A monthly magazine for the region’s retirees by Target Publications
GOLDENTIMES Nov. 4, 2013 / Vol. 23, No. 11
Forever Serving Many vets return from the military but never stop serving / Page 18
E
ID INS
Senior lunch menus — Page 3
Volunteer of the month — Page 24
House Call — Page 34
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GOLDEN TIMES
INDEX: Social Security Q&A................... Page 4 Briefs .......................................... Page 5 Who am I? trivia .......................... Page 5 Meeting calendar......................... Page 6 Birthdays .................................... Page 9 Who am I? answer ......................Page 13 Sudoku ........................................Page 17 Sudoku solution ..........................Page 23 Volunteer opportunities .............. Page 24 Reader poetry ............................. Page 26 Crossword ...................................Page 30 Crossword solution .....................Page 31 Tri-State Hospital’s Diabetes Education Program
presents
National Diabetes Month 2013
Diabetes is a Family Affair
M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
TIMES GOLDEN
COORDINATOR: Peggy Hayden On the cover: The American flag located at the Grangeville Rodeo Grounds Photo by: Barry Kough of the Tribune Golden Times P.O. Box 957, Lewiston, ID 83501 goldentimes@Lmtribune.com (208) 848-2243
To advertise: contact your Tribune advertising sales representative at (208) 848-2292.
Come experience the warm caring environment. •All private apartments with a private bath •24 hour personal care nursing services and medications assistance •Emergency call pendant system •Individually climate controlled •Activities and exercise programs
Tuesday, November 5 4:00 to 5:00pm Diabetes is a challenging disease that affects the entire family in many ways. If you are living with diabetes or have a loved one with the disease, family support is very important when it comes to managing diabetes and preventing serious health problems. This informative group meeting will discuss diabetes and how it affects you and your family.
Diabetes Risk Community Support Family Support
To Attend! (Please RSVP)
Please RSVP to: Geri Cooper, RD, CDE gcooper@tsmh.org 509.758.5511 x2512
•Housekeeping •Shopping and sight seeing •Beauty/Barber shop on site •Located on the TSMH Campus
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M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
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g o l den t i me s
november senior menus monday Senior Round Table Nutrition Program serves hot lunches at noon at the Valley Community Center, 549 Fifth St. No. F, Clarkston and the Asotin United Methodist Church, 313 Second St. Suggested donation is $4 for seniors age 60 and older. Cost is $7 for nonseniors.
Lewiston Senior Nutrition Program serves hot lunches at noon at the Lewiston Community Center, 1424 Main St. and the United Methodist Church, 1213 Burrell Ave. Suggested donation is $4 for seniors age 60 and older. Cost is $5 for nonseniors.
tuesday
wednesday
7 Beef stroganoff over noodles/capri-blend vegetables/biscuit/fruit
8 Soup bar/salad bar/fruit
12 Baked chicken/gravy/ chicken rice/peas and carrots/roll/peaches
14 Baked breaded fish/ oven-roasted potatoes/ carrots/roll/fruit
15 Deluxe salad bar/fruit
19 Pork chops in applesauce/potatoes/ cauliflower/roll/fruit
21 Spaghetti/mixed vegetables/garlic bread/pears
22 Hot dog/salad bar/ fruit
26 Thanksgiving dinner with all the fixings
28
(no Clarkston delivery/Asotin closed)
5 Spaghetti/Jell-O salad/mixed vegetables/ breadsticks/pudding
6 BUFFET (starts at 11:30 a.m.): Old-fashioned fried chicken
11
12 Chicken-fried steak/ mashed potatoes/gravy/ green beans/salad/biscuit
13 BUFFET (starts at 11:30 a.m.): Roast beef
18 German sausage/kraut/ potatoes/mixed vegetables/ salad/roll/cookie
19 Porcupine meatballs/ rice/corn/Jell-O salad/roll
20 BUFFET (starts at 11:30 a.m.): Italian foods
25 Baked ham/scalloped potato/applesauce/peas/ cornbread
26 Beef stroganoff/ carrots/coleslaw/ muffin/fruit
27 BUFFET (starts at 11:30 a.m.): Thanksgiving dinner
Moscow Senior Nutrition Program serves lunch at noon in the Great Room of the 1912 Center, 412 E. Third St. Suggested donation is $4 for seniors age 60 and older. Cost is $6 for nonseniors. Salad bar is available at 11:30 a.m. Soup and dessert is available at each service.
J-K Senior Meals serves meals at noon at 104 South Sixth St., Kendrick. Dessert is served both days. Suggested donation is $3 for people age 60 and older, and $5 for those younger than 60; Children younger than 6 years eat for free.
The next Golden Times will publish Dec. 2
friday
5 Chicken-fried steak/ mashed potatoes/gravy/ broccoli/roll/fruit
4 Meatloaf/mashed potatoes/gravy/carrots/ salad/roll CLOSED FOR VETERANS DAY
thursday
CLOSED FOR 29 CLOSED FOR THANKSGIVING THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY HOLIDAY
5 Homemade meatloaf/ mashed potatoes/ vegetable
7 Beef liver or peppersteak/grilled onions/ potato/vegetable
12 Pollack/potato/ vegetable
14 Hamburgers/french fries/vegetable
19 Sweet and sour meatballs/rice/vegetable
21 Roast Turkey/ dressing/vegetable
26 Fried chicken/ potatoes/gravy/vegetable
28
CLOSED FOR THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY
6 Swedish meatballs/rice/ coleslaw/pears/cookies
8 Baked fish/garlic pota-
13 Hamburgers/french fries/macaroni salad/fruit cocktail/cupcakes
15 Chicken and dumplings/baked squash/fruit salad/chocolate mousse
20 Thanksgiving dinner with all the fixings
22 Barbecue pork on a hoagie/fresh baby carrots/green salad/German Chocolate cake
27
29
CLOSED FOR THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY
Everyone has a story. David Johnson proves it every Friday. In the Tribune.
toes/broccoli/cauliflower/ green salad/peach mousse
CLOSED FOR THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY
Have a news tip? Let us know by emailing city@lmtribune.com
golden times
Thought for the month “Good management consists in showing average people how to do the work of superior people.” — John D. Rockefeller
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MOND A Y, NO V EM B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
Social Security Q&A McClatchy-Tribune News Service
Q: Are Social Security numbers reassigned after a person dies? A: No. We do not reassign Social Security numbers. In all, we have assigned more than 460 million Social Security numbers. Each year we assign about 5.5 million new numbers. There are over one billion combinations of the nine-digit Social Security number. As a result, the current system has enough new numbers to last for several more generations. ——— Q: Is it true that if you have low income you can get help paying your Medicare premiums? A: Yes. If your income and resources are limited, your state may be able to help with your Medicare Part B premium,
deductibles, and coinsurance amounts. State rules vary on the income and resources that apply. Contact your State or local medical assistance, social services, or welfare office, or call the Medicare hotline, (800) 633-4227, and ask about the Medicare Savings Programs. If you have limited income and resources, you also may be able to get Extra Help paying for prescription drug coverage under Medicare Part D. Learn more at www. socialsecurity.gov/prescriptionhelp. Also, see our publication, Medicare, at www. socialsecurity.gov/pubs. Type the title of the publication in the publication search box on the left side of the page. ——— Q: I know I am eligible to apply for disability benefits based on my earnings record. But how does Social Security decide whether I am disabled?
A: Overall, we use a fivestep evaluation process to decide whether you are disabled. The process considers any current work activity you are doing. It also considers the severity of your medical condition and how it affects your ability to work. To be found disabled: l You must be unable to do work you did before you became disabled and we must decide you cannot adjust to other work because of your medical condition. l Your disability must last, or be expected to last, for at least one year or to result in death. Social Security pays only for total disability. We do not pay benefits for partial or shortterm disability. For more infor-
4 See social security, page 14
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M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
Briefs
Drivers Safety classes being held
20 at Jawbone Flats Cafe, 902 Sixth St., Clarkston.
Fundraiser planned for J-K meal site A fundraiser for the JuliaettaKendrick Senior Meal Site is taking place from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Nov. 16 at the meal site. The event is a spaghetti feed, pie and craft fair. There will be 11 tables available for rent by vendors. Cost is $10 per table. There will also be a raffle with five drawings for three turkeys and two hams. Raffle tickets are $2 each or five for $8. Drawings will be at 4 p.m. and you do not have to be present to win. The fair will have live entertainment from noon to 4 p.m. provided by Neal Stenerson, Steve Gleason and Bluegrass Friends. Spaghetti feed cost is $5 per adult and $3 per child younger than 12. Menu includes spaghetti, green beans and garlic bread. The center is also in need of donated pies.
Elvedalen Lodge will have potluck The heritage program given during the Sons of Norway Elvedalen Lodge No. 129 will be on Stave churches. The meeting will begin with a potluck meal at noon followed by a short business meeting Nov. 16 at Valley Community Center, 549 Fifth St., Clarkston. The group is for those of Scandinavian descent or those interested in the culture. More information about the group and its meetings is available by calling (208) 798-8617 or (208) 743-2626.
at noon Nov. 27. Membership dues for 2014 are currently being accepted. The center’s board will meet at 9 a.m. Nov. 19. Foot care is being offered at 9 a.m. Wednesday at the center. The twice-weekly dances with live music provided by The Heustis Kountry Band is from 7 to 9 p.m. each Tuesday and Thursday. Cost is $4 per person.
ter in Clarkston will be closed Nov. 28 and 29 for the Thanksgiving holiday. The board for the center will meet at 9 a.m. Nov. 13. Foot care is being offered Mondays at the center by appointment. Appointments can be made by calling (509) 7582355. Blood pressure checks are done at 11:30 a.m. each Center will close Thursday. Fitness classes are offered at the center from for holiday 10:15 to 11:15 a.m. each TuesThe Valley Community Cen- day and Thursday.
You have our Promise Best price on simple cremation.
Thanksgiving Day lunch being offered The Sixth Street Senior Center will have a free Thanksgiving meal at noon Nov. 28 at the center. There will also be a pancake feed at noon Nov. 13 at the center. Cost is $4. The monthly potluck with meat furnished by Emeritus at Juniper Meadows is
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There are two AARP Drivers Safety Classes in November. In Lewiston there will be a two-day class from 1 to 5 p.m. Nov. 13 and from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Nov. 14 at CrossPoint Alliance Church, 1330 Powers Ave., Lewiston. Registration for this class can be completed by calling Kay Gaines at (208) 816-3450. A second class will also be a two-day class from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Nov. 18 and 19 at Gritman Medical Center, 700 S. Main St., Moscow. Registration for this class can be completed by calling Elaine Broyles at (208) 883-8612. The cost for each class is $12 for AARP members and $14 for nonmembers. The classes are designed for those age 50 and older but are open to all ages and may result in a point reduction on driver’s licenses and/or insurance discounts.
5
GOLDEN TIMES
Jerry Bartlow 208-743-9464
NARFE to learn about Medicare Penny Wilhelm, with Community Action Partnership, will give a program on detecting and reporting Medicare fraud during the National Active and Retired Federal Employees’ November meeting. The meeting is at noon Nov.
WHO AM I? I was born Nov. 4, 1916, in Missouri and died July 17, 2009, at the age of 92, in New York City. I was an anchor and reported on every important event in U.S. history between 1937 and 1981. I was known as “the most trusted man in America.” My wife died in 2005 after more than 60 years of marriage. Answer on Page 13
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GOLDEN TIMES
M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
Monthly meeting calendar
A monthly magazine for the region’s retirees by Target Publications
Goldentimes
Find
Nov. 4, 2013 / Vol. 23, No. 11
Golden Times online at
Forever Serving Many vets return from the military but never stop serving / Page 18
IDE
INS
Senior lunch menus — Page 3
Volunteer of the month — Page 24
House Call — Page 34
LMTribune.com/special_sections/
Malcom’s Brower-Wann
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•Serving Lewis-Clark region for 87 years
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•Pre-arranged funeral plans are guaranteed •Modern comfortable facility with up-to-date Audio/Video
NOV. 11: Twin City Square and Round Dance Club, board meeting, 7 p.m., 2130 Fifth Ave., Clarkston. NOV. 13: Valley Community Center, general board meeting, 9 a.m., 549 Fifth St., Clarkston.
Groups and organizations can submit information, pertaining to seniors in the region, to be published in Golden Times monthly magazine. All submissions are subject to space availability and editing. Submissions should be emailed to: goldentimes@lmtribune.com or mailed to: Target Publications P.O. Box 957 Lewiston, ID 83501 Information for December’s issue must be recieved by Nov. 18 to be considered. Questions about submitting information can be sent via email or by calling (208) 848-2243.
NOV. 16: Sons of Norway Elvedalen Lodge No. 129, noon, Valley Community Center, 549 Fifth St., Clarkston. NOV. 19: Sixth Street Senior Center, board meeting, 9 a.m., 832 Sixth St., Clarkston. NOV. 19: Retired Educators of North Central Idaho, 11:30 a.m., Red Lion, 621 21st St., Lewiston. NOV. 20: National Active and Retired Federal Employees, noon, Jawbone Flats Cafe, 902 Sixth St., Clarkston. NOV. 25: Seaport Quilters, 6 p.m., 549 Fifth St., Clarkston. If you would like to have your group or club meetings included in this monthly calendar send complete information to goldentimes@Lmtribune. com or Golden Times, P.O. Box 957, Lewiston, ID 83501. You can call (208) 848-2243 with any questions.
Serenity Place is Lewiston’s Premiere Assisted Living Facility
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M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
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g o l den t i me s
New research suggests numbers with Alzheimer’s may not be increasing By Susan Reimer
The Baltimore Sun
likely to blow up Medicare, older population increases. A couple of new studies too. However, it is possible we from England and Denmark were jumping to the wrong suggest the numbers can be conclusion: The number of those affected would continue 4 See Alzheimer’s, page 8 to increase as the size of the
We Work for You, Right Here in the Valley
743-2471
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I don’t know if you remember, but we have been panicking lately about predictions an epidemic of dementia is waiting to sweep through an aging U.S. population, bankrupting families as well as the health care system. About 5.4 million Americans — 1 in 9 older than age 65 — are affected by Alzheimer’s, the most common form of dementia, and because we are living longer and there are a lot of baby boomers, that number was expected to double or triple by 2050, according to various estimates. A study by the Alzheimer’s Association estimates the disease costs about $57,000 a year per patient and most of that must be paid by the family. Because those suffering from the disease are most often 65 or older, its costs are
Birthday submissions
1-800-900-2471
All work done by professional memorialists in our own local plant. 1603 Main Street, Lewiston, Idaho 83501
Birthdays starting at 70, and every year after, will be accepted for publication in Golden Times in the month of the birthday only. The limit for each submission is 200 words. Photographs are welcome. Birthday submissions must include the name and phone number of the person submitting information. If you would like your photo returned, please include a self-addressed, stamped envelope. If you have questions about submitting a birthday, please call (208) 848-2243. Mailed information may be sent to: Golden Times, P.O. Box 957, Lewiston, ID 83501; emailed submissions should be sent to goldentimes@lmtribune.com. December birthdays must be received by 5 p.m. Nov. 18.
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golden times
4 Alzheimer’s, continued from page 7 expected to retreat as people adopt healthier lifestyles and acquire more education. And another study, in France, suggests those who delay retirement — staying socially engaged and mentally
sharp longer — are also at less risk of dementia. Proof that if you don’t use it, you will lose it, perhaps. There are some skeptics, of course. Maybe we need to move to France or the British Isles if we want to avoid dementia, because obesity is epidemic in this country, and the research suggested controlling blood pressure and choles-
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terol — two of the casualties of unhealthy eating — were instrumental in lowering the risk by reducing the incidence of mini-strokes or vascular disease in the brain. The same kinds of studies are needed in America to test the trend, experts say. But it seems the assumption that each generation would be at the same risk of dementia may not hold up. It was a study by the RAND Corp., based on the calculation the same percentage of the population would continue to be affected, that concluded the number of dementia patients would double in the next 30 years as boomers aged. However, a study of people older than 65 in England and Wales, published this week in The Lancet, showed the rates of dementia had dropped by
MOND A Y, NO V EM B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3 an astonishing 25 percent during the past two decades, from 8.3 percent to 6.2 percent. And in Denmark, people in their 90s who were given a standardized test in 2010 scored much better than those 90-year-olds who had been tested a decade ago, and the percentage of those showing signs of severe impairment dropped, too. It may be too late for those of us who came late to the game of healthy eating, exercise and mental gymnastics as a way to keep the brain healthy, but it bodes well for future generations, who can learn from our poor example. Those principles are taking better hold among our children and their children. Meanwhile, the French study — so credible because the French keep meticulous
health records, and the sample was of more than 420,000 people — found that for each additional year of work, the risk of getting dementia was reduced by 3.2 percent. For example, someone who retired at 65 had about a 15 percent lower risk of dementia than someone who retired at 60. This research adds credence to the new notion of retirement — one spent in a kind of second career that includes mental challenges, social engagement and physical activity. This is heartening news because the specter of dementia is particularly harrowing. That we could, in effect, forget ourselves is a cruel last trick played by the mysterious and powerful brain.
IN HONOR OF VETERANS EVERYWHERE THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE!
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Emeritus Senior Living Emeritus is one of the largest and most experienced providers of assisted living throughout the United States and Canada. Juniper Meadows brings that level of care to the Lewiston Valley. We look forward to offering families and prospective residents with a new lifestyle and living options that are laden with compassionate care and attention to daily details. We feature 82 apartments, onsite physical therapy, a beauty shop, activities, free parking and much, much more. Call us today to learn more about the benefits of assisted living for your loved one. Choosing assisted living at an Emeritus Senior Living community will actually give your loved one greater independence. You will gain peace of mind knowing that they are nearby in a safe and comfortable senior living community. Call us today to learn more about the benefits of assisted living for your loved one. We will be glad to arrange a private tour experience for you.
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M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
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GOLDEN TIMES
BIRTHDAYS NOV. 6 ELDORA WEEKS
NOV. 7
IRENE UPTMOR
Eldora Weeks of Moscow will celebrate her 88th birthday on Wednesday. She was born Nov. 6, 1925, on Little Bear Ridge, near Troy, to Ernest and Anna Bovencamp. Weeks was the only girl, with three brothers. She attended school at Yellow Rose Schoolhouse on Little Bear Ridge before going to school in Troy. She and Myrel Weeks were married June 3, 1944, and raised two sons. In their retirement, they
enjoyed spending time with their children and grandchildren, as well as traveling the western states from Alaska to Arizona. They were married for nearly 65 years when her husband died in 2009. Weeks has seven grandchildren, 12 great-grandchildren and two great-greatgrandchildren. She enjoys visiting with family and friends. Weeks also likes to listen to the Old Time Fiddlers and other visitors at Good Samaritan Village.
JOHN Q. MOXLEY
Irene Uptmor of Lewiston will turn 99 years old on Wednesday. She was born Nov. 6, 1914, to Herman and Mary Uptmor at Keuterville. Uptmor attended elementary school in Keuterville and high school at St. Gertrude’s Academy in Cottonwood. She and William (Bill) Uptmor were married on Sept. 4, 1934. The couple
L e w i s t o n Tr i b u n e
lived for many years near Keuterville until moving to Boise where they owned and operated a service station. They retired to Lewiston in 1972 and her husband died in 1982. Uptmor has seven children, 16 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren. She used to enjoy playing cards, and continues to enjoy visiting with family and friends.
Tribune Classifieds Work! Call 746-4ADS
John Q. Moxley of Peck will turn 87 on Thursday. Moxley lived in Lewiston for 44 years before marrying Carolyn Fuhrman in 1971 and moving to the Clearwater Valley. He did many things before he retired as a beekeeper in 1999. Moxley’s hobby is playing pinochle evey Saturday evening at the Orofino Senior Center.
The Trib. Have coffee with us.
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golden times
MOND A Y, NO V EM B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
Nov. 9
Nov. 12
Kraig Schlottman
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Committee for 30 years. The couple went to most of the school sporting events while their children and grandchildren competed. They also played golf for a number of years. They have two children and four grandchildren. Ill health has caused Schlottman to be confined at home.
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Kraig Schlottman they were married. of Grangeville The couple moved to will turn 80 on Grangeville in 1959 Saturday. and to Lewiston He was born in in 1960. In 1962, Weiser, Idaho, they moved back to to Alf and Gladys Grangeville. Schlottman on Nov. Schlottman 9, 1933. worked for the Schlottman gradFarmers Home uated from high Administration for school in Fruitland, 32 years. Idaho. In school he met He was a member of the Beverly Dennett and later Grangeville Border Days
Got an opinion on a timely issue? Vote in the Tribune’s weekly online poll. Go to www.lmtribune.com and let your voice be heard.
Anna J. Layes of Culdesac will turn 96 on Nov. 12. She was born in 1917 at Park Hill Hospital (now Providence Sacred Heart Hospital) in Spokane to Joseph and Myrtle Hall. Layes was raised on a small farm outside of Nezperce and attended Mount Vale, a oneroom schoolhouse, through the eighth grade. She graduated from Nezperce High School in 1936. Her and Edward Layes were married in 1940, and lived in Spalding for nearly 20 years before moving to Mission Creek Valley, near Culdesac, in 1960. The couple had six
sons, one of whom died. The couple were married nearly 60 years when her husband died in 1998. Layes has 11 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. She stays busy with sewing, baking, watching game shows on TV, going to card parties and dancing at least once a week at the Sixth Street Senior Center in Clarkston. Layes has devoted her life to God and thanks him every day for all of her blessings — long life and great health. She can be quoted as telling everyone she lives “without an ache or pain.”
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M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
NOV. 13
NOV. 16
JOHN LAGERQUIST
JOSEPH A. SCHMIDT
Gertrude White Ring of Orofino will turn 94 on Nov. 12. She was born Nov. 12, 1919, at Teaken, Idaho, and received her schooling at Cavendish. Ring moved to Orofino in 1939 and had various jobs before going to work at the Corner Store (now the Glenwood IGA), where she continued to work for 24 years. She and Sturlie White of Fraser were married in 1943. The couple had one daughter. In 1969, she married Carl Ring. He died in 1973. Ring enjoys going to the Orofino Senior Center meal site twice a week and visiting with friends.
John Lagerquist of Orofino will turn 81 on Nov. 13. He was born in Asheville, N.C., in 1932 and moved to Redlands, Calif., in 1945. Lagerquist married his wife Bobbi in 1955 and they have two children. He served three tours overseas with the Department of Defense; fi rst in Vietnam, then in Saudia Arabia and finally in Italy. Lagerquist and his wife moved to Orofino in 1990. He’s a member of National Active and Retired Federal Employees, the hospital auxiliary, Ascension Lutheran Church and volunteers whenever needed.
Joseph A. Schmidt of Clarkston will turn 94 on Nov. 16. He was born on the family farm in Greencreek in 1919. Schmidt was raised by his grandparents after the death of his parents. He enlisted in the U.S. Army on Dec. 5, 1942, and served in the 14th Armored Division. Schmidt and Agnes Lustig were married on Feb. 17, 1944, while he was on furlough. After receiving a Bronze Star, he was discharged in 1945. The couple moved to Clarkston and he worked as a general contractor until
RUTH BOSSERMAN Ruth Bosserman of Clarkston will celebrate her 85th birthday on Nov. 20. She was born in Pr i n c e t o n in 1928 and grew up in Clarkston. She and Lloyd J. Bosserman were married on June 18, 1950. They were married for 60 years. He died on July 30, 2010. Bosserman graduated from Lewis-Clark Normal School with a degree in education. She taught at Parkway Elementary School in Clarkston for 18 years before retiring to spend time traveling with her husband. She is an active member of P.E.O., Chapter AS, and the Clarkston First Christian Church. Bosserman enjoys volunteering, playing violin, spending time with family and friends, and traveling. She has three daughters, five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.
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retiring in 1986. the Elks and Moose Schmidt has been lodges, and a founda member of the er of Pautler Senior Knights of Columbus Center (now Valley for 60-plus years and Community Center). held all the offices His wife died of the local council. Aug. 9, 2005, and He is also a member a daughter died in of Holy Family Parish 2004. where he served on Schmidt has seven many boards and children, 22 grandcommittees. children and 35 Schmidt is also a member of great-grandchildren.
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GOLDEN TIMES
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Nov. 24
Nov. 27
Clarence Taylor Clarence Taylor of Clarkston will celebrate his 90th birthday with an open house from 1 to 3 p.m. Nov. 24 at Sunset Heights Clubhouse, 2115 Sixth Ave., Clarkston. He was born on Nov. 24,
1923, to Bert and Emma Taylor in Promise, Ore. The family moved to Asotin in 1935. Taylor married Betty Greer On Dec. 31, 1943, and the couple will celebrate their
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Happy Veterans Day Nov. 11
Nov. 28
Helen Vernon
Pauline Brosa
Helen Vernon of Orofino will turn 79 on Nov. 27. She was born in 1934 at Orofino to Beulah and Iver Pederson. She married Jim Vernon. He died June 12, 1983. In July, she received her 50-year jewel from the Bluebell Rebekah Lodge No. 72 and serves as noble grand of her lodge. Vernon volunteers twice a week at the Orofino Senior Center meal site and helps at the Clearwater Health and Rehabilitation Center. She enjoys playing bingo and visiting Brookside Landing. Her hobbies include music and dancing.
Pauline (Polly) Brosa of Clarkston will celebrate her 80th birthday on Thanksgiving Day with her family. She was born Nov. 28, 1933, in Fairfield, I d a h o , where she grew up and attended school. She married Harlan Brosa in 1954 at Pullman. Brosa worked for the Pullman School District and Washington State University until she retired in 1990, and moved to Clarkston. Her hobbies include golf, bowling and playing cards.
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Nov. 28 Jeanette McConnell Jeanette McConnell of Clarkston will turn 94 on Nov. 28. She was born in 1919 to Bert and Ella Lewis in the Yakima Valley. After high school, McConnell worked for Reeds Millenary in Yakima and later in California. She met Carl McConnell in spring 1940. He was a pitcher for the Yakima Pippins and worked for UPRR in Pocatello. It was love at first sight and they married a year later. They made their home in Pocatello where they raised their two daughters. McConnell was active in the Methodist church, WSCS, Protestant Women of Pocatello, PTA, Eastern Star and AXO Mother’s Club.
Nov. 29 Robert Mansfield
She enjoyed decorating, and her home and holiday tables were always beautiful. McConnell began oil painting in her 50s and became quite accomplished. In her younger years, she played golf and never turned down a chance to play bridge. Since her husband died in 2001, she has lived in Pullman, Asotin and Clarkston, and for the last six years she has been a happy, wellloved resident at Riverview Residential Care. McConnell has two grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. She has a beautiful attitude about life, and shares love and wisdom with all who know her.
Robert (Bob) Mansfield of Lewiston will celebrate his 94th birthday on Nov. 29. He was born in Milwaukee and graduated from high school there in 1938. Mansfield served as a radarman on aircraft carriers in the South Pacific during World War II. After a number of years and moves, he and his family settled in Lewiston in 1971 and he went to work for the Lewiston Morning Tribune. He retired from there in 1983.
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golden times
Caregivers may live longer
4 Social security, continued from page 4
Nov. 29 Cuma M. Johnson
mation, read out publication Disability Benefits, by visiting www.socialsecurity.gov/pubs and typing the title of the publication in the search box on the left side of the page. ——— Q: If I go back to work, will I automatically lose my Social Security disability benefits? A: No, Social Security has several work incentive programs to help people who want to work. You may be able to receive monthly benefits and continue your health care coverage during a trial work period. For information about Social Security’s work incentives and how they can help you return to work, you should: l Visit our special work site at www.socialsecurity.gov/ D. Olson L.D. - 47 Years Experience work. l See the Red Book on work incentives at www.socialsec urity.gov/redbook. l Check out our publications at www.socialsecurity.gov/pubs • The best of material & workmanship and type “work” in the search • Ask about our Guarantee box.
Cuma M. Johnson of Lewiston will celebrate her 84th birthday on Nov. 29. She was born in 1929, at Leadville, Ark. As a young girl she worked with her father in various orchards. Her family moved to Yakima. Later she moved to Spokane until finally settling in Lewiston where she worked for Opportunities Unlimited. In her retirement years, Johnson has enjoyed her plants and morning walks.
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This column was prepared by the Social SecurityAdministration. Social Security can be contacted toll-free at (800) 772-1213 (TTY [800] 325-0778).
By Meredith Cohn The Baltimore Sun
Caring for a chronically ill or disabled family member has long been associated with stress, but a new study suggests the practice gives those caregivers a survival advantage. A study of 3,000 family caregivers showed no increase in health risk and a nine-month increase in life expectancy during the study’s six-year period. “Taking care of a chronically ill person in your family is often associated with stress, and caregiving has been previously linked to increased mortality rates,” said David L. Roth, director of the Johns Hopkins University Center on Aging and Health, and a study author, in a statement. “Our study provides important new information on the issue of whether informal family caregiving responsibilities
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are associated with higher or lower mortality rates as suggested by multiple conflicting previous studies.” For the results, published in the American Journal of Epidemiology, Roth said researchers looked at caregivers from a large stroke study to see if they had differences in rates of death from all causes during a sixyear period compared with non-caregivers that were matched with using common variables such as demographics, health history and health behaviors. Roth said, many caregivers had enhanced self-esteem and received gratitude from their care recipients. “Thus, when caregiving is done willingly, at manageable levels and with individuals who are capable of expressing gratitude, it is reasonable to expect health
4 See Caregivers, page 17
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Home sharing becomes an option for seniors By Vikki Ortiz Healy Chicago Tribune
dential neighborhoods. What began as a one-house experiment in Lombard has grown to include houses in Naperville, Downers Grove and Elmhurst, Ill., where the seniors get three prepared meals a day and medicine reminders from a live-in house manager. But in every other way, the home-share residents are com-
4 See hoME SHARING, page 16
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Bill Kelly, 64, gives Jackie Kindl, 81, a hug at lunch in Lombard, Ill. Self-sufficient seniors share a house in a residential neighborhood.
CHICAGO — The roommates share bathrooms and have each other’s shower times memorized. They fold each other’s laundry when someone leaves it in the dryer too long. They play cards together in the afternoon and watch “Dancing with the Stars” together at night. And they ride along in the ambulance when one takes a bad fall. It’s a living arrangement none of the seniors imagined for themselves when they were young, married and raising families in their own suburban homes. But time, age and circumstances led the five roommates — two men, three women ranging from ages 64 to 98 years old — to the red brick house in suburban Lombard, Ill. There, next door to a young family with a swing set and
across the street from a high school. The seniors share a sprawling ranch as part of a Wheaton, Ill., non-profit organization’s mission to bring a unique housing option to the Chicago area’s elderly population, which is expected to double by 2040, officials said. For the last three decades, Senior Home Sharing has placed seniors who are self-sufficient but in search of company into homes nestled on typical resi-
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home-share residents are completely independent and typical roommates, sharing living spaces, granola bars and, in Lombard, even a vegetable garden in the backyard. “I grew up in a family of seven and two parents, and this is like home again,� said Bill Kelly, 64, who moved into the Lombard home a year ago and takes daily walks to pick up litter and greet the rest of the residents on the block. “I’m getting to know the neighborhood. I meet their children. I pet their dogs.� Advocates for the aging say the housing shares, which officials hope to expand to other parts of the Chicago area in
upcoming years, offer a novel and important option for the elderly. “People are getting older in communities that were never really meant for older people,� said Kathleen Cagney, an associate professor of sociology and health studies at the University of Chicago. “Anything that is innovative from a design standpoint would be most welcome.� After Jackie Kindl’s husband died, her five children worried about her. She had moved in with one of her daughters but spent much of her time alone. So when a family friend shared information about the home shares, Kindl’s children knew it would be a good fit. “She was turned off by a lot of places because they were filled with wheelchairs and
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tion’s budget is covered by foundation grants, private donors and local government allocations, while the remaining two-thirds is paid for by the residents, about half of whom receive some public aid, Gustafson said. “As more and more seniors are with us, many of whom are outliving their resources, we will need to find new ways to offer housing choices,â€? said Gustafson. “We’re trying to fill a niche between your typical independent living place and the assisted living kind of situation.â€? Claudia Taylor, who has been the house manager at the Lombard home for 30 years, said outside of scheduling designated days for the washer and dryer, the seniors don’t need many rules to keep the house running smoothly. Each resident’s room has a TV, but the seniors gather on their own in the living area to watch “All in the Familyâ€? reruns together. They set and clear the table for meals, and know to pick up their own mess around common areas. “It’s voluntary and I have a democracy here,â€? Taylor said. Residents live in the housing shares an average of 3½ years. Most of the time, it becomes clear when the senior is in need of more assistance than the unlicensed housing shares are able to provide. When that happens, management works with the resident and family to find a new residence.
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the four west suburban home shares. They are among more than 300 seniors who have lived in housing the program has provided since 1983. Most of them hear of the home shares by word of mouth, or through fliers at local rehabilitation centers. Some residents are still working, some are gone all day playing golf, others stay home and keep mostly to themselves. Residents come and go as they please and can have overnight guests with approval from housemates. The organization’s managers try to take personalities into account when they interview and place the seniors into the shares. But they note that it’s easier to navigate disagreements as they happen rather than to plan for them in advance. “We’ve got some night owls who stay up to all hours. At one house, two people sleep until mid-afternoon,� Gustafson said. “There’s the good times and there’s the bumpy times. But overall it’s a great place to get to know new people and have great social interactions.� Rents in the housing shares range from $1,090 to $1,900 and cover a private bedroom in the house, food, utilities and cleaning. The live-in house manager does all the grocery shopping and makes a resident’s favorite meal on his or her birthday — if the resident isn’t keeping age a secret. One-third of the organiza-
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walkers, and she didn’t want to feel old,� said Holly Johnson, Kindl’s daughter. Today, Kindl, 85, occupies the master bedroom of the Lombard house, where her dresser is lined with framed family photos. At mealtime, fellow resident, Mary Duprey, instinctively leans over to cut Kindl’s beef ribs before the seniors dig into the meat, corn, peas and cod. Duprey, 80, tells her housemates about the time she met “Rat Pack� members Joey Bishop, Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin at The Sands in Las Vegas. She refused Martin’s autograph because she didn’t like his reputation with women. “I was a young girl at the time. I was stupid,� Duprey said, over her roommates’ laughs. “You didn’t know any better,� Kindl said. Jessie Joniak, 98, talks about her favorite soap opera, which she’s been watching for decades: “The Young and the Restless.� “We’re the old and the restless,� Kelly shoots back, prompting laughs again. These types of interactions are precisely what Senior Home Sharing founder Mary Eleanor Wall had in mind when she and a board of directors used Community Development Block Grant funds to begin the nonprofit organization and purchase the first home, said Wendell Gustafson, the organization’s executive director. Today, 27 seniors live in
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4 home sharing, continued from page 15
MOND A Y, NO V EM B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
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Technology improving the odds for osteoporosis patients
S u d o k u Beginner Level:
Solution, page 23
By Keri Janton
The Atlanta JournalConstitution
The older we get, the greater our risk of developing osteoporosis becomes. The fragile bone disease affects about 9 million Americans. Experts from the National Osteoporosis Foundation predict it will be responsible for approximately 3 million fractures by 2025. The good news is there are several innovative options aimed at improving the effects of osteoporosis and one treatment that may someday prevent the disease. Integrated outcomes network: After watching his grandmother struggle for years with osteoporosis, Dr. Christopher Recknor decided to dedicate his career to the disease. As medical director of United Osteoporosis Centers
in Gainesville, Ga., he has tracked patients’ fractures since 2007 and, combining that information with other data, created the Integrated Outcomes Network, or ION, a computer software program that assesses each patient’s risk of fracture. “There are lots of seniors who are trying to be very functional and active,” Recknor said. “The issue for the physician is to establish whether or not the patient is safe in being functional and active. We’ve shown that we can measure safety and predict fracture based upon that.” Since launching ION three years ago, Recknor said the refracture rate under his care has dropped from 14 percent to 3 percent, well below the national average.
4 See Osteoporosis, page 21
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MOND A Y, NO V EM B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
A life of service: first to country, then community For many veterans service is a lifetime commitment “I feel the guy deserves it,” Gray said. The Marine Corps League provides this free service for any veteran, not just those who have served in the Marines. They are one of a few organizations to offer a graveside service that honors veterans and their families. “It’s kind of hard when we do someTribune/Steve Hanks one we know. We’ve A dedication ceremony for a new flag and pole at the Lewiston got some tough men, Red Lobster. The colors were unfurled, hoisted up the pole and but we see a lot of saluted by members of the American Legion and Auxiliary, Veter- damp eyes,” Gray ans of Foreign Wars, the Disabled American Veterans and Auxil- said. Volunteering with iary, the Fleet Reserve, the Marine Corps League, the retirees of the Marine Corps the 148th National Guard, Scottish American Military Society, the League is not all Nez Perce Tribe veterans, the Idaho State Veterans Home and the somber. Through volunteering, Gray Boy Scouts of America. has become good at blackjack — a group By Michelle Schmidt of Marine Corps League volunteers play regularly at Target Publications the Idaho State Veterans Home. The men at the home enjoy it so much that, more often than not, they are sitting at the tables, ready to Veterans have done their part to serve our counplay before volunteers even arrive. And their enthusitry. But for many area vets, serving doesn’t end with asm for the game doesn’t end there. retirement. “It’s kind of comical sometimes,” Gray said, with a A good number of them serve in one or more of laugh. the several area organizations that exist to support Gray joined the Marine Corps League 10 years ago. veterans and their famiHe has served as detachment commandant for five lies. Their impact — both years and is in his first year as commandant for the on fellow veterans and the state of Idaho. His time in the service has influenced community as a whole — is his time serving outside of it. diverse and widespread. “I’m a Vietnam vet,” he said. Then he paused. What Ron Gray sat at his kitchen table when trumpets was unspoken in that moment communicated what words could not. “I always thought a vet deserved suddenly sounded Reveille. It was his cellphone ringing. better than that.” And by serving local veterans, he’s been able to “It’s probably for a funeral,” he said, excusing himself give them something better. Service is a word veterans take seriously, as is while he took the call. evident at organizations like the Veterans of Foreign After he returned to the Wars. conversation, he explained It was just before noon at the VFW Hall in when he first joined the Ron Gray Clarkston and the coffee had just been put away. U.S. Marine Corps League, The cups were stacked nicely alongside the packets they were performing an of sugar and creamer and there was no trace of the honor guard ceremony at a doughnuts that were out earlier. graveside service once a month. Now, 10 years later, The hall is open Monday, Wednesday and Friday they’re doing about two ceremonies a week. The increase, he believes, is due to the reputation the mornings from 8 a.m. until noon. Some days there are several members who gather for coffee, other group has garnered for being professional. Gray and days are quieter. Some days the conversation is light his colleagues take their service seriously and refuse to and other times it takes a more serious turn. carry out the ceremony in a casual or sloppy manner.
With a listening ear and gentle demeanor, Gus Budach has earned the confidence of his peers. He’s made several friends through the organization and it’s not uncommon for one of them to come in some morning and talk through problems or frustrations. And it goes both ways. “It’s helped me too,” Budach said. “We’ve been through the same thing.” And that may be, more than anything, what draws them together. Veterans come to the hall because Gus Budach it is a place where they are understood. Budach served in the Vietnam War; his return home was far from pleasant. “I was just like all the other vets,” he said. “I was down in the dumps.” So when Budach retired at the age of 62 and he again found himself in a low place he joined the VFW. With its mission of supporting veterans, it was something he wanted to be part of. “I felt like it was a way of giving back to what I’ve been through,” he said. Budach didn’t participate much when he first joined. But through the years, he became more active in the organization and has been the post commander for four years. “I find it very rewarding,” he said. “It’s one of the best things I’ve done in my life.” And those low feelings? They’re not there anymore. Service and creativity — he’s created a portable Fallen Soldier display that he shows around town — leave no room for them. Elsewhere in the Lewiston-Clarkston Valley vets can find help in those low times at the local American Legion Post 27 as well. There are days when the door at American Legion Post 27 is a rotating one. As he sat in his office at the hall in East Lewiston, Vernon Serber described helping a local veteran fill out paperwork earlier that morning. Though the man had long been eligible for veteran’s medical assistance, he simply didn’t know it was available. what our job is. Vernon Serber We“That’s try to provide services for vets and guide them in the right direction,” Serber said. As post commander, Serber tries to spend one day every week checking in on various members to see how they are doing. On a recent visit to one of the newer members, he learned the man was having
M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
Tribune/Steve Hanks
Volunteers work to unload food donated to the Idaho State Veterans Home in Lewiston. Food is collected by members of American Legion posts 13 and 27, the Marine Corps League, Disabled American Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars and the Fleet Reserve. medical issues and needed help — which is how the man ended up in his office filling out paperwork earlier that day. And with that, one more veteran was given access to assistance they are eligible to receive.
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“I’m at the vet’s disposal,” Serber said. “I put the vet first — and when I say vet, I include the family.” That’s why the hall is open from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. At those times, Serber and his wife, Elaine, who is president of the
Veterans Day parade in downtown Lewiston. Tribune/Kyle Mills
Tribune/Barry Kough
American Legion Post 27 Commander and army veteran Vernon Surber Jr. surveys the new heroes wall at the post quarters on East Main Street in Lewiston, where plaques will be placed for military veterans, police and firefighters. Ladies Auxiliary, are available to help anyone who comes by. The service they offer ranges from providing food to helping them find low-income housing. In addition, American Legion members and their families are eligible for access to emergency
funds and college scholarships. “We serve veterans and their families because somebody’s got to do it,” Serber said. Schmidt can be reached themichelleschmidt@gmail.com.
at
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MOND A Y, NO V EM B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
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M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
4 Osteoporosis, continued from page 17 Cryotherapy: Cold therapy has gained popularity in recent years as a treatment to reduce the pain of athletes’ sore muscles, among other uses. According to Lauren Polivka, a licensed physical therapist and wellness coach at Icebox Cryotherapy Center, it’s helpful to osteoporosis patients, too. “Pain for most osteoporosis patients is due to compression in the joints, lack of mobility and the inflammation that has resulted,” she said. “Cryotherapy is a safe, short, effective treatment that will affect the entire system.” The treatment involves applying nitrogen gas to the client’s skin for 30 seconds or less, which dramatically reduces the body temperature for a few minutes. The theory is the skin reacts by sending messages to the brain, which stimulates the
regulatory functions of the body. “Osteoporosis generally doesn’t cause discomfort in just one area,” Polivka said. “So with the cryotherapy being systemic, it’s teaching the body how to combat pain and inflammation. The body goes into a healing state with the constant blood flow to the muscles, ligaments and tendons, and that is what is so beneficial with osteoporosis pain management.” Nanotechnology: There are plenty of medications on the market that treat osteoporosis, such as Fosamax and Miacalcin. Dr. M. Neale Weitzmann and Dr. George R. Beck, associate professors at the Emory University Department of Medicine, hope in 10 years or so, they will have developed a nanotechnology treatment that changes the way the disease is treated and could possibly prevent it entirely. It is in the patent stage now and is still being tested on lab mice. “The hope is that this drug
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g o l den t i me s development could be useful in multiple forms of osteoporosis,” Weitzmann said. “It could aid post-menopausal osteoporosis with women, age-related osteoporosis with men — it could even help with rarer causes of osteoporosis, like HIV and sickle cell disease in children.” This promising drug works on the molecular level by reducing bone breakdown and promoting bone formation. Most drugs only focus on bone reabsorption, Weitzmann said. “If everything goes as we plan, we could provide preventative measures, rather than just treatment after the fact,” Weitzmann said. “The standard of care for osteoporosis could change completely.” Osteoporosis resources: United Osteoporosis Center for Gainesville, www. uochs.org/UOC/home.html Ice Box Cryotherapy, www. iceboxtherapy.com National Osteoporosis Foundation, www.nof.org.
Arnold Palmer’s legacy — from golf course to hospitals It’s all about brand marketing with athletes. LeBron James and Tiger Woods embrace the mighty power of the Nike $woosh. Carl Edwards loves Subway subs. Aaron Rodgers will do the discount double-check honoring State Farm Insurance. Arnold Palmer — who turned 84 recently — lends his name to something a tad more precious than sneakers and subs. Babies. Kids. Children in distress. Children who are in danger of dying. Two fabulous Central Florida icons celebrated a birthday on Sept. 10: Mr. Palmer turned 84 and The Arnold Palmer Medical Center — two adjoining hospitals just south of downtown Orlando, Fla., — turned 24. Fittingly so, it opened Sept. 10, 1989, on Arnie’s birthday. Why not? It’s his baby. Way back when, in 1984, Palmer was approached to see if he would lend his name to
commentary
George Diaz a local hospital looking to expand its care for infants. He landed in a helicopter on the roof of the Orlando Regional Medical Center, with his late wife Winnie, to take a tour with a few folks, including John Bozard. They looked around and saw a place about the size of a large bus, with only six beds
4 See Diaz, page 22
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golden times
4 Diaz, continued from page 21 in the neo-natal unit. “Great people and love what I saw,� Arnie told Bozard. “But we can do better than this for our kids.� That they have. The hospitals are now among the nation’s best. Since 1987, the Arnold Palmer Invitational has raised more than $18 million for the two facilities under the AP brand — The Arnold Palmer Hospital for Children and the Winnie Palmer Hospital for Women & Babies. And that’s just the tournament kitty. On the eve of Arnie’s birthday, a plane full of local golfers loaded up on a tarmac and headed to Latrobe, Pa., Arnie’s hometown, for the inaugural Latrobe Classic. For $2,500 each, they got to spend the day at Arnie’s old playground for a round of golf and a few throwback memories. This was the place where Mrs. Fritz once asked Arnie to hit a tee-shot across a drainage
ditch at the No. 6 hole when he was 6 years old. “She said, ‘Arnie, if you hit my ball over that ditch, I’ll give you a nickel,’ â€? Palmer said. “I was there every time she was.â€? By the end of the day, during a reception, a big check was presented to the Arnold Palmer Medical Center Foundation for $200,000 — with a commitment from JetBlue, The Golf Channel and Bay Hill, which will raise that amount to $1 million in the next five years for the neo-natal unit. “That pleases the hell out of me,â€? Palmer said. “I’m not a nurse, I’m not a doctor, but I can at least attract attention sometimes. ‌ To see those kids who are sick and have them come up to you and tell you how great they are doing, and have the opportunity to be there and be taken care of, is wonderful.â€? Madeleine Davis was one of those babies. Madeleine suffered two collapsed lungs right after birth but was treated and saved at Arnie’s place. Her father
Brian, a PGA tour pro, came along for the ride Monday and auctioned himself off to the highest bidding foursome. It added to a hectic work-week, but he gladly accommodated Arnie’s request. Later in the day, when Arnie thanked him in front of a few folks, Davis said, “How could I not do this? You saved my daughter’s life.â€? Davis had a sister who died 40-some-odd years ago of the same problems as his daughter. Madeleine is now 5. “The tour is built on what he did when he was younger,â€? Davis said later. “Obviously Tiger took on the next mantle of bringing the tour on, but the reason we have what we have is because of people like Mr. Palmer. “From a players standpoint we owe him a great deal. From a family standpoint, well, we have a joke about it ‌ ‘I’ll always owe you.’ â€?
ď ˇ Diaz is a columnist for the Orlando Sentinel.
MOND A Y, NO V EM B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
Video game boosts mental abilities in older folks By MALCOLM RITTER Associated Press
NEW YORK — It probably won’t become as popular as “Grand Theft Auto,� but a specialized video game may help older people boost mental skills like handling multiple tasks at once. In a preliminary study, healthy volunteers ages 60 to 85 showed gains in their ability to multitask, to stay focused on a boring activity and to keep information in mind — the kind of memory you use to remember a phone number long enough to write it down. All those powers normally decline with age, Dr. Adam Gazzaley, of the University of California-San Francisco, and colleagues noted in a study released by the journal Nature. The study was small, with only 16 volunteers training on the specially designed game. Gazzaley and other brain experts said bigger studies were
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needed to assess whether the game could actually help people function in their everyday lives. He’s co-founder of a company that aims to develope a product from the research. Specialized video games might one day be able to boost mental abilities not only for healthy adults of middle age or older, but also children with attention deficit disorder, people with post-traumatic stress disorder or brain injury, and older adults with depression or dementia, he said. The work is the latest indication people can help preserve their brainpower as they age through mental activity. There are “brain training� games on the market and books devoted to the topic. Gazzaley stressed claims should be backed up by evidence and also that his results don’t mean any commer-
4 See Gaming, page 28
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g o l den t i me s
4 caregivers, continued from page 14
Puzzle, page 17
benefits might accrue in those situations,” he said. He didn’t rule out, however, that some caregivers might not be in manageable situations and may have an increased risk of death. More research is needed particularly on those caring for parents because it’s a growing population.
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golden times
Lynn Jarvis
Lynn Jarvis of Asotin is Golden Times’ Senior Volunteer of the Month for November. Nominated by: Rozella Van Pelt, wrote this in an email about Jarvis: “Lynn has worked hard to improve the city of Asotin, and I don’t believe, the people know what an asset she is to the city. … She has been involved in so many things with the Asotin city improvements, she has devoted a lot of time and a lot of the of hard work. … I believe the community needs to know what a wonderful person and hard worker she is.” Volunteer work: Jarvis doesn’t volunteer in the commu-
Senior Volunteer Month
Lynn Jarvis
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Green, Vikki Bonfield and Jarvis were instrumental in getting the old mileage sign heading up Asotin Creek restored, bringing back a piece of the town’s history. She has also worked with the Asotin-Anatone school on educating the youth about litter. What she wants people to know is volunteering is more than just working with organizations to improve the community, there are ways people can help on their own, she said. Career: She retired in 2008 from being an attorney in Bend, Ore., where she practiced law for 30 years. Family: She is married to Jim Jarvis, and the couple has four children and nine grandchildren. Jarvis met her husband while they were students at the University of Idaho and they raised their family in Bend. When asked her favorite part of volunteering, Jarvis said: “The people you get to know and the difference you see you make for the community.” “I would really encourage people not to be shy,” Jarvis advises anyone interested in volunteering. “Say ‘can I help?’ ”
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The WA-ID Volunteer Center, located in the Lewiston Community Center at 1424 Main St., provides individualized volunteer opportunities for individuals wishing to volunteer their time in Lewiston, Clarkston, Asotin, Pomeroy, Moscow or Orofino.
The phone number is (208) 746-7787. The center can also be found online at www. waidvolunteercenter.org. The following are a few of the volunteer opportunities available in November: l America Reads has an
Do you know someone who is age 60 or older and gives tirelessly of their time? Help Golden Times recognize their service to our community by nominating them for Volunteer of the Month.
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nity in the “traditional” way — when she sees a need she figures out how to fill it, she said. She does serve on the Library board and helped start an informal group called Asotin Tomorrow. The group meets weekly on Wednesday mornings. “I want to emphasise how easy it is for someone, not just in Asotin, to make a difference,” she said. The first project Jarvis undertook in Asotin was getting a pet waste dispensers installed and signage to leash and pick up after dogs. She saw a need and looked for ways to go about getting that need met, which is what she encourages others to do. “These are all things people can do,” Jarvis said. “There isn’t anything special about me.” She also helped with getting the new “Welcome to Asotin” sign on Highway 129 as you enter Asotin. Along with numerous other Asotin residents she helped spruce up the new curbs in town after the street project was done. Jarvis also put together a cleanup day for the Asotin cemetery and has worked to get the cemetery included in the Cemetery District for longterm care of the site. Elaine
Volunteer opportunities
Don Brown 509-758-2556
546 Thain Rd.
MOND A Y, NO V EM B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
Give a brief description of why you think they should be Volunteer of the Month. Nominations must also include the person’s name, phone number and age, as well as what type of volunteer work they do. And be sure to include your name as well. Send nominations to: Golden Times, P.O. Box 957, Lewiston ID 83501.
immediate need for tutors to help students with their reading skills. Volunteers for this program must be able to commit at least one hour, one day per week for the remainder of the school year. No teaching experience is necessary. l The Jack O’Connor Hunting Heritage and Education Center at Hells Gate State Park is in need of hosts. Individuals should have meetand-greet abilities, a friendly personality and be able to answer questions about the displays at the center. Some sales of merchandise may also be needed and training is provided. l Community Action Partnership Food Bank is in need of drivers and back-up drivers for regular routes. There is also a need for a helper to ride along on routes to help with loading and unloading. The ability to lift is needed for these positions. There are weekday and weekend times available. The food bank is also in need of volunteers to help at the front counter and in the warehouse. This posi-
4 See Opportunities, page 25
M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
4 Opportunities, continued from page 24 tion requires some computer work. l Asotin County Food Bank is in need of drivers and back-up drivers to pick upfood donations. The ability to lift is needed for these positions. There is also a need for volunteers to help at the front counter and in the warehouse. l St. Vincent de Paul Social Services is in need of volunteers to assist families in need of help with food, clothing, household items and furniture. There is also a need for volunteers at both thrift stores to sort clothing. l The Palouse Choral Society is in need of volunteers to act as ushers and hosts during performances. Positions require a three to four hour commitment per performance. There is also a need for a marketing/public relations volunteer to help with getting word out about the
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g o l den t i me s society and its performances. l The Idaho State Veterans Home has several volunteer opportunities available. There is a need for a specialevent planner, help with gift wrapping, one-on-one reading and assistance in other daily activities. l The Lewis-Clark Literacy Council is in need of volunteer tutors for basic language and grammar skills to help with English as a second language. It is not necessary for tutors to speak another language. Tutors are also needed for math skills preparation for the general education certificate test. Individuals interested in this opportunity must be able to commit to three hours a week for at least six months to work oneon-one with a student. l The Lewis Clark Chamber of Commerce is in need of a couple of volunteers to help with receptionist and office duties. Volunteers will help with guest reception and answering phones. This opportunity can be a regular
schedule or a fill-in position. For more information on any of these or other volunteer opportunities offered through the WA-ID Volunteer Center call Cathy Robinson at (208) 746-7787. ——— Interlink Volunteers — Faith in Action in Clarkston offers volunteer opportunities throughout the area. The office, located at 817 Sixth St., is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays. They can be reached at (509) 751-9143. l Handymen are needed for a variety of volunteer projects, including: installation of grab bars in bathrooms, gutter cleaning and minor roof repairs. Volunteers must use their own tools. Materials are provided by Interlink. l Volunteers with some carpentry skills are needed to help build entry steps and wheelchair ramps, and construct and place outdoor handrails. Volunteers must have their own tools, but materials are provided by Interlink. l Volunteers are needed to
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provide transportation to and from appointments weekdays. This requires a valid driver’s license, insurance and own vehicle. Mileage is reimbursed. l Volunteers are needed to help clients move. There is a need for those with and also those without a truck, to help pack, load and move household items. l Volunteers are needed to help with yard work, including raking and picking up leaves, and other yard debris. Interlink will hall away. l There is a continued need for a volunteer with a
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Is your organization looking for volunteers? Send the information to goldentimes@ Lmtribune.com to have it published in the monthly volunteer opportunities.
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GOLDEN TIMES
READER POETRY
READER POETRY Blessings We look up to the mountains, the valleys and the stars. we look around us to see fruit laden trees. We see the forests with many shades of green. We see God’s creatures wild and running free. Miles and miles of golden grain that covers the countryside. The folks around us exchange a smile as we go about our day. We share blessings with all we know.
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We give thanks to our Creator as he guides us in his way. So we count our blessings as we sing a song of praise. Eva Herring, 83, Lewiston
Thanksgiving Dinner I remember Thanksgiving dinner at our house when I was young — beef tongue was a treat. Family came from near and far. We all gathered ’round the large table to pray and to see the star of the dinner — a great big turkey gobbler. My mommy spent days preparing lots of food. Some of the things were: peach cobbler and huckleberry pie. You can bet, I always had my eye on the treats. Time has passed and things have changed — and I wish so much that things could be the same!
And it is my hope that everyone could have a happy Thanksgiving! Pray, love and laugh! And have fun with family and friends! Then one day you will remember the good old days! Happy Thanksgiving! Enjoy making memories. Yvonne Carrie, 69, Lewiston
Perfectly Rounded Our turkey is displayed surrounded by steaming foods, appetites respond in prayerful mood. Help us give thanks today and all year long, while we show God’s love to all with song. Our youngest sings, “I love to sing the story!” Lucille Magnuson, 93, Moscow
The Republican My baby face, sure, that’s what done it. Also my clever story and how I spun it — raisin cookies
spilled on a bakery shelf, who’s to know I cracked the bag myself? I remember how one old lady cried when I caught her with her hand inside, then blubbered and hiccupped all the more when the manager banned her from the store. He shook my hand for turning the old thief in; for sure, said he, I’d preserved his faith in men; Pilfering was a thing no business could afford, and gave me a bag of Oreos for reward. My political life started right there. It revealed people are gullible everywhere. So guard your cookies, you voting resident. I’m on my way to becoming president. Dan J. Williams, 83, Lewiston
Did you know: Pan American World Airways started the use of nautical terms in connection with air travel. Words like “captain” and “stewards” were used to attract customers who were accustomed to luxury ship travel. The airline also began dressing the crew in naval-style uniforms.
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Golden Times prints original short poetry from seniors on a space-available basis. Submissions must include the name, age, address and phone number to be considered for publication. Send poetry submissions to: Golden Times, P.O. Box 957, Lewiston, ID 83501; Deadline for poetry to be included in December’s edition is Nov. 18.
M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
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g o l den t i me s
62-year-old Californian continues quest for slalom skateboarding awards By Chris Macias
The Sacramento Bee
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Jamie Hart clutches his skateboard and walks up the hill for the third time this recent morning always back up the hill, like the myth of Sisyphus with a wooden deck and wheels. An SUV slows down to take stock of Hart, whose long, graying ponytail peeks from the back of his helmet. Hart has set up dozens of cones in a zigzag pattern on a steep grade of Estates Drive, a makeshift slalom
course in this otherwise upscale Wilhaggin neighborhood. At the top, Hart, 62, places his skateboard on the ground, slides pads over his knees and pushes with his right foot. He takes flight, weaving between the cones with arms outstretched, hitting speeds close to 25 miles per hour, just like he did as a young man in the 1970s. At the end of his run, Hart drags a foot on the pavement to avoid launching into traffic on American River Drive. Then it’s back up the hill. “I can do this all day long,”
said Hart, as sweat trickled down his cheek. “There aren’t too many people my age that do this. I’m proud of it.” Sacramento may be home to cliques of aging skaters, but few riders put their bodies at risk the way Hart does with downhill skateboarding, a sport that’s seen a resurgence in popularity over the past decade. This Sacramentan was one of the top competitors of slalom skateboarding in the 1970s and considered a legend of the sport. And his wheels keep rolling. Earlier this month, Jamie Hart, a Hart traveled to Tex62-year-old skate- as to compete in the World Championships boarder, takes of Slalom Skateboarda break after a ing, where he placed training session. 9th in his class. Hart, a retiree from He is in training the retail truck busifor the World ness, raced in the masChampionships ters division, geared of Slalom Skatefor ages 45 and up. boarding in Texas. Hart ranks as its oldest MCT competitor, and one of
MCT
Jamie Hart, a 62-year-old skateboarder who is training for the World Championships of Slalom Skateboarding in Texas, goes down a small hill on Estate Drive near American River Parkway in Sacramento, Calif.
its toughest. He’s a veteran of “He was one of the top guys, such legendary downhill compe- and a nice guy and great comtitions as the Signal Hill Speed Run in Long Beach, a definitive petitor,” said Mike Horelick, contest from the mid-1970s that 4 See skater, page 35 inspired a recent documentary.
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golden times
4 Gaming, continued from page 22 cial video game can help mental performance. His game was designed to exercise specific abilities. The game, called NeuroRacer, involves doing two things simultaneously. A player uses a joystick to guide a car along a hilly, twisting road, steering it and controlling its speed. At the same time, a series of signs — actually colored shapes — appear on the screen. The player is supposed to push a button only when a particular kind of sign appears. Players were scored on how quickly and accurately they reacted to the right signs. The game progresses to harder levels as a player improves, to keep it challenging. “You really had to focus,” said one study participant, Ann Linsley, 65, of Berkeley, Calif. “I went through 22 levels. By the end, we were really cooking along.” In a separate experiment with 174 volunteers, between the ages of 20 and 79, the researchers found as people age, driving the car interferes more and more with performance on reacting to the signs. But for 14 of the 16 participants
who played the game at home for a total of 12 hours, in a one-month period, the training decreased the amount of interference. In fact, on this measure they did better than a group of 20-year-olds who played the game for the first time. The improvements were still apparent six months after the training stopped. Researchers also found changes in brain wave activity that correlated with how well the improvement persisted at six months, as well as performance on a test of sustained attention for a boring task. Brain experts unconnected with the study said previous research has shown older people can improve on mental skills such as multitasking if they are trained. But the training in past multitasking studies was “boring as all get-go,” said Elizabeth Zelinski, a professor of gerontology and psychology at the University of Southern California. Presenting an appealing game like NeuroRacer instead could help people stick with it, she said. Linsley certainly enjoyed the game. “I looked forward to doing it,” she said. When she had to give the laptop with the game back to the researchers, “I kind of missed it,” Linsley said.
MOND A Y, NO V EM B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
A fish story as told by a 94-year-old By Lee Williams
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Moses Lopez spent his early days hunting with a slingshot. He mostly bagged rabbits and squirrels and was handy with a rod and reel as well. “I’d tag along with my brother,” Lopez said. “That’s where I learned to hunt and fish.” It was during the Depression in the 1930s, Lopez lived in Winnie, Texas, just east of Galveston Bay, Texas, with his mother, four brothers and two sisters. Besides hunting and fishing, he found odd jobs and worked in the fields, planting and harvesting crops, doing whatever he could to help out. “My father had passed away when I was 12,” Lopez said. “And we had a family to feed.” Now a spry 94 years old, Lopez doesn’t hunt anymore — “that’s too much work” — but he still loves to fish. “I’ll fish whenever I can find someone to go with me,” Lopez said. He’s put away a few stories during his 80-plus years of dropping
lines, but few rival the one he told recently. Fishing Aug. 22 with grandson Nicholas Griffin near Harbor One Marina at Eagle Mountain Lake in Texas, Lopez said it had been an uneventful day as he cast his line toward the docks. He felt a little tug. “I thought it was stuck on a stump but then it took off,” Lopez said. “It was fast!” The black bass was a fighter and shot out of the water, giving them a glimpse of its size. “He was big,” Lopez said. “Both me and my grandson knew that. He said, ‘That’s a big fish!’ ” As he maneuvered the fish near the boat, it spit out the Bandit lure — but Nicholas had a net in position and grabbed the largemouth bass, Lopez said. Lopez had an electronic scale, but the batteries were low, so after measuring it — 23½ inches long — and taking a few photos, he turned
4 See Gone Fishin’, page 38
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M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
g o l den t i me s
The new retirement: Leisure By Katy Read
Minneapolis Star Tribune
MINNEAPOLIS — Chris inherited her family’s farm, but has no interest in farming. So Chris, an artist, decided to transform the rural property into studio and housing space for artists, featuring a kiln, looms, painting areas and a metalworking shop, surrounded by nature trails decorated with her partner’s original metal sculptures. Jim, a retired engineer, had a longtime hobby of testing home energy-saving devices, applying his engineer’s skills to sort the valuable from the junk. He decided to start a website giving consumers access to the information he had collected, so they could put it to use in their own homes. Lynn’s son died in his 30s of ataxia, a rare degenerative disease. He had been writing a book but was unable to finish it, so Lynn finished the book for him. Then she got involved with a national ataxia association and began traveling the country speaking
“Boomers want to keep learning, keep growing, keep producing.”
— Carol Kronholm
on the subject and promoting the book. Though pursuing very different types of projects, Jim, Chris and Lynn have something in common. They’re all navigating midlife transitions, keeping engaged and productive through work that gives them a sense of purpose. “Boomers want to keep learning, keep growing, keep producing,” said Carol Kronholm, a freelance careertransition teacher and coach whose students have included Jim, Chris and Lynn. Kronholm specializes in helping adults in their 50s and older plan second careers or civic-involvement projects that make good use of their interests and talents. Kronholm has firsthand experience with that kind of transition. In
2008, she retired from the AnokaHennepin, Minn., school district, where she’d worked as a careerdevelopment teacher. She’d long been hearing about the coming flood of retiring boomers. With her heart still in teaching and her skills centered on career development, she decided to switch from high-school seniors to the other kind of seniors — the ones who have 30 or 40 or 50 years of job experience behind them but are ready to do something else in the next stage of life. Kronholm began teaching “encore careers” through a number of organizations, including the St. Paul, Minn.based Vital Aging Network, which offers a program called “Evolve: Reigniting Self & Community.” Kronholm teaches the eight-month course, which guides people from identifying interests and goals to launching their projects. Most people, as they near retirement, spend some time considering how they’ll manage their finances, but far fewer devote thought to how
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they’ll manage their time, said Kate Schaefers, a psychologist who specializes in coaching students through midlife transitions. While still working, they may have looked forward to unstructured days and leisure activities. But after a while, those can get old. Many look at the decades stretching ahead of them and find themselves longing for more meaningful activity. “People underestimate what work gives them,” including a sense of accomplishment, a social life, even a form of identity, Schaefers said. “It pays the bills, but it also gives a sense of structure to our lives. When that structure goes away, people really struggle. For a lot of people, they feel rudderless.” Kronholm recalled a man who retired and moved to Arizona, planning to golf. “He said, ‘I golfed for two years. Then I thought, well, that was fun, but I have all this time left
4 See lEISURE page 33
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golden times
MOND A Y, NO V EM B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
A mother and child reunion, 71 years in the making By Tonya Strickland The Tribune (San Luis Obispo, Calif.)
SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. — Brooke Mayo, 89, sat at a small kitchen table in her Paso Robles, Calif., home on a recent afternoon as she carefully adjusted her eyeglasses and began telling a story of the daughter she gave up for adoption in the summer of 1942. She reunited with that daughter for the first time this summer — a remarkable 71 years later. “In 1941, near Christmas, a young girl got pregnant,” she began in a somber tone. “She was raped and she got pregnant.” That young girl was Mayo, back when she was just 17 years old and walking to her car after a dinner party in the Hollywood Hills. She never knew her attacker. Nine months later, she gave birth to a little girl she named Delphine, a character in a film she liked, the 1940 mo-
tion picture, “Kitty Foyle.” “They aren’t supposed to let you see the child, but I had a night nurse who was the nicest lady. “And she let me hold the baby, who had the cutest, round rosy cheeks. I remembered those always,” Mayo said, a rare falter in her voice. “In those days, having a baby as a single person. I just decided (adoption) was better for her.” With support from her mother, she made the adoption arrangements at the same hospital in Glendale, Calif., where she had the baby. “Then war broke out and I signed up to go overseas,” she said. When Mayo arrived back home in 1945, she called the hospital to ask about her little girl. “I thought about her an awful lot,” Mayo said. “I just wanted to let her know she wasn’t adopted because I didn’t care about her, because I did.”
“And she let me hold the baby, who had the cutest, round rosy cheeks. I remembered those always.”
— Brooke Mayo
But the woman on the phone told her that her daughter had died, she said. Mayo, heartbroken, trusted that this was true. In reality, the baby wasn’t dead. The girl, renamed Patricia, was living with her adopted parents and a brother in the neighboring city of Burbank, Calif. “We think they told her she died so she’d stop looking,” said Robin Barris, Mayo’s friend and caregiver. From that day until Patricia was nearly 8 years old, mother and daughter lived mere minutes from each other — neither one ever knowing the other existed.
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In fact, Patricia never knew she was adopted until 20 years ago. “I still lived on Fairview Street in Burbank when they told her I was dead — 3 or 4 miles away,” Patricia said by phone from her Kansas home. “I’m just glad I was able to find her. That’s the bright side of it. It’s been a long deal, and I’ve been upset over what my mom and dad have done. But that’s OK now because I found her.” After the adoption, Mayo, one of two sisters in a family of no boys, served in World War II as a civilian administrator for the U.S. Army. Her father died in 1938 and he, “Would have wanted someone from the family to serve their country,” she said. She worked in London and arranged housing placements for other American civilians there, such as the wives of generals. Back home, after being told her baby had died, Mayo went on to become a showgirl and
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dancer, taking cues from her mother, who was a costume designer. She briefly worked in the motion picture industry but said she didn’t care for the early mornings. Instead, she traveled as a dancer, performing in stage shows across the country. She danced with movie star Gene Kelly and gave a ride to entertainer Sammy Davis Jr., stranded at a bus stop before he was famous, after recognizing him from a performance the night before. She pursued college during the day, studying at places such as New York University, Northwestern University and Cal State-Northridge in math, psychology and Egyptian studies — the latter inspired by something she saw in a newspaper one day. “My father always said, ‘Honey, you can do anything you put your mind to,’ ” Mayo recalled. Later, she married, had two
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M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3 other daughters and worked as a collections manager. In Paso Robles, she’s known locally for her dog-fight against citywide water rate hikes in recent years. She lived life. But her first daughter always lingered in her thoughts. Since she learned her baby had supposedly died, Mayo lit a candle for her each year. “There’s not a year I never thought of her,” she said. Patricia, whose last name is being withheld because of Mayo’s concern for her daughter’s privacy, was almost 8 years old when her family moved from Burbank to Wichita, Kan., where her father took a new job. Patricia’s father died when she was 14 and her mother continued to live in Kansas. She said her parents were good to her. Her father, a soft-spoken man, would do anything for his family, Patricia said. And she appreciated her mother’s sense of humor. Patricia married, raised three boys and led a life rooted in helping others. When her kids were in school, she did corporate work for American Airlines and Pizza Hut. Today, at 71 years old, she volunteers with the American Red Cross national disaster response team, the Kansas Humane Society and the Wichita Children’s Home. It wasn’t until 1993, years after her parents died, that she learned she was adopted. She was 51 years old. “To start with, I was shocked and then really angry,” Patricia said, adding she’s had lifelong kidney issues that always baffled her because such problems didn’t run in the family. She might never have known the truth had her brother not misplaced his birth certificate and called her up one day look-
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g o l den t i me s ing for a copy. They called Los Angeles County to get a duplicate and that’s when the clerk on the other line said they weren’t in the system. “I said that’s impossible. And he (the clerk) said, ‘Well, then you must be adopted,’ ” Patricia recalled. It was that moment on the phone with a stranger that prompted what became her 20year quest to track pieces of the adoption puzzle, while her brother continues his search today. “I knew nothing because everything my folks told me was a lie,” she recalled. Research eventually led her to discover that she and her brother, Ron Rodney, had been adopted from different families in closed adoptions that were likely illegal at the time. The circumstances also meant getting a judge to re-
lease their adoption paperwork would be difficult. Patricia started by phoning a family friend who lived next door to her parents in Burbank. “I asked her, ‘What do you know about Ron and I being adopted?’ And she said she didn’t know.” Frustrated, Patricia said goodbye and pondered her next move. But that same day, Patricia said the woman called her back and, emotionally torn, unloaded the bombshell: “I promised your mom I wouldn’t tell.” News of the long-kept secret rattled Patricia to the core. “I don’t know why (they hid it),” Patricia said of her parents’ decisions. “I just wish (they) would have told us the truth.”
4 See Reunion, page 32
MCT
Brooke Mayo, 90, pictured recently in San Luis Obispo, Calif., holds a photo of her daughter who she gave up for adoption 71 years ago. They recently reunited.
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golden times
4 Reunion, continued from page 31 After many attempts and few breakthroughs during the years that followed, Patricia finally learned the name of her birth mother this summer. Her search was lengthy; leading Patricia to two states and many roadblocks as she resolved to find her birth mother without hiring a private investigator. The long and frustrating search came to an end when Courtney Storck, a friend’s daughter with a keen interest in genealogy, found out about Patricia’s search and offered to help last year. Through her efforts and Patricia’s determination, they received the long-sought documents in early July.
And, when Storck looked up Mayo’s Paso Robles address, she told Patricia that it looked like Mayo was still alive. “I was floored,” Patricia said. “After all this looking and then — bang — just right out of the blue there she was.” It was a typical Thursday in July when Barris, Mayo’s caregiver, was going through Mayo’s mail. A large cardboard envelope caught her eye and she tore it open. “I started reading it to myself and then said, ‘Hey, what do you think of this?’ ” Barris said as she re-enacted the bewildered look on her face that day. The envelope contained a letter and several photocopies of adoption documents. The letter was from Storck, saying she had done research and be-
“I was floored. After all this looking and then — bang — just right out of the blue there she was.” — Patricia lieved Mayo was the biological mother of a dear friend. And the daughter wanted to meet her. “I was numb,” Mayo said. “I told Robin, ‘This can’t be. They told me she was dead.’ But they had all these papers.” Among the documents was another letter from Storck’s mother, Renae Storck, who volunteers with Patricia at the Red Cross. She described her friend, the type of life she’s led and a
MOND A Y, NO V EM B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3 little about her personality. “ ‘She has a sarcastic wit and doesn’t have a problem voicing her opinion,’ ” Mayo excitedly read aloud from the letter. With a pause, she looked up and smiled broadly, then added: “And that’s me!” The next morning, Barris and Mayo crafted an email to Patricia, saying Mayo would love to meet. Then they left for a doctor’s appointment, hoping to have a response by the time they returned home. But the inbox was empty. Robin left for a bit and “she was not out of the house 10 minutes when the phone rang,” Mayo said. “I didn’t recognize the number. I picked it up and said ‘Hello?’ and a woman said, ‘Is this Brooke Mayo?’ And I said, ‘Oh my God.’ ” Patricia asked Mayo if she was all right and if she was sitting down. “I wanted to email her (first) because you don’t call up someone who is (almost) 90 years old and say, ‘Hey, guess who I am?’ ” Patricia joked. The pair talked for two hours. Less than two weeks later, Patricia and her husband, Dick, were on their way to Paso Robles. They met Mayo in person on July 22. “I stood up and I just wanted to hold her. She looked
so good to me,” Mayo said, remembering Patricia walking through the front door for the first time. “When she came here, Brooke was grabbing her hands and kissing her,” Barris said of the touching scene. “It took all I had not to just fall apart.” When Patricia first saw her birth mother, she said, “I looked at her and thought, ‘Holy cow. That looks like me.’ ” The pair shared pictures of the past and chatted about their lives. They both said they instantly knew they were family. Several people have brought up genetic testing to them, the women said, but they don’t care for the idea. For now, they’re enjoying learning more about each other. “I’ve got fine hair just like she does,” Patricia said. “I’m left-handed just like she is.” The women plan to visit again this winter and they talk at least twice a week by phone. “I was in a daze,” Mayo said of the whirlwind meeting. “I’m still in a daze. I can’t believe this. The people I talk to say it’s like a book or a movie or something, it’s just so amazing.”
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4 Leisure, continued from page 29 and I’ve got to do something.’ ” She helps students figure out what to do next by helping them define their talents and skills, list activities they enjoy, identify values and goals that stir their passions. Do they like to work with fabric or wood? Do they enjoy tutoring children? “It has to come from that place of self-interest,” she said. “I’ll ask them, ‘What were you doing the last time you lost track of time?’ ” Some come into the classes with plans already in mind, sometimes goals they had postponed for the decades while they worked to support their families. Others have no idea what they want to do and may even take the course multiple times before inspiration strikes. Occasionally students who meet in class wind up partnering on projects of mutual fascination.
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g o l den t i me s Kronholm helps the students figure out how to turn these ideas into meaningful, productive work. Each case is individual, of course, although there are some common patterns: students evaluate their own leadership styles, identify communities to help with their projects, start working through the practical steps to achieving their goals. Many of Schaefers’ clients are seeking to supplement their retirement benefits with a paying job or business. “Some want to shift into nonprofit work, some imagine starting a nonprofit business, starting a business, starting a franchise. Some are looking at geographic shifts — they want to find a way to work at the lake, but earn a little income. A lot are looking toward consulting or teaching.” But money is not the only objective or even necessarily the primary one. “A sense of purpose is really important,” Schaefers said. “It’s a reason to get up in the morning.”
Would you want to live to be 120? By Jeff Kunerth
Orlando Sentinel
ORLANDO, Fla. — Otis Cliatt is 73 and hopes to make it to 100. Ginger Hallowell is 81 and thinks 90 will be long enough on this earth. “I’ve done what I need to, and I’ve had a long and productive life,” said Hallowell, a former model and Weeki Wachee mermaid. Neither has any desire to live to 120. Both belong to the majority of Americans who, given the chance, would rather not live to the endline of human existence, according to a recent study by the Pew Research Center’s Religion & Public Life Project. Fifty-six percent said if they had a choice to undergo a medical treatment that would allow them to live to 120, they would decline. More than half said extending longevity to such a degree would be bad for society. “We saw a number of people mention over-population as a concern,” said Cary Funk, the study’s senior researcher. Proponents of “radical life extension” — the science, technology and theory of living to the extreme
limits of human life — boldly predict that by the year 2050, the average American will live 120 years. So far, the oldest verifiable person was Jeanne Calment, who died in 1997 at the age of 122. But extreme longevity would affect everything from the environment to the workforce to the economy. It would redefine the meaning of young, middle age and old. Retirement at 65 would become obsolete. “It has far-reaching implications for how we live,” Funk said. Nonetheless, the idea of stretching the limits of a lifetime has some appeal — particularly among the young, blacks and Hispanics. All three groups had 40 percent or more who said they would like to live to be 120.
4 See 120 years old, page 37
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golden times
MOND A Y, NO V EM B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
The truth about tuberculosis The World Health Organization declared tuberculosis (TB) a global emergency in the early 1990s with onethird of the world’s population thought to have been infected with mycobacterium turberculosis. New infections are occurring at the rate of about 1 percent of the population each year. In 2007, there were an estimated 13.7 million chronic active cases globally, mostly in developing countries. Hopes of controlling the disease have lessened because of the lack of an effective vaccine, expense of medication, emergence of drug resistant organisms and the difficulty in providing adequate public health measures. Bovine and human TB are genetically similar and some opinion suggests humans contracted the modified organism when cattle were domesticated for use as milk and meat. TB appeared in Europe in the 16th century and peaked during the 18th and 19th centuries. This coincided with the industrial revolution and the migration to cities. It infected virtually
everyone in Europe’s urban area by age area can progress with possible forma20, and 25 percent of the deaths of the tion of cavities. The greater number of time were attributed to TB. organisms promotes the greater likeliMyths regarding the disease were hood of communicability. abundant until the organism was Diagnosis begins with suspicion of isolated in 1882, at which illness, such as a cough and point the disease began to fever, as well as other sympbe understood. toms. If a chest x-ray is An aerosol containing compatible then a mantoux the organism occurs after skin test or QuantiFERON®coughing or sneezing. The TB Gold blood test will passage into the lung leads confirm the disease. It is to an infection that in 90 then imperative to establish percent of the population is activity with a culture of asymptomatic and may lead the involved organ. Unforto minimal or no abnormaltunately cultures may take ity on an x-ray. many months. Rarely the organism Treatment options were commentary can disseminate to brain, negligible until the last cenbone or kidney tissue to tury. Often those infected cause acute illness. More were sent to a sanitarium. frequently the organism A surgical procedure was remains hibernating but if developed to close cavities, immunity diminishes due to which was somewhat effecage or disease, there is a 10 tive. Antibiotics were effecpercent chance active distive in the mid 20th century ease will develop. Once this happens, at almost eliminating the disease, but usually in the lungs, the pneumonic required prolonged treatment.
Dr. Hugh Haegelin
House Call The epidemic of the ’90s coincides with HIV, which lowers immunity. An AIDS patient develops an aggressive disease with more organisms, which makes transmission more likely. Public health measures are key, which include isolation until the organism is no longer transmissible. Low income, drug addiction and limited civil organization increases the likelihood of accelerating the epidemic. If therapy is interrupted MDR-TB develops. For this reason directly observed therapy with multiple drugs is often initiated. Clearly this requires an organized and well-funded operation. Haegelin practices at Valley Medical Center, 2315 Eighth St., Lewiston, (208) 746-1383.
M O N D A Y, N O V E M B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
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GOLDEN TIMES
SKATER, continued from page 27
MCT
Jamie Hart, a 62-year-old skateboarder during one of his training sessions goes down a small hill on Estate Drive near American River Parkway in Sacramento, Calif.
international circuit. It’s not to the level of the 1970s, but it’s a growing thing and most importantly there are a lot of great athletes.” Hart keeps a room dedicated to the mementos collected over a life of skateboarding. Vintage issues of Skateboarder magazine that mention him are stacked on a small table. His Santa Cruz Skateboards team T-shirt hangs on a wall inside a frame. There’s enough vintage skateboard decks to make the room look like a mini museum. Hart’s win at the Catalina Classic event netted his own bubblegum card from General Mills, which was capitalizing on the 1970s skateboarding craze via trading cards.
MCT
Jamie Hart, a 62-year-old skateboarder who is training for the World Championships of Slalom Skateboarding in Texas, shows his room of achievements in his Sacramento, Calif., home.
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the sport’s coverage, downhill skateboarding was once among the sport’s key attractions. The Signal Hill Speed Run and other contests drew thousands, and were sometimes covered by such TV networks as ABC and CBS. Modern street and vertical skateboarding might show off plenty of technical tricks, but no-frills speed and slalom contests, where competitors race for time, still provide plenty of thrills. “Downhill skateboarding was supposed to be the next big thing, until people were crashing and it started to die out,” Horelick said. “It’s gained a lot of traction for many years. All ages compete and there’s an
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the co-director of “The Signal Hill Speed Run” film. “Jamie Hart, Cliff Coleman, John Hutson — anyone who knows who these guys are respects them as icons. Jamie might be the last guy from Signal Hill who’s still competing.” And not just competing, but still winning, and still staying relevant. At 59, Hart won a giant slalom contest in San Luis Obispo, Calif. Concrete Wave, a skateboard magazine that covered the event, said: “a historic figure re-emerged,” in describing Hart’s win. In the darkened guest room of his Sierra Oaks, Calif., home, Hart slides a tape into a videocassette recorder. He fixates on the screen as the grainy footage unspools. The year is 1977. Hart is 26, sporting a bushy mustache that’s straight from the “Me Decade” and some thigh-hugging shorts. He steps to the starting line at the Catalina Classic skateboard contest as cameras from ABC’s “Wide World of Sports” capture the action. Host Jim Lampley narrates as Hart powers down the hill toward the finish line. “As you watch Hart, see how smooth his style is,” Lampley said. “He is the leader after two runs. He needs a time of 27.170 in order to better his overall time. As he comes through the finish, he ends up with a good run but I don’t think his time will be quick enough.” Hart hits the “stop” button and smiles. He came in second place that day, losing by just a few tenths of a second to Hutson, another downhill skateboarding icon. Hart netted $1,800 — half of that prize winnings, and the other $900 matched by his sponsor, Santa Cruz Skateboards. The money was nice, but the “Wide World of Sports” appearance, which included pre- and post-race interviews with him, counts as one of Hart’s greatest treasures. “I was such a dark horse and it was so unexpected,” Hart said. “It was like a dream.” While street skating, and aerial maneuvers from ramp and pool skating tend to dominate
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golden times
MOND A Y, NO V EM B E R 4 , 2 0 1 3
Baby boomers are flocking to church ministry MINNEAPOLIS — MaryAnne Korsch is still in her first month of classes at United Theological Seminary, but she hardly could be described as a tenderfoot. The retired school principal intends to become a chaplain at a hospital or hospice. “I wanted to stay active and figure out a way to make a contribution to society,” the Duluth, Minn., resident said. “I loved being an educator, but it’s time for a new path. I’m not done being productive, I’m not done making a contribution and I’m not done learning myself.” She’s one of a growing number of baby boomers — from handymen to business executives, from physicians to athletes — who are launching careers as ministers. They’re
As a basketball star in the 1970s, Janet Karvonen led the New York Mills to three straight state championships. Now KarvonenMontgomery is serving a one-year internship at Living Waters Lutheran Church in Lino Lakes, Minn., which will end with her being ordained as a Lutheran minister. MCT
part of a generation that grew up talking about making a difference in the world, but then got sidetracked by more pragmatic matters like raising children and paying their mortgages. Now they’ve reached a stage in life where they’re able to refocus their energies. “I’m a different person with a new life and a new calling,” said Janet KarvonenMontgomery, a record-setting basketball player who recently started a yearlong intern-
ship that will result in her being ordained as a Lutheran minister. “When I was in my 20s, I thought everyone was there to serve me. Now I realize how humbling it is for me to serve others. And how exhilarating. This feels a lot better to me.” Although many industries are intent on attracting a young workforce, churches have realized the benefits of also recruiting people with real-life seasoning, “The life experience they bring with
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them is a great advantage to the churches,” said Carrie Carroll, dean of students at Luther Seminary in St. Paul, Minn. Nearly one-third of the students enrolled in Minneapolisarea seminaries are considered baby boomers, defined as those born between 1946 and 1964. Not only is that above the national average — which is pegged at 25 percent — but the state has been ahead of the curve of what’s been a relatively recent phenomenon in many places. “I think it started here 10, if not 15 years ago,” said Glen Herrington-Hall, director of admissions at United Theological Seminary in New Brighton, Minn.
The seminaries have reached out to older students with innovative formats. United has a program in which classroom training is concentrated in two back-to-back days a week; there are even motellike dorms on campus for students who drive in from out of town. At Luther, there’s a program offering intensive training on campus twice a year — January and June — while everything else can be done online. Nonetheless, the decision to enter the seminary is not made lightly, said Jo Bauman, a Luther graduate who was ordained Oct. 20 and installed as a pastor at Bethany Lutheran Church in Minneapolis a week later.
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delay, deny and lifespan of humans could chal- on the prospect of adding postpone. It’s lenge our fundamental under- decades to the human lifeswhen everlasting standing of what it means to pan. life begins, he be human, religious leaders “Humanity would become said. told Pew researchers. extraordinarily old, there “ W i t h “Our mortality defines would be no more room for Christians, we us. It influences virtually youth,” he said. “Capacity think Heaven all of our decisions,” said sounds pretty David Masci, a senior Pew for innovation would die, good to us. It researcher who dealt with and endless life would be no has to be worth the religious implications of paradise, if anything a condemnation.” avoiding Heaven,” radical life extension. Nearly 70 percent of said Hunter, 65. “I Masci said leaders from all think I am at my different faiths questioned adults in the Pew study prime in terms of whether extreme longevity said they would like to live wisdom and the would upend the concept somewhere between 79 and best use of my of marriage for life, the 100 years. That includes time and leaderdefinition of family and the Beardall Senior Center manship. But I have relationships between gen- ager Cheryl Rainsberger, who no desire to live is 53. beyond the age erations. “I think 90,” she said. “I Pope Benedict XVI when I can constill see 90-year-olds dancaddressed those concerns tribute to somein 2010 when he preached ing.” MCT body’s life.” Paul Cyr, at 84, Otis Cliatt, 73, throws horeshoes at the Beardall Senior Center in Orlando, Fla. Some people predict the average also has no desire to live to 120. American will live to the age of 120 by the year 2050. “The amount of money it takes to survive, I don’t “It’s easy to say I want to have the facilities to sup4 120 years old, live forever, but we better port myself,” said Cyr, who continued from page 33 think of all the ramifications,” was pitching horseshoes at said Rabbi Rick Sherwin, 62, Orlando’s Beardall Senior head of Congregation Beth Center on Monday with his Kayla Arocho, a 20-year- Am in Longwood, Fla. “If two buddies. “If they don’t old Hispanic student, said I don’t retire until I’m 90, have horseshoes in Heaven, she would like to live to be what about all those graduI’m not going.” 135: “How the world is now, ates of the rabbinical semiLife shouldn’t be measured everybody thinks it’s so bad. naries? They don’t get jobs in years, but in fulfilling the So I’d like to see how much because I’m holding onto my purpose of being here in the the world would change.” job forever.” first place, said 62-year-old Blacks and Hispanics are Those least enamored most likely to hope they with extending life anoth- Orlando Catholic Diocese • Private Rooms with Bath, Home Cooked Meals reach 100 and have a more er couple of decades are Bishop John Noonan. More decades added to an empty, • Personal Care Assistance, Medication Management positive view of the future the old and the evangelical. sad or disappointing life is no the study found. • Respite care with hourly rates available Only 31 percent of those 65 reward. Cindy Epiphane, a 36-yearand older, and 28 percent “Life is something to value • WHY SETTLE FOR LESS? old black woman, said a longer life would give her a of white evangelicals, would and celebrate, but it is to be used for a higher purpose in Corner of Libby & 13th Street, Clarkston better chance of obtaining like to live to 120. Northland Church Rev. the context of our journey her dreams of an MBA and Owned & Supervised by Joel Hunter belongs to both toward life after death,” said law degree. She’d like to make it at groups. For many Christians, Noonan. Significantly extending the least to 100, but is con- death isn’t something to cerned about the possibility of outliving her money. “If I could afford it and not rely on anybody else, yeah, I’d like to do that,” •Granite and Bronze •Laser Engraving •Cemetery Lettering said Epiphane, who works at a college recruitment kiosk •Custom Art Services •Pet Memorials •Cleaning and Inspections in a mall. •Benches •QR Codes for Interactive Headstones And that’s where the futuristic idea of near-immortality For Personal Service, Visit Our Showroom meets the practicality of a longer life. Instead of retir369891BD_13 ing in your 60s, extended longevity might mean work618 D Street, Suite A, Lewiston, ID www.pcslaser.com babette@pcslaser.com ing until you are 80 or 90.
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GONE FISHIN’, continued from page 28 to Nicholas. “That was a thrill, but it’s time to turn him loose,” Lopez said. “I figure it was about 9½ or 10 pounds,” Lopez said. “That’s the biggest fish I’ve caught that wasn’t a striper or catfish.” About the only time he didn’t fish much was while he
was in the military, Lopez said. He joined the U.S. Army in May 1941. He soon transferred to the U.S. Army Air Forces, his son Ray said, and ended up retiring as a master sergeant from the U.S. Air Force in 1963. He worked primarily as an aircraft mechanic and flew combat missions in World War II and the Korean War, according to an email from Ray. He married Beatrice in 1952, and they moved to the Fort Worth area in 1967, where they raised a family of two boys and three girls. When he wasn’t fishing, Lopez worked as an automotive machinist and later with the General Services Administration, before retiring in 1985. His family moved to North Richland Hills, Texas, in 1977, where Lopez still lives today, not too far from Eagle Mountain and Grapevine lakes. “I’ve always loved fishing,” Lopez said, “but I liked hunting. My first gun was a .22. … I traded a bicycle I found and fixed up (for the gun). … Then I later traded another bicycle for a 12-gauge shotgun. I could take ducks, geese … anything I wanted with that gun. “I get around pretty good,” he said, proudly saying he still drives on Northeast Loop 820 and Airport Freeway when necessary. He’s a regular at Saint John the Apostle Catholic Church in North Richland Hills, and still does his own cooking and cleaning at home. Beatrice, his wife of 60 years,
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died in January. Lopez even cut his own grass until a couple years ago, “When we talked him into hiring someone to mow it,” Ray said. He owns a cellphone — “it’s only for emergencies” — but don’t dare ask him to text. “I don’t know nothing about that.”
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golden times crossword puzzle for November 1. Horse drawn carriages 5. Cathode-ray tube 8. Ribosomal ribonucleic acid 12. Marbles playing stone 14. Zodiacal lion 15. Whale ship captain 16. Hit the sack 18. Hostelry 19. People of southern India 20. Four 21. Male workforce 22. March 15 23. Food lifter 26. Copy 30. De Mille (dancer) 31. Overcharged 32. Conducted 33. Pronouncements 34. Flemish names of Ypres 39. Denotes three 42. Root source of tapioca 44. Animal track 46. Backed away from 47. Neighborhood canvas 49. Pigeon-pea plant 50. Nursing group 51. Within reach 56. Turkish brandy 57. Metal food storage container 58. Batten down 59. Assist in wrongdoing 60. Old world, new 61. Rust fungus spore cases
62. A way to wait 63. Point midway between S and SE 64. Adam and Eve’s third son
CLUES DOWN 1. Has two wheels 2. “A Death in the Family” novelist 3. Fabric stuffing 4. Mix in a pot 5. Move up a mountain 6. Replenishment 7. Weight of a ship’s cargo 8. Flightless birds with flat breastbones 9. Scholarship bequester Cecil 10. Consumer advocate Ralph 11. Overgarments 13. Terminator 17. Derive 24. Angry 25. Imprudent 26. Rural Free Delivery (abbr.) 27. __ Lilly, drug company 28. Chest muscle (slang) 29. Lease 35. Point midway between E and SE 36. Cool domicile 37. First woman 38. Radioactivity unit
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40. Revolves 41. Incongruities 42. ___-Magnon: early European 43. Indefinitely long periods 44. Saturated
45. Mannerly 47. Abu __, United Arab Emirates capital 48. Move rhythmically to music 49. Cheerless
52. 53. 54. 55.
4 highest cards Criterion Person from U.K. (abbr.) Affirmative! (slang)
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