LifeSTYLES Lehigh Valley
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Early Summer 2020
Hopes and Wishes
Part 3 of our Legacy Series
Looking Back - 1969 Remembering Mickey Rooney Things to Do with Grandkids Games, Puzzles & More!
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A THRIVE Media publication 4847 Hamilton Blvd, Allentown PA 18106 855-233-7034 editor@lifestylesover50.com Lifestylesover50.com
CopyrightŠ 2020 by Thrive, LLC. 4847 Hamilton Blvd., Allentown, PA 18106. The contents of this publication may not be copied or reproduced in any manner without the express written permission of the publisher. Thrive, LLC assumes no responsibility for damages arising from errors or omissions.
From The Editor Art Villafane
These are very trying times, not just for the Lehigh Valley, but for the entire country. The spread of COVID-19 has been fast and deadly. It has upturned just about everything we know. It has forced us to stay indoors and, sadly, away from many of our friends and loved ones. We at Lifestyles over 50 have slowed just like almost all businesses. Nonetheless, we want to continue to bring you news and info. This issue is different in that we decided to mainly provide you with humor and puzzles to make you smile and stimulate your mind. It is our way of giving you a respite from the gloom of the quarantine. We have heard of stories that showed the kindness of strangers. Whether they be volunteers who distributed food to those in need or assisted someone who needed a helping hand, we saw that the spirit of kindness is strong in the Lehigh Valley. We wish to give an enormous amount of credit to the frontline workers who have kept to their daily duties and cared for us when sick and took care of us in emergencies. Everyone is calling them heroes, and we join in that sentiment. We are happy to finally bring you this issue. We look forward to continuing our regular schedule and, perhaps, meeting face-to-face. We hope it will be soon. In the meantime, please stay safe.
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Subscriptions: Join our Club L50 to have seven annual issues mailed to your home. You will also receive our current Senior Savings Guide which includes hundreds of area businesses that offer senior discounts. Just $20 per year. Contact us today to join. WUZZLES are word puzzles consisting of combinations of words, letters, figures, and symbols, positioned to create disguised words, phrases, names, places, sayings, etc. Answers are on Page 17.
You Think Your Family’s Odd . . . The nineteenth-century French poet GÊrard de Nerval often took his pet lobster for a walk on the end of a length of ribbon.
IN CASE Y OU’RE WO NDERING
• Chocola te Easter b unnies date to the 1850 back s in Germa ny, along w chocolate ith eggs and c hickens. • When y our skin w rinkles in th water, it is e actually ex p a nding. The thicker lay David “Screaming Lord Sutch,â€? former head ers on you r h ands and feet expan of the Monster Raving Loony Party, proposed d more tha n th e thinner skin on oth towing Britain 500 miles into the Mediterranean er par ts of y o • ur body. The Emmy Sea to improve the country’s climate, and award was n o t named after a pers requiring dog owners to feed their pets on. It was a n ickname fo the image phosphorescent food so walker could more r or thicon tu b e • in 1948. Clocks run easily avoid stepping in their feces. “clockwise â€? because they mimic Here’s one for modern times: Benito the movem ent of the shadow on Mussolini adopted the Roman-style straighta sundial — in the nor th that is. Ha arm salute, copied by Hitler, because of his , d clocks b een invente th e s outh, they’d d in fear of germs. He thought shaking hands run counte w ris c e lo (which wo with people was unclean. ckuld be cloc • If a hen k w is e ). ’s earlobes Californian Zhang Huan smeared himself are white, lay white e s h e will ggs. If red with purĂŠed hot dog and flour and allowed , brown eg g s. himself to be sniffed by 8 dogs at an art
The first-century Greek scholar Pliny taught that you could prevent toothache by eating two mice a month, and “pervasive green frogs, burnt heel of ox, toads, and worms� cured halitosis. (Don’t complain about the institutional food!)
museum, to “explore the physical and psychological effects of human violence in modern society. The exhibit ended when a dog bit him on the bottom. Alexander Graham Bell tried to teach his dog to talk. He also kept his windows permanently covered to keep out the “harmful rays� of the full moon (Sounds like it didn’t work!).
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LIFESTYLES OVER 50
Lehigh Valley
Early Summer 2020
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Things To Do With Grandkids
Summer Fun is Outdoor Fun! Current conditions may have altered our normal schedules, but they also make us anxious to get outside. Here are some fun ways to gather with your grandchildren and enjoy some outdoor activities (and some indoor ones for those rainy days). You and they may even learn a thing or two, as well! Always remember to abide by health and safety recommendations. Biking and Hiking These are two simple activities that require little equipment and keep you moving. Look for open trails, parks, and even railroad tracks! Water Sports Fishing is as old as fish themselves. A quiet spot and some simple bait and tackle are just the thing for a lazy day and a good talk! Boating, canoeing, and rafting are good ways to see the scenery and have some adventures! Feed the ducks, swans, geese, and whatever other waterfowl live in your area. Be sure to first check to see what is safe for your feathered friends! Birdwatching No matter where you live, there are no doubt some species of bird in your neighborhood (or within a short walk or drive). Get out your binoculars, a bird book, maybe a smartphone for online research, and look to the trees. Oh yes, don't forget your camera! Nature Walk Birds, bees, bugs, and other critters are all over. Find a nice field or park or forest, dress appropriately, bring the binoculars, bug repellent, camera, and a notebook, and see what you can see!
monuments, and write and draw them on a sheet of paper. Check them off as you find them! Arts and Crafts Nothing beats the feeling of accomplishment when making something useful! • Build a kite • Build a bird house or feeder • Make a pillow or blanket for a needy person • Make a family quilt out of bits of cloth that mean something special • Make your own pillow or cushion • Remember tie-dyed shirts? They're back! • How about the ancient art of paper-folding, called origami? Make decorative figures to decorate your room or bring cheer to someone? • Now may be the time to stencil your walls or create a "living" stencil by using finger paints on little hands to create memorable images on poster board. • Build a model airplane or car from a kit or find a pattern for balsa wood airplanes or paper kites, boomerangs, etc. Then get out there and play! Food There are online recipes for making ice cream, popsicles, and other treats. Perfect for that picnic!
Picnic Simple enough. A nice place to spread your blanket, maybe a park with benches, or a familiar back yard, some yummy food, and the grandkids. What can be simpler yet grander? Scavenger Hunt Scavenger hunts work well indoors and outdoors (but outdoors is more fun!). Make a list of simple items like birds, bugs, rocks, leaves, maybe certain buildings and
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Hopes and Wishes — Legacy Series, Part 3 By Alan Allegra, Lifestyles over 50
Wishes are spirits of outcomes that may or may not a wistful feeling. However, hope carries with it a more be possible. As we saw in the previous installment, positive outlook, a possibility the wish will come true. “Regrets,” no amount of Hope involves decisions. wishing can change the You can wish your past. This does not stop children would find better us from wishing today friends, but unless they could be different or are put in a position where tomorrow will be more they can choose better satisfying. friends, there is no hope. When I was a child, Hope and wish are when cell phones is what often tied to regret. Ma Bell did and iMac When the outcomes of was a Scottish greeting, our actions and decisions I was innocent and don’t turn out as we’d naïve — I believed in wishing wells and making wishes like, we can wish we hadn’t made those decisions or when blowing out the candles on the birthday cake. As taken those actions. Too late — (which harkens back I grew up, I lost that childlike faith, along with a lot of to our previous article about not doing things we’ll pennies and the strength to blow out all those candles. I regret later, especially if they damage our legacy). We no longer believed, “When you wish upon a star, Makes can hope our children and grandchildren don’t follow no difference who you are, Anything your heart desires the pattern we learned to regret, and provide them with will come to you.” However, that didn’t keep me from the opportunities to do better, and even learn from our wishing at times that I were taller or shorter, or had regrets. straight hair or curly hair (or more hair), or were here or How often I’d heard my mother say, “I wish you there. We resort to wishes wouldn’t do that!” Well, when situations and people what did she want me to Hope deferred makes the heart sick, are not satisfactory to us. do? Without showing me an but a desire fulfilled is a tree of life" When it’s too hot, we wish alternative or providing an (Proverbs 13:12). it were cooler. When it’s too explanation, there was little cold, we wish it were warmer. hope I would — or have A “wish” is not the same as a “hope.” A wish is motive to — stop. merely a desire or yearning for something else; hope is A wish is a longing for something we think is better a feeling that something desired may or will happen. or will be more satisfying. “I wish I had more money.” Hope is a mature wish, a dim vision of the future you “I wish I could play the bassoon.” “I wish my grandkids wished for, perhaps based on the slimmest of evidence. would stay out of trouble.” “I wish I had finished my You can wish you will win the lottery, but you can only Art History degree.” Well, if these are wishes that can hope to if you purchase a ticket. bring about a better reality and don’t have foreseeable When it comes to leaving a legacy, good parents and bad consequences, why not turn them into hopes (and grandparents hope for the best for their families. The goals — our next installment)? The ability to get up off childless couple may say, “We wish we had children.” the couch of wishes and walk the treadmill of hopes Without children, there is no point in hoping they will and goals is a wonderful legacy to pass down to the next turn out right. There is no substance to the wish, just generations! LIFESTYLES OVER 50
Lehigh Valley
Early Summer 2020
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www.CrosswordWeaver.com
ACROSS 1 5 10 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 22 24 25 27 29 32 35 38 39 40 41 43 44
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Pedestal part Thoughts Pit Tel __ Vulgarly Rolled chocolate candy brand Bird of peace Beer mug Pixies Saber Bower "Raven" author Throat infection Utopian Sporty car brand Musician Adams Religious song Chest bone Light white stone IOU part Navies North northwest On the opposite side
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Top Gets older Steals Type of shorts Under, poetically Italian "dollars" Hog Succumb Speak without preparation Astringent Lotion ingredients Stare at Guilty or not Cleans a hole Coat Association (abbr.) Red headed orphan Lock openers
DOWN 1 2 3 4
Pops Affirms A piece of turf Infested
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Tax agency Information Vessel Excuse Governing group __ Lanka Obeying Dog food brand Love flower Winter mo. Picture puzzle Happy cat sounds Extremity Lip Taken __ (shocked) Inflammatory disease Nightly tv show Frost Young Women's Christian Association Pie types Of the pope Analyze quality Morse code "T" Poem Hangar Killed in action Jeweled headdress ___ Macinnes, author Fish tank growth Smooth Dada Evils Lend Prefix for half Honey makers Woman's partner Compass point
Crossword solution can be found on Page 17.
Word Search
While you’re waiting for dinner and you’re hungering for something to do, see if you can find the words from the Word Bank and circle them in the puzzle maze.
Dinner Time! V E G E T A B L E S S C R A P P L E V
X R T Z G N G N D A T V Q X R V Z C Y
Q Y T X X W I R N N J M S J Y Y O T W
D Y L N D K R D F E O A T W B R L N T
A Z Z I P D W A G B L O Y N D Y V N K
D Z D A T I O G M A W E P O S T E A K
N Y N H C L S X D N F M N S W B R V R
B P R H T X S R T I Y B X X M Q T D J
L L T A N O P E N L L P R Y D K Q L T
R T E L M J L K L E X R L D N N M S G
J M M D O M V C U F R E N N I D A P K
R L O A Y B Z N E P F T Z B R F R Z L
G R M N E S S M P L Z A T S K C A N S
T L E F B R L T N T B J W A C J B G G
T L L Z O W C I E Z L A E R C A Z T L
P R E M Q R M E S R W R T R X O K J L
T D T B R J K P C N B G N P D R S E G
K Q D D M Z B U W I E L K D J K T K Y
L M N J Q M W O M M X T Y K L Z X R J
L Y J R B D Y S R Z L J U Q V J G Y Z
WORD BANK: BREAKFAST, CAKE, CORDONBLEU, DINNER, EGGS, FORK, ICECREAM, KNIFE, LOBSTER, MEATLOAF, NAPKIN, OMELET, PIZZA, SALAD, SANDWICH, SCRAPPLE, SNACKS, SOUP, SPOON, STEAK, TABLECLOTH, TACOS, UTENSILS, VEGETABLES, WAFFLES https://www.puzzle-maker.com/crossword_Free.cgi
LIFESTYLES OVER 50
Lehigh Valley
Early Summer 2020
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Cybercriminals Prey on COVID-19 Fears Cybercriminals are exploiting the COVID-19 pandemic to gain access to confidential personal and financial information, warns David Finkelstein, St. Luke’s Information Security Director. He encourages everyone to be wary of on-line ads and websites that offer COVID-19 cures or preventions.
on their company’s information system, they might accidentally enable the cybercriminal access to that system, too. A popular trick of cybercriminals is to pose as an executive and send a fictitious email, often with an attachment or a link to a website. The names of company executives are often available through a Google search or on the company’s website.
“The COVID-19 pandemic creates a perfect environment for unscrupulous individuals,” Finkelstein says. “Many people are afraid and desperately looking “Before opening emails or attachments from people for ways to protect outside of your themselves and usual contacts, their families. As Hackers use social media platforms, such as double-check the a result, they are email address,” Facebook and Twitter, email, on-line ads, and more vulnerable he says. “If it to falling for a doesn’t look fictitious websites, to trick people into providing hacker’s trick right, delete it. If than they might usernames and passwords. it’s a suspicious be during more work-related typical times. email, contact Unfortunately, your company’s information services department there are no easy fixes for COVID-19, so be sure to get immediately.” your information from reputable sources, like www. As always, to protect your information: sluhn.org and www.CDC.gov.” • Do not provide your credentials, usernames, or Hackers use social media platforms, such as Facebook passwords, unless you are confident of the source. and Twitter, email, on-line ads, and fictitious websites, • Do not open email attachments from unknown to trick people into providing usernames and passwords. sources. Often, with this information, they can gain entry into an individual’s computer files and find such information • Do not click on a link that takes you to a website, even those that appear to be reliable. as addresses, birth dates, and social security numbers, as well as credit card and bank account numbers. They can • Use Google or other favorite search engine to find websites and then type the URL into your web also launch malware on the individual’s computer. browser instead. “The increased number of people working from • Keep your computer, router firmware, and web home can also make employers more vulnerable to browser up-to-date. cyberattacks, too,” he says. “It’s no longer business as • Make sure you have security software installed and usual.” keep it current. Some hackers use a tactic called "phishing," a cybercrime • Install software updates promptly. in which a target or targets are contacted by email, For information on the COVID-19 pandemic, visit telephone, or text message, by someone posing as a www.sluhn.org/covid-19. legitimate individual or institution to lure individuals into providing sensitive data. If the individual is working
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Salutes and Smiles
By Elissa Clausnitzer, SRES, CMRS, SRS This column is dedicated to all our health field workers, drug store workers, grocery workers, postal workers, truck and delivery drivers, and all people helping to keep our communities safe, alive, and supplied during this time. You are all heroes. This is a time for reflection. Families are together for a reason. I feel that this is a time for cleansing MIND AND BODY. Let us appreciate life, and honor all the souls that have passed. Please stay safe and remember to check on any elderly neighbors you have, especially if they are alone. I want to thank my wonderful neighbors who have always been very thoughtful and helpful to my husband and me. We seniors are especially vulnerable to health problems during this time, and we don't wish to make light of the seriousness of the current COVID-19 situation. However, we could certainly use some smiles and inspiration, so we hope you enjoy these jokes and witty sayings! Very sincerely, Elissa Clausnitzer • "I wake up every morning and I think, 'I'm breathing! It's a good day'" (Eve Ensler). • Doctor: Just do as I say, and you'll be another man Patient: Okay, and don't forget to send the bill to the other man. • An elderly lady fills out the registration form at a doctor's office. After the address, the form asks for
"Zip." She writes, "Not bad for my age!" • "Yes, there's one thing I do want. I want to be aware of the minutes and the seconds, and to make each one count" (Jacqueline Susann). • Son to his father while they watch television: "Dad, tell me again how when you were a kid you had to walk all the way across the room to change the channel." • I feel like my body has gotten totally out of shape, so I got my doctor’s permission to join a fitness club and start exercising. I decided to take an aerobics class for seniors. I bent, twisted, gyrated, jumped up and down, and perspired for an hour. But, by the time I got my leotards on, the class was over. • Ah, the modern days. I just saw a grandpa help a youngster who was staring into his phone to cross the street. • Old George, told Guy only last week that, "I'm not 80 — I'm merely 28 with 52 years' experience." • I'm the life of the party - even if it lasts until 8 pm.
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Grab Bar Installation in the Lehigh Valley & Beyond LIFESTYLES OVER 50
6081 Hamilton Blvd., Suite 102 ALLENTOWN, PA 18106 610-398-9888 Lehigh Valley
Early Summer 2020
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Kids Have Always Said the Darndest Things!
Each generation finds the next generation somewhat “I have a dog.” incomprehensible. This seems especially true with the flood What kind is it? iel and of social media posts and pontifications. Do you remember “Half cocker span .” the days of little black-and-white screens, and shows like half my neighbor’s Art Linkletter’s “House Party”? Enjoy a sampling of genuine, funny, unscripted thoughts from regular kids! Do you wan t to be a bachelo r” “No.” Why not? “Because my da d’s a bachelor.” al problems in life? re y an ve ha u yo Do ebody hool dance, som sc a to o g I n he “W I’m e pretty girls, and th s et g s ay w al e els .” left with the dregs er the I hear you got ov was chicken pox. How it? you do Nothing to it. All scratch. is sit in bed and You should alway s eat a good breakfast so you’ ll grow up quicker. “Not for me. If I gr ow up faster, I’ll get older sooner and then I’ll have to die younger.” ldn’t you What animal wou like to be? “A lion or tiger.” Why? and peo“They eat people good.” ple don’t taste so
A universal question that adults ask kids is, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” We may expect “fireman” or “ballerina,” but . . . “I want to be a boom bomber when I grow up,” bravely stated a six-year-old. I’ve never heard of one of those. What do they do? “Why, that’s a guy who goes up in the air, catches eagles by the tail and brings them down for his mommy to cook.” Would the following child survive in today’s techno-world? Who can tell me how color television works? “I can. It’s kind of mixed up, but I know that there’s a whole bunch of straws that go from this studio with all kinds of paint, and the straws go to the house and squirt color on the screen.” “My dad’s a policeman, and the best shot on the force.” Did he get a medal? “No, he got a man.”
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The Law Office of Gail Weiner Shearer Representing the Senior in Crisis
Learn your rights, and make your own decisions before the crisis. Hospitalizations, Nursing Home Care, Medical Assistance Applications, Estate Taxes.
610-867-2538 gws-legal.com
Color this picture using the numbered colors below, and you will soon see the fruit of your labors!
LIFESTYLES OVER 50
Lehigh Valley
Early Summer 2020
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A “Short” Biography of Mickey Rooney Mickey Rooney was born Joe Yule, Jr., on September 23, 1920, in Brooklyn, New York.Rooney passed away April 6, 2014, at the age of 93. Joe Yule, Jr., only 17 months old, joined his parents on the vaudeville stage as, of course, a toddler. He made his first film appearance in 1926. The following year, he played the lead character in the first Mickey McGuire short film. It was in this popular film series that he took the stage name Mickey Rooney. Rooney and his career quickly grew when he appeared as Andy Hardy, the popular all-American teenager, in A Family Affair. This beloved character appeared in nearly 20 films and helped make Rooney the top star at the box office in 1939, 1940, and 1941. He is also well-known for his award-winning dramatic performance opposite Spencer Tracy in Boys Town. In 1938, Rooney was awarded a juvenile Academy Award. In 1944, Rooney joined the service, where he helped to entertain the troops and worked on the American Armed Forces Network. Rooney had almost as many wives as he had starring roles. Mickey permanently and legally separated from his eighth wife, Jan, in June of 2012. In 2011, Rooney filed elder abuse and fraud charges against stepson Christopher Aber and Aber’s wife. At Rooney’s request, the Superior Court issued a restraining order against the Abers, demanding that they stay 100 yards from Rooney, Mickey’s stepson Mark Rooney, and Mark’s wife Charlene. Just prior, Rooney had mustered the strength to break his silence and appeared before the Senate in Washington D.C. telling of his own heartbreaking story of abuse in an effort to live a peaceful, full life and help others who may also be suffering in silence. Rooney requested through the Superior Court to permanently reside with his son Mark (a musician) and Charlene Rooney (an artist) in the Hollywood Hills. Ironically, after eight failed marriages, he never looked or felt better and finally found happiness in the single life. Rooney passed away April 6, 2014 at the age of 93.
Mickey Rooney Trivia
• Rooney appeared in a string of musicals, including Babes in Arms (1939), and was the first teenager to be nominated for an Oscar in a leading role. • Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961) starred Audrey Hepburn and George Peppard. Rooney played Hepburn’s Japanese neighbor, Mr. Yunioshi. A sign of the times, Rooney played the part for comic relief, which he later regretted, feeling the role was offensive. • Francis Ford Coppola’s 1979 film, The Black Stallion, brought him an Academy Award nomination as Best Supporting Actor. • He turned to the stage in 1979 in Sugar Babies with Ann Miller, and was nominated for a Tony Award. • Rooney received an honorary Academy Award “in recognition of his 60 years of versatility in a variety of memorable film performances.” • Upon Rooney’s death in 2014, Vanity Fair dubbed him “the original Hollywood train wreck.” • His talents included singing, dancing, acting, playing drums, and playing piano. • The 5'2" actor attracted some of Hollywood’s most beautiful women. “He went through the ladies like a hot knife through fudge,” said Ava Gardner. • The millions he had earned over the years had vanished and Rooney died owing medical bills and back taxes.
A Few of Mic key’s Films a n
d TV
A Family A ffair (1937) Babes in A rms (1939) Strike up t he Band (1 940) Babes on B roadway (1 941) Girl Crazy (1943) National V elvet (1944 ) Love Laugh s at Andy H ardy (1946 K iller McC ) oy (1947) Words and Music (194 8) Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961) Requiem fo r a Heavyw eight (1962 The Black ) Stallion (19 7 9 ) The Mickey Rooney Sho w (T V, 195 55) 4Adventures of the Blac k Stallion (T 1990-93) V,
LIFESTYLES OVER 50
Lehigh Valley
Early Summer 2020
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What’s a mother to do? know coming into my home. But I realized it was worth a try and probably the only choice I had if I didn’t want my kids to make me move.
I don’t know about you, but I want to stay in my house for as long as I can. It’s the place I’ve called “home” for over 50 years. And even though my children really want me to move to an apartment to be with other people my age, I want to stay right here at home for as long as possible. I know they’re tired of shoveling my snow, cutting my grass and taking care of repairs around my home. I realize they have their own families, so I can’t expect them to want to manage my home, in addition to managing their own homes. I also know they worry about my health. Am I eating properly? Am I taking my medications properly? And what would happen to me if I fell at home and nobody was there to help me. So, what’s a mother to do? My daughter suggested I get a “caregiver” from Senior Solutions. This is a Lehigh Valley not-for-profit business that provides professionals who work with you in your home so you can stay there. And the list of services they can provide is long. Whether I need someone who can do housekeeping, make good meals for me, run errands and get me to appointments…they do it all. At first I resisted, because I didn’t like the idea of having someone I didn’t
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Getting to choose my personal caregiver was important to me. First I met with someone from Senior Solutions who developed a plan and schedule for the things I needed help with. Then, I was introduced to one of their caregivers. In the beginning I only needed about 6 hours of help each week with things like light housekeeping, laundry, making meals, getting to medical appointments and doing errands that needed to be done. And then, a few months ago I became ill and was hospitalized briefly and needed to extend my caregiver’s hours. I needed some additional help with getting showered and dressed each day, and I needed my caregiver to keep me on track with the medications I had to take. These were things I know my children would have found a way to help me with, but not without sacrificing things in their work and family lives. I’ve come to trust my personal caregiver with my life. After making a full recovery from my illness, she is back on her regular schedule of duties to keep me successful at home. And the best part? My children are relieved and don’t worry about me being at home anymore. When they visit they can see that everything is in good order and things are being taken care of in the house. They often go into my refrigerator to help themselves to something when they visit, and they see the foods and meals that are prepared for me to eat. They comment that I eat better than they do.
Need Help with Senior Care? 855-233-7034
Maintaining independence is important to your parents. When they need help, call Senior Solutions to give your parents the ability to be successful living at home. A helper from Senior Solutions can: • Provide Companionship & Conversation • Assist with Personal Care Needs & Mobility • Prepare Meals • Light Housekeeping & Laundry • Organize & Provide Medication Reminders • Organize & Assist with Reviewing Mail • Plan Visits, Outings & Trips • Accompany to Appointments & Perform Errands • Provide Specialized Dementia Care
Senior Solutions has been helping people “stay at home” for over 25 years. For more information: Call Senior Solutions at 610.258.0700
.Senior-Solutions. com Serving Lehigh Valley, PA 610.258.0700 w w w.Senior-Solutions. com 610.258.0700
Trivia - A Rose by Any Other Name
Can You Guess the Popular Names of These Famous People? Their parents knew them by: 1. Robert Allen Zimmerman 2. Doris von Kappellhoff 3. David Adkins
You know them by:
4. Eunice Kathleen Waymon
1. Bob Dylan, folksinger
5. Frances Rose Shore
2. Doris Day, American actress
6. Judy Kay Cohen
3. Sinbad, American comedian
7. Joan Alexandra Molinksy
4. Nina Simone, American jazz singer
8. Lester Nelson Gillis
5. Dinah Shore, American singer
9. John Lydon
6. Juice Newton, American singer
10. Joseph Levitch
7. Joan Rivers, American comedienne
11. Archibald Alexander Leach
8. Baby Face Nelson, member of Dillinger gang
12. Nguyen That Thanh
9. Johnny Rotten, British punk singer
13. Richard Starkey
10. Jerry Lewis, American comedian
14. Shirley Schrift
11. Cary Grant, English actor
15. Harry Longabaugh
12. Ho Chi Minh, North Vietnamese president
16. Ladonna Andrea Gaines
13. Ringo Starr, Beatle
17. Melvin Kaminsky
14. Shelley Winters, American actress
18. Allen Stewart Konigsberg
15. The Sundance Kid, American outlaw
19. Aaron Chwatt
16. Donna Summer, American disco singer
20. Cherilyn Lapierre Sarkisian
17. Mel Brooks, American director, comedian 18. Woody Allen, American director, comedian 19. Red Buttons, American actor 20. Cher, American singer, actress
LIFESTYLES OVER 50
Lehigh Valley
Early Summer 2020
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COVID-19 or Psalm 19? by Alan Allegra, Lifestyles over 50
The big news for 2020 is the pandemic caused by COVID-19, the somewhat gentler term for the coronavirus. This deadly virus has grabbed the headlines from the presidential race, foreign threats, celebrity hijinks, and just about every other newsworthy event. We are saturated with contradictory articles and tweets and posts and murmurs and find it hard to know who or what to believe. It’s very Orwellian when you walk into a market to buy flowers and hear over the PA system, while standing 6 feet apart, wearing a creepy mask, “Attention customers! You must maintain social distancing. Wash your hands for 20 seconds. Wear a mask. Do not touch anything. Don’t go near the cashier; just toss your wallet over the plexiglass germ shield.” These are scary times, not to be taken lightly. People are seeking truth and escape from the dark clouds of fear. What we fill our mind with will determine our attitude and outlook. A mask won’t prevent us from inhaling or spreading fear and gloom. We can obsess over the unknown or look for avenues of peace and the distraction of hope. If we can get our eyes off the TV and blogs, we can look upward and inward to find truth and hope that are unaffected by microscopic particles and massive protests. Psalm 19, written by King David almost 3,000 years ago, can fill our minds with the peace and hope we long for. This psalm can be read Do you have in three sections. Section old classic 1, Verses 1–6, points us to God’s revelation of records that himself in nature: “The you want heavens declare the glory to sell? of God, and the sky above Call Julius Vitali of proclaims his handiwork” VINYLALLY HEAR at (v. 1). 610-217-1629 (cell) Section 2, Verses 7–11, 610-966-6202 (phone) proclaims the virtues of Buying classical records and
God’s word, the bible: “The law of the Lord is perfect, reviving the soul” (v. 7). Section 3, Verses 12–14, reflects on the personal reaction to the contemplation of God’s creation and writings: “Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in your sight, O Lord, my rock and my redeemer” (v. 14). Contemplating the grand layout of God’s universe, its vast, unchanging nature, shows his power and care for all he has made. The silent voice of his power and love drowns out the shouts of hopelessness and fear we hear every day. The words of men change and fail continuously, but the Words of God never change and bring great reward — They guard and cleanse body and soul. The power of God and purpose of his words lead us to look inwardly at the disease of sin that ravages all of us, for which there is only one cure: “But [Jesus Christ] was pierced for our transgressions; he was crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace, and with his wounds we are healed” (Isaiah 53:5). When fearful, look to the heavens, look to the bible, and look within. There, you will find peace and perspective.
collections
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PROLEGOMENON
WUZZLES answers from inside cover
That’s a fancy-sounding word that means, basically, an introduction. It’s possible that, during these trying times, you may be put into situations where you have little to do but talk. Let us suggest a way to dazzle your listeners with some words that are sure to impress: • If you like to drink milk, you are “galactophagous” (Sounds like something from Star Wars.) • It’s unlikely that you suffer from “chrematophobia,” the fear of money. • Tell your kitchen staff that your meal is “saporous”: tasty, flavorsome. • If someone asks to see your “uvula,” fear not — It’s your soft palate. • If you use these words, you won’t be accused of being “acerebral” — without a brain. • However, you may be accused of being “lexiphanic” — given to the use of pretentious words!
WUZZLE 01 1. Play on Words 2. Get in Shape 3. Monkey on Your Back 4. Dr. Dolittle 5. Fooling Around 6. A Kick in the Butt WUZZLE 02 1. No one to Blame 2. Right between the eyes 3. Jack in the Box 4. Down Payment 5. Left Overs 6. Bedspread
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Our proven model helps publishers quickly build readership, and it connects them with advertisers in the exploding health and senior care industry. With 10,000 boomers turning 65 each day, it is no wonder that new senior communities and home care companies are opening in your neighborhood. Don’t miss your opportunity! Call to see if a territory in your region is available!
855-233-7034 l Lifestylesover50.com/publish LIFESTYLES OVER 50
Lehigh Valley
Early Summer 2020
17
’69: Looking Back
Do you remember ‘69? 1969, that is, not when you were 69! If you can’t get out and jog, you can jog your memory with these nostalgic lists!
Top Ten TV Shows
1. Laugh-in 2. Gunsmoke 3. Bonanza 4. Mayberry, RFD 5. Family Affair 6. Here’s Lucy 7. Red Skelton Hour 8. Marcus Welby 9. Walt Disney 10. Doris Day Show
Top Ten Movies
1. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid 2. Midnight Cowboy 3. Easy Rider 4. Hello, Dolly! 5. Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice 6. Paint Your Wagon 7. True Grit 8. Cactus Flower 9. Goodbye, Columbus 10. On Her Majesty’s Secret Service
1969 Highlights
• New York Mets beat Baltimore Orioles 4 games to 1. • New York Jets upset Baltimore Colts in Super Bowl III. • Boston Celtics beat Los Angeles Lakers 4 games to 3. • The Woodstock Music Festival opens with 500,000 rock music fans going to this Peace and Harmony Music Festival. • Hurricane Camille, a Category 5 hurricane, makes landfall with winds estimated between 150 and 205 miles per hour. Camille was responsible for nearly 300 deaths and the destruction of thousands of homes in Alabama, Mississippi, Virginia, and Louisiana.
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Top Music Hits
1. Aquarius / Let the Sunshine In The Fifth Dimension 2. Sugar, Sugar - The Archies 3. Honky Tonk Women - The Rolling Stones 4. Get Back - The Beatles 5. Crimson and Clover - Tommy James and the Shondells 6. Dizzy - Tommy Roe 7. Jean - Oliver 8. Build Me Up, Buttercup - The Foundations 9. Touch Me - The Doors 10. Hair - The Cowsills
• Man lands on the moon for the first time. • French President Charles de Gaulle resigns after 11 years, following his defeat in a referendum on governmental reforms. • James Earl Ray pleads guilty to the crime of assassinating Martin Luther King, Jr. • Israel elects Golda Meir. • The Pontiac Firebird Trans Am, the epitome of the American muscle car, is introduced. • The U.S. holds its first draft lottery since WWII for the Vietnam War. • The Beatles make their last public performance, giving an impromptu concert on the roof of a London recording studio.
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The Skinny on Long Term Care Susan Capobianco, Morningstar Living
If you have any doubts about whether or not you will need long term care, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services estimates that 70% of people over the age of 65 are likely to need it. Currently, the average cost of long term care in a nursing home in Lehigh Valley, PA is $156,000 or $13,000 per month. So the question is how will you pay for long term care when you need it? There are basically three ways you can pay for long term care: You can self-insure. This means you use your retirement savings and income to pay for the care you need. And when you deplete your financial retirement resources, you can apply for Medicaid, a government-funded program reserved for people with very limited assets and income. If you do nothing to plan for the finances associated with future long term care needs, then by default, this is the option you have selected.
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You can purchase a long term care insurance policy to subsidize the daily cost of your long term care. It is estimated that fewer than 5% of people have long term care insurance, yet they are more likely to need long term care insurance than automobile and fire insurance. If you buy a long term care policy when you’re younger, your annual premium is likely to be a lot less costly. Then, when you need long term care, the insurance company pays the daily amount you contracted for. So while your policy may not pay 100% of your long term care costs, you’ll be able to reduce your out of pocket expenses.
Care Plan. But a Life Care Plan provides much more than “peace of mind” knowing you have 100% of your future health care costs covered. Life Plan Communities provide the full continuum of health care services at your retirement community...and that means, you never have to make another move.
2
You can move to a Life Plan Community 3 that offers a Life Care Plan. There are only a handful of retirement communities that offer a Life Care Plan, so most people aren’t familiar with the concept. A Life Care Plan covers long term care accommodations at 100% so that means the costs associated with assisted living, memory support care and nursing home care are covered in full by your Life
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Call 610.746.1000 to learn about Fridays Saturdays from 9:30 am – 11:30 am from 9:30 am – 11:30 am our Life Care Plan. A Life Plan Community
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Reservations Required: Email RSVP@moravian.com or Call 610.746.1000 All events are held at Moravian Hall Square 175 W. North Street • Nazareth, PA 18064
www.MorningstarLiving.org
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Lehigh Valley
Early Summer 2020
19
“Especially in the case of patients with symptoms concerning stroke or heart attack, the benefit of being evaluated far exceeds the risk of COVID-19 exposure in a hospital where safety precautions are practiced.” St. Luke’s physicians, hospitals, outpatient centers, and walk-in care centers, such as St. Luke’s Care Now, are taking extreme measures to protect patients and staff, including wearing masks and separating patients with suspected and confirmed cases of COVID-19 from other patients.
Health Providers Encourage Patients to Seek Medical Services
For example, Dr. McGorry said in his practice, patients with COVID-19 symptoms are directed not to come into the office. Rather, they are screened over the phone and set up for a virtual visit. If it appears that they may have the virus, they are then directed to a St. Luke’s testing location. Because there is no treatment for COVID-19, patients with
by Mary DeHaven, St. Luke's University mild symptoms are encouraged to recover at home, distance Health Network themselves from other family members, and take acetaminophen Area health care providers remind patients of the importance of seeking medical services to address chronic and acute health conditions as Pennsylvania begins to lift some of the restrictions enacted to slow the spread of COVID-19.
for symptom relief. Any patients with more severe symptoms of respiratory illness, including those who are COVID-19 positive, are directed to attend one of St. Luke’s six respiratory clinics for further evaluation and treatment for their symptoms. Even before the first case of COVID-19 surfaced in our community — and every day since — St. Luke’s has been developing ways to better serve patients of all kinds during this unprecedented period, he added.
Dennis McGorry, MD, St. Luke’s primary care physician, said the benefit of seeing Among the innovations was the expansion of virtual visits that your doctor during an in-person meeting to connect health care providers to patients through a computer, manage a chronic illness, such as heart disease, laptop, or tablet, using an on-line meeting program, such as diabetes, and chronic pulmonary obstructive Microsoft Teams meeting. disease, far outweighs any potential risk of exposure to COVID-19. Precautions in place In response to COVID-19, St. Luke’s greatly and quickly at doctors’ offices expanded the Network’s and hospitals address virtual visit capabilities so patient safety. In some cases, lives have been lost due to patients could now have an on-line visit with their Similarly, people patients’ fear of seeking medical care and we primary care physician, should not avoid medical specialist, going to the need to stop that immediately. such as a cardiologist emergency room or oncologist, or a or calling 911, he physical, occupational, or stated. Emergency speech therapist. This major endeavor involved the information medicine services (EMS) and emergency room technology department, marketing department, office staff personnel have reported that many people are members, physicians, and therapists. waiting too long to seek care in emergency situations. “Virtual visits have been a Godsend to get us through the “In some cases, lives have been lost due to patients’ fear of seeking medical care and we need to stop that immediately,” he said.
initial COVID-19 period,” Dr. McGorry said. And they will continue to be part of the solution as we continue to practice Continued on bottom of next page
Useless Facts That Mean Something to Somebody Do you remember Leopold Auenbrugger? His father owned a tavern in Graz, Austria, and that's why a doctor taps your back, and sometimes, your front. The elder Auenbrugger judged the amount of wine in his casks by noting whether his tapping produced a hollow (empty) sound or a dull (full) note. Leo applied this to people, and now doctors can tell if the chest cavity is clear (hollow) or contains fluid or something else that shouldn't be there (thud). Now you know over 200 years of medical history!
Here is an historical event that affects us all and deserves a holiday all its own: The International Olive and Olive Oil Agreement of 1986! This agreement defines the terms "virgin olive oil" and "extra virgin olive oil." (No, as far as we know, there is not yet a "super extra virgin olive oil" or an "ultra virgin olive oil.) The difference are rather complex, but the bottom line is: Extra virgin olive oil has to taste like . . . olives! Have you ever had that experience where it feels like food went up your nose when you swallowed or — Let's just say did the opposite of swallowing? That's because the uvula failed to guard the nasal cavity like it's Solution to crossword puzzle from Page 6. Solution:
D A D S
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O I D E V R A W E S T E R D A R R E P A C U R A M N R I B E A R M A R O S S C I D S K N E A T H G Y I E L U M A L O E A R E A S N A N N
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supposed to. That flap of muscle and mucus membrane that hangs in the back of your throat like an upsidedown bowling pin helps elevate the roof of the mouth during swallowing so food can plop down into the digestive system. Now that you finally got that bottle of medicine open (Whew!), you have to pluck out that puff of cotton. That's okay — It's there to keep the pills from rattling around and breaking, and to keep them dry. It's best to remove the cotton ball when you open the bottle, because it can absorb moisture and can contaminate the medicine. I wonder why it's not made of nylon or rayon or spandex or — ? In closing, ponder these questions: Why do American women shave their armpits? Why do only older men have hairy ears? Health Providers continued from previous page
social distancing. For example, should a patient have an exasperation of a chronic illness, Dr. McGorry might alternate in-office and virtual visits to keep frequent contact with the patient. Also, virtual visits will remain available for those patients who simply prefer it. “It can’t be overstressed, the importance of the fact that we’re only in the beginning of this process of managing the fallout of the pandemic,” he said. “We anticipate the presence of COVID-19 in our community for months, or even years, to come. It’s important to remember that without the practice of safety precautions, the impact of COVID-19 can — and will continue — to have devastating effects on a community.” Fortunately, the staff of St. Luke’s has been amazing during this pandemic, he said. At one point, the prevalence of COVID-19 in our area made the Lehigh Valley among the top 25 hot spots in the United States. Fortunately, however, the health providers’ clinical readiness and education efforts, combined with the community’s adherence to social distancing orders and other precautions, successfully reduced the spread. “Due to everyone’s hard work of staying home, we’ve flattened the curve,” he said.
LIFESTYLES OVER 50
Lehigh Valley
Early Summer 2020
21
They Oughta Make a Law!
SE
E YOU IN C It is against the law in Pueblo, Colorado, to permit OURT! Glenn env isioned the a dandelion to grow within city limits. ha
irstyle he w ed. He gre antw his hair out for mo two years, A local ordinance in Brewton, Alabama, forbids re than and — arm ed with a p arrived at the use of motorboats on city streets. hoto — the salon. When he le ft, he envis In Florida, anyone found underneath the ioned a $1 lawsuit. He 0,000 lost 10 inc sidewalks will be found guilty of disorderly hes of his ing glor y, w crownith 3/4 of a conduct. (This does not bode well for the Spring n inch amo to a “ruin.” unting They offere Break crowd!) d to “attem correct the pt to damage.” But there w You cannot drive a car in Tennessee while you enough hair asn’t left. Glenn’s so are asleep. cial life wa s a wreck; friends lau his ghed “bec Having a bathtub in your house in the state a u s e of the shor hair on top t of his head of Virginia is forbidden. It must be kept in the a n d hair on the the long sides.” He yard. wore a cap Glenn saw . a psychiatr is t to treat his One cannot attend a theater in Gary, Indiana, “panic anxiety order.” H e told the ju within four hours of eating garlic. dge he wa s “deprive of his righ d t to enjoym A law in Waterloo, Nebraska, prohibited ent of life” suffered “p a n d ermanent barbers from eating garlic. and contin damages. u in g” Spare me, said the ju grow back It’s against the law in New York to do d g e ; it’ll . And he d ismissed th anything against the law. e case.
When Crystal Balls Crack!
Here are some predictions that guaranteed an ignominious future reputation for their prophets! H. M. Warner head of Warner Bros. studio, rejected a new movie technology in 1927 by saying, "Who wants to hear actors talk?" • Here's a relevant one: French physiology professor Pierre Pachet (1872) said, "[Louis Pasteur's] theory of germs is a ridiculous fiction." • In 1949, Popular Mechanics saw the future of computers and boldly predicted, "Computers in the future may weigh no more than 1.5 tons." That's one awkward laptop! • Tell this to the Texans and Saudis: Edwin Drake tried to get professional well drillers to help him drill for oil in 1859. Their reply: "Drill for oil? You mean drill into the ground to try and find oil? You're crazy." • A couple guys took their brainchild to Atari and Hewlett-Packard and offered to work for them and offered their new idea to them, but were rejected and told, "You haven't got through college yet." So Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak started Apple Computer.
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I cannot do all the good that the world needs. But the world needs all the good that I can do. - Jana Stanfield
Senior Corps RSVP of Lehigh, Northampton and Carbon Counties wants to acknowledge and THANK all those volunteers who have stepped up during these most challenging times and have done “all the good that they can do”. We want to acknowledge the dozens of RSVP members who kept the Food Pantries in Carbon County open to serve an ever-increasing need and did so even when it rained on several of the curbside pickup days. Thank you to those who spent hours making masks and delivered them to where they were most needed. Thank you to those who grocery shopped for the elderly. Thank you to those who were willing and able to continue delivering meals to the homebound while following all the new safety procedures. We know many of you added more delivery days to your schedule. Thank you to the team of phone callers who spent hours reaching out to and checking in with hundreds of senior members of Lehigh Valley Active Life and helped identify those who needed deliveries of food. Thank you to our mentors who continued a relationship that is making a world of difference to their mentees by meeting ‘virtually’ with their students. Thank you to everyone who did everything possible to keep themselves safe while looking for ways to devote some time and energy to helping others. If you’re willing and able to help others, contact the Senior Corps RSVP office. Our staff will work to match your interests and available time to what needs to get done. You’ll receive personalized placement in the volunteer position that best suits you along with insurance protection while you’re volunteering. Call: 610-625-2290 Email: RSVPLNC@hotmail.com Visit: www.RSVPofLNC.org LIFESTYLES OVER 50
Lehigh Valley
Early Summer 2020
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Lifestyles Over 50
A Word Sudoku is the same as a "normal" Sudoku, except it uses words instead of numbers. So it's notThe exactly the same, but it is similar. Anyway, the object is to words or names that are used in the puzzle: put the following words in the squares without repeating any words in the rows, columns, or squares. The answer is on Page 26. (And each word has 9 letters!)
LIFESTYLES CAFETERIA PENSIONER
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Need Help with Senior Care? 855-233-7034
CARDGAMES
Virtual Technology Enabled Patients to Keep Health Care Appointments by Mary DeHaven, St. Luke's University Health Network One positive outcome of the COVID-19 pandemic has been the development of innovative ways to provide healthcare services to patients at home. For example, within a very short time, St. Luke’s greatly expanded its ability to connect patients with primary care physicians, medical specialists, and physical, occupational, and speech therapists. Patients connect with healthcare providers through a computer, laptop, tablet, or phone, using on-line meeting programs, such as Microsoft Teams meeting. Virtual therapy visits are quite popular, especially among patients who have difficulty getting around or who just feel safer at home during the COVID-19 pandemic, says Jeremy Kushner, PT, DPT, facility director, Physical Therapy at St. Luke’s. “We strive to provide the same standard of care through virtual therapy visits as through in-person visits,” Kushner says. “I’m seeing a lot of new patients who haven’t been able to get into the office. This includes patients who have an underlying health issue, such as cancer, heart disease, or a respiratory illness. “Although in many cases in-office visits may be preferred, some patients have thanked us for converting them to the virtual platform so they could continue to have access to our expertise and knowledge from their homes.” Many also appreciate saving the time it takes to drive to and from the office. Conditions treated through virtual therapy visits include musculoskeletal, neurological, and vestibular conditions. Virtual therapy visits are available with physical therapists, occupational therapists, and speech language pathologists. “You don’t have to be too tech-savvy,” he says. “If you can work on a computer, you can have a virtual visit. All that is needed is an Internet connection and a computer, tablet, or phone with a camera.” An application that
provides audio, video, and screen sharing, such as Microsoft Teams meeting, connects patient and therapist. Patients may schedule virtual visits for initial evaluations and follow-up treatments. The first session is a thorough evaluation to determine the patient’s needs and limitations, that the therapist uses to develop a treatment plan to start the individual’s recovery. “Subsequent visits might involve exercises,” he says. “For example, if the patient has a knee problem, I might ask him to perform a squat and would give verbal instruction to ensure proper movement. We provide feedback to get them moving the right way.” Typically, virtual visits occur once a week for 30–60 minutes, but could be more frequent, depending on patient needs. “Most major insurance companies are covering virtual therapy; however, please call our office to determine insurance coverage.” The staff will contact the insurance company on the patient’s behalf and report back to them. Kushner believes that due to their use during the COVID-19 period, virtual visits will become more accepted — and even desired — by patients and insurers. “There has been some prominent research that shows virtual appointments can be as effective as in-office ones,” he says. “I’m certain there will be some major policy changes regarding coverage of virtual visits as a result of what is occurring now.” Meanwhile, Physical Therapy at St. Luke’s continues to offer office visits at its more than 50 locations in the greater Lehigh Valley. To reduce the risk of COVID-19, staff screens every patient prior to their scheduled appointment, wear masks, practice social distancing in the office, and rigorously sanitize all equipment. To schedule your appointment, call Physical Therapy at St. Luke's at 484-526-5025, or visit www.stlukespt. com. For information on the COVID-19 pandemic, visit www.sluhn.org/covid-19.
LIFESTYLES OVER 50
Lehigh Valley
Early Summer 2020
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Industry News For Local Professionals Networking, news, and more!
Country Meadows of Alletown Country Meadows is meeting via zoom on 7/9 and 8/13. Contact mhaller@ countrymeadows.com for more information. LVAIP & Healthnet are meeting via Zoom. Visit lehighvalleyaginginplace.org or email KGarrison@ hgseniorliving.com for details. LV Senior Expo has been rescheduled to Thursday, October 8, 2020 | 9am–Noon for seniors and 4pm –7pm for caregivers | Agri-Plex at 302 North 17th St., Allentown, PA 18104 Lehigh Valley Homecare Benchmark Survey and Report Thrive Media, the publisher of Lifestyles over 50, is compiling its 2020 Non-Medical Home Care study. Since 2014, Thrive has been surveying home care agencies about their operations to help local agencies operate more efficiently and provided improved care.
If you are an agency that would like to participate in the survey, or you would be interested in purchasing a copy of the findings, please contact Jeff at jtintle@ lifestylesover50.com. PA Link is hosting a free webinar: Senior Bullying: It Doesn't Stop on the Playground. Thursday, June 18, 10am–noon. Contact Kim Melusky at kimberlymelusky@lehighcounty.org. Traditions of Hanover Traditions of Hanover just celebrated 15 years of compassionate senior living solutions in Bethlehem. Congratulations to our friends at Traditions of Hanover! traditionsofhanover.com
Word Sudoku
Lifestyles Over 50 The words or names that are used in the puzzle:
Wordoku answers from Page 24 LIFESTYLES CAFETERIA PENSIONER
Arden Courts, a 100% dedicated memory care community, recognizes the importance of customizing a well-rounded care plan for residents with Alzheimer’s or related dementias to help them thrive physically and emotionally. For more information or to schedule a personal tour, call the location nearest you. Allentown 5151 Hamilton Boulevard Allentown, PA 18106 610.366.9010
Old Orchard 4098 Freemansburg Avenue Easton, PA 18045 484.373.5170
GOLDENAGE CARDGAMES CAREGIVER
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GRANDKIDS
Need Help with Senior Care? 855-233-7034
CAREGIVER GOLDENAGE PENSIONER
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Monitored by ADT ® the #1 home security company in the U.S.
PRICE
MONITORING
ADT® 24/7 Monitored Home Security
24/7 monitoring provides peace of mind Yard sign and window decals help deter crime
Quickly connect to fire and emergency response May qualify for a homeowners insurance discount
PER MONTH
FREE HOME SECURITY SYSTEM 850
$
VALUE
FREE SECURITY SYSTEM
New customers only. Early termination fee applies. Installation starts at $99 with 36 month monitoring agreement. See details below.
FREE VISA GIFT CARD ®
From Protect Your Home —$100 Value
FREE
7 WIRELESS DOOR/ WINDOW SENSORS —$695 VALUE!
LIMITED TIME OFFER—CALL TODAY!
1-877-564-6047
FREE WIRELESS REMOTE CONTROL —$139 Value
FREE OUTDOOR CAMERA
When you upgrade to ADT Pulse® + Video
—$299 VALUE!
See all offer details below.
Ask about same-day installation! Reply By July 18, 2020
GIFT CARD: $100 Visa Gift Card fulfilled by Protect Your Home through third-party provider, Mpell, upon installation of a security system and execution of monitoring contract. $4.95 shipping and handling fee, gift cards can take up to 8 weeks to arrive after following the Mpell redemption process. BASIC SYSTEM: $99 Parts and Install. 36-Month Monitoring Agreement required at $27.99 per month ($1,007.64). 24-Month Monitoring Agreement required at $27.99 per month ($671.76) for California. Offer applies to homeowners only. Basic system requires landline phone. Offer valid for new ADT Authorized Premier Provider customers only and not on purchases from ADT LLC. Cannot be combined with any other offer. The $27.99 Offer does not include Quality Service Plan (QSP), ADT’s Extended Limited Warranty. ADT Pulse: ADT Pulse Interactive Solutions Services (“ADT Pulse”), which help you manage your home environment and family lifestyle, require the purchase and/or activation of an ADT alarm system with monitored burglary service and a compatible computer, cell phone or PDA with Internet and email access. These ADT Pulse services do not cover the operation or maintenance of any household equipment/systems that are connected to the ADT Pulse equipment. All ADT Pulse services are not available with the various levels of ADT Pulse. All ADT Pulse services may not be available in all geographic areas. You may be required to pay additional charges to purchase equipment required to utilize the ADT Pulse features you desire. ADT PULSE + VIDEO: ADT Pulse + Video installation is an additional $299. 36-month monitoring contract required from ADT Pulse + Video: $59.99 per month, ($2,159.64), including Quality Service Plan (QSP). Doorbell camera may not be available in all areas. GENERAL: For all offers, the form of payment must be by credit card or electronic charge to your checking or savings account, satisfactory credit history is required and termination fee applies. Local permit fees may be required. Certain restrictions may apply. Additional monitoring fees required for some services. For example, Burglary, Fire, Carbon Monoxide and Emergency Alert monitoring requires purchase and/or activation of an ADT security system with monitored Burglary, Fire, Carbon Monoxide and Emergency Alert devices and are an additional charge. Additional equipment may be purchased for an additional charge. Additional charges may apply in areas that require guard response service for municipal alarm verification. Prices subject to change. Prices may vary by market. Some insurance companies offer discounts on Homeowner’s Insurance. Please consult your insurance company. Photos are for illustrative purposes only and may not reflect the exact product/service actually provided. Licenses: AL-21-001104, AR-CMPY.0001725 AZ-ROC217517, CA-ACO6320, CT-ELC.0193944-L5, DC-EMS902653, DC-602516000016, DE-07-212, FL-EC13003427, EC13003401, GA-LVA205395, IA-AS-0206, ID-ELE-SJ-39131, IL-127.001042, IN-C.P.D. Reg. No. – 19-08088, City of Indianapolis: LAC-000156, KY-City of Louisville: 483, LA-F1914, LA-F1915, LA-F1082, MA-1355C, MD-107-1626, ME-LM50017382, MI-3601205773, MN-TS01807, MO-City of St. Louis: CC#354, St. Louis County: 100194, MS-15007958,MT-PSP-ELS-LIC-247, NC-25310-SP-FA/LV, NC-1622-CSA, NE-14451, NJ Burglar Alarm Lic. # -NJ-34BF00021800, NM-353366, NV-0068518, City of Las Vegas: 3000008296, NY-Licensed by the N.Y.S. Department of State UID#12000317691, NYS #12000286451,OH-53891446, City of Cincinnati: AC86, OK-AC1048, OR-170997, Pennsylvania Home Improvement Contractor Registration Number: PA022999, RI-3582, RI-7508, SC-BAC5630, SD- 1025-7001-ET, TN-1520, TX-B13734, ACR-3492, UT-6422596-6501, VA-115120, VT-ES-2382(7C),WA-602588694/ECPROTEYH934RS, WI-City of Milwaukee: PAS-0002966, WV-WV042433, WY-LV-G-21499. 3750 Priority Way South Dr. Indianapolis, IN 46240 ©2017 DEFENDERS, Inc. dba Protect Your Home DF-CD-NP-Q220
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