re coverage Is your Medica sive? too expen ith referrals? Still dealing w r hearing aids fo e g ra e v o c d e Ne or dentures? to see what Go to page 3 r you. we can do fo
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August 2019 • Vol. 25 No. 8
50th
Anniversary Woodstock
They Were Stardust, They Were Golden: The Reality of Woodstock 1969 page 4
Study Could Confirm Nicotine’s Benefit in Treating Memory Loss page 3
how seniors can spot fake news page 18
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50plus LIFE •
7/17/19 11:02 AM www.50plusLifePA.com
MIND Study Could Confirm Nicotine’s Benefit in Treating Memory Loss By Megan Joyce Nowadays, it’s difficult to hear the word “nicotine” without immediately conjuring up an image of a cigarette. Nicotine may be in need of a PR overhaul, to be sure. Its potential use as a medicinal agent has been on researchers’ radar for decades; nicotine has demonstrated effectiveness in the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, depression, ADHD, anxiety, and other disorders. A stimulant found naturally in the nightshade family of plants — which includes tobacco — nicotine is now also the focus of a two-year nationwide study, funded by the National Institutes of Health, that looks at nicotine and its potential to improve memory in adults diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment, or MCI. The MIND Study comprises data collected from 400 individuals diagnosed with MCI from 32 sites across the country, including Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center in Hershey. Researchers have used nicotine in memory studies for more than three decades, according to the NIH, and the MIND Study is the largest and longest running of its kind. Researchers hope to establish whether the safe use of nicotine, delivered via patch, can improve memory and functioning in people diagnosed with MCI. “MCI is a bit of a broad umbrella term that refers, in most cases, to short-term memory loss that starts to become noticeable to an individual in their daily activities,” Dr. Paul Eslinger, neurologist with Penn State Neuroscience Institute at Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, said. MCI, which occurs in about 20% of people 65 and older, goes beyond what is considered a normal level of cognitive decline associated with aging. “MCI is usually diagnosed if they tend to fall a certain degree below what’s typical for an individual of their background, such as their educational and occupational level,” Eslinger said. People with MCI will report not only misplacing objects and forgetting aspects of conversations, but also trouble retrieving names of people or objects they would usually know and difficulty keeping track of scheduled activities. “Most often, individuals don’t have noticeable changes in their neurologic exams, such as their cranial nerves or reflexes,” Eslinger added. People with MCI can generally use effective strategies — such as calendars, alarms, and other reminders — to compensate for their memory issues. www.50plusLifePA.com
“Most often, they’ll be able to be fully independent and continue managing their affairs and their social and recreational activities, but they need extra attention, often double checking specifics,” Eslinger noted. Eslinger said about half of individuals with MCI will remain stable, meaning their memory loss will not progress further; but the other half will develop more symptoms over time, leading to conditions such as Alzheimer’s disease. And it’s here, in the mild stages of impairment, that Eslinger and other MIND Study researchers hope to be able to slow or even stop memory decline — using nicotine. Studies of Alzheimer’s disease have shown that one of the brain’s neurotransmitters, acetylcholine, has become deficient in disease sufferers. Acetylcholine sends signals from cell to cell and activates entire groups of cells, Eslinger explained. It is a key neurotransmitter for memory and thinking. And nicotine, a natural stimulant, acts very similarly to acetylcholine, stimulating the nicotinic receptors in the brain and in areas close to the memory structures of the limbic system. “So [nicotine use] is a way for us to potentially stimulate some cells that may be underactive in the memory areas in a way that can bolster functioning please see NICOTINE page 7
BlueJourney Seminar Dates and Locations: Aug. 21 , 10 a.m. • Farm & Home Center, 1383 Arcadia Rd., Lancaster 17601 Aug. 1st, 10 a.m. • Hampton Inn York, 1550 Mt. Zion Rd., York 17402 st
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BlueJourney PPO is offered by Capital Advantage Insurance Company®, a Medicare Advantage organization with a Medicare contract. BlueJourney HMO is offered by Keystone Health Plan® Central, a Medicare Advantage organization with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in BlueJourney PPO and BlueJourney HMO depends on contract renewal. Capital BlueCross and its subsidiaries Capital Advantage Insurance Company, Capital Advantage Assurance Company and Keystone Health Plan Central are independent licensees of the BlueCross BlueShield Association. Communications issued by Capital BlueCross in its capacity as administrator of programs and provider relations for all companies. You must continue to pay your Medicare Part B premium. This information is not a complete description of benefits. Contact the plan for more information. Limitations, copayments, and restrictions may apply. Benefits, premiums and/or copayments may change on January 1 of each year. The formulary, pharmacy and/or provider network may change at any time. You will receive notice when necessary. Y0016_MK18_50plusAd Accepted
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August 2019
50plus LIFE •
They Were Stardust, They Were Golden: The Reality of Woodstock 1969 By Randal C. Hill
the original name was retained — would be a lowkey, folky affair drawing no more than 50,000 Half a century ago, in an atmosphere redolent of music fans. Given the green light, Woodstock Ventures cow manure and marijuana smoke, 500,000 young leased the nearby 300-acre Mills Industrial Park people came together on the hillside of a farm in and went to work. Beginning with Creedence New York state. Clearwater Revival, top rock acts of the day were The historic Woodstock concert of Aug. 15–18, soon signed 1969, became (at top dollar, the watershed in order to moment of secure the the late-1960s biggest names), counterculture and aroundgeneration and the-clock toil offered attendees was begun on a brief respite prepping the from political area. assassinations, However, inner-city race Wallkill folks riots, antiwar also began to demonstrations, get cold feet, Chappaquiddick, and a hastily Charles Manson, organized a raging foreign zoning board of war that made appeals denied no sense, a Photo credit: Marc Holstein the necessary general feeling This monument marks the site of the original 1969 of hopelessness, Woodstock Music and Arts Festival site in Bethel, New York. permits. Howls of protest and visions of a from Woodstock Ventures fell on deaf ears, and bleak future — if any future existed. the proposed concert, now only one month away, Translation: It was time to party! appeared to be dead in the water. ··· Everyone panicked except Lang, who assured his partners that everything would somehow work out. The architects of Woodstock included idea Given a tip from a realtor friend, Lang journeyed men Michael Lang, a concert promoter, and 33 miles west and met with an open-minded Capitol Records VP pal Artie Kornfeld, along with trust-fund millionaires John Roberts and Joel Bethel, New York, dairy farmer named Max Yasgur, who agreed to lease a sizeable portion of his Rosenman, who were both willing to fund Lang’s pet project: a history-making concert of prodigious sprawling property in nearby White Lake. As before, Lang had pitched the idea that no proportions that would feature the current crème more than 50,000 concertgoers would show up. de la crème of the rock-music world and ensure a huge profit for the investors. ··· In January of 1969, the foursome named their In mid-August, a river of cars, vans, and trucks fledgling company Woodstock Ventures, the title flowed into White Lake until their drivers could honoring Lang’s artsy adopted hometown 108 miles north of the Big Apple and his hoped-for site go no further. Many abandoned their vehicles and walked or hitched rides in cars inching toward of the biggest music gathering ever. Yasgur’s sacred grounds, a bowl-shaped cow pasture But Woodstock locals turned thumbs down that sloped to a flat space — a perfect setting for on the idea of a horde of rowdy, unwashed, longthe expansive performance stage — and next to a haired hippies descending on their Norman Rockwell-style village. After required permits were crystal-clear lake. But problems were far from over for the denied, the four men then set their sights on the Woodstock Ventures men. Rented portable ticket hamlet of Wallkill, 64 miles to the south. stands were never delivered, and the incoming The Wallkill locals were assured that the human tsunami that weekend — which would Woodstock concert — due to its coolness cachet, www.50plusLifePA.com
eventually total 400,000 people attended the event, recalled years — pushed over the rickety fences later feeling a certain sadness creep that had been erected around the into the euphoria that he felt as he perimeter. sat in thrall as final artist Hendrix After a while, Woodstock was performed his stellar “The Stardeclared a free event, which meant Spangled Banner” for a sleepthat Roberts and Rosenman were out deprived audience that had dwindled about $10 million in today’s money. to about 35,000. In between the onstage “We knew, as we listened, that it entertainment, the concert attendees was over,” says McKnight. “We’d often cavorted, made history skinny-dipped, and ‘come and made love together,’ with abandon but we also — not always understood privately — as that it could they endured never happen stifling heat again. Soon and humidity, there’d be booming Altamont thunderstorms, and Kent and howling State and winds, all the Watergate while gamely and disco. staving off Jimi and exhaustion, Janis and Jim thirst, hunger, [Morrison] and a shortage would all of portable die shortly toilets and thereafter, as coping with if they knew rivers of mud. it was all over Drug usage too. Photo credit: Chic Chicas was rampant, “But I Magazine advertisement for yes, but many also felt joy Woodstock Music Festival in 1969. concertgoers that misty had come morning. to just enjoy the world’s largest I knew I’d experienced something unchaperoned party and groove on extraordinary and unique … I had the music. shared a utopia with my brothers and And what music it was! Many of sisters for a brief moment in time.” the 32 performing acts that August Visitors to Yasgur’s farm that weekend reflected the quintessence summer weekend then began their of late-1960s rock and included inexorable march to adulthood, with established megastars of the day many “rebels” eventually swapping (Creedence, Sly and the Family their VW buses for sensible sedans, Stone, Joan Baez, Janis Joplin, the free love for marriage vows, spare Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, change for an IRA, and a room at Jimi Hendrix) and such on-the-rise home for a 30-year mortgage. artists as Santana, Melanie, Joe But for the 500,000 people Cocker, and Crosby, Stills, Nash, on the cusp of maturity who had and Young. temporarily bonded as members of The entertainment commenced an elite club of sorts, it had meant on a Friday afternoon with folkie three days that defined what many Ritchie Havens and ended the would come to mark later as the high following Monday morning — point of their young — or perhaps rain had delayed the Sunday-night entire — lives and one that to this performances by several hours — day retains an almost sanctified aura. with the legendary Jimi Hendrix. On the front cover: Opening In the book Woodstock Revisited, musician/songwriter/producer Sandy ceremony at Woodstock on Aug. 15, 1969. McKnight, who was 16 when he www.50plusLifePA.com
MULTI-DAY TOURS • Montreal, Quebec & Boston................. Sept. 9 – 13 • Nova Scotia & Prince Edward Island.... Sept 9. – 18 • Niagara Falls Getaway...................... Sept. 11 – 13 • Vermont, New Hampshire & Maine....Sept. 15 – 20 • Hudson River Valley..........................Sept. 18 – 20 • Adirondack Balloon Festival.............. Sept. 19 – 22 • Mountain Trains of New England......Sept. 21 – 25 • Cape Cod Getaway.............................Sept. 23 – 27 • Lake George & Lake Placid..........Sept. 29 – Oct. 3 • Biltmore Estate & Asheville..........Sept. 30 – Oct. 3 • Maine’s Rugged Coast..................Sept. 30 – Oct. 5 • Fall Mystery Tour.....................................Oct. 2 – 4 • Autumn in the Bay State.......................Oct. 5 – 10 • Mackinac Island & Michigan.................. Oct. 5 – 11 • Autumn in the Smoky Mountains..........Oct. 7 – 10 • Island Hopping in New England............ Oct. 7 – 11 • New England’s Finest Foliage............... Oct. 7 – 11 • Best of Pittsburgh.................................. Oct. 9 – 11 • Charleston, Savannah & Myrtle Beach.... Oct. 13 – 18
ONE-DAY TOURS • Atlantic City or Ocean City, NJ.........Aug. 17, 31 • Statue of Liberty...................................Aug. 17 • Riverboats & Railways.......................... Aug. 17 • Atlantic City Air Show...........................Aug. 21 • Brooklyn Bridge Walking Tour.............Aug. 24 • Cape May or Wildwood, NJ..................Aug. 24 • NY Gourmet Shopping.........................Aug. 31 • Holocaust Museum & Arlington............Aug. 31 • Annapolis & Naval Academy................. Sept. 7 • Mt Vernon & Potomac Cruise................. Sept. 7 • Maryland Seafood Festival.................... Sept. 8 • NY 9/11 Museum................................. Sept. 14 • Baltimore Aquarium............................ Sept. 14 • St Michael’s, MD – Lunch & Cruise...... Sept. 14 • Jim Thorpe Train Ride in the Fall........ Sept. 15 • Washington DC Bible Museum or Zoo.... Sept. 21 • Ocean City, MD Sunfest........................ Sept. 22 • Bloomsburg Fair.................................. Sept. 23 • NY Radio City Christmas Show.... call for dates!
For information or reservations : 717-569-1111 2019 catalog available, or visit our website: www.conestogatours.com
Tom & Randi LaNasa “MEMORY MUSIC”
Attention: RETIREMENT HOMES, CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS. Looking for entertainment?
Now booking our Christmas, variety, and specialty shows for 2019. We have many variety shows featuring the music from the 1930s to the 60s. Songs by legendary artists like Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Doris Day, Kay Starr, Dean Martin, Patsy Cline, and the Mills Brothers. Specialty shows include …
Songs from the WWII Years • The Post WWII Years: 1945 – 1955 AMERICA: From Sea to Shining Sea Salute to the Rat Pack (or if you prefer, just Sinatra) Elvis & Patsy • Classic Country Please contact Memory Music to book your next event!
Phone: (717) 846-6126
E-mail: memrymusic@aol.com
50plus LIFE •
August 2019
5
Tech Talk
Data Backup Considerations Mark Rinaudo
Question: What are my options for backing up my computer? When it comes to computers, it’s not a matter of if it’s going to fail, but when. With hard drives slowly being replaced by solid-state drives, the chances of losing your data is slowly diminishing — but it’s not completely gone. Solid-state drives today have about one-tenth of a percent failure rate, versus its cousin the hard drive, which has a 4–6% failure rate. It’s pretty slim, but still possible. Backups are a very important tool to be used to guard your data against failures within the machine and failures made by the users of these machines. As malicious activities — such as scams and viruses — escalate, so do the tactics used to deploy them and their level of sophistication.
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August 2019
50plus LIFE •
Ransomware is a tool that is starting to be seen more and more. The ransomware will encrypt all of your data and programs and leave your machine in an unusable state. The ransomware then instructs you where to make payment if you want your data decrypted. A good backup may be the quickest way to free yourself of ransomware. Backups play a crucial role in protecting yourself from data loss and time loss. There are many online services available to consumers that allow you to back up your computer to the cloud. When you hear the word “cloud,” it’s safe to assume you can replace it with the word “server.” When you back up to the cloud, your data is usually compressed, encrypted, and uploaded to a server on the internet, where it is stored for retrieval. Most online backup services provide you the option to keep multiple versions of files, so if you accidentally overwrite a file or want to go back to a particular version of a file on a particular date, you have that option. Online backups are your go-to disaster-backup tool. This protects your data from theft, fire, or acts of Mother Nature. In the event your home or office is no longer standing, for whatever reason, your data is readily available to be downloaded from the internet. All this data will take some time to download, however. For non-disaster recovery, I recommend restoring from an onsite backup. This usually entails an external hard drive connected to your computer. Some backup services allow you to back up to a local destination as well as to the cloud. I always recommend having a local backup in the event you need to recover from a computer failure and you don’t want to wait eight hours to download all your data from the internet. Backing up your files is a good first step for protecting yourself, but if you really want protection, then you will want to make sure you have a bare-metal backup. This backup provides a way for you to restore your operating system, programs, and files back to a specific point in time. This is the backup you want if your computer loses a hard drive or you’re infected with the latest, greatest ransomware. You can simply restore your machine from a bare-metal recovery, and you’re back up and running without having to reinstall the operating system and programs one at a time or without reconfiguring everything. It’s all there, ready to be restored. It’s like going back in time. Backups are definitely something any computer user needs to have in their line of defense. It will save you the loss of data and the anguish of lost time. Mark Rinaudo has worked in IT in Shreveport, La., for more than 20 years. He is the owner and operator of Preferred Data Solutions. Email mark@preferreddatasolutions. com to submit a question for this column.
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NICOTINE from page 3 of these memory structures in the brain and hence improve individuals’ memory functions on a day-to-day basis,” Eslinger said. Administering nicotine via a patch on the skin bypasses all the problems associated with cigarettes, he added. “In its pure form, [nicotine] can actually be used by the brain quite well,” Eslinger said. “The problem with cigarettes is all the carcinogens that cause all the lung disease, and the other anoxic effects of the smoke. And all that is completely taken out of the equation.” In a preliminary six-month study of 74 people with MCI, individuals using nicotine patches showed improvement in both attention and memory versus those who had placebo
patches. The two-year, double-blind MIND Study looks to extend the confirmation of nicotine’s benefit. Study participants must be healthy, nonsmoking adults 55–90 years old who have been diagnosed with MCI. Participants must commit to applying a fresh patch each morning and to visiting their research site every three months for two years to have their progress documented. All studies to date have shown no risk of addiction — even for former smokers — to the patch’s nicotine, which is released in a dose considerably lower than that found in cigarettes. The nicotine is also absorbed more slowly, over the course of a 12- to 15hour day, and is gradually titrated up
in each participant until a therapeutic dose is reached. Past participants have occasionally reported minor side effects, such as nausea, dizziness, or headache, but “when they do occur, they tend to be upon first having the patch, and they tend to resolve rapidly,” Eslinger said. “We have not seen any side effects that have been lingering or that have caused anyone to drop out of the study.” Eslinger sees the potential advantages of nicotine use for both halves of the population with MCI, those whose problems will progress no further — and those whose symptoms signal the beginnings of dementia or Alzheimer’s. “For those individuals … this will be a stage at which we could slow that
progression, and we may be able to slow it by several years if the nicotine patch ends up being very helpful in improving the memory function and slowing progression of the disease,” Eslinger said. “For those individuals who have MCI as really their only manifestation of change in the brain, it will help them, we believe, function better in their daily activities,” he added. “They’ll be less stressed and harried in trying to keep up with notes and providing reminders all the time.” The MIND Study has already begun, but additional participants are still needed. Individuals interested in more information should call (866) MIND-150 or visit www.mindstudy. org.
At Your Fingertips Helpful numbers, hotlines, and local businesses and organizations eager to serve you—all just a phone call away. Cancer care Lancaster Cancer Center Greenfield Corporate Center 1858 Charter Lane, Suite 202 (717) 291-1313 Emergency Numbers Central Pennsylvania Poison Center (800) 521-6110 Office of Aging (717) 299-7979 or (800) 801-3070 Entertainment Dutch Apple Dinner Theatre 510 Centerville Road, Lancaster (717) 898-1900 Financial Services Internal Revenue Service (717) 291-1994 Morgan Stanley Wealth Management (302) 573-4027 U.S. Financial (800) 595-1925, ext. 2122 Health & Medical Services Alzheimer’s Association (717) 651-5020 American Cancer Society (717) 397-3744 American Diabetes Association (888) DIABETES
American Heart Association (717) 393-0725 American Lung Association (717) 397-5203 or (800) LungUSA American Red Cross (717) 299-5561 Arthritis Foundation (717) 397-6271 Consumer Information (888) 878-3256 CONTACT Helpline (717) 652-4400 Disease and Health Risk (888) 232-3228 Domestic Violence (800) 799-7233 Flu or Influenza (888) 232-3228 Hearing Services Pennsylvania Office for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing (800) 233-3008 V/TTY Home Care Services Visiting Angels Living Assistance Services Hanover: (717) 630-0067 Lancaster: (717) 393-3450 York: (717) 751-2488
Home Improvement Haldeman Mechanical Inc. 1148 Old Line Road, Manheim (717) 665-6910 Housing Marietta Senior Apartments 601 E. Market St., Marietta (717) 735-9590
Supermarkets John Herr’s Village Market 25 Manor Ave., Millersville (717) 872-5457 Travel Conestoga Tours (717) 569-1111 Passport Information (877) 487-2778
Insurance Medicare (800) 633-4227 Vibra Health Plan (844) 660-2961 (TTY: 711)
Veterans Services Korean War Veterans Association (717) 506-9424 Lebanon VA Medical Center 1700 S. Lincoln Ave., Lebanon (717) 228-6000 or (800) 409-8771
Nutrition Meals on Wheels (717) 392-4842
Volunteer opportunities RSVP of the Capital Region (717) 454-8647
Pharmacies CVS/pharmacy www.cvs.com Retirement Communities Harrison Senior Living Locations in Christiana and East Fallowfield (610) 384-6310
yoga Little Yoga Place Semi-Private and Private Yoga Landisville, Pa. (717) 471-8328
senior services Lancaster County Office of Aging (717) 299-7979
Not an all-inclusive list of advertisers in your area.
www.50plusLifePA.com
50plus LIFE •
August 2019
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CCRC Continuing Care
Retirement Communities Designed with their residents’ changing needs in mind, CCRCs (Continuing Care Retirement Communities)/Life Plan Communities offer a tiered approach to the aging process. Healthy adults entering these communities 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/Life Plan Communities 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 Life Plan Communities 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
Woodcrest Villa Mennonite Home Communities
Cornwall Manor
1 Boyd Street, P.O. Box 125 Cornwall, PA 17016 Jennifer Margut Vice President of Marketing and Public Relations (717) 274-8092 info@cornwallmanor.org www.cornwallmanor.org
If you would like your CCRC/Life Plan Community to be featured on this page, please contact your marketing consultant or call (717) 285-1350.
2001 Harrisburg Pike Lancaster, PA 17601 Connie Buckwalter Director of Marketing (717) 390-4126 www.woodcrestvilla.org
Homeland Center
1901 North Fifth Street Harrisburg, PA 17102-1598 Barry S. Ramper II, N.H.A. President/CEO (717) 221-7902 www.homelandcenter.org
Willow Valley Communities
600 Willow Valley Square Lancaster, PA 17602 Richard Myers Director of Sales (717) 464-6800 info@willowvalley.org www.WillowValleyCommunities.org
The CCRCs listed are sponsoring this message. This is not an all-inclusive list.
Casey Holds Hearing on Scam Artists Impersonating Law Enforcement enforcement phone numbers and threatening seniors and others During a July 17 U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging hearing entitled, “Combatting Robocall Fraud: Using Telecom with arrest in order to scare them into immediately handing Advances and Law Enforcement to Stop Scammers and Protect over funds.” Seniors,” Sen. Bob Casey (D-PA) highlighted the need for the According to the FCC, Americans received approximately Senate to pass his bipartisan bill, the Stop Senior Scams Act. 47.8 billion robocalls in 2018. Delaware County Sheriff Jerry L. Sanders Jr. testified In an age where telecommunications technology, such as about the recent trends of phone scammers impersonating law robocalls and spoofing, is utilized to trick seniors into giving money to scammers, this bill would enlist bank tellers and enforcement, including his office. Sanders spoke on the steps cashiers in the effort to spot and stop scams before seniors lose his department takes to prevent seniors and others from falling money. victim to robocall scams. Delaware County Sheriff The financial impact of scams, including robocalls and “Often, trying to keep the public aware to avoid Jerry L. Sanders Jr. with financial abuses targeting seniors, is estimated to be at least $3 victimization is the best we can do,” Sanders said. “I was U.S. Sen. Bob Casey. pleased to learn that Sen. Casey has introduced legislation that billion a year. would help train bank tellers, cashiers, and others about how spot a potential “Robocalls calls are more than a nuisance: They turn a conversation into a heist by threatening our aging loved ones and stealing their hard-earned scam victim and intervene to stop it. savings,” said Casey, ranking member of the Special Committee on Aging. “In this way, they would serve as another line of defense — protecting our “Con artists are feeling more emboldened than ever, spoofing law friends and neighbors from these criminals.”
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August 2019
50plus LIFE •
www.50plusLifePA.com
Lancaster County
Calendar of Events
Support Groups Free and open to the public Mondays, 10 a.m.; Thursdays, 2 p.m. Our Journey Together Cancer Support Group Lancaster Cancer Center Greenfield Corporate Center 1858 Charter Lane, Suite 202, Lancaster (717) 291-1313, ext. 143 Aug. 7, 7-8:15 p.m. Alzheimer’s Caregivers Support Group Willow Lakes Outpatient Center 212 Willow Valley Lakes Drive, Willow Street (717) 464-9365 Aug. 12, 10-11 a.m. Alzheimer’s Caregivers Support Group Garden Spot Village Concord Room 433 S. Kinzer Ave., New Holland (717) 355-6076 jmorton@gardenspotvillage.org Aug. 15, 10-11:30 a.m. Bereavement Support Group Masonic Village Sycamore North Recreation Room 1 Masonic Drive, Elizabethtown (717) 367-1121, ext. 33576 Aug. 15, noon Brain Tumor Support Group Lancaster General Health Campus Wellness Center 2100 Harrisburg Pike, Lancaster (717) 626-2894
Aug. 20, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Dementia Caregiver Support and Education Group Masonic Village Health Care Center Courtyard Conference Room 1 Masonic Drive, Elizabethtown (717) 367-1121, ext. 33764 Aug. 22, 6:30 p.m. Alzheimer’s Support Group Keystone Villa at Ephrata 100 N. State St., Ephrata (717) 366-6330 Aug. 26, 2-3 p.m. Parkinson’s Support Group Garden Spot Village Theater 433 S. Kinzer Ave., New Holland (717) 355-6259 slapp@gardenspotvillage.org Aug. 27, 6-8 p.m. Epilepsy Foundation of Eastern Pennsylvania Support Group Community Meeting Room – Kohl’s Wing 142 Park City Center, Lancaster (800) 887-7165, ext. 104 Aug. 27, 7 p.m. Memory Loss Support Group Landis Homes The Heritage – Warwick Room 1001 E. Oregon Road, Lititz (717) 581-3939 supportgroups@landishomes.org
Community Programs Free and open to the public Aug. 5, 6 p.m. Red Rose Singles Meeting Centerville Diner 100 S. Centerville Road, Lancaster (717) 406-6098 Aug. 14, noon Korean War Veterans Association Meeting Woodcrest Villa – Eagle Commons Room 2001 Harrisburg Pike, Lancaster (717) 299-1990 pcunningham1841@verizon.net Aug. 16, 5-9 p.m. Meet Me in the Garden: An Art Exhibit of Faith and Flowers The Bachman Center at Homestead Village 633 Community Way, Lancaster info@artbyjeremymiller.com
Aug. 16, 6-9 p.m. Music Friday Downtown Lancaster https://visitlancastercity.com/music-Friday Aug. 27, 7 p.m. World War II Oral History Meeting St. Anne’s Retirement Community 3952 Columbia Ave., Columbia (717) 319-3430
If you have an event you would like to include, please email information to mjoyce@onlinepub.com for consideration.
Library Programs Lititz Public Library, 651 Kissel Hill Road, Lititz, (717) 626-2255 Aug. 14, 12:30 p.m. – Painting Club Aug. 22, 6:30 p.m. – Concert: Swing Street Aug. 26, 2 p.m. – Buckhill Sleuths Book Club: The Stranger by Harlan Coben
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Senior Center Activities Columbia Senior Center – (717) 684-4850 Aug. 8, 10:30 a.m. – Clyde Spangler Music Aug. 19, 10 a.m. – Lebanon VA: Veterans Benefits and Programs Aug. 30, 9:30 a.m. – Boom Box Music Bingo Elizabethtown Area Senior Center – (717) 367-7984 Aug. 7, 1:30 p.m. – Bingo 4 Bucks Aug. 26, 10:30 a.m. – Team Trivia with Bob Aug. 28, 11 a.m. – Trip to Mount Gretna Timbers Lancaster House North Happy Hearts Club Senior Center – (717) 299-1278 Mondays, 9:30 a.m. – Senior Exercise Class Thursdays, 12:30 p.m. – Bingo and Pinochle Fridays, 12:30 p.m. – Party Bridge Lancaster Neighborhood Senior Center – (717) 2993943 Aug. 6, 9 a.m. – CAP Nutrition Aug. 14, 9:30 a.m. – School of Cosmetology Haircuts/ Manicures Aug. 20, 9 a.m. – Pottery Works Lancaster Rec. Senior Center – (717) 392-2115, ext. 147 Aug. 1, 10:30 a.m. – Canvas Painting with Pottery Works Aug. 14, 9:30 a.m. – Indoor Shuffleboard Aug. 21, 10:45 a.m. – Sing-along with Bonita on Piano Lititz Senior Center – (717) 626-2800 Aug. 5, 10 a.m. – VisionCorps: Vision Loss as We Age Aug. 7, 10 a.m. – Trivia with Bob Aug. 14, 9:30 a.m. – Arts and Crafts Luis Munoz Marin Senior Center – (717) 295-7989 Wednesdays at 8:15 a.m. – Blood Pressure Checks Aug. 9, 10:45 a.m. – Fresh Express Aug. 15, 9:15 a.m. – Home Care Questions Millersville Senior Center – (717) 871-9600 Aug. 5, 10:30 a.m. – Tom and Randy’s Music Memories Aug. 9, 10:30 a.m. – Trivia with Bob Aug. 20, 10:45 a.m. – Nutrition with Giant’s Kilene Knitter Next Gen Senior Center – (717) 786-4770 Aug. 9, 9:30 a.m. – Pop-Pop Doo-wop Music Aug. 14, all day – Rainbow Dinner Theatre Trip Aug. 30, all day – Out-to-Eat Lunch Rodney Park Happy Hearts Club Senior Center (717) 393-7786 Tuesdays, noon – Pinochle Wednesdays, 1 p.m. – Varied Activities Thursdays, noon – Bingo Submit senior center events to mjoyce@onlinepub.com.
50plus LIFE •
August 2019
9
Soldier Stories
Robert Naeye
Sprayed by Shrapnel, His Flak Vest Saved His Life
Pennsylvania native and central Pennsylvania resident Tom Foor nearly perished in Vietnam during an enemy attack. But this stout artilleryman survived the war and earned numerous decorations for his valiant service, including the Army Commendation Medal, the Purple Heart, and a Presidential Unit Citation. Foor comes from a military family. He had 21 direct relatives who served in Tom Foor leaning on the barrel the Civil War, eight of whom of his 105 mm howitzer. paid the ultimate sacrifice. His father served in the Army in Africa and Europe for almost the entire duration of World War II and helped liberate the concentration camp in Landsberg, Germany. But like many World War II veterans, “He didn’t tell me a lot of stories about the war,” says Foor. Foor grew up in in Manns Choice, Pennsylvania, and graduated from Bedford High School in 1966. Shortly thereafter he went to work for a U.S. Department of Agriculture research center in Beltsville, Maryland. Foor had a 1A draft number, so he knew he would eventually have to go into the military. “I thought, ‘Man, I’m not going to sit around thinking about that for the next six, eight months or whatever.’ I decided to get it over with.” So he went to a recruiting station in Altoona and signed up for a two-year enlistment in the Army. On June 24, 1968, he traveled to the Pittsburgh airport to fly to Fort Jackson, South Carolina, for basic training. There, he met a fellow incoming soldier who would become one of his best friends: Jim Engelmeier. Foor vividly remembers a bus ride to Fort Gordon, Georgia. A staff sergeant named Raymond Soulet hopped on the bus and yelled, “I don’t wanna hear talk. I don’t wanna hear a fart. I don’t wanna hear nothin’.” “It was dead silence all the way to Fort Gordon,” says Foor. Foor enlisted at a time when casualties in Vietnam were mounting, so the armed services had to lower their standards for enlistees. Foor met soldiers who could barely read or write. “All they were doing was looking for bodies. They just wanted people to fill the ranks,” says Foor. He also recalls a renegade soldier punching a drill sergeant, which turned out to be a big mistake. A group of drill sergeants came out and beat the guy up so badly that his face was a bloody pulp. That was the last time they ever saw him. Foor later traveled to Fort Sill in Oklahoma for artillery training. There, he learned how to fire a variety of howitzers. “Fort Sill was nice because they treated you almost like you were a human being,” he recalls.
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50plus LIFE •
Photo credit: Robert Naeye
Tom Foor, right, with Rich Burton, president of the Central Pennsylvania Vietnam Round Table, for which Foor was recently the featured speaker.
After a 30-day leave back home in Bedford, he flew to Fort Lewis, Washington. Coincidentally, his buddy Engelmeier from basic training took the same flight. After turning down an opportunity to flee to Canada with three fellow soldiers who went AWOL, Foor flew to Hawaii, then Guam, and then to Bien Hoa Air Base, near Saigon. “I remember walking off that plane and as soon as that door opened, it smacked you in the face. The heat and the stink. I remember diesel fuel smells and garbage. Every time I smell that, it
takes me back to that time,” says Foor. Foor spent his first few weeks shuffling between bases. But he was eventually choppered into Landing Zone Clara, west of Saigon. “I was walking off the pad up to the guns and I heard this guy yelling at me. I thought, ‘Who the heck is that?’ Here’s that Engelmeier again. We ended up in the same outfit again. That is a one-in-a-million shot,” he recalls. On Dec. 29, the North Vietnamese Army battered LZ Clara with rockets and mortars. Foor was getting ready to return fire when a mortar round exploded about 15 feet away, spreading shrapnel that entered Foor’s chest, neck, arm, and leg. Foor was wearing a flak vest, which he credits for saving his life. The shrapnel penetrated his chest but didn’t go far enough to kill him. Foor was medevacked to a hospital in Cu Chi, where he spent several days recovering. He recalls one incident when a severely wounded man helped him make his blood-stained bed. “You could see his stomach and there was plastic covering the area. You could look in there and see stuff, whether it was intestines or whatever. I said to him, ‘What happened to you?’ He said, ‘I’m waiting for my abdomen to drain and then they’re going to sew me up.’” Foor was transferred several days later to a hospital at Cam Ranh Bay, where he stayed for nearly six weeks. There, he met the famous actor Jimmy Stewart, who was also from Pennsylvania. After Foor recovered sufficiently from his wounds to go back into the field, he first went to LZ Elrod and then LZ Lois. On March 17, 1969, Lois got hit hard with rocket-propelled grenades, and two howitzers were taken out of action, the only time Foor’s unit lost a gun to enemy action during his year in ’Nam. On May 10, Foor was stationed at LZ Phyllis when it was attacked by mortars and rockets. Infantrymen made a sweep around the base and found a cache of weapons. Following orders, they loaded the ordnance onto a jeep trailer and drove it into the LZ. Two days later, after a second enemy attack, another infantry sweep produced another cache of weapons that was also brought into the LZ.
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Something caused the entire pile to blow up, killing 11 men and wounding 10 others. “I hope somebody got court martialed for allowing that ordnance to come on the base. That was a travesty and a tragedy,” says Foor. After intelligence suggested a major attack was coming on LZ Phyllis, Foor was evacuated first to LZ Cindy then to LZ Joy. The NVA launched a heavy ground attack on June 12, and sadly, Jim Engelmeier was killed instantly when he was hit in the neck with small arms fire. Foor’s unit was moved around from base to base over the next few months and fired many rounds supporting the infantry. He later went to Bu Dop, a Special Forces camp near the Cambodian border. There, he witnessed a Vietnamese woman giving birth to a baby girl in a bunker. Foor recalls, “It was amazing, but I felt so bad for that kid being born into this time and in this hellhole. She was a pretty little thing.” After returning from R&R in Taipei, Taiwan, Foor was asked to drive an officer to a nearby provincial capital. That officer happened to be Gen. Creighton Abrams, commander of all U.S. forces in Vietnam. Abrams had a pocket full of cigars. Foor thought, “Please give me a cigar.” The general didn’t give Foor a cigar, but he thanked him for the ride. Foor spent most of his remaining tour at LZ Westcott. He shot a lot of rounds, and as he points out, “The longer you stayed in a place, the worse the rats would get.” On Thanksgiving, his battery commander and first sergeant told him that would be his last day in the field. “I got choked up. ‘Oh man, I made it,’” Foor recalls thinking. Flying out of the base that afternoon, Foor was allowed to follow a unit tradition by throwing a red smoke grenade out of the helicopter as he was flying away for the last time. In early December, Foor flew to Hawaii and then Oakland, California. A day later, while leaving Oakland for San Francisco’s international airport, he encountered protestors for the first time. “Why are they throwing rocks and eggs at us?” he thought. “We weren’t too much aware of what was going on in 1969.” He returned home to Bedford to friends and family. He still had six months of service remaining, which he completed at Fort Stewart, Georgia. Foor has enjoyed a successful post-military career, working for PPG Industries, then as a car salesman, and then 22 years in the postal service. He has been married to Kim for 39 years, and the couple has a daughter, Shelley, who lives in Florida. He has traveled around the U.S. and Europe and loves riding his Harley-Davidson motorcycle. But to this day, the war lingers on in Foor’s mind from shooting thousands of rounds with large guns. “I have big-time tinnitus,” he says, “It’s been ringing in my ears every day since.”
Aug. 27, 2019
Sept. 12, 2019
Radisson Hotel Harrisburg 1150 Camp Hill Bypass Camp Hill
Lebanon Expo Center 80 Rocherty Road Lebanon
9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
This event is FREE to attend. Veterans (of all ages), the military community, and their families are invited to join us!
The Expo brings federal, state, and local agencies together with area businesses to provide information and resources to veterans and their families. The Job Fair brings veterans and spouses who need jobs together with employers who can benefit from this rich source of talent to aid their organizations.
At the Expo
Veterans Benefits & Services Medical/Nonmedical Resources Products and Services Available Support/Assistance Programs Education/Training Services
At the Job Fair
Robert Naeye is a freelance journalist living in Derry Township. He is the former editor-in-chief of Sky & Telescope magazine.
Employers Job Counseling Workshops Employment Seminars Resume Writing Assistance Hosted by:
Sponsor & Exhibitor Opportunities Available
www.veteransexpo.com
Brought to you by:
www.50plusLifePA.com
(717) 285-1350 www.olpevents.com
50plus LIFE •
August 2019
11
Why More Ambitious Seniors are Going Back to School By Ted Lee
Another argument for going back to school later in life is the impact it can have on your life expectancy. Global lifespans are on the rise, and education can make a big difference in how long a person lives. Surprisingly, holding a college degree can increase your lifespan significantly. A Maryville University resource highlighting attending school after 50 notes that men with bachelor’s degrees lived 12.9 years longer than those without a degree. Women lived an average of 10.4 years longer. Seniors who go back to school to complete a degree will not only have a chance to fulfill their dreams, but they’ll also probably have more time to do so.
Historically, most college students have been young adults in their late teens and early 20s. It’s practically a given these days for young people to go to college. But what about the older generations that didn’t have the same opportunities and expectations? A growing number of adults aged 50+ are following their ambitions and going back to school to create new lives for themselves during their golden years. Today, people are living longer, and many older Americans see retirement age as time to make their dreams a reality. But what are the factors driving this trend, and what can ambitious seniors expect when they make the bold decision to go back to school? Let’s take a look. Seniors Have a Lot to Look Forward to! These days, healthcare is more effective than ever, and we’re living longer as a result. People over the age of 50 now lead active, vibrant lives and have a lot to look forward to. It makes sense to upgrade your skills and keep working if you enjoy what you do and could use the money (and let’s face it, who can’t!). There’s a growing demand for people with degrees and tech skills in the workforce, and seniors can launch a satisfying second career by investing in their education.
Going Back to School Can Make You Healthier and Wiser Older students can gain more benefits than an education and improved job prospects by going back to school. Attending college can also have massive health benefits and positively affect overall well-being. Seniors who continue learning late in life have the opportunity to stay sharp and exercise their brains in challenging and stimulating ways. Challenging yourself with education can help you stay independent, healthy, and empowered. The social component of going back to school can also make a difference in long-term health and happiness. Making new friends, engaging in academic
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50plus LIFE •
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discussions, and getting out into the world can help you stay healthy, wise, and engaged with the world. This can have a major positive impact on both your physical and mental health.
We Want YOU! •K orean war veterans (of all service branches) who served anywhere in the world 1950–1955
The Dollars and Cents of Going Back to School Obviously, going back to school is an investment that can be scary for seniors who may be on a limited income. Ambitious older students need to think about the financial implications of enrolling in a college or university program. Although degree holders make much more annually than high school graduates, some programs are more likely to create a return on investment than others. Making smart decisions about what to study can help justify the cost of an education and set you up for financial success late in life. If you’re worried about your finances when going back to school, take some time to make a budget and understand the investment you’re making. Creating new financial goals and understanding the full cost of going back to school and your potential earnings will help you understand if it will be necessary and worthwhile to borrow money and allow you to make a plan for how to afford your new educational journey. Pursue Your Dreams If you think you’re too old to pursue your dreams, think again. More and more people over 50 are saying yes to an education and using their retirement years to live fulfilling and active lives. If you dream of graduating, don’t let your age hold you back. There are so many benefits to going back to school in your golden years. And these days, you’re likely to meet students your own age and develop rich friendships. Invest in yourself and follow your dreams — you’ll be glad you did. Ted Lee is a higher education researcher focused on the continual merger between education and technology. Lee’s current focus is on the online education sector and how various online programs and learning platforms can help develop a more educated and informed society.
Pet of the Month
Scout
• Veterans (of all service branches) who served in Korea 1945–present
The mission of the KWVA/USA is to defend our nation. Care for our veterans. Perpetuate our legacy. remember our missing and fallen. Maintain our memorial. Support a free Korea.
Come and enjoy the camaraderie of your fellow veterans at a monthly meeting of the local chapter of the Korean War Veterans Association (KWVA). We meet on the second Wednesday of each month at Wood Crest Villa — Bluebird Commons, 2001 Harrisburg Pike, Lancaster, PA 17601, starting with lunch at noon. This invitation includes spouses/companions and drivers. There is no charge for attendance. Dress code is casual. We currently have 90+ registered members. Come join us. Hopefully, you will find it habit forming.
For more information call: Bill Kelley, VP (717) 560-9424.
HALDEMAN MECHANICAL INC. 717-665-6910 80
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Scout is a stunning 5-year-old spayed female, a dilute tortie looking for a fun-loving human to call her own. When you first meet this lovely lady, she tends to be more quiet and reserved, rubbing against your legs and curling up in your lap. Remember there are two sides to every story, though, and Scout is a complex novel. Once this girl becomes comfortable in a home, she gets bursts of happiness, or “zoomies,” and will love to run and play. She also likes to be aware of her surroundings and enjoys perching herself in high places, so she makes the best lookout. Please adopt Scout today! Scout’s ID number is 223989. For more information, please contact the Humane League of Lancaster County at (717) 393-6551. www.50plusLifePA.com
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August 2019
13
On Life and Love after 50
A Living-Apart-Together Relationship May Be Their Perfect Arrangement
Tom Blake
Finding love at 50-plus is challenging. Finding love at 76 is a blessing. That’s what happened to Judy (not her true name). But, now, at 78, she is confused about her two-year relationship. Judy contacted me, asking for advice. She said, “I never married (not yet, haha), though I had proposals. I met one man in my 30s whom I would have married. He was nine years younger, and we were so happy. His parents
E
October 5, 2019
omen’s Expo Lancaster County
9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Lebanon Expo Center 80 Rocherty Road Lebanon
October 12, 2019 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Spooky Nook Sports
omen’s Expo Cumberland County
2913 Spooky Nook Road Manheim
November 9, 2019 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Carlisle Expo Center
y Holida g in Shopp & Health ty Beau
Fun!
100 K Street Carlisle
Please, join us!
717.285.1350 community outreach sponsor
lunch bag sponsor
supporting sponsors
Homeland at Home
UPMC Pinnacle
associate sponsor
seminar sponsor
Wegmans
BeBalanced
Agora Cyber Charter School Ricker Sweigart & Associates Visiting Angels
media sponsors
FREE advance guest registration online! ($5 at the door) Talk to us about sponsor and exhibitor opportunities.
aGreatWayToSpendMyDay.com
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broke us up. “I compare everyone to the wonderful relationship we had. I know it’s ridiculous to hang onto the past and the hope I could meet another like him. “Two years ago, a high school classmate, 78, and I began a relationship. He was married 53 years. His wife had dementia; he cared for her until he couldn’t anymore. She went into assisted living. “After his wife died, he came to see me often and helped me move and buy a car. Our feelings grew and we declared our love. “We live an hour and a half away. He remembers our anniversary of our first holding hands, our first kiss, and incidents like when he says he thought of me while driving all the way home. “He’s a country boy; I’m a city girl. When I stay at his place, I feel like I’m in the boonies, and when he comes here, he cannot stand traffic. He curses at traffic, or if he drops something, or when he can’t find his phone, or at anything that frustrates him. “I can’t stand that. It cuts into the peace we are experiencing and really affects me. “He would like me to move up there, but it’s really rural. Nice house, but mostly still set up [the way it was] when his wife was there. “He’s jealous that I’ve been in several relationships prior to ever knowing him. Plus, he’s constantly wanting sexual activity to the point I think he’s obsessed. “We just talked a few moments ago; he’s at his place and I’m at home. He misses me and loves me, and for the first time, instead of rolling his eyes when I want to go to my church group, or other things I like, he’s encouraging me to do so. “I try to please him. He does me too. Today he said he doesn’t want to be someone who controls my life. That was new because, in fact, he tries to. “Having said all that, he’s truly a fine person and that’s the reason I got involved to begin with. There’s much I love about him. But we are very different. I tell myself all relationships have adjustments the older we get. “I’ve thought about moving up to his place and building a new life. It’s just that I like civilization. I also love his friends. They’re fun, great people. He has a large family; I enjoy being with them and love for him to spend time with them. “Also, he’s remarked he thinks about moving into my place, thus no yard to mow, hedges to trim, repairs to make, and the like. “If we break up, I figure it would be my last chance at a relationship, whereas he could find many others, as there are more women than men at our age. www.50plusLifePA.com
“He’s conflicted and so am I. What to do? We love each other, but we’re so different. Any comments would be welcome.” Tom’s advice: Considering you’re both so different and yet love each other, you already have the best arrangement — an LAT (Living Apart Together) relationship. Living an hour and a half away from each other is a bit inconvenient, but living apart allows you both to spend time alone when you want. You say you’re both “conflicted” about relocating. Based on the information you provided, if one of you relocated, there is a strong chance that one or both of you would not be happy living permanently in the other’s environment. Problems could quickly arise. Moving in together or getting married could ruin your relationship. You say he’s controlling, jealous, and wants too much sex. He also has anger issues. I see big red flags in those characteristics. Firmly explain to him that those behaviors are unacceptable to you. He must treat you with respect. You reported that he said he is going to try to change his behavior, to be more considerate of you. Give him a chance; see if he does. And, as far as the obsessive sex, tell him to cool his jets somewhat on that also. After your talk, see if his behavior changes. If not, you must decide what to do. Being treated with respect is nonnegotiable. For now, keep the LAT relationship as is.
No Need for Disguises. We’re Pet Friendly!
For dating information, previous articles, or to sign up for Tom’s complimentary, weekly e-newsletter, go to www.findingloveafter50.com.
Grants Will Benefit Vision-Impaired Adults, Children VisionCorps recently announced receipt of a $3,000 Low Vision Devices Grant, as well as a $12,000 Vision Benefit Administration grant, from the Pennsylvania Vision Foundation to continue serving people with vision loss. The Low Vision Devices Grant will help provide products deemed essential to maintaining independence for individuals who are vision impaired and low income. “We have been able to purchase products such as hand held magnifiers, stand magnifiers, glare shields, white canes, talking watches, monoculars, low-vision lamps, and much more,” Chris Ament, VisionCorps’ vice president of rehabilitation and education, said. “These are items that help individuals maintain independence in everyday tasks, and we’re pleased to be able to continue this work.” The Vision Benefit Administration grant will support a need-based voucher program, through which financially eligible individuals receive essential eye examinations and glasses at participating optometrists in their area. Those eligible for this program include low-income adults and children residing in Pennsylvania who do not have vision insurance. Eligible residents must first schedule an appointment with VisionCorps staff to complete the required verification paperwork. In affiliation with Pennsylvania Vision Foundation, Vision Benefits of America will then provide a printed voucher, accepted at any optometrist listed in their network. To schedule an appointment with VisionCorps staff to verify program eligibility, call (717) 291-5951. To find a local optometrist in-network, visit https://vbaplans.com/vision. www.50plusLifePA.com
At Harrison Senior Living, we believe that your four-legged friend can improve your overall health and happiness; that’s why we pride ourselves on being a pet-friendly community. After all, your pets are family too.
www.Harrisonseniorliving.com
H
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Independent Living Personal Care Respite Care 300 Strode Avenue East Fallowfield, PA 19320 610.384.6310
Short-Term Rehabilitation Long-Term Care Memory Care Respite Care 41 Newport Avenue Christiana, PA 17509 610.593.6901
See our website for more locations and information.
50plus LIFE •
August 2019
15
Art & Antiques by Dr. Lori
Collectibles Put into Everyday Use Lori Verderame
pet’s remains in the first jar she ever collected and continued the tradition down the line for other pets. Her idea made for an attractive and heartfelt display.
My job appraising art, antiques, and collectibles at big public events, online, and in private homes offers me many opportunities to learn about and share new and fascinating ideas about storage, display, and repurposing of antique and vintage objects. I learn a lot from my audiences and from my clients, and I like to spread around what is a wealth of information about how others are enjoying their collectibles. Here are some of my favorites:
About Us – The Lancaster County Office of Aging (LCOA) was established 45 years ago as a
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2. Twin sisters shared their late mother’s china service for 12. Each sister got half of the service, or an eight-piece place setting for six people. At holiday time, when one sister was hosting the entire family for dinner, she wanted to use all of her mother’s set, so her sister packed up her share of the set and 1. A client for whom I conducted an inCanister sets can be put into untraditional yet good use as brought them to her sister’s home. home appraisal had been a longtime pet bathroom catchalls. parent. Devastated when a pet member of The way she packed the fragile china was handy. She packed and transported the her family passed, she started to host their china by car, each piece wrapped in disposable diapers. The diapers’ sticky tabs cremated remains in her collection of antique lidded tobacco jars. made wrapping easy. The jars were made of pewter or silver plate, and with the aid of some Once wrapped, the sister packed them tightly in a carry-on roller-board creative display techniques, she kept a photo of each pet near each jar. suitcase to her sister’s home. The diapers’ padding and the easily portable My client kept the tobacco jar collection on her mantle. The jars were lined suitcase kept the china protected in transport. up in the order that she purchased or received each jar; she placed her oldest
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Lancaster County Office of Aging Maintaining the independence and quality of life for seniors through information, services, and protection since 1974.
result of the passage of the Older Americans Act. This act directed states to develop a network of services and supports to help keep older adults healthy and independent. The Pennsylvania Department of Aging was created to fulfill this mandate. In turn, a network of 52 Area Agencies on Aging (AAA) was established throughout the commonwealth to carry out this mission at the local level. Funding for aging-related services is a combination of state and federal monies, with the Pennsylvania Lottery providing the major source of funding. In Lancaster County, the AAA is part of county government. We are dedicated to providing Lancaster County residents, 60 years of age and older, with a wide range of informational resources and services as well as advocacy efforts and elder abuse protection. The LCOA offers the following services:
Our Philosophy: u Support
the older person’s right to decide his/her own destiny. Encourage consumer self-determination and choice.
• Information and referral services
• Adult daily living services
• Long-term living assessments
• Caregiver support
• H ome and community-based support services
• Employment • Ombudsman services
u Support
the older person’s right to risk.
• Protection from abuse and neglect
• Transportation
u Promote
independence and dignity.
• A PPRISE, Medicare, and related health insurance counseling
• Legal services
• Senior center services
• Volunteer opportunities
u Avoid
unnecessary/inappropriate institutionalization.
• Health and wellness programming
For more information, please call us Monday – Friday from 8:30 a.m. – 5 p.m. at 717-299-7979/1-800-801-3070, visit our website at www.lancoaging.org, or email aging@co.lancaster.pa.us.
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3. Use antique and vintage canister sets with lids on the bathroom counter or in a linen closet to hold or store toiletries. For instance, use the large flour or sugar containers for small washcloths, toothpaste tubes, soap bars, extra toothbrushes, etc. The smaller coffee and tea canisters are good for pocket-size tissues, travel-size shampoo bottles, makeup remover pads, and cotton balls. They offer a nostalgic look displayed on the countertop and, in the linen closet, these vintage canisters can keep the chaos of toiletries tidy. When someone opens the linen closet door, the closet looks uniform too. That is what my audience member told me she liked about her bright idea. There are many more bright ideas for putting your antiques and collectibles into everyday use. You can share yours on my social media pages on Twitter @ drloriv and www.facebook.com/doctorlori. Dr. Lori Verderame is an author and award-winning TV personality on History channel’s The Curse of Oak Island. With a Ph.D. from Penn State University and experience appraising 20,000 antiques every year nationwide, Dr. Lori presents antique appraisal events and travels the world lecturing about art, museums, and history. Visit www.DrLoriV.com or call (888) 431-1010.
Nutrition Vouchers Still Available Many of the Lancaster County Office of Aging senior centers have produce vouchers left over from the June 2018 distribution. The nutrition vouchers, valued at $20, can be exchanged for Pennsylvaniagrown fruits and vegetables through November at participating farmers markets and roadside stands. Each person is eligible to receive vouchers only once per year. An individual must also be at least 60 years of age, reside in Lancaster County, and have an annual household income of less than $23,107 for one person or less than $31,284 for two. Those living in nursing homes or other residential facilities where meals are provided are not eligible for this program. Persons unable to pick up the vouchers may have a proxy or representative go on their behalf but need to have a completed proxy form to receive the vouchers. To receive a proxy form by mail, call your local senior center. Vouchers are available on a first-come, first-served basis; please call the senior center before going. • Columbia Senior Center: 510 Walnut St., Columbia – (717) 684-4850 • Elizabethtown Area Senior Center: 70 S. Poplar St., Elizabethtown – (717) 367-7984 • Lancaster Neighborhood Senior Center: 33 E. Farnum St., Lancaster – (717) 299-3943 • Lancaster Rec Commission Sr. Center: 525 Fairview Ave., Lancaster – (717) 399-7671 • Lititz Senior Center: 201 E. Market St., Lititz – (717) 626-2800 • Next Generation/Solanco Senior Center: 184 S. Lime St., Quarryville – (717) 786-4770 • SACA Senior Center: 545 Pershing Ave., Lancaster – (717) 295-7989 www.50plusLifePA.com
September 28, 2019 Overlook Park, Lancaster
Registration at 9 a.m. • Walk at 10:30 a.m.
October 5, 2019
City Island, Harrisburg Registration at 10 a.m. • Walk at 11:30 a.m.
October 26, 2019 John C. Rudy Park, York
Registration at 8:30 a.m. • Walk at 10:30 a.m.
Easy online registration at http://www.alz.org/walk • Volunteer opportunities available. • Teams and individuals welcome. Chapter Presenting Sponsors
Registration brochures, team packets, and sponsorship packets available. For more information, please contact: Harrisburg/York Walks Katherine Ensell, Walk Manager (717) 651-5020; klensell@alz.org
Lancaster Walk Fran Gibbons, Walk Director (717) 568-2595; fgibbons@alz.org
Alzheimer’s Association 2595 Interstate Drive, Suite 100 • Harrisburg, PA 17110
50plus LIFE •
August 2019
17
Savvy Senior
How Seniors Can Spot Fake News Jim Miller
Dear Savvy Senior, I recently read that seniors are the No. 1 purveyor of fake news on the internet. Is this true, or is it fake news too? If it’s true, how can seniors go about spotting fake news? – Faked-Out Senior Dear Faked Out, Yes, it’s true. According to a recent study published in the journal Science Advances, people aged 65 and older are almost four times more likely to share fake news on social media than younger people. Why do older users share fake news more often? There are two theories. The first is that seniors, who came to the internet later, sometimes lack the digital literacy skills of their younger counterparts to identify false or misleading content. The second is that many older people experience cognitive decline as they age, making them more likely to fall for hoaxes. What is Fake News? Fake news is not new, but it is more prevalent than ever before because of the internet and social networking, which enables it to spread like wildfire. Fake news comprises false news stories, hoaxes, or propaganda created to deliberately misinform or deceive readers. Usually, these stories are created to influence people’s views, push a political agenda, or cause confusion and can often be a profitable business for online publishers. Also note that some fake stories aren’t completely false but rather distortions of real events. These deceitful claims can take a legitimate news story and twist what it says or even claim that something that happened long ago is related to current events. How to Spot Fake News Here are some tips from the International Federation of Library Associations,
Harvard University, and Facebook that can help you spot fake news stories. Be skeptical of headlines: False news stories often have catchy headlines in all caps with exclamation points. If shocking claims in the headline sound unbelievable, they probably are. Look closely at the web link: A phony or lookalike link may be a warning sign of false news. Many false news sites mimic authentic news sources by making small changes to the link, for example “abcnews.com.co” (an illegitimate site) versus the actual “abcnews. com.” Investigate the source: Ensure the story is written by a source you trust with a reputation for accuracy. If the story comes from an unfamiliar organization, check their “About” section to learn more. You can also find a list of websites that post deceptive and fake content at FactCheck.org — type “misinformation directory” in their search feature to find it. Watch for unusual formatting: Many false news sites have misspellings or awkward layouts. Read carefully if you see these signs. Inspect the dates: False news stories may contain timelines that make no sense or event dates that have been altered. Check the evidence: Check the author’s sources to confirm they are accurate. Lack of evidence or reliance on unnamed experts may indicate a false news story. Look at other reports: If no other news source is reporting the same story, it may indicate that the story is false. If the story is reported by multiple sources you trust, it’s more likely to be true. Is the story a joke? Sometimes false news stories can be hard to distinguish from humor or satire. Check whether the source is known for parody and whether the story’s details and tone suggest it may be just for fun. Do some fact checking: There are many good websites, like PolitiFact (www.politifact.com), Snopes (www.snopes.com), and FactCheck.org that can help you fact-check a story and identify fact versus fiction. These sites have most likely already fact-checked the latest viral claim to pop up in your newsfeed. Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.org. Jim Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show and author of The Savvy Senior book.
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August 2019
50plus LIFE •
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Puzzle Page
CROSSWORD
Solutions for all puzzles can be found on page 20 SUDOKU
WORD SEARCH
Computer Words
Across 1. Hobbyist’s need 5. Sister of Erato 9. Religious figure 13. Tears 14. Pencil part 15. ___ contendere 16. Electrical units 17. Name tag, e.g. 19. Game piece 20. Sweetheart 21. Tough tests 22. Pick up the tab 24. End of grace 25. Deviate
26. Overly proud 30. Smells 32. Terrarium plant 33. Undivided 34. Kind of phone 35. Kindergarten disrupters 36. Nickel, e.g. 37. Back of the boat 38. Artist Bonheur 39. Cigar ends 40. Standing still 43. Knitting stitch 44. Job for a body shop
45. Block house? 47. Pottery fragment 49. Heaps 51. Balancing pro 53. Swimming with a snorkel 55. Blood-related 56. Ballpark figures 57. Hole in the head 58. Monthly check 59. Undertaking 60. Derbies 61. “___ chic”
Down 1. Alumnus, briefly 2. Gaming table cap 3. Burkina Faso, once 4. Hook shape 5. Musical finale 6. Stead 7. Wayfarer’s stop 8. Hassocks 9. Babe in arms 10. Tiger’s position before a strike 11. Corrida cries 12. ___’wester 14. Devotion 18. Ticks off
20. Blocks 23. Nobleman 24. Main artery 26. Savage 27. Barracks trunk 28. Troop group 29. Telescope part 30. Wood sorrels 31. Skillful 32. Weather map phenomenon 35. Flourish 36. Ringlet 39. Insects
41. Port city in northern Poland 42. Dweeb 43. Short, high-pitched sounds 46. Sounds off 47. Gull-like bird 48. Collides 49. Shade 50. Burden 52. Colony members 53. Drunkard 54. Routing word 55. College major
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50plus LIFE •
August 2019
19
Such is Life
Threads of a Lifetime of Summers Saralee Perel
across a mile of ankle-deep muck. You may not know how I met my “Bob,” I grumbled, “you forgot the tide husband, Bob. After his divorce, he took a chart.” college course called “Life after Divorce.” I “Why is this my responsibility?” he said. was the teacher. Bob got an A. “Because you are a man.” That was 44 years ago. Since then, we “Then what am I when I vacuum all the have experienced many long-term summer time?” phases. “A good man.” The baking competition at the county While kayaking, my constant worrying fair has threaded its way throughout our ceased. Instead I’d focus on what’s right lives, with Bob winning 26 award ribbons around me. Present-moment living is the for his cookies. When he tests cookie only way to go. recipes, he turns from a sweet, gentle, goodIn fact, we kayaked year-round wearing natured soul into a monster. wet suits. These are like spray-painting your Once, when I ate one blueberry from body with rubber. Bob looked terrific in his. his recipe, he roared, “You’ve thrown off I looked like the Michelin Tire Man with everything. Now I have to start from bosoms. scratch!” Saralee in her garden. Bicycling was another thread. We’d “You take this contest too seriously, bike past cranberry bogs, kettle holes, and honey. When you don’t win, you demand a saltmarshes. recount.” Once, we biked to a restaurant that had a cemetery across the street. The Camping has also threaded its way through our lives. First, we went tent restaurant’s sign read: “So come on in and have a seat. Sure better here than camping. I kvetched, “Bob, this no-TV thing? A nightmare.” across the street.” We bought a slide-on truck camper so we could camp with the other 10 Since my spinal cord injury, I no longer kayak or go clamming, biking, or billion campers at popular beaches. Slide-ons are metal homes the size of a tick camping. So, we’ve turned to gardening. At first, Bob tried growing vegetables, that fit on the back of a pickup truck. A generator powers the TV! but in spite of trying every animal preventative in the universe, including Campers spend their days doing the same thing: nothing. spraying fox urine, nary a vegetable would grow uneaten by critters. Well, I’m not being fair. We all do three things. So instead, we grow a flower garden. It’s right outside our back door. In that 1. We swat greenhead flies, which don’t die — ever. You could smash them paradise, we feel everything we’ve felt before on the many pursuits threaded with a sledgehammer, after which they’ll resume biting you. throughout our lives. And what ties our threads together? Each other, of course. 2. We coat ourselves with 4,000 layers of bug repellant. We don’t take vacations, nor feel the need to. We live in vacation land. 3. We put combination locks on food containers so Einstein’s raccoons can’t There’s no better place to be. get in. But raccoons memorize numbers. We upgrade to padlocks, then on In the joy, maintenance, and creation of the garden, we still find the to deadbolts. Neither work. Varmints chew through whatever the container’s sustenance of our early pursuits: beauty, wildlife, visitors, peace, and made of, be it cardboard or concrete. appreciation of all that is truly in our midst. Nationally syndicated award-winning columnist Saralee Perel can be reached at sperel@saraleeperel.com or via her website: www.saraleeperel.com
Puzzles shown on page 19
Puzzle Solutions
Kayaking is heaven. Once, when we were far from any town landing, an unexpected, shocking event occurred. The tide went out. We dragged the kayak
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August 2019
50plus LIFE •
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It Was 50 Years Ago Today
‘Sugar, Sugar’ Randal Hill
The Archies’ “Sugar, Sugar” was the bestselling it was a blast, and at the session we just knew that single of 1969, yet the singing group was never this was something, and something huge was going to photographed together, never gave an interview, never happen.” appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show, never headlined in Kirshner knew that Top 40 radio stations probably Las Vegas, and never traveled the lucrative tour road. would steer clear of a single by a cartoon band, so he The reason was simple: Beyond the walls of the directed his promotion men to visit radio stations and recording studio, the Archies didn’t exist. The outfit play “Sugar, Sugar” for the program directors but not was as fictional as the absurdly wholesome teenagers reveal the group’s name until proper interest had been from John L. Goldwater’s Archie comic books that shown and the 45 had secured a place on the station’s had been around since 1942 and upon which the TV playlist. series was based. The strategy worked, and “Sugar, Sugar” In 1968, Filmation Studios released a Saturday subsequently reached No. 1 on the Billboard charts “Sugar, Sugar” morning CBS-TV cartoon program called The Archie and sold 3 million copies. The Archies Show and featured the whole clean-cut gang from And Ron Dante? Later in the year he became the August 2019 mainstream Riverdale High. lead singer of the one-hit wonder Cuff Links, another Music mogul Don Kirshner, a savvy businessperson who knew the youth studio-only group whose 15 minutes of fame included the little-remembered music market inside and out — he had managed the Monkees’ career — was 1969 Top 10 winner “Tracy.” hired to supply tunes for the prepubescent-oriented show. He brought together virtuoso studio musicians, a 19-year-old singer/ songwriter named Toni Wine (who, at 16, had co-written the Mindbenders’ “A Groovy Kind of Love”), and 23-year-old vocalist Ron Dante. Dante’s musical career had begun at age 11 after he had fallen out of a tree. To exercise a fractured wrist, he took up playing the guitar and mastered the instrument so quickly that he formed a rock group called the Persuaders just one year later. Dante had worked for Kirshner for years, mainly as a demo (demonstration) singer, although he had briefly tasted fame in 1964 as a member of the Detergents. They had enjoyed a Top 20 novelty 45 with “Leader of the Laundromat,” a spoof of the Shangri-Las’ “Leader of the Pack” that had resulted in a lawsuit from its composers. But later attempts at finding success in the entertainment world had eluded Dante until the day that Kirshner signed him as the lead voice of the nonexistent Archies. Pop-music fans probably thought they heard the entire group of Riverdale chums — Archie, Betty, Veronica, Jughead, and Moose — vocalizing on “Sugar, Sugar,” but in truth the recording Archies consisted only of Dante’s multi-tracked voice and Wine’s simplistic two-line contribution of “You make life so sweet!” and “I’m gonna make life so sweet!” She would later tell the website Songfacts, “It was just a very easy session …
UZRC Dedicates Expansion
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CEO Sue Verdegem addresses the crowd at United Zion Retirement Community’s new expansion dedication.
United Zion Retirement Community recently dedicated its expanded healthcare center and 10 new apartments. The expanded healthcare center is set up in the neighborhood model, where several rooms are situated around a common living and dining space. The renovation added four dining rooms, several sitting areas, and a wraparound sunporch. All rooms were converted to private rooms. Prior to the ceremony, guests were offered tours of the remodeled healthcare center. The ceremony included singing by the United Zion Quartet, comprising Mary and Glenn Snyder and Jim and Rosene Garman, as well as remarks from CEO Sue Verdegem. 50plus LIFE •
August 2019
21
The Beauty in Nature
Catching Insects in Midair Clyde McMillan-Gamber
Several kinds of creatures catch flying insects in midair during summer and autumn in southeastern Pennsylvania. Those species of winged wildlife are a variety of small birds, bats, and dragonflies. Some of those aerial predators hunt flying insects by day, including some families of birds and all dragonflies, while bats do so at night. Eastern kingbird But all those predatory species are entertaining and inspiring to watch. All these flying-insect predators are built for extensive, maneuverable flight. They are small, light in weight (birds even have bones filled with warm air), and have strong muscles to power their wings in rapid flight.
The small birds and bats have tiny legs that reduce the animals’ weight. Bats’ wings are made of skin stretched between long, thin fingers. Those fingers are also thin to reduce the bats’ weight. A variety of birds — including flycatchers, such as eastern phoebes, eastern kingbirds, chimney swifts, and all species of swallows — catch insects in midair Eastern phoebe but in different ways and in a diversity of habitats. Flycatchers perch on twigs and flutter out to snare an insect in the air, and then flit back to their perches to eat their victim and watch for more. Swifts and swallows weave quickly among their fellows, without collision, to seine flying insects, one right after another, from the sky. Swifts generally
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AL FESTIIVNS G E B at 2 pm RAC BEGINE at 5 pmS
Semi-Private and Private Yoga In our classes, we combine thoughtful sequencing, a dose of inspiration, and a spirit of playfulness to help you deepen your practice and awareness of your body. We seek to help others in nurturing their body, mind, and soul with yoga. Our hope is that the practice you develop on mat will transfer off mat, leaving you feeling nourished, balanced, and refreshed.
LANCASTER COUNTY CENTRAL PARK
Present this ad at the event for 5 FREE festival game tickets! (Limit 1 coupon per child)
GET YOUR DUCKIES NOW
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August 2019
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careen higher in the sky than swallows do to catch prey, thus reducing competition between those two groups of birds for food. As swallows and swifts retire for the night at twilight, little brown bats take wing from hiding in trees and swoop and dive across the darkening sky to catch flying insects in midair during dusk and into the night. The bats’ flight is erratic and swift as they track down each flying insect, one right after another. Bats locate prey at night by emitting high-pitched squeaks that strike the insects and bounce back to the bats’ ears. Bats “see” their victims ahead by hearing the echoes bouncing off them. The bats’ minds can visualize how big and far away each object around them is. Winged adult dragonflies, including green darners, white-tailed skimmers, and 12-spotted skimmers that are common in southeastern Pennsylvania, sweep over ponds, creeks, and dry land after flying insects to ingest. These dragonfly species, and others, are intriguing to watch and help make the landscape more interesting in summer. And they are attractive to see in their color patterns and with four wings held stiffly out to the sides when perched on vegetation. Dragonflies start life as camouflaged nymphs on the bottoms of still waters, where they prey on small invertebrates. But within a year, they become winged adults that leave the water and take to the air, where we see their beauties and intrigues. Watch for these creatures catching insects in midair. They are very entertaining.
23rd Annual
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Clyde McMillan-Gamber is a retired Lancaster County Parks naturalist.
One Health Risk of Dog Ownership Having a dog can be good for your mental and physical health. Dogs offer companionship to their owners and encourage more physical activity. However, as the Time magazine website reports, dogs can also pose a health risk, especially to older owners. The medical journal JAMA has shared research showing that fractures connected to dog walking are becoming more common among older adults. An examination of emergency room logs found that in 2014, close to 1,700 adults 65 and older around the country had to go to emergency rooms for injuries related to walking their leashed dogs. By 2017, the number had risen to almost 4,500. Fractures can happen when dog walkers fall as a result of dogs lunging while on the leash. The research found that almost 30 percent of those injured senior citizens were admitted to the hospital, nearly 20 percent with fractures to the hip. Hip fractures can contribute to disability and other long-term decreases in quality of life — as well as a mortality rate of close to 30 percent. Keeping a dog for health benefits is a positive choice, but just be careful to exercise caution on daily walks.
For active adults when apartment living is all you need! Affordable housing for those 62 and older, located in beautiful, historic Marietta Rents start at $715 and include all utilities (heat, electric, water, sewer, trash), off-street parking, on-site laundry, community room, and community garden. Two-bedrooms start at $857.
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Sept. 18, 2019 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Spooky Nook Sports 2913 Spooky Nook Road, Manheim Exhibitors • Seminars Free Health Screenings Demonstrations • Door Prizes
FLU SHOTS AVAILABLE!
Sponsored by Principal Sponsors:
Visitor Bag Sponsor: UPMC Pinnacle
Supporting Sponsors: Allwell from PA Health & Wellness Capital Blue Cross
Seminar Sponsors: Bellomo & Associates, LLC HARTZ Physical Therapy Landis Communities
Media Sponsors:
Brought to you by:
For applications and information, please contact:
Community Basics, Inc. 717-735-9590 or info@communitybasics.com
LANCASTER COUNTY
&
Skip the line – register online to attend! 601 East Market Street Marietta
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