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October 2021
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page 4
How to set up a trust fund page 8
Should you prepay your funeral? page 16
Make Giving Back Your Second Act!
Join RSVP to help tackle your community’s most pressing challenges! We empower Americans over the age of 55 to serve their communities. When you join the Retired and Senior Volunteer Program with AmeriCorps Seniors, you choose how you want to give back. Find a service opportunity that you are passionate about. With RSVP you can use the skills and talents you’ve learned over the years, or develop new ones while serving in a variety of volunteer activities in your community. Deliver meals to an elderly neighbor. Help a struggling child to learn to read. Support a family impacted by natural disaster.
Contact RSVP at info@rsvpcapreg.org or 800-870-2616 to find the perfect volunteer opportunity for you!
www.RSVPCapReg.org
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October 2021
50plus LIFE
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Women’s Expo Coming Back to Lancaster This Month By Megan Joyce The summer sun may be waning, but fall fun will soon take its place. The Women’s Expo is returning to Lancaster County for its fall show on Saturday, Oct. 23, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Spooky Nook Sports, 2913 Spooky Nook Road, Manheim. Brought to you by OLP Events, the fifth annual Lancaster County Women’s Expo (Fall) invites women of all ages and interests for a lively experience of shopping, inspiration, and relaxation and to learn about products and services. Organizers of the Women’s Expo are excited to once again welcome the women of Lancaster County and surrounding areas to a day of socialization and rejuvenation at the free, one-day event. Guests can connect with representatives from participating businesses and organizations offering products and services in home improvement, finances, health and wellness, beauty, nutrition, fitness, fashion, retirement living, leisure, entertainment, and more. Visitors will also be eligible for a variety of door prizes, and main-stage entertainment and seminars will be back. The event committee is working to put together a well-rounded lineup for guests’ enjoyment, including a presentation on handwriting analysis, a cooking demonstration, a seminar on Medicare Advantage and supplements, and more. Sponsors for the 2021 Lancaster County Women’s Expo (Fall) include 50plus LIFE, Blue Ridge Communications, BUSINESSWoman, LCTV, Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health, UPMC Magee-Womens, Vibra Health Plan, WellSpan Health, and WHTM abc27. Admission and parking at the Women’s Expo are free, but visitors are encouraged to preregister online at agreatwaytospendmyday.com. Check the website, visit the Women’s Expo on Facebook (facebook.com/ womensexpos) or call (717) 285-1350 for more information.
5th Annual
omen’s Expo Oct. 23, 2021 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Spooky Nook Sports 2913 Spooky Nook Road Manheim
Please, join us! It’s a time to rejuvenate your spirit and: t %P TPNF TIPQQJOH t $IFDL PVU XIBU T OFX JO GBTIJPOT t -FBSO BCPVU MPDBM CVTJOFTTFT t #F TPDJBM BHBJO t BOE NPSF $IBU XJUI FYIJCJUPST XIP PòFS QSPEVDUT PS TFSWJDFT UIBU UPVDI KVTU BCPVU FWFSZ GBDFU PG B XPNBO T MJGF JODMVEJOH
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and more! Skip the line and register online to attend—it’s free!
aGreatWayToSpendMyDay.com Health & Wellness Sponsor:
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50plus LIFE
October 2021
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Cover Story
A Bus Ride to Days Gone By When Turzai started college, he What comes to acquired a different your mind when you VW bug, also chosen think of traveling by his dad, for the in a Volkswagen same reasons as bus? Driving along the first one: It was a breathtaking affordable. California coastal The Turzais met highway? Maybe and began dating camping in Arizona while attending Penn with beautiful redState in 1985. Eric The Turzais’ son Shawn waving from the 1964 rock formations in the Turzai’s employment VW Bus they owned while living in Reno, background? eventually took them Nevada. For Eric and Celia to Arizona, where they Turzai, they don’t were married in 1987. have to imagine what In 1988, his employer traveling around in transferred him to a VW bus is like … Reno, Nevada. for them, it’s a normal It was while these occurrence, and it newlyweds were living happens right here in in Reno that his love central Pennsylvania affair with VWs truly among the abundant began. cornfields and “On the way back picturesque Amish from Lake Tahoe one farms. day, I saw a cherry-red The red 1968 Karmann Ghia Eric Turzai “fell in Eric Turzai was 1968 Karmann Ghia love with” on a drive home from Lake Tahoe. born and raised in and fell in love with Hershey, attended it,” Turzai recalls. “I Penn State majoring bought it and enjoyed in hotel/restaurant/ working on it, and institutional that started my deeper management, interest in all VWs.” and received his At one time, in the B.S. in business driveway of their home administration from in Reno, the Turzais Elizabethtown College. had, in addition to He is currently the 1968 Karmann employed as the Ghia, a 1983 Cabriolet In the early 1980s, Eric Turzai’s second car was a director of dining green ‘69 Bug. convertible; a 1964 services at Elizabethtown VW Bus; a 1957 ovalCollege, a position that window ragtop VW Bug; a 1958 all-original, keeps him very busy but still allows him time to German-origin VW Bug; and a 1967 Baja Bug. indulge in his passion for VWs. “The neighbors wanted to make a sign that said What would become that lifelong interest didn’t ‘Eric’s Used VW Lot,’” Turzai said. happen right away. One reason for the popularity of VWs in the “My first car at 16 was a 1968 VW Bug western part of the United States is that rust isn’t as convertible,” he said. “I wasn’t entirely thrilled with big of a problem as it is in the East. it. Dad picked it out because it was available and “Also, they were easy to find, and you could affordable.” make some interesting deals to obtain them,” To say that first car wasn’t in tiptop shape would Turzai said. “I once received a hot tub as payment be an understatement. The floorboards were gone, for one I sold.” and the top needed replacing, so “I only had it Once they became parents, welcoming a son about a year because it was too expensive to repair,” in 1989 and daughter in 1994, the Turzais moved he said. back to Pennsylvania and continued the used-VW By Lynda Hudzick Corporate Office
P.O. Box 8049, Lancaster, PA 17604 Phone (717) 285-1350 (610) 675-6240 Fax (717) 285-1360 Email address: info@onlinepub.com Website address: www.onlinepub.com
PRESIDENT AND PUBLISHER Donna K. Anderson
EDITORIAL Vice President and Managing Editor Christianne Rupp Editor, 50plus Publications Megan Joyce
ART DEPARTMENT Project Coordinator Lauren Phillips
BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT Senior Marketing Consultant Joshua Binkley Events Manager Kimberly Shaffer
ADMINISTRATION Business Manager Elizabeth Duvall
Member of
Awards
50plus LIFE is published by On-Line Publishers, Inc. and is distributed monthly among senior centers, retirement communities, banks, grocers, libraries and other outlets serving the senior community. On-Line Publishers, Inc. will not knowingly accept or publish advertising which may be fraudulent or misleading in nature. Views expressed in opinion stories, contributions, articles and letters are not necessarily the views of the publisher. The appearance of advertisements for products or services does not constitute an endorsement of the particular product or service. The publisher will not be responsible for mistakes in advertisements unless notified within five days of publication. On-Line Publishers, Inc. reserves the right to revise or reject any and all advertising. No part of this publication may be reproduced or reprinted without permission of On-Line Publishers, Inc. We will not knowingly publish any advertisement or information not in compliance with the Federal Fair Housing Act, Pennsylvania State laws or other local laws.
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tradition by acquiring a 1972 VW They’ve already loaned out Rosie Bus, a 1986 VW Vanagon, a 1974 once for a wedding reception, where VW Bug, a 1969 Karmann Ghia, she was parked in front of a barn. a 1987 VW Cabriolet, a 1985 VW “I think the bus softens the feel Gulf, and a 1984 Rabbit. of the photos. It has soft lines and Eric Turzai enjoys working on a relaxed stance, and it looks easy, air-cooled engines, which are a comforting, and inviting,” Celia staple of the VW brand. Turzai said. “They keep me challenged and The idea of making such a big give me something to analyze and life change, and starting their work out a solution for,” he said. own business, is daunting, but the The VW Camper Bus in Turzais are doing their homework. particular has a special place in “There are others who do it, Turzai’s heart. and we’ve looked at their websites “They are different and unique for ideas and details such as the and rarer,” he said. “I would like a reservation process, pricing, pre-1967 bus because of the split packages, and policies,” Eric window in front, but they are very Turzai said. “We also talked about The Turzais’ photo booth-like setup inside expensive to obtain.” buying one or two fully restored Rosie includes a ring light and various props. He has studied the history and functioning camper buses and of the introduction of VWs, the renting them out … but there are manufacturing of them, and the evolution of the brand, but mostly, he said, “I many factors to consider before we would embark on that venture.” just think they are cool vehicles, and I like working on them.” Whatever the future may hold, this couple is looking forward to spending These days, the VW Camper Bus that sits pride of place in their their retirement years together doing the things they love: camping, traveling, Elizabethtown driveway goes by the name of Rosie (a name suggested by the and visiting friends and family. Turzais’ daughter). Purchased in 2010, Turzai recalls that he “happened to be “We are also looking forward to continuing to work on Rosie, or any other on Craigslist and saw it. The owner needed money for rent and was selling it projects that may pop up,” Turzai said. for $2,500.” And those projects will surely include a VW or two. Rosie, a 1974 model, still had all her original equipment and was in pretty On the cover: Celia and Eric Turzai with Rosie, their 1974 VW Camper Bus. good condition. The previous owner had painted her green, but her original color is orange. “I have redone the interior — the walls, the upholstery, new flooring, curtains, stereo, and a 1976 engine,” Turzai said. Celia Turzai supports her husband’s interest because she enjoys hearing n ine ublishers nc about the projects and helping him figure things out. “Often, he needs to talk through a problem, and even though I can’t help him or answer a question, just the process of talking it through helps him figure it out,” she said. Even though she doesn’t quite share his level of interest, Turzai must admit that the bugs and buses “are cute, and I do enjoy seeing how different people have done different things with them,” she said. “It was interesting when we lived out West to see the older ones and how well they were maintained.” Growing up, Turzai did a lot of camping with her family; she said if they were younger, she would love to go camping in Rosie. “I like how the camper buses have all you need to go camping with,” she said. Merit Award She was also a big help with the restoration work, making curtains and helping choose the wood and the layout for the flooring. “Quilting Made Modern” “I am always holding a flashlight, or handing over a tool, or holding by Megan Joyce something in place or out of the way, or listening, or giving my opinion,” she said. With retirement in the not-too-distant future, the Turzais are hoping to Thank you for share their love of VWs with others by offering Rosie for photo opportunities supporting our at weddings, parties, and corporate events. It is an idea they are working on together as a means of future additional award-winning income that would be creative and fun and would not bind them into a fullpublication! time commitment. “The bus itself would be the photo booth, with the camera mainly inside,” Eric Turzai said. “The bus could also be used as a backdrop for outside photos with various-themed props available relevant to the theme of the event. We think the bus itself provides a unique frame for photos.”
O -L
P
,I .
has earned a Mature Media Award!
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50plus LIFE
October 2021
5
Home Care Services & Hospice Providers Listings with a screened background have additional information about their services in a display advertisement in this edition. This is not an all-inclusive list of agencies and providers. These advertisers are eager to provide additional information about their services.
PATRIOT HOME CARE
Homeland at Home
(717) 406-2537 www.patriothomecare.org
www.homelandathome.org Homeland Hospice: (717) 221-7890 Year Est.: 2008 Homeland HomeCare: (717) 221-7892 Year Est.: 2016 Homeland HomeHealth: (717) 412-0166 Year Est.: 2017 Counties Served: Adams, Cumberland*, Dauphin*, Franklin, Fulton, Juniata, Lancaster, Lebanon*, Mifflin, Northumberland, Perry*, Schuylkill, Snyder, York* *Homeland HomeHealth currently serves five of 14 counties. RNs: Yes LPNs: Yes CNAs/Home Aides: Yes Direct Care Workers: Yes PT/OT/Speech Therapists: Yes
Social Workers: Yes Spiritual Counselors: Yes Complementary Therapies: Yes Medicare Certified: Yes Other Certifications and Services: Homeland at Home is a community outreach of Homeland Center, a nonprofit CCRC that has served our region with excellent and benevolent care since 1867. Our expert team is dedicated to providing a continuum of At Home services—from nonmedical personal assistance to skilled nursing and compassionate care. We are privileged to care for you and your loved ones … any place you call “home.” We offer 13 months of bereavement support as well as community and staff educational programs. Please call for details.
Year Est.: 2018 Counties Served: Adams, Berks, Centre, Cumberland, Dauphin, Franklin, Lancaster, Lebanon, Mifflin, York RNs: No LPNs: No CNAs: No Home Aides: Yes
Senior life york Senior life harrisburg
(717) 757-5433 www.seniorlifepa.com
Year Est.: 2006 Counties Served: Dauphin, York RNs: Yes LPNs: Yes CNAs: Yes Home Aides: Yes Medicare Certified: Yes
Year Est.: 2010 Counties Served: Lancaster RNs: No LPNs: No CNAs: No Home Aides: Yes
Medicare Certified: No Other Certifications and Services: Homestead Village is a local name you trust. Now offering homecare services that come to you! Support after surgery, support with pet care, companion transportation, meal prep, laundry, housekeeping, and more!
Other Certifications and Services: Physicians; specialists; nursing care; physical, occupational, and speech therapies; personal and home care; medications; meals and nutritional counseling; eye, dental, and foot care; durable medical equipment; and other medically necessary services.
VISITING ANGELS
Homestead Village Home Care
(717) 397-3044 www.homesteadvillage.org/home-care
Medicare Certified?: No Other Certifications and Services: Act 150, aging waiver, OBRA waiver, COMMCARE waiver, independent waiver, and attendant care waiver. Meal prep, companionship, light housekeeping, laundry, medication reminders, errands, bathing, community engagement, and personal care.
(800) 365-4189 www.visitingangels.com Year Est.: 2001 Counties Served: Adams, Cumberland, Dauphin, Franklin, Lancaster, Perry, and York RNs: No LPNs: No CNAs: Yes Home Aides: Yes
Medicare Certified?: No Other Certifications and Services: Visiting Angels provides seniors and adults with the needed assistance to continue living at home. Flexible hours up to 24 hours per day. Companionship, personal hygiene, meal prep, and more. Our caregivers are thoroughly screened, bonded, and insured. Call today for a complimentary and informational meeting.
OSS Health at Home
(717) 747-8365 www.osshealth.com
Year Est.: 2013 Counties Served: Adams, Cumberland, Lancaster, York RNs: Yes LPNs: Yes CNAs: Yes
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October 2021
Home Aides: Yes Medicare Certified: Yes Other Certifications and Services: Physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, and medical social work.
50plus LIFE
If you would like to be featured on this important page, please contact your marketing consultant or call (717) 285-1350.
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New Study Links Dense Breasts in Older Women with Higher Cancer Risk By Bill Levesque
Physicians have long recognized that women with denser breasts are at increased risk of invasive breast cancer, heightening the importance of mammography screenings. A paucity of data, however, established such a risk in women age 65 and older, and virtually no data existed for women age 75 and older, a University of Florida Health researcher said. But now, a large study recently led by a UF Health population scientist examined data from more than 193,000 women age 65 and older, including more than 70,000 who were at least 75, and found a positive association between breast density and breast cancer risk. The study fills a gap of information with possible implications on the decision-making of older women considering a breast cancer screening mammography, said the study’s senior author, Dejana Braithwaite, Ph.D, the associate director of population sciences at the UF Health Cancer Center and a professor in the UF Institute on Aging. Right now, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, or USPSTF, an independent panel of national experts on disease prevention and evidencebased medicine, does not recommend for or against mammography screening after age 75. The task force says evidence to weigh risk versus benefit has been insufficient for a definitive recommendation. “Our goal is to develop the evidence that helps personalize breast cancer screening for older women,” said Braithwaite. “Older women who are in good health and have dense breasts may consider a screening mammogram even as they age beyond the screening recommendations for average-risk women.” Breast density is a measure of the amount of fibrous or glandular tissue compared with fatty tissue, with less dense breasts containing more fat. Roughly half of women ages 40-74 have dense breasts. The breasts of aging women become less dense over time, although nearly a third of all women age 65 and older still have dense breasts, Braithwaite said. The USPSTF recommends a mammogram every two years for women in the 50-74 age group. American Cancer Society recommendations are slightly different, with annual mammograms suggested for women 45 and older and then biennially after age 55 for women who are in good health. Physicians note that not all older women would benefit from screening mammography, especially those with serious medical conditions. “This study provides evidence that breast density remains an important risk factor in older women and should be included in risk-prediction models that also consider life expectancy to help identify women who may benefit most from continued screening,” said study co-author Diana L. Miglioretti, Ph.D., a researcher at the University of California, Davis. The study analyzed data from the Breast Cancer Surveillance Consortium and specifically examined breast density as a breast cancer risk factor in two groups of women — those ages 65-74 and those 75 and older. Data were collected from women in New Hampshire, Vermont, North Carolina, the San Francisco area, Washington, New Mexico, and Colorado. “Our findings are generalizable to the U.S. population because we collected
data from women in seven different surveillance registries across the country,” said Braithwaite. While researchers found that age is the strongest risk factor for breast cancer, women with dense breasts have a higher risk of breast cancer than women with fatty breasts. And the risk increases with increasing breast density. For example, in women 65-74 years old, the team found an increased five-year risk of breast cancer that ranged from 11.3 per 1,000 women in groups with fatty breasts to 23.7 per 1,000 women in Photo credit: Getty Images groups with dense breasts. “The 30% to 32% of older women with high breast density should discuss with their healthcare provider whether having high breast density sufficiently increases their risk to warrant ongoing screening mammography,” said Karla Kerlikowske, M.D., a co-author and a member of the University of California, San Francisco’s Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center.
October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month
www.50plusLifePA.com
Why Newspapers?
84%
of Baby Boomers have taken action as a result of seeing an ad in a print newspaper in the past 30 days.2
Because in print or online, newspapers are
the most trusted source of news and information among all age groups.1
To advertise your products and services, call 717-285-1350 or email info@onlinepub.com
50plus LIFE
Sources: 1Coda Ventures; 2NAA
October 2021
7
How to Set Up a Trust Fund b ecome public information. If you wish to keep your personal matters private, you might want to consider setting up a trust. Bypassing probate court means that your matters won’t be publicly available.
By Patrick Hicks
As we age, we naturally think more frequently about how we plan to pass on our property to our loved ones, whether it’s a spouse, children, or grandchildren. After all, you’ve spent decades building a legacy, and you likely want to retain that legacy within the family as much as you can. The process of estate planning can be tricky because you want to make the choices that will best protect your assets and your loved ones. One of the main choices you will face will be getting a will, a trust, or both.
Cons of a trust include:
October is National Estate Planning Month
What is a Trust? A trust is a fiduciary agreement that allows one person (the “trustee”) to control property provided by another person (the “trustor” or “grantor”). The trustee is charged with the duty of managing the trust, and any distributions, in the best interest of the beneficiary. When setting up the trust, the grantor is responsible for designating instructions for how the trust should be managed and how assets should be distributed. Trust vs. Living Trust In general, trusts come into effect upon the grantor’s passing. This means the trust is irrevocable or that it cannot be changed or modified. In contrast, you can also set up a living trust, which is one you set up during your lifetime. Living trusts are revocable, meaning you can change the terms at any time. Living trusts are a great option if you prefer to have some flexibility and think you might need to make any changes during your lifetime. You can also set it up in such a way that you can access property and assets placed in the trust while you still need them. Pros & Cons of a Trust Both wills and trusts are important estate-planning tools. A last will and testament designates how your property should be divided and distributed to beneficiaries upon your passing. Trusts essentially hold the same function, but they offer additional protections that are worth consideration. Pros of a trust include: • Avoiding probate – Avoiding probate proceedings is arguably the largest draw for most families. Upon your passing, property held within a trust will not be subject to probate court. This will save your family time, money, and frustration. • Simple and flexible – Contrary to popular belief, trusts are not difficult to set up. If you go with a living trust, it will also offer you flexibility. You can add to it or modify it at any time. • Limits estate taxes – Because assets held within a trust are owned by the trust itself, some tax benefits will kick in. For example, you can help limit your estate taxes. • Keeps family matters private – Estates that pass through probate court
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50plus LIFE
• Potential loss of flexibility – A living trust does offer flexibility, while an irrevocable trust does not. Once you set up an irrevocable trust, you cannot revoke it or modify it. A living trust is recommended if you prefer retaining flexibility, although an irrevocable trust offers added tax benefits. • Ongoing costs and fees – In addition to the cost of setting up the trust, you may be subject to ongoing costs to maintain the trust, as well as fees paid to the trustee for managing the estate on your behalf. How to Set Up a Trust Setting up your trust just takes three steps: 1. Draft your trust agreement – First, you’ll need to create a draft of your trust agreement. This document should list out all the assets that will be held in the trust, as well as the names of all your beneficiaries. You’ll also need to think about who you will name as your trustee, and create detailed instructions on how you want your property managed and distributed. You can make the terms of your trust yours; you can be as detailed or general as you’d like. 2. Set up the trust fund – Next, it’s time to set up the trust with an estateplanning attorney. 3. Place assets into the trust – A final and critical step is funding your trust. You’ll do this by transferring property and assets into the trust so they are then owned by the trust. It’s helpful to contact your financial institution and ask what documents they’ll need to make this happen. How to Distribute Trust Assets to Beneficiaries How your assets are distributed depends on the rules you set for your trust. Your trustee could distribute property or assets directly to your beneficiaries outright and without any restrictions. This could take the shape of a check, cash, or transfer of real estate. Alternatively, you could instruct the trustee to disburse assets over time. For example, you could instruct the trustee to wait until your beneficiary reached a certain age or milestone. You can also instruct that the assets are released over a certain time period, such as on a monthly or annual basis. Setting up a trust fund is a smart choice for many families. If you feel stuck choosing between a will and a trust, know that you can do both. In fact, many individuals successfully create an airtight estate plan by setting up both a will and a trust, which can work in tandem. Patrick Hicks is the head of legal for Trust & Will (trustandwill.com), the leading digital estate-planning provider in the U.S. offering affordable, customizable estate plans for all 50 states.
www.50plusLifePA.com
Elder Law Attorneys
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This is not an all-inclusive list of agencies and providers. These advertisers are eager to provide additional information about their services.
Specific areas of elder law in which the firm concentrates:
Appel, Yost & Zee LLP 33 North Duke Street Lancaster, PA 17602 717-394-0521 • fax 717-394-0739 appel@appelyostzee.com www.appelyost.com
5
17
1883 1970
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Estate planning, wills, trusts, powers of attorney, living wills/ advanced healthcare directories, estate administrative, guardianship, Medicaid planning, and business succession planning. Experienced, responsive, and friendly staff.
Yes
Estate planning, wills, trusts, powers of attorney, estate administration, guardianships. York County Bar Association Estate Planning and Probate Law Section, chairman since 2001, friendly and efficient service and staff.
Yes
Medicaid and nursing home asset planning; asset protection trust planning; elder, estate, and POA planning; advanced directives; Certified Elder Law Attorney (CELA).
Yes
Estate planning, wills, financial powers of attorney, durable healthcare powers of attorney (living wills), guardianships, Medicaid planning, and estate administration. Offices in Lancaster, Columbia, Elizabethtown, and Quarryville.
Blakey, Yost, Bupp & Rausch, LLP David A. Mills, Esquire
17 East Market Street, York, PA 17401 717-845-3674 • fax 717-854-7839 dmills@blakeyyost.com www.blakeyyost.com
1
6
1980 1990
No
Yes
No
CGA Law Firm 135 North George Street York, PA 17401 717-848-4900, ext. 121 fax 717-843-9039 tbupp@cgalaw.com www.cgalaw.com
3
32
1967
2010
Yes
Yes
Yes
Nikolaus & Hohenadel, LLP 212 North Queen Street Lancaster, PA 17603 717-299-3726 • fax 717-299-1811 www.n-hlaw.com
7
23
1972 2006
No
Yes
No
If you would like to be featured on this important page, please contact your marketing consultant or call (717) 285-1350. * Indicates that at least one attorney in the firm is a member. Information contained herein was provided by the firm.
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50plus LIFE
October 2021
9
CROSSWORD
Puzzle Page
Solutions for all puzzles can be found on page 27. SUDOKU
WORD SEARCH
Fruits & Veggies with Skin
Across 1. Limit 4. Trade punches 8. Dejected 11. One of the Osmonds 13. Western director Sergio 14. Top gun 15. Patagonia native 17. Map abbr. 18. Not me 19. Apr. addressee 20. Rarely 22. Ghent native 25. Small dam
26. Current unit 27. Decree 30. Asp 33. Courtroom event 34. Wrath 37. Arduous 38. A Smothers brother 39. Tense 40. Alias 41. French impressionist painter 42. Gamut 43. Gem mineral 45. Via
46. Urban center 47. Bratislava natives 51. Donnybrooks 53. Bullfight cheer 54. Grassland 56. Samuel’s teacher 57. Belgrade native, once 61. Carte start 62. Chip away at 63. Like a dryer trap 64. Heavy weight 65. Lifeless 66. Latin foot
Down 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
Locust pod Bicker Pastry Japanese coin Luau dish Literary collections Restoration Mediterranean island native 9. Role player 10. View as 11. Might 12. Mystery 13. Actress Kudrow
16. Excursion 21. Waikiki wear 23. Fat 24. Cherbourg natives, once 28. Lens holders 29. Calendar square 30. Chinese tea 31. Furniture wood 32. São Paulo native 33. African nation 35. Carpet 36. Summer on the Seine 38. Gumshoe, to some 39. Mitchell mansion
41. Free from tears 42. Divulge 44. Mineral suffix 45. After straw or exit 46. Bowed, stringed instrument 48. Misplace 49. French Kiss star Kevin 50. Chairs 51. Butcher’s stock 52. Certain 55. Unspecified number 58. Indian state 59. Eccentric
Your ad could be here on this popular page! Please call (717) 285-1350 for more information.
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October 2021
50plus LIFE
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The History of Ordinary Things
The Evolution of Toilet Paper Doris Montag
What did humans use to clean themselves after required a product that could flush away without toileting before toilet paper? clogging or damaging the pipes. Americans Naturally, they used what was readily available. quickly embraced toilet paper. The simplest way was use of one’s hand, but if That said, the quality of paper production there was an alternative, it was likely preferred. varied widely. In fact, splinters were a common Different materials were used depending problem with early toilet paper. In 1935, upon the country, weather conditions, social Northern Tissue introduced splinter-free toilet customs, and status. Ancient Greeks used clay paper! and stones. In the era of Roman baths, men used In 1928, the Hoberg Paper Company a communal sponge attached to a wooden stick, introduced Charmin using a feminine logo with which soaked in a bucket of saltwater between a beautiful woman. The marketing campaign uses. focused on softness and femininity, thus avoiding In coastal regions, mussel shells and coconut reference to the paper’s actual purpose. Charmin husks were available. Eskimos used moss or snow; introduced the economy-size pack of four rolls in the Vikings used wool. 1932. Mayans and early/rural Americans used the Do you remember the affable TV grocer of cobs from shelled ears of corn. Other handy the 1970s who implored customers, “Please don’t options were hay, leaves, grass, ferns, maize, fruit squeeze the Charmin”? In 1978, a TV Guide poll skins, animal fur, and, later, fabric, newspaper, named Mr. Whipple the third best-known man magazines, and pages of books. in the U.S., behind former president Richard The first paper-like toilet paper was made in Nixon and the Rev. Billy Graham. 1391 for the needs of the Chinese emperor’s In 1942, the first two-ply toilet paper was family. By the late 1500s, paper became more introduced in England, and today two-ply is the readily available, resulting in the advent of the standard. In 1990, the U.K. introduced moist A two-hole outhouse, complete with a bucket of newspaper, which became a popular choice for toilet paper, which was marketed in the U.S. by corncobs for self-cleanup. toileting. Kimberly-Clark in 2001. In 1857, Joseph C. Gayetty created the first According to the toiletpaperhistory.net, commercially packaged toilet paper, a manila hemp infused with aloe. It was the average person uses 57 sheets of toilet paper each day, and 100 rolls of marketed for those with hemorrhoids. toilet paper per year (over 20,000 sheets). Each day, 83 million rolls are His product was not a commercial success, in part because people did not manufactured. want to buy toilet paper when catalogs came in the mail for free, and old Growth in this market is focused on developing countries, where some sheets or clothes were available to use. studies suggest that more than 70% of people do not use toilet paper due to Initially, toilet paper came in individual sheets. In 1878, two brothers, cost and custom. Clarence and Irvin Scott, formed the Scott Paper Company, which introduced Doris Montag is a homespun historian and an exhibit curator who researches and “tissue on a roll.” displays historical collections of ordinary things, such as can openers, crochet, toy In 1890, the Scotts’ Waldorf brand was marketed to hotels and drugstores sewing machines, hand corn planters, powder compacts, egg cartons, and more. rather than direct sales to the public. At the time, any reference to bodily Contact or follow her on Facebook, HistoryofOrdinaryThings. functions was considered impolite at best; thus, the public was hesitant to openly buy toilet paper. In 1897, perforated sheets on a roll were marketed by the Albany Perforated Wrapping Paper Company. By the 1900s, people had replaced corncobs and other organic materials with whatever paper they had on hand. The mail-order catalogs were repurposed to the outhouse (until they were printed on glossy paper). Americans nailed the Farmer’s Almanac to the outhouse wall, leading the company, in 1919, to precut the legendary hole in the upper-left corner of the magazine. An old-timer remembered that during peach season, the individual tissue wraps were used in the outhouse. By the 1930s, most urban populations had access to municipal running water, ushering in the advent of flushing indoor toilets in private homes. (In rural areas, access to running water came about 15 years later, or mid-1940s.) The sit-down flush toilets with their newfangled indoor plumbing systems www.steinmetzcoins.com
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Can You Travel Safely with the Delta Variant? By Dan Richards Perhaps you’re planning a fall getaway to wine country? Maybe your college-aged loved ones are heading off to a study-abroad program? Or possibly your boss decided it’s time to restart domestic, even international, business travel again? No matter the reason, people have been traveling at steadily increasing volumes during the late spring and summer, based on TSA’s airportscreening data. But the delta variant may be changing that trend. The delta variant of coronavirus is making news headlines, and some of the reporting is contributing to traveler confusion about whether they should take trips and, if they do, how to minimize risk and travel safely. The delta variant is twice as contagious as previous strains of the disease. But the available scientific data indicate COVID-19-vaccinated people and those who have been infected and subsequently recovered are far less likely to catch coronavirus in any form, including delta. The most recent data indicate that all Western-approved vaccines — Pfizer,
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Moderna, Johnson & Johnson, and AstraZeneca — are highly effective at protecting against the worst outcomes of COVID-19, including the delta variant. The Pfizer vaccine was 92% effective at fighting the delta variant, but the vaccine’s effectiveness fell to 90%, 85%, and 78% after 30, 60, and 90 days, respectively, according to a recent study by the Nuffield Department of Medicine (University of Oxford). In another study published by Reuters in August, researchers found the effectiveness of Moderna’s vaccine against infection from the delta variant was 76%. To minimize contracting or spreading the virus during air travel, people should continue to mask and physically distance in airport terminals, screening and security areas, at the gates, and on the jetway. Inflight is different. Passengers cannot socially distance on board a jet, but masking is still required. Travelers should know that the onboard jet air filtration is fast and effective against bacteria and viruses, including COVID19. A United States Transportation Command study revealed the chances of becoming infected with COVID-19 while wearing a mask and flying on a modern commercial airline is about the same as being struck by lightning: about 1 in 500,000. Air filtration and recycling on a jet are fast and effective due to the use of powerful air-circulation fans and high-efficiency particulate absorbing (HEPA) filters. “The HEPA filters are 99.9% effective or greater in removing particulate contaminants, including viruses like COVID-19, and bacteria and fungi from recirculated air. The air flows from the ceiling to the floor and creates completely new air in the cabin every six minutes,” said Denise Stecconi, a commercial pilot who flies Boeing 737s for Alaska Airlines. When it comes to destinations, domestic or international, travelers should look at hotspot trend data to identify places to avoid, but they should also be aware that viruses mutate. “Hedge your destination bets by picking outdoor getaway spots where COVID-19 and delta variant trends matter less, like remote camping, horseback riding, ranch or seashore vacations, and hiking. Go where you can be outside and away from crowds,” said Kent Webber, senior manager, Intelligence Services at Global Rescue. Medical experts, like Amber D’Souza, professor of epidemiology for the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, agrees delta variant infection rates are getting worse, but she adds that “in evaluating now whether to go on trips, if individuals are vaccinated, risk does remain low if you take appropriate precautions. “I think it still is OK to consider taking those trips.” Dan Richards is CEO of Global Rescue, the leading provider of medical, security, evacuation, and travel-risk management services. He serves on the U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board at the U.S. Department of Commerce and is a global member of the World Travel and Tourism Council.
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The Beauty in Nature
Eggs on Their Feet Clyde McMillan-Gamber
The 4-foot-tall, 88-pound emperor penguins are the only birds on Earth that raise young on sea ice around the Antarctic Continent during the southern hemisphere’s winter, which is our summer. However, these stately penguins that stand upright are built for bitterly cold, windy conditions. They have two layers of dense feathering and are lined with fat. Though penguins of all species can’t fly, their long, powerful wings are used for diving and swimming in the oceans to procure food. And emperors are known to stay submerged up to 20 minutes. Emperor penguins begin their breeding season in April (during the southern autumn) when they leave the Antarctic Ocean. Each bird finds its mate in noisy throngs of tens of thousands of individuals on the sea ice around the Antarctic Continent. Each pair courts with much bowing and posturing and then finally mates. Later, each female lays a single egg and, having no nest materials, gives the egg to her mate, who pushes it on his feet with his beak and plops a feathered brood pouch on that egg to keep it warm. Female emperors leave the nesting colonies early in June (midwinter) to gorge on krill, squid, and small fish in the Antarctic Ocean. Meanwhile, their mates, by the thousands, stand together in tightly massed huddles to stay warm and incubate their eggs. There the males stand, clustered together, for two months, without eating or drinking and in bitter winds, blizzards of ice and snow, and the total darkness of the southern winter, each patient father incubating a single embryo.
Nature’s Wonders
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Female emperors return to the nesting colonies late in July (still winter). Each mother is fat and has a stomach full of half-digested krill, fish, and squid, much of which she will feed to her chick, who hatched in mid-August. Each mother takes her chick on her feet and feeds it frequently. Finally, all the males trudge to the ocean to get food. During October and November (spring in the southern hemisphere), each pair of emperors takes turns feeding themselves in the ocean and feeding and protecting their chick from giant petrels and south polar skuas, a gull relative. As the chicks grow, they develop their own masses to stay warm and fight off those predatory birds themselves. That independence allows both parents freedom to hunt food in the ocean and shuttle some of it to their youngster. Adult emperors leave nesting colonies in December and feed in the ocean until April. The chicks fledge in December by diving off ice floes into the ocean to feed themselves. Young and adult penguins must be alert for the large leopard seals that prowl along the sea ice to catch and eat some of those birds. Emperor penguins start their breeding season in the southern hemisphere’s fall and through its winter so their chicks can be independent in the southern summer, when there are 24 hours of sunlight, warmer weather, melted sea ice, and the living around the Antarctic Continent is as easy as it will get. Clyde McMillan-Gamber is a retired Lancaster County Parks naturalist.
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Create a Great Funeral Day Americans’ Burial Plans Have Changed as a Result of COVID-19 By Anthony Martin
The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted nearly every facet of our daily lives, including funeral decisions. Choice Mutual recently surveyed another 1,500 people to determine how America’s burial preferences have changed since its 2020 report. How the Pandemic Impacted Americans’ Burial Decisions More and more families are facing unexpected losses, virtual funeral services, and overall community deaths. With that in mind, it is no surprise that 37% of respondents reported that their burial/memorial
choices have changed due to the pandemic. Among that 37%, over half claimed COVID-19 changed which process of body disposal they will choose. Over 50% of Americans were invited to a funeral sometime after March 2020 and witnessed the complicated task of organizing and paying for a memorial mid-pandemic. Of the 37% mentioned above, 52% said COVID-19 changed how they’d like their memorial services arranged, and 43% claimed it motivated them to determine or finalize their burial plans. “COVID-19 has driven the United States, a country that has for the past several decades been a country that refuses to discuss death, to have this conversation with ourselves and with our family,” Brian Waters, licensed funeral director and host of Undertaking: The
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Create a Great Funeral Day Podcast, said. “This mere shift in mindset has allowed Americans to discover the offerings of funeral homes across the nation.” Burial Preferences in the U.S.: 2020 vs. 2021 Traditional burial emerged as the most popular funeral plan (selected by 33% of respondents), closely followed by cremation (32%). This shift is partly due to more Americans planning for a natural burial (up 7% from 2020) and donation to science (up 5% from 2020). “The natural burial option is rapidly taking its place among the most popular end-of-life options offered as conventional burial costs continue to rise,” Joe Casper, funeral director at Casper Funeral & Cremation Services, said. “In fact, natural burials have joined cremation as a top choice for environmentally and cost-conscious individuals and families wanting to respectfully return a loved one to the earth.” The increased interest in donating remains to science may be tied to the heavy media coverage on the healthcare industry in 2020. The heightened exposure to medically vulnerable individuals could inspire America to choose a more philanthropic burial approach. Unconventional Burial Decisions For many of us, providing peace for our loved ones is the ultimate goal when planning our burial decisions. Solace may come in the form of a decorative urn that your family can cherish or a traditional burial plot in the company of past generations. Alternatively, one can request the creation of jewelry using preserved teeth or bones, which 13% of Americans consider. Better yet, you can prevent your favorite tattoo from “dying” with you by getting it preserved as leather for your loved ones to display. Of respondents, 23% would consider this alternative memorial, starting at $1,600. Americans ages 35-44 are most on board with forever ink, with 31% saying they would consider it. Another modern trend that some funeral homes offer is “extreme embalming,” the extensive process of preserving a body in a natural position for the duration of the funeral service. Those who select this option often request to be positioned doing their favorite things, whether sitting at a poker table, playing the drums, or even
Although traditional burial narrowly topped it as the most common burial plan, cremation is still a widely used option. The survey asked Americans who plan on being cremated what they would like to do with their cremains. The responses haven’t changed much since 2020, with “ashes spread in a specific location” still being the top choice overall (28%), followed by: • Having family keep them – 26% • Other – 21% • Plant as a tree – 13% • Buried in a cemetery – 12%
riding a motorcycle. Thirty-four percent of Americans said they would consider this unique variation of an open-casket memorial. Again, the 35-44 age bracket is the most interested in this option, with nearly half (46%) saying they are open to it. How Do You Want to Be Memorialized? Although a lot has changed since the 2020 report, one thing remains the same — Americans can get pretty creative when it comes to their burial. Regardless if you choose a more traditional option or venture outside of the casket, it is crucial to take the proper steps now to prepare for the financial impact of your funeral. Learn more about planning ahead so your family can focus on remembering you (in whichever form you choose). To view the full 2021 report, visit choicemutual.com/funeral-preferences.
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Create a Great Funeral Day Savvy Senior
Should You Prepay Your Funeral? Jim Miller
Dear Savvy Senior, My wife and I have been thinking about preplanning our funerals now so our kids won’t have to later, but we would like to find out if it’s a good idea to prepay. What can you tell us? – Living on a Budget Dear Living, Planning your funerals in advance is definitely a smart move. Not only does it give you and your wife time to make a thoughtful decision on the type of service you want, but it also allows you to shop around to find a good funeral provider, and it will spare your family members the burden of making these decisions at an emotional time. But preplanning a funeral doesn’t mean you have to prepay too. In fact, the Funeral Consumer Alliance, a national nonprofit funeral consumer-protection organization, doesn’t recommend it unless you need to spend down your financial resources so you can qualify for Medicaid. Here’s what you should know. Preneed Arrangements Most funeral homes today offer what is known as “preneed plans,” which allow you to prearrange for the type of funeral services you want and prepay with a lump sum or through installments. The funeral home either puts your money in a trust fund with the payout triggered by your death or buys an insurance policy naming itself as the beneficiary. If you’re interested in this route, make sure you’re being guaranteed the services you specify at the contracted price. Some contracts call for additional payments for final expense funding, which means that if the funeral home’s charges increase between the time you sign up and the time you sign off, somebody will have to pay the difference. Here are some additional questions you should ask before committing:
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• Can you cancel the contract and get a full refund if you change your mind? • Will your money earn interest? If so, how much? Who gets it? • If there is an insurance policy involved, is there a waiting period before it takes effect? How long? • A re the prices locked in, or will an additional payment be required at the time of death? • A re you protected if the funeral home goes out of business or if it’s bought out by another company? • W hat happens if you move? Can the plan be transferred to another funeral home in a different state? • If there’s money left over after your funeral, will your heirs get it, or does the home keep it? If you decide to prepay, be sure to get all the details of the agreement in writing, and give copies to your family so they know what’s expected. If your family isn’t aware that you’ve made plans, your wishes may not be carried out. And if family members don’t know that you’ve prepaid the funeral costs, they could end up paying for the same arrangements. Other Payment Option While prepaying your funerals may seem like a convenient way to go, from a financial point of view, there are other options available. For example, if you have a life insurance policy, many policies will pay a lump sum when you die to your beneficiaries to be used for your funeral expenses. The payment is made soon after you die and doesn’t have to go through probate. Or you could set up a payable-on-death (or POD) account at your bank or credit union, naming the person you want to handle your arrangements as the beneficiary. POD accounts also are called Totten trusts. With this type of account, you maintain control of your money, so you can tap the funds in an emergency, collect the interest, and change the beneficiary. When you die, your beneficiary collects the balance without the delay of probate. 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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Bob’s Tech Talk
See Better with Your Smartphone Bob DeLaurentis
Q. How do I make the text on my phone larger? A. The good news is that both iPhone and Android have system settings to make text larger, and many apps support adjustable-size text based on these settings. The less-good news is that these settings appear in multiple places, and they have different effects. Read on for some general suggestions, but I encourage you to search the web for detailed advice about your specific device. Not all text on a phone is the same. Labels are text. So is scrolling text in an email. Action items, such as notifications and menus, contain text as well. On both iPhone and Android, open “Settings,” and open the “Accessibility” option, and then look for a menu choice like “Font Size” or “Larger Text.” These controls will get you started in the right direction.
On Android, text in the Chrome web browser has its own control under the threedot menu in the upper right of the screen. Tap it, and then tap “Settings,” followed by “Accessibility” and “Font Scaling.” On Apple, the Safari text is a small button next to the URL marked with “AA” that reveals a menu to change text size. One side effect of larger text is that other items on screen have to adapt. Make the text too big, and other screen elements might be pushed off the screen. There is a balance to strike between readability and usability. Once you find the correct size for you, the experience of using your phone will be much more comfortable. Q. How can I make my phone screen easier to see? Sometimes I cannot tell where I should tap. A. Modern smartphones are smart enough to accommodate our individual
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differences in a number of ways. Options range from increases in text size, to contrast and color refinements, to voice-based interfaces usable by people with severely impaired vision. All of these options are managed in device “Settings,” grouped under a menu titled “Accessibility.” There are a considerable number of choices under that menu. Simply knowing what they are and what they do is useful. In addition to text-size adjustments, there are two other notable features worth exploring. The first is system-wide screen enlarging. It works similar to a zoom gesture on a photo, except that it magnifies the entire screen. It takes practice to manage zooming along with screen taps and scrolling regions, but it can make a huge difference in usability. To enable it, look under “Accessibility” for an item called “Magnification” on Android and “Zoom” on iPhone. The second is increasing contrast. This feature is more useful on iPhone because it changes elements like buttons and borders to make them more clearly defined. Android has a similar option, but it only applies to text. Every year smartphones become smarter at adapting to us. And accessibility features are key to making the most personal computing devices ever even more personal.
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A. Absolutely, yes! I first wrote about this capability on iPhone a few years ago, but the feature has improved since then, and it has come to Android as well. The “Magnifier” app comes preinstalled on iPhones, and the “Lookout by Google” app is available from the Google Play Store. Both apps have similar features. For iPhone users, this feature is as simple as activating Siri and saying “open Magnifier.” It can also be opened by tapping the Magnifier app in the utilities folder or in the Control Center. There is a slider at the bottom of the screen to adjust the magnification. If you tap just above the slider, a tray will slide upward to reveal secondary controls, which include a snapshot button, contrast and color adjustments, and a flashlight. Snapshots allow you to store a quick image so you do not have to hold the camera for more than a few seconds. This is especially handy for grabbing images in awkward-to-reach places. Use the two-finger zoom gesture to enlarge the parts the snapshot you wish to read. The Lookout app for Android is a gem. Alongside the ability to magnify, it has special modes for tasks like reading a document aloud and deciphering nutrition labels.
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Booming Voice
A Giant Step for Me and My Robots Bill Levine
While out with our friends in their new SUV, the question of whether we four senior citizens would ever own anything other than an eco-unfriendly, gas-powered vehicle was entertained. Each couple agreed we would be pure MPG drivers until our keys were turned in — no switching to hybrids or electric for us. This admission was fine with my wife and me, as we have always been rear-guard, rather than avant-garde. I realized that we would not be trendsetters early on in our lives together, back when we attended a New Year’s Eve party in the early 1980s, where the hosts screened a movie on the TV using a thing called a Betamax. We appreciated the Betamax luxury of watching a fairly recent movie on TV, but it was far from our regular peak cinematic experiences in a movie theater, popcorn debris notwithstanding. When VCRs became a fixture in homes circa 1984, we did buy one but continued to go regularly to our local movie theaters and megaplexes. We did, though, sign up for cable right away when it came to our town — but it didn’t arrive until 1990, making us the last in the area to get cable and still solidly rear-guard cable-wise. Also in the early 1980s, we relented and added a key feature to our driving
experience, gleaned from an incident on a bridge. On our way to visit my wife’s Philly relatives from our August vacation base of Atlantic City, we got stuck on the Tacony-Palmyra Bridge for far too long on a hot day. Rolling down our windows on our 1976 Pinto didn’t invite in enough cooling air. We weren’t on a bridge over a troubled marriage, but with each interminable minute on the bridge my wife clamored for A/C on our next car. I had to agree we needed to get with the mainstream; more than half of all cars had A/C by 1969. Our next car, a 1984 Corolla, came with factory air, so we welcomed ourselves into the cool-car generation. Around 1990 some friends gave us a used Apple computer. By this time, personal computers were fairly common in college-educated homes like ours; about 25% owned one. We initially made an effort to use our Apple, actually taking a course in basic use of this intriguing machine. Honestly, though, we didn’t really get it. After taking the course, I sort of stalled out after mastering trash-bin logic. The learning curve just didn’t seem worth it. Besides, I had a solidly effective word processor (a really smart typewriter).
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My wife did have a business where a computer could help, but she had her manual methods well developed. Our Apple PC was relegated to unused junk, and we were computer-less until 1995. By this time, we were ready to be part of the home-computer generation. I had started to use PCs at work, so I was somewhat versant in Windows. We purchased an HP Pavilion and then signed up for AOL. I did find Word an improvement over my word processor, as I could see a whole page as opposed to an LCD of two lines. Being an information junkie, I really appreciated internet info as “knowledge at the speed of light” vs. my old reference-book world. Even though we have gone from Windows 95 to Windows 10, we have balked at the recent trend to invite robots into our house. We do not have a Roomba or an Alexa or an Echo. We had an Alexa, donated by our millennial son, but he mentioned that his roommate, a Microsoft IT guy, said that Alexa may possibly be spying on us. My wife does use Siri as a personal assistant, but I tough it out by looking things up myself. Even though I am a rear-guard regular on adapting the quotidian improvements of technology, I am awed by the otherworldly possibility of a human on Mars within the next 20 years. Though actuarially iffy, living to see a real life “Martian” would be a great bookend for my life, together with witnessing the transcendent moment of Apollo 11’s touchdown on the moon at age 18 in 1969. Indeed, beholding the “giant step for mankind” moment of a Martian landing will be a lifetime highlight, even if am I stuck watching it flanked by newfangled senior-citizen robot friends. Bill Levine is a retired IT professional and active freelance writer. Bill aspires to be a humorist because it is easier to be pithy than funny. He may be reached at wlevine0607@comcast.net.
The road of life contains more than a few curves …
… and confident decisions are informed decisions. Throughout the year, 50plus LIFE includes Special Services pages dedicated to connecting you with these resources in our area: • CCRCs/Life Plan Communities • In-home Healthcare • Hospice Providers • Nursing/Rehab Communities • Assisted Living/Personal Care Communities • Elder Law and Estate Planning Attorneys
Please access this free and valuable information any time at
50pluslifepa.com/special-services
You know a good story when you hear it. Think you or someone you know would make an interesting profile story for 50plus LIFE? We are looking for central Pennsylvanians over age 50 who have a unique hobby, passion, or history of volunteer work, or who are a part of an interesting local club. Ideal story candidates are willing to talk about themselves and to be photographed. Your name: _______________________________________________________________ Your address: ____________________________________________________________________ Your phone: ________________________________________ Email:_____________________________________________ Nominee’s name (if not self): ____________________________________________________________________________ Nominee’s town of residence: ___________________________________________________________________________ Nominee’s phone: __________________________________ Email: _____________________________________________ Why they would make a great story: _____________________________________________________________________ Note: Please get your nominee’s permission before submitting them!
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Please email story submissions to Megan Joyce, editor, at mjoyce@onlinepub.com or send via mail to 50plus LIFE, P.O. Box 8049, Lancaster, PA 17604. www.50plusLifePA.com
50plus LIFE
October 2021
21
It Was 50 Years Ago Today
‘Gypsies, Tramps & Thieves’ Randal Hill
About Us – The Lancaster County Office of Aging (LCOA) was established 45 years ago as a
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Thomas “Snuff” Garrett was a Dallas successes of the decade. But two years high school dropout who became a later, neither the pair together nor Cher Lubbock, Texas, disc jockey at age 17 on her own found themselves putting out and befriended local music star Buddy any hits. Holly. Two years later, Garrett became a Then, in 1971, Cher signed with staff producer at Liberty Records in Los Kapp Records, hopeful of finding a Angeles. successful song that would return her to Garrett wasn’t a musician, but he did prominence. have the uncanny knack of finding — Garrett asked songwriter pal Bob and later producing — hit songs. During Stone to come up with something the ’60s, he created million-sellers for noteworthy that would bring Cher a hit the likes of Bobby Vee (a Buddy Holly and an audience beyond teenyboppers. soundalike) and Gary Lewis & the Stone responded with an adult-level Playboys. story-song called “Gypsies and White Garrett lived in the Hollywood Hills, Trash.” Garrett sensed that Stone’s Sonny and Cher performing live in 1971. next door to Salvatore and Cherilyn Bono creation had hit potential but obviously — better known in the entertainment needed some tweaking in order to avoid world as Sonny and Cher. (As with controversy. Garrett, both were also high school dropouts themselves.) The result was one of the finest pop tunes of Cher’s career — and one she In 1965, the husband-and-wife duo had rocketed to international fame never really liked. when their Atco single “I Got You Babe” became one of the biggest pop The melodramatic “Gypsies, Tramps & Thieves” unfolds at near-
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Lancaster County Office of Aging Maintaining the independence and quality of life for Lancaster County’s aging population through information, protection, services, and community support.
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:
• Information and referral services
u Support
the older person’s right to decide his/her own destiny. Encourage consumer self-determination and choice.
• Long-term living assessments • H ome and community-based support services
u Support
the older person’s right to risk.
• Protection from abuse and neglect
u Promote
independence and dignity.
• A PPRISE, Medicare, and related health insurance counseling
u Avoid
unnecessary/inappropriate institutionalization.
• Senior center services
• • • • • • • •
Adult daily living services Caregiver support Employment Ombudsman services Transportation Legal services Health and wellness programming Volunteer opportunities
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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breakneck speed — it lasts just two and a half minutes — but unfurls a poignant tale of poverty and misfortune. I was born in the wagon of a travelin’ show My mama used to dance for the money they’ d throw Cher, as the 16-year-old narrator, tells of meeting a 21-year-old drifter in Mobile, Alabama. Her family befriends him, feeds him, and gives him a ride to Memphis. He travels on from there, deserting the girl: Three months later, I’m a gal in trouble And I haven’t seen him for a while The narrator’s daughter is, as she herself was, born in a wagon. Now the
teenager is the one who must dance for money when men of the visited towns come to do their ogling. Hypocritically, those who frequent the traveling show later reject the gypsy families as lowlife carnies and grifters. Cher all but spits out the words in a sort of punkish anger that renders Stone’s lyrics both haunting and depressing. “Gypsies, Tramps & Thieves” held the No. 1 position on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart for two weeks. Cher never liked her comeback hit and dismissed it as “a song I recorded in, like, an hour.” In concert, she would pare the tune to 90 seconds by eliminating a verse and a chorus. We’ll never know the reason for Cher’s antipathy toward the song, but it does seem an odd way to treat Stone’s creation, which had granted her a rare return to music-world stardom. Randal C. Hill is a rock ’n’ roll historian who lives at the Oregon coast. He may be reached at wryterhill@msn.com.
On Life and Love after 50
Moving in is Easier than Moving Out Tom Blake
Recently, two women emailed me about difficult cohabitation situations with men. Both women admit to ignoring red flags in the early days of their respective relationships. Jeanne emailed that she met a man online in 2015. In 2018, she allowed him to move in with her. Jeanne said, “His landlady knew he and I were dating; she called to tell me that he might ask to move in with me. She kicked him out of her house because of ‘lifestyle differences,’ namely that he was a hoarder and had boxes piled high in his bedroom. “She was right. He did ask to move in with me. It was easy; just open the door and let him. I admit I ignored some red flags. “I thought he would weed out the boxes before moving in. But no, the boxes came with him and into my garage and house. He has even more stuff in a neighbor’s garage. “He is very quick to anger and is an incessant talker and takes over conversations and hates being interrupted or countered. Two wives left him; apparently, they hated being lectured to and that he was always right and having it his way. “He refuses to get rid of the bicycle, motorcycle, and kayak. He isn’t going to use them as he’s in his late 70s and out of shape. “His flaws are too much for me; they killed my love for him. I didn’t like the person I had become — yelling and fighting back or shutting myself in my bedroom. “We don’t have a cohabitation agreement. He says that I can’t kick him out, and the only way he will leave is if I sell my house. Maybe I should ask my lawyer! Getting him to move out is nearly impossible.” Beth (not her true name), 70, wrote: “Sixteen months ago, I started dating an older gentleman (79). We met online at the beginning of COVID-19. www.50plusLifePA.com
We missed the dating process because of COVID shutdowns. “We walked often, and I cooked for us and cooked for him before I went home. We Facetimed every night we weren’t together. He’d call eight times a day asking when I would come to his house. He asked me to marry him early on, but I said no. “He wanted me to move in, but I said no. He started to fail physically, losing his balance and falling occasionally. I started going to doctor appointments with him. I went from girlfriend to caregiver in a few short months. Staying at his home for three months, I cooked and cleaned with no days off. “He was very demanding of my time. He had brain surgery. I had to shower him. I started pushing back and told him when he got well, I was returning to my home. He asked me to stay another month. “One day while he was on the phone, I packed and left. I felt guilty for leaving but knew no time would be a good time to leave. I am so burned out. I decided to just enjoy my life.” Here are my seven lessons learned from these two situations. Before cohabitating: 1. Heed red-flag warnings. 2. Trust your instincts. 3. Get to know the person well. 4. Don’t rush your decision. 5. Agree to a written exit plan before the move, in case it doesn’t work out. 6. Don’t do it just to save money. 7. Remember, moving in is easy; moving out is difficult. For dating information, previous articles, or to sign up for Tom’s complimentary, weekly e-newsletter, go to findingloveafter50.com.
50plus LIFE
October 2021
23
So What Do Trick-or-Treaters Really Want? By Sally Breslin Over the years, I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about Halloween and what I could give to trick-or-treaters that would make them squeal with delight. Unfortunately, many of my efforts have turned out to be less than rousing successes. Take, for example, the year I decided to hand out packs of colorful smiley-face stickers instead of candy. I imagined the trick-or-treaters also having smiles on their faces when they saw them. I figured wrong. For one thing, the really young kids didn’t know what the stickers were and tried to eat them. And the older kids’ expressions clearly told me where I could stick my stickers. Still, the next morning, when I spotted dozens of smiley faces stuck all over my car in the driveway, I convinced myself my treat had helped the kids unleash their hidden creativity. The next year, I bought small paper Halloween bags decorated with witches and pumpkins. I then painstakingly filled each with assorted wrapped penny candy (fireballs, root beer barrels, caramels, Tootsie Rolls, etc.) and stapled them shut. The kids actually looked scared when I handed them the sealed bags.
Are you getting your share of the
SILVER ECONOMY? Which buyers make up the Silver Economy? • 962 million men and women over the age of 60 • A group with 11 times more wealth than millennials • Persons with a life expectancy in the U.S. is about 78.87 years • Persons who prefer in-person contact when possible • A group that wants to age at home as long as reasonable
Why do you want to reach these buyers? • They are free of many economic burdens • They like to take care of themselves, be active, eat well, be fashionable, and have fun • They have more free time • They are looking for products and services to help them age well
What sectors are on the rise? The obvious:
The not-so-obvious:
• Home improvements/renovations • Tourism and leisure activities tailored for them • Caregiver solutions • Financial products geared for seniors • Retirement living
• Security technology – mobile apps, sensors, wearable devices, smart clothing, etc. • Pet care – pet sitting, walking, grooming, food, accessories, etc. • Gardening/lawn services combined with snow removal • Mobile esthetic and concierge services – hairstylist, manicurist, massage, facials • Personal services – running errands, shopping
What are you waiting for? 51% of people aged 52-70 spend fewer than 11 hours a week online. While businesses need an online presence, print adds power to a media campaign. Most boomers and seniors are open to and love classic media.
50plus LIFE—Covering Chester, Cumberland, Dauphin, Lancaster, Lebanon, and York counties—is an excellent venue!
Call to learn how we can help you reach our 150,000+ readers of 50plus LIFE! 717.285.1350 or email info@onlinepub.com
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“What’s in here?” one little boy hesitantly asked as he held the bag with only two fingers, in a way that someone might hold a bag of manure. “It’s a surprise!” I said. “Will it bite me?” he asked. Through years of trial and error, I finally found something that no red-blooded trick-or-treater could complain about: full-sized chocolate bars. The first time I handed them out, I finally got the reaction I’d been seeking for so long. “Wow! Awesome!” one group all gasped in unison. “Big candy bars! Thank you, lady!” Not so awesome was my husband’s reaction when he had to eat scrambled eggs for dinner three nights in a row because I’d spent all our grocery budget on the chocolate bars. I mean, they certainly weren’t a nickel apiece anymore, like back when I was a kid. “How many candy bars did you give out anyway?” my husband asked me at the dinner table the night after Halloween. He stabbed a piece of egg with his fork and then held it up and stared at it as if he were trying to use mind power to transform it into a T-bone steak. “About 75, I guess,” I said. “There didn’t seem to be nearly that many kids, judging by the doorbell.” “Well, that’s because quite a few of them had sick sisters or brothers who couldn’t come out trick-or-treating,” I said. “So they asked me for candy bars to take home to them.” My husband rolled his eyes and shook his head. “Those kids were pulling the oldest scam in the book on you! There are no sick sisters or brothers. If they like your candy, they’ll make up stories like that just to get some extra candy for themselves.” So the next year I bought fewer candy bars and vowed not to give out any for the supposedly sick brothers or sisters. If a kid wasn’t well enough to go out trick-or-treating, I decided, then he or she was going to be out of luck. Unfortunately, it rained so hard that Halloween night, the only kid who ventured out was dressed like the Gloucester Fisherman. I ended up with loads of candy bars left over. My husband and I ate so many of them during the next few weeks, we actually could see the cavities popping out in our teeth and hear our arteries hardening. So this year, with Halloween just around the corner, I once again am faced with the dilemma of what to give the trick-or-treaters, especially with my drastically reduced budget. “I was thinking maybe I’ll get a bunch of dimes and hand one out to each kid,” I said to a friend the other night. “After all, what kid doesn’t like money? And it’ll be much cheaper than buying some overpriced candy I might end up getting stuck with.” “Dimes?” she repeated, laughing. “This isn’t the 1950s! You can’t buy anything, not even penny candy, for a dime anymore.” “Well, what would you suggest then?” I asked. “I suggest that on Halloween you lock the doors, shut off all the lights, and don’t answer the doorbell. You’ll save a bundle that way.” I think she really could use a smiley-face sticker. Sally Breslin is an award-winning syndicated humor columnist who has written regularly for newspapers and magazines all of her adult life. She is the author of several novels in a variety of genres, from humor and romance to science fiction. Contact her at: sillysally@att.net.
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Art & Antiques by Dr. Lori
Collectibles for the Baker Lori Verderame
Baking has been a popular pastime for years. Among Mom’s china or Grandma’s baking dishes, collectors find cooking collectibles to have good design elements and maintain high values. Some of the most popular collectibles for bakers are not the utensils, rolling pins, or specialty pans but rather mainstay objects necessary in every baker’s kitchen. These baking-collectible objects hold their value, recall bygone days, and stir old memories of kitchen time with loved ones. What are bakers collecting in the vintage and antiques market?
thousands and tens of thousands of dollars. Recently, cookie-jar values leveled off, but the cute and colorful cookie jars remained popular. They bring good money on the market today.
Cake Plates Like cookie jars, the display of one’s baked goods, specifically cakes, helped to make cake plates in all styles popular with collectors. Cake plates are important collectibles for the kitchen and may be found in materials like glass, ceramic, aluminum, crystal, etc. Showing off one’s baked goods on a kitchen countertop on a pretty cake plate was commonplace. Cookbooks The cake plate, usually on a stemmed or pedestal base Cookbooks are a big part of any kitchen. Cherished with a matching cover or dome, is an age-old tradition. It is home recipes handed down from generation to generation Photo credit: Staff of www.DrLoriV.com being revived with the interest in cake baking and over-theare well-known keepsakes. Pig cookie jar, ceramic, top cake decorating. circa 1960s. Cookbook collectors amass their collections by country Values for fine-china cake plates soar to the several or region, like the highly regarded and coveted work The hundreds of dollars, while other cake plates, in glass Summer Shack Cookbook by Jasper White, one of New mainly, can be acquired for less than $250 each depending on manufacturer, England’s premier seafood experts; The William Greenberg Desserts Cookbook: design, condition, etc. Classic Desserts from an Iconic New York City Bakery; or Martie Duncan’s cookbook nod to her Alabama hometown of Birmingham called Magic City Cravings, which is chock-full of recipes. The connection between cookbooks and memory is a strong one. Some cookbook lovers build collections based on specific meals, holiday fare, or occasions. Two American cookbooks highlight how Americans ate during the late 20th century and early 21st century. The all-American cooking style of Ina Garten evinced in The Barefoot Contessa Cookbook and Martha Stewart’s Entertaining both speak to the way Americans cooked and ate over the last 30-plus years. These cookbooks and other like them all promise to be must-haves in any cookbook collection and are destined to increase in value. Some vintage cookbook collectors look for historic recipes like those found in collectible cookbooks like White House Cookbook; Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking; The Joy of Cooking; Betty Crocker’s Picture Cookbook; Grandma’s Little Black Book of Recipes from 1910; Amelia Simmons’ American Cookery from 1796; Eustace Murray’s The Oyster from 1861; and Salvador Dali’s Les Diners de Gala, published in 1973, among many others. Values for these cookbooks on the vintage and antiques market range from under $100 for some facsimile copies to several thousands of dollars for firstedition volumes.
Vintage Cookie Jars Another collectible that is a fine gift for a baker is a vintage cookie jar. The cookie-jar-collecting craze started in the 1950s and continued to gain strength in the late 1900s. The World War II baby boom sparked a newly found need for cookies and cookie storage, so cookie jars were placed front and center in manufacturing lines and on kitchen countertops. Postwar American examples of cookie jars were made by potteries like Brush-McCoy, Blue Ridge, and other firms. Nursery rhyme figures like Mother Goose, Humpty Dumpty, and Mary had a Little Lamb were featured. What made the cookie-jar market spike? Andy Warhol’s cookie-jar collection was sold at auction in the late 1980s and brought values that prompted an unexpected craze. The values skyrocketed, and vintage cookie jars sold for www.50plusLifePA.com
The kitchen is a great place to look if you want to start a collection that will remind you of family time. Since kitchens are the center of any home, the collectibles for the baker are certain to be of interest on the collectibles market. Ph.D. antiques appraiser, author, and award-winning TV personality Dr. Lori presents antique appraisal events nationwide and appears on The Curse of Oak Island on History channel. Visit drloriv.com, youtube.com/drloriv, or call (888) 431-1010.
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is available online for anytime/anywhere reading!
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50plus LIFE
October 2021
25
How to Lose Weight after Age 55 By Dr. Amy Lee
The perks of entering into the golden years, such as working less and slowing down, are on everyone’s mind. But living your best life should take No. 1 priority! Use this chance to refocus on your priorities and truly practice healthy living with nutrition, movement, and stress management. As we grow older, we are more at risk for weight gain, and there are many contributing factors that play a role in this. Understanding these factors and working on solutions is a big part of weight loss. 1. Consider what you’re eating. There is a loss of lean mass as you age. This overall decrease of muscle density can lead to a decrease in your metabolism, which means you can burn fewer calories as time goes on. You can, however, slow down this inevitable change by acquiring more amino acids derived from the protein in foods you eat, especially whole foods such as eggs, yogurt, chicken, fish, meats, and/or even from meal replacements like protein shakes, smoothies, and bars. Look at your daily meals and consider adding a little more lean protein in your day.
The ultimate resource for boomer and senior living and care options.
2. Regularly see the doctor to find any underlying issues. As we age, we shrink, and deterioration of organs in general happens. When a functional organ shrinks, the efficiency of the role it plays also decreases. For example, the pancreas is in charge of secreting insulin to manage the blood sugar from the foods we eat. But our insulin level may not be at its optimal level in our 50s, compared to what it was in our 20s. So, some people may develop elevated blood sugars in their later years, even though they eat the same foods. Make sure you go in for your physical to screen for changing conditions of your metabolic risks. 3. Avoid having weight become an issue in the first place. We tend to be more active when we are young, but we acquire more pain and aches as we age. It is not uncommon to develop nagging aches in the knees or lower back from years of wear and tear. You then find yourself feeling less motivated for that daily walk or any consistent exercise. Lack of activity can put the body into further deterioration and deconditioning and lead to weight gain. Being overweight can put a lot of stress and inflammation on the existing joints. If you are not overweight, strive to stay that way by seeking help from a professional, such as a chiropractor or physical therapist, to learn the right ways to move without the risk of further injuring the body. Once that is optimized, increase intensity and duration of any activity level, which helps with maintaining lean mass and slowing down deterioration. That way, you will continue to burn calories and not store them. 4. Don’t brush off a “small” sickness. A simple flu or urinary tract infection in an older body can take more days for recovery — it could also become life threatening if not treated quickly. With that, fighting off an acute illness adds a lot of stress to both the body and the mind and could take weeks and months for full recovery. When deconditioned, a lot of people find themselves with low energy and end up staying sedentary vs. remaining active. This then leads to weight gain from the body’s ability to store fat into places such as the belly. Seek medical help early. Resolve the issue quickly so you are led to a faster recovery and can remain healthy. 5. Form a good social circle. A good social circle is truly a vital aspect to motivation and initiation into a healthy lifestyle. Studies show that who we surround ourselves with can have a major impact on our health. Call it peer pressure or simply a stress outlet, but humans are social beings. It is important to exchange conversations, discuss topics, or simply let off some steam by troubleshooting life’s problems. Oftentimes, we make plans with others that involve physical activities, and that boosts psychological and physical well-being. Having a group of friends, family, or acquaintances who take part in physical activities is a great way to motivate yourself.
25th Annual Edition
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Dr. Amy Lee is an expert in weight control, obesity, and nutrition. She is board certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine and a member of the National Board of Physician Nutrition Specialists and the American Board of Obesity Medicine. She is also the head of nutrition for Nucific (nucific.com).
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Melinda’s Garden
Keep Gardening after the First Fall Frost Melinda Myers
There is nothing worse than frost in the Systems like Maxi Garden Hoops stand 7 feet forecast and a garden full of vegetables not tall and 5 feet wide when installed. Simply quite ready for picking. Use some simple cover the set of three hoops with row cover strategies to extend the growing season and fabric. keep enjoying garden-fresh vegetables. Cloches have long been used to jump start Fortunately, some vegetables — like the season or extend it beyond the first fall cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, kale, and frost. You will find a variety of shapes and Brussels sprouts — tolerate frost and even sizes available. Select one large enough to taste better after a slight chill. Most of these cover your plants and protect them as needed. can tolerate temperatures as low as 24-28 Look for those with vents to prevent plants degrees F. from overheating and ones like the coolLeeks are another vegetable that thrives weather row cloches (gardeners.com) that in cooler temperatures. Many tolerate allow water through while trapping in the temperatures as low as 20 degrees F. Just heat. mound some protective mulch around the Don’t let unripe tomatoes go to waste if plants and continue harvesting. you are unable or unwilling to protect them Leave some of your carrots, turnips, and from frost. Harvest any that are starting to parsnips in the ground for winter. Just cover show color before the killing frost and finish the soil with straw or evergreen boughs after ripening them indoors. The bottom of the it lightly freezes. Dig as needed or during a tomato should be greenish white or starting to winter thaw. You will enjoy their wonderfully color up. sweet flavor. Store your green tomatoes in a cool (60-65 Protect frost-sensitive plants with old degrees) location to extend their storage life. Photo courtesy of Gardeners Supply Company. bedsheets and even mattress pads. Cover the Spread the tomatoes out on heavy paper or Use hoops and row covers to allow easy access for plants in late afternoon and remove them as wrap them individually in newspaper so the harvesting while protecting plants from frost. soon as the temperatures climb above freezing. fruit do not touch. They will ripen over the Keep them handy and be ready to cover next few weeks. whenever frost is in the forecast. Speed up the process by moving a few tomatoes to a warm, bright location a Make it easier by using all-purpose garden fabric row covers. This spun few days before they are needed. Enjoy green tomatoes fried or in relish, salsa, material allows air, light, and water through while protecting the plants from pies, or one of many more ways. frost. And when the season finally ends for you, start planning for next year. Loosely cover the plants and anchor the edges with stones, boards, or Many of these same strategies can be used to jump start the season for an garden pins. You only need to remove the fabric to harvest ripe vegetables. earlier harvest. Otherwise, it can stay in place until the vegetables stop producing or you Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including Small Space decide it is time to end the season. Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses’ How to Grow Anything DVD series and Create a high tunnel over garden beds filled with large plants. Use hoops the Melinda’s Garden Moment TV and radio program. Myers is a columnist and and row covers to allow easy access for harvesting while protecting the plants.
Puzzles shown on page 10.
Puzzle Solutions
contributing editor for Birds & Blooms magazine. MelindaMyers.com
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50plus LIFE
October 2021
27
Wrinkle Injections Won’t Erase Attitudes By Kathleen O’Brien
A neighbor of mine recently returned from Brazil. While in Rio, she decided to indulge in Botox injections and a lipplumping treatment because she was worried about tiny lines around her mouth and eyes. She’s 26. When I was her age, the last things on my mind were tiny lines, anywhere. I felt marvelously young at 26, without a moment of worry about a face or body that was starting to age. Perhaps we weren’t as obsessed with youth back in the mid-1970s, when I was my neighbor’s age. But anti-aging messages are hard to miss today, sponsored by a powerful marketing machine that wants to sell us everything from facelifts to sports cars, all to assuage our fear of growing old. There is something troubling about a culture that doesn’t want us to age, that insists we eliminate any hint of getting older, even as we grow older. If young people see imaginary signs of aging in their young faces, imagine how those of us in our 60s, 70s, or 80s feel? Maybe it’s time we pushed back on our society’s endless and self-defeating campaign to be forever young.
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Each stage of the human life cycle is important: childhood, adolescence, young adulthood, middle age, elderhood, and very old age. But somehow we are stuck trying to emulate those at the beginning of the cycle without respecting those in the later stages. Yes, young faces and bodies are attractive, but so is a mature appearance. The beauty of an older face is in its accessibility, its genuineness, its lack of pretense. And older people have experience, perspective, and wisdom that are hard to come by in your teen years. Greater emphasis on maturity and less on superficially smooth skin could make everything in our culture a little more substantive. What can older people do to turn society’s anti-aging attitude on its head? First of all, we can stop buying into it. One of the reasons anti-aging messages proliferate is that marketers think they work. They’re convinced the 100 million people in the U.S. over 50 are ready to spend lots of money trying to stay young. Maybe the more compelling argument would be for all of us to accept the natural process of growing old. It’s certainly cheaper. We can also find new role models, the gray-haired kind, who inspire us to be
The December issue of 50plus LIFE will include a special focus —
Orthopedics & Pain
Whether you provide relief through standard care, complementary and alternative medicine, therapies, fitness options, or specialty products ...
50plus LIFE is the perfect venue to reach an ideal demographic Listen to the livestream Thursdays from 12:30-1:30 p.m. at www.vrocp.org! The program will repeat 3 times that day and Saturdays from 11-11:30 a.m.
For more information, call Vision Resources at (717) 238-2531 and listen at visit www.vrocp.org. 28
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Closing date for advertorial: Oct. 29, 2021 Closing date for ad copy: Nov. 5, 2021 Let our readers know what their options are and to whom they can turn when they hurt. Please contact your marketing consultant at 717.285.1350 or info@onlinepub.com today to reserve your space! On-Line Publishers, Inc. • Online and In Print • onlinepub.com
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ourselves. We need to see that self-knowledge and self-assurance lead to more sustainable beauty than any short-lived flash of young glamour. And, finally, we can start owning up to our age. That is, we can begin telling people how old we are every chance we get. When we reveal our age, we’re saying we’re not afraid of growing old. We’re not embarrassed by it. We’re grateful to be where we are in life. We may even encourage young people to have a more positive view of their own adventure into aging. If we want to begin to right our culture’s lopsided view of the human journey, we need to show people what it looks like to be every age. No matter what any cosmetics manufacturer, plastic surgeon, or aging guru tells you, there is no way to stop the aging process. Someday we may slow it down, but we are always going to age. And why wouldn’t we want to? With aging come some of life’s greatest moments: the opportunity for self-reflection, the ability to piece together the significance of our own personal experiences, the privilege of a glimpse at the meaning of life itself. We can’t underestimate the significance of this time in our lives. And we can’t get bogged down by chasing after a youthful appearance that no longer represents who we are. Young faces unmarked by time and experience are for young people. We have more significant work ahead. And it has nothing to do with eliminating those two little lines between our eyebrows. Kathleen O’Brien has researched aging for over 13 years and writes regular blogs at growoldbehappy.com. She began her career as an advertising copywriter, worked as a television broadcaster, owned her own video production company, and taught media relations at two graduate schools of business. She lives in Denver, Colo.
Free Retreat for Adult Survivors of Sexual Abuse Planned Safe Communities, a Lancaster-based organization dedicated to ending child sexual abuse, will hold a retreat for adult survivors of child sexual abuse Saturday, Oct. 9, from 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. near Manheim (address shared upon registration). At the “Journey with Tamar” retreat, adults who were sexually abused as children or teens are invited for a day of reflection, connection, and education. The day will include information about the impact of trauma, common symptoms, and tools for managing stressful emotions. The sessions will examine the Old Testament/Hebrew Bible story of Tamar, daughter of King David, who was raped by her brother. Dialogues will also look at how the expectation www.50plusLifePA.com
of forgiveness can be difficult for survivors, as well as discuss what healing looks like. All adult survivors of child sexual abuse are welcome, at whatever stage in their healing journey. The retreat will be facilitated by Andrea Stoner Leaman, MSW, program manager, Safe Communities. Registration is required. There is no cost for this retreat due to funding from the LMC Legacy Foundation. Breakfast and lunch are provided. COVID-19 precautions required by the state at that time will be taken. For more information and to register, visit safecommunitiespa. org, call (717) 560-9989, or email Leaman at andrea@ safecommunitiespa.org.
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Embrace Family & Legacy Forbes recently reported that we are at the brink of the most significant intergenerational wealth transfer in historyi. Over the next 30-40 years, $30 trillion in assets will pass from one generation to the next in the United States. The sad reality is that 70% of this wealth will never make it past the second generation. Start Training Your Children Now After parents die, their wisdom and experience die with them unless effort is taken to learn from them. Parents need to teach the next generation about how they acquired their wealth and the responsibilities of inheriting that wealth. It seems that today many people have given up on the idea that the best of what we can offer of ourselves and experiences can be passed on to our children. We cannot share our wisdom by adding their name as a beneficiary in the will. Lesson 1: No Shortcuts to True Wealth There are no shortcuts to acquiring true wealth, be it money or wisdom. Those who take shortcuts — lottery winners, marrying for money, or inheriting a sizable estate without proper preparation — often live dysfunctional lives, with their windfall creating more significant problems than they faced before. Lesson 2: Use Wealth in Service of Others Everyone is rich when money, regardless of the amount, is
used in the service of others, ultimately for family, friends, and humanity. The thinking that money we earn should just be used to buy more stuff, and that more stuff is best, can surely destroy one from the inside out. According to Thomas Jefferson, the “pursuit of happiness” has to do with an internal journey to know ourselves and an external journey of selfless service to others. Lesson 3: Use Money to Bring People Together Money can divide, or money can connect; money can grow relationships, or money can destroy them. Money is energy; it is there to employ. If you have money, does it control you, or do you control it? The answer is found when you examine your engagement with others in your life. Having regular conversations with the next generation can provide an opportunity to frame a set of values that leads to a closer relationship between parent and child and a greater commitment. What we leave behind, most notably our words and deeds, are reflected in the lives of those we touched. Are you taking time to teach your children and grandchildren about the family and the legacy you want to pass on?
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The Greatest Wealth Transfer in History? By Jess Stonefield. Forbes, May 21, 2018
2025 Lititz Pike • Lancaster, PA 17601 www.Rodgers-Associates.com • (717) 560-3800 ADVERTISEMENT
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October 2021
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EASTWOOD VILLAGE HOMES, LLC
Open House
Saturday, October 9th, 10am – 2pm Friday, October 15th, 1pm – 4pm Sunday, October 17th, 1pm – 3pm Thursday, October 28th, 1pm – 4pm Villages at Greenfield (formerly Eastwood Village) offers: t High-quality, affordable manufactured homes on foundations t Covered Front Porches t Energy Star Certified Directions: t Landscape package included Route 30E – Greenfield Road Exit, t Optional Garage / Storage Shed Right onto Ben Franklin Blvd, t Natural Gas Community Right onto Eastwood Lane, t Public Water and Sewer follow signs to model homes.
Model homes available to tour.
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October 2021
50plus LIFE
Pet of the Month
Mew While Mew is catching up on her beauty sleep, let us tell you a little bit more about this special lady. Mew is a 4-year-old domestic medium-hair who is an absolute sweetheart. Mew has two conditions called cerebellar hypoplasia and microphthalmia (try saying those five times fast!). CH means Miss Mew walks a little funny but is still able to get around just fine. She enjoys cuddling with her people and playing with her toys. Microphthalmia is a big, fancy word meaning Mew’s eyes are much smaller than normal, making this lady one unique cat! We are sure someone will scoop up this lovebug soon, so hurry in and meet her today! Mew’s ID number is 229020. Please send your application to adoptlancaster@humanepa.org, or give the shelter a call at (717) 393-6551 to learn more.
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Nine years without a cold?
Scientists have discovered a natural way to kill germs fast. Now thousands of people are using it against unwanted viruses and bacteria in the nose and on the skin. Germs, such as viruses and bacteria, can multiply fast. When unwanted germs get in your nose they can spread and Copper can stop germs before they spread. cause misery unless you stop “What a wonderful thing!” exthem early. claimed Physician’s Assistant Julie. In the last 20 years, hundreds of Another customer asked, “Is it supstudies by government and universi- posed to work that fast?” ty scientists show the natural element Pat McAllister, 70, received one copper kills germs just by touch. for Christmas and called it “one of 7KH (3$ R൶FLDOO\ GHFODUHG FRS- the best presents ever. This little jewper to be antimicrobial, which means el really works.” it kills microbes, including viruses, )UHTXHQW ÀLHU .DUHQ *DXFL XVHG WR bacteria, and fungus. VX൵HU DIWHU FURZGHG ÀLJKWV 7KRXJK The National Institutes of Health skeptical, she tried copper on travel says, “The antimicrobial activity of GD\V IRU PRQWKV ³6L[WHHQ ÀLJKWV copper is now well established.” DQG QRW D VQL൷H ´ VKH H[FODLPHG Ancient Greeks and Egyptians %XVLQHVVZRPDQ 5RVDOHHQ VD\V used copper to purify water and heal when people around her show signs wounds. They didn’t know about mi- of unwanted germs, she uses copper crobes, but now we do. morning and night. “It saved me last Scientists say the high conduc- holidays,” she said. “The kids had tance of copper disrupts the electrical crud going round and round, but not balance in a microbe cell by touch me.” and destroys it in seconds. $WWRUQH\ 'RQQD %OLJKW WULHG FRSSome hospitals tried copper for per for her sinus. “I am shocked!” touch surfaces like faucets and door- she said. “My head cleared, no more knobs. They say this cut the spread of headache, no more congestion.” MRSA, and other illnesses, by over A man with trouble breathing half and saved lives. through his nose at night tried copper 7KH VWURQJ VFLHQWL¿F HYLGHQFH MXVW EHIRUH EHG ³%HVW VOHHS ,¶YH KDG gave inventor Doug Cornell an idea. in years!” he said. He made a smooth copper probe with In a lab test, technicians placed D WLS WR ¿W LQ WKH ERWWRP RI KLV QRVH PLOOLRQ OLYH ÀX YLUXVHV RQ D &RSThe next time he felt a tickle in perZap. No viruses were found alive his nose that felt like a cold about to soon after. start, he rubbed the copper gently in The handle is curved and textured his nose for 60 seconds. to increase contact. Copper can kill “The cold never got going,” he ex- JHUPV SLFNHG XS RQ ¿QJHUV DQG KDQGV claimed. “That was September 2012. after you touch things other people I use copper in the nose every time have touched. Some use it one the lip and I have not had a single cold since DW WKH ¿UVW VLJQ RI YLUXVHV JDWKHULQJ then.” there. “We don’t make product health The EPA says copper still works claims,” he said, “so I can’t say cause even when tarnished. DQG H൵HFW %XW ZH NQRZ FRSSHU LV DQMade in America of pure copper. timicrobial.” 90-day full money back guarantee. He asked relatives and friends to Price $79.95. try it. They reported the same thing, *HW R൵ HDFK &RSSHU=DS ZLWK so he patented CopperZap® and put code PAFP7. it on the market. See www.CopperZap.com or call Soon hundreds of people had toll-free 1-888-411-6114. tried it. The feedback was 99% posi %X\ RQFH XVH IRUHYHU tive if they used the copper within 3 Statements herein are not intendKRXUV DIWHU WKH ¿UVW VLJQ RI XQZDQWHG ed and should not be interpreted as germs, like a tickle in the nose or a product health claims, and have not scratchy throat. been evaluated by the FDA. Not Mary Pickrell said, “I can’t be- claimed to diagnose, treat, cure, or lieve how good my nose feels.” prevent any disease. (paid advertisement)
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Capital Blue Cross Seminar Dates and Locations: October 18, 11:00 a.m. • Courtyard by Marriott, 150 North Park Road, Reading 19610 October 20, 10:00 a.m. • Best Western Premier, 800 East Park Drive, Harrisburg 17111 October 21, 10:00 a.m. • Comfort Suites Bethlehem, 120 West Third Street, Bethlehem 18015 October 26, 10:00 a.m. • The Center Hotel, 7736 Adrienne Drive, Breinigsville 18031 October 28, 10:00 a.m. • Hampton Inn Pine Grove, 481 Suedberg Road, Pine Grove 17963 November 3, 11:00 a.m. • Courtyard by Marriott, 150 North Park Road, Reading 19610 November 10, 11:00 a.m. • Courtyard by Marriott, 150 North Park Road, Reading 19610 November 15, 10:00 a.m. • Comfort Suites Bethlehem, 120 West Third Street, Bethlehem 18015 November 17, 10:00 a.m. • Hampton Inn Pine Grove, 481 Suedberg Road, Pine Grove 17963 November 18, 10:00 a.m. • The Center Hotel, 7736 Adrienne Drive, Breinigsville 18031 November 24, 10:00 a.m. • Best Western Premier, 800 East Park Drive, Harrisburg 17111
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PPO PLAN Join us for a FREE seminar to learn more. To RSVP, or get more information, call 833.201.8363 (TTY: 711), 8 am–6 pm, Monday–Friday with extended hours October 1 through December 7.
Capital Blue Cross Medicare BlueJourney PPO is offered by Capital Advantage Insurance Company®, a Medicare Advantage organization with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in BlueJourney PPO depends on contract renewal. Capital Blue Cross and its subsidiary Capital Advantage Insurance Company are independent licensees of the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association. Y0016_50PlusAd21_M
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Compassionate and Convenient Care
Penn State Health Hampden Medical Center Opening Oct. 1, 2021 Healing takes more than good medicine. It’s also about your comfort, your surroundings and feeling welcome. At the new Hampden Medical Center, everything from the natural lighting and meditation room to the art on our walls was thoughtfully designed to ease your stress and promote healing.
Learn more at pennstatehealth.org/hampden
When you want compassionate and convenient hospital care, choose Hampden Medical Center. The care you want, where you want it – right here.
HAMC-16905-22 CC 158956 090121 LIFE