August 2012 Howard County Beacon Edition

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The Howard County

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F O C U S

VOL.2, NO.8

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P E O P L E

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More than 30,000 readers throughout Howard County

A chance to shine in ‘Olympics’

5 0 AUGUST 2012

I N S I D E …

PHOTO BY CRAIG GOTSCHALL

By Robert Friedman Henry Dahlen brought home a gold medal from the National Senior Games in Houston last year as a member of the Maryland men’s volleyball team, 60- to 64-year-old category. Now he’s revving up take part in this summer’s Maryland Senior Olympics. But winning gold isn’t everything for Dahlen. “To participate is to win,” he said philosophically. The Maryland Senior Olympics commissioner from Ellicott City will take part in his 13th year of the games. Dahlen is getting set to join as many as 200 Howard County athletes over the age of 50 who will be off and running, jumping, swimming, bowling, golfing, shuffle-boarding, shot-putting, line-dancing and bocce ball-tossing, among other competitions, when the two-month-long Maryland Senior Olympics gets fully underway Aug. 18. Women’s volleyball will take place on that date at the Meadowbrook Athletic Complex (MAC) in Ellicott City. Men’s volleyball games will be held the following day at the MAC. (One earlier event, bass fishing, was held July 14 in Chase, Md.) Dahlen expects a sizeable participation from the county because this is a qualifying year for the 2013 National Senior Games set for Cleveland, Ohio. Almost 2,000 older Marylanders are expected to compete in 23 sports and nearly 100 events in different venues across the state. Those finishing in first through fourth place (except in golf and tennis) will be eligible for the national games. Senior Olympics participants compete by gender and in five-year age categories, starting at 50-54 and going all the way up to the 95-plus grouping. This year, Dahlen, a Long and Foster associate broker and former gym teacher in Howard County schools, is recruiting his “50-plus-year-old” wife, Donna, to take part in her first senior games. They will team up in a new senior event, called cornhole, which is similar to horseshoes and involves tossing bean bags. The Dahlens, residents of Ellicott Hills (a ”55-plus” community) “love to get involved in games. I play over 10 hours of volleyball a week. We also stay active by walking, working out and swimming in the pool there,” he said.

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ARTS & STYLE Runner Lee Meizlesh climbs stairs as part of his workout routine. A Maryland Senior Olympics commissioner, Meizlesh recruits older athletes from around the state for the competition, which begins in August. About 200 Howard County residents typically take part in the Senior Olympics, and this year’s volleyball competition takes place at Meadowbrook Athletic Complex in Ellicott City.

Al fresco Pride and Prejudice offers strong acting; plus, writer Anna Quindlen celebrates growing older page 26

In the swim of things Swimming is the activity that brings Doris Russell, 92, to the games. It provides her with medals upon medals (probably hundreds; she’s lost count), has been central to her life, and keeps her going and going. “I’ve said it over and over: swimming keeps you young, it’s the fountain of youth,” Russell said. “I feel just as good and as strong as I did 20 years ago,” said the Ellicott City mother of eight and grandmother of seven, who has high hopes that one of her recently married granddaughters will soon place

her in the great-grandma category. Nevertheless, she sometimes uses a cane or a walker when she leaves the house to protect herself from falling. A Howard County school bus driver for 15 years, she gave up her driver’s license five years ago. “My eyes were getting weak,” she said. And her legs have never been strong. “But once I’m in the pool, my upper body is really strong and it carries me along,” she said. Russell is known in swimming circles as See SENIOR OLYMPICS, page 7

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THE SENIOR CONNECTION 16 k Howard County Office on Aging Newsletter LAW & MONEY k Use coupons like a pro k Pay zero capital gains tax

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