Complimentary | York County Edition | May 2016 • Vol. 17 No. 5
Retiring on the River page 4
SENIOR GAMES RETURN page 10
COLLAGEN FOR HEALTHY joints page 22
Art & Antiques by Dr. Lori
Dr. Lori’s Kid Collectors Lori Verderame
At my public antiques-appraisal events held at venues nationwide, many of my audience members are kids. Some of these kids remind me of my childhood. I was a kid who spent many a weekend touring local flea markets and yard sales with my dad. My dad liked to look for old tools and military objects, and he taught me about them. But the kids that come to my events collect all types of objects, from fine art to movie memorabilia and more. Young people are very keen collectors. They know what’s hot and what’s not. They learn to become good negotiators and they know how to spot a bargain and how to use their technology skills to sell and trade online. I often feature kids and their
collections on my brought a medal antiques appraisal she found in her grandpa’s button tour. They share jar to one of my their knowledge events. of a collectible category and talk What Carly had found was a about diverse Native American collections peace medal ranging from that Louis and Star Wars toys to Clark gave vintage pottery. to the Native Here are a few of the kids that Americans during their follow me and are at the core of my Dr. Lori with Emily during Dr. Lori’s Kid expedition Kid Collectors Collectors Appraisal event in Tulsa, Okla. under the auspices of the programs. Jefferson administration. My evaluation of her valuable During the early years of my tour, I met Carly, age 5, who came to my piece of Western history was the impetus for a childhood filled with event in Lancaster, Pa. Accompanied the joy of collecting. Carly returned by her mother and older sister, she
to my program years later to show me a Frederic Remington sculpture of a bucking bronco she bought at an auction, which she added to her growing Western art collection. Asaya from Virginia Beach, Va., bought an autographed poster of Pete Rose from a thrift store. He loves baseball, and although the 6-year-old was unfamiliar with the Cincinnati Reds slugger, Asaya liked the piece so much that it started him on his way as an autograph collector. He even asked for my autograph to add to his collection. I met Ethan, age 11, at my show in Baltimore, Md. He told me that he and his older brother collect “unusual objects” from flea markets and thrift stores.
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“If there is something that I have never seen before, I buy it and then search online to see if I can find something similar,” he explained. “It’s like solving a mystery.” I thought that was great for creative learning and a fine collecting method. Ethan brought me a Medieval Revival base metal sculpture of an equestrian from the 1870s worth $500. The
architectural object was interesting and unusual. Emily, age 12, brought a painting by a well-known regional artist to my appraisal event in Tulsa, Okla., and we became fast friends. I asked Emily why she collected paintings and she commented quite intelligently and enthusiastically
about the composition, brushwork, execution, and formalist properties of the painting like a true art historian. I was so impressed with her command of the field’s vocabulary and knowledge that I asked how long she was collecting, and she said that she studies art in school and has been collecting for a few years. When she is not helping out
around the farm, Emily adds to her growing art collection with some pretty valuable pieces. Ph.D. antique appraiser and awardwinning TV expert Dr. Lori Verderame is the star appraiser on Discovery channel’s international hit TV show, Auction Kings, and appears on FOX Business Network’s Strange Inheritance. Visit www.DrLoriV. com or call (888) 431-1010.
Deal Me In
Breaking the Bank By Mark Pilarski
Dear Mark: I have never seen you answer this question, so I wanted to send it to you. Through your column, I now know and accept the fact that the casino always has the house edge over players, be it on slot machines, table games, or any other forms of gaming. But, I also know sometimes I have
winning sessions, and more often I have losing sessions. I understand RNG, house edge, and everything that comes with it. Concisely, over time, the casino always wins. I also know the casinos do not cheat, but I realize there are good days and bad days for the house. This brings me
to my question: Has there ever been a casino that had such a run of “bad luck” that it was forced to close its doors? – Jim Y. In French, Jim, if a gambler were to win more than the remaining chips on the table, he was said to have “faire
sauter la banque,” which translates to our milder “break the bank.” The idiom “break the bank” has its origins (c. 1600) in the casino business and is used as a reference to an unlikely instance when the casino please see BANK page 5
At Your Fingertips Helpful numbers, hotlines, and local businesses and organizations eager to serve you—all just a phone call away. Active Adult Communities Roth’s Farm Village Roth’s Church Road, Spring Grove (717) 633-7300 Animal Hospitals Community Animal Hospital Donald A. Sloat, D.V.M. 400 S. Pine St., York (717) 845-5669 Automobile Sales/Service Gordon’s Body Shop, Inc. 10 Mill St., Stewartstown (717) 993-2263 Coins & Currency Steinmetz Coins & Currency 2861 E. Prospect Road, York (717) 757-6980 Energy Assistance Low-Income Energy Assistance (717) 787-8750 Entertainment Dutch Apple Dinner Theatre 510 Centerville Road, Lancaster (717) 898-1900
www.50plusLifePA.com
Funeral & Cremation Services Cremation Society of Pennsylvania Serving Lancaster County (800) 720-8221 Health & Medical Services Alzheimer’s Association (717) 651-5020 Alzheimer’s Information Clearinghouse (800) 367-5115 American Diabetes Association (800) 342-2383 CONTACT Helpline (717) 652-4400 The National Kidney Foundation (800) 697-7007 or (717) 757-0604 Social Security Information (800) 772-1213 Healthcare Information PA HealthCare Cost Containment (717) 232-6787 Hearing Services Pennsylvania Office for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing (800) 233-3008 V/TTY
Home Care Services Senior Helpers (717) 920-0707 Visiting Angels Living Assistance Services Hanover: (717) 630-0067 Lancaster: (717) 393-3450 York: (717) 751-2488 Housing Assistance Housing Authority of York (717) 845-2601 Property Tax/Rent Rebate (888) 728-2937 Independent Living Pine Run Retirement Community 1880 Pine Run Road, Abbottstown (800) 683-0706 Insurance – Long-Term Care Apprise Insurance Counseling (717) 771-9610 or (800) 632-9073 nursing/rehab Pleasant Acres Nursing & Rehabilitation Center 118 Pleasant Acres Road, York (717) 840-7412
Pharmacies CVS/pharmacy www.cvs.com Services York County Area Agency on Aging (800) 632-9073 Transportation Rabbittransit (800) 632-9063 Travel AAA Southern Pennsylvania (717) 600-8700 Veterans Services Lebanon VA Medical Center 1700 S. Lincoln Ave., Lebanon (717) 228-6000 or (800) 409-8771 Volunteer opportunities RSVP of Capital Region, Inc. (717) 847-1539 SpiriTrust Lutheran Senior Companion Program (717) 843-2677
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May 2016
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Cover Story
Retiring on the River
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3912 Abel Drive, Columbia, PA 17512 Phone 717.285.1350 • Fax 717.285.1360 Chester County: 610.675.6240 Cumberland County/Dauphin County: 717.770.0140 Berks County/Lancaster County/ Lebanon County/York County: 717.285.1350 E-mail address: info@onlinepub.com Website address: www.onlinepub.com
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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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By Chelsea Peifer When Barb Burrell read about a public contest to select the name of the then-nameless Pride of the Susquehanna riverboat, she thought she might as well put an entry in. “I submitted my name [suggestion] in 1986, and it got picked,” Burrell said. “And I also got a plaque and lifetime tickets for the riverboat.” And now, 30 years after naming the popular stern-driven paddlewheel riverboat that visitors delight in riding, Burrell also volunteers a few days each week at the riverboat. “I volunteer with whatever they need help with,” Burrell, 69, said. “They make sandwiches, and I help deliver orders or call names. I help in the office when I can, but I love the kitchen crew.” Burrell started riding on the riverboat more frequently when she retired. “There’s nothing like it. It’s just wonderful. You get to see the mountains, birds, and wildlife … and you get the chance to talk to people from all over the United States,” she said. The riverboat was built by hand on City Island as a communityservice project by the Harrisburg Area Riverboat Society and launched in 1988, according to its website (www.harrisburgriverboat. com). The proceeds that don’t go toward maintaining the riverboat are given to community-service projects benefiting seniors, children, military veterans, and others. The riverboat is one of only six remaining “authentic” paddlewheel riverboats in the nation, meaning that it only uses the paddlewheels for propulsion and steering. Burrell had the chance to take part in the riverboat’s 25th anniversary celebration a few years ago, and she was volunteering on the day that the boat welcomed its millionth customer. Choosing a favorite cruise is not easy for Burrell, who said it really
Volunteer Barb Burrell in the dining area inside the Pride of the Susquehanna, the location of the riverboat’s dinner cruises and other special events.
depends what a person is looking for on their trip—because the riverboat can be used for anything from weddings and business functions to themed dinner cruises and murder mysteries. “I like the ‘Pirates on the Pride’ and I like the ‘Princess’ ride. I love it all,” Burrell laughed. “I’ll go ride anytime.” The riverboat also offers daily 45-minute cruises to visitors on all seven days of the week from Memorial Day through Labor Day. Tours can cover history, ecology, and environmental issues surrounding the Susquehanna River. In the springtime, Burrell delights in seeing lots of children and students visit the boat for field trips. “I love to see all the kids having fun,” Burrell said. Her own two grandchildren love going along on the riverboat with her and jump right in to help volunteer with the kitchen crew sometimes. “The first time they rode with me, they just stood at the back and watched the paddles,” Burrell recalled. The months of May through November are pretty much nonstop at the riverboat, but during the winter months there are plenty of repairs to be done and lots of preparations for the busier season. Burrell retired in 2010 when her husband, Larry, became ill and soon passed away. They were married for 42 years.
Burrell lives with her dog, Gus, who is a 10-year-old Jack Russell and black Labrador mix. “Gus was a stray, and my husband was ill and decided that he wanted to keep him,” she explained. “He just showed up at our door, and he’s still there. He is a feisty little thing, and very protective.” Before retirement, Burrell owned a cleaning service, and before that she worked in construction. Now she continues to work part time as a cashier. “If I’m not doing anything, I show up and ride the riverboat,” Burrell said. “Everyone has to experience it. There’s so much to offer on it. There are so many activities, and they’re all worth it.” Visitors to the riverboat may park in the lots off the Market Street Bridge and can follow the signs marked “riverboat” along the walking paths on the island that lead to the docks where the riverboat is located. Anyone who is interested in volunteering with the Pride of the Susquehanna riverboat should call (717) 234-6500. “We can use any help that we can get,” Kim Yoder, administrative assistant with the riverboat, said. Burrell encourages everyone who is retired or soon to retire to get involved with something such as volunteering right away. “Sitting at home is not a good idea. You can end up getting depressed and thinking about all that you can or cannot do,” she said. “Get involved with anything. There are so many things to do.” For Burrell, volunteering at the riverboat has become one of the parts of her routine that she looks forward to the most. “You meet so many different people from all different walks of life, and you find out how good your life really is,” she said. “You make people smile, and that’s the best thing. “Get out there and talk to people and let them talk about themselves. You learn so much.” www.50plusLifePA.com
BANK from page 3 does not have the cash to cover winning bets. Unfortunately, Jim, I cannot find any reference in gaming annuals to any gambler who has won the total reserves of a casino and then asked for the keys to the front door. There are, though, plenty of examples of gamesters who have whooped the casino, badly. The fact is, Jim, casinos do go broke. Donald Trump himself scuttled three. When you see that happen, it is generally on management’s shoulders, but also competition, failure to comply with a changing marketplace, or because of an economic downturn. One such tar and feathering happened in Las Vegas when the late billionaire Kerry Packer, an Australian media tycoon, beat the MGM out of $33 million, most of it while playing blackjack. The casino finally backed him off the game, not because he was a card counter, but because he was more capitalized than the casino. When a player has more financial resources than the house, a casino opens itself up to a serious whooping. A titanic win, sure; but in 1999, it was reported Packer had a threeweek losing streak at London casinos that cost him almost $28 million, and at the time, it was reported as the biggest gambling loss in British history. A Packer visit was always a risky affair for any casino, as his wins and losses could make quite the difference to its financial bottom line, even for the biggest casinos.
For others, who dream of a winning streak at blackjack where eventually a casino “cries uncle,” there too is some precedent. In 2011, Don Johnson “broke the bank” by winning approximately $6 million at the Tropicana Casino in Atlantic City after previously taking $5 million from the Borgata and $4 million more from Caesars. His $6 million win cut a devastating swath through the monthly revenue of Atlantic City’s Tropicana Casino. Incidentally, like The Donald, the Tropicana Casino and Resort in Atlantic City also went through bankruptcy in 2009. For the Tropicana, it was because the Casino Control Commission denied their application for a license renewal in late 2007. The commission cited the management’s “abysmal” regulatory compliance, as well as a “lack of business ability ... financial responsibility ... and a lack of good character, honesty, and integrity.” Gambling Wisdom of the Month: “‘Breaking the bank’ at Monte Carlo is a euphemism for closing a single gaming table. It was last accomplished at the Casino Ste. Bains de Mer during the final days of 1957, with a harvest of 180 million francs.” – Richard Arnold Epstein, The Theory of Gambling and Statistical Logic Mark Pilarski is a recognized authority on casino gambling, having survived 18 years in the casino trenches. Pilarski is the creator of the bestselling, awardwinning audio book series on casino gambling, Hooked on Winning. www. markpilarski.com
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Y Share a light lunch.
YP lay cards and games or work on puzzles together.
Y Assist you with light errands.
Y Go to the senior center with you.
The Senior Companion Volunteer is not permitted to do the following: Participate in any household cleaning activity or heavy lifting. Perform any nursing or personal care duties. Volunteers are not required to transport clients. Arrangements must be made with the volunteer and must be in the local area.
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Central Pennsylvania’s Award-Winning 50+ Publication www.50plusLifePA.com
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Is This Thing On?
Abby Stokes
3 Reasons I’m Not an Early Adopter of Windows 10
If you have a PC computer, you’ve possibly seen this window, or something like it, pop up when you turn your computer on. What are you to do? Well, I don’t want to tell you what to do, but here’s what I’m going to do. Wait … wait … and then wait some more. The free upgrade to Windows 10 will be available (for those with PCs running Windows 7, 8.1, or 9) until August 2016. So there’s plenty of time for “early adopters” to discover and protest what’s wrong with Windows 10 and give Microsoft a chance to fix the bugs before I go for the upgrade. I don’t chase down the latest and greatest gadgets out there. You’d
do pay when we buy a phone, tablet, or computer that has been rushed to market before the bugs have been fixed or exterminated. Since when did paying customers become unpaid usability experts? Yes, fixes come down the pipeline after early adopters make a fuss. Why not offer a discount to early buyers for our expertise and feedback on the new products?
think I’d be an early adopter, but I’m not. I read the reviews about what’s new with technology so I can be current, but I’m slow to make a purchase.
Your guide to choosing the right living and care options for you or a loved one. 20th Edition Now Available! Featuring:
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Here are three reasons why I am not an early adopter: 1. If it ain’t broke ... I don’t believe in a “Kleenex society”—use it once and toss it aside. Quite literally, when I find an old tissue in a coat pocket, I’m more than happy to reuse it over and over again. It takes a lot for me to replace something that’s still functioning fine and meeting my needs. Sure, sometimes I have to endure shocked expressions or ribbing that I’m still carrying an iPhone that is now three generations older than the one available in stores, but I can take it. Pressure from someone who thinks they know what I need or wants me to have what they have is no reason to give up what I like or am used to. I don’t base my footwear purchases on what other people are wearing or would like me to wear. Why is technology any different? What I walk in or talk on or type with has to meet my needs—not anyone else’s. I suspect that is true of you too. 2. I’m no guinea pig. If unpaid internships pose an ethical dilemma, why doesn’t selling technology before it performs properly have us equally indignant? The analogy is weak because an intern doesn’t pay to work, but we
3. I’m sticky. Loyal. Content. Maybe a little bit of each. I’ve never been a fan of change for change’s sake. Statistically that’s true of most baby boomers (born before 1964) and beyond. It’s not that we sticky ones can’t learn something new or be flexible, but for heaven’s sake, have it be because there’s some kind of improvement with the technology, not just a need for it to look different so some users won’t get bored. There are incredible technologies out there, and all kinds of amazing things are in the pipeline. Your choice to purchase a new tech device or make an upgrade should be about its benefit to you. What can it do that your old device can’t? What need does it fill? Does it sound like something you’ll enjoy? Don’t let anxiety about learning something new prevent you from embracing change, but also be sure that you’re not succumbing to pressure to adopt something new before you’re ready or want to. Abby Stokes, author of “Is This Thing On?” A Friendly Guide to Everything Digital for Newbies, Technophobes, and the Kicking & Screaming and its companion website, AskAbbyStokes. com, is the Johnny Appleseed of Technology, singlehandedly helping more than 300,000 people cross the digital divide.
www.50plusLifePA.com
The Way I See It
Mike Clark
Road Trip Comfort
The snazzy red van pulled up to the end of our driveway as I was closing up the tool shed. I had a suspicion who the occupants were, and as I approached, the passengerside window went down and my brother’s broad grin filled the opening. He and his wife, Judy, had just purchased the ideal road-trip vehicle. They beat us to it. We had all talked about the need for a vehicle like this; we just didn’t know who would make the move first. My brother and I and our wives love taking road trips together. We usually take our mid-size sedan because their car is too small to accommodate four mature travelers. Biological and physiological issues begin to accrue over the years; the cruelty of such confined spaces can be merciless on the aged. Even our car seems to be growing more cramped. The seats feel harder, stretching out can cause injury to family members, and getting a leg cramp in small spaces like that can send one into convulsions, thus bruising soft, plump flesh. So, we have all been talking about purchasing a vehicle capacious enough to carry our rickety carcasses, as well as our luggage and medical devices. On some road trips, we must carry my brother’s Scottish regalia and his cumbersome snare drum. He is a member of the elite York Kiltie Band, a traditional drum and bagpipe corps. They parade in some of the most beautiful and historic towns in the region such as Alexandria, Va., and Chestertown, Md.—all great road trips. And you never know when you’ll pick up additional baggage and medical devices along the way. OK, I’ll briefly explain that. On a trip to North Carolina last summer to visit our elderly aunt, my knee swelled to a horrible, painful lump not long after we arrived. www.50plusLifePA.com
By the end of that evening we were all sitting in the waiting room at Duke University Medical Center. Eventually, a medical student (Duke is a teaching hospital), who had never performed the procedure before, pumped three large vials of blood from my knee. The poor student trembled as I assured him he was doing a fine job. They think that a bone fragment might have cut me and caused me to bleed internally. My blood-thinning medicine aggravated the problem. I walked out of the hospital early in the morning on crutches. It was something we had to make room for in a crowded car. There is so much more to the story, but the point is that even a pair of crutches added to an alreadybursting vehicle can be troublesome. That trip was cut short because of my condition, which was unfortunate. There were a lot of places on the itinerary that we missed. But, as my sister-in-law is fond of saying, we never miss a meal. My crutches worked best when they were propelling me toward an eatery that served southern fried chicken or belly-busting breakfasts. Our first road trip of the season will be in June, again to North Carolina. We can’t wait to hop into that van and wallow in its rich comfort. We will be free to stretch, slump, and slumber without injuring ourselves or each other. With all that extra room I might still take my crutches. OK, yes, my knee has been repaired, but if crutches get me to the dinner line just a bit quicker, I think it’s justified. Mike Clark writes a regular column for The Globe Leader newspaper in New Wilmington, Pa. He has a Bachelor of Science degree in organizational behavior/applied psychology from Albright College. Mike lives outside Columbia, Pa., and can be contacted at mikemac429@aol.com.
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priced from $82,500 (717) 259-8644 (800) 683-0706
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Elder Law Attorneys
Specific areas of elder law in which the firm concentrates:
Blakey, Yost, Bupp & Rausch, LLP 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
Asset protection; long-term care; medical assistance; veterans’ benefits (veteran certified); estate planning, wills, trusts, powers of attorney; estate administration; guardianships. Attorney/CPA on staff.
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Wills; powers of attorney; living wills; estate settlement; probate; estate planning; nursing home planning; Medicaid; asset protection planning; trusts. We make house calls!
Yes
Compassionate guidance with Alzheimer’s and special-needs planning; VA and Medicaid benefits; wills; powers of attorney; trusts; estate administration; care coordination; nurse on staff.
David A. Mills, Esquire
17 East Market Street, York, PA 17401 717-845-3674 fax 717-854-7839 dmills@blakeyyost.com www.blakeyyost.com
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1990
No
Yes
No
Daley Zucker Meilton & Miner, LLC 635 North 12th Street, #101, Lemoyne 4813 Jonestown Road, #106, Harrisburg 325 South Hanover Street, #2, Carlisle 717-724-9821 fax 717-724-9826 ppatton@dzmmlaw.com • www.dzmmlaw.com
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2004
2004
No
Yes
No
Gettle & Veltri 13 East Market Street, York, PA 17401 717-854-4899 fax 717-848-1603 ghg@gettleveltri.com www.gettleveltri.com
2
4
1997
1997
Yes
Yes
Yes
Keystone Elder Law 555 Gettysburg Pike, Suite C-100, Mechanicsburg 43 Brookwood Ave, Suite 1, Carlisle 717-697-3223 toll-free 844-697-3223 karen@keystoneelderlaw.com www.keystoneelderlaw.com
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3
2010
2010
Yes
Yes
Yes
This is not an all-inclusive list. These advertisers are eager to provide additional information about their services. * Indicates that at least one attorney in the firm is a member. Information contained herein was provided by the firm.
Eisenhower Set Guidelines for Flag at Half-Staff On Memorial Day, the American flag should be flown at half-staff from sunrise until noon only, and then raised briskly to the top of the staff until sunset, in honor of the nation’s battle heroes. An easy way to remember when to fly the United States flag at half-staff is to consider when the whole nation is in mourning. These periods of mourning are proclaimed either by the president of the United States for national
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remembrance, or the governor of a state or territory for local remembrance, in the event of a death of a member or former member of the federal, state, or territorial
50plus LIFE t
government or judiciary. The heads of departments and agencies of the federal government may also order that the flag be flown at halfstaff on buildings, grounds, and naval
vessels under their jurisdiction. In the early days of our country, no regulations existed for flying the flag at half-staff and, as a result, there were many conflicting policies. But on March 1, 1954, President Dwight Eisenhower issued a proclamation on the proper times. The flag should fly at half-staff for 30 days at all federal buildings, grounds, and naval vessels throughout the United States and its territories and possessions after the death of the www.50plusLifePA.com
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Elder Law Attorneys
Specific areas of elder law in which the firm concentrates:
McNees Wallace & Nurick 100 Pine Street, Harrisburg, PA 17108 717-237-5444 triser@mwn.com www.mwn.com
6
129
1935
No
Yes
No
Yes
Mooney & Associates
HARRISBURG: 105 North Front St.; YORK: 40 East Philadelphia St. CARLISLE: 2 South Hanover St.; SHIPPENSBURG: 34 West King St. HALIFAX: 3703 Peters Mtn. Rd.; CHAMBERSBURG: 80 N. 2nd St. GETTYSBURG: 18 E. Middle St.; HANOVER: 230 York St. Additional offices in Stewartstown, Mercersburg, Duncannon, and New Oxford 717-200-HELP; toll-free 877-632-4656 — CALL 24/7 info@mooney4law.com www.PAElderIssues.com; www.Mooney4Law.com
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1997
1997
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Advanced estate planning and all aspects of administration and probate, including all tax returns (CPA on staff); asset protection: Medicaid planning; all trusts, including special needs and charitable giving; guardianships; veterans’ benefits; 12 convenient locations in South Central PA with evening and weekend appointments available, and we make house calls too!
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1986
1986
No
Yes
No
Yes
Estate planning, wills, trusts, powers of attorney, estate administration, guardianships.
Yes
Estate planning and administration; long-term care planning; medical assistance; special-needs planning and trusts; guardianships.
Reese, Samley, Wagenseller, Mecum & Longer, P.C. 120 North Shippen Street, Lancaster, PA 17602 717-393-0671 fax 717-393-2969 mcs@trustmattersmost.com www.trustmattersmost.com
Scott Alan Mitchell Rhoads & Sinon LLP Lancaster & Harrisburg 717-397-4431 (L) and 717-231-6602 (H) smitchell@rhoads-sinon.com www.rhoadssinon.com
1
60
1935
1995
Yes
Yes
Yes
This is not an all-inclusive list. These advertisers are eager to provide additional information about their services. * Indicates that at least one attorney in the firm is a member. Information contained herein was provided by the firm.
president or a former president. It is to fly 10 days at half-staff after the death of the vice president, the chief justice or a retired chief justice of the United States Supreme Court, or the speaker of the House of Representatives. For an associate justice of the Supreme Court, a member of the Cabinet, a former vice president, the president pro tempore of the Senate, the majority leader of the Senate, the minority leader of the Senate, www.50plusLifePA.com
the majority leader of the House of Representatives, or the minority leader of the House of Representatives, the flag is to be displayed at half-staff from the day of death until interment. The flag is to be flown at half-staff at all federal buildings, grounds, and naval vessels in the Washington, D.C., area on the day of and day after the death of a United States senator, representative, territorial delegate, or the resident commissioner from the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
It should also be flown at half-staff on all federal facilities in the state, congressional district, territory, or commonwealth of these officials. Upon the death of the governor of a state, territory, or possession, the flag should be flown at half-staff on all federal facilities in that governor’s state, territory, or possession from the day of death until interment. The president may order the flag to be flown at half-staff to mark the death of other officials, former
officials, or foreign dignitaries. In addition to these occasions, the president may order half-staff display of the flag after other tragic events. The flag should be briskly run up to the top of the staff before being lowered slowly to the half-staff position. Source: U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
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2016 Senior Games to Include New Swimming Event By Sam Peeples The Senior Games are coming back to York County for their 15th year. Starting June 20, men and women over 50 will be given the chance to compete against each other in a variety of sporting events for medals and fun. The games originally began in 2002, lasting a single day. This year, they will feature 44 different sporting events held over a five-day period. The York County Area Agency on Aging and the Senior Games Planning Committee have been gradually expanding the games since their creation. The games’ staff hopes to promote physical fitness and a healthy lifestyle in the senior residents of the county. A new event has been added to the swimming roster: a 200-yard freestyle rally held at the YMCA on June 24. Event coordinators will form teams of four from those registered for the event, and it will take place at the
conclusion of the swimming section. The opening ceremonies begin at their new location, the front lawn outside York Central High School, on Tuesday, June 21, at 8:15 a.m. They will include a color guard, parade of athletes, a torch-lighting ceremony, and a special performance by the band Hearts in Harmony. The closing ceremonies will be held on Friday, June 24, starting at 3:30 p.m. in Central York’s cafeteria. Any resident of York County 50 or older may participate in the games. Registration will cost $12 and allows participants to join an unlimited number of events. Some events carry additional fees related to equipment: $4 for
Register Now! 15th Anniversary
June 20–24 For York County Residents Age 50+
Both competitive and non-competitive events!
Compete in favorites such as bocce, bowling, foul shooting, mini golf, or horseshoes, to name a few. Join us for the opening ceremony the morning of June 21 on the front lawn of Central York High School!
For more information, call
(717) 771-9001 10
May 2016
50plus LIFE t
shooting events and mini-golf, $8 for rental of bowling equipment, and $8.50 for nine-hole golf. The deadline for registration is May 31. Additional participants may be accepted after the deadline provided space is available and an event coordinator approves, but the fee will be increased to $15. While senior games staff expect no shortage of participants, more volunteers are always appreciated. With hundreds of people competing in over 40 events, it takes a lot of hands to keep everything organized and running smoothly. To volunteer or to view the registration booklet, visit the York County Area Agency on Aging’s website at www.yorkcountypa.gov and look under programs and services or call (717) 771-9001. Monday, June 20 • Bowling: Singles – 9 a.m. at Hanover Bowling Centre • Bowling: Doubles – Noon at Hanover Bowling Centre • 3-on-3 Basketball – 5:30 p.m. at Central York High School Tuesday, June 21 All events at Central York High School (except mini golf) • Opening Ceremony – 8:15 a.m. • Bocce – Begins at 9 a.m.; specific times for age groups will be listed in registration booklet. • Soccer Kick – Drop in between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. • Washers – Drop in between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. • Ladder Golf – Drop in between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. • Wii Archery – Drop in between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. • Mini Golf – Drop in between 1 and 5:30 p.m. at Heritage Hills
Wednesday, June 22 All events at Central York High School (except shooting) • Running Events – 100-meter, 8 a.m.; 5K, 9 a.m.; 50-meter, 9:45 a.m.; 4x100 relay, 10:45 a.m.; 400-meter, 11:15 a.m.; Sprint Medley, 11:45 a.m.; 1600-meter, 12:15 p.m. • Shuffleboard – Begins at 10 a.m.; specific times for age groups will be listed in registration booklet. • Throws – Drop in between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. • Basketball Hoops – Drop in between 3 and 5 p.m. • Target Shooting – 1 p.m. at Izaak Walton League • Trap Shooting – 6 p.m. at Izaak Walton League Thursday, June 23 • 9-Hole Golf – 8 a.m. at Little Creek Golf Course • Horseshoes: Singles – 8 a.m. at John Rudy Park • Horseshoes: Doubles – Noon at John Rudy Park • Darts – Drop in between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. at John Rudy Park • Wii Bowling – Drop in between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. at John Rudy Park • 500 – 9:30 a.m. at John Rudy park • Basketball Hoops – Drop in between 3 and 6 p.m. at John Rudy Park Friday, June 24 All events at Central York High School • Tennis: Singles – 8:30 a.m. • Darts – Drop in between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. • Wii Bowling – Drop in between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. • Pinochle – 9:30 a.m. • Tennis: Doubles – 11 a.m. • Swimming Events Warm-Up – 9:30 a.m. • Swimming Events – Begin at 10 a.m. (all events follow immediately after each other): Freestyle 50-yard, Backstroke 50-yard, Breaststroke 50yard, Freestyle 100-yard, Backstroke 100-yard, Breaststroke 100-yard, Individual Medley, Freestyle Relay 200-yard • Poker – 12:30 p.m. • Closing Celebration – 3:30 p.m. at Central York Cafeteria www.50plusLifePA.com
Please join us for these FREE events!
Volunteer Spotlight CASA Volunteer Marks 10 Years
Do you know a 50+ volunteer who gives selflessly to others? Tell us what makes him or her so special and we will consider them for 50plus LIFE’s Volunteer Spotlight! Submissions should be 200 words or fewer and photos are encouraged. Email preferred to mjoyce@onlinepub.com or mail nominations to 50plus LIFE, Volunteer Spotlight, 3912 Abel Drive, Columbia, PA 17512.
www.50plusLifePA.com
17th Annual
Smorgasbord Building 129 Toddy Drive, East Earl
LANCASTER COUNTY
17th Annual
May 31, 2016 9 a.m. – 2 p.m. Hershey Lodge
325 University Drive Hershey
DAUPHIN COUNTY
13th Annual
June 8, 2016 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Church Farm School
1001 East Lincoln Highway Exton
CHESTER COUNTY
Sept. 21, 2016
20th Annual
something so worthwhile.” The Red Lion Area Herr was born in York Senior Center would County. She is married like to recognize an with one daughter and one outstanding volunteer, granddaughter. She was a Brenda Herr, senior center receptionist. bookkeeper for 30 years. After deciding she She has been with needed a change from the center for four years. bookkeeping, she went to When Herr was asked work for Goodwill as the to take the receptionist lead sales assistant. Her position, she readily Brenda Herr responsibilities included agreed. Herr is the first impression for pricing donations, customer service, anyone visiting the center. Her lovely and head cashier. When the store closed, Herr came to the senior smile and welcoming personality center. make regular and new members Herr enjoys shopping, reading, always feel welcome. Herr’s thorough and coloring in adult coloring books. and organized manner is an But her favorite pastime and special invaluable help to the staff. Herr comes in every day: snow, time is visiting her daughter and rain, or sunshine. She started coming family in Philadelphia. The senior center is a better place in even earlier to assist the meal coordinator with calls. Her reason: “I because Herr is here. Its staff and love being around people and receive members cannot fully express their appreciation for all that she does. a great sense of satisfaction doing
9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Shady Maple Conference Center
9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Spooky Nook Sports
2913 Spooky Nook Road Manheim
LANCASTER COUNTY
Sept. 28, 2016
14th Annual
Senior Center Receptionist Brings Dependability, Friendly Smile
May 18, 2016
NEW LOCATION!
9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
York Expo Center
Memorial Hall East 334 Carlisle Avenue, York
YORK COUNTY
Oct. 19, 2016
17th Annual
Compassion Team. RSVP of the Capital She has been married Region’s volunteer of the month for May in York for 39 years and has four children ranging County is Beth Koblitz. in age from 23 to 33 She volunteers at the years. Koblitz and her York County Court husband operate an Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) electrical contracting company. program. Her first She enjoys traveling, case was 10 years ago; playing with her dogs, she has advocated for Beth Koblitz watching movies, and three families and eight following Villanova basketball children in that time period. games. Koblitz has volunteered at her church in various capacities and for For more information on volunteering with RSVP of the the American Red Cross, Multiple Capital Region, please contact Scott Sclerosis Society fundraisers (her Hunsinger at (443) 619-3842 or son was diagnosed with MS four by email at yorkadamsfranklin@ years ago), and she is a member of the York County coroner’s Care and rsvpcapreg.org.
Always free parking!
9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Carlisle Expo Center CUMBERLAND COUNTY
100 K Street Carlisle
Exhibitors • Health Screenings • Seminars Demonstrations • Entertainment • Door Prizes
Limited Sponsorship Opportunities Available
(717) 285-1350 (717) 770-0140 (610) 675-6240
www.50plusExpoPA.com 50plus LIFE t
May 2016
11
Free Event a Bridge to Benefits, Job Opportunities for York’s Veterans By Megan Joyce “I’m a veteran, and I want to look for employers that want to hire veterans.” For this simple yet significant reason, Marine Corps veteran and job seeker Susan Noel had driven west from her home in Lancaster, shopping her resume amongst the more than 50 employers composing the Job Fair section of the recent Veterans’ Expo & Job Fair in York. The day was a two-for-one event presented by OLP Events; admission was free to the public. Held for the second year at the York Expo Center, the Veterans’ Expo connected active and retired military members with the sometimes hard-to-find benefits and resources available to them. At the Job Fair, veterans and employers met face-to-face to discuss available positions. After words of welcome from Donna Anderson, president of OLP Events, the Korean War Veteran Color Guard began the opening ceremony by displaying the colors. The guardsmen recognized each branch of the military—Army, Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force, and Coast Guard—individually. Amy Shaffer, singer from House of Vocals, performed the national anthem. “It’s good to honor veterans and have great ceremonies … but reallife stuff, stuff that changes people’s lives for the better, is really the most important, and that’s today,” guest speaker Phil Palandro, York County director of Veterans Affairs, said. Guest speaker and York County Commissioner Susan Byrnes urged local organizations and charitable donors to help fund needed public transportation for the county’s 34,007 veterans. “Fifty percent of our veterans in this state are under the age of 65, and they’re not able to qualify for
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May 2016
lottery-funded transportation,” Byrnes said. “This is a real barrier for our veterans and their families to get to their medical appointments … so York County has partnered with rabbittransit, and starting today, veterans will ride free on rabbittransit.” Byrnes urged veterans to call (717) 849-0721 for additional information on the rabbittransit program. Spring Grove resident and Army veteran Angelo Jurek had just completed his second full circuit of the Expo area, speaking with exhibitors and collecting printed information as he went. “I’m looking to see what’s out there for help for all the veterans,” Jurek said. The Expo gathered in one location more than 30 local businesses and organizations offering discounts, important information, and other types of aid to veterans. Exhibitors ranged from VFWs, American Legions, and Veterans Affairs offices to financial services, homeimprovement companies, and health insurers. Company representatives at the Job Fair were looking to fill openings in sales, labor, management, tech, medical services, transportation, clerical, manufacturing, engineering, construction, retail, financial services, and more. Jordan Rich, Marine Corps, was weeks away from graduating from Penn State with a degree in marketing. “I’m a vet and I’m a graduating college senior, so I’m just going through the interview process and job-hunting experience right now,” he said.
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Job seekers also took advantage of a Resource Center with representatives providing assistance with resume writing; information on VA benefits and Medicare; mock interviews; and guidance on small-business ownership for veterans, women, and the disabled. Karen Francis, global career development facilitator, offered free resume reviews for veterans prior to the event, and during the event photographer Steven Francis took free, professional headshots for veterans for use on LinkedIn profiles. York native Marshall Jordan was also about to enter the job market with a newly minted degree in marketing, sales, and business development.
“I’m a senior at York College; I graduate in May and I’m looking for a job,” Jordan said. “I got out of the Marines in 2012, and I started school right away. I’m hoping to find some employment here.” The Veterans Expo & Job Fair will debut in Berks County June 10 at the Crowne Plaza Reading Hotel in Wyomissing. The event will also return to the Capital Region Aug. 25 at the Radisson Hotel Harrisburg in Camp Hill and to Lancaster County Nov. 15 at Spooky Nook Sports, Manheim. For more information, call (717) 285-1350 or visit www.veteransexpo. com. Hosted by:
Sponsored by: Conewago Enterprises, Inc. • Disabled American Veterans Fulton Financial Corporation • Pennsylvania American Legion Pennsylvania National Guard Employment Outreach Services Pennsylvania State Headquarters VFW • The Stewart Companies York County Veterans Affairs Office
www.50plusLifePA.com
Salute to a Veteran
Robert D. Wilcox
Early On, He Served Our ‘Advisers’ in Vietnam
Richard “Pete” Then he one Petersen says day noticed on that, when he the bulletin board was growing up that they needed in a suburb of St. volunteers to go to Louis, his father Vietnam to man thought of him as gunships. He was “an undisciplined approaching the young man”—so end of his hitch much so that his and was thinking father strongly of making a career urged him to of the Army, but enlist in the Army, he hadn’t yet seen where he’d get what combat was straightened out. like. So Petersen did So he decided Pvt. Richard Petersen after basic that in February training at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. to extend his 1962, and his dad enlistment and turned out to be volunteer to go to right. Vietnam. And soon he found himself Of course, neither of them had on an airplane headed for Saigon. any idea that he would one day be When he arrived, they assessed shipped off to a place like Vietnam, him for serving on a helicopter where the southern half of that gunship. But when he told them he country was trying to defend itself had qualified as sharpshooter (which from a communist invasion from the he was pretty proud of), they told north. him dourly that that wasn’t good Getting there was something of enough. a rocky road. After basic training at To man a gunship, you had Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., he shipped to be no less than excellent in to Fort Gordon, Ga., to attend a marksmanship. So he was assigned to telegraph operator school. use his skills as a teletype operator. Having successfully completed He was to send and receive that, he was assigned to a New Jersey messages for the American “advisers,” base that served the needs of Nike which in those days were the missiles guarding Philadelphia. please see VIETNAM page 15 Then, he was sent to Fort Richardson, Alaska, where in the winter they had two hours of sunlight a day and, every now and then, the wind chill would flirt with 60 below zero. The rule there was that every newcomer served on KP (kitchen patrol), where he performed all kinds of kitchen duties. And only then was Petersen able to get back to his teletype machine. During his time there, he also experienced the major earthquake that damaged a big part of the base and “made automobiles bounce up and down like rubber balls.” www.50plusLifePA.com
June 10, 2016 Aug. 25, 2016 9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
9 a.m. – 2 p.m.
1741 Papermill Road Wyomissing
1150 Camp Hill Bypass Camp Hill
Crowne Plaza Reading Hotel Radisson Hotel Harrisburg
Please, join us! This combined event is FREE for veterans of all ages, active military, and their families.
At the Expo
Veterans Benefits Community Services Products and Services Available Support/Assistance Programs Education/Training Services
At the Job Fair
Employers Job Counseling Workshops/Seminars Resume Writing Assistance
LIFE
Principal Sponsors:
Sponsored by: Berks Encore • Bob 94.9 • CBS21 Disabled American Veterans • Pennsylvania American Legion PA National Guard Employment Outreach Services Pennsylvania State Headquarters VFW • The SYGMA Network Veterans Affairs of Berks County • WFYL • WHP580
Sponsor & Exhibitor Opportunities Available
www.veteransexpo.com (717) 285-1350 www.olpevents.com
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Brought to you by:
&
May 2016
13
The Bookworm Sez
Dimestore: A Writer’s Life Terri Schlichenmeyer
You never have to darn your socks. That was a weekly chore for Grandma, but when you have holes in your socks, you go buy new ones. You don’t have to settle for just three channels on TV, either, or just one local grocer, but in the new book Dimestore by Lee Smith, you can read about someone who did. Born in an area of the Appalachians that were so steep that “the sun didn’t even hit our yard until about 11 o’clock,” Lee Smith grew up in the shadow of both mountains and dimestore. That was her father’s Five and Ten Cent Variety Store, which he’d owned since Smith was a small girl and that he’d operated with the help of family when he was feeling “kindly nervous.” At those times, he stayed in a state mental hospital in another city, far
away from home take hours because in Grundy, Va., “visiting” was part of the package. population of about It was when 3,000. Saturday nights Lee remembers those days but were spent at the drive-in, listening doesn’t dwell on to bluegrass music them. When either before the movie of her parents began; and before was hospitalized chain stores for mental health replaced locally issues, she stayed with family—which owned businesses, including Smith’s nearly described Dimestore: A Writer’s Life father’s dimestore. everybody in By Lee Smith It was when Grundy. c. 2016, Algonquin Books of neighbors took up That was back Chapel Hill when parents didn’t the slack when it 224 pages was needed, because always know the whereabouts of everybody watched out for everybody else. their children for most of the day, And yet, Smith was “being raised and when product deliveries could
to leave.” There was life outside Grundy, and her parents wanted her to have it. And she did: college in another town, jobs in other states, marriage, children, and marriage again. She became a published author, a mental health advocate, a grieving mother. And through it all, in her heart, Smith never really left Grundy. How could she? It was home, “the perfect … education for a fiction writer.” Inside Dimestore, there’s a little something for everybody. Fans of author Lee Smith’s novels will find introspection here, on reading, writing, and how her novels came together. Most are humorous; some are teary. Then there are the best parts of this book: chapters that sparkle and essays
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May 2016
50plus LIFE t
www.50plusLifePA.com
about life in a small town so isolated that many of Smith’s grade-school classmates had never even been outside the county—priceless pages, evoking nostalgia that feels like a homemade afghan or chocolate chip cookies hot from the oven. As she does in her novels, Smith makes it seem as though we’ve met her people before, or grew up knowing them as our parents’ friends. Even readers raised in the big city will be convinced that they
hailed from over yonder. You shouldn’t hesitate to give this book to an elder, with plans to borrow it back soon. It contains the kind of warmth you need on One of Those Days. Yep, Dimestore is a pretty darn good book. The Bookworm is Terri Schlichenmeyer. Terri has been reading since she was 3 years old and she never goes anywhere without a book. She lives on a hill in Wisconsin with two dogs and 14,000 books.
VIETNAM from page 13 Americans supporting the struggling South Vietnam army. Thousands of South Vietnamese who opposed the Diem government had fled to the north, where the communists had trained them and then sent them back to infiltrate South Vietnam. Called the Vietcong, they blended in, completely indistinguishable from the South Vietnamese. So they were able to wage a different kind of war in the south. As Petersen well remembers, the fear about those forces was an everpresent reality. He and the advisers he served had a constant dread of the innocent-looking men who were actually Vietcong actively trying to find ways to kill them. Petersen was first assigned to a small Signal Corps detachment near the main base at Da Nang, but he often moved to other locations. Sometimes he was close enough to the fighting with the regular North Vietnam forces to hear the rifles and machine guns fire, but he didn’t have a lot of time to think about it. When he was through with his shift, he was often detailed to filling sacks with sand to be used as bunkers. He also had helped bring supplies from Da Nang to his unit. “That was a three-vehicle convoy,” he says. “It was led by a Jeep with an officer and a sergeant. I was in a 3/4ton truck that came next. And we were followed by a ‘deuce-and-a-half’ truck.” On those trips and on others he made as his assignment changed from place to place in his unit, he came to see what Vietnam was like … some primitive practices of the natives, constant flooding from the www.50plusLifePA.com
soaking rains that went on for days at a time, and the planks that replaced crumbling bridges over which vehicles had to thread their way. At least, he had by then made E-5 (equivalent to a buck sergeant), and there was the one time that he had R&R (rest and recuperation) for a week in Hong Kong. He smiles as he thinks of the great steaks and the luxurious hotel he enjoyed there. He was then sent to Hue to help set up a communications center, which he was able to accomplish successfully. And, after two months there, his hitch was up, and he was winging his way back from Saigon to McChord Air Force Base near Tacoma, Wash., and then to San Francisco, where he was discharged from the Army. He then went to New Jersey, where he worked as a plumber’s helper for a while. And he soon started his career as a chemical operator with DuPont in their Chambers Works in Deepwater, N.J. In 2012, he and his wife, Paula, toured many retirement communities until they found one in Central Pennsylvania that exactly suited what they were looking for, and they moved there. Today, Petersen keeps in good shape, with a main focus on visiting at the hospital facility at his retirement community to help make life better for the patients there. But he says he will never forget those tough and dangerous years in Vietnam and how they caused him to so appreciate all the years that followed. Col. Wilcox flew a B-17 bomber in Europe in World War II.
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Congratulations to the winner of the Best Bites survey and a $50 gift card from Giant:
Linda S. Peters Thank you to all who participated!
Enter to
WIN
4
Admission Tickets to
Take a quick survey on issues important to people over 50. You will be entered into a drawing for 4 admission tickets to the Turkey Hill Experience.
You’re a SageAge and we want to hear from you ... and your friends, family, and coworkers! Go to www.SageAgeToday.com to enter! Contest sponsored by:
The winner will be selected at random. You may enter no more than once a day. The winner will be emailed and called.
50plus LIFE t
May 2016
15
Nursing & Rehabilitation Centers Bethany Village – The Oaks
325 Wesley Drive • Mechanicsburg, PA 17055 (717) 766-0279 • www.bethanyvillage.org Number of Beds: 69 Rehabilitation Unit: Yes Alzheimer’s Unit: Yes Skilled Licensed Nursing: Yes Therapy: Speech, Occupational, Physical Long-Term Care: Yes Respite Care: Yes 24-Hour Medical Care: Yes Recreational Activities: Yes Scheduled Entertainment: Yes
Private Rooms Available: Yes Semi-Private Rooms Available: Yes Pet Visitation Allowed: Yes Beauty/Barber Shop: Yes Medicare: Yes Medicaid: Yes Accreditations/Affiliations: CARF/CCAC; Eagle, LeadingAge PA Comments: Maplewood Assisted Living also available.
Fairmount Homes
333 Wheat Ridge Drive • Ephrata, PA 17522 (717) 354-1800 • www.FairmountHomes.org Number of Beds: 114 Rehabilitation Unit: Yes Alzheimer’s Unit: No Skilled Licensed Nursing: Yes Therapy: Speech, Occupational, Physical Long-Term Care: Yes Respite Care: Yes 24-Hour Medical Care: Yes Recreational Activities: Yes Scheduled Entertainment: Yes
Private Rooms Available: Yes Semi-Private Rooms Available: Yes Pet Visitation Allowed: Yes Beauty/Barber Shop: Yes Medicare: Yes Medicaid: Yes Accreditations/Affiliations: LeadingAge PA Comments: Fairmount is known for its high-quality care and its successful rehabilitation program. We are mission driven and dedicated to faith, family, and community.
Maple Farm
Number of Beds: 290 Rehabilitation Unit: Yes Alzheimer’s Unit: Yes Skilled Licensed Nursing: Yes Therapy: Speech, Occupational, Physical Long-Term Care: Yes Respite Care: Yes 24-Hour Medical Care: Yes Recreational Activities: Yes Scheduled Entertainment: Yes
Private Rooms Available: No Semi-Private Rooms Available: Yes Pet Visitation Allowed: Yes Beauty/Barber Shop: Yes Medicare: Yes Medicaid: Yes Comments: Featuring Traditions at Claremont, a dedicated, 39-bed, short-term rehab unit. Claremont provides quality skilled nursing and rehabilitation services for short- and long-term stays.
Homeland Center
1901 North Fifth Street • Harrisburg, PA 17102-1598 (717) 221-7902 • www.homelandcenter.org Number of Beds: 95 Rehabilitation Unit: No Alzheimer’s Unit: Yes Skilled Licensed Nursing: Yes Therapy: Speech, Occupational, Physical Long-Term Care: Yes Respite Care: Yes 24-Hour Medical Care: Yes Recreational Activities: Yes Scheduled Entertainment: Yes
Private Rooms Available: Yes Semi-Private Rooms Available: Yes Pet Visitation Allowed: Yes Beauty/Barber Shop: Yes Medicare: Yes Medicaid: Yes Accreditations/Affiliations: AAHSA, LeadingAge PA (PANPHA), NHPCO, PHN, HPNA Comments: A beautiful, full-service continuing care retirement community with a 149-year history of exemplary care.
1520 Harrisburg Pike • Lancaster, PA 17601 (717) 393-1301 • www.mennonitehome.org Private Rooms Available: Yes Pet Visitation Allowed: Yes Beauty/Barber Shop: Yes Medicare: Yes Medicaid: Yes Accreditations/Affiliations: LeadingAge, LeadingAge PA, Mennonite Health Services Comments: Maple Farm puts the person first so your choices matter. Enjoy the comforts of home with country kitchen, private bedroom, full bath, and great views.
The Middletown Home
999 West Harrisburg Pike • Middletown, PA 17057 (717) 944-3351 • www.middletownhome.org Number of Beds: 102 Rehabilitation Unit: No Alzheimer’s Unit: No Skilled Licensed Nursing: Yes Therapy: Speech, Occupational, Respiratory, Physical Long-Term Care: Yes Respite Care: Yes 24-Hour Medical Care: Yes Recreational Activities: Yes
1000 Claremont Road • Carlisle, PA 17013 (717) 243-2031 • www.ccpa.net/cnrc
Mennonite Home Communities
604 Oak Street • Akron, PA 17501 (717) 859-1191 • www.maplefarm.org Number of Beds: 46 Rehabilitation Unit: Yes Alzheimer’s Unit: No Skilled Licensed Nursing: Yes Therapy: Speech, Occupational, Physical Long-Term Care: Yes Respite Care: Yes 24-Hour Medical Care: Yes Recreational Activities: Yes Scheduled Entertainment: Yes
Claremont Nursing & Rehabilitation Center
Scheduled Entertainment: Yes Private Rooms Available: Yes Semi-Private Rooms Available: Yes Pet Visitation Allowed: Yes Beauty/Barber Shop: Yes Medicare: Yes Medicaid: Yes Comments: Our campus offers skilled nursing and rehabilitation services, personal care, and independent living residences.
Number of Beds: 188 Rehabilitation Unit: Yes Alzheimer’s Unit: Yes Skilled Licensed Nursing: Yes Therapy: Speech, Occupational, Physical Long-Term Care: Yes Respite Care: Yes 24-Hour Medical Care: Yes Recreational Activities: Yes Scheduled Entertainment: Yes
Private Rooms Available: Yes Semi-Private Rooms Available: Yes Pet Visitation Allowed: Yes Beauty/Barber Shop: Yes Medicare: Yes Medicaid: Yes Accreditations/Affiliations: Equal Housing, LeadingAge PA Comments: Person-centered care with reputation for compassion and excellence. Established in 1903. Respite care available w/minimum stay.
Pleasant Acres Nursing & Rehabilitation Center 118 Pleasant Acres Road • York, PA 17402 (717) 840-7100 • www.yorkcountypa.gov Number of Beds: 375 Rehabilitation Unit: No Alzheimer’s Unit: Yes Skilled Licensed Nursing: Yes Therapy: Speech, Physical, Occupational Respiratory Long-Term Care: Yes Respite Care: Yes 24-Hour Medical Care: Yes Recreational Activities: Yes
Scheduled Entertainment: Yes Private Rooms Available: No Semi-Private Rooms Available: Yes Pet Visitation Allowed: Yes Beauty/Barber Shop: Yes Medicare: Yes Medicaid: Yes Comments: Elm Spring Residence Independent Living on campus.
This is not an all-inclusive list of agencies and providers. These advertisers are eager to provide additional information about their services.
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Nursing & Rehabilitation Centers Tel Hai Retirement Community
1200 Tel Hai Circle • Honey Brook, PA 19344 (610) 273-9333 • www.telhai.org Number of Beds: 139 Rehabilitation Unit: Yes Alzheimer’s Unit: No Skilled Licensed Nursing: Yes Therapy: Speech, Occupational, Physical Long-Term Care: Yes Respite Care: Yes 24-Hour Medical Care: Yes Recreational Activities: Yes Scheduled Entertainment: Yes
Private Rooms Available: Yes Semi-Private Rooms Available: Yes Pet Visitation Allowed: Yes Beauty/Barber Shop: Yes Medicare: Yes Medicaid: Yes Accreditations/Affiliations: CARF, MHS Alliance, Leading Age Comments: Dedicated short-term rehab neighborhood with Tel Hai’s own therapy department dedicated to intensive therapy with goal of returning home.
Transitions Healthcare – Gettysburg
595 Biglerville Road • Gettysburg, PA 17325 (717) 334-6249 • www.transitionshealthcarellc.com Number of Beds: 135 Rehabilitation Unit: Yes Alzheimer’s Unit: Yes Skilled Licensed Nursing: Yes Therapy: Speech, Occupational, Respiratory, Physical Long-Term Care: Yes Respite Care: Yes 24-Hour Medical Care: Yes Recreational Activities: Yes
Scheduled Entertainment: Yes Private Rooms Available: Yes Semi-Private Rooms Available: Yes Pet Visitation Allowed: Yes Beauty/Barber Shop: Yes Medicare: Yes Medicaid: Yes Accreditations/Affiliations: PHCA, PACA Comments: Fully staffed Transitions Healthcare employees in skilled nursing and sub-acute rehab. Tours are encouraged!
If you would like to be featured on this important page, please contact your account representative or call (717) 285-1350. This is not an all-inclusive list of agencies and providers. These advertisers are eager to provide additional information about their services.
It Was 50 Years Ago Today
‘Sloop John B’ Randal Hill
“Sloop John B” The Beach Boys May 1966 Was Capitol Records—one of the industry’s biggest labels—about to make a major mistake with one of its top acts? The haunting “Caroline, No,” the debut single from the Beach Boys’ new Pet Sounds album, hadn’t sold well. In a panic, Capitol rush-released a second Pet Sounds track. But would this be a wise move? After all, the Beach Boys’ “Sloop John B” had been sitting on the shelf for nearly a year, it wasn’t an original work from creative leader Brian Wilson, and it was the only Pet Sounds track without melancholia or introspection. Not to worry. “Sloop John B” took off like a shot, selling 500,000 copies the first two weeks, on its way to No. 3 on the national charts and becoming the 11th Top Ten winner for the www.50plusLifePA.com
California quintet. The song had a long history. “The John B Sails” had come from the Bahamas as a story song about a sunken boat. It was brought to America’s attention in 1927 by poet Carl Sandburg’s The American Songbag. In 1951 the ditty was adapted by the Weavers as “The Wreck of the John B.” Seven years later, the Kingston Trio included it on their debut album. This was the version first heard by future Beach Boy Al Jardine. In the booklet that accompanied the Pet Sounds CD later, Jardine recalled the summer of 1965. “Brian was at the piano. I asked him if I could sit down and show him something. I laid out the chord pattern and said, ‘Remember this song?’”
Wilson’s reaction? “I’m not a big fan of the Kingston Trio.” Jardine then showed Wilson how the song would sound in the Beach Boys’ style. “The very next day I got a phone call to come down to the studio,” Jardine said. “Brian played the song for me, and I was blown away. [From] the idea stage to the completed track took less than 24 hours.” Wilson gave the tune his signature Beach Boys imprint of dense harmonies, as well as the use of a 12string guitar and some minor chord changes. He also altered some of the original lyrics: “This is the worst trip since I have been born” became “This is the worst trip I’ve ever been on”—possibly a wink from Wilson to the drug
culture he was embracing, a venture that eventually would all but destroy him. “Sloop John B” was recorded after Wilson auditioned each group member—Mike Love, Al Jardine, and brothers Dennis and Carl Wilson—to see whose voice would best fit the lead vocal. Brian Wilson ended up singing the lead on the first and third verses, with Love handling the second-verse chorus. Jardine had always assumed he would sing the lead—after all, it was he who suggested the future hit—but he later admitted philosophically, “My vocal had a much more mellow approach because I was bringing it from the folk idiom. For the radio, we needed a more rock approach.” And good rock ’n’ roll was what the Beach Boys were all about. Randal C. Hill is a rock ’n’ roll historian who lives at the Oregon coast. He may be reached at wryterhill@msn.com.
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Tinseltown Talks
Nick Thomas
Richard Anderson: From MGM to the Six Million Dollar Man
Richard Anderson appeared in more than 200 films and TV shows throughout his career. But it’s not just his well-known role as security chief Oscar Goldman in The Six Million Dollar Man that elicits fan questions on the classic film/ television convention circuit. “They always ask about Curse of the Faceless Man, which we made in 1958 and was my first lead film role,” said Anderson from Los Angeles. “It was a low-budget remake of The Mummy two decades earlier, featuring a stone monster rather than one wrapped in bandages. I really just learned my lines and tried not to bump into the furniture.” Two years earlier, Anderson appeared briefly in the venerable sci-fi classic Forbidden Planet.
Image from the cover of Anderson’s memoir.
Alan Oppenheimer, Lee Majors, and Richard Anderson in The Six Million Dollar Man.
Anderson in Curse of the Faceless Man.
Jack Kelly, Warren Stevens, Leslie Nielsen, and Richard Anderson in Forbidden Planet.
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“That was the last of two dozen movies I did for MGM,” he said. “Sci-fi feature films were rather new in 1956, and it changed the genre forever. The whole movie was shot on one stage, and as filming progressed, the studio gave us more money and the best production staff. We turned out a first-class movie that’s still impressive today.” Born in New Jersey and raised in New York, young Dick and his brother Bob were weekend matinee regulars at the 96th Street Motion Picture Theater, absorbed in their favorite films: Westerns. “The stories had heroes and happy endings—I really wanted to live in that world,” recalled Anderson, who outlined his career in the 2015 autobiography Richard Anderson: At Last ... A Memoir, From the Golden Years of M-G-M to The Six Million Dollar Man to Now, co-written with Alan Doshna. But Anderson wasn’t the only celebrity in his family.
“Katharine, my second wife, was the daughter of Norma Shearer and MGM producer Irving Thalberg.” Anderson and Katharine were married in 1961, so he never knew Thalberg, who died in 1936, but says he was close to his mother-in-law. “Norma Shearer was very nice to me; she liked and respected me,” he said. “She gave us a party when we were married—Judy Garland was one of the guests. Norma had a house on the beach, and when we visited her, she would talk about her career and how she ‘had it all’ at one time.” While Shearer found fame in film and retired just as television was coming of age in the early ’40s, it was TV that made Anderson a household name when The Six Million Dollar Man exploded on the small screen in 1974 for five seasons. “It was a show that brought back the hero and happy endings, so I told my agent I wanted the part even if I had to pay the producers to let me do it!” laughed Anderson, who also narrated the show’s famous introduction. “‘Gentlemen, we can rebuild him; we have the technology,’” he quoted. “You can’t imagine how many fans come up to me and say that. It’s the best TV show introduction ever written.” Anderson continued his Oscar Goldman role in three seasons of The Bionic Woman, becoming one of the few actors to portray the same character in different television series. As to why he took so long to write a book about his life, “My answer is simple,” said Anderson, who turned 89 last August. “I’m still living it.” Nick Thomas teaches at Auburn University at Montgomery, Ala., and has written features, columns, and interviews for more than 600 magazines and newspapers. Follow @TinseltownTalks
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Savvy Senior
The Consequences of Dying Without a Will Jim Miller
Dear Savvy Senior, What will happen to my money and possessions if I die without a will? – Getting Old Dear Getting, If you die without a will, what happens to your assets will be determined by the state you reside in. Every state has intestacy laws in place that parcel out property and assets to a deceased person’s closest relatives when there’s no will or trust. But these laws vary from state to state. A good resource to help you find out how your state works is About. com’s Wills and Estate Planning site, which provides a state-by-state breakdown of how your estate would be distributed if you die without a will. See www.stateintestacylaws.com for a direct link to this page. In the meantime, here is a general (not state-specific) breakdown of what can happen to a person’s assets, depending on whom they leave behind. Married with children: When a married person with children dies without a will, all property, investments, and financial accounts that are “jointly owned” automatically go to the surviving coowner (typically the spouse or child), without going through probate, which is the legal process that distributes a deceased person’s assets. But for all other separately owned property or individual financial accounts, the laws of most states award one-third to one-half to the surviving spouse, while the rest goes to the children. Married with no children or grandchildren: Some states award the entire estate to the surviving spouse, or everything up to a certain amount (for example, the first $100,000). But many other states award www.50plusLifePA.com
sisters, or if they only one-third are not living, to one-half of their children the decedent’s (your nieces and separately nephews). If there owned assets to are none of them, the surviving it goes to the next spouse, with of kin, and if the remainder there is no living generally going family, the state to the deceased takes it. person’s parents, or if the parents Make a Will are dead, to To ensure brothers and your assets go sisters. to those you Jointly May is National want to receive owned property, Elder Law Month them, you need investments, to create a will. financial accounts, An experienced or community attorney can make sure you cover property automatically go to the surviving co-owner. Single with children: All state laws provide that the entire estate goes to the children, in equal shares. If an adult child of the decedent has died, then that child’s children (the decedent’s grandchildren) split their parent’s share. Single with no children or grandchildren: In this situation, most state laws favor the deceased person’s parents. If both parents are deceased, many states divide the property among the brothers and
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all your bases, which can help avoid family confusion and squabbles after you’re gone. Costs will vary depending on where you reside, but you can expect to pay anywhere between $200 and $1,000 for a will. To find local attorneys that specialize in elder law, see the chart on pages 8 and 9. If money is tight, check with the American Bar Association (www. findlegalhelp.org) to find low-cost/nocost legal help in your area. Or call the Eldercare Locater at (800) 6771116 for a referral. Jim Miller is a regular contributor to the NBC Today show and author of The Savvy Senior Book. www.savvysenior.org
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Calendar of Events
York County
Community Programs/Support Groups Free and open to the public
Senior Center Activities
May 2, 9:30 a.m. Green Thumb Garden Club Meeting Emmanuel Lutheran Church 2650 Freysville Road, Red Lion (717) 235-2823
May 7, 2 p.m. Mother’s Day Tea Senior Commons at Powder Mill 1775 Powder Mill Road, York RSVP at (717) 741-0961
Crispus Attucks Active Living Center – (717) 848-3610, www.crispusattucks.org
May 3, 7 p.m. Surviving Spouse Socials of York County Faith United Church of Christ 509 Pacific Ave., York (717) 266-2784
May 18, noon May Blooms Bingo Senior Commons at Powder Mill 1775 Powder Mill Road, York RSVP at (717) 741-0961
May 6, 10:30 a.m. Partners in Thyme Herb Club of Southern York County John Rudy Park 400 Mundis Race Road, York (717) 428-2210
If you have an event you would like to include, please email information to mjoyce@onlinepub.com for consideration.
Parks and Recreation May 5, 7 p.m. – The Debate Over the Lincoln Photographs, Hanover Junction May 5 and 19, 7:30 to 9 a.m. – Early Bird Walk Series, Nixon County Park May 8, 2:30 to 4 p.m. – Mother’s Day Walk, Nixon County Park
Library Programs Collinsville Community Library, 2632 Delta Road, Brogue, (717) 927-9014 Tuesdays, 6 to 8 p.m. – Purls of Brogue Knitting Club Kaltreider-Benfer Library, 147 S. Charles St., Red Lion, (717) 244-2032 May 17, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. – Volunteer Opportunities with York County Area Agency on Aging Mason-Dixon Public Library, 250 Bailey Drive, Stewartstown, (717) 993-2404 May 9, 3 to 5 p.m. – Volunteer Opportunities with York County Area Agency on Aging
Mother’s Day: A Short History The second Sunday in May was officially proclaimed “Mother’s Day” by President Woodrow Wilson in 1914. But it had a long history before then. In the 19th century, Anna Reeves Jarvis organized Mother’s Work Day to heighten awareness of local sanitation issues in her home state of West Virginia and then expanded her efforts to improve health and sanitation during the Civil War. Julia Ward Howe (who wrote the words to “The Battle Hymn of the Republic”) promoted a “Mother’s Day for Peace” in 1872.
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On May 9, 1905, Anna Reeve Jarvis’s daughter, Anna Marie Jarvis, privately commemorated her mother’s death two years before. Then, in 1908, Jarvis organized a larger celebration of motherhood at her church in Grafton, W.Va., with more than 400 children and their mothers participating. After that, Jarvis began working for a national day of recognition for mothers. West Virginia recognized Mother’s Day first, in 1912, followed by Wilson’s proclamation in 1914. Ironically, the younger Jarvis never had any children of her own.
Delta Area Senior Center, Inc. – (717) 456-5753, www.deltaseniorcenter.com Dillsburg Senior Activity Center – (717) 432-2216 Eastern Area Senior Center, Inc. – (717) 252-1641 Golden Visions Senior Community Center – (717) 633-5072, www.goldenvisionspa.com Heritage Senior Center, Inc. – (717) 292-7471, www.heritagesrcenter.org Northeastern Senior Community Center – (717) 266-1400, www.mtwolf.org/SeniorCenter Red Land Senior Center – (717) 938-4649, www.redlandseniorcenter.org Red Lion Area Senior Center – (717) 244-7229, www.redlionseniorcenter.com South Central Senior Community Center – (717) 235-6060, http:// southcentralyorkcountysrctr.webs.com Tuesdays, 10 to 11 a.m. – Stretch Yoga Wednesdays, 9 to 9:45 a.m. – Intermediate Line Dancing; 10 to 11 a.m. – Beginner Line Dancing Wednesdays, 12:45 p.m. – HoopFit Stewartstown Senior Center – (717) 993-3488, www.stewsenior.org Susquehanna Senior Center – (717) 244-0340, www.susquehannaseniorcenter.org Mondays, 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. – Chorus Practice Tuesdays, 6 to 10 p.m. – Bluegrass/Country Music Jam Session White Rose Senior Center – (717) 843-9704, www.whiteroseseniorcenter.org Windy Hill On the Campus – (717) 225-0733, www.windyhillonthecampus.org York Community S.E.N.I.O.R.S. – (717) 848-4417 Yorktown Senior Center – (717) 854-0693, www.yorktownseniorcenter.org Just a snippet of what you may be missing … please call or visit their website for more information.
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Puzzle Page
CROSSWORD
Solutions for all puzzles can be found on page 22 SUDOKU
brainteasers
American Car Models of the ’50s and ’60s Find the missing words from these American car models of the ’50s and ’60s: 1. Pontiac Ch_____n 2. Studebaker La_____ 3. Rambler Amb_____r 4. Plymouth Va_____t 5. Dodge Co_____t 6. Chevrolet Co_____r 7. Oldsmobile Ro_____t 8. Mercury Co_____t 9. Ford Fa_____e 10. Cadillac El_____
Tony Award Winners of the ’50s and ’60s Find the titles of the Broadway shows that won a Tony Award for Best Musical during the ’50s and ’60s: 1. 1950 – S_____ P_____ 2. 1951 – G_____ and D_____ 3. 1956 – D_____ Y_____ 4. 1957 – My F_____ L_____ 5. 1958 – The M_____ M_____ 6. 1961 – B_____ B_____ B_____ 7. 1964 – H_____, D_____! 8. 1965 – F_____ on the R_____ 9. 1966 – M_____ of L_____ M_____ 10. 1967 – C_____
Across
1. Orient 5. Make cookies 9. Cal. lake 14. Daniel Boone star Parker 15. Arm bone 16. Swears 17. Repose 18. Regret feeler 19. Cyphers 20. Pocketbook 21. Meliorating 23. Tibetan mountaineer 25. Consume
26. Gr. letter 29. Not him 30. Residential fringe 33. Booted 34. Bricklayer 35. Long, narrow inlet 36. Malevolent 38. Beverage 40. Breakfast dish 41. Alert 42. Terra firma 44. Ravine 45. Acid forerunner 47. Invoice
50. Cuckoo 51. Distress signal 52. Happy 54. Football play 58. Stumble 59. Spam medium 61. Inactive 62. Bear dipper 63. Agreement word 64. Encounter 65. Acts 66. Convex moldings 67. Klutzes 68. Sea eagles
22. Light touch or stroke 24. Religious text 27. High rocky hills 28. Summate 31. Scarf 32. Subordinate 33. Respire 34. Bog 35. Retrieve 36. Panache 37. Ratify 39. Sense organ 41. Actress Gardner
43. Deficiency of vitamin D disease 45. Dandy 46. Arctic resident 47. Panic 48. Ascended 49. Go around 51. Arias 53. Opus 55. Ritual 56. Thought 57. Musical notation 59. Japanese capital 60. Russ. plane
Down
1. In a new or different way 2. Foam 3. Distributor 4. Up and about 5. Chests of drawers 6. Grad 7. Leg part 8. Breadwinner 9. Implied 10. Eng. river 11. Gnawing rodent 12. Pay dirt 13. Curve
Written by Alan Stillson. Please see http://stillsonworks.com
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Dear Pharmacist
Collagen for Healthy Joints Suzy Cohen
Sports Nutrition, treated group researchers had significantly wanted to see how better outcomes UCII collagen than the group would work in taking the a preventative chondroitin/ manner if you glucosamine exercised too. combo. This Pain diminished randomized, double-blind, among both placebogroups. The controlled collagen-treated study in healthy group had a individuals also 40 percent proved the merits pain reduction compared to of collagen. The scientists a 15 percent chose 55 adults reduction in the May is Arthritis Awareness Month who had no other group. So arthritis at rest both groups felt but who experienced joint discomfort improvement, but the collagen group with exercise or physical activity. Only fared dramatically better. half of the participants received the In a more recent study in the collagen; the other group served as the Journal of the International Society of placebo. The doctors measured knee movements and pain scores after a “step mill” test, which is like walking an endless flight of stairs. After 120 days, they found that the collagentreated group showed significant improvement in knee range of motion and/or extension of their knee. “Like” us on Facebook to receive a In addition, the collagen-treated free 6-month subscription! group could walk that “endless flight Plus, you’ll receive event updates, story links, and more! of stairs” longer than they could
When we think of joint pain, we often assume glucosamine to be the star. But not everyone gets better on that. Some people can’t tolerate it because it is usually fish derived. Natural collagen is available today, and it’s finely ground up in particle sizes that are small enough to get absorbed by your system and incorporated well. It’s not new; there’s a lot of solid research. Undenatured type II collagen, sometimes seen as UC-II or UCII, is a natural source of collagen that comes from chicken sternal cartilage. That’s the cartilage attached to the breastbone where we get “white meat” in chicken. Once purified and encapsulated, you can buy it as a supplement. Several studies point to its benefit for joint health. In a human clinical trial, researchers compared UCII to a combination of glucosamine and chondroitin. After 90 days, the UCII-
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This information is not intended to diagnose, prevent, or treat your disease. For more information about the author, visit SuzyCohen.com
Brainteasers American Car Models of the ’50s and ’60s 1. Pontiac Chieftain 6. Chevrolet Corvair 2. Studebaker Lark 7. Oldsmobile Rocket 3. Rambler Ambassador 8. Mercury Comet 4. Plymouth Valliant 9. Ford Fairlane 5. Dodge Coronet 10. Cadillac Eldorado
Puzzles shown on page 21
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originally! The placebo group did not enjoy these types of gains. By the end of the research, about 20 percent of the collagen-treated participants reported zero pain (yes, zero), during or after the step mill testing. There were no adverse effects reported. Think about that the next time you pop a drug that is known to harm your heart or stomach! Natural UCII can be taken with, or instead of, other joint health supplements. Side effects are not common, and in fact, one nice side effect is how it affects your skin. It’s usually easier on the tummy compared to chondroitin and glucosamine. It’s sold at health-food stores and online, but I’d still ask your doctor if he/she minds you taking it. One more thing: The unique molecular characteristics of UCII help prevent your immune system from attacking proteins that wind up in your cartilage and joint tissue. Simply put, this means it could help reduce an autoimmune reaction that would otherwise lead to more pain and stiffness associated with osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis.
Tony Award Winners of the ’50s and ’60s 1. 1950 – South Pacific 7. 1964 – Hello, Dolly! 2. 1951 – Guys and Dolls 8. 1965 – Fiddler on the 3. 1956 – Damn Yankees Roof 9. 1966 – Man of La 4. 1957 – My Fair Lady 5. 1958 – The Music Man Mancha 6. 1961 – Bye Bye Birdie 10. 1967 – Cabaret
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The Beauty in Nature
Miniature Masters of Flight
Reach Active, Affluent Boomers & Seniors!
Clyde McMillan-Gamber
Thinking back to Though when I was 5 years hummingbirds, old and living in swifts, and Lancaster city, one swallows eat of the first kinds small insects, of birds I saw were they get that flocks of chimney food in different swifts wheeling habitats, reducing quickly across the competition for summer sky above Ruby-throated hummingbird. it among those row houses, their species. chattering notes Hummingbirds tumbling to the get insects from ground as they flew. flowers at the I remember being ground level. Swifts fascinated by them, catch insects in and I know I was the sky, mostly hooked on nature at over cities, while that young age. swallows snare that Ruby-throated same food closer to Barn swallow. hummingbirds, the ground level, chimney swifts, mostly in farmland. and six species of swallows nest These species of birds raise young in southeastern Pennsylvania and in different niches, eliminating elsewhere in the United States. They rivalry among them for nesting sites. are all miniature masters of flight. Hummingbirds raise two broods of Their development is centered on two youngsters each in grass-andnearly endless flight every day. down cups on top of twigs. They They are powerful, agile fliers that bind those nurseries with spider webs stay aloft much of each day to get and decorate them with lichens, food. All have tiny legs and feet they camouflaging each cradle. use to perch. Those limbs reduce their Chimney swifts build twig weight for better flying, but the birds platforms down the inside of can’t walk, making them dependent chimneys, using their saliva to hold on flight to get food. the twigs together and attach those Though they have different body cradles to the sheer walls. builds and styles of getting food, The six kinds of swallows that nest hummingbirds and swifts are related here do so in a variety of sheltering in the Apodiformes order of birds. niches, both natural and humanAlthough related, the two made. Barn swallows and cliff species occupy different habitats: swallows attach mud-pellet cradles to Hummingbirds hover among flowers beams in barns and under bridges, as to get nectar and insects with their they have in caves and on cliffs. long beaks, and swifts stay high in the Tree swallows and purple martins sky to snare flying insects with their rear offspring in bird boxes, as they wide mouths. also do in tree cavities. And bank But the unrelated swifts and and rough-winged swallows hatch swallows are built alike because they youngsters in burrows they dig into have similar flying-insect foods in stream banks. the sky habitats they share. Habitats Watch for these miniature masters shape all forms of life, allowing of flight this summer. They are all each kind the ability to fit into and noticeable when searching in the efficiently use its habitat. proper habitats. www.50plusLifePA.com
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York Expo Center Memorial Hall East • 334 Carlisle Ave., York Exhibitors • Health Screenings • Seminars Entertainment • Door Prizes
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