Women of Teton Valley

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Women of Teton Valley

Teton Valley News • March 24, 2011 • Page A7

Wendy Abrams • Bella Abzug • Abigail Adams • Rebecca Adamson • Jane Addams • Marian Anderson • Mary Anderson • Ethel Parchy Andrus • Lupe Anguiano • Susan B. Anthony • Virginia Apgar • Mary Arlene Appelhof • Roswitha Augusta • Stephanie Avery • Judith F. Baca • Ella Baker • Clara Barton • Mollie Beattie • Catherine Beecher • Rebecca Bell • Mary McLeod Bethune • Rachel Binah • Elizabeth Blackwell • Jenny Blaker • Arlene Blum • Margrett (“Gretta”) Boley • Gertrude Bonnin • Margaret B. White • Carole Moseley Braun • Pearl Buck • Sarah Buel • Nannie H. Burroughs • Barbara K. Byrd • Helen Caldicott • Edna Campbell • Tammy Cromer-Campbell • Rachel Carson • Mary Shadd Cary • Willa Cather • Linda C.-Thompson • Pamela S. Chasek, Ph.D • Gillian Christie • Lynne Cherry • Judy Chicago • Shirley Chisholm • Septima Clark • Mary Cleave • Hillary Rodham Clinton • Mignon Leticia Clyburn • Alice Coachman • Jacqueline Cochran • Ellie M. Cohen • Bessie Coleman • Madie Collins • Jill Ker Conway • Mary S. “Mimi” Cooper • Betsy Damon • Dr. Margaret Bryan Davis • Dorothy Day • Ada Deer • Emily Dickinson • Dorothea Dix • Marjory Stoneman Douglas • Caitlin Alexandra Dunbar • Virginia Foster Durr • Kathleen Eagan • Amelia Earhart • Sylvia Alice Earle • Sister Claretta Easter • Elizabeth Eckford • Marian W. Edelman • Gertrude B. Elion • Drew Gilpin Faust • Ilia J. Fehrer • Laura Capon Fermi • Caroline Rose Foster • Matilda Elizabeth Frelinghuysen • Pamela A. Frucci • Matilda Joslyn Gage • Felisa R. Gautier • Althea Gibson • Lois Marie Gibbs • Lillian Gilbreth • Ruth Bader Ginsburg • Mary K. Goddard • Emma Goldman • Jane Goodall • Amy Goodman • Sunshine Goodmorning • Katharine Graham • Martha Graham, Martha Wright Griffiths • Angelina Grimke • Sarah Grimke • Juana Gutierrez • Rebecca S. Halstead • Fannie Lou Hamer • Alice Hamilton • Harmony Hammond • Ann Hancock • Frances W. Harper • La Donna Harris • Dorothy Height • Lilian Hellman • Aileen Hernandez • Edna Hibel • Anita Hill • Julia Butterfly Hill • Linda M. Hiltabrand • Dolores Huerta • Mary Hultman • Martha Brookes Hutcheson • Dr. Roz Iasillo • Jovita Idar • Pam Iorio • Barbara Haney Irvine • Shirley Jackson • Mae Jemison • Mary-Harris Jones • Marietta Pierce Johnson • Victoria Johnston • Elizabeth Donnell Kay • Helen Keller • Billie Jean King • Coretta Scott King • Maxine Hong Kingston • Tsuyako Kitashima • Eryn Klosko • Yuri Kochiyama • Maggie Kuhn • Anne Bowes La Bastille • Osprey Orielle Lake • Winona LaDuke • Abbe Land • Marian V. Landingham • Dorothea Lange • Emma Lazarus • Brownie Ledbetter • Lora Ledermann • Lihua Lei • Gerda Lerner • Tania Leon • Suzanne Lewis • Queen Lili’uoakalani • Maya Lin • Belya Lockwood • Maria L .de Hernandez • Donna Lewis • Susan Love • Julietta Low • Dr. Meg Lowman • Pamela A. Frucci • Mary Lyon • Joanna Macy • Wilma Mankiller • Judy Kellogg Markowsky • Maria M. Martinez • Vilma Martinez • Sharon Rose Matola • Sonia Mazano • Cindy Marano • Barbara McClintock • Mary Eliza McDowell • Rose Marie Williams McGuire • Dr. Jeannie McLain • Margaret Mead • Donella (Dana) Meadows • Monique Mehta • Patsy Mink • Maria Mitchell • Mary Aloysius Molloy • Alicia D. Montemayor • Toni Morrison • Constance Baker Motley • Tanya Narath • Shirley Nelson • Roberta J. Nichols • Nancy S. Nordhoff • Dr. Sharon Nunes • Violet Oakley • Ellen Ochoa • Sandra Day O’Connor • Georgia O’Keeffe • Graciela Olivarez • Kitty O’Neal • Rose O’Neill • Nina Otero-Warren • Lorrie Otto • Rebecca Otto • Essie Parrish • Alice Paul • Frances Perkins • Esther Peterson • Linda Petee • Val Plumwood • Agnes Baker Pilgrim • Dr. Diana Post • Mary Pickford • Mary Taylor Previte • Leontyne “Ma” Rainey • Jeannette Rankin • Faith Ringgold • Leontyne Price • Tobey Silbert Schein Prinz • Roxanne Quimby • Amanda Quraishi • “Ma” Rainley • Jeannette Rankin • Torrey Reade • Toshi Reagon • Florence Reece • Ellen Swallow Richards • Sally Ride • Robin Roberts • Elsie Roemer • Joanelle Romero • Eleanor Roosevelt • Harilyn Rousso • Ernestine Rose • Mary Rozmajzl • Wilma Rudolph • Mary Ruthsdotter • Sacajawea • Buffy Sainte-Marie • Margaret Sanger • Maxine Lazarus Savitz • Miriam Schapiro • Rose • Tye Leung Schulzse • Carolyn The best waySchneiderman to learn M. Scott • Kate Shackford • Mary BelletoKing Sherman • Ellen be a lady is to see how K. Silbergeld • Leslie Marmon Silko • Beverly Sills • Lorna Simpson • Lillian other Smithladies • Margaret do it. Chase Smith • Sandra Smith • Jaune Quick-To-See Smith • Betty Reid Soskin • Nancy Spero • Sister Dorothy Stang, SNDdeN • Elizabeth —————— Mae• West Cady Stanton • Gertrude Stein • Gloria Steinem Marion Stoddart • Lucy Stone • Anne Sullivan • Robyn (Staup) Sweet • Kathleen C. Taylor • Anne P. Teller • Emma Tenayuca • Mary Church Terrell • Tina J. Terrell • Susette Tibbles • Laurie Tippin • Minnijean Brown Trickey • Nichole Trushell • Sojourner Truth • Mary Tsukamoto • Harriet Tubman • Yoshiko Uchida • Wilma Vaught • Lillian Wald • Madam C. J. Walker • Rebecca Walker • Alice Waters • May Petrea Theilgaard Watts • Annie Dodge Wauneka • June Claire Wayne • Ida B. Wells-Barnett • Elizabeth Coleman White • Janice S. Wiles • Frances Willard • Ann Wilson • Diane Wilson • Mary Louise Wilson • Sarah Winnemucca • Jade Snow Wong • Chien-Shiung Wu • Esther Yanai • Alice Yu • Mildred D. Zaharias

March National Women’s History Month Our History is Our Strength


Women of Teton Valley

Page A8 • March 24, 2011 • Teton Valley News

Warning By Jenny Joseph

When I am an old woman I shall wear purple With a red hat which doesn’t go, and doesn’t suit me. And I shall spend my pension on brandy and summer gloves And satin sandals, and say we’ve no money for butter. I shall sit down on the pavement when I’m tired And gobble up samples in shops and press alarm bells And run my stick along the public railings And make up for the sobriety of my youth. I shall go out in my slippers in the rain And pick flowers in other people’s gardens And learn to spit. You can wear terrible shirts and grow more fat And eat three pounds of sausages at a go Or only bread and pickle for a week And hoard pens and pencils and beermats and things in boxes. But now we must have clothes that keep us dry And pay our rent and not swear in the street And set a good example for the children. We must have friends to dinner and read the papers. But maybe I ought to practice a little now? So people who know me are not too shocked and surprised When suddenly I am old, and start to wear purple.

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The Teton Valley Scarlet O’Hatters strut their stuff. From left to right: Tricia Scalia (Queen Mum), Sarah Thiel, Janet Cain, Linda Hall, Pink Hatter Denise Anderson, Micky Briggs, Rusty Anderson, and Toni Hill. Photo courtesy of Tricia Scalia

The Scarlet O’Hatters:

Teton Valley’s chapter of the Red Hat Society Lisa Nyren TVN Staff You’ve seen them around, in big cities, in small towns, in your favorite restaurants. Ladies with those bright red hats and purple blazers, some adorned with personalized jewelry and other accessories. But who are they? What do they do? “Anything to have fun,” Teton Valley’s Red Hatters’ Queen Mum Tricia Scalia said. “We’re a friendship group for women.” Teton Valley’s Red Hatters, or Scarlet O’Hatters of the Tetons as they’ve named themselves, have been meeting and having fun for over six years. Scalia started the group when she was at a great milestone in her life. “I was just turning 50 and I love to dress up and I love to do crazy things with women,” she said. “I just didn’t want to be depressed on my 50th birthday.” The now international Red Hat Society has been a bright spot in the lives of women 50 and over since 1998. Inspired by a red hat she purchased at a thrift store and a poem, “Warning” by Jenny Joseph, RHS founder Sue Ellen Cooper gave a friend the hat and a copy of the poem, and that friend did the same for another friend, and the Red Hat Society was born.

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Now there are over 40,000 RHS chapters worldwide. There’s even a Red Hat Society Day on April 25, the anniversary of the group’s founding. “Girls just want to have fun,” Scalia said. “That’s the theme.” The Scarlet O’Hatters even have a mascot, a teddy bear that plays the Cyndi Lauper song. RHS is a group for women age 50 and over. The Scarlet O’Hatters started with just six members and have grown to over 30. Its oldest member, Rusty Anderson, is 83. As the poem and the bright attire might suggest, RHS is no ordinary club. There are no dues to pay, no rules to follow and no mandatory events. Women just gather together and do whatever suits them. The Scarlet O’Hatters have been to almost every restaurant in town, Scalia said. They’ve also taken trips to see performances at Brigham Young University and taken advantage of the annual local’s special at Spring Creek Resort in Jackson. The group also participates in service projects. Through all this socializing and recreating, these women form tight bonds. RHSers help each other through good times and bad, through joy and through grief. These women take their group seriously. Scalia attended a Red

Hat Society convention in Las Vegas where there were over 5,000 women in red hats and purple blazers. (Imagine that the next time you’re strolling down The Strip). And don’t let the red and purple uniforms fool you. Personal flair such as beads, pins, and sparkly things are encouraged, Scalia said. “It’s just having fun and chick’n it up.” Don’t have a red hat? Don’t worry. The Red Hat Society store (redhatsocietystore.com) sells hats, boas, gloves, socks, sunglasses and more, all in red and purple. Not quite 50? Not a problem. Pink Hatters are members who are under 50. They wear pink and lavender. The Scarlet O’Hatters generally meet once a month. It’s been a great way to bring together women from all walks of life, Scalia said. “We have women of all backgrounds,” she said. “From retired [women], to school teachers to nurses, it’s just a great diversity as far as backgrounds.” Any woman is welcome to join the Scarlet O’Hatters. Just call Scalia at (208) 787-2067. For more information on the Red Hat Society visit redhatsociety.com. To contact Lisa Nyren, e-mail editor@tetonvalleynews.net.


Women of Teton Valley

Teton Valley News • March 24, 2011 • Page A9

Teton Valley’s great women grab the spotlight Lisa Nyren TVN Staff

in candidates any time soon. Past presenters include Jane Linville Weins, a veterinarian; Susan Elrich, founder of the Earthfire Institute; Ruby Parsons, long-time valley resident and fire commissioner; Sally Mylar of Corner Drug; Etta Rokes, of Sue’s Roos and so many more. “A lot of people have said to me, ‘I’m so happy you’re doing this,’” said de Got Shulz. One of the most intriguing things about this group is that the presenters often share stories and accomplishments of things they’ve done that no one knows. April’s speaker, Rita Johnson, for example, is known for making leather clothing. She also has other traits, talents and experiences, de Got Shulz said,

Everyone knows Teton Valley is home to strong women, but not everyone knows who they are or how their backgrounds shaped their lives. Philbin de Got Schulz and Kathleen Martin decided to change that just over two years ago, and they continue to find women with great stories and strong ambitions. “We thought it was just too interesting a group to not be able to show them off,” de Got Shulz said of the women in the valley. In addition, when she and Martin started the group they sensed a divide between cultures, something that de Got Shulz surmised was because few people knew each other. Upcoming Group! Great Women of Teton “Check Out Valley is a group that Your Mind” meets once a month, and Improve your life by getting to know your mind in each meeting features a this experiential mindpresentation from a great fulness-based cognitive therapy group. woman in Teton Valley. Call or e-mail if interested De Got Shulz said they Christina Emde Riley, have had no trouble findLCSW ing women suitable to be 307-730-7060 rootstherapy@gmail.com these speakers, and she Office in Victor doesn’t see any decrease

including having climbed Mt. Kilimanjaro. This group and its meetings are nondenominational and welcome all people. “Men are very welcome,” de Got Shulz said. For those who haven’t attended a meeting, “they’re missing out on hearing the adventure of someone else who lives in this valley with us because all these lives are adventures,” de Got Shulz said. “[It’s about] having the opportunity to appreciate someone we haven’t met.” One of the joys of living in a small town, she said, is that you have the opportunity to really get to know people. Great Women of Teton Valley meets the first Tuesday of every month at St. Francis church in Alta. The meetings run from 6:30-8 p.m. and light refreshments are served. To contact Lisa Nyren, email editor@tetonvalleynews.net.

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Women’s Book Club Phyllis Lamken Owner, Dark Horse Books

In October 1998, Nola Bredal told Jeanne Anderson that the valley needed a women’s book group. That suggestion was the beginning of the Teton Valley Women’s Group. The group has been meeting monthly for 13 years with just the occasional cancellation due to weather. The group has hosted a variety of guest speakers. Over 120 different women have participated in the book club over the years. While the group shares a love for books, individually they represent a wide variety of reading tastes. The books, as a group are selected by consensus. Both fiction and nonfiction titles are read and discussed. Recently, the group has read the nonfiction, “Infidel” by Ayaan Hirsi Ali and the novel, “Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand” by Helen Simonson. Both books generated spirited and robust discussion, especially the books’ perspective on modern Muslims. The diversity of women at these meetings, who represent a wide spectrum of ages, occupations, backgrounds, and experiences, greatly enriches the discussion. Currently, the group meets the first Monday of every month at 7 p.m. at Dark Horse Books. The book group has an online presence on Facebook. The list of books selected by the book group is available on the Dark Horse Books blog, darkhorsebooks.wordpress.com. This is an open book club and everyone is welcome. The next meeting will be April 4 to discuss “Love in the Time of Cholera” by Gabriel Garcia Marquez.

The women who give Teton Valley a reason to smile.

Jenny Loveland, Megan Markegard, Rocia Labra

235 East Wallace Ave 354-8181

Not just man’s best friend.

Service you can bank on. Backrow – Darla Sewell, Stephanie Hopkins, Jean Hansen Sitting –Sami Soles, Darla Neeley

The women of Driggs Veterinary Clinic

Dr. Sarah, Susan, Laura, Becky, Denise, Pam, Heidi and Jan Caring for your four legged friends in Teton Valley

Driggs Veterinary Clinic 354.2212

Monday - Friday 8am-5:30pm Saturday 8am-12pm

15 North Main St. Driggs 354-2355


Page A10 • March 24, 2011 • Teton Valley News

Women of Teton Valley

Tea and paint: Callison lives life passionately

Ken Levy TVN Staff

From political activist to sensitive landscape painter, Anne Callison lives life with passion. "I'm a political animal,” she said. “I worked political campaigns most of my early life, and because I'm a taxpayer, I'm a real stickler for transparency and a good government, and I tend to speak up when I don't see it." Callison said people are "being taxed to death" today. "When taxes are as high as they are today, it is incumbent on all of us to find out how that money's being spent," she said. Callison said she was born a Democrat, but switched affiliations because of policies she found onerous during Jimmy Carter's presidency. "I'm a Republican, and I participate with the Tea Party here,"

she said. "But I participate in a band, Mac, in Tetonia, has earned Tea Party that is solely about fiscal degrees in business and urban studresponsibility and good governies with graduate work in marketing ment." and research and public policy. Callison said there are wild ele"I've done everything from being ments in every group, and "I don't a regional planner to corporate support some of the extreme sides public relations and marketing and of the Tea Party. I believe in comnonprofit marketing," she said. mon sense and good faith, honorThe Callisons came to the Teton able efforts. Valley for the first time to ski in "I'm a fiscal 1983. conservative, "We kept I'm not a liberal coming back, by any stretch and bought a of the imaginapiece of proption, and I think erty here," she there's room said. for tough love They built in society and a house in less people not Tetonia, have work[ing] as celebrated their hard as the rest 29th anniverof us." sary, and plan to She sees the retire here, she need to cost said. things all the They'll be way out from the first and start to finish. last generation An example of her family to she gave is with settle here, she Anne Callison nuclear power. said. The couple "Once that has no children, spent fuel rod is and Anne is the finished, that's where the utility cost only one of her siblings not still livstops and the government picks it ing in her native Virginia. up. That's wrong. That means that Callison paints Western landcost is shifted onto the taxpayers." scapes and landscapes from This, she said, is also where envi- Scotland — where she still has relaronmentalists go wrong, because tives — primarily in acrylics, but also they're so strident about getting rid in oils and watercolors in her studio, of coal, but they don't figure out and dabbles in photography. She the cost for all other energies. shows her work with the Teton Arts Callison, who lives with her husCouncil, where she is workshop

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coordinator, as well as in shows with art guilds in Denver, Castle Rock and Littleton, Colo. "So many things inspire me," she said. "Good friends make me happy, and we love sunsets. I'm also a pretty good cook. My husband describes most of my meals as restaurant quality." Callison said she won first place in the MD Nursery Idaho Potato Cook-off the last two years it was run. Sunset Magazine has published two of her original recipes. She also gardens incessantly, and builds rock walls. She attributes the latter to her Scottish heritage. "I have built probably 200 linear feet of Scottish stack walls at my house," she said, along with help from Roger Kaufman and his frontend loader. She grows perennials and tomatoes from seed. They built two "huge" raised beds last summer. She used to can and freeze a lot and may get back into that. The secret to growing here, she said, is creating a microclimate. She has a walkout basement with a west-facing wall that almost encloses her raised beds, which really help "until you get a freeze." She's also working on three movie scripts based around World War II and pre-war events. She's done "endless research" into various archives and museums and the Scottish connection to the war. To contact Ken Levy, email reporter3@tetonvalleynews.net.


Women of Teton Valley

Teton Valley News • March 24, 2011 • Page A11

Teton Valley Business Women

Annie Al len

Brady Swecker

Karin Bivins

Kat Plourde

Cory Carlson

Karen Jacob

t

Kris Kaminsk i

Lindsey Bennet

CityPASS Felicia Banks is the owner of Indigo Natural Healing & Massage. TVN Photo/Rachael Horne

Indigo Healing

Mar yanna Voucolo

Lisa Wagener

Rachael Horne TVN Staff

There’s no denying womens’ intuition, but sometimes they need a little help listening to their own bodies. That’s one of the benefits of massage, said Felicia Banks. Banks is one of the valley’s newest massage therapists and said a massage can bring out the goddess in all women. Staying in tune with your body helps you realize when it’s missing something or is keeping you from feeling your best. “Sometimes our body isn’t being heard,� she said. “A massage can help you with that bond to your body.� Banks said she’s had several clients who didn’t even know something was wrong until they got on the table and she started working on them. Some of the benefits she listed were the relief of muscle tension, relief of stress and balance. It also boosts confidence. “It teaches you how to dance with your own soul,� she said. Banks says massage is a good way to boost oxytocin levels. It’s the hormone that helps people relax and promotes growth and healing. It also just makes people feel good. Banks has been learning and

practicing natural medicine for about nine years, working with aromatherapy and medicinal use of plants. She was born and raised in Idaho Falls and moved to the Valley this fall. She completed schooling for massage therapy in June from the College of Massage Therapy in Blackfoot. She said she always had an interest in massage. Banks has a twin sister and she said they used to massage each other when they were younger to help them fall asleep. Banks runs her own business, Indigo Natural Healing and Massage. She makes her own lotions, sprays and candles. She offers aromatherapy massages with her own blends of essential oils. Banks said she could specialize any massage to your own body’s needs. She said she could tell by the way people react how intense or deep to go with a massage. Indigo Natural Healing is located at 535 Howard Street in Driggs. To inquire or make an appointment call (208) 360-6258.

Megan Allen

Melissa Davidson

Sloan Prissel

Stacy Mead

Rachel Cormier

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Sharon Beard

Susan Hanse

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Not pictured: Sarah Divan and Sam Schultheis

www.citypass.com • 27 Arrow Root Lane, Victor • 08.787.4300

To contact Rachael Horne email reporter2@tetonvalleynews.net

From left to right:

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Fitzgerald, Kelly Sadausckas, Megaera Quyle, Elaine Spang, Beth Vontz, Judy Baumgardner, Michelle Bodenhamer, ! Jackie Sequin, Heather Evans, Marijke " # $ % Onsrud, Kathleen Hanson

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Page A12 • March 24, 2011 • Teton Valley News

Women of Teton Valley

Jennifer Zung Photo by Ken Levy/TVN staff

Zung thrives on consensus building Ken Levy TVN Staff

As principal of Harmony Design and Engineering in Driggs, Jennifer Zung’s name is followed by a virtual alphabet soup of professional qualifications. Her email signature is followed by PE, CFM, and LEED AP. She’s a professional civil engineer registered in Idaho, Wyoming and Colorado, and a Certified Floodplain Manager, which means she’s well versed in flood-insurance programs and how to administer and manage flood plains. Zung is also a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design Accredited Professional. LEED, a program of the U.S. Green Building Council, certifies projects based on environmentallysound building practices that use energy and materials with a focus on efficiency, minimum use and maximum energy savings in their design. “The philosophy for all our development projects is to design them to integrate with our natural environment, our natural surroundings,” Zung said. “Whether our projects are going to be LEED certified or

not, we try to use the same principles.” During land-development projects — which are anything but plentiful right now — Zung and her team analyze sites to take advantage of wind or solar energy, and preserve views and locations onsite that are environmentally sensitive; such as habitat and wetlands. For example, she said, Zung worked on 100 N. Ecopark, which was a proposed pilot project for LEED for neighborhood development. Zung and her colleagues worked with an architect and incorporated areas for shared geothermal fields and oriented lots to take advantage of passive solar energy. But, as with many projects countywide, this one is on indefinite hold. She also worked on the design of the new Teton Valley Community School building in Victor, for which funds are currently being raised, she said. LEED certification won’t be sought for this project due to the added cost, but Harmony and “everyone involved is trying to make it as energy-efficient as possible,” she said, and is looking to incorporate recycled materials.

Her husband and business partner Randy Blough, a landscape architect, designs water-wise landscape and efficient irrigation systems. She and her Harmony colleagues design regional projects, including a master plan for a business park in McCall and projects in Hailey that helped them with an Idaho Department of Commerce block grant. She’s working on a Snake River project, to help develop a risk map for the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which updates hazard maps to include flood-plain hazards in addition to earthquake and mudslide hazards. “We’re doing surveys in conjunction with another engineer, “ she said, and Harmony is a sub-consultant in a joint venture known as STARR (Strategic Alliance for Risk Reduction). Harmony is also working with Teton County, Idaho doing hydraulic and hydrologic analysis on Badger Creek bridge redesign to replace bridges, and on map revisions on Teton Creek. Zung moved to the valley in 2003. She grew up in Missouri and did graduate work at Colorado State University in Fort Collins. She worked for a consulting firm there for about seven years before doing a two-year stint with the Peace Corps. She spent some time in the

Philippines before coming to the valley. “I had some friends living here, and I was looking for a smaller town than living along the front range, something a little bit slower paced,” she said. “I fell in love with the mountains and made fast friends here.” Zung is on the board of directors of Teton Valley Community Recycling and was involved with its recently-completed Trash Bash fundraiser. She and Blough helped organize the inaugural Alta Skate Race with Teton Valley Trails and Pathways, where she was the race director. Recreationally, she’s an avid skier, hiker and mountain biker. She’s also getting more involved with yoga. “Every day is a new day, and it’s kind of exciting,” she said. “You never know what’s going to happen. It’s fun to see what life brings, and welcome it all.” In her business, she relishes the opportunities to facilitate projects, especially when it comes to consensus building. “I’ve found that I really enjoy doing that, and it comes naturally to me,” she said. “It’s fun to see a project bring a community together.” To contact Ken Levy, email reporter3@tetonvalleynews.net.

We Make Everyday a Good Hair Day

Darlene Bailey, Gay Murdock, Deanne Hamilton, Rosemary Summers

354-2272

45 N. 1st E., Driggs


Women of Teton Valley

Teton Valley News • March 24, 2011 • Page A13

Back row – Denise Vostrejs, Leslie McCune (2nd grade teacher), Jill Jackson Front Row – Martha Meredyk, Vicki Ziesmer, Barbara Butler Not pictured – Angie Kincaid and Julieta Sweigert

Now enrolling for the 2011-2012 year. Grades K – 12

It's never too early for spring style (ARA) It's freezing outside and you're happily bundled up in the trendy sweaters you've just purchased for winter. So it's too soon to be thinking about spring, right? Not according to Courtney Hammonds, faculty member in fashion and retail management at The Art Institute of Atlanta-Decatur. "While winter 2011 hasn't even officially ended, we're already looking beyond it to spring and summer 2011," Hammonds says. "What can we look forward to?" Fashion is about new looks, new combinations, new takes on older trends. Spring 2011 is no different, Hammonds says. One website he particularly likes to look at for fashion trends is fashionising.com, which points to nine major trends we are sure to see. Here are some tips for this season: Biker Chic. The military look — a mainstay for the last decade — is

Teton Christian Academy

260 E. Howard Ave. Driggs • 354-8523

out. The biker look is in. You'll see the motorcycle jacket, in silver or traditional black, with silver zippers, even quilted. And, borrowing from the style, a motorcycle skirt. And don't forget motorcycle boots. The return of the Maxi Dress (yes, down to the ankles). And sheer this time around. Lots of lace. Lace this spring will be on the classic side with quality antique lace fabrics, and less of the stretch and/or allover lace look. Silhouettes of the 1950s and 1960s. The influence of "Mad Men" continues. This era's flattering full skirts and narrow waists along with the hip-hugging sheath dresses predominate. Tassels. A simple little decoration with thousands of years behind it. Remember kitten heels from the '60s? Jackie Kennedy and Coco Chanel wore them for a classy look. They're the perfect accompaniment to '50s and '60s silhouettes.

Join Christina Riley, LCSW for free, confidential women’s group support.

SEXUAL ASSAULT SURVIVORS SUPPORT GROUP Mondays 4 to 5 pm Tree of Life Counseling 164 N Main Street in Victor In the Aspen Wellness Building

This support group is designed to uplift sexual assault survivors who have experienced both past and recent victimization.

The Fine Ladies of Teton Ace Hardware

Back row: Tabi Wood, Dixie Dick, Rosalba Lazalbe, Kay Martin Front row: Belinda Hale, Mary Lou Hatch Not pictured: Sierra Furniss, Julie Smaellie, Bobbie Douglass

Teton

Hardware

120 SOUTH MAIN, DRIGGS • 208-354-2344

Learn skills for: • Mindfulness • Living Successfully with Trauma • Expanding Coping Skills • Personal Growth • Processing Grief • Moving Forward With Hope • • • •

Space is limited to 10 participants. Must be 18 or older to attend. Participation is free & confidential. All adult women are welcome to attend. For more information contact Family Safety Network at 354-8057


Page A14 • March 24, 2011 • Teton Valley News

Women of Teton Valley

Paid for by American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network

Whose side is your legislator on? BIg TOBACCO

73% Of IdAhO vOTerS Increasing the current tobacco tax by $1.25 will help relieve taxpayers of the $539 annual burden every household now pays for tobacco related health costs and keep kids from smoking. That’s why 73% of Idaho voters support it. Tobacco companies know this. That’s why they’re fighting to stop it. Call your legislators at 1-888-NOW I CAN and ask them “Whose side are you on?”

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