Park City • The bazaar of corporate-sponsored pop-up lounges dotting Main Street during the 2019 Sundance Film Festival serves up a familiar array of tech companies, beer and liquor makers, and showbiz publications. This year there’s a new player vying for attention on Main Street: a company that makes cannabidiol, or CBD, a nonpsychoactive derivative of cannabis plants. The pop-up Wellhaus lounge, sponsored by Charlotte’s Web/Stanley Brothers , offered opening-weekend festivalgoers space to sample and learn about CBD, and a gastropub featuring CBD-infused cocktails and food — including burgers, tacos and chicken wings. The lounge, which will stay open through Sunday at 412 Main, is an effort to educate people about the potential health benefits of CBD as pain reliever and epilepsy treatment, as well as helping with stress and sleeplessness. “This is not about getting high, but getting healthy,” said Josh Stanley, one of seven Stanley brothers who founded the company, based in Bo
Vatican City • The largest U.S. association of Roman Catholic nuns urged its members Monday to report any sexual abuse of religious sisters by clergy and demanded that church authorities “take action to end a culture of silence, hold abusers accountable and provide support to those abused.” The Leadership Conference of Women Religious, which represents about 80 percent of Catholic sisters in the U.S., issued a statement Monday in response to an Associated Press report about several sisters coming forward recently to denounce assaults by priests and bishops. The LCWR said it didn’t have data on incidents in the U.S. but thanked the sisters for speaking out. “We understand that reporting abuse requires courage and fortitude. However, bringing this horrific practice to light may be the only way that sexual abuse by those in positions of trust in the church community will be put to an end,” the association’s statement said. The conference has about 1,300 members in 300 orders. LCWR s
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