Cache Magazine
LOOKING AT THE WORLD WITH A ‘SENSE OF AWE’ Inside the artwork of Michael Langenheim The Herald Journal
NOVEMBER 16-22, 2012
contents
November 16-22, 2012
COVER 8 Michael Langenheim works in natural and digital art mediums
MOVIES 3 Cache Valley resident
Erik Bateman delivers his first film, ‘Equilibrium’
7 Steven Spielberg’s
‘Lincoln’ lives up to the hype with four stars
MUSIC 4 Cache Symphony kicks off season with concert
BOOKS 11 New ‘Nature Wars’ dives into hot topic
THEATER 4 Holiday tradition continues with ‘The Nutcracker’ 5 ‘Miracle on 34th Street’ coming in musical form
COLUMN 10 Lael Gilbert looks into what sounds good to eat
CALENDAR 13 See what’s happening this week
Jeff Hunter/Herald Journal
The setting sun colors clouds lingering above Hyrum Reservoir on an early November evening.
FROM THE EDITOR It amazes more and more how technology has opened up a variety of creative processes to ... well ... anyone. Over the last two months alone, I’ve written or edited stories about individuals who became authors by the ability to selfpublish books and sell them in e-book form. Or became singers and/or musicians and put songs up for sale on iTunes after recording them in their basement. Or made a movie by virtue of the ability to film scenes digitally, and then edit
them at home on a computer — like Erik Bateman in the “Equilibrium” story on page 3. It makes me think that in a decade, if you haven’t recorded a song, published a book or at least filmed something for YouTube, then you’re just being a lazy slob. Of course, the downside of so many people being able to say they’re an author or a filmmaker or a musician means that those titles will lose some of their cachet. And many people would argue that just because more people are recording their own music or picking up a camera, that it doesn’t necessarily mean that the world is going to be provided with the next Bruce Springsteen or Martin Scorsese by
virtue of someone being fortunate enough to be able to afford a Mac and a copy of GarageBand or iMovie. But it might. In fact, chances are with the rate that technology is progressing, there’s some young kid sitting in his or her thirdgrade class right now, who, in 15 or 20 years, will create the 21st century version of “Citizen Kane” on an iPhone 17 while sitting around waiting for the hover bus. The only question is, since there will be about 9,000 other movies released that year, how many people will actually have the time to see it? — Jeff Hunter
Finding his ‘Equilibrium’
Father of 4 takes time out to make first movie By Jeff Hunter Cache Magazine editor
It all started in 2010 with Erik Bateman’s desire to be a smart aleck. Looking to spend some time with his old college friend Richie Call while Call was back in town, Bateman suggested that the two go on a “guys’ night out.” “Just for kicks and giggles, we went to see the midnight showing of ‘Clash of the Titans’ with the idea that we’d make like ‘Mystery Science Theater 3000’ and sit there and laugh at the whole thing,” Bateman recalls. “But I had been thinking about making a movie for quite a while, and that kept Jeff Hunter/Herald Journal going through my head. After a two-and-a-half-year-long process, Logan resident Erik Bateman is finally ready to share “When we got back home his first film “Equilibrium” with the rest of Cache Valley Saturday night at the Dansante Building. and were just sitting around catching up, I said to Richie, this can happen. It means graduated with more theater ‘I want to make a movie. Do WHAT: Premiere of the more revenue for Cache credits than journalism credyou want to make a movie film “Equilibrium” Valley and more interest in its on his way to obtaining a with me?’ He just kind of WHEN: 5, 7 and 9 p.m. filmmaking in general.” minor in theater education. stopped and paused for what Saturday, Nov. 17 Born in Salt Lake City, Primarily focused on seemed like forever before WHERE: Dansante Bateman and his family sound design, Bateman also finally saying, ‘OK.’” Building, 59 S. 100 West moved to Oregon when he ended up meeting his wife, That lengthy pause eventuCOST: $5 was in his early teens. After Kathy, as well as numerous ally grew to two-and-a-half serving an LDS mission actors and theater personnel. years, but Saturday night at to Colorado, he ended up “After I graduated, I really the Dansante Building, Bate- “I think the film really returning to Utah to live started thinking, I would represents the talent we’ve man will premiere his first with his sister before getting like to make a movie somegot here and what’s availfilm “Equililbrium.” The accepted to Utah State Uniday,” he says. “I had started 76-long-movie will be shown able, and I think it’s undeversity. Bateman graduated to learn about directing and rutilized,” Bateman says. at 5, 7 and 9 p.m., with most telling stories through sound, “There’s great potential here, from USU in 2004 with a of the cast and crew schedand if people come and see major in broadcast journaluled to come to the 7 p.m. it and support it, more of See MOVIE on Page 6 showing. Admission is $5. ism, but he says he actually
“It’s a movie that will give you a newfound respect for an already illustrious historical figure.” – Cache film critic Aaron Peck on ‘Lincoln’ (Page 7)
PET OF THE WEEK Available for adoption
Pet: Ducky From: Cache Humane Society Why he’s so lovable: Welcome Ducky! The newest baby to the herd here at Cache Humane Society. This sweet boy is an unclaimed stray from the north side of Cache Valley. Because of this, we do not know much about what he was exposed to during the first little bit of his life. What we can tell you is how super sweet this baby boy is. With his age and love to people please, he’ll be an easy dog to train. Ducky is also showing promising signs of getting along with other dogs. This happens to be a great mix, as well, since you get the masculine looks in a smaller package. He will be a good family pet; he just needs the right home.
Page 3 - The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, November 16, 2012
ALL MIXED UP
Quotable
Page 4 - The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, November 16, 2012
all mixed up ‘The Nutcracker’ celebrates 30th year Holiday tradition continues next week at Eccles Theatre The Cache Valley Civic Ballet’s production of “The Nutcracker” each Thanksgiving weekend has become a tradition for many in the community. In fact, this year’s production marks the CVCB’s 30th anniversary performing the show. “I never imagined I would be involved with the Cache Valley Civic Ballet for 30 years,” says artistic director Sandra Emile. “I originally thought it would be fun to do for a couple of years. My, how time flies when you are having fun. To be honored by the community’s support for 30 years is a tremendous gift.” Rehearsals for “The Nutcracker” have been underway for the nearly 100-member cast since September. The Northern Utah Symphony Orchestra and the Cache Children’s Choir will also join the CVCB in performing this classic tale at the Ellen Eccles Theatre. The ballet will run will take place at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 23, 24 and 26, with an additional matinee at 1:30 p.m. Saturday. Tickets range from $10-$21 and can be purchased at www. centerforthearts.us.
Coming from his recent performance with the CVCB as Count Dracula, Kevin Nakatani returns to the stage in a different role, taking on the part of the Cavalier in “The Nutcarcker.” Hanna Corcoran will be performing the role of the Sugar Plum Fairy on Friday night and Saturday afternoon, while Becky Erickson will perform Saturday and Monday evenings. Mary Fonnesbeck will perform as Clara. The Sugar Plum Tea Party will be held prior to the matinee from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in the Bullen Center Ballroom. This popular event gives patrons an opportunity to enjoy a snack and meet their favorite “Nutcracker” characters. Cost is $3 at the door and staged photographs with the Sugar Plum Fairy and the Cavalier can be purchased additionally for $5. Cache Valley Civic Ballet alumni are invited to attend this year’s production and special events are being planned to celebrate this milestone anniversary. For more information visit cvcballet.org.
Becky Erickson and Luke Anderson performed as the Sugar Plum Fairy and the Cavalier, respectively, last year in Cache Valley Civic Ballet’s production of “The Nutcracker.”
Bridgerland Storytellers hosting this year’s StorySwap Tell me a story and make it a good one. The ancient art of making a story “a good one” will be explored in Cache Valley Nov. 19-20. The Bridgerland Chapter of the Utah Storytellers Guild will be hosting this year’s statewide StorySwap event. Many of the regions finest tellers will be sharing their knowledge and their stories in local schools and at the American West Heritage Center. “It’s going to be a terrific event,” says
StorySwap director David Sidwell. With great local and national talent and a beautiful backdrop – Cache Valley in the late fall or early winter – StorySwap will be an event that nobody should have to miss. The fee is quite a pleasant surprise as well ... it’s free. “We have storytellers all over the area going into schools to share their talents,” says Leah Adkins, vice president of the Briderland Chapter. “I, personally, feel that it is important to give
to the community where I live. While I am not telling at the school in my hometown, I am joining some excellent storytellers in the next town over. I am really excited to share this with another generation.” Adkins and Sidwell have been working in and around schools for many years. “I have seen the difference a story can make in a child’s life,” Adkins states. The event will have appeal to people
of all ages. There will be a concert at 7 p.m. Friday, followed by workshops and storytelling events starting at 9 a.m. Saturday. The StorySwap website begins, “As a storytelling guild, it’s our Thanksgiving gift to Utah and beyond!” For more information on who is telling and when and where events are to be held, you can contact Sidwell at dr.davidsidwell@gmail.com or go to the StorySwap webpage at www.utst oryswap.org.
Classic tale comes to the stage Nov. 27-28 One of the most beloved holiday movies ever has been re-imagined as a fully staged Broadway musical. The Cache Valley Center for the Arts presents Troupe America’s touring production of “Miracle on 34th Street” at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 27-28, at the Ellen Eccles Theatre. Tickets range from $30 to $44 and are on sale now at the CVCA ticket office, 43 S. Main St., online at www.ellenecclestheatre. org or by calling 752-0026. “We are delighted to bring Cache Valley such a diverse range of entertainment opportunities,” said Wally Bloss, executive director for the Cache Valley Center for the Arts. “This festive time of year is full of some of the best holiday traditions. Be sure to add ‘Miracle on 34th Street’ to your holiday line-up. The Ellen Eccles Theatre schedule is full of many wonderful family traditions from ‘The Nutcracker’ to the Bar J Wranglers. ‘Miracle on 34th Street: The Musical’ is the perfect treat!” Rediscover the magic of believing that wishes can come true and miracles still happen in one of the best-loved of all Holiday classic tales, “Miracle On 34th Street.” This heart-warming story originally written for the 1947 classic movie is brilliantly brought to life in a musical production. Featuring the wonderful sound of Meredith Willson’s fabulous lyrics and tuneful score, including “It’s Beginning To Look a Lot Like Christmas” and “May the Good Lord Bless and Keep You,” this holiday family plum of a musical is sure to leave every audience believing in love and miracles once again. The story follows the adventures of an elderly gentleman named Kris Kringle, who must leave his
COMING UP Cache Symphony ready to open 39th season
The Cache Symphony Orchestra is pleased to announce the first concert of its 39th season at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 18, at the Kent Concert Hall in USU’s Chase Fine Arts Center. Admission is free. Directed by Dr. Robert Frost, this concert will be performed by the Cache Symphony strings — 68 string players drawn from all walks of life in Cache Valley. Frost will direct the group in several interesting and varied works by composers Johann Stamitz, Julius Klengel and Edward Elgar. For more information, visit the orchestra’s website at cachechamberorchestra.wordpress.com.
‘A Christmas Carol’ coming to Sky View
Four Seasons Theatre Company will present Cache Valley’s newest holiday tradition “A Christmas Carol: The Musical” at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 29-30, and Dec. 1, 3 and 6-8, at the Sky View High School Auditorium in Smithfield. Charles Dickens’ beloved tale of the miserable Ebenezer Scrooge comes to life like you’ve never seen it in this musical adaptation. This touching story combined with unforgettable music by awardwinning composer Alan Menken is guaranteed to inspire audiences with the Christmas Spirit. Four Seasons Theatre Company is graciously hosted by the Sky View drama department, which allows tickets to remain at an affordable price and encourages support of the arts in our public schools. Tickets are $10 in advance ($12 at the door) and are available now at fourseasonstheatre.org or by calling 770-9763. Group rates are available.
Kuss Quartet returns
cozy existence at the Maplewood Retirement Home because Maplewood only keeps elderly people as long as they are in good physical and mental health. There is also this matter of Kris continuing to claim that he is Santa Claus, which calls his sanity into question. Kris has two choices: either he can go to the Mount Hope Sanitarium (the “nut house,” Kris calls it) or he can try to fend for himself on the streets. Kris chooses to make his own way and leaves the Maplewood Retirement Home early Thanksgiving Day. He ends
The Chamber Music Society of Logan is thrilled to have the Kuss Quartet return to Logan for a concert at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 20, at the USU Performance Hall. up in Manhattan and happens The Kuss Quartet is firmly established in the elite to arrive during the last minute preparations for the annual Macy’s of the world’s string quartets. This Berlin-based string quartet is more than technically competent. They are Thanksgiving Day Parade, where celebrated for their exciting programs, as well as he discovers the person hired to their sincere, honest and captivating interpretations. play Santa Claus has been drinkPerforming with the Kuss Quartet will be guest artist ing. Kris is horrified for the children Jon Nakamatsu at the piano, who’s playing combines elegance, clarity and electrifying power. who will be watching the parade Tickets for the Kuss Quartet with Jon Nakamatsu and complains to the parade orgaare $24; students are $10. Tickets may be purchased nizer, Doris Walker, about this at the door prior to the concert or through the Caine intoxicated fraud. Doris fires the College of the Arts Box Office in the Chase Fine Santa she has hired on the spot and Arts Center, Room 139-B. You can also go online at offers the job to Kris, who relucarts.usu.edu or call 797-8022. tantly agrees — and this is where For more information visit www.cmslogan.org. the adventure begins.
Page 5 - The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, November 16, 2012
‘Miracle’ gets musical
Page 6 - The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, November 16, 2012
Movie Continued from Page 3 and I found that I enjoyed it quite a bit. That’s when the gears really started turning in my head.” Those gears turned rather slowly until that night at the movies with Call, a well-known Cache Valley actor who now teaches his craft at USU. The two got together afterwards to throw out some ideas, but Bateman says, “Frankly, they were all garbage.” It wasn’t until he started watching an episode of “Fringe” on his computer that something suddenly clicked. “I can’t tell you what the title of the episode is because it would give too much away, but the minute I saw it, every single bit of this movie came into my head like that,” Bateman says while snapping his fingers. Bateman immediately sat down and put together a treatment for what would become “Equilibrium,” eventually pounding out a 95-page script over five days. With the help of Kathy, Richie and other
local actors, the script was trimmed down to about 70 pages, and Bateman purchased a Sony EX-1 camera to start shooting the movie. Out of work at that time, he says he simply felt like: “I’ve always wanted to make a movie, and I’ve got the time. No one was hiring, so what else am I going to do?” After putting together a cast that includes a lot of highly regarded local talent like Call, Chrislynn Call, Lee Daily, Kent Hadfield and Kevin Doyle, Bateman’s biggest challenge was finding the right location since about 85 percent of “Equilibrium” takes place in the same “cabin in the woods.” Wardrobe designer Amanda Profaizer suggested using the home of well-known USU set design teacher Dennis Hassan, and Bateman said the Hassans’ large Victorian-style home on 200 North was “perfect.” “Dennis isn’t just a set designer at work; he’s a set designer all the time, and his home is just full of treasures he’s found and collected over the years,” Bateman says. But since much of the movie takes place at night, Bateman usually had to film scenes between 9
of an adapter and old Nikon and Canon lenses from the ’70s, he says the movie has the feel of having used film rather than digital technology to create it. “We’re getting all of these pristine images with DSLRs now, but I Richie Call is one of the stars of “Equilibrium.” really wanted to go the other way,” Bateman Hassan says. p.m. and 1 a.m. explains. “I wanted it to “I have four teenagers, Although it was only look chunkier and more supposed to take a few so trying to keep them like film.” of weeks, the filming of quiet or away from the “Equilibrium” ended up action was a little chal Film is something lenging,” Hassan says. “I going from late June to that Bateman actually think a number of scenes October 2010. grew up with. His father, had to be re-shot because “But it was super fun — Darrel, worked as a the funnest summer ever.” filmmaker for 30 years, of the sound in the backsays Kathy, the mother of creating short films and ground.” the Batemans’ four chil Hassan soon provided commercials for corporamore than just a location, dren, who also acted in tions, as well as for the the film. however. Bateman had state of Utah and the Bateman says that one pivotal role left to LDS Church. fill, and at the suggestion because several people Bateman says while who originally said they of Hassan’s children, he working on “Equilibrium” soon started to look at the would help with the he often called his Darmovie ended up dropone-time actor — who rel in Oregon for advice, ping out due to the big ended up being as “perbut that if were to “talk time commitment, editfect” for the part as his to my 12-year-old self, I house was for a location. ing the movie at home “It’s interesting because on his Mac has taken much longer than he had that has really rekindled hoped. But through use my interest in acting,”
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wouldn’t believe that I’d be doing anything related to what my dad did.” And yet, here Bateman is, ready for the premiere of his first film, with which he admits he’s been “intentionally vague” about the plot. Bateman says “Equilibrium” would probably receive a rating of PG-10 “if there were such a thing,” and that it’s basically “a murder-mystery/ romantic comedy.” “The movie really is meant to be a metaphor, and I hope that after people see it once, that they want to see it again,” says Bateman, who has already submitted his film to Slamdance and is considering other film festival opportunities around the country. “Everyone who’s seen it say they glean a little more out of it each time.”
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The road was dirty, and at times unethically navigated, but it led to something that history has proven was for the greater good. “Lincoln” sheds a brand new light on the revered president. One who not only gave some of the greatest speeches in American history and led us through one of our darkest hours, but a man who was willing to put his own ethics and morality on the line if it meant achieving a goal that he knew was good and right. Not enough can be said about Daniel DayLewis’s performance as Abraham Lincoln. He’s created this surprisingly vulnerable character from a man who has stood tall throughout the ages. This Lincoln is a quietly contemplative man. He listens and never rashly reacts to anything. He dispenses colorful stories as parables time after time. He teaches anyone and everyone he comes in contact with. This is
cally divisive movie, think again. The crux of the movie rests on the intense squabbling of political factions. Some try to derail the bill, others AP photo/Dreamworks/Twentieth Century Fox try to uphold it. Lincoln Two-time Academy Award-winning actor Daniel Day-Lewis, center, portrays the 16th is short of the votes he needs and will do anyPresident of the United States in Steve Spielberg’s “Lincoln.” thing to procure them, iron-clad constitutional which leads to the most amendment to make sure interesting aspect of the all slaves are permanently movie. freed and can never be Lincoln was so sure used for involuntary ser- that abolishing the evil act Director // Steven Spielberg Starring // Daniel Day-Lewis, Sally Field, David vitude again. So, with all of slavery was the right Srathairn, Joseph Gordon-Leavitt, James Spader, the power he possesses course for the country Hal Holbrook, Tommy Lee Jones as President of the United that he was willing to do Rated // PG-13 for an intense scene of war vioStates, Lincoln sets just about anything to get lence, some images of carnage and brief strong about trying to get the the necessary votes in the language 13th Amendment passed House of Representatives. before the war comes to He bribed, cajoled and spectacle. he’s getting antsy that it an end. even threatened repreThe movie begins near won’t hold up after the If you didn’t think sentatives to get this bill the end of Lincoln’s life. war is over. He needs an See REEL on Page 12 you were in for a politipassed. The Civil War has left ! Action PLAYING NOVEMBER 16 - NOVEMBER 20 blood-soaked battlefields MOVIE HOTLINE 435-753-1900 up and down the Union. UNIVERSITY 6 SHOWINGS ARE Lincoln has already 1225 N 200 E., BEHIND HOME DEPOT FOR FRIDAY 2297 N. Main issued the EmancipaBREAKING DAWN PART II (PG-13) 11:30 MOVIE HOTLINE 753-6444 THRU TUESDAY 12:15 2:00 2:45 4:30 5:30 7:00 8:00 9:30 WWW.WALKERCINEMAS.NET tion Proclamation, but THIS WEEK TICKETS ONLINE AT WWW.MEGAPLEXTHEATRES.COM FRI ONLY 10:30pm, MIDNIGHT ALL SEATS ALL TIMES $3.00
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Steven Spielberg’s “Lincoln” is a surprising and refreshing biopic that isn’t concerned with cramming in an entire life in under three hours. Usually these epic life portraits of historical figures are too worried about telling a story that spans birth to death that they forget the important bits in between. This certainly isn’t the movie you’re most likely expecting. Spielberg has done a curious thing here with tremendous effect. He’s forgone all the usual Lincoln events – his rise to prominence from humble beginnings, the Gettysburg Address, and his assassination. None of these things are actually seen in the movie. We don’t even see any significant Civil War battles. We know the war is raging on, but it isn’t important for us to see scene after scene of death and carnage. “Lincoln” instead favors quiet dignity over grand
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‘Lincoln’ focuses on smaller moments
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‘I can’t really help creating’ STORY BY KEVIN OPSAHL
C
ache Valley artist Michael Langenheim’s creative oasis is in the basement of a red brick house on “The Island” in Logan — which doubles as his residence. It’s a quaint space, but Langenheim uses the walls to his advantage, storing acrylic paintings that he has either shown at art galleries or are currently in the works. The two prominent pieces directly behind the stressless chair where he sat for an interview with Cache Magazine on Monday were based entirely on his imagination or memory, as opposed to photos. One called “Starry Stargate Night,” depicts a rolling crash of waves on a beach — a play on the style and composition of Vincent Van Gogh’s “Starry Night. The other, “Man, Horse, Mountains, Mist,” shows a man with a horse and a large rock formation in the background. These examples, the 34-year-old says, are a “celebration of man, nature and the mystery of life.” “When I’m doing (art) I get into a meditative state where I’m not really thinking about anything else, and get lost in the art of creating,” Langenheim says. “I can’t really help creating things, it just kind of appears. I like the process of taking something that’s immaterial and manifesting it into something that is material.” Over the summer, Langenheim had his work on display at the popular Logan coffeehouse Citrus and Sage — the first show he has had in a while. But Langenheim is also a graphic designer, working for Sign Pro Graphics & Design in Logan, creating
JENNIFER MEYERS/HERALD JOURNAL
MICHAEL LANGENHEIM
logos, ads, posters and T-shirts. He also does freelance graphic design. Clients with his graphic design endeavors include Cache Education Foundation and Joyride Bikes. He has also done graphic designing for Beaver Mountain Ski Area. “You name it, I’ve probably done it before,” Langenheim says. “I feel really hopeful. I’m doing more to get my work out there. I think it’s resonating well.” Most of Langenheim’s work has been done in Utah, and he’s lived in Cache Valley for 12 years. But he was born and raised in San Clemente, Calif. Langenheim says his roots as an artist trace back to watching his own family members — his mother is an artist, his father is a guitar player, and his grandfather is an architect. In high school, Langenheim started doing surfboard and T-shirt designs for surfing companies in California, then he moved to Cache Valley in 2000 and earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Utah State University in 2004. Langenheim’s fine art is meant to “convey a sense of celebrating life, nature, and they mystery of existence,” he says. “(Life) is a mystery that transcends words …. Creating it in an art form helps you get past the negative stuff and appreciate life,” Langenheim adds. His source of inspiration for his fine art comes from his life-long hobbies: “being alone in nature, biking, snowboarding, and rock climbing.” “(It’s) the sense of awe I get when I’m outside in beautiful areas we have here in Utah,” Langenheim explains.
“Hey Frank, how does that burger taste?” If you like food, you probably occasionally discuss how food tastes. Taste comes from that muscly organ in our mouth called the tongue. Specifically it comes from the tiny taste receptors buried in the bumps on your tongue that can sense sweet, sour, salty, bitter and (probably) meaty flavors. But taste is only a small part of how you experience food. You (and Frank) experience food with all five of your senses. For example someone places in front of you
fruit with no hint of yellow or green and minimal blemishes tells you it is healthy, near ripeness, calorie dense and sweet. The likelihood of finding a little worm inside is minimized. It is ready to eat. Pick up that fruit and your sensitive fingertips tell your brain that the fruit you have chosen is firm with a slight fleshy give (rather than being unpalatably hard or overa large bowl of cherries ly soft and squishy). At picked from their backthis point you know that yard tree. They are freshly the cherry hasn’t gone washed and ready to eat, beyond ripeness into still cool from the leafy decay with the accomshade and the outside panying introduction of morning air. First you use bacterial byproducts that may be harmful to your sight. Seeing a deep red
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Page 10 - The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, November 16, 2012
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gut upon consumption. Once in your mouth, you use your teeth and tongue to demolish the edible parts and separate them from the less edible pit. You immediately sense the sweetness of the natural sugars with the taste receptors on your tongue, on the roof of your mouth, and even in your throat. Chewing releases a complicated concoction of molecules that waft up the back of your throat and into your nasal cavity, where your nose detects the deep, rich, acidic and fruity cherry flavor (the process is called retronasal olfaction for you nerds out there). Your senses
aftermath of the tongue’s are awash in the experience of cherriness. Much decisions.” For those countof what we describe at ing, I’ve highlighted taste is actually smell, as anyone with a bad cold at four senses we use to experience food. The Thanksgiving can attest fifth is auditory percepto. But it doesn’t end there. tion … hearing. Initially I thought the inclusion There are taste cells in of this sense in the food the stomach, intestine experience was a stretch. and, evidence suggests, Sure, there is the pop of the pancreas, colon and esophagus, according hot popcorn and the crack to a report in the March of opening coconuts, but 2010 ScienceNews. those two phenomenon “While taste cells in the aren’t exactly essential mouth make snap judgto an individual’s eating ments about what should experience. be let inside, new work Then I remembered suggests that gut taste the sound of grape juice. cells serve as specialized When I was young my ground forces, charged mom would pile ripe with preparing the digestive system for the See BREAD on Page 12
Books Wildlife proliferation is a hot-button issue The usual hot-button issues such as taxes and zoning are beginning to take a back seat in some communities to disputes that include deer, beavers, feral cats and bears. Wildlife-related controversies have been springing up in towns throughout the country, pitting neighbor against neighbor, animal-rights activists against biologists and in some cases, even prompting death threats. In “Nature Wars,” Jim Sterba lays out battle lines that emerged after populations of species that declined to near-extinction by the end of the 19th century came roaring back as the nation’s forests regenerated and city dwellers moved to the suburbs and exurbs. Farmland reverted to woods and subdivisions, while the ensuing sprawl created hospitable habitat for all sorts of wild creatures. “It is very likely that more people live in closer proximity to more wild animals and birds in the eastern United States today than anywhere on the planet at any time in history,” writes Sterba, a longtime reporter for The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. The nation’s whitetailed deer population, which sank as low as 350,000 more than a century ago in the face of uncontrolled hunting, rebounded to an estimated 25 million to 40 million by the 1990s. What had been consid-
annually and blamed for $850 million in damage to farm crops and forests. They are also carriers of tick-borne Lyme disease, which the author contracted three times in 11 years. Controlling the size of the deer population poses a monumental problem. Young people prefer computer games and television to hunting, while generations reared on Disney’s “Bambi” bristle at the idea that sharpshooters ered an elegant creature should be hired to thin became “long-legged the herd. rats” linked by researchIf hunters are fewer ers to more than 1 million in number, trappers motor vehicle collisions
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are even harder to find. That’s been a bonanza for beavers, blamed for the most costly damage by any species. But even as the industrious rodents triggered complaints throughout Massachusetts about damage to structures, trees and water supplies, the state’s voters banned the use of an effective trap that kills instantly but that critics depicted as cruel. Canada geese no longer migrate; instead, they befoul golf courses and soccer fields in their year-round turf, and can be responsible
for hundreds of deaths if they are sucked into the engines of a jetliner. Wild turkeys have gone from novelty to nuisance, attacking pedestrians and flying into car windshields. And bears have advanced into populated areas, drawn by easy-toobtain food. The author takes issue with the boom in wild bird feeders, seeing it as a manipulation of nature that spreads disease and benefits neither the birds nor the environment. But he reserves his sharpest critiques for activists on behalf of feral cats, numbering up to 100
million and blamed for killing up to 1 billion birds in North America. Those who think the feral animals should be killed, rather than trapped, neutered and released, have been subject to death threats, according to Sterba. This book is sure to initiate discussion about an issue that seems likely to move closer to the forefront in the years ahead. Sterba’s views certainly won’t win support in all quarters, but he articulates them forcefully, and he presents solid evidence to back them up.
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Page 12 - The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, November 16, 2012
Reel Continued from Page 7 one of the most honest and forthright Lincoln performances you’ll ever see. Yet, when he’s called upon to do so, Day-Lewis’s Lincoln is just as powerful as history has made him out to be. Spielberg’s direction here is key to the movie working as well as it does. Focusing on the lesser known aspects of Lincoln’s life and presidency must have been a difficult task. Everyone is expecting to see the grandiose historical events when going into a movie like this, so the finite focus of it may be a little jarring. However, it’s rewarding on so many levels. It’s a movie that will give you a newfound respect for an already illustrious historical figure.
Bread Continued from Page 10 Concord grapes into the juicer on our old electric stove and steam them until the purple skins burst and released the tiny seeds, light-green flesh, and fragrant juices. The mash remained in the strainer. The juice continued down into a catching pan and then through a transparent plastic tube, bubbling and steaming into the waiting sterilized Mason jars. Kids weren’t allowed to help at this stage. But that didn’t keep me from hovering nearby in fascination. I noticed the pungent smell, the luxurious steam, the bright purple dribbles and splashes on the white countertop. I also noticed that the hot juice dribbling into the jars sounded hot – as opposed to sounding like a room temperature liquid. You can totally try this at home. Heat up some water. Blindfold a friend.
AP photo/Dreamworks/Twentieth Century Fox
Daniel Day-Lewis as Abraham Lincoln looks over a battlefield in a scene from “Lincoln.”
Let your friend listen to you pouring hot water into a mug and then pouring room-temperature water into a separate mug. Hear the difference yourself. Then make hot chocolate because there is no need to waste perfectly good hot water. There is a scientific reason for this involving the viscosity of water, but I won’t get into it here. Then I started thinking about crunch. I love crunchy apples. Mushy apples — no matter how sweet they are — don’t “taste” as good to me. Crunchy apples seem more fresh. And then there is the bubbly sizzle of hot bacon browning in a pan. That gets my mouth watering. Or how about the ping of a freshly sealed jar. That is a nice sound. So is the hiss of a chicken drumstick as it hits a hot barbecue. You can bet that food companies think about how we hear food and engineer their products accordingly. Chips have a certain fresh-sounding snap. Fries have a cer-
tain salty grind as you draw them across the wrapper toward a pile of ketchup. Coffee makes a certain “glory” as is swishes around your paper cup. The sound of food matters. So does the sound of packaging and the sounds in the atmosphere around us as we eat. Anne-Sylvie Crisinel, a graduate student from Oxford University had volunteers match wines, milk and other foods with particular musical notes. A sweet-tasting dessert or something like lemon juice tended to be matched with a higherpitched notes, and foods that were savory or meaty tended to be matched with brassy, low-pitched sound, as reported on the food blog on Smithsonian. com. So, when we hear that high-pitched tune broadcast from the ice-cream van in the summer — even if it is slightly offpitch and blaring Christmas music in the middle of July — our minds are primed for sweetness.
Friday Atomica will perform at 4:45 p.m. Friday, Nov. 16, at Caffe Ibis, 52 Federal Ave. Described as punk anthems and thrash guitar solos, these three local guys are going unplugged for a set at the Ibis. Come and start off the holiday season with OPTIONS for Independence at the Candy Cane Lane Boutique and lunch activity at 11:30 a.m. Friday, Nov. 16. Entrance is $1, transportation is $5 and lunch prices will vary. For more information or to reserve your spot contact Mandie at 7535353 ext. 108. Logan High School presents “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 16-17 and 19-20, at the Logan High School Auditorium. Tickets can be purchased on the Logan High School website at www.loganschools.org. Winter weather got you down? Macey’s Food Sense girls are here to teach again. Come learn about winter veggies to boost your spirits and keep you healthy during this cold winter season at noon Friday, Nov. 16, in the Little Theater. Please reserve a seat at the service desk or on Facebook. Kaiti Jensen will perform along with Leah Wilson and Allie Harris at 8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 16, at Why Sound, 30 Federal Ave. Admission is $5. Global Village Gifts will be having a Nativity Night and Holiday Event from 5 to 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 16. Join us and see the beautiful nativities and ornaments made by artisans from around the world that are fairly traded. Global Village Gifts is located at 146 N. 100 East. Our phone number is 713-4347. For its fifth annual November Demonstration Show, USU Dept. of Physics presents “Fabulous Fluids” at 7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 16, in the Eccles Science Learning Center Emert Auditorium, Room
130, on the USU campus. All ages are welcome to the free event, which features demonstrations of fluid dynamics. For information, call 797-2857 or visit www.usu.edu/unwrapped. Leaping Lulu will perform at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 16, at the Brigham City Fine Arts Center, 58 S. 100 West. Tickets are $10 ($5 for students) and are available at the door or online at www. bcfineartscenter.org. You can also call (435) 723-0740 for reservations. The 4-H Cache County Dog Club is in need of old blankets, towels, bedding and T-shirts to aid sick and injured animals. Please drop off your used items between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Nov. 12-16 at the Cache County 4-H Extension Office, 179 N. Main St., Suite 111. Call 752-6263 for more information. In collaboration with The Acting Company’s 40th Anniversary, the Cache Valley Center for the Arts proudly presents John Steinbeck’s “Of Mice and Men” at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 16, in the Ellen Eccles Theatre. Tickets for the one-night-only event range from $24 to $35 and are on sale at the CVCA ticket office, 43 S. Main St., online at www.ellenec clestheatre.org or by calling 7520026.
SATURDAY The Aggie Marching Band presents is 13th annual Sounds of the Stadium season-ending concert at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 17, at the Kent Concert Hall. The free concert will include musical highlights of the marching band’s 2012 season, as well as traditional school songs and fan favorites. For more information visit the Caine College of the Arts box office in Room 139-B of the Chase Fine Arts Center, by calling 435-797-8022 or go to the college website at arts.usu.edu. Lewiston’s annual craft and gift boutique will be held from
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 17, at the Lewiston City ballroom, 29 S. Main St. There will be food and entertainment, and door prizes will be given out hourly. It’s a great way to get ready for the holidays. Call (435) 890-9768 for more information. Keep Kim Home is a fundraiser to help Kim Maibaum stay in her home with the help of CNAs instead of living in a nursing facility. She was diagnosed with Lou Gehrig’s disease eight years ago after being given only five years to live. This fundraiser will include a silent auction, entertainment and food. Please help us keep Kim in her home by coming to 1295 N. 1000 East in Logan from 7 to 10 p.m. The Top of Utah Snowmobile Association, a non-profit organization, is holding our annual fall social/dinner at 5:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 17, at Bridgerland Applied Technology College, 1301 N. 600 West. The Top of Utah Snowmobile Association is one of Utah’s largest snowmobile clubs. We welcome everyone who enjoys riding snowmobiles to join and help protect this great sport and have your voice heard. Our club sponsors several rides, warming huts, charity events and avalanche and outdoor survival training events each year. Cost for the dinner is $15 for adults, $7 for children 7 to 17, and under 6 free. There will be lots of great Dutch-oven food, live entertainment and door prizes, raffle/ auction items as well as time to catch up with old friends and make new ones. For more information call Kerry (435) 232-9052 or Kelly 770-5007. Join in a free community Thanksgiving meal from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 17, with family activities until 2 p.m. The Loaves and Fishes Community Meal hosts a free meal open to all every third Saturday at 178 W. Center St. in the Fellowship Hall. Imagine sitting down and sharing a meal with the members of our community at large is an important way you can serve. No
set up, no clean up, simply sitting, eating and talking with another individual or family. That’s all many of us need. Hope you come to be that friendly face. For more information, call Rachel at 435-554-1081. Sarah Olsen will perform along with Coral Bones and Meghan Young at 8 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 17, at Why Sound, 30 Federal Ave. Admission is $5. The Daughters of the American Revolution Bear River Chapter invite you to our meeting at 10:30 a.m., Saturday, Nov. 17, at the Logan Library northeast conference room. Dr. Eric Swedin, a Professor at Weber State University will address us on his award-winning book “The Cuban Missile Crisis,” which happened 50 years ago. All are welcome.
SUNDAY
The Post-Mormon Community is a non-sectarian organization of individuals and families who have left Mormonism. The Cache Valley chapter meets for dinner and socializing at a local restaurant at 6:30 p.m. every Sunday evening. New-comers welcome. For more information call Jeff at 770-4263 or visit our website at www.postmormon.org/logan. Cache Community Connections will hold its annual Interfaith Thanksgiving Service at 7 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 18, at the Logan Tabernacle. Started 10 years ago to bring people of many faiths together to express gratitude and giving of thanks in their worship, the tradition continues with a special recognition of the Cache Community Food Pantry and their new facility. The theme for the evening will be “Feeding Bodies, Filling Spirits: A Celebration of a Community United to Nourish Its Members.” The program is free and everyone is invited to attend. Iver Anchor will perform at noon, Sunday, Nov. 18, at Caffe Ibis, 52 Federal Ave.
Cache Symphony Orchestra is pleased to announce the first concert of its 39th season at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 18, at the Kent Concert Hall in USU’s Chase Fine Arts Center. Admission is free. Directed by Dr. Robert Frost, this concert will be performed by the Cache Symphony strings — 68 string players drawn from all walks of life in Cache Valley. Visit our orchestra’s website at cachechamberorchestra.wordpress.com.
MONDAY The Utah State University Percussion Ensemble and the Caine Percussion Ensemble present their annual fall concert at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 19, in the Kent Concert Hall in the Chase Fine Arts Center. The pieces to be performed range from large percussion ensembles to a group of non-pitched percussion instruments. Tickets are $10 general admission, $8 seniors and youth, $5 USU faculty and staff and free for USU students with ID. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit the Caine College of the Arts Box Office located in room 139-B of the Chase Fine Arts Center, call 797-8022 or visit arts. usu.edu. The Logan Library will be showing “The New World” starring Colin Farrell and Christopher Plummer at 6:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 19, in the Jim Bridger Room. “The New World” is a sweeping adventure set amidst the first encounter of European and Native American cultures during the founding of the Jamestown, Virginia settlement in 1607. The film is rated PG -13.
TUESDAY Story Time at the North Logan Library is scheduled for 10:10 and 11 a.m. for toddlers and preschool-aged children. Sleepytime, which includes songs and stories, will take place at 6:30 p.m. in the meeting room. No registration is necessary for these programs.
Page 13 - The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, November 16, 2012
calendar
Page 14 - The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, November 16, 2012
CrossworD By Myles Mellor and Sally York Across 1. Customize 6. It’s 29,028 feet high 13. Sack 16. Place for sweaters? 19. Indian dignitary 20. Sailing event 21. Photogs 23. Undercover work 26. ___ Throat 27. Sounds heard in passing? 28. Sum, ___, fui 29. Skeleton part 30. Hornswoggled 32. Lake formed by glaciers 35. Loafing 38. Ratfinks 43. Brain section 45. Trophy for a matador 46. Rossini composition 51. Ready and willing’s partner 52. Pacifier 53. Augmented 54. Brought out 57. Bad atmosphere 60. Mud ___ 62. In a tasteless manner 64. Faux ___ 65. Some ducts carry them 67. Pertaining to a sewer 71. Oarlock 72. Fashion designer 75. A Simpson 78. Long pillow 79. ___ spill 80. Kitchen meas. 83. “It’s likely that...” 85. Dashboard abbr. 87. Of a leaf shape 89. It shows signs 90. Unfortunately 94. Time on end 96. Ablutionary vessel 97. Ways to distribute video content 102. From Okla. City to
Tulsa 103. Kind of traffic 104. Natives of an Austrian state 105. Approach 110. White House’s ___ Room 112. Kimono sash 113. Went on 114. Reverse, e.g. 116. Teen fave 119. Polio vaccine developer 123. Eleventh sign of 89-Across 129. Wild Eurasian plum 130. Sent with a click 131. “You got it!” 132. Collector’s goal 133. “Owner of a Lonely Heart” band 134. Pavlova and de Mille 135. Wedding band, perhaps Down 1. Unimaginative 2. Rosencrantz or Guildenstern 3. ___ meridiem 4. Judases 5. ___ el Amarna, Egypt 6. New York county south of Niagara 7. Lyra’s brightest star 8. Cast out 9. Amscrayed 10. And more 11. African antelope 12. New Mexico resort 13. Like Tsarevich Alexei 14. End of profit? 15. ___ lab 16. Beach Boys album title 17. Nawies 18. Paquin and Nicole Smith 22. ___ gun 24. It was conquered by the Persians in 546 B.C.
25. Trident-shaped letter 31. HBO’s “Da ___ G Show” 33. Apiece, in scores 34. Play thing? 36. Procrastinator’s word 37. With knowledge 38. Everglades area 39. Skeleton part 40. Indian palm leaves 41. Type widths 42. Do this in the name of love? 44. Time before 47. Relating to “Beowolf,” e.g. 48. First name in mystery 49. Marsh descriptive 50. She loved Narcissus 55. Wright wing? 56. ___ job 58. Tatty 59. Old-time welcome 61. “The moan of doves in immemorial ___”: Tennyson 63. Violist’s clef 66. Goya’s “Duchess of ___” 68. U.N. Day mo. 69. Super server 70. Critic 72. Band of color 73. Unlikely to defect 74. Squat 75. Show ___ 76. Buzzing about 77. X-ray units 80. Leather strap 81. Editors’ notes 82. Intrinsically 84. Nativity ___ 86. Like some points 88. Not abstract 91. English ___ 92. Fatty tissue 93. “Buona ___” (Italian greeting) 95. Thumbs down 98. Bush and little enders
99. Clear the tables 100. Facetious 101. Cygnet’s father 105. Olives 106. Court game 107. Ticket category 108. Prosperity 109. Notes after dos 111. Deed 115. Zipped through 117. Does in general? 118. Reo maker 120. “If it ___ broke ...” 121. Stadium section 122. Granny ___ 124. Romano 125. Winter coat 126. Masefield play “The Tragedy of ___” 127. Quotation qualification 128. ___ system
answers from last week
giving holiday. They will also run for free in The Herald Journal one to two days prior to the Deadlines event. Calendar items can be submitted by email at hjhappen@hjnews.com and will run on Cache Magazine calendar items are due Tuesday by 5 p.m. this week due to the Thanksa space-available basis if selected.
www.ThemeCrosswords.com
Page 15 - The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, November 16, 2012
Page 16 - The Herald Journal, Logan, Utah, Friday, November 16, 2012
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