood to bluegrass
music. In 2004, Taylor Brodsky won an Emmy(R) for "The Rural Studio," her
portrait of late architect Samuel Mockbee and his legacy in the American
South.



HEAR AND NOW Premieres on HBO THURSDAY, MAY 8 (8:00-9:30 p.m. ET/PT)!

Other HBO playdates: May 8 (5:25 a.m.), 11 (7:30 p.m.), 15 (9:30 a.m.,
midnight), 19 (2:30 p.m., 10:15 p.m.), 24 (12:30 p.m.) and 27 (6:30 p.m.);
HBO2 playdates: May 10 (6:00 p.m.), 12 (12:30 p.m., 12:10 a.m.) and 18
(11:00 a.m.)





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10) *It's Time To "Party For The Planet" At Utah's Hogle Zoo-Granola Is
Optional*



This April, don't just recycle your can-get off it! It's time to get your
party on with Mother Earth at the wildest spot in town.



The Association of Zoos and Aquariums is throwing a party; over one hundred
parties throughout the country. The Salt Lake City version of AZA's "Party
for the Planet" takes place at Utah's Hogle Zoo from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. for
an Earth Day celebration Saturday, April 26. It's a beautiful time of year
to watch the animals enjoy the spring sunshine, and it's also a great time
for people to learn about how their actions affect the environment where the
animals make their homes.



Hogle Zoo's "Party for the Planet," will feature fun for all ages. "Visitors
can participate in hands-on activities, plus visit booths to sample local
foods," says Special Events Coordinator Song Stott. "There will also be
entertainment from Irish dancers to Native American hoop dancers." In
addition, there will be numerous local organization stations where people
can participate in fun activities, like making seed starting cards, which
benefit the environment. Together people coming to the Zoo for this event
will learn that what they do locally makes a difference globally, as well as
learn about other communities around the globe do to keep their planet
happy.



As a member of the AZA, Hogle Zoo is part of a massive conservation movement
to preserve our environment. From the Wasatch Front to the mountains of
Africa, Hogle Zoo strives to help the world in any way possible. Food
Service Supervisor Seth Palmer says, "Whenever we can, we use paper products
that are not only biodegradable and compostable, but also made from
by-products of organic materials." Conservation measures don't stop at the
concession stands, the animal care staff at Hogle Zoo works hard to provide
the most innovative animal care practices and goes the extra mile to ensure
species survival.



For more information about Hogle Zoo's "Party for the Planet" celebration or
affiliation with the AZA, contact Community Relations Coordinator Holly
Braithwaite at (801) 584-1729 or email at hbraithwaite@???
<mailto:hbraithwaite@???&gt;. Party for the Planet is sponsored in
part by Rocky Mountain Power.





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*Articles of Interest <#interest>*

* *

The Endangered Record
Store<http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/18/arts/music/18reco.html?_r=2&ref=arts&oref=slogin&oref=slogin>

Some 3,100 record stores around the country have closed since 2003,
according to the Almighty Institute of Music Retail, a market research firm.
And that's not just the big boxes like the 89 Tower Records outlets that
closed at the end of 2006; nearly half were independent shops. In Manhattan
and Brooklyn at least 80 stores have shut down in the last five years.

The New York Times 04/18/08



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Arts & Culture As "Soft
Power"<http://www.theage.com.au/news/opinion/reviving-a-creative-nation/2008/04/15/1208025185681.html>

Actress Cate Blanchett says that her home country has "an opportunity to put
creativity and the arts back into the centre of Australian life here and
abroad. This is how a middle power can exercise its soft power in a positive
and stimulating way -- that shows the world that we are much more than the
cliched images that come readily to mind."

The Age (Melbourne) 04/16/08

* *

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Music As Social
Policy?<http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php?/site/article/4973/>

There is little doubt that scientific research plays an important role in
enhancing our quality of life and improving our future wellbeing. However,
today the term 'the research shows...' is often deployed because we find it
difficult to justify music or art or indeed anything cultural as true or
good in its own terms. Yes, cultural entrepreneurs will sometimes
rhetorically affirm that music is important in its own right - but
increasingly such declarations come across as ritualistic.

spiked-online 04/14/08



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*Resources *



UCA utilizes many resourceful listserves and acknowledges their valued
contribution in compiling news and information that we are pleased to share
in the E-newsletter:

Americans for the Arts - Monthy Wire

APInews (Arts in the Public Interest)

Artists of Utah

ArtsJournal newsletter

Arts Wire Current

Board Cafe: The Newsletter Exclusively for Members of Nonprofit Boards of
Directors

Charity Lobbying in the Public Interest

Cultural Policy Listserv, Center for Arts & Culture

Downtown Alliance

Downtown Rising

Federation of State Humanities Councils

Grant Station

Steve Klass

National Assembly of State Arts Agencies

National Council of Nonprofit Associations Action Center

National Humanities Alliance

NYFA Current

Salt Lake County Zoo Arts & Parks Program, Salt Lake City

TechSoup

The NonProfit Quarterly

Travel Arts Partnership Newsletter

Utah Arts Council

Utah Humanities Council

Utah Nonprofits Association

Utah Progressive Network (UPNet) E-Mail Alert List



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*Submission Guidelines for this Newsletter *



Interested in posting your events in this newsletter? This is another
benefit of membership in the Utah Cultural Alliance. The newsletter is
distributed every Monday morning. Members may simply send your information
to the Utah Cultural Alliance at news@??? by the
Friday prior to the Monday you want your event listed.



Please send your information as text in the body of an email message - DO
NOT SEND attachments. We do not save information. Please send us an email
each time you want an event posted. We do not edit the content, except for
length - please limit your listing to a maximum of 500 words. Check for
spelling and grammar - what you send is what you will see.

Please send us the title you want your event listed under.



Forward this message to your public relations person and ask them to put the
Utah Cultural Alliance on their PR list.



Acknowledgements:



Posting events in the Utah Cultural Alliance E-NEWSLETTER is an exclusive
benefit of membership in the Utah Cultural Alliance. We welcome members'
contributions including events, resourceful websites or articles of interest
for inclusion in the next issue of UCA's E-Newsletter. This program is
supported in part from Xmission. The Utah Cultural Alliance would like to
thank Xmission for its generous contribution of internet services. You can
visit them at www.xmission.com .



If someone is sharing this email with you, please consider becoming a
member. For more information please visit our website at
http://www.utahculturalalliance.org/



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*Acknowledgments*



The Utah Cultural Alliance would like to acknowledge the generous support of
its programs from:



Americans for the Arts

Art Works for Kids

The B.W. Bastian Foundation

Children's Museum of Utah

The George S. and Dolores Dore Eccles Foundation

The Fieldstone Foundation

KUER - FM

The Mark and Kathie Miller Foundation

Museum of Utah Art & History

National Association of State Arts Agencies

The John and Marcia Price Family Foundation

Salt Lake City Arts Council

Salt Lake County Zoo, Arts & Parks

Sundance Institute

Utah Arts Council

Utah Humanities Council

Utah Valley State College

Wells Fargo Bank

Wild Oats

Xmission Internet Service Provider





Utah Cultural Alliance

http://www.utahculturalalliance.org/



P.O. Box 521613

Salt Lake City, UT 84152-1613

801 718-9020

staff@???





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