Complimentary | Dauphin County Edition | July 2016 • Vol. 18 No. 7
Dancing Boosts Body, Mind, and Soul page 4
50plus Expo highlights page 12
Book review: POLITICAL SUICIDE page 19
Is This Thing On?
6 Travel Tips for Smartphones Abby Stokes
Are you planning a trip out of the country this summer? Let’s talk about precautions you should take so you don’t come home to a smartphone bill that’ll ruin your vacation afterglow. 1. Call Your Cellphone Service Provider – Before traveling overseas, call the company you pay for your cellphone service and ask what packages they offer for international use. Think about how you might use your phone (calling the U.S., calling within the country you’re visiting, texting, email …) and ask how each of those is billed under your provider’s international plan. 2. Turn Off Data Roaming – The moment you board the plane for your
international destination, go into the settings on your smartphone and turn off data roaming and the cellular data plan. That’s the best way to prevent your phone from randomly using data to search for emails and texts throughout the day. Better that you control specifically when the cellular data is used. You can turn the cellular data on and off as you need it so as not to exceed the plan you’ve chosen.
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3. Wi-Fi Is Your New BFF – If the hotel or home you’re visiting has Wi-Fi, you’re all set. When on WiFi you can check email, visit websites, send photos, text, and use the GPS feature on your phone. You want to be careful when you’re outside of that Wi-Fi area. That’s when things can get pricey. Wi-Fi is a free zone where you can use almost all of the features of your phone without incurring additional charges. The one exception is voice calling.
You may still be charged international fees for phone calls (in and out). You might have the option of turning on Wi-Fi calling, or better yet, use a service like Skype. 4. Skype Your Phone Calls – Skype is a free app that allows you to use your smartphone, tablet, or computer to call, text, or video chat internationally for free or at greatly reduced prices. When you’re in a Wi-Fi area and communicating with another Skype user, your calls, video chats, or texts are free. Free! Using a credit card, you can open a Skype account and pay a very small (and I mean very small) amount to call people who aren’t registered with Skype. I have yet to see a phone
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company offer more competitive pricing than Skype for international phone calls. 5. When in Doubt, Use Airplane Mode – If you arrive at your destination and can’t remember what your smartphone plan allows for, simply go to your settings and turn on airplane mode. Airplane mode will stop all transmission to or from the phone. So no emails, texts, phone calls, or visiting websites. No signal = no ugly phone bills. You can still take and view photos, read your notes, or listen
to any music saved on your phone. Once back in the safety of a Wi-Fi area, you can turn off airplane mode and turn on Wi-Fi. 6. Document with Your Camera – Of course you’re going to take photos of everything you love about your visit. Why not also take a photo of your passport and
the back and front of your credit cards so you’ll have that information on your phone at all times? When traveling, I even take a photo of my rental car and its license plate to make it easier to identify in a parking lot full of cars. Remember that to put away your
smartphone for a day is a great vacation choice. Smell the roses, enjoy the sea breeze, and linger in a museum while your smartphone becomes your personal assistant taking all of your messages. Bon voyage! Abby Stokes, author of “Is This Thing On?” A Friendly Guide to Everything Digital for Newbies, Technophobes, and the Kicking & Screaming and its companion website, AskAbbyStokes.com, is the Johnny Appleseed of Technology, singlehandedly helping more than 300,000 people cross the digital divide.
At Your Fingertips Helpful numbers, hotlines, and local businesses and organizations eager to serve you—all just a phone call away. Assisted Living Residences Brookdale Harrisburg 3560 N. Progress Ave., Harrisburg (717) 671-4700 Cremation Zimmerman Auer Funeral Home, Inc. 4100 Jonestown Road, Harrisburg (717) 545-4001 Dental Services Eichman Family Dental 348 Beech Ave., Hershey (717) 534-1750 Emergency Central PA Poison Center (800) 521-6110 Dauphin County Area Agency on Aging (717) 780-6130 Floor Coverings Gipe Floor & Wall Covering 5435 Jonestown Road, Harrisburg (717) 545-6103 Funeral & Cremation Services Cremation Society of Pennsylvania Serving Dauphin County (800) 720-8221 Funeral Directors Zimmerman Auer Funeral Home, Inc. 4100 Jonestown Road, Harrisburg (717) 545-4001 Health & Medical Services Alzheimer’s Association (717) 651-5020 American Diabetes Association (800) 342-2383 Arthritis Foundation – Central PA Chapter (717) 763-0900 www.50plusLifePA.com
CONTACT Helpline (717) 652-4400 The National Kidney Foundation (717) 757-0604 (800) 697-7007 PACE (800) 225-7223 Social Security Information (800) 772-1213 Vision Resources of Central Pennsylvania (717) 238-2531 Healthcare Information PA Healthcare Cost Containment Council (717) 232-6787 Hearing Services Enhanced Hearing Solutions, LLC 431 E. Chocolate Ave., Hershey (717) 298-6441 Pennsylvania Office for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing (800) 233-3008 V/TTY Home Care Services Senior Helpers (717) 920-0707 Home IMPROVEMENT Grand Opening Windows & Doors 46 Warwick Circle, Mechanicsburg (717) 691-5670 Hospice Services Homeland Hospice 2300 Vartan Way, Suite 115, Harrisburg (717) 221-7890 Housing/Apartments B’Nai B’rith Apartments 130 S. Third St., Harrisburg (717) 232-7516
Housing Assistance Dauphin County Housing Authority (717) 939-9301 Property Tax/Rent Rebate (888) 728-2937 Insurance Apprise Insurance Counseling (800) 783-7067 Intellectual Disabilities Keystone Human Services 124 Pine St., Harrisburg (717) 232-7509 Nursing/Rehab Homeland Center 1901 N. Fifth St., Harrisburg (717) 221-7902 Personal Care Homes Greenfield Senior Living at Graysonview 150 Kempton Ave., Harrisburg (717) 558-7771 Homeland Center 1901 N. Fifth St., Harrisburg (717) 221-7902 PeT SERVICes Pet Guardians (717) 464-5606 Pharmacies CVS/pharmacy www.cvs.com Realtors Brokers Realty (888) 774-8488, ext. 753 – Office (717) 608-1284 – Cell Services Dauphin County Area Agency on Aging (717) 780-6130
The Salvation Army Edgemont Temple Corps (717) 238-8678 Therapies Madden Physical Therapy 5425 Jonestown Road, Harrisburg (717) 901-9487 Toll-Free Numbers American Lung Association (800) LUNG-USA Bureau of Consumer Protection (800) 441-2555 Meals on Wheels (800) 621-6325 National Council on Aging (800) 424-9046 Social Security Office (800) 772-1213 Veterans Affairs (717) 626-1171 or (800) 827-1000 Transportation CAT Share-A-Ride (717) 232-6100 Travel AAA Central Penn (717) 657-2244 Veterans Services Lebanon VA Medical Center 1700 S. Lincoln Ave., Lebanon (717) 228-6000 or (800) 409-8771
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Cover Story
Dancing Boosts Body, Mind, and Soul
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By Lori Van Ingen At age 65, Marian Condon wasn’t miserable or depressed, but she wasn’t joyous either. She had been divorced for a number of years, but had a “wonderful job and good friends.” Condon is an adjunct nursing professor and has two grown sons. “I was not as happy as I could be,” Condon said. “It was not as much fun. It was like I was marching, not skipping, through life,” Condon said. “I could feel better if I exercised, but I hated exercise. I tried it all—running, lifting weights, machines, gyms, yoga studios. I was never a physical person.” However, weighing over 200 pounds, Condon was a good 65 pounds overweight and the doctor was warning her about her blood pressure and blood sugar. And as a registered nurse with a master’s degree in primary care from the University of Pennsylvania and a doctorate in adult education from Penn State, Condon knew she needed to make a “significant change in my life.” Condon said she “felt bad being overweight. I was chubby by 11 years old. I went through the cycle of emotional eating, being ashamed of how I look [followed by] more eating,” she said. It is very difficult to stay away from sweet foods when you are “addicted” to them, she said. “I know as a nurse what an addiction is. You can become dependent on sugary foods. They elevate your mood almost instantly. You eat chocolate cake and it makes you feel better physiologically. (It’s made with sugar and flour) and the glucose, or the sugar, triggers the release of endorphins and dopamine, which raise your mood instantly.” That’s the mechanism behind emotional eating and few educated people know that it’s unhealthy, she said. A lot of women can relate to it.
Photos courtesy Keith J. Bowers Photography
Marian Condon and Arthur Murray instructor Tim Hippert competing at the 2015 Harrisburg Area Showcase ballroom dance event.
“I know how difficult it is to control when you are 60, 70, 80 pounds overweight. You think it’s an impossible challenge. ‘So what if I give up? I’ll just die a few years early,’” Condon said. That’s when one day in her email she found a Groupon coupon for a dance studio. “My parents liked to jitterbug and took me with them. I loved it,” she said. But Condon thought she couldn’t learn to dance because she didn’t have a partner. She contacted the dance studio anyway and was told it didn’t matter that she didn’t have a partner because one of the instructors would dance with her at their dance parties. She decided to give it a try and “it changed my life, absolutely,” Condon said. She learned ballroom dancing, which encompasses many smooth dances like the foxtrot, waltz, tango, Latin dances (rumba, merengue, cha-cha), swing, hustle, and country-western. “There’s something for everyone,” she said. Dancing is “so much fun. I felt happier. I went almost every night after work. I got into better shape and became more attracted to
exercise. I’d go to the park to walk, then jog. I bought weights ... ” She finally could fit into the “sparkly” dresses the dancers wore. Condon had a new motivation, a joy in the music and the positive people around her laughing and joking as they danced. She felt happier and able to control her eating. She was able to stick to a healthy diet and she lost 65 pounds in a year. “I’m five years out now and have not regained any weight.” Most people, she said, regain the weight they have lost over time. Condon loved dancing so much that she decided she would write a book about how dancing can help people lose weight. For her book, Thinner, Fitter, Happier: Dancing Will Change Your Life!, Condon interviewed 40 dancers around the country: Some are teachers and some are students, but all said dancing changed their lives. Dancing affects your mind, spirit, soul, and relationships. “It’s the best-kept health secret,” Condon said. Some of the benefits of dancing are that it’s an aerobic activity, you get a mental lift from the music, you are with people having fun, and you make new friends. “You don’t talk about politics or religion. There’s no negative conversation on the dance floor. It’s a very positive, upbeat, happy place to be,” Condon said. “Research shows the people you hang around affect your mood. Debbie Downers suck your energy, but you don’t find that at dance studios. Music uplifts your soul. You learn to move in sync with another person and it reminds us of being rocked in the womb. It’s sublime. “You don’t think about your feet or your body; you just feel every slight shift in weight. Longstanding married couples have rekindled their relationships through dance. Dancing also is www.50plusLifePA.com
phenomenal for the brain.” Condon said dancing is not only for the young, slim, and athletic. “If you can walk, you can dance”—even at age 98, like one of Condon’s new friends at her dance studio. “I took up dancing late in life,” said Condon, who is now 71. “I did a lot of research. Dancing confers more protection against dementia than any other activity.” According to a 20-year longitudinal study on people in their 70s, dancing had the highest degree of protection for their cognition. It was higher than chess, board games, walking, golf, or tennis. “While dancing, the aerobic exercise is pumping blood to the
brain, and it keeps you thinking where your body is in space, processing the music and processing where your partner’s body is located. Dancing puts a demand on your brain and you form new neurons.” Dancing also could fit into anyone’s budget. You don’t have to dance at a franchise studio. There are dance clubs around the area that are inexpensive because they rent their studios from fire halls, she said. Thinner, Fitter, Happier: Dancing Will Change Your Life! is available through http://thinnerfitterhappier. drmariancondon.com and Amazon. com. Condon also can be contacted on her Facebook page or on her website (www.doctormariancondon.com).
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Share Some Independence Day Trivia Here are some fun facts to share with your family and friends on the Fourth of July while waiting for the hot dogs to cook on the grill: • Three presidents died on July Fourth: Thomas Jefferson and John Adams in 1826 and James Monroe in 1831. Calvin Coolidge was the only president born on July Fourth, in 1872. • The Massachusetts General Court was the first state legislature to recognize July Fourth as a state celebration, in 1781. • The first recorded use of the name “Independence Day” occurred in 1791. • The U.S. Congress established Independence Day as an unpaid holiday for federal employees in 1870. It became a federal paid holiday in 1931.
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Helping seniors and their families to make smooth residential transitions Barbara Kauffman, Realtor Certified Negotiation Expert (CNE) Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES) Certified New Home Sales Professional (CSP)
Office: 1-888-774-8488
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Savvy Senior
How Medicare Handles Second Medical Opinions
Jim Miller
Does Medicare cover second medical opinions? The doctor I currently see thinks I need back surgery, but I would like to get some other treatment options before I proceed. What can you tell me? – Searching Senior Dear Searching, Getting a second medical opinion from another doctor is a smart idea that may offer you a fresh perspective and additional options for treating your back condition so you can make a more informed decision. Or, if the second doctor agrees with your current one, it can give you some reassurance. Yes, Medicare does pay for second opinions if your current doctor has recommended surgery or some other major diagnostic or therapeutic procedure.
If you’re enrolled in original Medicare, 80 percent of the costs for second medical opinions is covered under Part B (you or your Medicare supplemental policy are responsible for the other 20 percent), and you don’t need an order or referral from your doctor to get one. Medicare will even pay 80 percent for a third opinion, if the first two differ. Most Medicare Advantage plans
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cover second opinions too, but you may need to follow certain steps to get it paid for. For example, some plans will only help pay for a second opinion if you have a referral from your primary-care doctor, and/or they may require that you can only use a doctor in their network. If you have a Medicare Advantage plan, you’ll need to call it to find out their rules.
Finding another Doctor To find another doctor for a second opinion, you can either ask your current doctor for a name or two, or you can ask another doctor you trust for a referral, or you can find one on your own. Whatever route you choose, it’s best to go with a doctor that’s affiliated with a different practice or hospital from your original doctor. Hospitals and practices can be set in their ways when it comes to treatments and are likely to offer similar advice. If you choose to find one on your own, use Medicare’s online Physician Compare tool (www.medicare.gov/ physiciancompare). This will let you find doctors by name, medical specialty, or geographic location that accept original Medicare. You can also get this information
Who Has the Best Bites in Central PA? 50plus LIFE readers have spoken!
Here are the Dauphin County dining favorites for 2016! Breakfast: Mellow Minded Café
Fast Food: Arby’s
Lunch: Café Fresco
Seafood: Devon Seafood Grill
Dinner: Hoss’s Steak & Sea House
Steak: The Glass Lounge
Ethnic Cuisine: Gabriella Italian Ristorante
Outdoor Dining: Susquehanna Harvest Seasonal Grill & Wine Bar
Celebrating: Char’s at Tracy Mansion
Romantic Setting: The Progress Grill
Bakery: Desserts, Etc. at Hershey Pantry
Smorgasbord/Buffet: Sunday Brunch in The Circular at Hotel Hershey
Coffeehouse: St. Thomas Roasters
Caterer: Commonwealth Caterers
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Winner of $50 Giant Food Stores Gift Card: Linda S. Peters Congratulations!
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by calling Medicare at (800) 6334227. Or, if you’re enrolled in a Medicare Advantage plan, call or visit your plan’s website for a list of candidates. After you’ve gotten a few doctors’ names, there are a number of free online resources to help you research them, like Healthgrades (www. healthgrades.com) and Vitals (www. vitals.com). Or, consider Angie’s List (www. angieslist.com, (888) 888-5478), which
is a membership service that currently offers doctor ratings and reviews from other members in your area for $3.50 for one month or $11.32 for the year, but the site will be offering free reviews this summer. After you find another doctor, before you get a second opinion you’ll need to have your current doctor’s office send your medical records ahead to the second doctor, or you may have to pick them up and deliver them yourself.
That way, you won’t have to repeat the tests you already had. But, if the second doctor wants you to have additional tests performed as a result of your visit, Medicare will help pay for these tests too. For more information, see the Medicare publication Getting a Second Opinion Before Surgery (www. medicare.gov/pubs/pdf/02173.pdf).
WE CAN BE YOUR EXTRA HAND
Jim Miller is a regular contributor to the NBC Today show and author of The Savvy Senior Book. www.savvysenior.org
Social Security News
By John Johnston
Pa. Residents Can Now Order Replacement Cards Online
The Social Security Administration introduced the expansion of online services for residents of Pennsylvania available through its my Social Security portal (www.socialsecurity. gov/myaccount). Carolyn W. Colvin, acting
commissioner of Social Security, announced that residents of Pennsylvania can use the portal for many replacement Social Security number card requests. This will allow people to replace their SSN card from the comfort of
Our in-home caregivers are available to assist you or your senior loved ones for a few hours a week or around the clock. Whether it is for personal assistance or expert guidance in working with those who have Alzheimer’s or dementia, call today and let us be your extra hand.
their home or office, without the need to travel to a Social Security office. The agency plans to conduct a gradual rollout of this service; Pennsylvania is one of eight states, please see REPLACEMENT page 16
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Visit seniorhelpers.com/harrisburg for more information. 3806 Market St., Camp Hill
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To be included in the 2017 edition of 50plus LIVING, call your representative or (717) 285-1350 or email info@onlinepub.com www.50plusLifePA.com
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Salute to a Veteran
He survived the Bataan Death March. He bombed the Bridge on the River Kwai. He escorted MacArthur ashore in the Philippines.
Stories of ordinary men and women called to perform extraordinary military service.
For Him, His Time in the Navy Was a Life-Changer Robert D. Wilcox
hated school, didn’t study, and who When George T. Heidig says, “The ran the streets with all the wrong kind Navy saved my life,” he doesn’t mean it saved him from death. He means it of people.” He says, “If there was a saved him from the worseway to go wrong, I found than-hopeless path his life it and took it.” had taken to that point. He was a lad whose He asked his mother to sign a note with her father had trouble holding a job and was away from permission for him to leave school after the home a lot. His mother, ninth grade. Of course, on the other hand, “was she wouldn’t, and she a saint” who spent much begged him to stay on and of her time working a low-paying job so she do well in school. So he asked his father, and no would be home when the rd Radarman 3 Class youngsters got there and problem. He got the note George T. Heidig at he needed, and at age 16 so she could provide food Charleston Naval Base, left school. for the family. S.C., in 1957. He got the kind of jobs Eventually, the parents a kid that age could expect, making separated, and, without ever having had the father figure he needed, no more than a dollar a day. When his last employer turned down his request Heidig grew up as a “cocky kid who
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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 #________
Or send a check made payable to On-Line Publishers, Inc. You can also order online at www.50plusLIFEpa.com!
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Take a quick survey on issues important to people over 50. You will be entered into a drawing for a pair of tickets to Dutch Apple Dinner Theatre ($110 value).
You’re a SageAge and we want to hear from you ... and your friends, family, and coworkers! Go to www.SageAgeToday.com to enter! Contest sponsored by:
The winner will be selected at random. You may enter no more than once a day. The winner will be emailed and called.
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accepted, because I for a 10-cent increase, missed my mother he impetuously joined and brother so the Navy in order to much, and this leave. touch of family At 18 he was on meant a lot to me.” his way to “boot At one point, camp” training at the that radar training U.S. Naval Training became very Center, Bainbridge, important, when the Navy base at Port Deposit, Maryland. The USS Tills, the Navy destroyer the radarman 1st There, recruits escort on which George Heidig class became ill and served in the 1950s. were given a battery couldn’t make the of tests to determine cruise. The ship’s their educational and skill levels. And captain then questioned Heidig at with his spotty school experience, length before deciding Heidig could Heidig did not do well. All recruits well fill the berth, and the captain were then trained in ordnance and permitted the cruise to go on. gunnery, seamanship, firefighting, Although his Navy hitch was for physical training, and military drill. only two years, it gave Heidig the Upon graduation, Heidig was structure and discipline he needed to shipped to Charleston, South straighten out his life. Carolina, where he was assigned to Leaving active duty in 1958 as a the destroyer escort USS Tills. She radarman 3rd class, he found that his high school would not accept him to made two-week training cruises to make up the high school years he had the Caribbean with naval reservists missed, so he used his G.I. Bill to get undertaking refresher and reserve training cruises, and she also used her his high school credits during two years at a trade school. radar to perform a host of tasks. He then worked his way through Heidig fondly recalls the day when Millersville State College, earning a he was lingering near the “off-limits” B.A. in industrial arts. radar room, and the older radarman st He taught at a junior high school 1 class in charge invited him in and visited with him over a cup of coffee. for 30 years before he retired in “I don’t know exactly why he did 1988 and went to work for a funeral home. Since his retirement from their that,” Heidig says, “but he became support staff in 1996, he has kept in much like the father figure I never had. He invited me to come back shape by swimming, playing golf, and whenever I had time. And, over time, riding his bicycle. he taught me all about the radar … Does he think often of his Navy days? doing navigation, recommending “All the time,” he says quietly. “It courses to avoid a collision course absolutely laid the solid foundation for with other ships, how to make emergency entrance to ports, spotting everything I did with my life.” subs, etc. Col. Wilcox flew a B-17 bomber in “Once, he also invited me for Europe in World War II. dinner with his family. I gladly
Would you like to serve those who have served?
Aug. 25, 2016 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
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Radisson Hotel Harrisburg 1150 Camp Hill Bypass Camp Hill
The Veterans’ Expo & Job Fair welcomes volunteers! If you can help with registration or stuffing attendee bags for all or just part of the day, we’d love to have you. Contact Kimberly Shaffer at (717) 285-8123 or kshaffer@onlinepub.com for more information.
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Aug. 25, 2016 Nov. 15, 2016 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Radisson Hotel Harrisburg 1150 Camp Hill Bypass Camp Hill
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Please, join us! This combined event is FREE for veterans of all ages, active military, and their families.
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Employers Job Counseling Workshops/Seminars Resume Writing Assistance
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Sponsor & Exhibitor Opportunities Available
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July 2016
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Tinseltown Talks
Singer Toni Tennille’s Brush with Hollywood Nick Thomas
She put the “Tennille” in the popular ’70s music duo of the Captain and Tennille and enjoyed two huge No. 1 Billboard hits: “Love Will Keep Us Together” and “Do That to Me One More Time.” But Toni Tennille also brushed shoulders with Hollywood’s biggest stars. Born and raised in Montgomery, Alabama, Tennille recently left five decades of West Coast life behind her, as well as nearly 40 years of marriage to musical partner Daryl “the Captain” Dragon, and returned to the South. “I’m now living just northeast of Orlando near my sister,” said Tennille, who released her April autobiography Toni Tennille: A Memoir, written with niece Caroline Tennille St. Clair (see www.tonitennille.net).
The Captain and Tennille in early years.
“It took two years to write and looks back at my childhood growing up in the segregated South,” she said. After arriving in California in 1961, Tennille worked in repertory theater, wrote music, and eventually met and married musician Daryl Dragon. When the Captain and Tennille
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exploded onto the pop music scene in 1975, they were given their own primetime weekly TV variety show on ABC also called The Captain and Tennille. Tennille says working with the weekly guests was a highlight. “I was so excited about meeting all
those fabulous stars like George Burns and Bob Hope.” A reoccurring skit throughout the series was Masterjoke Theater, where a guest would perform a short monologue and close by tossing a pie in his own face. “Big stars like Vincent Price, Raymond Burr, Bob Hope, and Tony Randall were all game to be silly.” The show, however, only lasted one season. But with her cheerful and engaging personality, Tennille was back on television again in 1980 starring in her own program, The Toni Tennille Show, a nationally syndicated series featuring musical numbers and her interviews with special guests. She also drew on advice her mother had offered years before. “She once told me: ‘Toni, always be really nice to your lighting guys,
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Toni Tennille today with niece and book co-author Caroline Tennille St. Clair.
because they can make you look like an old hag if they want!’ So that’s what I did.” The show only lasted a year, too, but the parade of stars was once again stellar and included Ginger Rogers, Ernest Borgnine, and Charlton Heston. However, one of her most memorable encounters occurred offscreen at Dodger Stadium in 1978. “I used to sing the national anthem there,” she recalled. “I was sitting at a table during one of the events and a man came up to me and said, ‘Miss Tennille, I’m Cary Grant. I just wanted to tell you that I have never heard the national anthem sung more beautifully.’ “Wow, such high praise from Cary Grant. And I found it so endearing that he felt the need to introduce himself to me!” Her glitzy entertainment career now in the distant past, Tennille, 75, says she found the perfect house
Tennille and Dragon with George Burns on The Captain and Tennille Show.
last summer after moving to Florida and easily slipped back into Southern living. But her decision to divorce Dragon in 2014 took many fans by surprise, as the duo was publicly perceived as a devoted couple performing their string of love songs for years. However, says Tennille, throughout the marriage there were problems that became overwhelming, so it was time to move on. “We were not the lovebirds that the public saw,” she said. “We still talk regularly and care for each other. But my message for people who are in a bad relationship is to get all the help you can to remove yourself from the situation. We all deserve happiness.” Nick Thomas teaches at Auburn University at Montgomery, Ala., and has written features, columns, and interviews for more than 600 magazines and newspapers. Follow @TinseltownTalks
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July 2016
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Exercise, Education, and Entertainment Enliven 50plus EXPO
By Sam Peeples Hershey offered more than chocolate on May 31 as the Hershey Lodge welcomed the 17th annual Dauphin County 50plus EXPO. Seniors from Dauphin and surrounding counties were invited to partake in booths, demonstrations, seminars, and health examinations. This year’s expo included guests from all over Dauphin County and even beyond. “[Gean] invited me; I had never been to an EXPO before,” said Marilyn Ostermayer, of Harrisburg. “I’m loving it, absolutely loving it.” Her friend, Gean Martell, had first heard about the EXPO through a poster at the Friendship Senior Center. “I’ve been here several times and I love it,” Martell said. “I come every year.” A big draw for many of the guests is the array of free health screenings offered by various organizations throughout Pennsylvania, such as Central Penn College, Madden Physical Therapy, and the Orthopedic Institute of Pennsylvania. Attendees could receive screenings for blood pressure, glucose, spinal arthritis, bone density, and hearing. “[The health screenings] are always good because they’re free. You might not be paying as much attention to these things as you should,” said Patricia Stringer,
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another attendee from Harrisburg. “You should always concentrate on your health. It’s good that they include that in the EXPO.” Not all attendees arrive for a specific reason, however. Some merely happen to be in the area or visit out of general curiosity. “[I came] just to participate, to see what they have,” said Edward Rogowicz, a Hershey local and visitor to several EXPOs in the past. In addition to the booths filling the conference hall, a small stage hosted a variety of demonstrations and seminars. Jerry Mitchell, an education and outreach specialist from the Office of the Attorney General, discussed the scams most commonly used to trick seniors, such as false sweepstakes, lying charities, and attempts at identity theft. He emphasized the need for proper skepticism and research whenever asked for money or personal information. At least one attendee found Mitchell’s words informative. Patricia Stringer referred to it as a highlight of the EXPO. “I like the seminars,” Stringer said. “The Attorney General’s seminar on scams, identity theft, power of attorney, and how [people] try to rip you off, I think it’s very informative.” Other demonstrations included a presentation by Dutch Apple Dinner Theatre cast members
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singing songs from their upcoming productions such as Anything Goes, The Phantom of the Opera, and Million Dollar Quartet. Messiah Lifeways led the audience in an exercise routine that can be done seated or standing as a way to get seniors active and moving. The series of stretches set to music can be done with nothing more than a small ball or balloon. Christopher & Banks Outlet turned the stage into a runway, showing off their new lines for the summer season. Kraig Herman, Christine Williams, and Scott Steffen from the office of the State Fire Commissioner warned about the dangers of both fire and falls. They discussed the need for regularly tested smoke alarms on every floor
and in every bedroom, making an escape plan based around your own abilities, and how to properly describe the situation to the dispatcher. They also expressed the importance of proper exercise to improve balance and hand-eye coordination in preventing injury from falls. The next 50plus EXPOs hosted by OLP Events will be in the fall: Sept. 21 at Spooky Nook Sports, 2913 Spooky Nook Road, Manheim; Sept. 28 at York Expo Center, Memorial Hall East, 334 Carlisle Ave., York; and Oct. 19 at Carlisle Expo Center, 100 K St., Carlisle. For more information, call (717) 285-1350 or visit www.50plusExpoPA.com.
Brought to you by: Dauphin County Veterans' Affairs
DAUPHIN COUNTY Sponsored by:
50plus LIFE • b magazine • Freedom Auto Group
Harrisburg Gastroenterology, Ltd. • Homeland Center
Jackson Siegelbaum Gastroenterology • Madden Physical Therapy
Menno Haven Retirement Communities • Orthopedic Institute of Pennsylvania PinnacleHealth • RetireSafe
www.50plusLifePA.com
Dear Pharmacist
Suzy Cohen
Which Should You Take, Advil or Tylenol?
When you’re in pain, what do you reach for, Tylenol or Advil? What about fever or body aches from the flu? How about if your precious grandbaby is teething or gets an earache—which do you give? These are questions that you might be asking yourself today, and I’m going to help you. There are some primary differences between these two medications, both blockbusters sold worldwide under various brand names. The ingredients themselves are included in thousands of multitasking formulas. If you read labels, you’ll see the generic names as follows:
away from Tylenol because it could exacerbate the liver damage caused by the alcohol. Ibuprofen is a drug mugger of folate, whereas acetaminophen is a drug mugger of glutathione. If you run out of folate, you could develop high homocysteine (increases risk of heart disease), cervical dysplasia, depression, chronic diarrhea, gray hair, and mouth sores. If you run low on glutathione, fatigue, general pain, and liver problems occur. There are dozens of other symptoms that I don’t have space to list, and also, these depletions take time. You don’t run out of the nutrients with normal dosages, taken Tylenol = acetaminophen properly for a short term. Advil, Motrin = ibuprofen Don’t live in pain because you are worried about this; just keep it Fever – You can use either one in mind if you take them every day. unless you’re giving it to a baby Supplement with what the drug less than 6 months old. Babies less mugger stole. than 6 months old should be given Do you take blood thinners acetaminophen (Tylenol). (warfarin) or anticoagulant medications? You’re better off with Pain – I’d choose ibuprofen because acetaminophen in this case because it directly reduces some pain-causing ibuprofen can further thin the blood. cytokines, whereas acetaminophen Heart disease or hypertension? impacts the way you feel pain, You’re better off with acetaminophen. essentially “numbing” you to the A recent study suggests taking sensation. No one is 100 percent sure acetaminophen affects your ability to how it works; we just have clues. We empathize with someone else during know it works, though. their own physical or emotional pain. If you have severe pain, it’s Does ibuprofen blunt your sometimes recommended to emotional reactions too? While alternate between ibuprofen and no study ever tested ibuprofen, I acetaminophen every few hours. Back personally think it does. Whenever pain and osteoarthritis respond better you reduce your own ability to feel to ibuprofen, according to the British pain, it’s certainly harder to feel pain Medical Journal. for another. Finally, you may be concerned PMS or cramps – Definitely about addiction, so let me reassure ibuprofen for this; it is a stronger anti- you, both medications are completely inflammatory. Just FYI, a combination safe in this regard. of B complex and magnesium may help mood swings, water retention, This information is not intended to tearfulness, and cramps. diagnose, prevent, or treat your disease. If you are normally a wine drinker at dinner, or you drink alcohol, stay www.50plusLifePA.com
For more information about the author, visit SuzyCohen.com
Increase Traffic, Build Brand, Gain New Clients!
E Oct. 1, 2016 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. Lebanon Expo Center
80 Rocherty Road, Lebanon Please join us as a sponsor or exhibitor for the fourth annual women’s expo this fall. Women of all ages have enjoyed these annual events, finding helpful information for all the hats they wear in their everyday lives, including:
Health & Wellness • Finance • Home Technology • Beauty • Nutrition Spa Treatments
and more!
Face-to-face in a comfortable environment.
Talk to us about sponso r and exhibito r opportunitie s.
717.285.1350
FREE advance guest registration online. ($5 at the door.)
aGreatWayToSpendMyDay.com 50plus LIFE H
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Calendar of Events
Dauphin County
Support Groups Free and open to the public
Senior Center Activities
Mondays, 6:30 to 8 p.m. Grief Support Group Mohler Senior Center 25 Hope Drive, Hershey (717) 732-1000
July 20, 1:30 p.m. Parkinson’s Support Group on East Shore Jewish Home of Harrisburg 4004 Linglestown Road, Harrisburg (717) 441-8627
July 6 and 20, 7 to 8:30 p.m. ANAD Eating Disorders Support Group PinnacleHealth Polyclinic Landis Building, Sixth Floor, Classroom 1 2501 N. Third St., Harrisburg (717) 712-9535
July 21, 6 to 8 p.m. Harrisburg Area Parkinson’s Disease Caregiver Support Group Giant Food Stores – Second Floor 2300 Linglestown Road, Harrisburg (717) 580-7772
Mohler Senior Center – (717) 533-2002 www.hersheyseniorcenter.com July 15, 11 a.m. – Movies and Munchies at Mohler July 25, noon – Christmas in July Potluck Luncheon July 28, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. – Ice Cream Social
July 12, 6 to 7 p.m. Alzheimer’s Caregivers Support Group Greenfield Senior Living at Graysonview 150 Kempton Ave., Harrisburg (717) 561-8010
July 27, 7 to 8 p.m. Connections Support Group: Families of Memory Impaired Ecumenical Retirement Community Building 3, Second Floor 3525 Canby St., Harrisburg (717) 561-2590
July 13, 6 to 7 p.m. Alzheimer’s Support Group Emeritus at Harrisburg 3560 N. Progress Ave., Harrisburg (717) 671-4700 July 18, 6:30 p.m. Support Group for Families of Those with MemoryRelated Illnesses Frey Village 1020 N. Union St., Middletown (717) 930-1218
If you have an event you would like to include, please email information to mjoyce@ onlinepub.com for consideration.
Community Programs Free and open to the public July 6, 7 p.m. World Culture Club of Central PA Meeting Penn State Hershey Medical Center Fifth Floor, Lecture Room B 500 University Drive, Hershey www.worldcultureclubpa.org
July 26, 6 p.m. Susquehanna Rovers Volksmarch Walking Club Bass Pro Shop – Hunt Room Harrisburg Mall 3501 Paxton St., Harrisburg (717) 805-9540
July 7, 7 p.m. Central Pennsylvania World War II Roundtable Meeting Grace United Methodist Church 433 E. Main St., Hummelstown (717) 503-2862 charlie.centralpaww2rt@gmail.com www.centralpaww2roundtable.org
July 27, 7 p.m. Piecemakers Quilt Guild of Middletown St. Peter’s Lutheran Church Spring and Union streets, Middletown (717) 915-5555 gsk1308@gmail.com
July 14, 7:30 p.m. Central Pennsylvania Vietnam Roundtable Meeting Vietnam Veterans of America, Michael Novosel MOH Chapter 542 8000 Derry St., Harrisburg (717) 545-2336 centralpavietnamrt@verizon.net www.centralpavietnamroundtable.org
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Rutherford House – (717) 564-5682 www.rutherfordcenter.org Mondays, 10 a.m. – Line Dancing Tuesdays, noon – Circuit Exercise with Personal Training Fridays, 11 a.m. – Chair Yoga Just a snippet of what you may be missing … please call or visit their website for more information.
PARKS & RECREATION July 3, 10 to 11:30 a.m. – Beginner’s Yoga and Walk, Wildwood Park July 10, 10:30 a.m . to noon – Flower Walk: Still More Blooms, Wildwood Park July 10, 6 to 8 p.m. – Sunday Evening Bird Walk, Wildwood Park
Library Programs East Shore Area Library, 4501 Ethel St., Harrisburg, (717) 652-9380 July 26, 9:30 a.m. – Friends of the East Shore Area Library Meeting Elizabethville Area Library, 80 N. Market St., Elizabethville, (717) 362-9825 July 7, 6:30 p.m. – Friends of Elizabethville Area Library Meeting July 12, 6:30 p.m. – History of Elizabethville: Lively Minds Workshop July 14, 6 p.m. – Thursday Theater Harrisburg Downtown Library, 101 Walnut St., Harrisburg, (717) 234-4976 Johnson Memorial Library, 799 E. Center St., Millersburg, (717) 692-2658 Kline Branch, 530 S. 29th St., Harrisburg (717) 234-3934 William H. & Marion C. Alexander Family Library, 200 W. Second St., Hummelstown, (717) 566-0949 July 5, 6:30 p.m. – Novel Thoughts Book Club July 12, 6 p.m. – Friends of the Alexander Family Library Meeting July 13, 6 p.m. – Second Wednesday Cinema www.50plusLifePA.com
As I’ve gotten older, I’ve been sleeping less. I’m now waking up at 4:30 in the morning. There’re a lot of scientific explanations for this, but I like to think it’s because I want to boldly face the world and can’t wait to get started each morning (it may also be because I have to go to the bathroom). The question is, what should I do with myself in these early-morning hours? Just recently I’ve read a few articles saying that before you die, you should achieve what you really want to achieve. That’s a lot of pressure. I mean, why can’t we just be happy with what we’ve already done?! However, since I am getting up at 4:30, I decided to use these early hours to accomplish my real goal in life. I just have to figure out what that is. Here are a few things I’ve tried in my attempt to leave my mark on the world:
American novel. I then decided that it didn’t have to be that great; there’s nothing wrong with a mediocre novel. I then decided that a novel is a lot of words—maybe it should be a novella. After another week I decided I should write a short story. I now have decided to write the great American letter to the editor. I’m still working on it.
Write the great American novel – For a week I awoke at 4:30 and faced the blank page of my great
Do something heroic – I would love to be a hero. I could go to
Invent something – I figured I just had to identify a need and fill it. In the early-morning hours I walked around the house barefoot and noticed that my feet were picking up dust and crumbs—my feet were like human Swiffers. Greatness awaited me—I just needed to invent something that would do a better job of cleaning. I designed, I sketched, I edited, I redesigned, and then after several days of perfecting my work, I looked at my drawings and realized I had invented … the broom.
FREE PARKING
!
20th Annual
Sept. 21, 2016 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Spooky Nook Sports
2913 Spooky Nook Road Manheim
LANCASTER COUNTY
Sept. 28, 2016
14th Annual
Sy Rosen
Early-Morning Greatness
Please join us! FREE events!
9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
York Expo Center
Memorial Hall East 334 Carlisle Avenue, York
YORK COUNTY
Oct. 19, 2016
17th Annual
Older But Not Wiser
9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Carlisle Expo Center CUMBERLAND COUNTY
100 K Street Carlisle
Exhibitors • Health Screenings • Seminars • Demonstrations • Entertainment • Door Prizes Limited Sponsorship Opportunities Available (717) 285-1350 (717) 770-0140 (610) 675-6240
www.50plusExpoPA.com
please see GREATNESS page 16
CELEBRATING
a belief that the smallest gestures make the greatest difference.
At Brookdale we know it’s often the little things that mean the most, such as a thoughtful reminder a resident’s favorite show is about to start or a dash of cinnamon added to coffee just the way it’s liked. We believe personalized care is part of aging well. Here, you’ll find it’s also what makes our care truly unique. For more information, contact (717) 671-4700 or jessica.perry@brookdale.com.
Brookdale Harrisburg Assistive Living Alzheimer’s & Dementia Care 3560 N. Progress Ave | Harrisburg, PA 17110
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brookdale.com
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www.50plusLifePA.com
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REPLACEMENT from page 7 plus the District of Columbia, where this option is initially available. Throughout 2016, the agency will continue to expand the service option to other states and plans to offer this to half of the nation’s population by the end of the year. This service will mean shorter wait times for the public in the more than 1,200 Social Security offices across the country and allows staff more time to work with customers who
have extensive service needs. U.S. citizens age 18 or older and who are residents of Pennsylvania can obtain a replacement SSN card online by creating a my Social Security account. They must also have a U.S. domestic mailing address, not require a change to their record (such as a name change), and have a valid driver’s license. my Social Security is a secure online hub for doing business with
Social Security, and more than 25 million people have created an account. In addition to Pennsylvania residents replacing their SSN card through the portal, current Social Security beneficiaries can manage their account—change an address, adjust direct deposit, obtain a benefit verification letter, or request a replacement SSA-1099. Medicare beneficiaries can request
nervous (and a cramp in my leg), and went home. Write a song – 4:30 a.m. is a good time to write the lyrics of a hit song that would pave my way to greatness. By 6 a.m. I had written, “me and you, you and me.” By 7 a.m. I had written, “me and you, you and me, we is we.” By 8 a.m. I had decided to give up
on writing a song.
a replacement Medicare card without waiting for a replacement form in the mail. Account holders still in the workforce can verify their earnings and obtain estimates of future benefits. For more information about this online service, visit www.socialsecurity gov/ssnumber. John Johnston is a Social Security public affairs specialist.
GREATNESS from page 15 the Middle East and help destroy ISIS. However, I am afraid to fly. I therefore decided to do something locally. I got dressed at 5 a.m. and, with my trusty flashlight in hand, started to patrol the neighborhood. Maybe I’d see a coyote and rescue a small dog or kitten. I walked about a block, got a little
Run for political office – In the early-morning hours, I hatched my plan. I would run for the mayor of my small city, and then after one successful term I would run for president. It was a very exciting plan and I would certainly be doing something important with my life. However, I then looked at the map
on my wall and realized I couldn’t locate Pakistan, Afghanistan, Syria, or Utah. I decided I wasn’t qualified to be president. Now if only some of the other candidates would also come to that conclusion. I have now decided to concentrate all of my efforts on a way to sleep later so I won’t have to go through this craziness.
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Back Pain? Sciatica? Don’t suffer in silence any longer …
Brand-New Back Pain And Sciatica Workshop Will Have You Back On Your Feet – In No Time. When you have back pain or sciatica, you need to feel better fast so you can get back on your feet and keep on living. Our responsibilities never end: kids, grandkids, jobs, leisure activities… but back pain can stop you in your tracks. We often take our mobility for granted. Hiking, cycling, and running — these are all activities you may have loved in the past, but now you may be considering giving up because of back pain or sciatica. Are you … • Taking a couple of ibuprofen each day, hoping the pain will disappear? • Buying expensive stop-gap solutions that only drag out the ordeal? • Finding yourself leaning forward on the shopping cart at the store just to make it through your errands? • Slowing down and missing out on more than you think — maybe even the kids’ or grandkids’ sports games? Small injuries grow into bigger ones if not properly treated. Regardless of your age or your level of activity, injuries happen to anyone, at any time. But it’s how you FOLLOW UP that matters! Our Lower Back and Sciatica Workshop teaches you about the latest treatment techniques to figure out exactly where and how your pain affects how you’re moving and your physical health. Learn from our experts how other sufferers cured their back pain — ONCE AND FOR ALL. “When I first came in, I had so much back pain. It hurt to go from sitting to standing, and I couldn’t stand straight. I couldn’t even sleep. I was usually up pacing all night … but now that I’m done (with treatment) I feel great! I have my life back without the pain. After trying two chiropractors before coming here, I wish I would have known to come here first.” – Karie Baker Hi, I’m Chad Madden, Physical Therapist and Owner here at Madden Physical Therapy. And I’d like to ask: How do you spend an hour nowadays?
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Persistent pain is no joke ... • Sorting out pain medication for the week • In one single traffic jam on the way to the doctor’s office • Picking out a walking cane • NOT playing with your kids or grandchildren • NOT playing the sports you used to enjoy Here’s how you COULD spend that time, after you spend one hour at our Back Pain and Sciatica Workshop: • Walking along a sunny beach • Running errands pain-free • Taking your spouse out on a spontaneous date • Impressing your boss on the golf course • Lifting weights, jogging, and keeping your physical health in check • Playing on the floor with your grandkids Here at Madden Physical Therapy, our expert team of physical therapists have successfully treated HUNDREDS of patients with back pain and sciatica, all of whom let their back pain ruin their lives by slowing down and moving less, making their back pain WORSE, and triggering many other health problems a sedentary lifestyle brings. We aim to heal as many people as possible. That’s why we’re hosting a Sciatica and Lower Back Pain Workshop here at Madden Physical Therapy on Saturday, July 30, 2016, from 10 to 11 a.m. If you have back pain … sciatica … or are worried about them happening in the future … or just want to find out more … here’s some of the things you’ll learn: • The ONE everyday activity sufferers are doing WRONG that blocks healing and actually makes back pain WORSE • The three most common causes of lower back pain and sciatica • Why no two back pains are the same and how to work with your physical therapist to develop a unique, tailored treatment plan • How sciatica affects the health of the rest of your body • A 100% natural, permanent, and safe solution exists — and how you can access it!
Register NOW — Call our office at 901-9487. When you register, we will mail you a copy of the Lower Back Pain and Sciatica Worksheet. You will bring it with you to the event to make sure you catch all of the key information and tips from our experts. WARNING: Only 30 seats are available for the workshop. Our last event was highly attended, and sold out within just a few hours … so please don’t delay your registration. Let us solve your back pain and sciatica issues and RECLAIM YOUR LIFE! **BONUS!** the first 10 people to call and register for this FREE Lower Back Pain Workshop will receive a copy of my new book, Back to Normal: Natural Healing Without Medications, Injections and Surgery. ALL 30 attendees for the Sciatica and Lower Back Pain Workshop will receive a special report: “The Top 10 Burning Questions for Sciatica.” The workshop is completely FREE — so why wait? However you choose to spend your time when we give you a new lease on life, Madden Physical Therapy will help you reclaim your energy by getting rid of your back pain and sciatica … naturally, easily, and permanently. See you there! Chad Madden, Physical Therapist P.S. Don’t delay — register now! Call our office to save your seat: 901-9487 P.P.S. This event is limited to 30 people — first come, first served. BUT, if your registration is successful, you may bring a guest for support at no additional cost. P.P.P.S. Remember: ALL 30 attendees for the Sciatica and Lower Back Pain Workshop will receive a special report: “The Top 10 Burning Questions for Sciatica.” BUT if you’re one of the first 10 people to register, you’ll ALSO receive a copy of my new book, Back to Normal: Natural Healing Without Medications, Injections and Surgery!
www.50plusLifePA.com
Puzzle Page
CROSSWORD
Solutions for all puzzles can be found on page 18 SUDOKU
brainteasers
Game Shows that Started in the ’50s Find the titles of these television game shows that started in the ’50s: 1. Beat the C_____ 2. G.E. C_____ Bowl 3. I’ve Got a S_____ 4. Name That T_____ 5. The P_____ is Right 6. Q_____ for a Day 7. The $64,000 Q_____ 8. Tic Tac D_____ 9. To Tell the T_____ 10. You Bet Your L_____
Jobs of the ’50s and ’60s Find these job titles that are rarely used now but were common in ’50s and ’60s: 1. St _ _ _ g _ _ _ _ _ r 2. St _ _ _ d _ _ _ 3. Ha _ _ _ d _ _ _ _ r 4. Ic _ _ _ _ 5. Nu _ _ _ _ _ _ d 6. So _ _ Je _ _ 7. El _ _ _ t _ _ Op _ _ _ t _ r 8. Se _ _ _ _ _ St _ _ _ _ _ At _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 9. Mi _ _ _ _ n 10. Sw _ _ _ _ b _ _ _ _ Op _ r _ _ _ r
Written by Alan Stillson. Please see http://stillsonworks.com
Across
1. Sea eagles 5. Crash into 8. Journey 12. Debatable 13. Java canvas 14. Mayhem 16. Pol. second in command 19. Bursts 20. Horse defect 22. Break out 25. Your (Fr.) 26. Surrealist Spanish painter
27. Have supper 28. Cover 29. Civet relative 30. Polluted precipitation 33. High rocky hill 34. Connected 35. Salzburg location 37. Brim 40. Flatboat 41. Sporting shoe 43. Egg-shaped 46. Genetic material 47. Always
48. Rave 49. Embrace 50. Lead off 51. Booked 53. Seal off 55. Responsibility words 60. Spoken 61. Moray 62. Redact 63. Yes votes 64. Action word 65. Spice
22. Dutch cheese 23. Food grain 24. Building block 25. Dying 28. Fleur-de-___ 29. Gazelles 31. Uncommon 32. Diving bird 33. Bind 36. Music co. inits. 37. Volcanic rock 38. Roman road 39. Saucy 40. A slap on the back 42. Teapots
43. Pay dirt 44. Letter-turner White 45. Afr. country 46. Washouts 49. Pays attention 50. U-boat 52. Paste 53. Visionary 54. Golf aim 56. Body of water 57. Crete mountain 58. Lance 59. Fr. summer
Down
1. Ostrich relative 2. Director Howard 3. Gesture of assent 4. Locomoted 5. Wood file 6. Fruit drinks 7. Raincoat, for short 8. Muscles 9. Grade 10. Boxer Holyfield 11. Altaic language 15. Periodic event 17. Decompose 18. Woodwind 21. Outfit
Your ad could be here on this popular page! Please call (717) 770-0140 for more information.
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The Way I See It
Another One Gone? Mike Clark
The character in Larkin’s poem is a bicycle traveler who stops at one of the archaic churches that dot the bucolic English countryside. Attendance at these churches is dwindling, as it is here. The tone of the poem is reflective and a bit melancholy. Although the traveler lacks strength of conviction regarding his personal faith, he laments the emptiness and deterioration of what he calls a serious house on serious earth. The tentative and indifferent visitor enters the church after he determines the place is inactive; he peruses the surroundings and surveys the contents. From all appearances, this could be any one of a number of forlorn holy structures that were once filled to capacity with the faithful. The traveler is acutely aware of the present stillness but is also aware that a caretaker or worshippers have recently been there. Mats, seats, books, and the organ are neatly in their proper place, offering a sense of hope, but the fading flowers reveal the subtle truth of the “tense, musty, unignorable silence.”
Puzzle Solutions
There’s a church for sale in a town near here. It has been there as a Sunday school since 1897. The present structure has been there since 1937. It’s a beautiful building, with all the traditional stained-glass windows, bronze plaques, and wooden pews that have been burnished to a glassy smoothness over the years by wool suits, cotton dresses, and the restless limbs of small children. I am concerned when churches go up for sale. I worry that they will be converted to secular use when they are sold. It happens. I’ve visited a few of these altered structures on candlelight tours and other occasions. Instead of being uplifting and spiritual, they were eerie and devoid of atmosphere, in spite of the creative use of space and contemporary décor. Americans used to be some of the most churchgoing people in the world. That has changed in recent years, though. There is a growing number of people who, although they say they are spiritual and believe in God, are not members of any particular church. Consequently, many churches are struggling to meet financial obligations through tithing. That is what is happening to this church. The notion of the declining church reminds me of a poem by English poet Philip Larkin called “Church Going.”
July 2016
every structure—the stones will crumble and fall, and the wood will rot away as they become “a shape less recognizable each week, with a purpose more obscure.” There will be those who remember why these sacred places existed. They will take their children in the hope that just the touch of a single stone will steel them against harm; the sick, out of desperation, will still seek relief; and those in grief will look for some sort of resurrection of familial souls. And finally, when faith and superstition are no longer a compelling force, the earth will reclaim the elements of each structure, altar by altar and stone by stone. The traveler finds solace and feels the spiritual power of this holy ground. “It pleases me to stand here,” he says. And if, in all his cynicism, he still feels the power of this place, then the truly faithful must remain vigilant in preserving the church—not just for themselves, but especially for those in doubt. Mike Clark writes a regular column for The Globe Leader newspaper in New Wilmington, Pa. He has a Bachelor of Science degree in organizational behavior/applied psychology from Albright College. Mike lives outside Columbia, Pa., and can be contacted at mikemac429@aol.com.
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Puzzles shown on page 17
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The traveler wanders about the church and ponders the whole experience. Before leaving, he chucks a worthless coin in the offering plate and determines the place wasn’t worth the stop. In spite of his disdain, the traveler always stops at these places, never certain of what he is seeking. Of course, like all of us, he is looking for existential answers. And if the answers are in these holy places, what will we do when they are gone? We can only imagine. Will these marvelous structures, devoid of their spiritual essence, be relegated to nothing more than pastoral scenery? Will architects and preservationists go about their routine business of interpretation, uninterrupted by those who once sought the grace that could be found there? And will all the books of instruction, Bibles, collection plates, and holy vessels lie with other relics at a museum somewhere while the curious guess at their former purpose and value? As time passes, the elements of weather, human neglect, and vandalism will take their toll on
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Politicians are human. comptroller-treasurer “stole $53 There are surely times when you’d million … money right out of the like to think otherwise, but the truth pockets of her friends and neighbors.” is that they laugh, they cry, they There have been sex scandals love—and they do boneheaded things. aplenty in politics, words that went In the new book Political Suicide by awry, and a lot of big mouths. Racism Erin McHugh, you’ll see that all kinds has reared its terrible head, as has of things can go wrong. double-crossing and blame-laying. Their greed gets the better of them. History repeats itself in contentious Their egos need stroking, or their elections and Supreme Court tempers take over. nominations. And at least one political Take, for instance, Daniel Sickles. “man among men” wasn’t a man at all Though the New York state … assemblyman was a known Looking for a little levity in the philanderer himself, wreckage of this political he was furious that year? his missus enjoyed a You’ll find some dalliance. Sickles killed between the lines in his wife’s lover and went Political Suicide, but to trial but pleaded don’t expect belly laughs temporary insanity, or goofy stories. No, becoming the first author Erin McHugh person to successfully gives readers lots of true be acquitted in that (and outrageous!) tales, manner. but the humor comes Also lucky was a from the situations California congressman themselves more than who killed a man over from the author. a lack of breakfast; he McHugh is quick Political Suicide By Erin McHugh likewise served no jail to point out the c. 2016, Pegasus Books ridiculousness of what time. 258 pages Throughout history, happened, but she there have been many also puts things into scandalous quirks in politics. One historical and cultural perspective; sitting congressman served his country what’s more, her accounts seem from an insane asylum. One was sympathetic now and then, especially reelected to Congress while in jail. when naiveté is involved. And one notable congressman told That gives readers a nice balance of a mega-whopper of a lie to gain his silly, sad, and scandalous. What’s not seat, and then tried to explain it by to like about that? saying that he was “a prisoner” of his Nothing, that’s what—so, White own story. House watchers, voters, fed-up folks, There’s money to be found in and historians should want to read politics—although, unfortunately, it this book. If you need a hint of doesn’t always belong to the politician. disgracefully laden lightheartedness That doesn’t necessarily stop them between now and Nov. 8, Political from taking the cash, however: One Suicide is just the ticket. state treasurer who called himself The Bookworm is Terri Schlichenmeyer. Honest Dick “in fact, was not.” Terri has been reading since she was 3 Questionable loans are altogether too years old and she never goes anywhere common. without a book. She lives on a hill in And imagine the shock when Wisconsin with two dogs and 14,000 books. one small town discovered that its www.50plusLifePA.com
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