Lovin' Life After 50: Southeast Valley - August 2017

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August 2017 | Southeast Valley

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inside THIS ISSUE

10 5 Hot Neighborhoods

Downsizing doesn’t mean you can’t go big. Find your next nest in one of these cool communities.

Opinion 5 6

7 8

Straus’ Place Sound Off

Ask Gabby Gayle News Briefs

Features 14

Anni Beach turns kids into a jam band.

Entertainment 16

Monkee Around

Micky Dolenz plans career-spanning set in Tempe.

16 Calendar of Events 21 Tony Role

Travel

28 Ed Boitano

Exploring the Enchanting Emerald Isle

26 Tinseltown Talks 27 Puzzles 34 Traveltizers

A très magnifique visit to Las Vegas

Jan D’Atri’s recipe for cobbler cake in a jar

36 Holy Guacamole!

The Mission Kierland carries on Chef Matt Carter’s Latin cuisine crusade.

38 When in Roma

Italian cuisine spices up East Mesa.

41 Arizona Relay Services 43 Arizona Greenthumb 43 Lovin’ Tech After 50 44 Hospice Is Hope 44 Arizona Senior Olympics

Columns 39 Aging Today 40 Legally Speaking 40 Bear Market Report Publishers

Graphic Designer

Executive Editor

Senior Account Executives

Niki D’Andrea

Lou Lagrave Gordon Wood

Travel Editor

Administrator

Ed Boitano

Guitarist Ana Popovic finds musical freedom.

37 What’s Cooking?

Dining

Steve T. Strickbine Steve Fish

22 Trivia Contest 25 Stressing Diversity

Singer Judy Collins still vocal on social issues.

Jeremy Jason Sartin puts on his boogie shoes for Saturday Night Fever.

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Editor’s Note

The Bluegrass Is Greener

Tonya Mildenberg

Courtney Oldham

Stuff. We all have some. One of the funniest standup comedy routines of the 1980s was George Carlin’s spiel about “stuff ” during the 1986 broadcast of the famine fundraiser show Comic Relief on HBO. “That’s all your house is: a place to keep your stuff. If you didn’t have so much stuff, you wouldn’t need a house. You could just walk around all the time. A house is just a pile of stuff with a cover on it,” Carlin said. “You can see that when you’re taking off in an airplane. You look down, you see everybody’s got a little pile of stuff. All the little piles of stuff. And when you leave your house, you gotta lock it up. Wouldn’t want somebody to come by and take some of your stuff. They always take the good stuff. They never bother with that crap you’re saving. All they want is the shiny stuff. That’s what your house is, a place to keep your stuff while you go out and get… more stuff! Sometimes you gotta move, gotta get a bigger house. Why? No room for your stuff anymore.” Carlin cracked us up about our attachment to “stuff ” decades before television shows like Hoarders, featuring some extreme examples of people who couldn’t part with anything (no matter how worthless), made us all feel better about our reluctance to let go of Grandma’s three sets of china or that collection of cardboard coasters collected from bars along the Pa-

cific Coast Highway during a road trip in the ’60s. But while jokes about the absurdity of materialism might have been funny in our younger years, the idea of managing massive collections of stuff can become a daunting task as we get older and our lifestyles and priorities change. Downsizing – shuffling off those excess piles of whatever and moving into more compact abodes – sounds like a great solution but isn’t so simple in its execution. That’s where some of the articles in this month’s issue could come in handy. Our regular “Lovin’ Tech After 50” column spotlights some of the spots in cyberspace (from Craigslist and beyond) where you can sell your stuff. And once you’ve lost all that excess weight and are ready to transition into a smaller space, our “Five Hot Neighborhoods to Live in Now” feature breaks down some of the best master-planned communities all over the Valley and Tucson, from architectural styles and average home prices to nearby amenities and more. We hope you’ll find the information in these pages valuable, and maybe even add this issue to your own personal pile of stuff.

Niki D’Andrea Executive Editor

Contributors

Teresa Bear, Becky Cholewka, Lin Sue Cooney, Jan D’Atri, Justin Ferris, Christina Fuoco-Karasinski, Irv Green, Andrea Gross, Tracy Heck, Kenneth LaFave, Gayle Lagman-Creswick, Carson Mlnarik, Bob Roth, Irene Stillwell, Bill Straus, Glenda Strickbine, Nick Thomas, Ralph Zubiate

| AUGUST 2017

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Opinion Straus’ Place

Have You Found A Trusted Attorney?

White Mountains fishing saga

• Estate Planning • Wills / Trusts

BY BILL STRAUS Some of the happiest days of my youth were spent at summer camp. Camp Wonderland (yep, that was the name) was nestled in the hills just north of Greer, and my memories of those days have stayed with me for over 58 years. And I loved fishing up there. Oh, I still do, but don’t get to do it very often anymore. Then, two years ago, I met Patti. I discovered that she, too, loved to fish, and she’d never been to Greer. That’s all I needed! We were heading north and I was going to write this column all about recapturing those old memories. I’ve been talking up our big trip for almost the whole two years we’ve been together. I raved about the scenery, the daily thunderstorms and, of course, the fishing. Finally, in July, we did it. We arrived at the White Mountains Lodge B&B (awesome place!) and couldn’t wait to fish. So we were off to the Little Colorado River, one of the sites of my most memorable youthful fishing accomplishments. We found a spot where they were pulling trout out at an astonishing rate. We, too, had immediate luck, landing three good-size rainbows. Then we discovered why. The trout were literally clumped together in droves. I tried Googling for an explanation of this phenomenon but came up empty. These droves were so large, and the fish so hungry, it was like fishing at Fred’s Trout Farm. The fishermen there were gleefully

telling us they didn’t even need bait! The trout just jumped at anything and everyone was getting their limit. It wasn’t fun. It wasn’t sport. We became disgusted and left. The next day, we headed over to Big Lake. Nothing. The manager of the general store there told us it was because of a strong hail storm a day before. Nevertheless, it was very disappointing. But we weren’t through. We fished the Greer Lakes and again, nothing. Nary a bite! But I must add here that we just love the act of fishing. Actually catching fish is secondary to the act itself. We also tried to find the site of my old camp, but again, we were out of luck. This trip was not turning out as I imagined. And then I started to feel sick. I was suffering from altitude sickness (Greer is at 8,400 feet). If you’ve never felt it, you’re lucky. Not fun. I really wanted to write this column highlighting the successes of our little trip. Successes? It must sound to you like the trip was a total failure. But that was not the case! No, I didn’t recapture those memories I sought. But even with all of the bumps in this particular road, we had fun. We were able to laugh at our frustrations. And we maybe, possibly, hopefully, created some new memories upon which we’ll look back with a smile. We may even go back. But not for a while.

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Local Opinions

Sound Off Questions about weather in your Trivia Contest are fun, I guess, but they are often open to argument or disagreement among entrants, depending on what source one uses. When a question is about a president or a date in history or a certain city, there is ONLY ONE correct answer, usually. And I know it is always hotter in Phx, but I live in Tucson, so I am glad I live down here, where it is much cooler! To those writing in to tell others to keep quiet, don’t express political opinions, don’t talk about the president, run for office if you think you can do better, accept change (even if it’s change for the worse) and support Trump “just because,” I say forget it. Take a lesson in how democracy works – freedom of speech and press, remember? (Although attempts are being made to erode that and many other principles our country was founded upon). I will not be silent in the face of the wrongdoing I see going on. Dictatorships always It is obvious that President Trump has an incurable disease. It is called megalomania. And horror of horrors, he said he would “be honored” to meet with another megalomaniac, the leader of North Korea. But this too will he deny when confronted for the whole world to hear. As when he said the President of Mexico said Mexico would build a border wall when he did not. What next? M.L. Ellis, Green Valley, AZ, 85

Thank you for being there. I’m an old lady watching television in the morning becoming more discouraged with the intelligence of some of the people that I have to look at, especially in the morning with all those off-theshoulders. It’s so distasteful looking; it’s so cheap. Wear your clothes if you’re going to be on TV. Off-the-shoulder is for evening, or did your mother never bother to teach you that? try to silence the people and the media; that is happening right now. I can express my opinions because I live in a free country. I do not have to shut up, run for office or move to another country if I don’t like what is happening in this one. I do not have to quietly accept what I feel to be wrong. People died for us to retain this freedom of expression. If anyone does not want to hear or read others’ opinions, skip that page or change the channel. No one is forcing you. If you don’t like what you hear, that’s your business. I urge all who see the harm being done by those in power to speak out. Do not be a silent sheep. What has happened to the Mesa water? The dishwashers are no longer as efficient as they once were and my clothes are starting to come out stiff as a board no matter what I use to wash or rinse. What’s going on with our water system? Just blame it on somebody else, I suppose, or the weather, but whatever it is, try and fix it. It’s hard on housewives.

We Want to Hear from You!

Your message might be printed in the next issue! At Lovin’ Life, we believe your opinions should be heard. Give us yours! Space providing, your Sound Off will be printed in the next issue. Please limit your messages to one minute or 100 words.

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Email us: soundoff@lovinlifeafter50.com Leave a message: 480-898-6500, option 6 Write us: 1620 W. Fountainhead Pkwy., Suite 219 Tempe, AZ 85282

| AUGUST 2017

I’m in my 70s and I have to admit that when I first heard Donald Trump come up with “Make America great again,” I was a little in denial about the fact that America wasn’t so great anymore. I’ve been struggling with that idea. I don’t like the fact that because I’m growing older, things aren’t so great for me anymore. Aging comes with some problems, some decline and as the saying goes, “It’s not for sissies.” But my patriotism took a hit when I started admitting to myself that America’s not all that anymore. I started examining my own outlook, thinking that just because I’m dealing with some catastrophic illness, health insurance problems, my retirement didn’t turn out… Well, whose retirement ever turns out to be exactly as planned? Whose life turns out to be exactly as planned? I really had to struggle with Donald Trump’s “Make America great again.” I thought it was kind of a stab at America. I thought he was

I am a senior that lives at Fellowship Towers in Phoenix and what I do not understand is the fact that we are not allowed to either use medical marijuana, even if it’s prescribed, or have partisan political events here, both due to the fact that there’s a HUD rent subsidy and HUD, in their regulations, denies these rights. Now it seems to me that these rights were

My name is Dale Trier and I live on 92nd St. in Scottsdale, AZ. I have been reading and enjoying your publication for many, many years. ( I am 73) RE: Local Opinions / Sound Off . . . You recently begin Omitting (?) the identity on the Opinion giver ? My Opinion = If a person is unwilling to identify themselves along with their opinion = NO CREDIBILITY ! . . . If it is your publications choice to omit the identity / source of the opinion ? ? . . . . Well, to some of us . . smells like “Fake News” . . . again, just my opinion and, My name is Dale Trier and I live on 92nd St. in Scottsdale, AZ. . . . and,

being critical. Certainly what did he have to complain about? If America wasn’t great for Donald Trump, who was it great for? Apparently we all bought into the idea that it wasn’t great anymore and we elected Donald Trump. I’m wondering how many of you are asking yourself: Is it true that America’s not great anymore? Where was the point at which we declined? Was it the failure of the Clintons to use the time they were in office to actually produce a healthcare bill that helped us in the future? I still blame them for that. After all, if Clinton hadn’t gotten caught with his pants down and wasted so much time in office, we’d be better off, wouldn’t we? Can you believe that Hillary actually loves Bill after such a public shaming? On the other hand, we believe that people shouldn’t get divorced. I grew up in an era where you’re supposed to get married once and for all and have children in a marriage that’s stable. We had all these values once. Is that what Trump means when he says “Make America great again?”

earned by us as seniors. I’m a veteran, I vote and I do not agree with denying our individual rights. I wish someone would look into this, perhaps one of our representatives. Just because there’s a rent subsidy does not mean we should be denied the use of medical marijuana if it’s prescribed and the right to have the benefit of having some partisan political events in the building.

NO SOURCE / NO IDENTITY . . . = . . NO CREDIBILITY ! ! ! . . So, is “Lovin’Life after 50 trying to become another CNN . .or . . are contributors simply no longer willing to “Stand Up” for their opinions ? ? ? Your Answer Please . . . .. . . Editor’s response: Hi, Dale. Thanks for your opinion. In answer to your question, most readers specifically request their name not be printed. In a case such as yours, when a reader explicitly requests their name be printed, we do not omit identities. Thank you for being a longtime reader of Lovin’ Life After 50.

www.LovinLifeAfter50.com


Ask Gabby Gayle Destination weddings are invites, not demands BY GAYLE LAGMAN-CRESWICK

Q

Dear Gabby Gayle:

My husband and I just returned from our granddaughter’s wedding in another state. It was what they call a “destination wedding.” That is when the bride and groom choose a lovely, expensive place to get married and the family is obligated to go and spend a fortune to witness this blessed event. I guess we are just old-fashioned, but that wedding must have cost upwards of $50,000, not to mention what it cost all the family members. We were surprised that the parents (our daughter) allowed it. Of course, my husband opened his mouth and expressed his opinion to them, which has now created hard feelings. What do you think of destination weddings, and do you think my husband was out of place to say something?

Signed, Old-Fashioned

A

Dear Old-Fashioned:

I have been to and enjoyed one destination wedding. It was beautiful, lots of fun, and expensive for all concerned. My advice is: 1) It is an invitation, not a demand. If it is too expensive for you, don’t go. 2) If you have read me for a while, you know I stand firm on some things. One is, never criticize or advise your married children or grandchildren – unless you want to damage the relationship. If they ask for your advice, give it very carefully. You are through raising children. Just enjoy them and keep your opinions to yourself. That is what I would do. I have slipped up a few times and regretted it every time!

GG

Q

Dear Gabby Gayle:

I am a 65-year-old widower. After several years of loneliness and my lousy cooking, I have decided to move into an independent retirement community. My friends are constantly chiding me, telling me I am not “ready for that.” I tell them they do not know what they are talking about. Where else can an old guy like me get meals, housekeeping, exercise, friendship, entertainment, and be free to travel without worrying about my house? My friends have some mistaken idea that you go to a place

www.LovinLifeAfter50.com

like that when you need care. Wrong. If you wait until you need care, you have waited too long. You can’t get in! They need to know that one’s life can change in a heartbeat. My wife died of a heart attack at age 60. I wish you would tell them, please.

Signed, MC

A

Dear MC:

Years ago, I spoke to a gerontology class at a university about retirement communities and all they offer. After class, the professor, a woman who was about 50 years old, said to me, “If they had those places for young people like me, I would move there in a minute. I would love to have a meal when I get home without cooking it, a ride to the symphony so I wouldn’t have to fight traffic, have my apartment cleaned, and all that other stuff.” I think there is a certain mindset as we grow older to cause us stay away from retirement places, almost as if people think they will catch something... like “old age?” Congrats to you for being a free thinker.

Happy Landings, GG

Q

Dear Gabby Gayle:

My friends are not churchgoers and I am. They are constantly telling me that I don’t have to go to church to be close to God. I have gone to church all my life and I think they are wrong. I believe that church gives me guidance to live a life close to God. What do you think?

Signed, HH

A

Dear HH:

Oh boy. This is a loaded question. I believe that it is possible to be very spiritual without going to church. I also believe that some regular churchgoers are not very spiritual. I also believe that some churchgoers are very spiritual. I believe the best sign of true spirituality is how you live your life and how you treat others. I’m also sure I will get letters from those who disagree with me. That is okay. I am only one opinion. P.S. You need to do what seems right to you!

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News Briefs BY LLAF STAFF

Freedom Plaza Retirement Community hosts huge art show More than 200 original artworks will be on display through August 6 in the gallery at Freedom Plaza Retirement Community in Peoria. The exhibition – titled the Centennial High School Art Show – features paintings, ceramics, photographs and drawings by 95 Centennial art students. Phil Bruner, a retired social studies teacher and an artist, curated the show with his wife, Carmalene Bruner. The couple lives at Freedom Plaza and coordinated the show with visual arts teacher Chris Buhrmann. “The students’ artworks are really imaginative,” Phil Bruner says. “They express how they see themselves and social issues.” For the second consecutive year, Miranda Wacker, an 11th-grader at CHS, took home top honors in the art show. Wacker’s winning

piece, “Ambigious,” was awarded the blue ribbon in the Mixed Media category, and the Best of Show prize. “Miranda has a great start in art,” Bruner said. “’Ambiguous’ is absolutely gorgeous.” Phoenix artist Julie Frye, president of the Phoenix Artists Guild, served as judge for the show, awarding ribbons for first, second and third place in various categories, in addition to 12 honorable mentions. All works will be on display from 2 to 4 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays through August 6 in the upstairs gallery at Freedom Plaza Retirement Community, located at 13373 Plaza del Rio Boulevard, Peoria. Freedom Plaza is a Brookdale Senior Living Community. For more information, visit brookdale.com or call 623876-2416.

Above: Freedom Plaza resident Phil Bruner acts as curator of the Centennial High School Art Show. Right: “Ambiguous” by Miranda Wacker took top honors at the Centennial High School Art Show at Freedom Plaza. (Photos by Marla Levine)

Home Instead Senior Care launches free community program for caregivers According to a recent study conducted by Home Instead Senior Care, 50 percent of daughters in the workplace feel they “must choose between being a good employee and a good daughter.” Respondents expressed their supervisors were unsympathetic when it came to balancing work with caregiving, and also that they felt uncomfortable talking about

the issue with their employers. In response to the findings, Home Instead in Phoenix has launched Daughters in the Workplace, a free community program offering resources and tips to encourage caregivers to discuss balancing work and caregiving with their employers. Visit homeinstead.com for more information.

Arizona Animal Welfare League program provides estate planning for pets Many people consider their pets a part of their family, but not every pet owner has a plan for their pets should they precede their furry friends in death. One local no-kill shelter, the Arizona Animal Welfare League (AAWL), offers a posthumous option for peoples’ pets, through its Angels for Animal program. If a pet owner becomes a Legacy League Member and pledges a donation to the Angels for Animals program, the local no-kill shelter will take up to five domesticated dogs and/or cats upon the pet owner’s death, or in the event the pet owner becomes incapacitated or otherwise unable to care for their animals. There are two options – the pre-planned option, which requires a minimum donation of $10,000 to the AAWL at the time of

The Angels for Animals program provides a home for people’s pets after the owners pass away. (Special to LLAF)

enrollment, and the “gift in will” option, which requires a minimum $15,000 donation paid on a deferred basis. For more information about the program, Call 602273-6852 x106 or visit aawl.org.

Simply A Cappella seeks choral director Simply A Cappella, an East Valley chapter of Sweet Adelines International, is looking for a choral director. Experience and knowledge of the barbershop style of singing is desirable. The women sing a variety of familiar tunes: Golden Oldies, modern, holiday and patriotic music. They perform year-round at various facilities and functions, but in the spring, they compete in the Sweet Adelines Region 21 contest.

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Rehearsals are held from 7 to 10 p.m. Thursdays in the choir room of Family Life Center at First United Methodist Church, 15 E. First Avenue, Mesa. All applications will be considered. For more information about the group, visit simplyacappella. com. For more information, call Pat Bowen at 480-399-9799 or email pat.bowen2015@ outlook.com.

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New smartphone application brings services directly to doorsteps Phoenix residents are the first to have access to a new smartphone application that brings health and wellness services directly to people’s homes. The app, ThrivinU, allows users to order services from their phones to be performed at their residences. Physical therapists, personal trainers, beauticians, massage therapists and more can be summoned

to homes throughout the Valley. The app is available on iOS and Android, and encompasses six categories: nutrition, beauty, wellness, fitness, fashion and health. Phoenix is the beta market for ThrivinU; developers plan to launch in other cities soon. For more information, visit thrivinu.com.

True Concord Voices & Orchestra receives $25,000 grant for project The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) has approved a $25,000 Art Works grant for True Concord Voices & Orchestra. The Tucson-based professional chamber choir and orchestra plans to use the funds for its American Rhythm performance project. The project features a new work by composer Gerald Near for choir, orchestra and soprano based on the writings of American poet Emily Dickinson; and a Veterans Day concert of works such as Aaron Copland’s “Fanfare for the Common Man” and Jake Runestad’s “Dream True Concord Voices & Orchestra, performing at Lincoln Center in this of the Fallen,” accompanied by photo, will use its grant to fund its American Rhythm performance text written by Iraq War veteran project. (Photo courtesy of True Concord Voices & Orchestra) and award-winning poet Brian Turner. All performances will take place in various Tucson locations next year. organizations such as True Concord Voices By the end of 2017, the NEA will provide more & Orchestra in serving their communities than $82 million to fund arts projects throughout by providing excellent and accessible arts the nation. “The arts reflect the vision, energy and experiences.” For more information on the talent of America’s artists and arts organizations,” NEA, visit arts.gov. To learn more about NEA chairman Jane Chu says. “The National True Concord Voices & Orchestra, see Endowment for the Arts is proud to support trueconcord.org.

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Downsizing doesn’t mean you can’t go big. Find your next nest in one of these cool communities. BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI Photos by Kimberly Carrillo are a ton of amenities within reach.

Empty Nest Syndrome or freedom? No matter what you call it, it’s always an adjustment when kids grow up and move out of the family home. It seems like so many decisions must be made: Will you turn the kids’ rooms into offices or guest quarters? Should you use their old rooms as storage spaces or get rid of all your excess stuff instead? Do you even need the extra space anymore? Downsizing may be the inevitable answer, and Arizona’s home to myriad master-planned communities designed for downsizers. We recently tapped the expertise of local Realtors for their selections of the best neighborhoods for Boomers and retirees to relocate. From luxury homes and prime locations to rec center havens and historic districts, here are five great neighborhoods to call home.

NORTH VALLEY

Realtor: Neil Brooks Neighborhood: Corte Bella, Sun City West

Downsize: Brooks says this makes the perfect “empty-nester” community for people looking to streamline their lives. Vital stats: Corte Bella homes

emphasize luxury and are adorned with quality, high-end finishes. Constructed between 2003 and 2007, the single-story, single-family homes range from 1,100 to 3,200 square feet. Many of them feature desirable upgrades, such as granite countertops, three-car garages, casitas

10

Vital stats:

Ranging in size from 1,215 to 7,741 square feet and priced from $200,000 to $870,000, Seville homes offer more affordable options than in most other master-planned communities. The HOA costs $67 per month.

Who lives here:

Seville is a beautiful master-planned community for all ages, but it provides an ideal landing pad for Baby Boomers and retirees, as they have everything they need nearby. Homes like this one in Corte Bella are perfect for empty-nesters.. (Special to LLAF)

and oversize home sites with golf course views. Homes range from two to four bedrooms and two to three and a half bathrooms.

Who lives here: Fun-loving, active adults 45 years of age and older. Residents cherish the smaller, tight-knit atmosphere here, a rarity in Sun City. Amenities: Corte Bella is located

near many shopping outlets and cultural attractions in Sun City West. Within 12 miles, residents can enjoy the Arrowhead Towne Center, West Valley

| AUGUST 2017

Art Museum, Wildlife World Zoo, Arizona State University-West and Lake Pleasant. Plus, sports enthusiasts can visit various venues hosting the Arizona Cardinals, Arizona Coyotes and several Major League Baseball spring training camps.

EAST VALLEY

Realtor: Julie Morris Neighborhood: Seville, Gilbert

Downsize: Morris describes Seville as an easy place to downsize because there

Amenities:

With its first homes built in 2002, Seville is a newer community farther from Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport than other East Valley neighborhoods but still within Gilbert and near shopping, PhoenixMesa Gateway Airport, hospitals, theaters, restaurants and entertainment. Seville also boasts unique amenities like a championship golf course with varying memberships available, a water park, community theater that can be reserved, workout facility, clubhouse and restaurant and some gated sections.

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WEST VALLEY

Realtor: Gwen Wallace Neighborhood: Sun City Festival, Sun City

Downsize: At Del Webb’s Sun City Festival, downsizing is a common decision for existing homeowners and new buyers averaging 63 years old, Wallace says. Residents are recent emptynesters who want to shift their lifestyle from “home maintenance” to “lifestyle enjoyment,” typically scaling down their home sizes from 3,000 square feet or more to 2,000 square feet or less. Vital stats: Sun City Festival has 10

single-family, single-story floor plans from 1,573 square feet to more than 2,700 square feet, priced from $211,990 to $294,990. Its most popular floor plan: the 1,573-square-foot Hideaway, featuring two bedrooms and two baths, a perfect fit for the 35 percent of buyers who are seasonal residents.

Who lives here: Existing residents at Sun City Festival commonly downsize. At first, they think they may need three bedrooms, a den and 2,300 square feet but then find after living in the home a while that all the space they need is really 1,800 square feet, according to Wallace. They then sell and buy again, but this time they downsize to a layout that fits them even better. Dens and/or home offices seem to be popular features with many Baby Boomers who have officially retired but continue working part-time, perhaps in consulting. The flexibility of the designs, featuring dozens of structural options, has also proved www.LovinLifeAfter50.com

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City Festival is large. It will eventually have 7,200 homes, three recreation centers and 45 holes of golf. Its location, about 15 minutes west of Surprise, appeals to mobile Boomers who enjoy being outside the hustle and bustle of the city. Shopping, restaurants and medical facilities are within 15 to 20 minutes of the community, which will soon host onsite commercial and retail services. Last year, the city of Buckeye opened a public services facility at Festival with aroundthe-clock fire, police and EMTs.

PHOENIX

Realtor: Don Mertes Neighborhood: Willo Historic District

Downsize: On average, a Willo Historic District home spans 1,500 to 2,500 square feet, so there are attractive options for empty-nesters who want to purge and plenty more for those who still need room to spread out. Vital stats: You don’t need to go very far to find someone willing to share accolades about the Willo Historic District, a centrally located neighborhood with palm-lined streets. A handful of homes open their doors for the annual Willo Home Tour, which has been called the best-attended tour in Central Phoenix. Everyone seems to think

Neighborhoods.... continued on page12

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Neighborhoods....

seniors and empty nesters to the area.

“Willo” when they think historic Phoenix. Well-kept homes and manicured lawns make up almost a square mile of this charming residential neighborhood just north of downtown Phoenix. Tudors, bungalows and Spanish Colonials — classic historic examples from the ‘20s and ‘30s with hardwood floors and multipane windows – welcome admirers in the southern end of the Willo Historic District. Travel north and you’ll find classic ‘40s and early-’50s ranch-style homes. Willo properties, which are close to trendy restaurants and shopping, typically range in price from $350,000 to more than $800,000.

neighbors, grocers and dry cleaners by name and enjoy an abundance of art galleries, shops and restaurants.

continued from page11

Who lives here: Willo residents have been the cornerstone of the neighborhood since its designation as a local historic district in 1990. Aided by the city of Phoenix’s matching funds programs and the state’s substantial historic tax reduction program, Willo was once an area predominantly owned by retirees until young urban professionals began buying these properties and updating them with new kitchens, colors and furnishings. Today, the vibrancy of the downtown core once again draws

Amenities: Willo residents know their

SCOTTSDALE

Realtor: Mike Bodeen Neighborhood: Scottsdale Ranch

Downsize: Scottsdale Ranch includes nearly 4,000 properties in more than 40 neighborhoods. Folks who have sold and downsized but stayed in Scottsdale Ranch have an excellent assortment of larger homes, as well as affordable townhouses and condominiums.

Vital Stats: Scottsdale Ranch is a Santa Barbara-style community built predominantly in the 1980s. The homes have frame/stucco construction with Mediterranean tile roofs, palm trees in landscaping and are part of gated and lake communities. The average 90-day sold price of a single-family detached (SFD) home as of July 2017 is $588,000. The average size is 2,454 square feet. The mean 90-day sold price of a townhouse/ condo as of July 2017 is $234,000, with an average size of 1,254 square feet.

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The Bluegrass Is Greener Anni Beach turns curious kids into a jam band. BY RALPH ZUBIATE

Photos by Kimberly Carrillo

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Anni Beach is the kind of substitute teacher any kid would want. Fun-loving, kindhearted and uniquely talented, the teacher created a neighborhood band that’s been going strong for 23 years. Beach was a substitute teacher in the Chandler Unified Anni Beach of Chandler plays mandolin with the Jam Pak band as Javier School District for Garcia-Wallace takes the lead on mountain dulcimer. years, moving from The Jam Pak Blues ‘N’ Grass Neighborschool to school as the need arose. One hood Band was born. day, doing her duty at a second-grade Since then, the band has grown to inclassroom in Galveston Elementary clude more than 25 members of all ages School near her Chandler home, Beach and races. They play their own brand of hauled out her mandolin for a quick bluegrass, gospel and traditional counsong, as she had done dozens of times try in shows and festivals all over the before. nation. They’ve won awards and been For some reason, this time, the music recognized nationally for the program. caught the imagination of a few of the The band even breaks down into varineighborhood kids. “They came to my ous small-group configurations, such house after school,” says Beach, who is as Cabin John, Morning Fire, Fair Black in her 70s. “The two kids asked if I could Rose and The Would Bees. A professional teach them to play.” band, Cisco & The Racecars, has even She didn’t have time that day, but she been born out of the group. talked it over with her husband, VinAt first, instruments were hard to cent, who died in 2010. “He said maybe come by. I should.” The Jam Pak kids began learning on The next week, the original two kids simple instruments called “canjos,” which showed up with four others, friends and are empty soda cans with a stick and a siblings. She taught them “This Land Is string attached. Since then, they have Your Land,” “Tom Dooley” and “Will the been sponsored by Arizona bluegrass Circle Be Unbroken.”

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Terri Babick brings her two children, Rachel and Benjamin, all the way from Cave Creek to Chandler to play with the Jam Pak Band.

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organizations and many individuals who have loaned or donated instruments and provided lessons and lesson scholarships. The band’s website, jampak. com, drives home the point: It’s all about the kids learning music. “It’s been thrilling to see the progress of various children who, with no particular musical background, have taken to bluegrass music and can play, sing, ‘take breaks,’ keep the rhythm, learn by ear and also play notes,” it says. The musicians practice in Beach’s tiny house, finding corners to play in and performing in the backyard. The band draws kids from all over. “They come to me; I don’t have to recruit or any- Nazarena Delgado, 12, sings and plays for the crowd at the “Beach House Revue” in Anni Beach’s backyard. thing,” Beach says. such a presence in this community of fondly recalls. Terri Babick brings her two kids He played with the band until he all the way from Cave Creek to play with bluegrass music and festivals,” she says. Babick says Benjamin jammed with was 16, then picked football over perJam Pak. Benjamin, 14, plays mandolin and handles the sound board at some the band at a senior center and loved it, forming. Though he quit playing, Menperformances. Rachel, 12, plays the fid- as did the residents: “Imagine 20 of your eses will continue in the music field and grandparents giving encouragement.” hopes to be an audio engineer. dle. It’s their fourth year in the group. Ramon Meneses was one of Beach’s Meneses still has fond memories of his “My son especially became entranced with bluegrass,” Babick says. “He really first students, then a precocious 4-year- time in the band, and he still visits, like old hanging out with his siblings. “My when Beach hosts a “Beach House Rewanted to play and jam with children.” She scoured the internet and finally brothers and sisters came home with in- vue” with dozens of musicians and a lot found Jam Pak. “Mrs. Beach has created struments. I said, ‘I want to do that,’” he of free food.

Recently, the kids took the stage in Beach’s backyard, playing and singing such bluegrass and gospel standards as “God’s Not Dead.” Mismatched chairs invited neighborhood moms and dads and visitors. Group after group took the makeshift stage, playing banjos, mandolins, dulcimers, guitars and basses. Beach’s dogs wandered the friendly crowd, greeting guests and looking for dropped hot dogs and chips. The littlest kids may play or not, as they continue to learn by ear. They gain some experience and get comfortable on stage, knowing that, like their friends around them, their day will come. “(Beach) has created a tribe of care and connection and love,” says Mark Hickler, a professional banjo maker who plays in Cisco & The Racecars. “The band’s motto is from her, and it’s ‘To make ourselves and others happy with our music.’” “She’s a dying breed,” Meneses gushes. “She’s a gift on Earth in this city. You can see the openness. I always see her as a mother. Immediately, you fall in love and respect her.”

Is your estate plan current? Have you had it reviewed recently? Estate plans don’t ‘expire.’ However, personal circumstances and laws do change. Reviewing your plan is an opportunity to make sure it still fits your current needs. You should have your estate plan reviewed if: 1. Your plan was not created in Arizona; 2. Your plan was created more than four years ago; 3. You are unsure whether your trust addresses potential capital gains and/or income tax issues; or 4. You, your spouse or your named beneficiaries have had a change in circumstances (financial or personal). There are several more reasons to have your plan reviewed, including the importance of understanding the plan you have in place and how it will impact those you care about. Call 480-385-1700 to make an appointment for a complimentary review or download a guide on living trusts at morristrust.com/llchandler Morris Hall was ranked the #1 Estate Planning Law Firm for 2017 20th Anniversary 1997-2017

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Calendar of Events

Entertainment Monkee Around

Entertainment

August 1 Tuesday

Micky Dolenz plans career-spanning set in Tempe BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI Micky Dolenz hits the nail on the head when he calls his catalog of songs “feel-good music.” But Dolenz, best known as the vocalist/ drummer in The Monkees, also hits the nail on the head – literally – in the furniture-building business he runs with his daughter, Georgia. In addition to crafting catchy choruses and designing artisanal tables, Dolenz has also worked as an actor, television director, radio personality and theater director. Diversity fuels the fire of the 72-year-old, who brings his solo show to the Marquee Theatre in Tempe on Saturday, Aug. 19. The show is partially seated, with standing-room tickets also available. “It’s hard not to enjoy shows like that,” he says about his concerts. “There are sometimes three different generations there. “It’s feel-good music. Frankly, the audiences are so enthusiastic that I liken it to someone throwing me a birthday party every night. It’s fun. That’s why they call it ‘playing.’” Dolenz quickly adds there are downsides, too. “There are aspects of it that are grueling, like the traveling,” he says. “It’s become so horrible with everything that’s going on. The planes are getting smaller. The seats are getting closer together. The food is terrible. The security. “Like we say in the business: ‘They pay us

to travel. We sing for free.’” In 2016, The Monkees celebrated the band’s 50th anniversary with a successful world tour and an album called Good Times!, produced by Fountains of Wayne’s Adam Schlesinger. The collection came out in May 2016 and reached No. 14 on the Billboard 200 album chart. “That tour was huge,” Dolenz says. “Then the album went Top 20, of all things. It made all the big Top 10 lists. We’ve been riding the wave on that for at least a year now.” The Marquee performance will feature songs from Dolenz’s solo and Monkees catalogs, with him backed by a full band that includes his sister, Coco. “It’s the same band who backs up The Monkees,” Dolenz says. “If you saw The Monkees’ 50th anniversary shows, you’re going to get much of the same thing. I sang most of the hits – not all, mind you. I always do all The Monkees’ hits. I play some non-Monkees material, too. Mostly they are songs that have stories attached to them.” A tune special to Dolenz is Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B. Goode.” “I tell the audience that I do it because it was my audition piece for The Monkees,” he says. “It’s the song that got me the gig.” Dolenz looks forward to a peaceful rest of the year, spending it touring as a solo artist, tending to his vegetable garden and designing and building furniture with

Monkees drummer and singer Micky Dolenz runs a family furniture business on the side. (Special to LLAF)

Georgia, as Dolenz & Daughters. Founded in 2013, the company uses high-quality materials and traditional woodworking techniques to build furniture. (Visit dolenzanddaughters.com.) “I’ve always been into building stuff,” he says. “I was going to be an architect. All my life, my father was very, very handy with tools. He was always fixing stuff and he was always building stuff around the house. His theory was, if you can build it, don’t buy it.” As a child, Georgia joined Dolenz in his shop and messed with his tools. When she pursued a theater degree, she learned how to build and design sets. “She’s a better welder than I am,” he says with a laugh. “We were in my shop here a couple years ago and she asked if we could build a coffee table as a birthday gift for a friend. “I said jokingly that we should start a business, Dolenz & Daughters Fine Furniture. She ran with it. I was kind of kidding. The next day, we had a website, license and business cards.” The company has been inundated with orders. “We do as much as we can and we want,” he says. “Occasionally, Georgia puts a note on the website that we can’t take any more orders because daddy is on tour. A lot of people didn’t think we were actually making the stuff. But we are.”

FOR MORE INFO

The Monkees from a 1967 trade ad. From left: Davy Jones, Micky Dolenz, Peter Tork and Mike Nesmith. (Photo courtesy of Entertainment International)

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| AUGUST 2017

What: Micky Dolenz with special guest Jam Now When: 8 p.m., Saturday, Aug. 19 Where: Marquee Theatre, 730 N. Mill Ave., Tempe Cost: $42-$65 Info: 480-829-0607, luckymanonline. com

Ocean of Light: Submergence, noon to 5 p.m. Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Sundays, and noon to 9 p.m. Thursdays to Saturdays, Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art, 7374 E. Second St., Scottsdale, $7-$10, 480-874-4666, smoca. org. The U.K.-based artist collective Squidsoup is known for creating spaces using sound and light to build digitally mediated experiences. Ocean of Light: Submergence is an LED structure that envelops viewers in light and allows them to interact. The live data ecosystem demonstrates how placement of artworks next to each other influences viewers’ perceptions of them, helping to build a narrative for the exhibition. Saturday Night Fever, various times through Aug. 20, Arizona Broadway Theatre, 7701 W. Paradise Ln., Peoria, various prices, 623-7768400, azbroadway.org. Humble paint store clerk by day, stallion dance king by night, Tony Manero lives for Saturday night at the disco. Based on the 1977 film starring John Travolta, this musical features the songs “If I Can’t Have You” and “Disco Inferno.” Fiddler on a Hot Tin Roof, 12:10 p.m., repeats Aug. 2, Aug. 3, Aug. 8 and Aug. 9, Herberger Theater Center, 222 E. Monroe St., Phoenix, $6, 602.252.8497, http://bit.ly/2tlxCfW.

August 2 Wednesday

East Valley Friends and Neighbors, 9:30 to 11 a.m., repeats first Wednesday each month, Grace United Methodist Church, 2024 E. University Dr., Mesa, free, 480-848-5146, evfanaz.org, evfanaz@ gmail.com. This nonreligious, nonpartisan group welcomes East Valley residents who wish to get better acquainted with others and to participate in social, educational and charitable activities. Fiddler on a Hot Tin Roof, 12:10 p.m., repeats Aug. 3, Aug. 8 and Aug. 9, Herberger Theater Center, 222 E. Monroe St., Phoenix, $6, 602-2528497, http://bit.ly/2tlxCfW.

August 3 Thursday

Fiddler on a Hot Tin Roof, 12:10 p.m., repeats Aug. 8 and Aug. 9, Herberger Theater Center, 222 E. Monroe St., Phoenix, $6, 602-252-8497, http://bit.ly/2tlxCfW.

August 4 Friday

Neil Diamond: The 50 Year Anniversary World Tour, 8 p.m., Talking Stick Resort Arena, 201 E. Jefferson St., Phoenix, tickets start at $64.75, 800-745-3000, ticketmaster.com. Dogfight, 7:30 p.m., repeats Aug. 5, The Brelby Playhouse, 7154 N. 58th Dr., Glendale, $25, $20 seniors/students/military, $17 children, 623282-2781, brelby.com. Dogfight is based on the Warner Bros. film and screenplay by Bob Comfort. On the eve of their deployment, three young Marines set out for one last crazy night.

Calendar ...continues on page 17 www.LovinLifeAfter50.com


Calendar of Events Calendar...continued from page 16 August 5 Saturday

Ethiopia Fest, 6:30 to 11 p.m., Doubletree by Hilton, 2100 S. Priest Dr., Tempe, $40, 480829-1939, cafelalibela.com, ethiopianfest.com, splashthat.com. Café Lalibela is celebrating its 21st anniversary by sharing Ethiopia’s cuisine, art and music with the Valley at Ethiopia Fest. The nation’s food is characterized by bold, colorful spices and is often vegetarian, and eaten by hand using a traditional Ethiopian bread called injera. Don McLean, 8 p.m., Talking Stick Resort, 9800 E. Talking Stick Way, Scottsdale, tickets start at $25, 480-850-7777, talkingstickresort.com. Prescott Antique Auto Club Watson Lake Show, 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., repeats Aug. 6, Watson Lake, 3101 N. State Route 89, Prescott, $5, paacaz.com. Karaoke Night, 6 to 9 p.m., Sunland Village Auditorium, 4601 E. Dolphin Ave., Mesa, $2 at the door, 480-832-9003.

August 6 Sunday

Prescott Antique Auto Club Watson Lake Show, 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., Watson Lake, 3101 N. State Route 89, Prescott, $5, paacaz.com.

August 7 Monday

George Clinton and Parliament Funkadelic, 6

p.m., Marquee Theatre, 730 N. Mill Ave., Tempe, $37$175, 480-829-0607, luckymanonline.com.

August 8 Tuesday

Arizona Diamondbacks vs. Los Angeles Dodgers, 6:40 p.m., repeats Aug. 9 and Aug. 10, Chase Field, 401 E. Jefferson St., Phoenix, $19-$275, arizona. diamondbacks.mlb.com. Over the Hill Gang Classic Car Show, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., Schnepf Farms, 24810 E. Rittenhouse Rd., Queen Creek, free, schnepffarms.com. Come check out hot rods, custom, muscle and classic cars, while partaking in raffles and listening to music. The event benefits Hospice of the Valley. Fiddler on a Hot Tin Roof, 12:10 p.m., repeats Aug. 9, Herberger Theater Center, 222 E. Monroe St., Phoenix, $6, 602-252-8497, http://bit.ly/2tlxCfW.

August 9 Wednesday

Grown-Ups Table, 6 p.m., Beckett’s Table, 3717 E. Indian School Rd., Phoenix, $45 plus gratuity, 602954-1700, beckettstable.com. The Grown-Ups Table returns to Beckett’s Table, which features a threecourse meal and drinks by Chef Justin Beckett enjoyed around the community table. Previous Grown-Ups Table menus have included Spanish tapas, Baja peninsula and Asian wok. Fiddler on a Hot Tin Roof, 12:10 p.m., Herberger Theater Center, 222 E. Monroe St., Phoenix, $6, 602252-8497, http://bit.ly/2tlxCfW.

August 10 Thursday

Scottsdale ArtWalk, 7 to 9 p.m., various locations in downtown Scottsdale, free, scottsdalegalleries. com. Restaurants, museums and free trolley

and/or horse-drawn carriage rides are available during ArtWalk to transport folks from numerous free parking areas throughout the Scottsdale Arts District and Scottsdale downtown. Locations include Main Street from Scottsdale Road west to Goldwater Boulevard, and on Marshall Way north of Indian School Road to Fifth Avenue.

August 11 Friday

Dennis DeYoung, 8 p.m., Mesa Arts Center’s Ikeda Theater, 1 E. Main St., Mesa, $35-$55, 480-644-6500, mesaartscenter.com. Legends of Song, 7:30 p.m., repeats Aug. 12 and Aug. 13, Theater Works, 10580 N. 83rd Dr., Peoria, $22, 623-815-7930, theaterworks.org/calendar/ legends-of-song/. In this trip down memory lane, award-winning entertainer and impressionist T.A. Burrows uses his vocal talents to recreate the distinctive sounds of nine incomparable artists. John Waite, 8 p.m., Talking Stick Resort, 9800 E. Talking Stick Way, Scottsdale, tickets start at $30, 480-850-7777, talkingstickresort.com.

August 12 Saturday

Rock ‘n’ Roll Dance, 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., RH Johnson Social Hall, 19803 N. RH Johnson Blvd., Sun City West, $6 members, $8 guests, 602-679-4220, rocknroll.scwclubs.com. DJ Kort Kurdi will spin the greatest hits from the 1950s to 1980s, complete with video. Bring your own refreshments; ice and cups will be provided. Wynonna and the Big Noise, 8 p.m., Talking Stick Resort, 9800 E. Talking Stick Way, Scottsdale, tickets start at $55, 480-850-7777, talkingstickresort.com.

August 13 Sunday

Steve Martin and Martin Short, 8 p.m., Comerica Theatre, 400 W. Washington St., Phoenix, tickets start at $55, 602-379-2800, 800-745-3000, comericatheatre.com. Wine Appreciation: Wine + Food Pairing, 5 to 6:30 p.m., LDV Wine Gallery, 6951 E. First St., Scottsdale, $35 per person, $65 per couple, 480-664-4822. Join LDV Winery for a gathering that explores wine and food pairings. The event is part of a monthly series of fun, interactive get-togethers to discuss “All About Wine.” Registration includes expert-led discussions, little bites and wine, and take-away materials. The cost includes wine tasting, nibbles and materials.

August 15 Tuesday

Deep Purple and Alice Cooper with Edgar Winter, 6:30 p.m., Ak-Chin Pavilion, 2121 N. 83rd Ave., Phoenix, tickets start at $15, 800-745-3000, ticketmaster.com.

August 16 Wednesday

National Active and Retired Federal Employee Association (NARFE) Chapter 1395 Meeting, 11 a.m. lunch, noon meeting, Brothers Family Restaurant, 8466 W. Peoria Ave., Peoria, charge for lunch, 623-935-4681, deb.at.narfe@gmail.com. Meetings are held on the third Wednesday of each month. All current and retired federal employees and spouses are invited.

August 17 Thursday

Herbie Hancock, 7:30 p.m., Mesa Arts Center’s Ikeda Theater, 1 E. Main St., Mesa, $38-$66, 480644-6500, mesaartscenter.com.

Calendar ...continues on page 18

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AUGUST 2017 |

17


Calendar of Events Calendar...continued from page 17 West Side Story, 7:30 p.m., repeats 7:30 p.m. Aug. 18, 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Aug. 19, 2 p.m. Aug. 20, Tempe Center for the Arts, 700 W. Rio Salado Pkwy., Tempe, $32-$42, scottsdalemusicaltheater. com.

August 18 Friday

Rock ‘n’ Roll Dance, 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., Palm Ridge Summit Hall, 13800 W. Deer Valley Dr., Sun City West, $6 members, $8 guests, 602-679-4220, rocknroll.scwclubs.com. DJ Kort Kurdi will spin the greatest hits from the 1970s to 1980s, complete with video. Bring your own refreshments; ice and cups will be provided. Downtown Chandler Art Walk, 6 to 10 p.m., Historic Downtown Chandler, free, 480-855-3599, chandlerartwalk.com.

August 19 Saturday

Rock ‘n’ Roll Dance, 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., Palm Ridge Summit Hall, 13800 W. Deer Valley Dr., Sun City West, $6 members, $8 guests, 602-679-4220, rocknroll.scwclubs.com. DJ Kort Kurdi will spin the greatest hits from the 1950s to 1960s, complete with video. Bring your own refreshments; ice and cups will be provided. Micky Dolenz with Jam Now, 8 p.m., Marquee Theatre, 730 N. Mill Ave., Tempe, $42-$65, 480-8290607, luckymanonline.com. Table Tennis Tournament, 10:30 a.m., Via Linda Senior Center, 10440 E. Via Linda, Scottsdale, space is limited and registration is required, 480-312-5810. This year’s tournament will have recreational and competitive levels of play. Karaoke Night, 6 to 9 p.m., Sunland Village Auditorium, 4601 E. Dolphin Ave., Mesa, $2 at the door, 480-832-9003.

August 20 Sunday

Opera and Gelato Film Fest: Aida, 2 p.m., Arizona Opera Center Black Box, 1636 N. Central Ave, Phoenix, free, reservations required, 602-2667464, azopera.org.

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August 22 Tuesday

Maceo Parker, 7 and 9 p.m., Musical Instrument Museum, 4725 E. Mayo Blvd., Phoenix, $38.50$48.50, mim.org.

August 23 Wednesday

Indulge! It’s National Sponge Cake Day!

August 24 Thursday

Foreigner with Cheap Trick and Jason Bonham’s Led Zeppelin Experience, 7 p.m., Ak-Chin Pavilion, 2121 N. 83rd Ave., Phoenix, tickets start at $21.95, 602-254-7200, 800-745-3000, ticketmaster.com. The Australian Pink Floyd Show, 8 p.m., Talking Stick Resort, 9800 E. Talking Stick Way, Scottsdale, tickets start at $55, 480-850-7777, talkingstickresort.com.

August 25 Friday

August 28 Monday

Fitz’s Supper Club: The Grand Illusion, 7 p.m., Dominick’s Steakhouse, Scottsdale Quarter, 15169 N. Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale, see website for pricing, larryfitzgerald.com. Walter Payton NFL Man of the Year Larry Fitzgerald will bring magicians, mentalists and illusionists, not to mention some of his celebrity friends, to Dominick’s Steakhouse for a night of revelry and fundraising. The dinner benefits the Larry Fitzgerald First Down Fund. For more than a decade, the organization has supported kids and their families with gifts of time, money and special resources through numerous associations across the country. Dessert Speaker Series, 6 p.m., Sunland Village Auditorium, 4601 E. Dolphin Ave., Mesa, $4 in advance only, 480-832-9003. Bill Harrison is scheduled to speak at the event, which includes dessert, coffee and talk.

August 2 Wednesday

Breast Cancer Support Group, 6 to 7:30 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 685 S. Dobson Rd., Chandler, free, registration required, 602-588-4367, ironwoodcrc.com. Heartfulness Meditation, 12:30 to 1 p.m., repeats Aug. 16, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 5810 W. Beverly Ln., Glendale, free, registration required, 602-588-4367, ironwoodcrc.com. Chair Yoga, 10 to 11 a.m. Wednesdays, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 685 S. Dobson Dr., Chandler, free, registration required, 480-3404013, ironwoodcrc.com. Tai Chi, 1 to 2 p.m., repeats Aug. 16, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 5810 W. Beverly Ln., Glendale, free, registration required, 602-5884367, ironwoodcrc.com.

Yestival with Yes, Todd Rundgren and Carl Palmer, 7 p.m., 440 N. 32nd St., Phoenix, $54.50$130, 602-267-1600, celebritytheatre.com. The show will feature greatest hits from Yes’ studio albums up to 1980.

August 29 Tuesday

Pat Benatar and Neil Giraldo with Toto, 7:30 p.m., Comerica Theatre, 400 W. Washington St., Phoenix, tickets start at $48.50, 602-379-2800, 800-745-3000, comericatheatre.com.

Yoga for Recovery, 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesdays, HonorHealth Deer Valley Medical Center, Medical Building 1, 19841 N. 27th Ave., Suite 400, Phoenix, free, registration required, 623-780-4673, honorhealth.com/events.

Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat, show times vary through Oct. 7, Hale Centre Theatre, 50 W. Page Ave., Gilbert, $18-$32, 480-497-1181, haletheatrearizona.com.

August 30 Wednesday

August 3 Thursday

Made: A Local Market, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., repeats 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Aug. 26, Mesa Convention Center, 263 N. Center St., Mesa, madelocalmarkets.com. Join the group for workshops and a local handcrafted marketplace.

August 31 Thursday

August 26 Saturday

Rock ‘n’ Roll Dances, 6:30 to 9:30 p.m., RH Johnson Social Hall, 19803 N. RH Johnson Blvd, Sun City West, $6 members, $8 guests, 602-679-4220, rocknroll.scwclubs.com. DJ Kort Kurdi spins the greatest hits from the 1950s to 1980s. Jerry Jeff Walker, 8 p.m., Talking Stick Resort, 9800 E. Talking Stick Way, Scottsdale, tickets start at $30, 480-850-7777, talkingstickresort.com. The Fixx, 7:30 p.m., repeats 7 p.m. Aug. 27, Musical Instrument Museum, 4725 E. Mayo Blvd., Phoenix, $33.50-$43.50, mim.org.

August 27 Sunday

The Fixx, 7 p.m., Musical Instrument Museum, 4725 E. Mayo Blvd., Phoenix, $33.50-$43.50, mim.org.

| AUGUST 2017

Ottmar Liebert, 7 p.m., repeats Aug. 31, Musical Instrument Museum, 4725 E. Mayo Blvd., Phoenix, $43.50-$48.50, mim.org. ASU Football: ASU vs. New Mexico State, 7:30 p.m., Sun Devil Stadium, 500 E. Veterans Way, Tempe, visit website for ticket information, 480965-5812, thesundevils.com. Ottmar Liebert, 7 p.m., Musical Instrument Museum, 4725 E. Mayo Blvd., Phoenix, $43.50$48.50, mim.org.

Support Groups August 1 Tuesday

Tai Chi with Roxanne Reynolds, 4:30 to 5:15 p.m. Tuesdays, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 685 S. Dobson Rd., Chandler, free, registration required, 480-340-4013, ironwoodcrc.com. Heart of a Woman Educational Support Group, 10 to 11 a.m., HonorHealth Scottsdale Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Brady Conference Center, Scottsdale, free, registration required, 623580-5800, honorhealth.com/events.

Heartfulness Meditation, 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. Thursdays, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 685 S. Dobson Rd., Chandler, free, registration required, 480-340-4013, ironwoodcrc.com. Meditation for Healing, 6 to 7 p.m., repeats Aug. 17, HonorHealth Deer Valley Medical Center, Medical Building 1, 19841 N. 27th Ave., Suite 400, Phoenix, free, 623-780-4673, honorhealth.com/events.

August 4 Friday

Chair Yoga, 1 to 2 p.m., repeats Aug. 18, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 5810 W. Beverly Ln., Glendale, free, registration required, 602-5884367, ironwoodcrc.com. Chair Pilates, 2 to 3 p.m., repeats Aug. 18, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 8880 E. Desert Cove Ave., Scottsdale, free, registration required, 602588-4367, ironwoodcrc.com.

August 5 Saturday

Caregiver Support Group, 10 a.m. to noon, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 5810 W. Beverly Ln., Glendale, free, registration required, 602-588-4367, ironwoodcrc.com.

Calendar ...continues on page 19

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Calendar of Events Calendar...continued from page 18 Is Weight Loss Surgery Right for You?, 10 a.m. to noon, repeats Aug. 19, HonorHealth Scottsdale Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Brady Conference Center, Scottsdale, registration required, 623-580-5800, honorhealth.com/events.

August 6 Sunday

On this day in 1956, the Voting Rights Act became law in the United States.

August 7 Monday

Look Good Feel Better, 4 to 6 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 685 S. Dobson Dr., Chandler, free, registration required, 1-800-2272345.

August 8 Tuesday

Color Me Calm, 1 to 2:30 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 8880 E. Desert Cove Ave., Scottsdale, free, registration required, 602-5884367, ironwoodcrc.com. Grief Support Group, 3 to 4:30 p.m., repeats Aug. 22, HonorHealth Virginia G. Piper Cancer Center, 10460 N. 92nd St., first floor conference room, Scottsdale, free, registration required, 480-3231321, honorhealth.com/cancer.

August 9 Wednesday

Cancer Support Group, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., repeats Aug. 23, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 5810 W. Beverly Ln., Glendale, free, registration required, 602-588-4367, ironwoodcrc.com. Spirituality Group, 4 to 5 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 6111 E. Arbor Ave., Mesa, free, registration required, 480-340-4013, ironwoodcrc. com. Breast Cancer Support Group, noon to 1:30 p.m., HonorHealth Virginia G. Piper Cancer Center, 10460 N. 92nd St., Suite 301, Scottsdale, free, registration required, 480-323-1321, honorhealth.com/cancer. Yoga for Recovery, 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesdays, HonorHealth Deer Valley Medical Center, Medical Building 1, 19841 N. 27th Ave., Suite 400, Phoenix, free, registration required, 623-780-4673, honorhealth.com/events.

August 10 Thursday

Lymphoma Support Group, 6 to 8 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 8880 E. Desert Cove Ave., Scottsdale, free, registration required, 602588-4367, ironwoodcrc.com. Colorectal Cancer Support Group, 4 to 5:30 p.m., HonorHealth Virginia G. Piper Cancer Center, 10460 N. 92nd St., Suite 301, Scottsdale, free, registration required, 480-323-1321, honorhealth.com/cancer. Breast Cancer Support Group, 6 to 8 p.m., repeats Aug. 24, HonorHealth Breast Health and Research Center, 19636 N. 27th Ave., Suite 205, Phoenix, registration required, 623-780-4673, honorhealth.com/cancer.

www.LovinLifeAfter50.com

August 11 Friday

Chair Yoga, 2 to 3 p.m., repeats Aug. 25, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 8880 E. Desert Cove Ave., Scottsdale, free, registration required, 602588-4367, ironwoodcrc.com.

(480) 892-9411

Excellence is our family standard Locally owned and family operated

Caregiver Connect, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., Lord of Life Lutheran Church, 13724 W. Meeker Blvd., Sun City West, free, registration required, 623584-4999. The event provides family caregivers with education and guidance that will assist and support them. Expert presenters, free breakfast provided by Birt’s Bistro and free resources from numerous community senior care vendors will be featured.

August 12 Saturday

Breast Cancer Support Group, 10 a.m. to noon, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 8880 E. Desert Cove Ave., Scottsdale, free, registration required, 602-588-4367, ironwoodcrc.com.

August 13 Sunday

Prostate Cancer Support Group (USTOO), 7 to 9 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 685 S. Dobson Dr., Chandler, free, registration required, 480-340-4013, ironwoodcrc.com.

August 14 Monday

Look Good Feel Better, 4 to 6 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 8880 E. Desert Cove Ave., Scottsdale, free, registration required, 1-800227-2345. Pancreatic Cancer Support Group, 4 to 5:30 p.m., HonorHealth Virginia G. Piper Cancer Center, 10460 N. 92nd St., first floor conference room, Scottsdale, free, registration required, 480-3231321, honorhealth.com/cancer.

August 15 Tuesday

Rhythm and Relaxation, 6 to 7 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 8880 E. Desert Cove Ave., Scottsdale, free, registration required, 602588-4367, ironwoodcrc.com. Heart Health Evaluations, 7:30 to 11:30 a.m., HonorHealth Scottsdale Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Diagnostic Center, Scottsdale, $20, registration required, 623-580-5800, honorhealth. com/events. GYN Cancer Support Group, 4 to 5:30 p.m., HonorHealth Virginia G. Piper Cancer Center, 10460 N. 92nd St., Suite 301, Scottsdale, free, registration required, 480-323-1321, honorhealth.com/cancer.

August 16 Wednesday

Cooking Demonstration, 3 to 4 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 10585 N. 114th St., Suite 401, Scottsdale, free, registration required, 480-314-6677, ironwoodcrc.com. Bone Density Screenings, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., HonorHealth Scottsdale Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Diagnostic Center, Scottsdale, $20, registration required, 623-580-5800, honorhealth. com/events. Spirituality Group, 5:30 to 7 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 5810 W. Beverly Ln., Glendale, free, registration required, 602-5884367, ironwoodcrc.com.

Calendar ...continues on page 20 AUGUST 2017 |

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Let the experienced staff of Lakeshore Mortuary help plan for the Celebration of a Lifetime Lakeshore Mortuary

A Funeral is not a day in a Lifetime, it is a Lifetime in a day.

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A LEADER IN NEUROREHABILITATION for East Valley

HealthSouth East Valley Rehabilitation Hospital specializes in comprehensive rehabilitation for many conditions such as neurological impairments resulting from an illness, accident or surgery. Neuro conditions we provide intensive therapy programs for using advanced technologies and expert care include:

• Brain injury Multiple sclerosis bilitation•Hospital • Parkinson’s disease

Spirituality Group, 5:30 to 7 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 685 S. Dobson Rd., Chandler, free, registration required, 480-3405013, ironwoodcrc.com. Caregiver and Family Support Group, 4:30 to 5:30 p.m., HonorHealth Virginia G. Piper Cancer Center, 10460 N. 92nd St., Suite 301, Scottsdale, free, registration required, 480-323-1321, honorhealth. com/cancer. Yoga for Recovery, 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesdays, HonorHealth Deer Valley Medical Center, Medical Building 1, 19841 N. 27th Ave., Suite 400, Phoenix, free, registration required, 623-780-4673, honorhealth.com/events.

August 17 Thursday

Book Review and Discussion of “The Cancer Effect” by Claudia Bretzing, 6:30 to 7:30 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 685 S. Dobson Rd., Chandler, free, registration required, 480-340-4013, ironwoodcrc.com.

• Spinal cord injury • Stroke • Trauma

rehabilitation for rological To impairments help patients regain independence, they receive dent or surgery. their own neurorehabilitation team and a personalized ntensiveprogram therapyto improve motor skills, cognition, balance, memory, technologies anddaily living tasks and language skills. Learn more about our neurorehabilitation

• Spinal cord injuryby calling 480 567-0350 or program • Stroke visiting healthsoutheastvalley.com • Trauma

endence, they receive team and a personalized lls, cognition, balance, d language skills.

Calendar...continued from page 19

Osteoporosis Support and Education Group, 9 to 10 a.m., HonorHealth Scottsdale Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Brady Conference Center, Scottsdale, free, 623-580-5800, honorhealth.com/events.

R IN EHABILITATION

ley

Calendar of Events

Paradise Valley Ostomy Support Group, 12:30 p.m., La Casa de Cristo Lutheran Church, 6300 E. Bell Rd., Scottsdale, free, 480-644-6890. At the meeting, participants can enjoy a light lunch at 12:30 p.m., followed by a speaker at 1 p.m. SPOHNC—Oral, Head and Neck Cancer Support Group, 6:30 to 8 p.m., HonorHealth Virginia G. Piper Cancer Center, 10460 N. 92nd St., first floor conference room, Scottsdale, free, registration required, 480-323-3214, honorhealth.com/cancer.

Look Good Feel Better, 4 to 6 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 5810 W. Beverly Ln., Glendale, free, registration required, 1-800-2272345. Head and Neck Cancer Group, 3 to 4:30 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 685 S. Dobson Rd., Chandler, free, registration required, 480-340-4013, ironwoodcrc.com.

August 22 Tuesday

Grief Support Group, 3 to 4:30 p.m., HonorHealth Virginia G. Piper Cancer Center, 10460 N. 92nd St., first floor conference room, Scottsdale, free, registration required, 480-323-1321, honorhealth. com/cancer.

August 23 Wednesday

Metastatic Cancer Support Group, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 685 S. Dobson Dr., Chandler, free, registration required, 480-3404013, ironwoodcrc.com. Yoga for Recovery, 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesdays, HonorHealth Deer Valley Medical Center, Medical Building 1, 19841 N. 27th Ave., Suite 400, Phoenix, free, registration required, 623-780-4673, honorhealth.com/events.

August 24 Thursday

Breast Cancer Support Group, 6 to 8 p.m., HonorHealth Breast Health and Research Center, 19636 N. 27th Ave., Suite 205, Phoenix, registration required, 623-780-4673, honorhealth.com/cancer.

August 25 Friday

Chair Yoga, 2 to 3 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 8880 E. Desert Cove Ave., Scottsdale, free, registration required, 602-5884367, ironwoodcrc.com.

August 27 Sunday

Meditation for Healing, 6 to 7 p.m., HonorHealth Deer Valley Medical Center, Medical Building 1, 19841 N. 27th Ave., Suite 400, Phoenix, free, 623780-4673, honorhealth.com/events.

Multiple Myeloma Cancer Support Group, 1 to 2:30 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 8880 E. Desert Cove Ave., Scottsdale, free, registration required, 602-588-4367, ironwoodcrc. com.

August 18 Friday

August 28 Monday

Chair Pilates, 2 to 3 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 8880 E. Desert Cove Ave., Scottsdale, free, registration required, 602-5884367, ironwoodcrc.com.

August 30 Wednesday

August 19 Saturday

Breast Cancer Support Group, 10 a.m. to noon, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 5810 W. Beverly Ln., Glendale, free, registration required, 602-588-4367, ironwoodcrc.com.

5652 E. Baseline Road • Mesa, AZ 85206 ©2016:HealthSouth Corporation:1275497-02

20

August 21 Monday

Chair Yoga, 1 to 2 p.m., Ironwood Cancer and Survivor Group, 6 to 7:30 p.m., Ironwood 5652 E. Baseline Road • Mesa, AZ 85206 Research Centers, 5810 W. Beverly Ln., Glendale, Cancer and Research Centers, 685 S. Dobson Rd., free, registration required, 602-588-4367, Chandler, free, registration required, 480-340©2016:HealthSouth Corporation:1275497-02 ironwoodcrc.com. 4013, ironwoodcrc.com.

neurorehabilitation 0 567-0350 or stvalley.com

5206

Is Weight Loss Surgery Right for You?, 10 a.m. to noon, HonorHealth Scottsdale Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Brady Conference Center, Scottsdale, registration required, 623-5805800, honorhealth.com/events.

| AUGUST 2017

Caregiver Support Group, 10 a.m. to noon, Ironwood Cancer and Research Centers, 685 S. Dobson Dr., Chandler, free, registration required, ©2016:HealthSouth Corporation:1275497-02 480-340-4013, ironwoodcrc.com.

Cholesterol and Glucose Screenings, 7:30 to 11:30 a.m., HonorHealth Scottsdale Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Diagnostic Center, Scottsdale, $15, registration required, 623-5805800, honorhealth.com/events. Yoga for Recovery, 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesdays, HonorHealth Deer Valley Medical Center, Medical Building 1, 19841 N. 27th Ave., Suite 400, Phoenix, free, registration required, 623-780-4673, honorhealth.com/events.

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Tony Role

Jeremy Jason Sartin puts on his boogie shoes for Saturday Night Fever BY CARSON MLNARIK Performing has always been a passion for Jeremy Jason Sartin. His mother would say he got his start after the power went out when he was 5. “I proceeded to light candles and put on a 45-minute singing, dancing and comedy routine,” Sartin says, laughing. “At the end of it, I said ‘thank you’ and bowed and went up to my room.” The Nashville-born Sartin plays Tony Manero in Arizona Broadway Theatre’s

“On the stage, you’re performing to a live audience, and they have their own reactions, sometimes surprising reactions that you didn’t even expect.” production of Saturday Night Fever, which continues through August 20. He is no stranger to the Arizona Broadway Theatre stage – he’s performed in its All Shook Up, Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat and Cats. While he now lives in New York, where the humidity rivals Arizona’s dry heat, he says his past shows in the Valley have prepared him for the Sonoran Desert’s intense summer. “I’ve kind of learned how to negotiate the heat out here,” Sartin says. “I know how to dodge it and stay in the air conditioning and run from your house to the car.” He has performed in musicals and plays across the world; however, this is his first time starring in the musical based on the classic John Travolta movie. It tells the story of Manero, a young man in Brooklyn who feels trapped. He turns to the discotheque each week, where he is king of the dance floor and admired

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by many, including Stephanie, another young dancer. The musical follows the same soundtrack that made the film a hit, featuring songs like “If I Can’t Have You,” “Disco Inferno” and “Stayin’ Alive” – but with a twist. “It’s the traditional Bee Gees songs you know, but they’ve been put on to the characters and really made to tell their story,” Sartin says. “I think it’s a very cool new way to see the piece.” Being a John Travolta and Bee Gees fan, Sartin says finding his inner disco dancer wasn’t a complete stretch. It wasn’t an easy feat, though, to sing and dance each night during the emotional story. “It’s become kind of a triple-threat role,”

Fever...continued on page 24

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Trivia Contest

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Admit it: You’re happy. Go ahead. I’ll wait. There. See how easy it was? And appropriate, because August is “Admit You Are Happy Month”! It’s also “National Back to School Month,” but just how those two can occupy the same 31 days vexes me to no end. By the way, if you’re wondering why August has 31 days instead of 30, blame the month’s namesake, Augustus Caesar. The month was originally called “Sextilis,” which means simply “sixth” (the Roman year began with the month of March) and it contained 30 days. But when the month preceding it was named after Augustus’ adoptive father, Julius Caesar (“July”), Augustus demanded his own month, and further insisted it contain as many days

as dad’s. The day was reportedly stolen from February. August is National Picnic Month and National Eye Exam Month. August 6 is National Mustard Day, possibly because it was on Aug. 6, 1762 that the Earl of Sandwich asked a servant to bring him a piece of meat between two slices of bread. He was in the middle of a heated card game at the time and didn’t wish to stop and mess with forks and knives. Next time you bite into a Reuben, remember: You have gambling to thank. August is the birth month of Davy Crockett, Annie Oakley, Michael Jackson, Bill Clinton and Mother Teresa – in other words, fighters, saints, singers and dancers (of the political sort).

August Questions:

3

1

2

If you’re really bad at writing poetry, which day of August is all yours? What sales-shattering jazz album by which artist was released in August 1959?

Contest Prizes:

For August, two readers in Tucson and two readers in Phoenix will win a certificate for a one-night stay at InnSuites.

July Winners:

The winners each received a one-night stay at InnSuites.

PHOENIX Elmer Manaois Linda Wolfe

TUCSON Liesel Reichert Dominic Coppola

To Enter:

On a sheet of paper, list the correct answers in order 1 through 5. Include your full name, mailing address, phone number and email address if available.

Mail your trivia contest entry to: Lovin’ Life After 50 Attn: Trivia Contest 1620 W. Fountainhead Pkwy., #219 Tempe, AZ 85282

Or email your entry to: trivia@lovinlife.com

The deadline for entry is the 15th of each month. Please be sure to have your entry postmarked by that date. If you’re a winner in our drawing, we’ll contact you via telephone.

4 5

What important event in the history of publishing happened in August of 1456? What city was liberated on August 25, 1944? The country of Hungary was founded on what day and year?

July Answers: 1 July is one of Phoenix’s hottest

months, with an average daily high of 106.6 Fahrenheit. What is the average low temperature for Phoenix in July, rounded down to the nearest degree? 83

2 One magical July day in Phoenix, the

high was an incredibly low 79 degrees. What day and year did that miracle happen? JULY 1, 1911

3 The Declaration of Independence was

formally adopted on July 4, 1776, but on what day was it first revealed to the people in a public reading? JULY 8

4 July is the seventh month of our year,

but it was the fifth month of the Roman year, which called it by another name prior to Julius Caesar’s assassination. What was that name? QUINTILIS

5 More U.S. presidents have died in July

than in any other month. How many do they number? SEVEN

GOOD LUCK! 22

| AUGUST 2017

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WORKSHOP OVERVIEW BY SECTION MODULE 1

MODULE 5

MODULE 2

MODULE 6

RETIREMENT PLANNING

ESTATE PLANNING / LONG TERM CARE

MODULE 3

MODULE 7

TIME FOR A NEW MODEL

RETIREMENT TAX STARTEGIES

MODULE 4

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All Maricopa County Community Colleges and Arizona State University are not affiliated with the event and should not be contacted regarding the program. Investment advisory services are offered through Brookstone Capital Management, LLC, an SEC Registered Investment Advisor. URA Group is not affiliated with Brookstone Capital Management.

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AUGUST 2017 |

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New York resident Sartin says his past shows in the Valley have prepared him for the summer heat. (Special to LLAF)

Fever...continued from page 21 Sartin says. “You have to do everything, so it’s exciting to play, for sure.” Before he goes out as Manero, Sartin’s preshow ritual involves physical and vocal warmups, tongue twisters and speech practice to “get into” his Brooklyn dialect.

“It’s the traditional Bee Gees songs you know, but they’ve been put on to the characters and really made to tell their story.” While he loves the dance numbers and fun music, the acting scenes in between are his favorite part. “There’s a progression (between Stephanie and Manero) you see from the beginning of the show to the end,” Sartin says. “She’s not the nicest to him in the beginning, but we get to see quite a

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| AUGUST 2017

journey of their two lives together.” It’s a journey that Sartin says might hit audiences when they’re not expecting it – leading them to dance in their seats at some points and pulling their heart strings at others. It’s all part of the beauty that is live theater. “On the stage, you’re performing to a live audience, and they have their own reactions, sometimes surprising reactions that you didn’t even expect,” Sartin says. “That’s kind of amazing when you can feel an audience giving energy back – that’s really what made me fall in love with theater.”

FOR MORE INFO

What: Saturday Night Fever When: Now through Sunday, August 20. Times vary. Where: Arizona Broadway Theatre, 7701 W. Paradise Lane, Peoria Cost: $38.50-$95 Info: azbroadway.org

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Stressing Diversity

Guitarist Ana Popovic finds musical freedom BY TRACY HECK Ana Popovic has been referred to as “one of the greatest six-string slingers of our time” and she tries to live up to those expectations with her intense live shows. “At the end of the day, I play the shows for me and my band first,” says Popovic, who will bring her show to the Musical Instrument Museum on Sunday, September 3. “We try to have fun with what we do and we try to go deep and forget about everything else. It’s about being one with our instruments and one as a band. Hopefully that translates over to the audience.” Born in Belgrade, Serbia, Popovic grew up in a house filled with music. With a diverse collection of influences, Popovic swirls them in her performances and in her recorded tracks. Last year, Popovic took that diversity to a new level when she released her threealbum collection, Trilogy, which features 23 tracks divided among funk, rock/blues and jazz discs. She says she was surprised by the enthusiastic response the release received. “When it came out, it was at the same time as a lot of incredible records, and there we were in the Top 10 blues records alongside those albums from high-end record companies,” Popovic says. “I mean, you could have gotten the new Eric Clapton record for $9 or Trilogy for $20 and people were out there buying

it. I guess that proves that people will still go in and buy stuff if they believe it’s good. “This project was something that I always had a mind to do, and I thought it was the right time to do it,” she adds. “A lot of people told me that it was just past its time and that nobody wants volume anymore. They want a song or a small EP of songs. The fact that it did so well proved to be to the contrary and it’s a wonderful thing.” Although there are some mainstays in Popovic’s shows, she likes to leave some room open for improvisation. She likes to get a handle on the crowd first. “Sometimes I will come to a show and look out and say, ‘This is a biker crowd’ or ‘This is a blues crowd.’ Oftentimes, they surprise you. You would assume fans at a jazz festival want a classic jazz sound, but on the contrary, they are jumping to these blues shuffle tunes and the real rock tunes. It’s wonderful to get that mix of different audiences.”

FOR MORE INFO

What: Ana Popovic When: 7 p.m. Sunday, September 3 Where: Musical Instrument Museum, 4725 E. Mayo Boulevard, Phoenix Cost: $30-$40 Info: 480.478.6000, mim.org

Ana Popovic likes to leave room for improvisation at her shows. (Photo by Jack Moutaillier)

Coming next month:

READY FOR RV-ING? Issue

Publishing September 2017 • The ABCs of RVs A, B, B+, C and how to choose • How big is too big – and how small is too small? Most people find 26 feet too small for anything but comfort travel in a true “B.” Did you know you can’t set up in a national park with a rig that is more than 32 feet long? Is it true most happy RVers buy bigger rigs every couple of years? • New Innovations/Options Decks, fireplaces, extra baths, outdoor showers, outdoor kitchens. What you need to know about associations, clubs • Coach vs. Trailers, 5th Wheels, Toy Haulers • Checklist box Taxes, storage, HOA concerns, gas mileage, “toads” and more

Is your business a fit for the Ready for RV-ing? Issue?

Call us at (480) 898-6500 to place an ad today!

Ana Popovic performs at the Piacenza Blues Festival in 2010. (Photo courtesy of Giulia Ciappa)

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Delivering qualified, cost-effective leads since 1979 AUGUST 2017 |

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Tinseltown Talks Singer Judy Collins still vocal on social issues

At 78, Judy Collins still performs around 120 shows a year. (Photo courtesy of Judy Collins)

BY NICK THOMAS Whether she’s singing her own words or those penned by others, pop/folk singer Judy Collins has been drawing audiences for over 50 years with her sublime vocal talent. But it almost never happened. “I contracted polio as a child and later tuberculosis when I was in my early 20s,” recalls Collins from her home in New York. “My schoolteachers told me I was suffering from growing pains, but when I was around 11 and the pain became severe, I went to the doctor, who said I had polio. Of course, there was an epidemic throughout the country when this happened in 1950 and I spent two months in hospital. Fortunately, there were no lasting effects.” At 23, while performing in Tucson, she was diagnosed with tuberculosis and quarantined for a month before being transferred to a Denver hospital that specialized in treating patients with

TB. “I got the right cocktail of drugs, so I was very lucky to have survived all that illness,” she says. She would go on to brighten the world with more than 50 albums that included pop hits such as “Send in the Clowns” and “Both Sides Now.” But her own adult world was overshadowed by a darker side, as she dealt with eating disorders, alcoholism, and the death of her only son, who committed suicide in 1992 at age 33. Battling back again from those desperate challenges, Collins used her voice to promote awareness about social problems including suicide and mental health issues. “Music is especially an all-embracing art form,” she says. “I’ve written songs about love and war, as well as the loss of my son. In 2007, I published a book about surviving tragedy – The Seven T’s: Finding Hope and Healing in the Wake of Tragedy

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“I still have a lot to say about mental health issues. We have to keep raising awareness in order to get the stigma removed so that people are not afraid to talk about their problems.” – which helped me and hopefully others facing similar ordeals.” In April, she was recognized with the 2017 Beatrice Stern Media Award, given by Didi Hirsch Mental Health Services, a leading provider of services since 1942 for people dealing with mental health and substance abuse issues (see didihirsch. org). “I’m pleased for the honor, but I still have a lot to say about mental health issues,” Collins says. “We have to keep raising awareness in order to get the

stigma removed so that people are not afraid to talk about their problems.” Collins, who turned 78 in May, continues to perform on the road. “This summer I’m going on a tour with Stephen Stills for four or five months and I still do around 120 shows a year,” she notes (see judycollins.com for dates). “And my latest book, Cravings: How I Conquered Food, was released this year. I’ve survived a lot of difficulties, but I’m still hanging in there!”

Judy Collins performing with Tom (left) and Dick Smothers on their television program The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour in 1967.

(Photo courtesy of CBS Television)

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| AUGUST 2017

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Puzzle page brought to you by Humana is a Medicare Advantage HMO, PPO and PFFS organization and a stand-alone prescription drug plan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in any Humana plan depends on contract renewal.

Puzzles

EVEN EXCHANGE

by Donna Pettman

ANSWERS ON PAGE 47

ACROSS 1 5 9 12 13 14 15 17 18 19 21 24 25 26 30 31 32 33 35 36 37 38

Finished Western state Netflix rental Tragic Mexican money Debtor’s letters Doctor’s determination Beer cousin Family member Hides Contribute to the mix “Galloping dominoes” Destroy Proud birds Alias (abbr.) “No man is an island” writer Cravat Maryland city Ill will Wedding shower? Breakfast side dish Part of Hispaniola

40 Tolerate 42 Recede 43 Vibrating part of a microphone 48 Honest politician 49 Rim 50 Always 51 — Moines 52 American Beauty, e.g. 53 Allows

DOWN 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 16

Peculiar Half of XIV Historic period Get back “Once — a time ...” Examination “— was saying, ...” Monastery lodging Science of logic Chevrolet model Union payment Sister

20 21 22 23 24 26 27 28 29 31 34 35 37 38 39 40 41 44 45 46 47

“Foucault’s Pendulum” author Bedouin Noble title Bitter speeches Carvey or Delany Sit for a shot Conclusion Narc’s measure Spotted Tie-breaking game, e.g. Smack Keg “Humbug!” Leader French cleric Luggage Duel tool Altar affirmative Rd. Understand Wife’s address

Each numbered row contains two clues and two answers. The two answers differ from each other by only one letter, which has already been inserted. For example, if you exchange the A from MASTER for an I, you get MISTER. Do not change the order of the letters.

SUDOKU TIME

Place a number in the empty boxes in such a way that each row across, each column down and each small 9-box square contains all of the numbers from one to nine.

DIFFICULTY THIS MONTH ★

★ Moderate ★★ Challenging ★★★ HOO BOY!

GO FIGURE! by Linda Thistle

The idea of Go Figure is to arrive at the figures given at the bottom and right-hand columns of the diagram by following the arithmetic signs in the order they are given (that is, from left to right and top to bottom). Use only the numbers below the diagram to complete its blank quares and use each of the nine numbers only once.

DIFFICULTY THIS MONTH ★

★ Moderate ★★ Difficult ★★★ GO FIGURE!

SCRAMBLERS Unscramble the letters within each rectangle to form four ordinary words. Then rearrange the boxed letters to form the mystery word, which will complete the gag!

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AUGUST 2017 |

27


Travel Exploring the Enchanting

Emerald Isle BY ED BOITANO

Photos courtesy of Tourism Ireland

My wife and I woke up to the smell of rich morning coffee. It was to be part of breakfast on our first day in Ireland, always a dream in itself. It has been said that all Irish homes become a bed and breakfast during the summer, and this Donegal County cottage with one spare room was no exception. The owners fussed over us at the table as we enjoyed a full Irish breakfast: eggs, bacon, sausages, black and white pudding, fried potatoes and homemade rolls with

Slieve League Cliffs is the highest point in Ireland.

marmalade. They told us of the area’s attractions and educated us on the Irish Potato Famine, which began in 1845 and lasted for

six years, killing over a million men, women and children and causing another million to flee the country. The owner explained how the Irish in the countryside began to live off wild blackberries, nettles, turnips, old cabbage leaves, edible seaweed, shellfish, roots, roadside weeds and, toward the end of the famine, even green grass. The owner added you could always identify famine victims by the green grass stains around their mouths. Later, we followed his instructions and found a famine pot in the middle of a forest, where locals placed food for the displaced victims. It felt like we were living history. We had already anticipated a trip to Slieve League Cliffs on the west coast of Donegal, and were not disappointed once we arrived. Towering over 2,000 feet from the Atlantic Ocean, it is one of the highest sea cliffs in Europe. Its visual splendor gets my vote for the most striking site in Ireland. We headed down the road to County Sligo for a pilgrimage to the gravesite of our favorite poet, WB Yeats (1865-1939), and soon found ourselves stuck in the car, avoiding a heavy downpour. We didn’t mind. We read Yeats and listened to an Altan CD, our favorite

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traditional Irish music group, while gazing in awe at the stunning green countryside. We read where the lyrical name Emerald Isle arrived from William Drennan in his poem “When Erin First Rose” in 1795. Once the weather cleared, we stumbled upon Carrowmore Megalithic Cemetery, the largest burial site of Megalithic tombs in Ireland. Built around 4600-3900 BC, the site is characterized by massive polished stones. To this day, no one knows who these people were and how they were able to move such mammoth rocks. We both could feel the power of the setting and something came over us; before we knew it, we were renewing our wedding vows. After a Sunday pub meal of lamb, potatoes and Guinness, we found another B&B, where (once again) we were the only guests. We wanted to take the owner home with us, and to this day remain in contact. The next day, it was a drive through the sweeping Connemara in County Mayo, a place Charles Dickens

A massive Dolomite burial site in the Burren

Kilcredaun Holy Well

ing that Ireland is the most welcoming nation on the globe. It was pitch black when we arrived at our next bed and breakfast accommodations. But where were we? In the morning, with the blazing sun illuminating this piece of paradise, we realized our B&B was nestled on the banks of a breathtaking fjord. We were in the town of Liane, where the film The Field (1990) was made. In one of the local pubs, a huge painting of the film’s star, Richard Harris (RIP 2002), hangs above the fireplace. Eventually, we made it down to the musical town of Doolin, a coastal fishing village in County Clare on the Atlantic coast. Coined the traditional music capital of Ireland, this was for us an adult Disneyland. Three pubs specialized in Irish session music each night. We joined in with locals and like-minded tourists for big pub meals of lamb and potatoes or bacon and cabbage, and then nursed pints of Guinness as we listened to reels, jigs and haunting ballads, many about the famine and emigration. Our daytimes were spent on trips to the Aran Islands, a landscape that once consisted of solid lime-

(1812-1870) once described as a place of “terrible beauty.” We pulled off the road to study a famine trail known as the Doolough Tragedy of 1849. Hundreds of destitute and starving people staggered through horrendous weather for 15 miles to a manor’s house in the hope of food, only to be turned away. Later, people found corpses by the side of the road with grass in their mouths. Once a year, a famine walk takes place on the trail to commemorate the victims. As we departed down the road, we both commented that we had not seen a single car for over half an hour. A second later there was a rumbling on the road. We had a flat, not A famine walk in the Connemara, which pays homage to the unusual on these rock-strewn Doolough Tragedy of 1849 Irish roads. Faced with having stone rock with locals having to make their to unpack our little rental just to find the own soil; the windy, yet tranquil Cliffs of spare tire and equipment was a daunting Moher, standing 702 feet along a stretch of thought. Before we knew it, two cars, each five miles and featuring panoramic views as arriving from the opposite direction, ap- far as the eye can see; a massive Dolomite peared out of nowhere. The drivers both burial site located on a farm; exploring the hopped out and quickly changed our tire. archaeological sites in the Burren as well as They barely stuck around for a handshake. local castles. We now carry the memories Such is the hospitality of the Irish, confirm- with us wherever we go. Erin Go Bragh!

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THE FALL TRAVEL PLANNER

To advertise in this section, contact Ed Boitano at 818.985.8132 or Ed@TravelingBoy.com

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ORCHARD CANYON ON OAK CREEK provides a unique experience in an unforgettable setting in the heart of Sedona’s magnificent Red Rock Country. Guests can choose from seventeen cozy cabins nestled on ten lush acres of organic gardens and apple orchards. A stay at Orchard Canyon includes full breakfasts, afternoon tea, and an elegant four course dinner. Oak Creek, a spectacular 16-mile gorge with streams and waterfalls between sheer rock walls, beckons hikers, campers and fishermen. It has been termed one of the eight most scenic drives in America. Orchard Canyon on Oak Creek is a place where magical moments happen. (928) 282-3343. or www. EnjoyOrchardCanyon.com

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SEDONA PINES RESORT – When the sun rises up above the horizon it introduces the best show in Sedona. Sedona is a true oasis, a vacationer’s paradise surrounded by red-rock buttes, steep canyon walls and pine forests. Sedona offers jeep tours, hiking, Slide Rock, and Oak Creek Canyon to spiritual healing, massages, psychic readings and energy vortexes, Sedona will have your senses buzzing for days! Receive your complimentary 3/2 Sedona Getaway simply by calling (480) 269-9453 or sign up at

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AUGUST 2017 |

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your bikes, bring your friends, bring your pets. To book or for more information, visit www.redagaveresort.net or call 877-284-9237. SEDONA BEAR LODGE is an expansive bed and breakfast in beautiful West Sedona, nestled on almost a full acre of land. When you stay at our B&B, you experience excellent service and the relaxation that you deserve. During your stay, you will awake to the aroma of fresh coffee and a delicious gourmet breakfast each and every morning. After you are done exploring for the day, you can continue to enjoy your day by relaxing in our hot tub or curling up by the fireplace. Above all else, what you’ll find at Sedona Bear Lodge is a warm, friendly place where you can unwind and be yourself. Book online at www.sedonabearlodge.com SEDONA REAL INN & SUITES – Come and see why Autumn in Sedona is famous for unparallelled beauty. Our hotel rooms offer a comfy home away from home waiting when you return from a big day of exploring majestic Sedona. With spacious hotel rooms and suites, flexible layouts including suites with fireplaces and balconies, a sparkling pool, and even a pet friendly park—you’re sure to have a relaxing stay. Whether you choose a standard Sedona hotel room or upgrade to a suite, our delicious hot breakfast bar, speedy Wi-Fi, parking and signature concierge service are always free of charge. (800) 353-1239 or www.sedonareal.com

HAWAII BANYAN HARBOR RESORT, Managed by OLS Hotels & Resorts, is exceptionally suited to accommodate couples, groups and families for your Kauai vacation. Each tropical vacation rental offers separate

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| AUGUST 2017

living, dining, and sleeping areas, plus fully-equipped kitchen. With amenities that include a salt heated pool, barbecue grills, tennis court, and shuffleboard, the Banyan Harbor Resort offers your perfect central island location for your next Kauai vacation. Ask about our $129 special for two-bedroom, fully-equipped condominiums. Add a car rental for only $26 per day. (800) 422-6926 or www.Vacation-Kauai.com COCONUT WAIKIKI HOTEL is a family-friendly boutique hotel with classic island-chic style, located in the heart of Waikiki and renovated in Summer 2016. With bright rooms spacious enough for cartwheels, private balconies, complimentary Continental breakfast, a pool with sun deck, and Waikiki Beach just blocks away, this is your island home away from home. Book directly through our website and we will waive the resort fee! (808) 923-8828 or www.coconutwaikikihotel.com CONDOMINIUM RENTALS HAWAII has been managing quality vacation condos on or across the best beaches for 35 years. Choose from the best locations on both Maui and Kauai. Save up to 25% off now through Dec 20th for as low as $105 per night! Call (800) 3675242 or select your fabulous condo online at www.crhmai.com MAUI CONDO AND HOME, LLC features over 250 studio, one-, two- and three-bedroom condos in more than 20 oceanfront, beachfront and golf course locations in Kihei, Wailea, and Kahana and Kapalua in West Maui. And now they have condos on Hawaii Island, Kauai and Oahu; so booking a multi-island vacation is a breeze. Maui Condo And Home has easy check-in. Just call ahead for your check-in information. With their Keyless entry system, you are able to go straight to your unit at check-in time. (844) 567-8601 or www. mauicondo.com

SHORELINE HOTEL WAIKIKI is a modern boutique hotel with classic island-chic style, just 2 blocks from the beach and upscale shopping. Choose from 135 rooms, designed with sleek, minimalist interior design that accents ample natural light each with their own private lanai. The property features free breakfast, Heavenly Organic Restaurant and lounge and an outdoor rooftop pool with panoramic view of the Pacific Ocean. Shoreline Hotel Waikiki is within two blocks of Royal Hawaiian Center and The International Market Place. Book directly through our website and we will waive the resort fee! www.shorelinehotelwaikiki.com or (808) 931-2444

CALIFORNIA BIG SUR LODGE is located in ancient groves of redwood and oak trees in Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park, Big Sur, California. Guests are invited to step back in time to an earlier, more peaceful era. Our 61 newly-renovated and remodeled cottage-style guest rooms, each with its own deck or porch, are located on a hillside, within walking distance of our restaurant, gift shop, and grocery store. Your stay at the Big Sur Lodge includes free access to Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park, Andrew Molera State Park and Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park. Ask about our Lovin’ Life discount. (800) 424-4787 or www.BigSurLodge.com DOLPHIN BAY RESORT & SPA— Escape the ordinary and visit Dolphin Bay Resort & Spa in beautiful Pismo Beach. Book your summer stay and receive your 4th night free! With 60 spacious 1 and 2 bedroom suites featuring all the amenities of home, The Spa, Lido Restaurant and an array of activities on the Central Coast, it’s the perfect getaway. (800) 516-0112 or www.thedolphinbay.com

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GLORIETTA BAY INN – Nestled just one block from the beach in Coronado, California, the Glorietta Bay Inn combines old-world charm with modern amenities. The eleven-room historic mansion features 89 contemporary inn rooms and suites. Amenities include complimentary expanded continental breakfast, heated swimming pool and spa, flat screen TV, refrigerators, microwaves, complimentary WI-FI, plus afternoon refreshments and more. The Glorietta Bay Inn is just a short stroll to famous Hotel Del Coronado. Check out our August specials or call us at (800) 283-9383 or http://www.gloriettabayinn.com/internet-specials HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS & SUITES OF ATASCADERO — Stay, explore, savor the best of the Central Coast. Experience our award-winning wine country hotel featuring full hot breakfast, Wi-Fi, refrigerators/ microwaves/Keurig coffeemakers in each room, and an outdoor heated pool & spa. Conveniently situated in the heart of the Central Coast – minutes to Hearst Castle and historic Atascadero City Hall. Marston’s 101 Restaurant & Cocktails, and Caladero Event Room – NOW OPEN! (805) 462-0200 or www.hieatascadero.com PISMO COAST VILLAGE RV RESORT — Located right on the beach, this beautifully landscaped RV resort features 400 full hookup sites, each with complimentary Wi-Fi and cable TV, on 26 grassy, tree-lined acres. Enjoy general Store, children’s arcade, restaurant,

BANYAN HARBOR VACATION CONDOS Banyan Harbor RESORT

Exceptional VALUE AT $139 per night

Laundromat, heated pool, bicycle rentals and miniature golf course. The resort offers the ideal location for wineries, golf or Hearst Castle. Pismo Coast Village RV Resort was awarded the 2007/2008 National RV Park of the Year. As about our fall midweek specials. (888) RV-BEACH or www.PismoCoastVillage.com RIVERSIDE DOWNTOWN PARTNERSHIP - Riverside is located midway between Los Angeles and Palm Springs and less than an hour from the mountains. Downtown Riverside is home to a number of special attractions including the historic Mission Inn Hotel & Spa. Visitors can enjoy shopping at a number of unique boutiques, dining at restaurants with a range of cuisines, or performances at the Fox Entertainment Plaza and other venues. For more information visit www.RiversideDowntown.org or call 951-781-7335. TAHOE LAKESHORE LODGE & SPA – The only beach front Lake Tahoe hotel where every room has a lake view and fireplace. Offering both lodge rooms and condominiums. Enjoy fall in Tahoe by the lake. Amenities include a private beach, seasonal heated pool and hot tub that are lakeside and a day spa for pampering. Centrally located just minutes from downtown casinos, area restaurants, marinas, incredible hiking areas and area attractions. Call and ask about our fall midweek promotion 25% off (Sunday-Thursday) stay 09/04/17-12/14/17 restrictions apply. (800) 448-4577 or www.TahoeLakeshoreLodge.com

Maui Condos

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Come, walk on the beach, snorkel, golf, or just relax in one of our studio, 1, 2, or 3-Bedroom condos at 20 different locations in Kihei, Wailea, Kaanapali, Kahana & Kapalua Call us on Maui today to save on our best rate!

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KODIAK ISLAND CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU — Kodiak, Alaska’s Emerald Isle, offers miles of scenic coastline for beachcombing in quiet solitude while eagles soar overhead. World-class fishing, bear viewing, whale watching, birding, and unspoiled scenery make Kodiak the best place to experience pure Alaska. Museums, picturesque harbors, shopping, restaurants serving the freshest seafood and kind hospitality round out your experience in “the real Alaska.” Kodiak - the only way to see Alaska. (800) 789-4782 or Kodiak.org TOGIAK RIVER LODGE— Located in Togiak, Alaska, we are all about the fishing and keeping you comfortable and well fed. Yes we have the hot tub on the river’s edge, and a sauna too, satellite television for those who must catch up on their sports teams, Wi-Fi Internet, daily room service and more, but it is the world-class Alaska Salmon fishing, King Salmon Fishing, fly fishing Silver Salmon, and Trophy Rainbow Trout fishing that people travel to Togiak, Alaska for. Allow us to take care of you, your family or friends on a remote Alaskan wilderness fishing adventure of a lifetime. (503) 784-7919; www.togiaklodge.com or llchinook@aol.com

UTAH CANYON SERVICES - Escape the heat, find your mountain getaway at Alta/Snowbird Utah. Your vacation rental condominium or

Enjoy the Drive Cherish the Stay...

One and Two Bedroom Condos w/ Full Kitchen, AC & Washer / Dryers Block from Kalapaki Beach, Restaurants and shopping, Triple AAA rated WiFi, Tennis, Parking, Shuffle Board and Pool w/Great Views

Compact Car Add $26 per day!

ALASKA

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In our Newly-Renovated Guest Rooms. Only a five hour drive from the LA area, the dramatic Big Sur coastline offers breathtaking views. Enjoy the tranquility, and spend the night surrounded by ancient oaks and redwoods at the Big Sur Lodge.

Mention this ad for a complimentary breakfast. Big Sur Lodge

Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park

47225 Highway One, Big Sur, CA 93920 800.424.4787 • www.bigsurlodge.com

(808) 931-2444 Maui• www.shorelinehotelwaikiki.com Condo And Home, LLC

M136-1191 - AZ Lovin’ Life After 50 Magazine shoreline 1/8 pg (3.22” x 4”) 4/Color Ad HOTEL • WAIKIKI

Runs: July 2017 in the “Cool Country” Travel Section Email Discover Shoreline HotelPDF-X Waikiki 1/a ad to Rep: A modern boutique hotel in the heart of Waikiki Boitano Book directly through ourEd website and we will waive the resort fee! Ed@travelingboy.com

Summer Savings. Book Today! Pismo Beach, CA | 800.516.0112 | www.thedolphinbay.com

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home awaits with close access to Alta Ski Area and Snowbird Ski and Summer Resort with tons of great activities and cool mountain air. Our properties give you spectacular views, access to incredible day hikes, and close proximity to Salt Lake City events! We are just a day drive from many National and Utah State Parks and Monuments. (888) 546-5708 or www.CanyonServices.com LOGAN, UTAH is a few degrees cooler in so many ways. This beautiful high mountain valley offers unparalleled access to world class performing arts on the edge of the great outdoors. It’s only a 10 minute drive from the downtown theater district to hiking, fishing, or picnicking in the Wasatch Cache National Forest. Explore Logan Canyon National Scenic Byway with its dramatic limestone cliffs and wildflowers. Our valley is famous for outdoor adventures, hands-on living history experiences, and fine arts. Just 90minutes north of Salt Lake City. (800) 882-4433 or www.explorelogan. com RUBY’S INN is located at the entrance to Bryce Canyon National Park and offers the closest lodging with everything from luxury hotel rooms to RV parks and campgrounds. Ruby’s Inn is open yearround with a General Store that provides fuel, groceries, camping gear, clothing and gifts. To plan your vacation, visit www.RubysInn. com or call 1-866-866-6616.

Ask about our August specials!

Coronado, California’s Best Value

A Charming Boutique Hotel just one block from Coronado’s Beautiful Beach

800-283-9383 | www.gloriettabayinn.com ATASCADERO

Stay | Explore | Savor The Best of California’s Central Coast Wine Country Life After 50 Readers! Receive 15% off AND COMPLIMENTARY SUITE UPGRADE Call directly to book. Some restrictions apply

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Full Hot Breakfast | Wi-Fi | Pool + Spa | Restaurant + Bar 9010 West Front Road, Atascadero, CA 93422 805.462.0200 | hieatascadero.com | facebook.com/hieatascadero

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PISMO COAST VILLAGE RV RESORT was awarded the 2007/2008 National RV Park of the Year

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A recreational resort, nestled right on the beach. 400 fully developed sites with picnic tables, fire rings,Wi-Fi, utilities and satellite TV hookups all included in one price!

RV RESORT

SunRiver - ST. GEORGE is southern Utah’s premier feel like a well cared member of the family. (800) 323-3833 or master-planned active adult lifestyle community. Built in an www.ColoradoTrails.com unspoiled, rural location, SunRiver St. George provides a quiet, superbly planned community with occupancy limited to at least one resident 55 or older. From the golf course layout and community center design to the floor plans of our sensational SunRiver St. George homes, the active adult lifestyle is our central point of focus. SunRiver St. George is WO R L D - C LA S S T H E AT ER • O U T D O O R A DV EN T U RES • “building a lifestyle, not just homes.” (435) 688-1000 or F O O D I E T REK • F ES T I VA L S • FA M I LY F U N www.SunRiver.com

83 miles north of salt lake city

WESTERN EXPERIENCES COLORADO TRAILS RANCH — What you need is a week unwinding and exploring the wonders of our first class guest ranch. Colorado Trails Ranch is not far from Durango, in Southwest Colorado. Set in the spectacular panoramas of the San Juan Mountains, our dude ranch resort offers lifetime experiences for singles, groups and entire families. There isn’t one difficult activity in our perfectly personalized programs. The food is delicious, the comfort is wonderful and you’ll

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The Perfect Weekend Getaway

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TOGIAK, ALASKA Experience A Wilderness Fishing Adventure of a Lifetime!

STROLL. DINE. SHOP. EXPLORE. It’s all in Downtown Riverside— www.RiversideDowntown.org

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Ask About Our Fall Midweek Discount Reservations: Call 888-RV-BEACH 165 Dolliver St., Pismo Beach, CA 93449

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INTERNATIONAL ACCESSIBLE TRAVEL CHILE — Wine Tour to Chile & Argentina September 03-10, 2017. Enjoy the best wines of South America. Visit top wineries, stroll the picturesque vineyards, savor famous local varieties, and learn about Chilean and Argentine cuisine, culture and history. We specialize in small groups, expert bilingual guides and guaranteed departures. We also welcome wheelchairs and slow walkers. Contact us at: info@accessibletravelchile.com or www.accessibletravelChile.com CRUISEONE specializes in cruise and land vacations to the world’s most exotic destinations, the St. Lawrence River, the Caribbean, the Mediterranean, Hawaii and the Mexican Riviera. Programs range from family reunions at sea and honeymoon cruises to river cruising and land vacations. Each independently owned and operated business combines the latest technology with old-fashioned customer service. Ask about our land packages to Ireland. Contact Joni Notagiacomo in Los Angeles at (800) 600-4548 or www.luv2cruz.com HERZERL TOURS — Celebrate New Year’s in Vienna like the Imperial Family! If you ever had a dream to celebrate a very special New Year’s Eve in truly royal splendor, then this is for you. First, Waltz lessons in Vienna’s most renowned dancing school, then the

New Year’s Eve Ball “Hofburg Ball” at the Imperial Palace (the winter residence of the Habsburgs) – swaying to the strains of Johann Strauss’ waltz music in the arms of your prince or princess. A oncein-a-lifetime experience and there is much more! Contact Susanne at (800) 684-8488 for details; sms@herzerltours.com or visit www.herzerltours.com/pages/ kaiserball - that’s a direct link!!

Argentina’s Patagonia,the ruins of Tikal, Easter Island, and natural beauty of Costa Rica. (800) 327-0080 or www.TaraTours.com

HOME OF

everyday getaways.

TARA TOURS specializes in tours to Latin America with more excitement and mystery one could experience in a lifetime of travel. Tara Tours can take you there, with great service and tour programs, designed with your desires and budget in mind. Experience the majesty of Machu Picchu, Rio de Janeiro’s “Cidade Maravilhosa,” indigenous market of Chichicastenango; Peru’s Amazon Jungle; the incredibility of the Galapagos Islands, Chile and

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A WESTERN ADVENTURE OF A LIFETIME! A first-class dude ranch in the mountains outside of Durango.

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If you ever had a dream to celebrate a very special New Year's Eve in truly Imperial splendor, then this is for you. First, Waltz lessons in Vienna's most renowned dancing school, then the New Year's Eve Ball "Hofburg Ball" at the Imperial Palace swaying to the strains of Johann Strauss' waltz music in the arms of your prince or princess. Please visit www.herzerltours.com or email us at sms@herzerltours.com or call Susanne Servin at 1-800-684-8488

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1-800-327-0080 tara@taratours.com www.taratours.com AUGUST 2017 |

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A

Très Magnifique Tr visit to

LAS VEGAS

The Eiffel Tower soars 460-feet into the Las Vegas sky.

BY ANDREA GROSS

Photos by Irv Green

Aha! There it is, the Eiffel Tower. Around the corner, the Arc de Triomphe. And nearby, a row of quaint shops on a cobblestone street. Voila, this is Paris, n’est-ce pas? Actually, it’s Paris Las Vegas, a Frenchthemed hotel and casino that’s done a remarkable job of bringing the famous landmarks of the governmental capital of France to the entertainment capital of the United States. Although at first it’s a bit disconcerting to see Parisian landmarks sitting amid the high-rise hotels and brightly lit casinos, it’s also trés magnifique. The architects and designers responsible for creating the Paris Las Vegas Hotel, which opened in 1999, went to great lengths to make sure the famous landmarks were reproduced as accurately as possible. Their greatest coup was securing the original plans that Gustav Eiffel used to build his monument for the Paris Exposition in 1889. The Las Vegas tower is an almost exact half-scale replica, soaring 460 feet (more than 40 stories) into the desert sky. The major difference, aside from size, has to do with safety. Rather than joining beams with rivets as in the original, modern builders felt that welding would

34

The Arc de Triomphe, replicated in two-thirds scale, honors soldiers who fought with Napoleon.

a two-thirds-scale replica of the Arc de Triomphe, a Parisian landmark honoring the soldiers who fought with Napoleon. Some parts of the hotel have facades that echo famous buildings in Paris. One wall looks like the Paris Opera House, and the exterior of the 34-story hotel itself was designed to look like Paris’ 800-yearproduce a stronger structure. Then, to old Hôtel de Ville, which now serves as ensure an authentic look, they overlaid Paris’ City Hall. The Parisian theme carries to the the welding with cosmetic rivets. The concern for accuracy even inside, where touches of France adorn extended to the lighting system. In 1989, the casino, lobby and, most of all, 100 years after the original tower was the shopping promenade. The retail built, lights were added to brighten the area, which is completely indoors, has Paris sky. Ten years later, the same experts “cobblestone” streets, wrought-iron were hired to install the lights in the Las street lamps, and shops fashioned to look distinctly European, with flowerboxes Vegas reproduction. The Eiffel Tower is the first sign of Paris and balustrades. As with the architecture, the hotel’s that visitors to Las Vegas see when they restaurants pride themselves on authenticity. Many are devoted to French food of one sort or another — from crusty baguettes and delicate crêpes to foie gras and le filet de boeuf. Mon Ami Gabi is an upscale café where people can eat outside and watch folks stroll up and down the Strip, At Mon Ami Gabi cafe, the Strip is often refered to as Champs-Elysees. except the bow-tied drive up the famous Strip, but it’s far from waiters don’t call it “The Strip.” They call it the only one. People who are arriving at the “Champs-Élysées.” Diners can start with wild escargot or the Paris Las Vegas Hotel drive around

| AUGUST 2017

onion soup au gratin, move on to chicken grand-mère and finish with a vanilla bean crème brûlée — if, that is, they don’t get sidetracked by some of the 80-plus boutique wine offerings. But it’s the Eiffel Tower restaurant, on the 11th floor of the tower, that is the epitome of Parisian elegance. The prices are nearly as stratospheric as the view, but no one seems to care. After all, this is a restaurant that’s often dubbed one of the most romantic in the country, and what is more French than romance? (Tip: Those who are more pragmatic than romantic can opt to go for brunch or, better yet, go for a tasting.) The Village Buffet takes diners to the provinces outside Paris to experience the sights and tastes of the countryside. The restaurant has six sections, each of which replicates the architecture and design of a specific province. Likewise, there are a variety of cooking stations that feature the foods and cooking styles of each region. Guests, who are welcome to gorge themselves with food from all of the provinces, can have crêpes à la Brittany, seafood from Normandy, meats from Burgundy, croissants from Alsace and beverages from Bretagne. (Tip: The buffet isn’t cheap, so go hungry.) Finally, almost hidden in a corner on the hotel’s north side, Le Cabaret offers an ooh là là experience during which folks make merry as they sip cocktails and listen to live music. Now what could be more French than that? For an expanded version of this story, see traveltizers.com

www.LovinLifeAfter50.com


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Dining

The Mission Kierland carries on Chef Matt Carter’s Latin cuisine crusade with luminous food. STORY & PHOTOS BY NIKI D’ANDREA Anyone with a proverbial “cross to bear” might be consoled by the literal load the Mission Kierland’s bar carries – a colossal crucifix, composed of amber-orange fiberglass and illuminated from inside, beaming brighter than all the chandeliers hanging from the high, vaulted ceilings. But the radiant rood isn’t the only thing glowing in this Latin cuisine cathedral. The food’s luminous, too, proffering a fusion of Spanish, Mexican, Central and South American flavors. Chef Matt Carter’s a culinary star with a solar system of superb eateries orbiting his name – Zinc Bistro, House Brasserie, the original Mission in Old Town Scottsdale and, most recently, the decadent and jaw-droppingly delicious Fat Ox. Opened in January 2017, The Mission Kierland shares a menu with the Old Town location (established in 2008), but the décor’s more dramatic and the vibe’s a little more modern at the North Scottsdale spot. During the day, cleverly designed floor-to-ceiling windows flood the res-

taurant with soft, natural light; at night, the chandeliers and giant cross cast their light across the upscale eatery. Lively conversations and the clanking of silverware fill the air at all hours (the acoustics are indeed cathedral-like, especially from the second floor, where, by the way, there’s a second bar, sans huge cruciate). Tortillas, salsas and arepas (a popular breakfast food in Venezuela and Colombia, made from ground maize flour) are made fresh on-site daily, and The Mission’s meats are smoked over mesquite or pecan wood on a flat-top grill to imbue them with rich flavor. The drink menu includes several popular beers, including Dos Equis, Modelo, Pacifico and Tecate, and the craft cocktail menu revolves around margaritas (nine kinds), mojitos (four varieties), mules (three choices), and seven house specialties. The wine menu is extensive. They also offer tequila flights. It’s an awful lot of alcohol for a place that resembles an old Catholic mission, but maybe some kind

The Mission Kierland opened in January 2017.

36

| AUGUST 2017

Brussels sprouts tacos with grilled street corn

of instant repentance-setting is the whole idea. Some starters shine on the food menu, especially the grilled and skewered street corn smothered in butter and cotija and sprinkled with paprika; earthy and subtly spicy shrimp antichucos (kebabs) spiked with oregano and black pepper; and the roasted corn gorditas (stuffed pastry) with zucchini, mushroom and thick huitlacoche crema. The guacamole – made tableside with ingredients including chunky avocado, jalapeño, red onion, and chipotle puree – is also divine. There’s not a taco on the menu Craft cocktails include nine varieties of margaritas, seven that’s not stellar, but carnivores house specialties, and a handful of mules and mojitos. can savor out-of-this-world pork smothered in ice cream, and sprinkled shoulder (slow-roasted for 12 hours and slathered in a pineapple haba- with pepitas and pomegranate seeds. Or nero glaze) and herbivores can get fired undo the top button of your pants and up about Brussels sprouts tacos beauti- dig into the Guatemalan chocolate pasfully balanced with sesame, chile de ar- tilla made with XO tequila, and a fig and guajillo glaze. The rich dishes are emibol, apple, ginger and cotija cheese. Grilled meats get smoked over wood, nently easy to finish and quite filling, so and include superb surf (Florida grou- you might feel like you need to be rolled per) and terrific turf (filet mignon, pork out of The Mission, but that’s a pretty shoulder) selections. But the source of sweet cross to bear. the most succulent entrees is the Spanish griddle, where mouthwatering Chilean The Mission Kierland salmon, flavorful Pacific swordfish, and 7122 E. Greenway Parkway, #140 green chile duck confit begin their jourScottsdale, 480-292-7800 ney to your plate. themissionaz.com If there’s room for dessert, fill it with The Mission’s pumpkin bread pudding – a dense confection spiked with Scotch,

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What’s Cooking?

Cobbler cake in a Mason jar BY JAN D’ATRI

They’re so popular for so many purposes, we sometimes forget that Mason and Ball jars were designed strictly for canning. But these days, they are a favorite in crafting, decorating and, believe it or not, baking a really fun, simple and ultra-transportable cake! Cake in a jar? Yes, that’s right. I said jar. Half-pint wide-mouth jars make perfect single-serving cakes that you can bake in the oven, cool down, seal and take to a party or pack in a lunchbox. I’ll admit I was skeptical about putting Mason jars in the oven until I researched and discovered that the same jars you use for canning are designed to withstand very high heat and are sturdy enough to bake in. Then I found out that although the Mason jar has been around since 1858, making cake in a jar is one of the newest baking crazes.

Cobbler Cake in a Jar For 4 half-pint Mason jars: - 3 cups fresh or frozen fruits in season - 3/4 cup flour - 3/4 cup sugar - 1/2 teaspoon salt - 4 tablespoons butter - Whipped cream for topping - 1 package dried beans

Directions: In a bowl, mix together fruits of choice equaling 3 cups. Pour equal amounts of the fruit in each of the four jars. In another bowl, mix together flour, sugar and salt until well combined. Pour equal amounts of dry ingredients on top of the fruit. Add one tablespoon of butter on top of dry ingredients. Place the four jars into a square baking dish, a few inches apart. Spread dried beans (Photo Credit/Jan D’Atri)

With cake in a jar, there’s no need to make the batter to pour into the jar. Simply spoon the raw ingredients into the jars, add a slice of butter on top and watch the magic happen in the oven. Then serve the tasty treats right from the jar. Here are two variations of my new favorite single-serving sensation.

Half-Pint One-Pan Éclair: For delicious cakes in a jar that don’t need baking, try the half-pint éclair! Place a graham cracker on the bottom of each jar. Combine one small box of vanilla pudding and one cup of milk, mixing until thickened. Add ½ small tub of Cool Whip and mix until well blended. Spoon a dollop

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on graham cracker. Repeat process until layers are just below the neckline. Melt one container of chocolate fudge frosting in microwave for about 45 seconds. Pour several tablespoons of melted frosting over the top of each jar of graham cracker layers. Refrigerate for 24 hours to soften graham crackers before serving.

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around the jars to keep them steady while you’re moving them in and out of the oven. Bake at 350 degrees for about 45 minutes. Remove from oven and allow cakes to cool. When cooled, twist on lids and refrigerate until ready to serve. Top with a dollop of whipped cream.

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The pasta menu is robust at Café Roma. (Special to LLAF)

When in Roma

Italian cuisine spices up East Mesa. BY KENNETH LaFAVE In an age of hyper-sophisticated dining, sometimes it helps to go home. Yes, the pomegranate sea salt duck with artichoke salad flambe is a wondrous thing to experience, I’m sure, but it doesn’t replace classic dishes. Gaeta, near Rome, was home to Antonio and Anna Magliozzi, restaurateurs who brought the classic Roman dishes they were raised on to Café Roma Ristorante in East Mesa. Eating at Café Roma is as close to experiencing Rome as you are likely to find anywhere in the Valley. “This is my story,” says Antonio Magliozzi, waving an arm at the wall of photos, documents and menus behind the register. The photos show a young Magliozzi, training under his chef father to inherit the traditions of Italian cooking. They trace the history of the couple’s restaurants after he and Anna moved to the U.S. in 1988: restaurants in Pasadena, Hermosa Beach, and their first (now closed) Mesa restaurant on Recker Road. Antonio Magliozzi’s story includes graduation from Italy’s prestigious La Culinaria Academia in 1972, years of working for his father in Gaeta, and a stint as chef for the Hilton hotel chain. Magliozzi does all the cooking himself, and the couple’s son, Marco Magliozzi, manages the front of the house, with assistance from his fiancée, Sydne Bonner. “My customers come here for many reasons,” Antonio Magliozzi says. “Some for price” – dinner at Café Roma is quite affordable – “and some for the cooking,

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| AUGUST 2017

which is 1960s- and ‘70s-style Italian cooking with nothing fancy.” Café Roma’s clientele tends toward an older demographic. Young diners seem to want the wings and burgers of sports bars, Antonio Magliozzi laments. Too bad for them. That means they may never experience seafood as fresh and unique as cioppino, a blend of clams, shrimp, scallops, mussels and salmon in a white wine sauce, with linguini; risottos made with imported Italian rice; regional specialties such as polenta (cornmeal) with spinach and mushrooms; and meatcentered classics like the sage-infused veal dish saltimbocca a la romana. Pastas, served with soup or salad, range from simple tomato and sweet basil over angel hair and alla primavera over spaghetti to alla carbonara – eggs and cheese in a cream sauce, sizzling under bacon and served over spaghetti – and al pesto Genovese (pesto sauce over penne). And yes they even have spaghetti and meatballs, which, prior to about 1980, were all Americans knew of “Italian food.” Café Roma is open for dinner Mondays through Saturdays starting at 4 p.m., and Sundays starting at 3 p.m. Lunch during the summer months is only by special arrangement for groups of ten or more.

Roma Café

7210 E. Main Street Mesa, 480-654-0558 romacaferistorante.com

www.LovinLifeAfter50.com


Columns Aging Today

Dog days of summer – are you prepared? BY BOB ROTH

Managing Partner of Cypress Homecare Solutions

People have called this time of the year the “dog days of summer” for a long time. For those of us not aware of this fact, the name comes from the rising of the star Sirius during the late summer months, which Greek and Roman astrology connected with heat, drought, sudden thunderstorms, lethargy, fever, mad dogs and bad luck. Not so sure about the fever, mad dogs and bad luck, but for those of us that live in the Valley of the Sun, the other descriptions are spot on. Get it? “Spot” on. Last year I wrote a similar column with the focus on older adults staying cool and hydrating. More particularly, the content of my column was centered on activities and keeping older adults active but safe during this dangerous time of year. My focus in this column is centered on protecting seniors from the heat, sun, storms and brown/black outs, and the unexpected. If you have ever lived through a Phoenix summer, you know it takes some preparation to make it bearable. Seniors are more prone to heat-related illnesses because they are more sensitive to heat than younger generations. Aging adults simply fail to see the warning signs of heat-related illnesses or injuries until it is too late. As we age, the response of our bodies to higher temperatures also changes. Here are a few tips for this summer: • Wear protective clothing such as longsleeved shirts and long pants. • Wear a wide-brimmed hat that shades your face, neck and ears. • Seek shade whenever possible. • Wear sunscreen with a Sun Protection Factor (SPF) of 15 or higher as well as UVA and UVB protection. • Reapply sunscreen regularly, especially after swimming, perspiring heavily or drying skin with a towel. • Wear sunglasses that block both UVA and UVB rays.

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• Avoid direct sun exposure between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., when the sun’s rays are strongest. • If you need or desire exercise, go to a mall where it is air conditioned and you are protected from the sun. Another important thing people tend to forget about is how their medication and diet might affect them. Medications that encourage dehydration and loss of electrolytes need to be combated with lots of water. Low-carb diets also require a lot of water, since the extra protein can cause the body to heat up. With the monsoons now upon us, we need to remember there are many older adults in our community that are dealing with life’s challenges. Combine this with extreme weather and this can and will only make matters worse. So how do you protect your loved ones from one of these weather events occurring? First, you need to put a plan in place so they are prepared. When the inevitable happens, your aging loved one will know exactly what they need before, during and after the storm. You will rest easy knowing your aging loved one is prepared. Severe storms aren’t the only weather condition we must prepare for. The items listed below can also help in the case of other emergencies such as a power outage during our sweltering summer heat. We recommend you prepare for an emergency situation by gathering these items in advance: Emergency kit: includes water (one gallon per person per day for a minimum of three days), food (nonperishable), batterypowered radio with extra batteries, flashlight with extra batteries, first aid kit, whistle and flares, matches in a waterproof container, face mask, plastic sheeting and duct tape for a shelter-in-place, moist towelettes and toilet paper, garbage bags and plastic ties, wrench or pliers, scissors and knife, manual can opener, local maps,

and a cell phone with a solar charger or inverter. Medical needs and documentation: medications, copies of prescriptions, contact lens supplies or spare eyeglasses, and important legal documents like a copy of your birth certificate, advanced directives, important phone numbers and insurance policies. Protective wear and resources: blankets and pillows, one change of clothing and footwear per person, gloves, coats and rain gear.

If some prescriptions your loved one is taking need refrigeration, we recommend you have a small cooler available so you can use ice to keep the medication cold. There are valuable online resources for disaster preparedness, including FEMA and the Weather Channel’s Weather Ready. Just remember the old saying: An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. A little precaution in our case – planning before a crisis – is preferable to a lot of fixing up afterwards.

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AUGUST 2017 |

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Bear Market Report

pensive, you can include provisions for your pets in your will. A third, less cumbersome option might be to set aside funds for the caregiver in an account which bypasses probate. They can be a beneficiary of your life insurance policy, annuity or IRA account. The easiest option might be at your local bank. You can attach transfer on death (TOD) instructions to a savings or checking account so that when you pass, the funds will go directly to your caregiver.

What will they do without you? BY TERESA BEAR One of my earliest memories was watching our miniature dachshund, Schatzi, giving birth to her first litter of puppies. Proud papa Peanuts (yeah, not the most creative name – but hey, I was 7) wanted to be near – but mama let him know in no uncertain terms that he was to stay far, far away. Under normal circumstances, this protective instinct would not be a problem. However, the miracle of birth happened in a motel room as we were moving from Colorado to Ohio. Needless to say, it was rather tight quarters traveling in a station wagon with Mom, Dad, my two siblings, the seven dogs – and me. Pets do bring adventure into our lives! Since childhood, I have seldom been without animal companions. Currently, we share our home with three cats. Even though they are legally considered

“property,” they’re much more like family. It goes without saying that just as you make preparations to care for your human family members after your passing, you need to plan for your pets, as well.

Finally, be sure to leave specific instructions for their future mommies and daddies.

First of all, choose a caregiver. Ideally, a family member will be willing and able to take care of your pet when you pass. However, if that’s not possible, search for a trusted friend or neighbor. The search is complicated if the pet is older or disabled – or sports an exterior of scales or feathers. If all else fails, you can utilize the option of sending your pet to a continuing care program such as one sponsored by the Arizona Humane Society. For a nondeductible enrollment fee and a substantial donation, your pet will receive lifetime care or be given an adoptive home.

Secondly, consider the costs. On average, it costs $1,135 annually to own a dog, and $792 for a cat. If possible, set aside some funds for their care. You can do this in several ways. One way is through a pet trust. This allows you to control from the grave the care of your pet. However, like any trusts which are designed to continue for years after your death, these can be expensive to create and administer. If this is too ex-

Who is your pet’s vet? Their groomer? What brand of food do they eat? Which toy can they not live without? No one knows your pet like you do, so share everything you can. Teresa Bear, CFP™, CPA (www.TeresaBear.com 480-5030050) specializes in retirement planning and asset preservation for retirees and those about to retire. Investment advisory services provided by Brookstone Capital Management, LLC., an SEC-registered Investment Adviser. Neither the author nor the publisher is engaged in providing accounting, legal, investment, or other professional services through the publication of this article – you must seek competent, professional representation for your personal situation. This is for informational purposes only and is not a solicitation or recommendation of any investment strategy. Investments and/or investment strategies involve risk including the possible loss of principal. There is no assurance that any investment strategy will achieve its objectives.

Legally Speaking

Putting the puzzle pieces in place BY BECKY CHOLEWKA

Estate Planning Attorney

I have always enjoyed puzzles. I remember working on one when I was about 11 or 12. It was a black cat against a black background. The only colors were in the cat’s eyes and whiskers. That puzzle took a while to complete. Have you ever worked on a puzzle and when you were almost done, you realized you are missing the last few pieces? How frustrating! Estate planning is like a puzzle to me. And trust me, if your plan is missing pieces, your family will be frustrated. Healthcare, mental healthcare, and financial powers of attorney (POA) are important pieces in your estate planning puzzle. A POA is a document that allows your chosen agent to help you while you are alive. Here are a few examples of how these important documents could be used.

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• Several years ago, a wife wanted to sell the family car before the end of the year to take advantage of a cash-forclunkers tax break. The problem was, her husband was on the title to the vehicle and he was overseas working. When you are in another country, the only way to get a document notarized is to make an appointment with either the U.S. Embassy or Consulate. These appointments can sometimes take 4-8 weeks to schedule. She had to wait weeks before getting her husband’s notarized signature back on the car title. If she had been POA for her husband, she could have signed the document immediately on his behalf and sold the car. • A client’s daughter went overseas as part of a college-abroad program. Unfortunately, her daughter’s purse

| AUGUST 2017

including her phone and wallet were stolen in Spain. Because the daughter had made her mom her POA before she traveled, mom was able to contact daughter’s credit card companies, banks, phone company, and credit reporting agencies on her daughter’s behalf to notify them of the theft. • A 93-year old client came to our office to sign the POA we had created for her. Her health was declining and she expressed concern she would not be able to attend the meeting she had in a few days with the title company for her house closing process. I told her not to worry. “Send

your daughter to the meeting instead! You just made her your POA.” • My mom wasn’t feeling well several years ago during our family vacation in Colorado. My brother-in-law drove her to the emergency room. Several hours later, she went in cardiogenic shock and had to be airlifted to another hospital. Mom stayed in the hospital for 17 days, mostly in and out of consciousness in the ICU. During that time, my family relied on her POA to make medical decisions for her. Make sure you have all the pieces to your estate plan… before your family needs to put the puzzle together.

www.LovinLifeAfter50.com


How do you know if you have a hearing loss? BY KEN ARCIA

Arizona Relay Service

We live in a world where physicals, doctor’s appointments, eye exams and visits to the dentist are an annual occurrence. Amongst all of these efforts to take care of our body as it ages, why aren’t we paying more attention to our hearing health? When was the last time you had your hearing checked? According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, hearing loss is the third most common chronic physical condition in the United States. So it may be surprising to learn that millions of people are living with hearing loss and are not doing anything about it. In fact, a federal study found that about a quarter of people between the ages of 20 and 69 who think their hearing is good or excellent actually show signs of hearing loss. Hearing loss can be tricky to identify because not all

sounds register the same way in the ear. Some sounds may be perfectly clear while others are distorted. According to the Hearing Loss Association of America, some major indicators one may be losing their hearing include: • Frequently asking people to repeat themselves • Often turning your ear toward a sound to hear it better • Losing your conversations

place

in

group

• Keeping the volume on your radio or TV at a level that others say is too loud • Pain or ringing in your ears • Noticing that some sounds remain clear (often low-pitched sounds such as the bass line in music) while others may seem fuzzy (frequently women’s and children’s high-pitched voices)

For many people, it’s hard for them to justify they may have a hearing loss because their family doctor has failed to mention it. The truth of the matter is, only 14 percent of physicians routinely screen for hearing loss during a physical. Whether you have begun to notice these symptoms or someone close to you has, it is important to make an appointment to get your hearing checked as soon as possible, as nearly 95 percent of people with sensorineural hearing loss can be helped with hearing aids, but if needed, all possible treatment options should all be discussed with an audiologist. Another common issue surrounding hearing loss is that people believe they can live with it, depending on its severity. While this may seem plausible,

it is in fact highly discouraged. If left undiagnosed, hearing loss, no matter the severity, may cause other issues such as anxiety, isolation, paranoia, decreased self-esteem or depression. No matter the issues you may be experiencing, organizations like Arizona Relay Service and Arizona Commission for the Deaf and the Hard of Hearing can help you through them. If you are having trouble using the phone, Arizona Relay Service offers a variety of different devices that are alternative to the traditional voice-to-voice telephone. Video phones, captioned telephones and teletypewriter (TTY) devices help ensure hearing loss doesn’t prevent a person from being connected and at a volume comfortable for everyone. In addition, the Arizona Commission for the Deaf and the Hard of Hearing has valuable information about hearing solutions as well as connections to a number of other local organizations and resources to help you on your path towards healthier hearing. For more information on the Arizona Commission for the Deaf and the Hard of Hearing, visit acdhh.org. For information on Arizona Relay Service, visit azrelay.org.

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This material is not from HUD or FHA and has not been approved by HUD or any government agency.

AUGUST 2017 |

41


Immunizations are important for children, adults

A

ugust is National Immunization Awareness Month. Immunizations (also called vaccines) are necessary throughout the lifespan. Below is an overview of selected Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommended immunizations. Seasonal Influenza (Flu) Vaccination The flu is a contagious respiratory illness caused by influenza viruses. It can cause mild to severe illness, and at times can lead to death. On average, each year, 5% to 20% of the U.S. population gets the flu; more than 200,000 people are hospitalized from flu-related complications; and up to 49,000 people die from flu-related causes. Although the flu season cannot be exactly predicted, it generally starts in October and can continue up until late May. Hence, flu season is fast approaching. Since the vaccine can take about two weeks to take full effect, getting the vaccine as soon as it becomes available is advisable. Who should get this vaccine? Everyone 6 months of age and older.

vaccine is FDA approved for people 50 years of age and older. Tetanus, Diphtheria and Pertussis (Tdap) Vaccination Tdap is a combination vaccine that provides protection against tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis. Tetanus is a serious condition that leads to death in 20% of cases due to muscle stiffening which limits breathing. People

Pneumococcal Vaccination Pneumococcal disease is a severe infection. Most people are only familiar with this infection as pneumonia. However, it also causes infections in the blood stream and brain. Pneumococcal disease leads to death in 1 out of 20 people with pneumonia; 1 in 5 people with a blood stream infection; and 1 in 3 people with an infection in the brain. According to the CDC, this disease is the most preventable cause of death out of all the infections we can vaccinate against. Who should get this vaccine? Everyone 65 years of age and older should get two distinct pneumococcal vaccines. Other people who should get the vaccine include those under the age of 65 who smoke or have diabetes, lung disease, heart disease, kidney disease, liver disease or a weakened immune system. Herpes Zoster (Shingles) Vaccination Herpes zoster is caused by the same virus that causes chickenpox. After a person gets chickenpox the virus stays in the body and can eventually reappear in the form of shingles. Shingles causes a painful skin rash, described as “intense burning,” lasting anywhere from two to four weeks. Who should get this vaccine? The

www.lovinlifeafter50.com 42

| AUGUST 2017

can be infected with tetanus after getting cut or scraped by an object with the bacteria. After getting infected, it may take one day to several months for a person to show signs of infection. Pertussis, also known as “whooping cough,” causes severe coughing spells that can lead to hospitalizations and sometimes even death. Although this infection is more of a concern in children, it is important for all adults to receive the vaccine to prevent the spread to infants. Diphtheria is an infection that causes a thick covering over the back of the throat,

making it difficult to breathe. It can also lead to other serious problems, such as heart failure, paralysis, and even death. Who should get this vaccine? All adults should receive a single dose of Tdap, then a Td booster (containing only tetanus and diphtheria) every 10 years. Pregnant women, however, should receive a Tdap dose with every pregnancy. To know if you qualify for any of these vaccines, stop by your local Walgreens pharmacy today. Many insurance plans, including Medicare, cover vaccines as part of your health benefits.

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August 2016 : : Lovin’ www.LovinLifeAfter50.com Life After 50 : : page 39


Arizona Greenthumb

Fall gardening starts now BY GLENDA STRICKBINE

It’s time to get rolling on your fall garden. It may not feel like it outdoors, but we are heading toward fall. It’s time to plan your space, get your soil ready and plant the seeds you will eventually transplant into your garden. I called on Master Gardener Bill Felton for some advice going into such an important growing season, and am glad I did. He had some great advice based Plant marigolds or dill to keep insects away from your garden. (Special to LLAF) on his personal experience nitrate, potash and potassium. Compost and his obvious passion for gardening. Bill has had success with artichokes, is also an excellent earthy ingredient to broccoli, carrots, lettuce, green onions, mix into your soil. Spend time cultivating peas and spinach in his fall garden. He your soil so it will provide proper drainrecommends holding off on tomatoes age for your plants. When planting, don’t crowd, and if until spring because the fall growing season isn’t long enough. If you are a total planting seeds, make sure to plant at the tomato hound like myself, you can exper- proper depth. Use a start solution of 10 iment with acclimatized cherry or plum -50 -10 fertilizer to give your new garden tomatoes because they mature much a boost and protect new plants from the faster. Planting date for fall transplants is sun for the first few days. Irrigation is an important part of garOctober 15th. If starting your own transplants from seed, plant them inside in late dening success because of the lack of rainfall here. Try to find a happy medium August. Start by choosing your location. You – do not overwater but don’t allow your can start with a container, a small garden plants to wilt. As your plants take hold, or something larger. Choose a location they won’t require so much attention. You will have to work to control weeds with morning sunlight and afternoon shade. Most fruiting vegetables do best and pests. Put them on notice that enwith 6 to 8 hours of full sun and most will trance into your garden is by invitation only. Weeds and insects really want to tolerate some shade. Sketch a plan of what you will plant come to your party and it will take diliand where. Bill said he now staggers his gence on your part to ward them off. Replants instead of planting all the same member Bill’s advice to grow marigolds kinds together; this keeps the insects and dill to control insects naturally. Also guessing. Be sure to plant dill and mari- cultivate between your rows to control golds in your garden – they are great for weeds and keep mulch down. Harvest your veggies and enjoy. Take keeping insects at bay. One key to successful gardening, espe- time to write down the things that cially in the desert, is to plant vegetables worked this growing season and what engineered to grow here. These plants didn’t. Remember they don’t sell vegetamay be more heat-tolerant or have a bles like this at the store, so you have to shorter grow season and can make a big grow them. I would like to thank Bill Felton for his difference in your success. Bill suggests checking out community gardens which expert advice. Bill is a Master Gardener at may sell plants during growing season or the University of Arizona’s Cooperative sponsor a seed swap. Just make sure you Extension, which offers gardening classes this fall. Visit extension.arizona.edu/ start with quality seeds or transplants. The soil here needs to be enriched with maricopamg.

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Lovin’Tech After 50

Up-size your bank account while downsizing your home BY JUSTIN FERRIS When you start to downsize decades of possessions, two questions inevitably arise. First, how do you decide what needs to go? Second, how do you dispose of your former treasures? Most people put a lot more thought into the first question than the second. Unwanted items usually just go to charity or the dumpster. Those work, but don’t forget “make money.” Thanks to the internet, you might get a nice chunk of change for certain unwanted items.

Price Your Stuff Before you sell an item, you need to know its potential worth. You don’t want to sell something for $5 that’s worth $5,000, or waste time on something worth 50 cents. Even if you use one of the setprice hassle-free services we talk about later, it helps to know the ballpark. To price items, head over to eBay (ebay. com). In the search area at the top, type the name of your item, such as “McDonald’s collector plate” or “Disney VHS” and click “Search.” Next, go to the search options in the left-hand column. Scroll down to “Show Only” and select the “Sold listings” option. Now you can see how much similar items sold for in the past. As you price items, note the photos and descriptions of the ones that sold for the most. Mimic them in your own listings later to boost your profits. For electronics, check Sage BlueBook (bluebook.sagese.com). It asks you detailed questions about each item to give you a more accurate estimate.

Sell Your Stuff To sell items, eBay works well for most people. It boasts a solid reputation, millions of users, and plenty of tools to help you sell successfully. Just click the “sell” link at the top of the home page. If you want less hassle, eBay offers eBay Valet (ebay.com/s/valet) to sell items for you. Just send off your items and it does all the work. Of course, it does take a cut – 20 to 75 percent depending on the item’s final sell price. Other sites might work better than eBay for certain items. Avoid shipping hassles and use online classified site Craigslist

(craigslist.org) to sell larger items, such as furniture and appliances. For clothes and accessories, consider ThredUp (thredup.com), which bills itself as “the largest online consignment and thrift store.” Amazon Trade-In (http://amzn. to/2q3wWtX) will exchange approved technology and books for Amazon Gift Cards. Likewise, Gazelle (gazelle.com) buys used electronics and specializes in cell phones. As with valet programs, be aware that trade-ins offer less money in exchange for the convenience.

Stay Safe If you do sell items yourself, safety and privacy become big factors. Scammers will try to take your money and information, and in-person transactions carry the risk of physical danger. Ebay’s seller ratings and its use of PayPal – and PayPal’s dispute resolution system – will mitigate some risk. In other situations, only deal in cash or reputable online payment systems like PayPal. Checks, money orders and wire transfers are risky. Brush up on common scams like overpayment, check-cashing, advanced fee, shipping service, and pre-paid label. The Federal Trade Commission’s Consumer Information site (consumer.ftc.gov/scamalerts) is a good resource. Frequent online sellers should set up a dedicated bank account so digital scams and payment processing errors don’t impact your primary account. When dealing online, don't give out your real email address and phone number. Create a dedicated email account on your preferred email services. For disposable phone numbers, check out Burner (burnerapp.com), Hushed (hushed. com) or Sideline (sideline.com). When conducting in-person transactions, always bring a friend and meet in a public place. Ask your local police station if they provide a monitored transaction area – many do. You can also try OfferUp (offerup.com), a Craigslist alternative that verifies the ID of each person who uses the service. It won’t remove all the dangers, but it adds one more layer of protection.

AUGUST 2017 |

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Hospice Is Hope

Parents with empty arms BY LIN SUE COONEY It’s only natural to associate the word “hospice” with end-of-life, and to envision a patient who is elderly and frail – someone who has lived a long, full life. But what happens when care is needed before a baby draws its first breath – before life even begins? Five years ago, when a desperate mom carrying a child with a life-limiting condition asked Hospice of the Valley for help, we created a unique perinatal support program. It embraces any family grieving the anticipated death of a baby still stirring inside a mother’s womb. These are families with crushed dreams, who still want to meet and hold their little one – even if the first time will also be the last time. I can’t imagine that kind of heartbreak. Or the courage it took for Derrick and Maricela Kempf to share their story with me – so other couples know where to find

help. At their 20 week ultrasound, they were just hoping to keep the gender of their third baby a surprise. Instead, they were told he was "incompatible with life.” Maricela didn’t know what to think. “We were shocked and confused. I felt like he was saying, ‘Well, your baby’s not really a baby. It’s not real.’ We were shattered. Then we found Hospice of the Valley.” Perhaps you didn’t know Hospice of the Valley offered this kind of support – or that families don’t pay for this no-cost community program. Pam Roman, our director of pediatric services, calls it “service to the human spirit.” “Our families come to us feeling isolated and alone, so we support them holistically with nursing, physicians, social workers, child life specialists and grief counselors. This baby is precious to them and will always be their child regardless of how long they have together.”

Just as with hospice, the care is tailored to each family. Derrick and Maricela asked if their son could be born at home, not in a hospital. So our teams worked to get all the right people in place to make that happen. To make the home birth extra special, Pam arranged for one of our harpists to play soothing Derrick and Maricela Kempf with their children. (Photo by Lakisa Muhammad) music during and after delivery. Derrick is grateful for the way the periIn her words, “It’s what we do with our natal team seemed to rejoice in caring for babies – we nurture them, we sing to them, which lightened the burden. “It let them. This was something we could offer us focus on each other, love each other that was beautiful and comforting.” and just be a family. It was a gift.” Rafael came into the world peacefully It’s a gift we want to share with every and drew his last breath seven and a half family on this difficult journey – because minutes later. Yet Maricela remembers no one should face it alone. Learn how that day with happiness. “We were expe- Hospice of the Valley’s perinatal program riencing something so tragic, but in my helped other couples at hov.org or call us memory, we were able to welcome Rafael 24/7 at 602-530-6900. with joy and peace and beautiful music in Lin Sue Cooney is Director of Community Engagement at Hospice of the Valley. For more information, call 602-530the background. We just felt so loved and 6900 (available 24/7) or visit hov.org. honored.”

T HE F INISH L INE Arizona’s Leader in Senior Fitness

Albuquerque, Here We Come! The 2019 National Senior Games will be held in Albuquerque and athletes who wish to qualify to compete in those games will do so in 2018. For all those athletes, we will be running a series of articles on the City of Albuquerque and the State of New Mexico in order to help them prepare for the games there. First and foremost to remember is

2017 Sponsors

44

the altitude. Athletes will need to train differently in order to function well at 5,312 feet. To compare, our altitude here in the Valley of the Sun is 1,087 feet. The higher altitude requires the lungs and heart to work harder and athletes should train accordingly. Albuquerque, New Mexico’s largest city, sits in the high desert. Its modern

The Finish Line Newsletter is produced by Arizona Senior Olympics, founded by:

| AUGUST 2017

downtown core contrasts with Old Town Albuquerque, dating to the city’s 1706 founding as a Spanish colony. Old Town is filled with historic adobe buildings, such as San Felipe de Neri Church, five museums, and shops selling Native American handicrafts. These and many other fascinating places await the athletes that compete in this beautiful city.

Albuquerque's Summer Temps: June 88 high July 90 high August 87 high

62 low 66 low 65 low

Arizona Senior Olympics P.O. Box 33278, Phoenix, AZ 85067-3278 in partnership with the cities of Chandler, Glendale, Mesa, Peoria, Scottsdale, Tempe and the communities of Sun City, Sun City West and Sun City Grand

602-274-7742 www.seniorgames.org

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www.seniorgames.org

Games Management Team If you’ve been around the Arizona Senior Olympics for a few years, you’ve heard about the group referred to as the GMT (Game Management Team). This is the group that meets throughout the year to plan the Annual ASO Games. Without the GMT, there would be no games! This dedicated group of people each take on the responsibility of two sports. They work with the Sport Commissioner, who actually runs the event – such as Track

and Field or Swimming etc. They act as a resource for the Commissioner and as a liaison between the Commissioner and the ASO office. Throughout the year, they are in contact with their Commissioner to work on promotion of the event, seeing that a facility is secured, obtaining the necessary equipment and supplies and seeing that volunteers and officials are obtained. They are present at the event at the beginning and end to help with set up

and takedown and to see that results are recorded and transmitted to the office. We are now recruiting for members of the GMT. The time commitment is August through March. Meetings are held twice monthly and take about three hours with travel. During the games, the time spent on each of the two sports averages about four hours. If you are looking to volunteer for something that will require an interest in

helping others stay active and healthy; a willingness to drive to lively, fun meetings; and a desire to use your skills to make the ASO Games the best in the nation, then you are GMT material! Please call Irene at the ASO office to learn more about becoming a GMT member. Call 602-274-7742 Tuesday through Thursday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. We’re counting on you. Call today!

2017 National Senior Games Results Congratulations to all of our athletes!

Event

Age Group

Name

Result

60-64

Larry Butterfield

Gold

Badminton-Mixed Doubles Basketball- Women’s Div. II

75-79 70-74 80-84 70-74 75-79 75-79 55+

Phil Brunner/Robert Semon Lorna Hunter/Margot Hurst Peggy Jefferson/Joan Kalfahs Lorna Hunter Margot Hurst Margot Hurst/Phil Brunner Texas Crush- Joan Clarke

Bronze Silver Bronze Bronze Gold Silver Gold

Cycling – Women’s 5K Time Trial Cycling – Women’s 10K Time Trial Cycling – Men’s 5K Time Trial Cycling – Men’s 10K Time Trial Cycling – Women’s 20 K Road Race Cycling – Men’s 20 K Road Race Cycling – Men’s 40 K Road Race

85-89 85-89 85-59 85-89 85-89 85-89 85-89

Sally Pace Sally Pace James Rigney James Rigney Sally Pace James Rigney James Rigney

Gold Gold Gold Gold Gold Silver Silver

Golf-Men’s Golf- Women’s

80-84 75-79

Marvin Selby Sallie McCutcheon

Silver Bronze

Road Race- Men’s 5K

60-64

Gary Plank

Gold

Shuffleboard-Open Doubles Shuffleboard-Open Doubles

65-69 80-84

Darlene Salls/Charles Crouse William Rindone/Thomas Wiehle

Gold Silver

Softball-Women’s Div. I

60+

Bronze

Softball-Women’s Div. I

70+

Sharon McCloskey, Cynthia Lutz, Mary Lou Porter, Nancy Gagnon, Lorraine Hebert, Gloria Smith, Karen Strickland, Eleanore Stavarek Juanita Lange, Ella Barnett

80-84 80-84 70-74 80-84 80-84 80-84

Ardeth McLeod Ardeth McLeod Wendy Weinberg Ardeth McLeod Ardeth McLeod Ardeth McLeod

Gold Gold Bronze Gold Gold Gold

Archery- Men’s Compound Release Badminton-Men’s Doubles Badminton-Women’s Doubles Badminton-Women’s Singles

Swimming-Women 50 Yd Breaststroke 100 Yd Breaststroke 50 Yd Butterfly 100 Yd Butterfly 100 Yd Individual Medley

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Silver

Event

Age Group

Name

Result

200 Yd Individual Medley Swimming-Men 50 Yd Freestyle

80-84 75-79

100 Yd Freestyle 50 Yd Backstroke 50 Yd Breaststroke

75-79 75-79 70-74

100 Yd Breaststroke

75-79 70-74

200 Yd Breaststroke 50 Yd Butterfly 100 Yd Individual Medley

75-79 70-74 75-79 70-74

200 Yd Individual Medley 400 Yd Individual Medley Table Tennis-Men’s Doubles Table Tennis- Women’s Doubles Table Tennis-Women’s Singles Track-Men’s 800 M Track-Men’s 1500 M Field- Men’s Discus Field- Men’s Javelin Field- Men’s Pole Vault Field- Women’s Hammer Throw Field-Women’s Javelin Volleyball- Men’s Volleyball- Women’s

70-74 70-74 70-74 60-64 60-64 60-64 60-64 50-54 50-54 50-54 55-59 55-59 70+ 50+

Ardeth McLeod Richard Kramer-Howe Kenneth McKinney Kenneth McKinney Kenneth McKinney Doug Springer Levente Batizy Kenneth McKinney Doug Springer Levente Batizy Kenneth McKinney Doug Springer Richard Kramer-Howe Doug Springer Levente Batizy Doug Springer Doug Springer Dennis Keppen/Don Weems Yali Carpenter/Yvonne Smart Yali Carpenter Gary Plank Gary Plank David Privett David Privett David Privett Tamara Alegria-Dybvig Tamara Alegria-Dybvig Jack du Mace Margo Darris Marmy Kodras Florina Douglas Rosa Brodersen, Aileen Kucera Diane Fordney, Douglas Myer (coach)

Gold Silver Bronze Silver Silver Gold Bronze Gold Gold Bronze Silver Gold Silver Gold Bronze Gold Gold Bronze Gold Silver Gold Gold Silver Bronze Bronze Gold Gold Silver Silver Bronze Gold Silver Gold

60+ 70+ 75+

AUGUST 2017 |

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S E P T E M B E R 16 – 1 8

Join us for our Seniors Poker Tournament and your chance at a huge payday. Satellites being held on 8/20 and 9/3, starting at 11:15am for $130! For every five (5) paid entries into a satellite, The Arena will award one entry to the tournament!

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Puzzle Answers

16121-10_TSR_SeniorsPokerTourn_LovinLife.indd 1

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AUGUST 2017 |

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