Complimentary | Chester County Edition | August 2016 • Vol. 13 No. 8
Dirty Hands Unearth Health and Happiness page 4
Dating When a Spouse Has Alzheimer’s page 11
‘Roots’ Series Reimagined page 14
Art & Antiques by Dr. Lori
Decorating with Family Heirlooms Lori Verderame
There is an overwhelming abundance of home-makeover TV shows and online blogs about redecorating, redesigning, and reconsidering the objects with which we live. Antiques and family heirlooms are front and center when it comes to innovative design. Here are some decorating tips that might prove fun and interesting. Arrange Collections Architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe was onto something when he said, “Less is more.” Even large collections can look organized if they are arranged well. Put antique collections together by size, material, color, or texture. This method shows both a collection’s similarities and differences.
This is a statement wall. Put your best object right there with pride.
Organization of a collection shows that you have given some thought to your collection and its arrangement.
Family Friendly If you have an object that has been handed The Front is down in the family Foremost over the years, consider When you enter designing a room any room in your home, there is one around it. Ironstone mixing bowl in foyer atop a repurposed chest. If you have your wall that is right in front of you or one grandmother’s Regina music box dating back to the early wall that you focus on the most. 1900s, feature it proudly where This wall is the starting point for everyone can admire it. any design concept, and in museums Is that antique parlor chair from the it is called the confrontation wall— aptly named as it is the first wall you Victorian period or cut-glass punch bowl looking for a new space to show confront. This wall shouts out for something important, big, colorful, or its stuff? Take it out of the living room where it may get lost in the array of bright.
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other furnishings and make it the featured antique object in a guest room, powder room, or foyer entryway. Feature a single antique object with family significance, like Grandma’s 19th-century ironstone mixing bowl, in a prominent area of your home. Use objects to let your family history shine. For instance, I have my father’s war medals proudly displayed in my home library along with World War II literature and military scrapbooks. Talk about the origin of these special old pieces and let your history speak through heirloom objects throughout your home. Ph.D. antique appraiser and awardwinning TV expert Dr. Lori Verderame is the star appraiser on Discovery channel’s international hit TV show Auction Kings and appears on FOX Business Network’s Strange Inheritance. Visit www.DrLori V.com or call (888) 431-1010.
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50plus LIFE u
www.50plusLifePA.com
The Beauty in Nature
Fall Webworms Clyde McMillan-Gamber
During late July and all of August in Central Pennsylvania, as across much of eastern North America, we see large sheets of webbing wrapped over whole branches of the abundant black walnut and hickory trees.
Those webs, made by hundreds of fall webworm caterpillar siblings—the offspring of a small, mostly white moth—engulf the leaves of entire limbs. There, those webworm larvae eat
the enclosed foliage in relative safety from predators and the weather. The webs get larger as the caterpillars grow. Sometimes those limbs are almost completely defoliated, but fall
webworms don’t cause permanent damage to the trees. Fall webworms aren’t beautiful creatures that lend to the esthetics of local landscapes. They are pale yellow please see WEBWORMS page 15
At Your Fingertips Helpful numbers, hotlines, and local businesses and organizations eager to serve you—all just a phone call away. Continuing Care Retirement Communities Moravian Manor 300 W. Lemon St., Lititz (717) 626-0214
Arthritis Foundation (215) 665-9200
JEWELERS American Gold & Estate Buyers, Inc. 363 E. Lincoln Highway, Exton (484) 872-8216
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (800) 232-4636
Legal Services Lawyer Referral Service (610) 429-1500
Coatesville VA Medical Center (610) 383-7711
Legal Aid of Southeastern PA (610) 436-4510
Chester County Emergency Services (610) 344-5000
Domestic Violence (800) 799-7233
Salvation Army Coatesville (610) 384-2954
National Osteoporosis Foundation (800) 223-9994
Pine and Pine Law Offices 104 S. Church St., West Chester (610) 344-7100
Salvation Army West Chester (610) 696-8746
PACE (800) 225-7223
Nutrition Meals on Wheels Chester County Inc. (610) 430-8500
Emergency Numbers Central PA Poison Center (800) 521-6110
Senior Healthlink (610) 431-1852
Pennsylvania Hunger Action Center (800) 366-3997
Social Security Administration (800) 772-1213
Office of Aging Chester County Department of Aging Services (610) 344-6350
Disasters American Red Cross Greater Brandywine (610) 692-1200
Office of Aging (610) 344-6350/(800) 692-1100 Financial Services Internal Revenue Service (800) 829-3676 Fitness Aquatics Is, Inc. (484) 354-2720 Funeral & Cremation Services Cremation Society of Pennsylvania Serving Chester County (800) 720-8221 Health & Medical Services Alzheimer’s Association (800) 272-3900 American Cancer Society (800) 227-2345 www.50plusLifePA.com
American Heart Association (610) 940-9540
Southeastern PA Medical Institute (610) 446-0662 Hearing Services Advanced Hearing Solutions 111 Arrandale Blvd., Exton (610) 968-1039 Pennsylvania Office for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing (800) 233-3008 V/TTY Housing Assistance Community Impact Legal Services (610) 876-0804 Housing Authority of Chester County (610) 436-9200
Physicians Gateway Medical Associates Locations in Coatesville, Downingtown, Lionville, and West Chester (610) 423-8181 Senior Centers Coatesville (610) 383-6900 Downingtown (610) 269-3939 Great Valley (610) 889-2121
orthopedics Premier Orthopaedic & Sports Medicine Associates LTD Kennett Square – (610) 444-1344 West Chester – (610) 692-6280 West Grove – (484) 748-6148
Kennett Square (610) 444-4819 Oxford (610) 932-5244 Phoenixville (610) 935-1515 Wayne (610) 688-6246 West Chester (610) 431-4242 Not an all-inclusive list of advertisers in your area.
personal services Butler-Ette Services (484) 770-8059 Pharmacies CVS/pharmacy www.cvs.com
Housing Authority of Phoenixville (610) 933-8801 50plus LIFE u
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Cover Story
Dirty Hands Unearth Health and Happiness Corporate Office
3912 Abel Drive, Columbia, PA 17512 Phone 717.285.1350 • Fax 717.285.1360 Chester County: 610.675.6240 Cumberland County/Dauphin County: 717.770.0140 Berks County/Lancaster County/ Lebanon County/York County: 717.285.1350 E-mail address: info@onlinepub.com Website address: www.onlinepub.com
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Vice President and Managing Editor Christianne Rupp Editor, 50plus Publications Megan Joyce
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50plus LIFE is published by On-Line Publishers, Inc. and is distributed monthly among senior centers, retirement communities, banks, grocers, libraries and other outlets serving the senior community. On-Line Publishers, Inc. will not knowingly accept or publish advertising which may be fraudulent or misleading in nature. Views expressed in opinion stories, contributions, articles and letters are not necessarily the views of the publisher. The appearance of advertisements for products or services does not constitute an endorsement of the particular product or service. The publisher will not be responsible for mistakes in advertisements unless notified within five days of publication. On-Line Publishers, Inc. reserves the right to revise or reject any and all advertising. No part of this publication may be reproduced or reprinted without permission of On-Line Publishers, Inc. We will not knowingly publish any advertisement or information not in compliance with the Federal Fair Housing Act, Pennsylvania State laws or other local laws.
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Olivia’s House, a grief and By Sam Peeples loss center for children. Of course, she makes Driving up to Melanie sure to spare plenty Markowski’s house, the of time for her own butterfly garden sits backyard. Each side of prominently in the front the house is surrounded yard. It is filled with by greenery, whether it is flowers of cool lavender, a row of bushes and trees pink, and white and or carefully constructed surrounded by plants flowerbeds. specially chosen to provide “I love doing theme for every stage of a gardens. I have a butterfly butterfly’s lifecycle. Markowski’s kitchen herb garden contains garden, a hummingbird Following the short 20 favorite herbs. garden, and colorwalkway to her front door coordinated gardens,” is another bed of reds Markowski said. “I love and yellows supported by matching the gardens with shrubs and berry bushes. the color of the house.” Right away, it is evident While the front yard is that nature is important in centered on the butterfly her life and has been for a garden and flowers from long time. friends, the back and sides Markowski’s first of the yard provide their memory is of planting lima own beauty. beans in June. A small herb garden sits “When they pop up out in pots growing thyme, of the ground, they have parsley, and oregano. these little dirt caps. I went A wooden tub The Green Thumb out and picked up all the pollinator garden of Garden Club’s memorial Her shed is surrounded by wildflowers and selfdirt caps because I thought annual flowers. garden of native plants seeding plants that provide I was helping them be in a local park. cover for a small pond born. I don’t think Dad beloved by frogs. appreciated that.” Another pond sits by Markowski is a longtime all their attendees. the fence’s gate with fish enjoying member and current vice president The club has been consistently shade from nearby trees. And just of the Green Thumb Garden active within the community. off of her patio sits a bed of silver Club. She joined when one of She and the other members are plants promising to glow the next the group’s founding members, responsible for planting and time there’s moonlight. Lucretia Fake, invited her to a maintaining the flowerbeds Markowski’s love of gardening meeting one day. surrounding the town square and extends beyond the confines of “Lucretia invited me to a its borough’s four welcome signs. her own backyard or the Green meeting in 1997 and I promptly They also manage a native Thumb Gardening Club. joined,” she said. “It’s amazing plant memorial garden at a park For 15 years she ran the how you can grow up right next to and playground to honor club afterschool Junior Garden something and never hear of it.” members who have passed on. Program for a local elementary Since joining the Green Members donate plants to an school. More than 250 students Thumbs, Markowski has been annual yard sale, and last year’s passed through the program and both correspondence secretary and proceeds were enough to create 2,000 more toured the gardens membership chair. Her secretarial two $500 scholarships for local and learned about local wildlife. duties consisted of writing letters, students pursuing gardening“I very much enjoyed running keeping members informed of related fields. an afterschool Junior Garden events, and sharing incoming Club members engage the Program with a focus on correspondence. residents of Victorian Villa in gardening for wildlife,” she said. As chair, she reached out to horticultural therapy, teaching “Since that program has ended, potential members and invited them to create floral designs and them to meetings, welcoming new gardens. And during the holidays, Green Thumb and I have been members and maintaining a list of they decorate a Christmas tree for looking into another way to reach www.50plusLifePA.com
out to children.” She and Green Thumb also host a series of library lectures every fourth Thursday of the month. These lessons include herb growing, how to cut down on labor, making special gardens and orchards, and even a topiary demo for the holidays. She is also happy to see local schools continuing their commitment to gardening and the outdoors. “Since the war gardens of World War I and the victory gardens of World War II, school curriculums have included gardening,” Markowski said. “I am very happy to see a lot of schools receive grants and set up gardening programs.” Whether it is in her home or throughout her county, Markowski is truly passionate about horticulture. She believes in its benefits enough to recommend gardening to anyone
who has even a passing interest in working with plants. “I hope that everyone plants a garden with their families; whether it’s flowers or vegetables, digging in the dirt helps to keep you healthy,” she said. “It doesn’t matter if you live in an apartment, the suburbs, or on a high-rise with a balcony. If you have land, plant what you enjoy, can afford, and can take care of. “And if you really don’t like to dig in the dirt, then go outside and enjoy the efforts of others as you tour the many beautiful parks and gardens throughout Pennsylvania and beyond.” For more information on the Green Thumb Garden Club, go to their website (http://gardenclubofyork. com), email info@gardenclubyork. com, or contact Markowski at (717) 244-8476 or mmarkowski@juno. com.
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50plus LIFE u
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Salute to a Veteran
Robert D. Wilcox
He Flew the Dreaded Hump, Delivering Supplies that Kept China in the War
When Newton Dana graduated from Trenton High School in 1941 at age 17, he enrolled at Ohio State University. But by the end of his sophomore year there, the draft was about to pay him a visit. So he decided to enlist in the Army Air Corps, and he headed for Atlantic City, New Jersey, for basic training. He was then selected for the aviation cadet program, and after completing primary, basic, and advanced flight training, he won his wings and became a flight officer. He then joined the crew of a fourengine B-24 Liberator bomber as copilot in late 1944 and was on his way east across the Atlantic, Africa, and the Near East to India. From there, the crew flew the Hump to their base in China, where they flew as members of the Flying Tigers.
Their crew’s bombing missions were against the Japaneseoccupied facilities along the eastern part of China, tearing up bridges, marshalling yards, and airfields. One mission Dana especially remembers is attacking and helping to destroy the Yellow River
Bridge that spanned the river that is China’s second longest and the cradle of Chinese civilization. The bridge would have supplied the Japanese their all-essential access to the Chinese heartland. When the list of consequential Newton Dana with the PT-17 Stearman he targets ran thin in early flew in primary flight training. 1945, Dana
Stories of ordinary men and women called to perform extraordinary military service. Since 1999, writer and World War II veteran Col. Robert D. Wilcox has preserved the firsthand wartime experiences of more than 200 veterans through Salute to a Veteran, his monthly column featured in 50plus LIFE. Now, for the first time, 50 of those stories— selected by Wilcox himself—are available to own in this soft-cover book.
Simply complete and mail this form with your payment to the address below to order Salute to Our Veterans. On-Line Publishers • 3912 Abel Drive, Columbia, PA 17512 Name_ _______________________________________________________ Address_ ______________________________________________________ City_______________________________ State_ ____ Zip_ ______________ Phone_ _____________________ Email______________________________ Number of copies_ ______ (Please include $20.80 for each copy) Credit card #______________________________________ Exp. date________ Signature of cardholder_________________________________CVV #________
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and his crew were assigned to fly the Hump back to Chabua, India, to join the planes that were flying the Hump around the clock, carrying fuel, ammo, and supplies of all other kinds to China. Flying the Hump had begun in early 1942, when the Japanese advance had taken Burma and had sealed off the Burma Road, which had permitted trucks to carry drastically needed supplies to the Chinese. That 1,000-mile roundtrip airlift turned out to be an extremely hazardous undertaking for our flight crews. Planes flew around the clock over high mountains and deep gorges between Burma and China. Fully loaded C-47s couldn’t climb over the tallest peaks, so they had to fly dangerous paths between the peaks, some of which reached 20,000
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feet into the skies. There was violent turbulence—with winds of 200 mph—huge downdrafts, and icing, and wild weather as a daily threat. Also, there was a severe lack of suitable charts and an absence of navigational equipment, like radio beacons. Airlift crews were said to have faced a 1-in-3 chance of being killed. On the ground, there were not enough mechanics or spare parts to go around, so maintenance and engine overhauls were often deferred. Many overloaded planes crashed on takeoff when they lost an engine. Author and ATC pilot Ernest Gann remembers flying into Chabua and seeing four air crashes in one day: two C-47s and two C-87s. But, each year the tonnage carried to China increased significantly, with more planes flying, more flight crews, and more mechanics to keep them in the air. The weather, however, remained lethal. “Those downdrafts were a special horror,” Dana says. “Once, one grabbed us and dropped us 4,000 feet like we were on an elevator. Nothing
we could do about it. Luckily, we were “They’d have made a good tree still above the tops of the mountains house back home,” Dana remembers. … although barely. How about the food? “There were plenty of crashed “Typically, in China it was airplanes below us, so many that C-rations we were delivering. In it used to be called ‘an aluminum India you felt like you hadn’t lived undercast.’” until you had An Air some Buffalo Force report cacciatore.” said, “A Gen. byproduct of William the numerous Tunner, air crashes was who had a local boom commanded in native wares the last phases made from of the Hump, aluminum later wrote, crash debris.” “Once the What airlift got A B-24 like the one Dana flew makes a happened underway, high-altitude turn in the clouds. when a Hump every drop of flight got to China? fuel, every weapon, and every round “Usually, when we got there, they of ammunition, and 100 percent of unloaded everything but the meager such diverse supplies as carbon paper load of fuel aboard that would get and C-rations, every such item used by us back to India, and then sent us American forces in China was flown back over the Hump to fly another in by air. mission,” Dana says. “Never in the history of When he had a chance to grab transportation had any community some rest between missions, what been supplied such a large proportion were the quarters like? of its needs by air, even in the heart
of civilization over friendly terrain. After the Hump, those of us who had developed an expertise in air transportation knew that we could fly anything, anywhere, anytime.” The dropping of the atomic bombs brought about the surrender of Japan on Aug. 15, 1945, but the Hump flying went on until China could be supplied reliably from the ground. And on Sept. 17, Dana and his crew headed their B-24 back to the U.S., where they were discharged at Fort Dix, New Jersey. Dana returned to Ohio State to earn his degree in animal husbandry before forging a career as general manager of the family’s Dana Packing Company, in Wrightstown, New Jersey. He came to Central Pennsylvania to be close to his daughter. Asked if he now thinks often of those days of bombing China and flying the Hump, he says quietly, “When you have memories like those, you’ll have them with you the rest of your life.” Col. Wilcox flew a B-17 bomber in Europe in World War II.
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Savvy Senior
Great Gadgets for Aging Golfers Jim Miller
Dear Savvy Senior, Can you recommend any products that can help older golfers? I love to play golf, but I have hip and back problems that make bending over to tee up or pick up the ball difficult. And I have arthritis in my thumbs that makes gripping the club a problem. – Ailing Eddy Dear Eddy, There are actually a wide variety of nifty golf accessories and adaptive equipment that can help older golfers who struggle with injuries, arthritis, or loss of mobility. Here are several products for different needs. Bending Substitutes The game of golf requires a lot of repetitive bending and stooping
that comes with teeing up the ball, repairing divots, marking the ball on the green, and retrieving a ball or tee on the ground, along with picking up a club, sand rake, or flag stick off the ground. For teeing up the ball without bending over, consider one of the Northcroft Golf Tee-Up devices. These are long-handled tools (1.5–3 feet long) that have trigger-style handgrips and a jaw that holds the ball and tee for easy placement. They cost between $69 and $72 and are
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available at www. northcroftgolf.com. For other tee-up solutions, see the Tee Pal ($55, www. teepalpro.com) and Joe’s Original Backtee ($15, www. uprightgolf.com). Northcroft Golf and Upright Golf also offer a variety of stoopproof ball-pickup accessories and divot-repair and magnetic ballmarker products ranging between $5 and $12. Or, if you just want a great allaround golf picker-upper, consider the GraBall GrabALL JAW, sold
through Amazon.com for $10 for a package of two. It attaches to the handle end of your putter and chipper and is designed to pick up golf balls, flagsticks, putters, and greenside chippers. Gripping Aids To help alleviate your golf-clubgripping problem, there are specially designed golf gloves and grips that can make a big difference. The best gloves are the Bionic Golf Gloves (www.bionicgloves.com) that have extra padding in the palm and finger joints to improve grip. And the Power Glove (www. powerglove.com) has a small strap attached to the glove that loops around the club grip to secure it in your hand. These run between $20 and $30.
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Another option is to get oversized grips installed on your clubs. This can make gripping the club easier and more comfortable, and they are also very good at absorbing shock. Oversized grips are usually either one-sixteenth inch or one-eighth inch larger in diameter than a standard grip and cost around $10 per grip. You can find these grips and have them installed at your local golf store or pro shop. Or, for a grip-and-glove combination fix, consider the Quantum Grip (www.quantumgrip.
com) that incorporates Velcro material recessed in the golf club grip and a companion golf glove that has mating Velcro material in the palm. Cost is $20 per grip, plus $35 per glove. Vision Helper If vision problems make finding the ball difficult, Chromax golf balls (www.chromaxgolf.com) can make a big difference. These are reflective, colored golf balls that appear larger and brighter. Cost is $10.50 for a three-pack.
Ergonomic Carts There are also ergonomically designed golf carts that can help you transport your golf clubs around the course. If you like to walk, the Sun Mountain Sports Micro-Cart, V1 Sport Cart, or Reflex Cart are great options. These are three- and fourwheeled, lightweight push carts that fold into a compact size for easy transport. They are available at www. sunmountain.com for $200, $210, and $230, respectively.
Or, for severe mobility loss, the SoloRider specialized electric golf cart (www.solorider.com) provides the ability to play from a seated or standing-but-supported position. Retailing for $9,450, plus a $550 shipping fee, this cart is lightweight and precisely balanced so it can be driven on tee boxes and greens without causing any damage. Federal ADA laws require that all publicly owned golf courses allow them. Jim Miller is a regular contributor to the NBC Today show and author of The Savvy Senior Book. www.savvysenior.org
Take Care of Your Inheritance A rich, distant uncle dying and leaving you all his money may sound like good luck, but any financial windfall should be managed carefully if you want to conserve it for the future. Remember these tips if you come into some money: Stash it away. Put the money away
for at least six months. Trying to decide what to do with the money too soon after a relative’s death may lead to questionable decisions. Put it into
a money market or savings account for a little while. Assess your debt. Before you decide to invest in stocks or buy something with the money, determine
whether the money would be better spent wiping out any debt you currently have. Seek advice. If you receive more than $20,000, consider hiring a financial advisor who can suggest a way to safeguard it while getting the largest or safest return on your investments.
PREMIER ORTHOPAEDIC CARE FROM CHESTER COUNTY’S TOP DOCS
Standing left to right: Todd A. Michener, MD, Mark Tantorski, DO, Chet Simmons Jr., MD, Greg Kirwan, DO, Jeff Citara, DO, Matthew Schaeffer, MD Seated: Richard Ziegler, MD, John Benner, MD, Adrienne Towsen, MD, Robert Huxster, MD
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At Chester County Orthopaedic Associates, Ltd., our mission is to provide the highest quality orthopaedic surgical care in a compassionate, caring, and professional manner. We strive to provide you with the personal attention you deserve. Our orthopaedic team helps patients rediscover the simple joy of being able to get up and go — free of pain and stiffness. For over 40 years we have served the community and are proud to be Chester County’s premier orthopaedic practice. Kennett Square 400 McFarlan Road Suite 100 Kennett Square, PA 19348 T: (610) 444-1344 F: (610) 444-1351
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CCRC Continuing Care
Retirement Communities Designed with their residents’ changing needs in mind, CCRCs offer a tiered approach to the aging process. Healthy adults entering a CCRC can live independently. When assistance with everyday activities becomes necessary, they can transition to personal care, assisted living, rehabilitation, or nursing care facilities. Some CCRCs have designated dementia areas that address the progressing needs of people who have any form of dementia. In addition, some communities have sought out and earned accreditation from CARF International, signifying they have met CARF’s stringent set of quality standards. CCRCs enable older adults to remain in one care system for the duration of their lives, with much of their future care already figured out—creating both comfort and peace of mind.
Bethany Village
325 Wesley Drive Mechanicsburg, PA 17055 Stephanie Lightfoot Director of Sales & Marketing (717) 766-0279 www.bethanyvillage.org
Calvary Fellowship Homes
Chapel Pointe at Carlisle
Cross Keys Village The Brethren Home Community
Homeland Center
The Middletown Home
Pleasant View Retirement Community
502 Elizabeth Drive Lancaster, PA 17601 Marlene Morris Marketing Director (717) 393-0711 www.calvaryhomes.org
Cornwall Manor
1 Boyd Street, P.O. Box 125 Cornwall, PA 17016 Jennifer Margut Director of Marketing (717) 274-8092 info@cornwallmanor.org www.cornwallmanor.org
770 South Hanover Street Carlisle, PA 17013 Linda Amsley Director of Marketing/Admissions (717) 249-1363 info@ChapelPointe.org www.ChapelPointe.org
2990 Carlisle Pike New Oxford, PA 17350 Amy Beste Senior Retirement Counselor (717) 624-5350 a.beste@crosskeysvillage.org www.crosskeysvillage.org
Homestead Village
999 West Harrisburg Pike Middletown, PA 17057 Andrea Henney Director of Residential Services (717) 944-3351 www.MiddletownHome.org
Enhanced Senior Living 1800 Marietta Avenue P.O. Box 3227 Lancaster, PA 17604-3227 Christina Gallagher Director of Marketing (717) 397-4831, ext. 158 www.homesteadvillage.org
St. Anne’s Retirement Community
Serving from the Heart in the Spirit of Friendship, Love, and Truth
Willow Valley Communities “A Catholic-Centered Community, Honoring All Faiths”
3952 Columbia Avenue West Hempfield Township, PA 17512 Toni La Pann Marketing & Sales (717) 285-6112 www.StAnnesRC.org
600 Willow Valley Square Lancaster, PA 17602 Ric Myers Director of Sales (717) 464-6800 (800) 770-5445 www.willowvalleycommunities.org
1901 North Fifth Street Harrisburg, PA 17102-1598 Barry S. Ramper II, N.H.A. President/CEO (717) 221-7902 www.homelandcenter.org
544 North Penryn Road Manheim, PA 17545 Amanda Hall Sales & Marketing Manager (717) 664-6207 ahall@pleasantviewrc.org www.pleasantviewrc.org
Woodcrest Villa Mennonite Home Communities 2001 Harrisburg Pike Lancaster, PA 17601 Connie Buckwalter Director of Marketing (717) 390-4126 www.woodcrestvilla.org
The CCRCs listed are sponsoring this message. This is not an all-inclusive list.
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August 2016
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On Life and Love after 50
Dating When a Spouse Has Alzheimer’s Tom Blake
One of the most difficult and controversial senior-relationship topics that readers bring up is dating when a spouse has Alzheimer’s. A woman, age 71, said, “I am dating a man, age 76, whose wife has Alzheimer’s and is very well cared for in an expensive facility. He visits her daily, sometimes as much as three times a day. They had a 35year marriage in which he raised her children, and he considers them equally his own. “Here is my dilemma. I don’t doubt that he loved his wife, and still does as much as he can. But in his online dating profile (how I met him), he said he has more love to give than his wife can accept. That is kind of awkward wording, but I knew what he was trying to say. “I do not think he is morally bad for seeking companionship, since his wife has been going downhill for five years and has been in this facility for the past three years. But his children do not like the idea of their father going out with other women. They know that he is, but they have told him, ‘We don’t want to hear about it.’ “That puts me in the ‘other woman’ category. I feel ‘back door’ and it doesn’t feel good. I have never asked to go with him to visit his wife. I find myself feeling resentful about the position this puts me in. I know he is happy with me as he has told me he loves me and often speaks of
our future together. “But I also know that he will always be in touch with his children, who will probably ask at some point if I was ‘dating’ their father while their mother was still alive. I don’t want to be a pariah when the day comes that his wife passes away. “Would it be reasonable or fair of me to tell him that unless I can be part of his life now, e.g., visit his wife in the facility and not be hidden from his children, I cannot go on this way? “If I cannot go to the facility, then perhaps his wife is not really ‘that far along’ after all. Maybe she has another three or four years to go. I don’t want to be ‘backdoor Dora’ for the next four years. Please help me understand my situation better.”
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sick she really is. That is totally wrong and disrespectful. She has no business going there. Next, she worries about how his stepchildren view her. She’s not going to be able to change that either. Probably ever. After all, the ill woman is the children’s mother. So, either she accepts the situation the way it is, stays in the background, and stops worrying so much about herself, or she needs to exit the relationship. I find her motives and dilemma to be her problem. For dating information, previous articles, or to sign up for Tom’s complimentary, weekly e-newsletter, go to www. findingloveafter60.com. See also www. findingloveafter50.com and www. travelafter55.com.
Practical Legal Representation Tailored for Your Needs Professional, Experienced, Trusted
Tom Blake’s opinion: The man is lonely; he went on a dating site. He did not try to hide that he is married and his wife has Alzheimer’s. What he did may not be right in some people’s eyes. One of my male readers was a caregiver to his wife for 12 years.
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He said, “You need to walk in someone’s shoes to know what it’s like to be an isolated caregiver in a hostile environment before you can criticize them. With Alzheimer’s, you watch your loved one slowly vanish before your eyes and become a total stranger.” The woman entered this relationship knowing the situation. She should have known she was walking into a minefield. Now, she wants to go visit the wife to see how
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Norman J. Pine, Esq.
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Phone: (610) 344-7100 Fax: (610) 344-7500 www.pineandpine.net 50plus LIFE u
August 2016
11
It Was 50 Years Ago Today
‘Summer in the City’ Randal Hill
Aug. 25, 2016 Nov. 15, 2016 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
1150 Camp Hill Bypass Camp Hill
2913 Spooky Nook Rd. Manheim
Radisson Hotel Harrisburg FREE PARKING!
Spooky Nook Sports
Please, join us! This combined event is FREE for veterans of all ages, active military, and their families.
At the Expo
Veterans Benefits Community Services Products and Services Available Support/Assistance Programs Education/Training Services
At the Job Fair
Employers Job Counseling Workshops/Seminars Resume Writing Assistance Principal Sponsors:
Sponsored by: Blue Ridge Communications • Bob 94.9 • CBS21 • DHL Supply Chain Disabled American Veterans • ESPN 92.7 • Fulton Financial Corporation Pennsylvania American Legion • Pennsylvania National Guard Outreach Office Pennsylvania State Headquarters VFW • The SYGMA Network • WFYL • WHP580
Sponsor & Exhibitor Opportunities Available
www.veteransexpo.com (717) 285-1350 www.olpevents.com
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The old radio brother might be able soundman scratched to do something with his head. Those the words as song lyrics scraggly, hippieabout a young city guy looking musicians had being out on a summer requested his entire night. sound effects collection The elder Sebastian of traffic noises. They said he’d take a look had even asked him to but then saw only two include the sound of lines he liked: a jackhammer. They But at night it’s a said all the noise would different world/Go out show up on their next and find a girl record. Working with Steve “Summer in the City” The elderly Boone, Sebastian The Lovin’ Spoonful gentleman rolled fashioned the poem August 1966 his eyes. Whatever into a winning musical happened to “normal” music? And just composition that included the novelty what kind of oddball name was the of urban sound effects. Lovin’ Spoonful, anyway? “We listened for hours to various Harmonica player/autoharpist John traffic-jam noises and car horns Sebastian and guitarist Zal Yanovsky and selected the ones we wanted,” had played in a bohemian Greenwich Sebastian explained to Fred Bronson Village jug band/folk group called the in The Billboard Book of Number 1 Mugwumps, which included future Hits. “We found [the sound of] a Mamas and Papas members Cass pneumatic hammer to provide for that Elliot and Denny Doherty. section and put it all together.” Seeking a new direction, Sebastian “Summer in the City” proved to and Yanovsky eventually left the band, be another winner for the Big Apple recruited drummer/vocalist Joe Butler boys. Musicologist Toby Cresswell, and bassist Steve Boone, and formed in his book 1001 Songs, enthuses, the Lovin’ Spoonful. For the name, “The pounding bass and drums with Sebastian had lifted a lyric phrase from staccato organ jabs build an intense “Coffee Blues,” an obscure song by an mood that’s shattered by the sound old bluesman named Mississippi John effects of jackhammers and car horns. Hurt. This really is the sound of the city After gigging in New York City and the promise of excitement and clubs for a while, the bluesy folkies adventure to be had in the streets and signed with the fledgling Kama Sutra nightclubs.” Records label and quickly found “Summer in the City” gave the success when the group racked up five Lovin’ Spoonful its sixth winning Top Ten singles in as many releases. single and their only No. 1 release. Now pressure was on to keep the There’s no way to calculate just winning streak alive. No problem. To how much the added sound effects the Lovin’ Spoonful, “Summer in the contributed to the million-seller’s City” had hit written all over it. popularity. Maybe not much, really. The future ’60s classic had begun as For all the time and effort spent on the a freshman English class poem written project, the entire gimmick lasts all of by the younger brother of Spoonful eight seconds. leader John Sebastian. Randal C. Hill is a rock ’n’ roll historian Mark Sebastian had been discouraged by the “F” grade the poem who lives at the Oregon coast. He may be reached at wryterhill@msn.com. had earned him, but he thought his www.50plusLifePA.com
Calendar of Events
Chester County
Support Groups Free and open to the public Aug. 9, 7 p.m. Hearing Loss Support Group Christ Community Church 1190 Phoenixville Pike, West Chester (610) 444-445 www.hearinglosschesco.com
Aug. 2, 1:30 p.m. Grief Support Group Phoenixville Senior Center 153 Church St., Phoenixville (610) 327-7216 Aug. 2 and 16, 6:30 to 8 p.m. Bereavement Support Group Brandywine Hospital Conference Room 2N 201 Reeceville Road, Coatesville (610) 998-1700, ext. 226 Aug. 2, 16, 30, 5 to 6:30 p.m. Bereavement Support Group Main Line Unitarian Church 816 S. Valley Forge Road, Devon (610) 585-6604 phoenixbereavement@yahoo.com Nondenominational; all are welcome. Aug. 3, 6 p.m. Memory Loss and Dementia Support Group Sunrise Assisted Living of Paoli 324 W. Lancaster Ave., Malvern (610) 251-9994 Aug. 8 and 22, 10:30 a.m. to noon Caregiver Support Group Adult Care of Chester County 201 Sharp Lane, Exton (610) 363-8044
Aug. 9 and 23, 6:30 to 8 p.m. Bereavement Support Group Jennersville Hospital Conference Room B 1015 W. Baltimore Pike, West Grove (610) 998-1700, ext. 226 Aug. 10, 1:30 p.m. Family Caregiver Support Group Sarah Care 425 Technology Drive, Suite 200, Malvern (610) 251-0801 Aug. 16, 6 p.m. Family Caregiver Support Group Sunrise of Westtown 501 Skiles Blvd., West Chester (610) 399-4464 Aug. 31, 6 p.m. Living with Cancer Support Group Paoli Hospital Cancer Center 255 W. Lancaster Ave., Paoli (484) 565-1253
Community Programs Free and open to the public Aug. 2, 11:30 a.m. West Chester University Retirees Luncheon For restaurant location, please email darsie@ verizon.net Aug. 4, 7:30 p.m. Compassionate Friends Valley Forge Chapter Good Shepherd Lutheran Church 132 E. Valley Forge Road, King of Prussia (484) 919-0820 www.tcfvalleyforge.org
Aug. 6 and 20, 5 to 10 p.m. Bingo Night Marine Corps League Detachment 430 Chestnut St., Downingtown (610) 429-8174 If you have an event you would like to include, please email information to mjoyce@onlinepub.com for consideration.
Around Town
Hawaiian Day Features Native Dancers
The Downingtown Area Senior Center recently held a Hawaiian Day featuring two young Hawaiian natives, Krisella and Angelia Gabriele. These young ladies pleased a crowd of 60 people with their grace and authentic dancing. If you have local news you’d like considered for Around Town, please email mjoyce@onlinepub.com
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Senior Center Activities Coatesville Area Senior Center – (610) 383-6900 250 Harmony St., Coatesville www.coatesvilleseniorcenter.org Monthly Veterans Coffee Hour – Call for date and time Aug. 17, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. – Senior Prom – “A Time to Remember” Downingtown Senior Center – (610) 269-3939 983 E. Lancaster Ave., Downingtown www.downingtownseniors.org Great Valley Senior Center – (610) 889-2121 47 Church Road, Malvern Tuesdays, 10 a.m. – Games and Coloring Aug. 17, 11 a. m. – Meal & a Message: Senior Issues with Sen. Dinniman’s Office Aug. 24, 1 p.m. – Meet and Eat at Great American Pub, Paoli Kennett Area Senior Center – (610) 444-4819 427 S. Walnut St., Kennett Square www.kennettseniorcenter.org Oxford Senior Center – (610) 932-5244 12 E. Locust St., Oxford – www.oxfordseniors.org Phoenixville Area Senior Center – (610) 935-1515 153 Church St., Phoenixville – www.phoenixvilleseniorcenter.org West Chester Area Senior Center – (610) 431-4242 530 E. Union St., West Chester – www.wcseniors.org Just a snippet of what you may be missing … please call or visit their website for more information.
Parks And Recreation Aug. 3, 5 to 6 p.m. – Weeding Wednesdays, Springton Manor Farm Butterfly Garden Aug. 13, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. – Old Fiddlers’ Picnic, Hibernia County Park Aug. 26, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. – Sunset Hike and Campfire, Hibernia County Park
LIBRARY PROGRAMS Downingtown Library, 330 E. Lancaster Ave., Downingtown, (610) 269-2741 Aug. 2 and 16, 6 p.m. – Knitters Club Aug. 8, 6:30 p.m. – Fantasy Book Club Aug. 9, 6:30 p.m. – Film Forum Paoli Library, 18 Darby Road, Paoli, (610) 296-7996 Mystery Book Club – Call for dates/times 50plus LIFE u
August 2016
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‘Roots’ Series Reimagined for Novel’s 40th Anniversary By Sam Peeples On May 30, History channel began airing a reimagining of one of the most critically acclaimed series to ever appear on television: an update of the TV miniseries Roots, based on both the novel by Alex Haley and the 1977 television adaptation of the same name. The four-episode, eight-hour series ran May 30–June 2 starring Malachi Kirby as Kunta Kinte. History announced production in 2013 after it obtained the rights to the franchise from Mark Wolper, the son of the original series’ producer, and the Haley estate. History commissioned Wolper to produce a contemporary adaptation that drew on both examples of the work. Roots follows the story of an African adolescent named Kunta Kinte as he is taken from his home and sent to America through the slave trade and renamed Toby by the man who buys him. It then details his experiences as a slave and his descendants’
physical evidence experiences, ending with Alex either provides no Haley himself. ALEX HALEY proof supporting The novel was first Haley’s story or published in 1976. Haley contradicts it outright. claims that the novel is TOM In addition, people partially autobiographical. from Kinte’s apparent While some plot MATILDA home village of Juffure elements were his own were inconsistent in invention and the corroborating Haley’s book is classified as a CHICKEN GEORGE story, changing novel rather than a TOM LEA details with each historical account, rendition. Haley purports his KIZZY Even the ancestry to be the village’s griot, same as the one BELLE a professional laid out in the KUNTA KINTE storyteller book. However, who acts as a repository of many of the BINTA oral history, documents and gave conflicted oral histories OMORO accounts each time Haley used to create he was asked to relate his timeline have the story. proven unreliable. Juffure itself was An examination of his represented in both the novel and sources by historian Gary B. Mills and genealogist Elizabeth the original series as what it was in Haley’s time rather than Kinte’s. In Shown Mills found that most of the the book, it is said to be a small village several miles from the coast that had FREE PARKING only heard rumors of white men. ! In truth, it was a port city very close to James’s Island, an important trading outpost owned by the British. 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. The new series remedied these Spooky Nook Sports errors, showing both Juffure and 2913 Spooky Nook Road Kinte’s tribe, the Mandinka, as we Manheim now know they were back in 18th century—specifically, that they were actually mounted warriors who rode horses well enough that Europeans 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. visited them for training. York Expo Center The new miniseries also corrected Memorial Hall East how Kinte was caught and sold: by 334 Carlisle Avenue, York African slave traders who sold men and women, sometimes those of their own tribe, to visiting Europeans—as opposed to white slave catchers, who 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. were far less prevalent than many Carlisle Expo Center assume.
Please join us! FREE events! 20th Annual
Sept. 21, 2016
LANCASTER COUNTY
14th Annual
Sept. 28, 2016 YORK COUNTY
17th Annual
Oct. 19, 2016 100 K Street Carlisle
CUMBERLAND COUNTY
Exhibitors • Health Screenings • Seminars • Demonstrations • Entertainment • Door Prizes Limited Sponsorship Opportunities Available (717) 285-1350 (717) 770-0140 (610) 675-6240
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Accusations of plagiarism also followed the novel. Harold Courlander accused Haley of stealing from his 1967 novel The African, while Margret Walker Alexander claimed her own book, Jubilee (1966), had been plagiarized. Walker’s case was dismissed in court, the judge claiming that “no actionable similarities” could be found between the works. Courlander’s suit was settled out of court for $650,000 after Haley admitted to copying several passages from The African. The original television series premiered just one year after the release of the novel and popularized it with the American public. The series was a great success with both audiences and critics, created a new interest in genealogy among the public, and established the miniseries as a workable format on broadcast television. In the original series, Levar Burton, of Star Trek: The Next Generation fame, starred as Kunta Kinte. David L. Wolper, Mark Wolper’s father, was the executive producer. The series drew in the largest audience for any type of television up to that point in U.S. history at 130 million to 140 million viewers. It is regarded as one of the greatest shows to ever play on television. The new series had a lot to live up to but was able to declare itself a success. Critics gave it near universal acclaim and the majority of audiences followed suit. The series currently holds a 97 percent “fresh” rating on the review-aggregation site Rotten Tomatoes, 83 percent on the similar site Metacritic, and glowing reviews in papers such as the New York Times and the Boston Globe. All four episodes of the miniseries can be found on History’s website at http://roots.history.com.
The Last Laugh “Always borrow money from a pessimist. He won’t expect it back.” – Oscar Wilde “By working faithfully eight hours a day you may eventually get to be boss and work 12 hours a day.” – Robert Frost www.50plusLifePA.com
WEBWORMS from page 3 to dark gray and have long, short bristles that protect them from most kinds of birds. They always stay in their protective, webbed homes and writhe at once if it is disturbed. That massed wiggling scares away or repels most would-be predators. It’s unnerving to me. The adult moths of fall webworms are furry and mostly white with a few dark spots. There is one generation of them per year in the north and two generations in the south. Adults of this moth appear in midsummer,
beneath tree bark or and each fertilized in leaf litter on the female lays hundreds of eggs in ground. a cluster. Each fall, The larvae hatch the webworm overwinters in its one week later and pupal stage and become noticeable in their obvious emerges the next webs for about summer as a moth, Photo by Alison Hunter five weeks. Then, ready to mate, Web of fall webworm. lay fertilized eggs each larva leaves its webbed nursery and pantry and on host trees, and die. The next pupates in a thin, brown cocoon of its generation of larvae soon hatches and together the larvae spin silk to form silk, plus debris that camouflages it,
protective, webbed homes. Two kinds of cuckoos in America, the yellow-billed and the black-billed, specialize in and adapted to eating caterpillars, including fall webworms. Those birds reach their long, curved beaks into the large webs and pull out webworms until their hunger is satisfied. Fall webworms are not lovely, but they are not harmful either. They are another interesting part of the Central Pennsylvania landscape late in summer every year.
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