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opinion Sound Off There’s no end to the superficial criticism of Obama. Criticism that’s based upon hate and not fact. Let’s play the same game. If Mr. R. had been elected, today the U.S. unemployment would be over 20 percent. The housing industry would have crashed. There would be no American autos manufactured in the United States. Wall Street would go wild without controls. The U.S. capital would be moved to the Caribbean so that Mr. R. could watch his investments more closely. The United States would be bombing Iran. U.S. troops would be fighting in Syria. John McCain would be Secretary of Defense and Sarah Palin would be Secretary of State. And the military/industrial complex would be in high gear. Any criticism of Obama now? Your article called “50 and Fabulous” was really disappointing. I thought it was so sad to see these grown women thinking that being fabulous is equivalent to wearing skin-tight

clothes, showing cleavage and partying like they’re 20 year olds. It makes me wonder what kinds of values their children are learning from moms who think that that’s what they have to do to be fabulous and feel good about themselves. I never anticipated publicly defending a wealthy celebrity, but I have long been interested in issues of justice, and it seems to me that lately, very little of it is accruing to famous food writer, broadcaster and fellow senior citizen, Paula Deen. Let me hasten to add, as a disclaimer, that I am not a fan of hers. I have never watched any TV show she may host, and (to my knowledge) I haven’t patronized any of her businesses nor tried any of her published recipes. But I am getting tired of hearing and reading attacks on Deen that seem not only frivolous, but questionably motivated. One wonders if her business rivals are behind these dumb public assaults on her character and reputation. For instance, a year or two ago, upon her public admission of the unfortunate fact that she had been diagnosed with diabetes, the media was full of sniping talk about Deen, suggesting that anyone who used her recipes was in for the same misfortune. As if diet was the

The Curmudgeon This and That : : by Drew Alexander

E

very so often, especially as the calendar turns to August, my least favorite month, I have to decompress from the weighty matters of the world and let my mind wander toward lighter and not so light thoughts about this and that. • A crisis will soon be declared over a shortage of good-looking blonde female correspondents and on-camera personalities because the Fox News Channel has a virtual monopoly on them. • There’s nothing more serenely beautiful than the setting sun sinking behind a range of rugged mountains or dipping into the far horizon of the Pacific Ocean. • I still marvel how ancient civilizations were able to build such enduring

structures as the Mayan temples, the aqueducts of Rome, the pyramids in Egypt and the Acropolis in Athens. • If I had a say on who was the No.1 entertainer of the 20th century, I would vote for Frank Sinatra. He sang, he danced, he acted, he was on the stage, in movies, on radio, on television, and he appealed to three generations of audiences, beginning with bobbysoxers in the early 1940s. • World War II was not only a war, it was a drama of epic proportions that brought to the surface all that is good and all that is evil in the human race. • I am overdigitized. I refuse to commit to memory any more phone numbers, passwords, entry codes, addresses or any other group of numbers or any combination of numbers and letters.

page 6 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

only factor in predisposing a person to that illness. Lately, one can’t watch or read the news without being told what a racist Deen supposedly is, because an African-American ex-employee is suing for “discrimination” and publicizing a charge that Deen was verbally abusive. I thought the accuracy of this was what a court of law was supposed to rule on, not every consumer of cable TV news. Why is the press excited about this? For only one reason, Deen admitted truthfully, in a deposition that, in the distant past, she has uttered the “N” word. So what? Why do the news reports admit no distinction between uttering a

word, versus calling somebody a name using that word? I have seen not a single account alleging that anybody has overheard Deen intentionally insult a black person by using this word. Is the public unable to appreciate the distinction between uttering a word and intentionally insulting someone by its use? I think the real issue with Deen is the public’s hostility to seeing a mature white woman, by her own efforts, make a success of herself, whether in business or any other enterprise. Look at how Hillary Clinton was publicly treated before the election of Barack ...continues on page 8

We Want to HEAR from You! Your message will 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 and include your name only if you would like it printed.

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• Every time I’m in or near a hospital I’m reminded that nurses are the every day quiet heroes of our society. • There were once inspired automobile designers like Harley Earl and Raymond Loewy who gave us art on wheels. Today’s largely lookalike, boring cars are engineered, not designed. • I have reached that point in life when all my friends are either dead, retired or in jail. • If I were a young man in today’s world I would not have any children. But if it were possible, I would still like to have grandkids. • There’s more to learn about monetary matters from someone who has been through a bankruptcy than from a pricey financial adviser. • In my view, a true genius is that person who can spell hors d’oeuvres without having to look it up. • The most overlooked educational resource in our schools is the elderly. They should be invited to speak to

Write us: Lovin’ Life After 50 3200 N. Hayden Rd., Suite 210 Scottsdale, AZ 85251

every class so that the young can learn firsthand what no book can teach them about every subject and every aspect of life. • There’s no such thing as “luck.” What people call luck is really timing. It’s all about being in the right place at the right time or the wrong place at the wrong time. Timing in life is everything. • And finally, this country needs an official national humorist, the likes of a Mark Twain, Will Rogers or George Burns. It was Rogers who gave us such ageless insights as, “Everything is changing. People are taking the comedians seriously and the politicians as a joke.” Drew Alexander, also known as “The Curmudgeon,” is a monthly columnist writing about political issues. Send comments to drewalexander@cox.net or to Drew Alexander, in care of Lovin’ Life After 50, 3200 N. Hayden Road, Suite 210, Scottsdale, AZ 85251.

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The Up Side

Living with Balls. And Strikes. : : by Michael Grady

I

’m kind of fuzzy today. The Arizona Diamondbacks took us into extra innings last night. So the wife and I cashed in a considerable amount of our beauty sleep in order to find out who would be spitting tobacco joyously at home plate, and who would be spitting tobacco disconsolately from the dugout. A minor distinction to many, but when you’ve spent three months watching highly paid surrogates scratch and sniff more than your relatives, these things begin to matter. “Oh, baseball,” a friend of mine always rolls his eyes. “It’s like watching paint dry.” Which is a hackneyed comparison and grossly unfair to paint. Paint will surprise you sometimes. Paint will bubble. Or chip. Or gather in powerful droplets that tumble breathlessly earthward. In baseball, when there’s two on, two out and the pitcher coming to bat? You know damn well where that’s going. “So why do you watch it if it makes you unhappy?” People ask me. The short answer is tradition: like my father before me, and his father before him, there’s a small part of my soul that remains unfulfilled unless I spend my summers screaming at men in matching capri pants for not running counterclockwise enough. The practical answer is camouflage: a man staring listlessly at the stereo hutch is catatonic. A man staring listlessly at a baseball game is busy. “Does it make you happy?” is not a question that should apply to baseball, because baseball isn’t a game. It’s a lengthy, grueling, competitive, traditionbound activity that occasionally spikes the senses and is often random and unfair. Sound familiar? That’s right—it’s a test case for life. If you think that is arbitrary—or just a thin justification to drink beer— then okay, you’re right about the second part. But there are powerful parallels between baseball and life itself that offer some teaching moments: • It’s long—Football is appointment television; you stop everything to watch. If you did that for every one of baseball’s 162 games, bill collectors would be in your foyer, waiting for the

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Haz-Mat team to finish cleaning you, before they repossessed your home. You can’t focus on baseball. You can’t demand results or satisfaction from baseball. You’ll wear yourself down. You just have to let baseball in every spring, flooding the corners of your existence, and dwell in it until it resolves itself. In an era of instant gratification, this kind of trancelike patience can be a weapon. I realized this several years ago, when a needy relationship I was in ran aground during a Tigers-White Sox doubleheader: How many personal problems will work themselves out if you simply remain inert until they go away? Watching baseball has helped me out of several dreary career paths and thorny social encounters, because it taught me to sit and stare for so long, people concluded I was dead. • Most of it is boring—there are baseball fans who insist this isn’t so. Baseball, they say, is alive with so many microscopic nuances that every moment is a treat if you just know where to look. There’s a name for these people: boring people. They’re just excited because baseball is speaking their language. Of course baseball is boring most of the time. Know what else is boring most of the time? Life. It’s a simple fact that people need monotony. It grounds us. It gives us context. It is the dull soil from which exciting moments spring up and flower. You know what’s exciting ALL the time? A Richard Simmons workout video. Try dwelling in one of those for awhile. • It is rife with failure—Modern culture has a highlight reel mentality. Watch thirty seconds of game clips on SportsCenter and you come to believe that success is a decisive, black-andwhite proposition. Watching a whole baseball game teaches you that success is always a hard-won grind against the odds: a good hitter will still fail two times out of three; an ace pitcher still coughs up two to three runs a game; a dedicated fan can only avoid his wife for five to six innings before she

finds him in the guest bathroom with a radio and demands he do yardwork. • It is not something won, or lost, in a day—Not long ago, after an egregiously blown save opportunity, the Diamondbacks’ closer was asked how he’d address his debacle. “I’ll forget about it,” he said. “It’s a long season. And that’s what you gotta do: shake it off. Start the next day like it never happened.” While wholly unsatisfying from a fan standpoint, it’s some of the best life advice I have ever heard. • It demands patience and fidelity—I have divorced baseball before. Usually during a losing streak, an offensive drought, or when a manager refuses to admit that their expensive closer is, in fact, a human gas can. “I’m done!” I tell my wife, who is kind enough to act like she hasn’t heard this before, and stalk out. The fact is, I have divorced baseball many times—I am baseball’s Gabor sister. The split never lasts longer than the time it takes for a dramatic win, and it often concludes as soon as I hear a ball hit sharply from another room. Baseball is a relentless, up-and-

down affair, like a rollercoaster or marriage to an Italian. The fact that I always return to it is either horrible co-dependency or intense loyalty, depending on where the team is in the standings. So, why do people stick? • It is, occasionally, miraculous— When the Diamondbacks won the Series in 2011, my wife jumped across a coffee table wide enough to trip a show horse. When the Detroit Tigers won the Series in 1968, my dad began speaking in whalesong. When the Chicago Cubs clinched the NL East Division in 1989, we flooded Wrigleyville and I got to chest bump a cop. Like life, baseball sets off its overarching routines with moments of transcendance. For all the repetition, for every stinging disappointment, for all its mind-numbing routines, baseball doesn’t pay off like a game. (“Hey! We won!”) It pays off like a relationship, with everything you ever put into it and more. You’ll see a flicker of it in the eyes of a Pittsburgh Pirate fan if you mention 1979, or a Red Sox fan if you mention Game Six. All that failure becomes a dark frame for a bright moment you’ll never forget.

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... from page 6 Obama. Maybe Deen did or maybe these talking heads that we forgot to she didn’t call her erstwhile employee raise to be Americans for America— names. That is up to the finder of fact not themselves for their guaranteed job in court to establish. And lest the public in Congress. Are you noticing now? forget, we have a principal of justice in this country to the effect that a President Obama’s fierce person is deemed innocent until proven opposition to the keystone guilty.—Name Withheld Please (I don’t pipeline and his insidious war want to go through what Deen is going on coal reveal that the entire American through.) way of life is ultimately under assault. Think again. Stop fighting the legalization of Latino immigrants. You’re going to need their help to control the next onslaught of Muslim invasion. Believe it or not, that’s the future. Hi. I picked up the June issue and I was reading the “Old Bag.” I responded to her via email, but I wanted to make a Sound Off comment in case this isn’t printed in the “Ask the Old Bag” column. The letter was about the friend who reads the Bible who was disappointed in her adulterous friend. She was told to look the other way. I wanted to say that looking the other way is never the right thing to do. I can quote the Bible; James 5:20 says you may be sure whoever brings a sinner back from the wrong path will save his soul from death and cover a multitude of sins. She’s a good friend for being concerned for her adulterous friend. I just hope she can help her turn from her ways. Thank you. In its DOMA decision, the Supreme Court has made it clear that the federal government must treat all citizens the same when it comes to tax benefits and other government benefits. That being the case, it is time to treat unmarried taxpayers the same as married taxpayers. It is time to eliminate all federal benefits to citizens simply because they are married or have children. Single citizens are as “equal under the law” as are married same-sex couples.—Jack C. McVickers, Scottsdale

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After reading so many comments expressing righteous indignation toward Obama (not that he doesn’t deserve it) and the Muslims who are supposed to be behind some kind of world takeover, it bears mentioning that Obama is a Zionist puppet and is owned largely by the same factions that paint Muslims as terrorists and who have hijacked the U.S. government—yes, Israel. Obama is nothing more than the front man, doing what he is told by the corporate thugs that own him, while Americans squirm in their stew!—Alan Scott In reference the Lovin’ Life After 50 Sound Off entry which stated that Maj. Hasan was “still getting his salary of $278,000.” Major Hasan served eight years as an enlisted member and 10 years—to date—as an officer. At most, his current pay as an O-4 with 18 years cumulative service would be $7,283 a month, or $87,396 yearly. The $278,000 figure, which was initially reported by the Dallas-Fort Worth NBC affiliate, Channel 5, and confirmed by the DOD, reflects his pay since the November 2009 shooting.— Irene Silverman, U.S. Navy, Ret. I would like to reply to Helen Lederer who thinks it’s too bad that Mr. Alexander can’t count his blessings and learn to enjoy his life after 50. I have to ask her: Are you not aware of what is going on in our country? Do you really approve of the Obama administration fundamentally changing our country into a socialist, left wing, liberal one? Just think about Europe, Helen. Do you want the United States to become Europe? Thank God for Mr. Alexander, who is intelligent enough to know the danger our country is in and is trying to warn the public. Get educated Helen, please. ...continues on page 38

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The Widow’s Corner Ten Things

: : by Terry Ratner, RN, MFA

T

hese are things you know about your son—a son who died when he was 25. They are secrets whispered in the dark, privileged information that you hold on to with all your strength. It’s like a private club with two members celebrating a life cut short—a life that should have more secrets to share with each other. These are 10 things only you know for sure. Part one appeared in July’s Lovin’ Life After 50. Part three will appear in the September edition of Lovin’ Life After 50. Part 2 Five When he ate malted-milk balls, he sucked the chocolate off first. Thinking you weren’t watching, he’d roll the candies from one side of his mouth to the other, making the sort of tiny noises you’d imagine a chipmunk would make, or a small bird, or something else tiny and cute. Sometimes, to tease him, you’d ask a question just to hear him talk, and his words would come out all lumpy and garbled, pushed around the sides of the candy. “What?” you’d say, teasing. “I don’t understand.” But no matter how much you teased, he never chewed. Six You received a call from the school secretary. She told you your 9-year old son wanted to talk with you. There was a moment of silence while the phone changed hands. He was in fourth grade and you panicked thinking the worst. “Mom,” he said. You could hear him panting as if he had just finished running a race. “I’m sorry. I took your diamond ring this morning and hid it. I want to tell you where it is.” You hadn’t even missed it, you thought to yourself. “Where is it and why would you take it,” you asked him. “I don’t know why, but it’s in the bathroom under the sink.” You told him not to worry and that you both could talk about it after school. His voice sounded calmer, as if some tension was released after telling you his secret.

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Seven He became moody and restless in junior high. You try and remember what happened, but you don’t recall all the circumstances. Maybe you don’t want to know them. Maybe it’s too painful, a reminder of what went on and how the divorce affected him. One day he announced that he took a few pills. You didn’t know whether it was aspirin or Tylenol or the exact number of pills taken. You call the family pediatrician and he tells you to give him Ipecac to expel the meds. He spent three weeks in a psych unit with other teens who had problems. The medications the doctors prescribed changed him into a zombie with slurred speech. His eyes were dull, he moved in slow motion, and had trouble gathering his thoughts. You visited him twice a day, but he seemed distant, like someone you didn’t know. It wasn’t until you took him home, tapered the dosage, and then discontinued the meds completely that he came back to you. Eight He had a few girlfriends when he was in high school. You always liked his taste in girls. They were smart, sweet and pretty. The girls fell hard for him, but he never wanted to settle down. He was always worried he’d miss something better in life. His friends came over at all hours of the night wanting to know if they could talk with him. When you asked him what they wanted, he replied, “I’m selling sunglasses to the kids at school.” Somehow you never believed that story. You remember when he wanted to go to prom, rent a limousine with a few friends and enjoy the evening. You offered to drive him and his friends because you thought he’d get in trouble. He went in the limo anyway and survived the experience. You are glad he didn’t listen to you. Nine He predicted a first complete-game shutout for the Diamondbacks with Omar Daal pitching, scattering four

hits in a 4-0 victory over the Chicago Cubs at Bank One Ballpark (1998). It was a warm day in July, the kind of day you look out the window and think about going to a baseball game. He’d grown up listening to games, sprawled sideways across his bed in the dark tuned into AM stations from faraway Chicago, New York, St. Louis. He remembered the call letters and could reel them off like a secret code. Sometimes he brought a radio to the games and balanced it on the armrest

between your seats and the announcers’ voices drifted up in bits and snatches, and part of him was sitting next to you eating a hot dog and cheering while part of him was that child sprawled in the dark listening to distant voices. To be continued ... Terry J. Ratner, RN, MFA is a health educator at Banner Good Samaritan Medical Center. Visit her website at www.terryratner. com. Send comments to info@terryratner. com.

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2013 : : 2012 Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 9 page 30 : : Lovin’ Life After 50August : : November

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Ask the Old Bag Advice for the Over-50 Crowd

N

: : by Gayle M. Lagman-Creswick

ote: This letter was too long to print its entirety. I will extract what I believe to be the gist of the letter for my readers. This letter was written in response to the letter from the Bible-reading woman who wrote that she was worried about the soul of her friend whom she defined as adulterous. She did not like my answer or my quote from the Bible “Judge not lest ye be judged.”

D

ear Old Bag: ... He has told us to be witnesses to these folks. How can we be witnesses...if we just look the other way while they live their ungodly lifestyles?...Yes, God does indeed call us to tell all sinners that their lifestyle is wrong; we are not to bless their lifestyle by looking the other way. So, yes, in that respect, we are to judge those living in sin. God is telling us to warn them of the consequences of their sin lifestyle...He is not telling us to look the other way...Signed, Another Bible Reader

D

ave many nvestigate m, which now while ut one or er seniors. reen your could sell etirement would be people are and even ow how it

ear Bible Reader: I am no match for Bible students nor do I pretend to be. I do respect your opinion. I also remember the Bible story which said, “Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.” I for one do not cast stones, and I have to say that I am glad you are not my friend; but I do thank you for writing. Signed, O.B.

D

The Ultimate in

ear Old Bag: (Also an excerpt from a long letter) I would like your help in starting a movement... My mama used to say, “We are all children of God.” In society I found myself labeled everything from a “dirty Mexican” to a “Spanish-American” (by the nicer folks...) Guess what? I’m a human being, woman, American, whose brothers fought for my (our) freedom... in Vietnam...I have now met people from everywhere in the world. We are all human beings on the planet who could respect one another even if our politics or religions are different. ...I feel very rich in spirit and I feel truly grateful that I am blessed to be: An American Woman.

POWER WHEELCHAIRS! The Ultimate in D Ultra POWER WHEELCHAIRS!

come the must face who are love to do s dinners. r 40s, so I ergy than n cooking 16 years

ear American Woman: Thank you for your spirited and

page 10 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

The Ultimate in

touching letter. If we could begin this movement, and move it successfully, there would be no war. Let us do it! I’m in. It is “better to light one little candle than to stumble in the dark.” Thank you, American Woman! Signed, O.B.

D

ear Old Bag: I would like to say to the woman who was wanting to take separate vacations: My husband and I have been taking separate vacations for years, for the same reason she wants to take a separate one. We could not get along once we hit the road. I highly recommend separate vacations. In our case we are always happy to get back together and hear about each other’s trip. I actually think it has strengthened our marriage. Signed, Distance Makes the Heart Grow Fonder!

D

ear Grow Fonder: Thanks for sharing. I guess there is such a thing as too much togetherness. Signed, O.B.

D

ear Old Bag: I heard by way of the grapevine that you recently lost your husband and I want to speak on behalf of your readers to let you know that you have our deepest sympathy. I have been there myself. Bless you. Signed, Sorry for Your Loss

D

ear Sorry: Thank you for the condolence. This was a second marriage for us and, in truth, it was the best 12 and a half years of my life. He was older than I, so I was just praying for a few good years...and look what we had! We had so much fun enjoying jazz, sports, travel and friends. The last year I pretty much took care of him, and it was truly an honor. He was the most appreciative man in the world. I will miss him, but I am happy he did not have to suffer anymore. Thanks again. Signed, O.B.

If you have a question for The Old Bag, please send it to: Ask the Old Bag c/o Lovin’ Life After 50, 3200 N. Hayden Road, Suite 210, Scottsdale, AZ 85251 or lagmancreswick@cox.net.

www.lovinlifeafter50.com


entertainment

rivia Contest

W

e’re buttoning up our Hawaiian shirts and slipping into our Crocs this month. Because, honestly, that’s what we want to do. Fashion be darned! You’ve probably noticed that as you age, you become less concerned about what people think. As we get older, we tend to lose our inhibitions. We don’t focus so much on maintaining our “cool factor” as we did in our 20s and 30s. Rather, we choose to proudly let our “freak flag fly.” Younger people might think we’re out of touch, but we know better. We get to fully be us for the first time in our lives! We get to finally let our guard down. We get to become lovable weirdos! Some people get the “don’t give a bleep” attitude down before others. Some of history’s greatest figures were considered outcasts of their time. We toast to those fanciful freaks in this month’s trivia contest.

Trivia–Freaky geniuses

1 2 3 4 5

What famous inventor and artist was born out of wedlock and therefore given a surname that reflected where he was born? What filmmaker obsessed about the size of peas and used a special fork to sort them by size? What musician was reported to forbid eye contact in the height of his career? What teenage folk heroine led French armies into battle? Michel de Nostredame is better known by this name.

www.lovinlifeafter50.com

To enter simply:

On a sheet of paper list the correct answers in order 1 through 5. Include your full name, mailing address, phone number and an email address (if you have one).

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NOW ON SALE

Mail your trivia contest entry to: Lovin’ Life After 50 Attn: Trivia Contest 3200 N. Hayden, Suite 210 Scottsdale, AZ 85251 Or email your entry to: trivia@lovinlifeafter50.com

ONLY 6 LEFT AT THIS PRICE!

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. Good luck!

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Last Month’s Answers

1 2 3 4 5

Franklin Delano Roosevelt was the president who threw out the most opening day baseballs.

Squanto taught the pilgrims how to grow corn and catch eel.

“This Land is Your Land,” contains the lyrics: “One bright sunny morning in the shadow of the steeple. By the Relief Office I saw my people. As they stood hungry, I stood there wondering...”

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August 2013 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 11


calendar SOLAS: SHAMROCK CITY TOUR

Friday, September 13, 2013 A multi-media stage show featuring remarkable photos and stories from turn-ofthe-century copper boomtown Butte, MT. A story of Irish Immigration, mining & murder told in song and music by Solas.

EXILE with Special Guest JUICE NEWTON Saturday, November 16, 2013 2 Great Artists in 1 Performance.

August 1 Thursday Sunland Village Bingo, 7 p.m. Thursdays in August, Sunland Village Auditorium, 4601 E. Dolphin Ave., Mesa, charge for cards, (480) 832-9003. $900 progressive pot. Zumba, 6:30 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, and 3 p.m. Saturdays all summer, Palm Ridge Dance Studio, 13800 Deer Valley Dr., Sun City West, $5 for a single class, punch cards sold for four/eight/12/16 classes, (623) 5447842, dancingartsscw@gmail.com. Classes are only open to holders of SCW Rec Center cards and their guests. Walk-ercize Class, 9 a.m. to 9:45 a.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, Humana Guidance Center, 5943 E. McKellips Rd., Suite 106, Mesa, free, (480) 325-4707.

BOB EUBANKS in the NOT SO NEWLYWED GAME

Saturday, November 23, 2013 Video clips and a live version of the game hosted by the original emcee, Bob Eubanks!

Grandparents’ Play Day, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., The Doll House and Toy Store, 16447 N. Scottsdale Rd., D115, Scottsdale, free playtime, (480) 948-4630, www. azdollhouse.com. Grandparents are invited to come in with their grandchildren of all ages and have a wonderful, silly time playing and coloring together in the toy store. Free coffee will be served all day. All grandparents will also receive a special 10-percent discount. Group Exercise, 10:30 a.m. Thursdays, Shadow Mountain Senior Center, 3546 E. Sweetwater Ave., Phoenix, free for paid members, $10 for Phoenix residents, $20 nonresidents, (602) 534-2303. Low-impact bone-builder exercises led by a volunteer.

THE BLIND BOYS OF ALABAMA Friday, December 6, 2013 “Go Tell It on the Mountain” A Holiday Celebration

Mahjongg, 12:30 p.m. Thursdays and Mondays, Shadow Mountain Senior Center, 3546 E. Sweetwater Ave., Phoenix, free for paid members, $10 Phoenix residents, $20 nonresidents, (602) 534-2303.

HERMAN’S HERMITS starring PETER NOONE

Saturday, January 11, 2014 The 60’s British pop group that charmed the world.

August 2 Friday Wii Games, Xbox and Kinect, 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Fridays, Humana Guidance Center, 5943 E. McKellips Rd., Suite 106, Mesa, free, (480) 325-4707. Euchre, 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Fridays, Humana Guidance Center, 5943 E. McKellips Rd., Suite 106, Mesa, free, (480) 325-4707. August 3 Saturday Calculated Couples Singles Dance, 8 p.m., Pointe Hilton Tapatio Resort, 11111 N. Seventh St., Phoenix, $10, or $9 with pet food or pet toy for animal rescue, (602) 765-0200, www.cupidhelp.com. Dance features DJ, dancing, “personal ad wall.” Open for those 40s to 80s. Summer dress code: shorts, Hawaiian shirts, sundresses are OK—and everyone gets a free lei.

page 12 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

Chair Exercises, 11 a.m. Fridays, Shadow Mountain Senior Center, 3546 E. Sweetwater Ave., Phoenix, free for paid members, $10 Phoenix residents, $20 nonresidents, (602) 534-2303. Instructor/volunteer-led, low-impact exercises. Movie Day, 9:15 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. Fridays, Shadow Mountain Senior Center, 3546 E. Sweetwater Ave., Phoenix, free for paid members, $10 Phoenix residents, $20 nonresidents, (602) 534-2303. Call for movie title. August 4 Sunday KOY Radio’s Danny Davis and “Swinging With Stars,” 4 p.m., Pebblecreek Tuscany Falls Renaissance Theater, 16222 Clubhouse Dr., Goodyear, $15, (623) 535-4646. The show, which benefits victims of domestic violence, also features performances by 2013 Ms. Senior Arizona, Lee Lotze, and by Mike Stapley, recent winner of the Surprise Senior Idol Competition. August 5 Monday Parkinson’s Disease Treatment Discussion, 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Mondays in August, Helen Foundation, 105 S. Delaware Dr., Suite 8, Apache Junction, free but reservations required, (480) 389-5431, ernestogallegos01@gmail.com. Caps for the Cure Knit and Crochet Group, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., repeats Aug. 19, Humana Guidance Center, 5943 E. McKellips Rd., Suite 106, Mesa, free, (480) 325-4707. Bunco, 12:30 p.m. Mondays, Shadow Mountain Senior Center, 3546 E. Sweetwater Ave., Phoenix, free for paid members, $10 Phoenix residents, $20 nonresidents, (602) 534-2303. Variety Dance Class, 12:30 p.m. Mondays, Shadow Mountain Senior Center, 3546 E. Sweetwater Ave., Phoenix, free for paid members, $10 Phoenix residents, $20 nonmembers, (602) 534-2303. August 6 Tuesday “The Heart of a Woman,” 10 a.m. to 11 a.m., Scottsdale Healthcare Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Scottsdale, free, (480) 882-4636. A support program for women with heart disease or heart disease risk factors. “Is Weight-loss Surgery Right for You?” 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m., Scottsdale Healthcare Thompson Peak Hospital, 7400 E. Thompson Peak Pkwy., Scottsdale, free but registration required, (480) 882-4636, www. bariatricsurgeryaz.com to register.


MS Disease Treatment Discussion, 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Tuesdays in August, Helen Foundation, 105 S. Delaware Dr., Suite 8, Apache Junction, free but reservations required, (480) 389-5431, ernestogallegos01@gmail.com. Movie Day with “Downton Abbey,” 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesdays, Humana Guidance Center, 5943 E. McKellips Rd., Suite 106, Mesa, free, (480) 325-4707. Canasta, Bridge or Scrabble, 12:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Shadow Mountain Senior Center, 3546 E. Sweetwater Ave., Phoenix, free for paid members, $10 Phoenix residents, $20 nonresidents, (602) 534-2303. August 7 Wednesday Fibromyalgia Treatment Discussion, 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Wednesdays in August, Helen Foundation, 105 S. Delaware Dr., Suite 8, Apache Junction, free but reservations required, (480) 389-5431, ernestogallegos01@gmail.com. Healthy Cooking Class, 10 a.m. to 11 a.m., Humana Guidance Center, 5943 E. McKellips Rd., Suite 106, Mesa, free, (480) 325-4707. August 8 Thursday “Ask the Health Care Expert: Nibbles of Nutrition: Grains, Greens and Beans: Oh My!” 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m., Downstairs Auditorium, Civic Center Library, 3839 N. Drinkwater Blvd., Scottsdale, free but registration required, (480) 882-4636. Chronic Pain Treatment Discussion, 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Thursdays in August, Helen Foundation, 105 S. Delaware Dr., Suite 8, Apache Junction, free but reservations required, (480) 389-5431, ernestogallegos01@gmail.com. New Image Fashions Trunk Sale, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Fountain of the Sun’s activity center, 540 S. 80th St., Mesa, free, (480) 380-4000, ext. 204. August 9 Friday Arthritis/Neuropathy Treatment Discussion, 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Fridays in August, Helen Foundation, 105 S. Delaware Dr., Suite 8, Apache Junction, free but reservations required, (480) 389-5431, ernestogallegos01@gmail.com. August 10 Saturday Sunland Village Karaoke Night, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., repeats Aug. 24, Sunland Village Auditorium, 4601 E. Dolphin Ave., Mesa, $2 at the door includes soda or popcorn ticket, (480) 832-9003. Calculated Couples West Valley Singles Dance, 8 p.m., Sun City Country Club, 9433 N. 107th Ave., Sun City, $10, or $9 with pet food or pet toy for animal rescue, (602) 765-0200, www.cupidhelp.com. Dance includes DJ, dancing and the “personal ad wall.” Open to those ages 40s to 80s. Summer dress code: shorts, Hawaiian shirts, sundresses are OK, and everyone gets a free lei.

August 11 Sunday

See What’S NeW at VQ

“Is Weight-loss Surgery Right for You?” 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., Brady Conference Center, Scottsdale Healthcare Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Scottsdale, free but registration required, (480) 882-4636, www. bariatricsurgeryaz.com.. August 12 Monday Bone Density Screening, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Women’s Diagnostic Center, Scottsdale Healthcare Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Scottsdale, $20 and registration required, (480) 882-4636. Sun Lakes Democratic Club, 7 p.m., Sun Lakes Country Club’s Navajo Room, 25601 N. Sun Lakes Blvd., Sun Lakes, free but nonperishable food donations accepted, (480) 895-1378, (480) 895-1734. Laura Copple, chairwoman of the Maricopa County Democratic Party, will speak about upcoming elections and the party’s teambuilding ideas. Quilting Group, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., repeats Aug. 26, Humana Guidance Center, 5943 E. McKellips Rd., Suite 106, Mesa, free, (480) 325-4707.

At the all-new Vee Quiva Hotel & Casino, discover 950 exciting slot machines, 36 action-packed table games, a deluxe 16-table Play Poker and a massive 550-seat Bingo Park. Then stay at the luxurious boutique hotel, find a wide array of dining options as well as great events. So what are you waiting for? We’ll even pick you up! We have free bus shuttles to Vee Quiva Hotel & Casino, Lone Butte Casino and Wild Horse Pass Hotel & Casino from locations all over the Phoenix area. We’ll even give you $10 in Free Bonus Play to get you started.

Call 1-800-946-4452, ext. 8207, 7342, 7256 or 1403. Monday-Friday, 7am - 3pm Visit WinGilaRiver.com for complete bus schedule. Live in Tucson? Charter buses available for groups of 45 or more.

August 13 Tuesday The Orpheus Male Chorus of Phoenix auditions, before and after rehearsals which are 7 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Tuesdays thru Sept. 3, Central United Methodist Church, 1875 N. Central Ave., Phoenix, free, (480) 295-6106, brook.larson@ gmail.com, www.orpheus.org. Arizona’s longest-standing, continuously performing choral organization will audition new male singers in all voice types during the chorus’ first through fourth Tuesday evening rehearsals of the fall season. Heart Health Evaluations, 8 a.m. to 11:45 a.m., Women’s Diagnostic Center, Scottsdale Healthcare Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Scottsdale, $20 and registration required, (480) 882-4636. Duet’s Caregivers Support Group, 10 a.m. to 11 a.m., Scottsdale Senior Center, 10440 Via Linda, Scottsdale, free, (602) 274-5022. This monthly support group is for individuals who are caring for an aging parent, friend, partner or relative. Beading and Jewelry Making, 10:30 a.m. every other Tuesday, Shadow Mountain Senior Center, 3546 E. Sweetwater Ave., Phoenix, free for paid members, $10 Phoenix residents, $20 nonresidents, (602) 534-2303. August 14 Wednesday “Resources for Aging Loved Ones,” 6:30 p.m., Courtyard Towers, 22 N. Robson St., Mesa, free but registration required, (480) 833-8247. The seminar, presented by Visiting Angels—Mesa, helps anyone who is a caregiver, or anyone who is getting older themselves. “Nutrition Class—Hydrate for Health,” 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., Virginia G. Piper Cancer Center at Scottsdale Healthcare, 10460 N. 92nd St., Scottsdale, free but registration required, (480) 882-4636 or www.shc.org/. ...continues on page 14

Santan 202 & Kyrene Rd.

I-10 and Wild Horse Pass Blvd.

51st Avenue, 4 miles south of Baseline Rd.

Owned and operated by the Gila River Indian Community. Restrictions apply. See Players Club for details.

Tickets On Sale NOW!

The Cornell Gunter’s Coasters, who were also inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, are known for such hits as “Poison Ivy”, “Young Blood”, “Charlie Brown” and “Yakety Yak.”

SHOWTIMES: Friday, September 20 at 7:00pm & 9:15pm Saturday, September 21 at 7:00pm & 9:15pm Sunday, September 22 at 5:00pm & 7:00pm TICKETS: $19.95 (In advance) or $24.95 (Day of Event) Tickets available at www.BakerStudiosAZ.com or (480) 313-7714

Food and Wine provided by Postino East - Gilbert | Additional Cost

Showroom located at Baker Studios 263 E. Warner Rd, Suite C-103 Gilbert, AZ 85296

Accommodations provided by DoubleTree by Hilton Phoenix—Gilbert

August 2013 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 13


Assisted Living

e in Mesa, AZ Welcom ! e m o H It’s about Living. It’s about Caring. It’s always about Commitment!

The Bridge Home

Private, Upscale, Eco-Friendly Eco-friendly, assisted living care home focused on removing the environmental stresses from already stressed immune systems. We provide the highest level of personalized care for those who need support with the activities of daily living.

Highly Qualified Staff Staff Nurse Secure Facility On-Sight Gerontologist On-Sight Chiropractor Mobile Dentist 24/7; Awake Staff Medication Management Wheelchair Accessible

Dementia/Alzheimer’s Staff Chef Flat Screen Televisions Furnished/Unfurnished Spacious, Walk-In Closets Theatre Room Organic Hair Care Housekeeping & Laundry Fire Sprinkler System

Information: (602) 717-9098 info@crismonpeaksassistedliving.com www.crismonpeaksassistedliving.com

Rummage Sale Fundraiser Saturday, August 17, 2013 6:30am-10:30am Lakeshore Mortuary and the American Diabetes Association We’ll have snacks, music, raffles, and a great selection of donations including: *Furniture *Clothing *Glucose Monitors *Tools *Camping Equip. *Knick knacks *Kitchen Items *Books *Electronics *Toys *Jewelry and much more! Lakeshore Mortuary

1815 S. Dobson Road, Mesa, Arizona 85202 Visit www.LakeshoreMort.com under Events for directions

calendar

... from page 13 Job Search Workshop for Seniors, 10 a.m. to 12 Scottsdale Rd., Scottsdale, $10, or $9 with pet food or pet p.m., Humana Guidance Center, 5943 E. McKellips Rd., toy for animal rescue, (602) 765-0200, www.cupidhelp. Suite 106, Mesa, free, (480) 325-4707. com. Dance includes DJ, dancing, and the “personal ad wall.” Open to those ages 40s to 80s. East Valley Michigan Club, 2 p.m. lunch, Golden Corral, 1868 N. Power Rd., Mesa, charge for meals, August 18 Sunday (480) 986-7085, (480) 610-9864, jilanctot@cox.net. Anthem Community Farmers Market, 9 a.m. to “When we meet, we eat!” Repeats for breakfast fourth 12 p.m., Anthem Community Park, 41703 N. Gavilan Wednesday of the month at 9 a.m. Peak Parkway, Anthem, free admission, http:// August 15 Thursday

arizonafarmersmarkets.com. Ranchers with grass-fed beef, pork, lamb and goat are featured.

Cancer Support Group, 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., Banner Good Samaritan Medical Center, 1111 E. McDowell Rd., Phoenix, free, (602) 839-4970, (602) 527-3776. Dinner and free valet parking are provided.

August 19 Monday

Healthy Living Class, 6 p.m. to 7 p.m., Mercy Gilbert Medical Office Building, McAuley Auditorium, third floor, 3420 S. Mercy Rd., Gilbert, call for cost, (480) 728-5414. The Healthy Living Classes will teach participants how to improve their lifestyle through weight monitoring, healthy food choices and exercise. “An Exciting New Approach to Total Hip Replacement Surgery,” 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., Scottsdale Healthcare Thompson Peak Hospital, 7400 E. Thompson Peak Pkwy., Scottsdale, free but registration required, (480) 882-4636, www.azhipreplacement.com. Baked Potato Luncheon, 12 p.m., Fountain of the Sun, 540 S. 80th St., Mesa, $6, (480) 380-4000, ext. 204. August 16 Friday Birthday Bash Ice Cream Social, 1 p.m. to 2 p.m., Humana Guidance Center, 5943 E. McKellips Rd., Suite 106, Mesa, free, (480) 325-4707. August 17 Saturday

M ake your next move a winning one. Change is difficult, especially when you’re deciding on a new place to call home. Perhaps it’s time you pay a little more attention to your emotional and spiritual self and look for more out of a senior living community. The way we see it, it’s about living the whole of life. To learn more about our Senior Living Apartments, Assisted Living with Living Well technology and Skilled Nursing and Rehabilitation/ Therapy Services, please call

(480) 981-0098

Women’s Wellness Program, 7 a.m. to 10:45 a.m., Women’s Diagnostic Center, Scottsdale Healthcare Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Scottsdale, $75 and registration required, (480) 882-4636. Program will feature cholesterol, bone density and body composition screening, and certificate for manicure at Scottsdale Healthcare’s Essential Touch Wellness Center. The Amazing Women’s Expo, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Aug. 17 and Aug. 18, Phoenix Convention Center, 100 N. Third St., Phoenix, $10, benefits Everyday Heroes Like You charity, www.AmazingWomensExpo.com. The event will bring together women of all ages, and will feature retail shopping, wine tastings, facials, spa treatments, makeovers, book signings, giveaways, vendors showcasing their products and other great services. Guest appearances by Eric Martsolf (“Days of Our Lives”), Booboo Stewart (“Twilight” saga and “X-Men: Days of Future Past”) and Monica Spannbauer (“The Bachelor”).

or visit www.good-sam.com All faiths or beliefs are welcome. 09-G0060

page 14 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

Calculated Couples Scottsdale Singles Dance, 8 p.m., Doubletree Paradise Valley Resort, 5401 N.

Parkinson’s Disease Treatment Discussion, 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Mondays in August, Helen Foundation, 105 S. Delaware Dr., Suite 8, Apache Junction, free but reservations required, (480) 389-5431, ernestogallegos01@gmail.com. August 20 Tuesday Line Dance Lessons, 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Tuesdays, Humana Guidance Center, 5943 E. McKellips Rd., Suite 106, Mesa, free, (480) 325-4707. August 21 Wednesday National Active and Retired Federal Employee Association (NARFE) Chapter 1395, 11 a.m., Brother’s Family Restaurant, 8466 W. Peoria Ave., Peoria, charge for meals, (623) 935-4681, deb.at.NARFE@gmail. com. The tentative speaker is Tom Gunner from Hospice of the Valley with a topic of “The Myths of Hospice.” All current and retired federal employees and spouses are invited. “Is Weight-loss Surgery Right for You?” 5:30 to 7 p.m., Scottsdale Healthcare Osborn Medical Center, 7301 E. 4th St., Ste. 4, Scottsdale, free but registration required, (480) 882-4636, bariatricsurgeryaz.com. Osteoporosis Support Group, 9 a.m. to 10 a.m., Scottsdale Healthcare Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Scottsdale, free, (480) 882-4636. “Ask the Health Care Expert, Bridging the Gap Between Traditional and Holistic Medicine,” 7 p.m. to 8 p.m., Barnes & Noble Booksellers, 10500 N. 90th St., Scottsdale, free but registration required, (480) 882-4636. “Doc Talk: Dehydration Prevention Seminar,” 10 a.m. to 11 a.m., Humana Guidance Center, 5943 E. McKellips Rd., Suite 106, free, (480) 325-4707. August 22 Thursday Bone Density Screening, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Women’s Diagnostic Center, Scottsdale Healthcare Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Scottsdale, $20 but registration required, (480) 882-4636.


“Ask the Health Care Expert: Nibbles of Nutrition: Halt the Cravings,” 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m., Downstairs Auditorium, Civic Center Library, 3839 N. Drinkwater Blvd., Scottsdale, free but registration required, (480) 882-4636.

Calculated Couples West Valley Singles Dance, 8 p.m., Sun City Country Club, 9433 N. 107th Ave., Sun City, $10, or $9 with pet food or pet toy for animal rescue, (602) 765-0200, www.cupidhelp.com. Dance includes DJ and “personal ad wall.” Open to those 40s to 80s.

Cholesterol Check, Glucose Screening, Bone Density, Body Composition Analysis, 8 a.m. to 11:45 a.m., Women’s Diagnostic Center, Scottsdale Healthcare Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Scottsdale, $40 and registration required, (480) 882-4636.

Movie Day with “Beautiful Creatures,” 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., Humana Guidance Center, 5943 E. McKellips Rd., Suite 106, Mesa, free, (480) 325-4707.

August 25 Sunday

August 28 Wednesday

Alzheimer’s Presentation, 9:30 a.m., Shadow Mountain Senior Center, 3546 E. Sweetwater Ave., Phoenix, free for paid members, $10 Phoenix residents, $20 nonresidents, (602) 534-2303. August 23 Friday Polynesian Luau, 1 p.m., Granite Reef Senior Center, 1700 N. Granite Reef Rd., Scottsdale, $5 and registration required, (480) 312-1733, www.scottsdaleaz.gov/seniors. You’re invited to beat the summer heat by enjoying a Polynesian luau at the center. The event includes Polynesian entertainment, island fare and much more.

“Is Weight-loss Surgery Right for You?” 1 p.m. to 3 p.m., Brady Conference Center, Scottsdale Healthcare Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Scottsdale, free but registration required, (480) 882-4636, bariatricsurgeryaz.com. August 26 Monday “Living With Lymphedema,” 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., Virginia G. Piper Cancer Center at Scottsdale Healthcare, 10460 N. 92nd St., Scottsdale, free but registration required, (480) 882-4636, shc.org/events. “Be Active Your Way,” 10 a.m., Shadow Mountain Senior Center, 3546 E. Sweetwater Ave., Phoenix, free for paid members, $10 Phoenix residents, $20 nonresidents, (602) 534-2303.

August 24 Saturday Fitness Testing, 8 a.m. to 10 a.m., Peak Athletic Club, 12545 N. Saguaro Blvd., Fountain Hills, free but registration required, (480) 882-4636. Scottsdale Healthcare provides percentage of body fat testing which includes lean body mass, fat body mass, BMI and body measurements.

August 27 Tuesday “Coffee with a Cop,” 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Granite Reef Senior Center, 1700 N. Granite Reef Rd., Scottsdale, free, (480) 312-0275, tmoag@scottsdaleaz. gov. Scottsdale Police Crime Prevention Officer Toni Moag will meet with attendees to answer questions, provide crime prevention tips and assist with citizen requests.

Do You have lower Dentures that Don't fit? Missing teeth? talk to us about iMplants!

National Styles of Humor Presentation through the Arizona Humanities Council, 1 p.m., Granite Reef Senior Center, 1700 N. Granite Reef Rd., Scottsdale, free, (480) 312-1700. East Valley Michigan Club, 9 a.m. breakfast meeting, Golden Corral, 1868 N. Power Rd., Mesa, charge for meals, (480) 986-7085, (480) 610-9864, jilanctot@ cox.net. “When we meet, we eat!” August 29 Thursday “Heart Health Evaluations,” 8 a.m. to 11:45 a.m., Women’s Diagnostic Center, Scottsdale Healthcare Shea Medical Center, 9003 E. Shea Blvd., Scottsdale, $20 and registration required, (480) 882-4636. Hard of Hearing Presentation, 9:30 a.m., Shadow Mountain Senior Center, 3546 E. Sweetwater Ave., Phoenix, free for paid members, $10 Phoenix residents, $20 nonresidents, (602) 534-2303.

Chelsea Faulds of the Spin Band and ABBA Fab, 7 p.m., Sonoran Plaza, Sun City Grand, 19753 N. Remington, Surprise, $15, (623) 214-9366, www. scgrandmusicclub.com. This performance celebrates the iconic 1991 Natalie Cole album, “Unforgettable… with Love” and is a tribute to the amazing talent of Nat King Cole. Backed up by her troupe of professional musicians, including keyboardist Mike Smith of the Spin Band, Faulds will perform songs such as “Mona Lisa,” “Paper Moon,” “Route 66” and “Unforgettable.” Holiday Weekend Singles Dance, 8 p.m., Pointe Hilton Tapatio Resort, 11111 N. Seventh St., Phoenix, $10, or $9 with pet food or pet toy for animal rescue, (602) 765-0200, www.cupidhelp.com. Dance includes DJ and “personal ad wall.” Open to those ages 40s to 80s.

Got an event? Email us: editor@ lovinlifeafter50.com

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Canasta, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Humana Guidance Center, 5943 E. McKellips Rd., Suite 106, Mesa, free, (480) 325-4707. August 31 Saturday

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Your East Valley Outlet Mall August 2013 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 15


Welcomes you to the next generation of healthcare!

W

ellsprings is a locally owned and operated skilled therapy center. Our mission is to provide patients transitional, next generation healthcare in a healing environment and return them home to live again. The Wellsprings environment is warm and inviting and meant to break the more traditional institutional health care mode. • Individualized plans of care for every Guest • Therapy Pool with Dartfish “video imaging” Technology • Alter G Antigravity Treadmill • 7 day a week Physical, Occupational, Speech, Aquatic & Massage Therapy • Onsite Physiatrist and Wound Care Physicians along with 24 hour nursing care Wellsprings was recently awarded an “Excellent A-rating” by The Arizona Department of Health Services as well as an “Excellent 5-Star Rating” by the Centers of Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Contact Wellsprings to schedule a consult for your post-surgical needs.

480.729.6500

3319 S. Mercy Rd. Gilbert, AZ 85297

www.WellspringsofGilbert.com

page 16 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013


Choose Joint Replacement Surgery and Improve your Quality of Life

P

ain Relief, improved joint function, and increased quality of life are reasons why nearly 400,000 hip and knee replacements are performed in the U.S annually. Per the AAOS (American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons) joint replacement and joint revision surgery can provide 10, 20 and more years of pain free living. Advances in technology, improved surgical methods, proper pre-surgery planning, and post rehabilitative care contributes to the increased demand for these procedures. Wellsprings of Gilbert understands why individuals are looking to better their quality of living. Our philosophy is simple, to transform the recovery process for every patient who Russell Wagner chooses to get back Director to a life worth living. Since joint replacement surgery is a major life event, we want to play a pivotal role in the recovery process. Above each of our Nursing Pod entrances we have the words “Live Again”, it is not just a catch phrase- it is our highest aspiration.

healthcare” so you and your loved ones may “live again”.

Dartfish technology, a video analysis software using high speed cameras that film Wellsprings is a locally owned and operat- movement to provide instant visual feedback ed company, right here in the East Valley. We to our Guests. It helps doctors and therapists were built for one purpose, to heal, so pa- better communicate to their patients, so they tients can go home and Live Again. Our in- understand the corrective measures they timate 32 bed inpatient skilled therapy cen- need to make to recover. Using the filming ter features all private rooms with 24 hour technology we are able to analyze progress nursing care. Wellsprings recently received on a day to day basis and send these results an Excellent A-rating from the Arizona De- to the physician and orthopedic surgeon for partment of Health Services along with an further review. Excellent 5 Star Rating from the Centers for IPC physician and Wellsprings physiatrist Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS.gov). Dr. Merkel said: “Wellsprings focuses on cusOur next generation technology is what truly tom individualized rehabilitation plans for sets us apart from our competition. Our 5,000 each of their patients. After a treatment plan square foot rehabilitation gym features two is in place they are able to use the many tools instrumental pieces of equipment that help in their gym to help strengthen and heal their our Guests recover more rapidly and return patients for a quick return home”. to their independence. Like any medical decision, when consider-

• Alter G: The Alter G, developed by NASA and FDA approved, is an antigravity treadmill that allows our Guests to apply 20%-100% of their body weight, leading to pain free movement and improved function, while the joints continue to heal. Guests are secured in the machine’s fall safe environment, which increases confidence and improves control and balance. The Alter G is the future of reLife is all about movement. For people of habilitation and has been recommended by all walks and ages, independence hinges leading surgeons throughout the valley. upon free mobility and the drive to “make it • Therapeutic Pool: Wellsprings offers a happen” at all costs. When a person realizes state of the art aquatic pool designed to efmaking it happen may be hampered or hinfectively use resistance of water to promote dered by an injury, surgery or the recovery healing. The warm water alprocess, Wellsprings comes to life by restoring the hope and possibility it takes to meet lows for the patient to work the challenge. Wellsprings Executive Direc- in a buoyant environment tor, Russell Wagner said “The most important where gravity is eliminated. part of the recovery process is ensuring re- Our Guests are then able covery is individualized. No two people are to increase range of motion alike and no two recoveries are alike. Gener- and decrease joint compresally after an injury or procedure it is not just sion forces. By using a comthe individual patient that is affected. Often bination of buoyancy and this event brings hardship to loved ones as resistance, Guests are able well. That’s where Wellsprings of Gilbert to improve posture, flexibiliexcels. Our individualized plans of care ad- ty, strength, balance, aerobic dresses not only the recovery needs of the in- endurance and gait, while dividual but, ensures we are involving your inhibiting pain and muscle loved ones each step of the way. Together, spasm. as a Wellsprings family we will meet your The Wellsprings therarecovery goals with our “next generation py department also utilizes

ing Joint Replacement or Joint Revision surgery you must weigh the pros and cons, and always consult with your physician before finalizing your decision. However when living with severe pain or joint damage starts to affect your daily activities, surgery may be your best option. Rehabilitation is a crucial step in a successful joint replacement in the following days, weeks, and even months after one’s surgery. Our professional and experienced staff are at the core of our care-giving and your rehabilitation experience. Welcome to the Wellspring Path, a path you will not walk alone.

August 2013 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 17


Need Some Back-to-School Bucks? Have a Gold Party By Jenny McQuesten

N

est prices available for the metals and diamonds they buy. They use high-tech chemical and electronic analyses to discern the actual values. “Come in for a free appraisal, and then check others if you want. Because we have built a good relationship with our refinery, we can give better deals to our customers.” “And for all those prospecting club members in the area, we can send your gold placer or nuggets to our refinery, and get you a payout based on their analysis of your finds,” added Brian. A Gemological Institute of America certified gemologist Mike has trained his children, as well. “With years of experience, we know what to look for,” he said. “If we think a piece has antique or numismatic value, we’ll send the customer to an antique or coin dealer rather than just offering them the metals price. We have built a legacy of trust and we want to maintain that reputation. We don’t sell jewelry or have any other business, we just buy gold, silver and diamonds.”

ow that schools are back in session, you may need some extra money for clothes, books, sports or tuition. How do you get some extra funds? Why not get together with your friends and have a Gold Party. This is a very fun way to have a great time and also make some really good money. Michele Santos, co-owner with her brother, Brian Meyer, and dad, Mike Meyer, of AAA Gold Exchange, says gold parties are becoming the most fun new way to get a little extra cash. “You invite your family, friends and neighbors over, and have them bring any broken or unworn gold or diamond jewelry, silverware, or coins that they would like to sell. We provide refreshments, and while everyone is socializing, we evaluate the items and tell them what they can sell it to us for. Everyone goes home happy and richer.” Anyone who hosts a Gold Party receives 10 percent of the total value of items bought at the party, Michele related. “It’s also a great way to have a fundraiser for kid’s sports or other charities. We can also do it for clubs and residential community centers.” If you want to find out more about having a Gold Party, come into the store or give Michele a call. She’ll explain it all, and handle all the details. “The newest of our four Valley stores is in a great neighborhood location at the southwest corner of Power and Brown. Our store is casual, friendly and comfortable, and there is never any pressure to sell. We get many repeat and referred customers because our prices are the best,” she claimed. The Meyer family prides themselves on offering the high-

Book your Gold Party with AAA Gold Exchange in just 3 easy steps. INVITE YOUR GUESTS – Invite all of your family, friends, neighbors, or co-workers to a fun get-together at your home or office. Have everyone bring all of their unwanted or broken gold, silver, platinum, diamonds or coins…. NEED HELP? (AAA Gold Exchange can supply

personalized invitations, marketing materials, and tips for how to spread the word about your party (Email, Facebook, and Printed Invitations). We will also cater the event by providing appetizers and beverages. You can even use 1 of our 4 valley stores instead of your home or office.) LET US KNOW WHEN YOUR PARTY IS – AAA Gold Exchange will send some of our trained professional and courteous representatives to your home or office, with all the tools needed to purchase gold and other metals. They will evaluate and weigh each person’s items and give them a no-obligation offer on the spot. (AAA Gold Exchange pays top dollar and often pays 10-25% higher than our competitors.) GET PAID!!!! – Don’t have any of your own gold or silver to sell? That’s okay, just for hosting the party, AAA Gold Exchange will pay you 10% of all the gold purchased that day. You can easily make $300.00 to $500.00 just for having some friends over for a fun and unforgettable time. (In the past our gold parties have ranged from $1,000.00 to $8,000.00) You can also turn your gold party into a charity fundraiser. You can donate a portion or all of the proceeds from the gold purchased at your party to raise money for your cause or charity. AAA Gold Exchange is located at 1152 N. Power, Ste. 102. Hours are 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., Monday through Saturday, and 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Sundays. For more information, call (480) 247-6876 or visit AAAGold Exchange.com.

CASH FOR GOLD! NO GAMES, NO GIMMICKS. ARIZONA’S GOLD STANDARD WE BUY...

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AAA GOLD EXCHANGE PAYS TOP DOLLAR FOR GOLD, SILVER AND DIAMONDS. AAA GOLD HAS 35 LOCATIONS

“I wanted to sell some gold that I had found in my drawer. I didn’t want to get ripped off so I started asking around. The max offer I got from other places was $420 but I decided to check this place out since it is really close to my house. The man that helped us was very friendly, and didn’t make us feel awkward at all! He offered $534 for the gold, which was $115 more than the other offer! It is a very nice shop, very clean. The customer service is great, and you can’t beat their payouts!” Don’t Be Fooled By 20% or 50%

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AAA GOLD EXCHANGE had over 2 million dollars in pay outs last month thanks in part to thousands of repeat customers and referrals

page 18 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

Van Buren St

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Mesa, AZ 85210

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entertainment

... answers on page 39

Even Exchange by Donna Pettman 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 H H H

Across 1. Dessert 6. Alternatively 10. Bar order, with “the” 14. Squirreled-away item 15. Alternative word 16. Songbird 17. 7:4, for example 18. Vault 19. Fantasy creatures of Middle-earth 20. Phoenix geological formation 23. 1967 Monkees song 25. Long-eared pack animal 26. One kind of street 27. Pig 30. Copper, e.g. 31. African chieftain 32. Pro’s rival 34. Kind of palm 38. Phoenix garden 41. Scene of a fall 42. Parade honoree 43. Top of the line 44. Egyptian king, colloquially 45. Black magic 46. One who treats people badly 50. School org. 52. Store posting, abbr. 53. Park where the Romero Pools are, in the Tucson area 57. Holm oak 58. Meeting places in ancient Rome 59. Cycle 62. Detective Wolfe 63. In any way 64. Alternative to a convertible 65. Sheepish look 66. Physics units 67. Relieved Down 1. Keep out 2. A wood sorrel

H Moderate HH Challenging HHH HOO BOY!

Crossword by Myles Mellor

3. Mom talking like a young child 4. Spirit 5. Carbon bond 6. ___ Island National Monument 7. Legal claims 8. Airplane assignment 9. Feeling of elation 10. Cursed 11. Cupid’s projectile 12. Pilgrimage destination 13. Extol 21. Piercing locale 22. Storm dir. 23. One in a black suit 24. Aimed directly at 28. Shrewd 29. Goof 30. Simpson’s bus driver, ___ Mann 32. “Not on ___!” (“No way!”) 33. Easter’s beginning

34. Storage site 35. ‘60s druggies 36. Swamp snapper 37. Spreads 39. One who carries burning incense at a ceremony 40. Recent 44. Business card abbr. 45. Brewer’s need 46. Mastering 47. One who wraps with twine 48. Where babies start from 49. Member of a Germanic people 50. Cut down 51. Rulers 54. Astronomer’s sighting 55. Notre Dame niche 56. “___-Team” 60. Freelancer’s enclosure, abbr. 61. Destroy

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! Pleased

DROUP Crash

C AMPIT Protect

GADUR Give

TANDOE

August 2013 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 19


ADAM MORENO

Fridays With Wallace Bill “Wallace” Thompson and his wife, Katie, are flanked by admirers who regularly have lunch with the long-running children’s television actor.

His sidekick’s not exactly Ladmo, and the Arizona Duuude is no Captain Super. But lunches with Bill “Wallace” Thompson may be the funniest, and the sweetest, weekly get-together in Arizona. By Jimmy Magahern

page 20 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

T

hey meet every week, at the same old restaurant. Every Friday at around 11 a.m., they begin slipping through the sliding back door at Bobby Q’s and taking their seats around a big square of tables set up on the dance floor. Some come with jokes, or a guitar, or a book they’ve written. Many are recognizable faces from local broadcasting history. There’s ‘70s weatherman Dewey Hopper in the corner, repeating what sounds like a bawdy joke about a nurse. Sandy Gibbons from the old “Dialing for Dollars” show is making the rounds, shaking hands. And is that Dolan Ellis in the cowboy hat? “There’s so many years of experience and media savvy sitting around here,” says Jonathan Abel, himself a former KTAR news director and voice-over artist for radio and TV commercials who knows many in the room from their behind-the-scenes work in Arizona broadcasting. “There’s writers and publishers, actors and stunt people. There’s wanna-bes, used-to-bes. There’s several geniuses floating around here, too.”

A few are only loosely connected to the industry, like Tom Ethington, a home improvement contractor who once chaired some fundraiser telethons featuring then-stars Hopper and Gibbons. “In the ‘60s and ‘70s, anybody who was on local TV was a celebrity,” Ethington says. “People who, in another state, would have been just newscasters. To us, they were like movie stars.” A few faces around the tables actually made it to the movies. Linda Rae Jurgens had some choice screen time with Tom Cruise in “Top Gun;” her mustachioed husband, Ron Garland, has been a go-to gunslinger type for decades in TV movies and commercials. Most of them say they come for the camaraderie. Some, toting business cards and headshots, claim they come to these gatherings to “network.” But really, there’s only one thing that could draw such a big group of extroverted old-timers, some who drive in from Tucson and Prescott, to a weekly lunch in the heat of the Phoenix summer. ...continues on page 22

www.lovinlifeafter50.com


YOU STILL GOT IT.

Rock your seniority with Cigna Medicare Advantage HMO plans With Medicare just around the corner, keep the momentum going by considering a Cigna Medicare Advantage plan. You can look forward to: • $0 monthly premiums* • A 4.5-star quality rating**—Arizona’s highest • Access to doctors valley wide Go ahead. Swing for a hole-in-one. Choose Cigna and GO YOU.

Learn more—and get a FREE gift***! Attend one of our fun valley-wide seminars. To RSVP and to find one near you: Call 1-800-524-0321 (TTY 711) 7 days a week, 8 am - 8 pm or Visit stillu.cignamedicareaz.com

SM

* You must continue to pay your Medicare Part B premium. ** Plan performance star ratings are assessed each year and may change from one year to the next. *** No obligation to enroll. “Cigna” and the “Tree of Life” logo are registered service marks and “GO YOU” is a service mark of Cigna Intellectual Property, Inc., licensed for use by Cigna Corporation and its operating subsidiaries. All products and services are provided by or through such operating subsidiaries, including Cigna HealthCare of Arizona, Inc., and not by Cigna Corporation. Cigna HealthCare of Arizona, Inc. is a Medicare Advantage organization with a Medicare contract and a Dual special needs plan contract with the Arizona Medicaid (AHCCCS) program. As of the date of publication, Cigna Medicare Select Plus Rx plans are offered to employers and individuals in Maricopa County and certain zip codes in Pinal County, Arizona only. H0354_162013a CMS Accepted www.lovinlifeafter50.com

August 2013 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 21


Fridays with Wallace... from page 20

It’s Wallace “Him” is Bill Thompson— “Wallace,” to generations of Arizonans who grew up watching the local legend on the “Wallace and Ladmo Show,” which ran on then-independent KPHO-TV for an incredible 35 years, beginning with its humble 1954 debut as “It’s Wallace?” through the show’s local-celebrity-studded, tearful finale in 1989. By the end, “Wallace and Ladmo” was seen all over Arizona, and could even be tuned in from a few neighboring towns in northern Mexico and eastern California. “I don’t think I’ve ever called him anything but Wallace, or Wall-boy,” says Steve Hoza, a longtime local museum archivist who curates the official exhibition of Wallace and Ladmo memorabilia and also runs the biggest fan website dedicated to the show, WallaceWatchers.com. “I’ve known Wallace 26 years now,

Adam Moreno

“Him,” says Ethington, nodding his head in the direction of the man slowly making his way to the head of the table, with a little help from his wife. “He’s the reason they all come.”

Every Friday, Wallace takes his same seat at the table, with Katie on his right and I’m still just in awe of him, of his and on his left, his close friend Gibbons, tremendous talent.” About a decade a fellow KPHO alum who would fill in ago, Wallace personally gave Hoza the on the “Wallace and Ladmo Show” legal rights to manage the Wallace and whenever regular Pat McMahon (who Ladmo name and merchandise, an occasionally shows up at the luncheons) honor the überfan says he sometimes was on vacation. still feels unworthy of. Next to them sits Larry “I go over to his house Chebowski, a former now to have him sign street clown who used to something, and it’s still entertain as an unicyclist the same feeling, after all at Legend City, where these years.” Wallace and Ladmo Katie Thompson, regularly performed. In the woman who’s been his trademark top hat, married to Bill since 1974 the lanky Chebowski, and is, by all accounts, the who today runs an driving force that keeps entertainment booking him coming to these company and says he luncheons, week after Bob Roloff, also known still rides the unicycle week, has become used to as “Arizona Duuude,” at age 72, can bear an those awestruck reactions. dresses in the colors of the unsettling resemblance “It’s amazing,” she Arizona flag. He travels to Ladimir “Ladmo” says. “They’ve been off the state as “Arizona’s Kwiatkowski, Wallace’s the air since 1989, but No. 1 Fan.” beloved comedic we’ll go someplace to eat and we can partner, who died of lung cancer on hear people talking at the next table: March 2, 1994. ‘Look, It’s Wallace!’ And smiles just Chebowski insists the effect is immediately light up everyone’s faces. unintentional, and can pull up old It’s wonderful, it really is. And he loves photos on his ever-present iPad that everybody.” show him wearing the top hat as far

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“Wallace” admirers Glenna Covina, Wes Zimmerman, Marc Faigus and Barb Yuschik join the festivities, which oftentimes feature fans breaking out in song.

of cheesecake instead. He dropped another when they couldn’t guarantee the services of a regular waitress. Nowadays, it’s not unusual for 30 to 40 people to show up for the lunches at the former Bobby McGee’s, with waitress Monique, which take on the format of a celebrity roast, only with everyone still too in awe of the guest of honor to say anything ungracious. Before and during the meal, everyone around the table takes turns updating the group on their latest doings, and some take a stab at providing a little entertainment. Abel will sometimes break out his harmonica; actor and former stuntman Rod Wolff will tell a joke or two; and Ellis, when he makes the festivities, will invariably break out in song. Today, Bob Roloff launches into a bit of his shtick as the Arizona Duuude (“That’s how we’d say it back in the late ‘60s: ‘Hey duuude!’”), a character who wears a shirt emblazoned with the Arizona flag and travels the state emceeing events as “Arizona’s No. 1 Fan.” Next to him is Wyatt Earp, the great-grandnephew of the notorious Tombstone lawman, who travels the world performing a one-man play about his famous namesake. In the way they all tend to look to Wallace for his reaction, many around the table seem to still be auditioning for a spot on the “Wallace and Ladmo Show.” After the meal, things unwind a little, and everyone begins subtly jostling for time with their hero before he and Katie leave. Gibbons graciously vacates his seat so that others can have a little one-on-one time with Wallace, and one after another, each takes their turn beside the throne. And smiles. It’s quite possibly the sweetest gettogether that happens in Phoenix on a regular basis, but Wallace himself will

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have none of that sappy sentimentality. “Frankly, I don’t know any of these people!” Wallace confides, with a boisterous laugh, when asked how it feels to see such an outpouring of love every week from so many lifelong friends and fans. “But I keep coming here, to find out who they are.” Stay Tuned He may move a little slower and look a bit frail compared to his heavier heyday, but at 82, Bill “Wallace” Thompson still retains all the irreverent wit and inspired mischievousness that indelibly shaped the sensibilities of the lucky generations of Arizonans who grew up watching his show. On one Friday, after occasional guest Dolan Ellis serenades the group with a long, solemn reading of his tribute to Cochise County Sheriff Larry Dever called “The Last of the Cowboy Sheriffs,” Wallace instantly brings the mood back up by asking Ellis, “So what happened to the second to the last cowboy sheriff ?” When there’s a lull in the action, Wallace will grab Gibbons and the two of them will act out a hastily rehearsed skit in the middle of the room. His top hat-wearing sidekick is not exactly Ladmo, and the Arizona Duuude is no Captain Super. But for a couple of hours every Friday, it’s as close to classic Wallace as we’re likely to get. “He still seems to be at the top of his game, at times,” says Abel, who places Thompson in a league with pioneers like Ernie Kovacs and says Wallace’s inventive humor “cut me free from the bonds of colloquial thinking.” Adds Ellis, after Wallace’s sheriff quip, “Nobody else would ever think to say something like that. That’s why he’s the king.” ...continues on page 24

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Fridays with Wallace... from page 23 On this Friday, Wallace appears in particularly fine form, firing off grumpy observations about the adoring friends who pay him weekly tribute like vintage Mr. Grudgemeyer. “This week we’ve got somebody with a famous relative,” he says, searching for the name. “Wyatt Earp?” assists Katie. “No, not the relative. What’s his name?” Wallace rejoins, engaging his wife in what would sound like forgetfulness coming from any other

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octogenarian but with his timing, comes across like classic “Who’s On First” riffing. “And here’s somebody of no consequence at all,” he rebounds, shaking hands with a beaming Steve Hoza. Wallace’s laugh is still the very definition of infectious, and even long-suffering Katie is not immune. “He is so funny, and he’s that way at home,” she says. “I have to look at him twice a lot to see if he’s being serious.”

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given them. Now they mostly stay at home and watch TV, Katie says. “He likes boxing, anything on the History Channel, and lately, ‘American Pickers.’” He tries to stay up on comedy— he’s heard good things about Jerry Seinfeld’s Web show, “Comedians In Cars Getting Coffee”—and he remains open to listening to new music. Lately Gibbons’ son, Jim, has been trying to turn Uncle Wallace on to his Irish Celtic rock band, the Biffos. But Wallace says he lost his musical connection with the passing of Mike Condello, music director on the “Wallace and Ladmo Show” from 1962 to 1971. After years of chronic depression, Condello took his own life in 1995, just a little over a year after the death of Ladmo. “We lost a lot when Mike died,” he says, a little quietly. No one wants to say it out loud, but everyone who keeps coming back for lunch with Wallace does it partly because no one can say how long this will last. “Today is the most animated I’ve seen him in a while,” says Ethington. “But sometimes he’s pretty quiet.” Chebowski adds that he has to deliver Wallace a big enough audience these days to keep him coming back. “If it gets down to five or six people, he doesn’t show up,” he says. “If I can keep the count up to 20 or more, he shows up.” He still enjoys an audience, after all these years. “I think he enjoys it, he’s sitting there smiling through the whole thing,” says Abel, who feels many come to the lunches to pay their respects to the man while he’s still around to see it. “Most of these people owe their careers to Bill Thompson.” Mike Martin, a veteran broadcaster who did a children’s TV show in Tucson he admits was “heavily inspired, shall we say, by Wallace,” says he comes to the lunches “pretty much for the same reason everyone else does: to hang out with Wallace.” One after another, the lunch guests sing their praises of the man they come to salute. But Wallace himself is convinced they come more for the dollar ice cream sundaes Chebowski was able to finagle for the group. “Don’t you believe any of them!” he hollers, as he and Katie, arm in arm, begin heading for the back door. “They’re all lying!” See you next week, Wall-boy.

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Bear Market Report The Five IRA Commandments : : by Teresa Bear Question: I’m thinking about setting up a self-directed IRA to invest in rental property. What’s your advice? Answer: In the movie, “History of the World—Part I,” Moses descends from Mount Sinai holding three stone tablets. Delivering the law to the Israelites, he says, “The Lord Jehovah has given unto you these 15...” [Moses then drops one of the stone tablets— which shatters—and he says] “TEN Commandments! For all to obey!” Of course this is my own personal theology, but as I ponder the five missing commandments, I think the God of Investing might say: Thou shalt not place these assets in your IRA: Rental Real Estate

11 12 13 14 15

Real Estate Investment Trusts (REIT) Limited Partnerships Gold Variable Annuities

The following summarizes why I don’t recommend these investments for my client’s retirement accounts:

Rental real estate: One of the reasons for purchasing rental real estate is the tax benefits, which you lose when you place it in an IRA. You cannot take advantage of the annual depreciation deduction on your 1040 and when you sell the property you lose favorable capital gains treatment. Another big issue is that you cannot comingle funds. For example, if the roof needs to be replaced, you cannot use nonIRA money to pay for it. You could potentially incur a 50 percent penalty for making an excess contribution to your IRA. Another downside is that the custodian of the IRA is required to report the fair market value of the assets to the IRS annually. This may require an expensive appraisal. A final headache is finding a custodian who specializes in this type of asset. When you do find one, the fees are much higher than you would pay to a bank or brokerage firm—who generally

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offer their custodian services for no additional charge. A REIT is a little better than owning individual real estate, but there may still be a custodian problem. I recently met with a gentleman who invested $20,000 of his IRA money in a private REIT. Imagine his shock when he discovered that the firm who was serving as custodian was charging $2,000 per year! This was in addition to the REIT management fees. Regrettably, he found out that he couldn’t liquidate the investment. He is stuck until the managers decide to sell the property and distribute the cash back to the investors. Limited partnerships (that aren’t publicly traded) have the same liquidity issue. You often can’t liquidate them if you need the money and must wait for the general partner to close the business. The worst case that I saw was a woman who received several limited partnerships in her exhusband’s IRA as a divorce settlement. These partnerships were defunct, but the amount reported to the IRS (and the courts) was the initial investment of $500,000. Not only was she stuck with a worthless asset, but since she was older than 70 1/2 years old, she was compelled to take a distribution from the account per the IRS rules. She was forced to hire an attorney to intervene on her behalf with the IRS. Gold: With gold, you not only have to pay custodian fees, but safekeeping fees as well. Additionally, you will also have to pay fees to buy and sell the gold within the IRA account—you can’t just add in coins that you already own. Variable annuities: When Suzy Orman was asked the question, “My financial adviser is recommending that I buy a variable annuity within my retirement account. What should I do?” Her reply was “Get yourself another financial advisor, pronto.” I agree with Suzy on this point. A variable annuity is an insurance contract that holds mutual funds. There are fees assessed by underlying mutual funds—as well as another layer of fees charged by the insurance

company. The biggest advantage in owning a variable annuity is that you can defer the taxes on the gains in the account. However, assets held in an IRA are already tax deferred. You can own the same mutual funds in a regular brokerage account without paying additional fees to the insurance company. Therefore, while these five investments might have their place in a financial portfolio, it is best not to hold them in an IRA.

Teresa Bear, CFP, CPA (www.TeresaBear. com), specializes in retirement planning and asset preservation for retirees and those about to retire. Bear is the author of the new book “She Retired Happily Ever After.” Send questions to TBear@JCGrason.com. Investment advisory services provided by Brookstone Capital Management, LLC., a SEC registered investment advisor. The information in this article describes general guidelines and suggestions for preventing identity theft. In no way should it be deemed as advice for any individual circumstance or situation.

August 2013 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 27


Insomnia: Causes and Treatment Insomnia, the inability to fall or stay asleep, is the most common sleep complaint among Americans. It occurs in people of all ages and can lead to daytime sleepiness and fatigue. Insomnia can be transient, due to jet lag, illness or stress; short term, lasting up to three weeks; or chronic, long lasting. Causes of insomnia Insomnia can be caused by many different things: Certain health conditions: Allergies Anxiety Asthma Chronic cough or pain Depression Heartburn Menopause Postnasal drip Restless leg syndrome Sleep apnea Certain medications including: Some antidepressants Asthma medications Decongestants Diuretics (“water pills”) Steroids Stimulants Thyroid medications Drinking caffeine, exercising, or smoking too close to bedtime. Environmental factors including bright lights, room temperature and outside noises. Napping or not getting enough physical activity during the day. Problems and stress in day-to-day life. Treatment: Lifestyle changes If you think you have insomnia, you may first want to consider changing some of your sleep habits as listed below. Try to keep a consistent sleep schedule, wake up and go to bed around the same time every day, even on weekends. Avoid napping during the day and get into bed only at bedtime. Exercise regularly, but at least four to six hours before bedtime. Try to avoid alcohol, caffeine, and nicotine. Don’t drink large amounts of fluids right before going to sleep. Remove bright clocks and other sources of light from your bedroom. Keep the room temperature comfortable.

Treatment: Medications Medications to help you sleep include sedatives, low-dose antidepressants, and over-the-counter (OTC) antihistamines. Sedatives should only be used under the close supervision of a doctor because they can cause tolerance and sometimes dependence. Also, stopping these medications suddenly can cause

rebound insomnia and withdrawal. To avoid feeling groggy the next day, get eight hours of sleep nightly while on these medications. Some low dose antidepressant medicines may also help. These medicines do not carry the same problems with tolerance and dependence as sedatives, but are still not side-effect free. Antihistamines (i.e., Benadryl or diphenhydramine) are found in many OTC products labeled “P.M.” They

work by causing drowsiness, but may not provide deep, restful sleep. You can quickly develop tolerance to the effects of these medications, so they should only be used for the shortest time possible. For more information on insomnia or for help in evaluating if any of your medications may be leading to insomnia, talk to your Walgreens pharmacist today.

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March of Dimes Honors Arizona’s Top Nurses

M

arch of Dimes celebrates its 75th anniversary by honoring Arizona’s top nurses. Throughout history, nurses have served as volunteers and advisors to the March of Dimes and are critical to its mission of improving the health of babies—and are key in comforting families. It was during the polio epidemic that March of Dimes began its long and rich tradition of working with nurses. Forty thousand nurses volunteered for the Salk polio vaccine field trials in 1954, the largest medical investigation of its kind ever conducted. President Franklin Roosevelt, who had polio himself, started the March of Dimes in 1938—to put an end to this terrible disease. The March of Dimes funded the research for vaccines developed by Jonas Salk, MD, (1955) and Albert Sabin, MD, (1962) that ended the polio epidemic in the United States and most of the world. As the only health charity to fulfill its original mission of wiping out polio, March of Dimes has a deep understanding of the need to support those men and women who are delivering patient care to our communities. For the past nine years, the Arizona Chapter has held its Nurse of the Year Awards Gala to honor the thousands of nurses who provide the highest standard of care

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to their communities. The event began to garner awareness of the critical nurse shortage in Arizona. Since its inception, more than 1,000 nurses have been given top honors in their disciplines and $1 million has been raised for March of Dimes Arizona Chapter. This year, more than 300 nurses throughout the state were nominated. After a rigorous finalist selection process, nurses are reviewed by a winner selection committee—where one nurse is chosen in each of 14 categories. On the night of Aug. 24, 2013, CBS 5 anchors Sean McLaughlin and Nicole Crites will reveal the winners. Funds raised from the event will support the March of Dimes’ mission of preventing birth defects, premature birth and infant mortality.

page 30 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

Tamra Cullumber - University of Arizona Medical Center Sharon Moritz- Chamberlain College of Nursing Beverly Rusing - Tucson Medical Center

District Medical Group - Children’s Rehabilitative Services Prenatal/ Pediatric

Adriana Brown - St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center Kimberly Reiners - Cardon Children’s Medical Center Laurie Smith - St. Joseph’s Hospital and Medical Center Tracy Stephens - Maricopa Integrated Health System

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Come Experience The Citadel With Me! Call 480-832-7600 to Arrange Your Tour Today

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S E N I O R

L I V I N G

C O M M U N I T Y

“I love living here! From the day I moved in the residents were friendly and made me feel welcome.” “I appreciate the dining room because I’ve done enough cooking in my life – now someone else can cook!” “I perform two times a month in the Desert Rose and quite often in the Assisted Living lounge. I love my keyboard and I’m happy that everybody loves to hear me play… I just love performing because I feel that I’m giving back.” “I’m thrilled to be living at The Citadel … I don’t think that I could live anywhere else.”

Marion Jordan

– Citadel Resi

dent

520 S. Higley Rd., Mesa, AZ 85206

480-832-7600 • www.citadelretirement.com page 32 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

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Experience Active Aging at The Citadel

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efore switching off the bedroom light at night, we all like to imagine that we’ve had a meaningful and productive day. But each of us has our own definition of “a meaningful and productive day.” If asked to characterize it, the average person might include any combination of the following: going to work or school; taking care of the household; spending time with family and friends; or eating, exercising, and enjoying hobbies. Many of us take for granted our autonomy in being able to achieve a meaningful and productive day until we lose that autonomy – which is sometimes true when someone is requiring additional care due to health challenges. To assist in recapturing what is meaningful and productive for each resident moving into The Citadel we advocate the identification of an individuals’ past career, interests, and lifestyle preferences as a basis for planning our social and recreational activities. Before going further into the importance of this process, let’s take some time to look closer at what we’ll call normal aging. The stereotype elder is a man or woman who is unproductive, chronically ill, and declining both physically and mentally. According to John W. Rowe and Robert L. Kahn in their book Successful Aging (1998), they shatter some long-standing myths of old age and give specific steps anyone can take to ensure successful aging. Ten years of research on the subject has supported their theories and has yielded the three areas they maintain must be attended to in order for a person to enjoy successful aging: • Productive physical and cognitive activity (volunteer or paid work); • Continued interpersonal relationships and socialization • Avoidance of disease through sensible health habits (exercise and good nutrition, including the use of nutritional supplements like vitamins and herbs).

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It seems as though many senior citizens know and practice these precepts instinctively. The U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that 44.7 percent of those between sixty-five and seventy-four and 33.7 percent of those seventy-five and over who are volunteering their time and services. And if we didn’t see own moms, dads, aunts, uncles, and neighbors volunteering their time and talent, we’d still see evidence. One example is former president George Bush’s June 1999 skydive on his 75th birthday. Or former senator John Glenn’s October 1998 flight on the space shuttle Discovery. The point is that members of the aging population can and should be productive if they are able. At The Citadel we recognize that keeping productive keeps them able. To that end we conduct thorough surveys, upon move-in and once annually to develop an understanding of The Citadel residents’ current values and interests – then programs are designed around the results. As a result residents at The Citadel enjoy participating in, as well as attending musical performances, being engaged as volunteers (some examples include: acting as a Campus Ambassador, helping the dining room staff in folding linen napkins, working in the campus gift shop, managing the community library, overseeing a social event, taking care of animals, visiting a sick friend, sewing or knitting for those less fortunate), as well as working with management to oversee community operations through the Resident Council and their committees – and this is but a short example of our resident’s engagement. The Citadel community, its residents and staff alike, extend an invitation for others to witness the vibrancy and active aging that occurs daily on their continuum of care campus – where everyone, from independent housing to assisted living enjoy life to the fullest. To set a private appointment please call (480) 832-7600.

520 S. Higley Rd., Mesa, AZ 85206

480-832-7600 • www.citadelretirement.com www.lovinlifeafter50.com

August 2013 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 33


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:: by Andrea Gross | photos by Irv Green

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he sign says we’re entering stables for our first horseback ride. paradise. I’m skeptical. The Everyone else is wearing a cowboy six of us—my husband, myself, our hat or riding helmet. We, on the other son, daughter-in-law and their two hand, are decked out in baseball caps children—are about to spend a week and bonnets. Oh dear! We exhaust the first wrangler when at a top-rated guest ranch. Back he tries to take us out on the trail. in December when we’d made the reservations, we’d all agreed that this Grandson can’t make his horse move. would be a perfect experience for our Daughter-in-law’s horse goes backward intergenerational group, but now I’m when she pulls too hard on the reigns. I can’t make mine stop eating. having second thoughts. But that afternoon a second wrangler We’re city folks through and through—better at driving four-lane takes us into the arena for a course in highways than riding four-legged Horseback Riding Basics. Granddaughter’s journal, day one: My creatures, more familiar with walking through manicured parks than hiking horse’s name is Pollywog. I thought the horse on canyon trails. And we’re used to would know what to do, but today I found plucking fish from market showcases, out that I’m the one who’s supposed to know what to do. not from mountain streams. The next morning we ride a trail— But here we are, on a mountain road in north-central Wyoming. We round a across a stream, up a rocky mountain curve, and I catch my first glimpse of path, through a meadow, back to the Paradise Guest Ranch. It’s in a valley stables. Grandson declares that “now surrounded by more than a million we’re really cowboys.” By Wednesday acres of Bighorn National Forest, we’re beginning to feel like pros. and with the hills awash with wildflowers, it’s breathtakingly beautiful. Then I see the corral, and I feel a rumble in the pit of my stomach. The kids—ages 9 and 6—have never been on a horse; the rest of us have a combined total of, perhaps, 10 hours of horseback-riding experience. Will we be the only novices in a group of experts? The answer becomes clear the Guests of all ages tend to gather around the swimming next morning when we go to the pool in late afternoon.

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While experienced fishermen go on all-day outings to more remote locations, others choose to practice on the ranch proper.

Granddaughter’s journal, day four: I think reigns like a pro. “Circle the barrels.” I’ve learned Pollywog’s personality, which is No problem. “Weave between the that sometimes he wants to do things his way. poles.” Granddaughter does it at a But now I can sometimes make him do things trot. Six days has transformed them both from Western Wimps to Cowboy my way. The week progresses, offering us a Champs. But it’s at the mix of family time and square dance where individual time. We granddaughter really ride together and eat shines. Blonde hair together, but in between flying, she allemandes we can each explore our left and circles right. own interests. DaughterWrangler Dave grabs in-law and I take a long grandson’s hand. “Come (for us) hike—proudly on, Buddy. Let’s dance!” puffing our way along he calls, as he propels trails that rise to an elevation of nearly 8,000 A 9-year-old girl who takes a grinning grandson ballet dancing in the city becomes ‘round the room. feet. Son tries his hand at a fan of square dancing. Then, the next fly-fishing, and husband finishes two books and starts a third. morning, we have our first crisis. None The kids spend off-horse time doing of us want to leave. “Wait! We have to go down to the barn to say goodbye crafts or swimming in the pool. After dinner, the counselors entertain to Pollywog.” “Wait! We have to take the kids while the adults have a chance one more picture of the fishing pond.” to get to know each other. Out of 12 Wait, wait, wait! It takes us two hours groups, five are adults only; the rest to say our goodbyes and get into the have children ranging from toddlers car. Grandson’s comment, day seven: I like to to teens. Only three, like us, are firstwatch sports, and Wyoming doesn’t have any timers. Every day we learn something professional sports teams. But that’s OK. It’s new. One day we have a lesson on still paradise. wildflowers. Another day we hear stories of Butch Cassidy and The www.paradiseranch.com Sundance Kid, who had an “Outlaw Cave” nearby. And another time we watch a moose moseying around the grounds near the fishing pond. Saturday is Rodeo Day, a chance for the kids to show off their equestrian skills. “Mount your horse.” Grandson is too short to do it alone—a ranger has Evening entertainment ranges from sing-alongs to to lift him on—but he grabs the marshmallow roasts.

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home

Dress your home to impress buyers this summer Y

our home is a place to kick off your shoes, relax and enjoy precious time with friends and family. Nothing quite tops the feeling you get when you walk through your foyer, close the door behind you and forget the day’s troubles. But as families expand, promotions require unexpected relocations or a coveted residence down the street goes up for sale, you might find yourself looking for a new oasis to call home. Your tastes and personal style have created a beautiful setting for your home until now. But as you prepare for house hunters visiting the space, it might be time to let go of emotional attachment and transform your home into a stunning showpiece that any potential buyer would love. A Touch of Color If your walls need painting, applying a neutral color is usually recommended. But don’t be afraid to have some fun

with a color that will leave a lasting impression on people searching for the perfect, stand-out home. A bold color like Azalea married with the soft subtle hue of Chiffon and Swiss Coffee, all from Pratt & Lambert Paints, can create an energetic atmosphere while still giving your home a comfortable and relaxing vibe. Apply the bolder colors to an accent wall or on minor architectural elements throughout the home, to breathe fresh life into otherwise dull walls. Painting is a small project that can create the most impact when selling your home. But if your home is large and the thought of taking on a painting project seems overwhelming, never fear. Skilled painting contractors in your area can offer the talent and knowhow to get any painting project done quickly, without sacrificing on quality. Ask a family member or friend for a reference, or visit an online resource

like AngiesList.com for a verified list of professionals who can turn your vision into a reality. Take your Space from Aged to Staged Another way to inspire potential buyers is by showing off a beautifully decorated and elegantly styled home. To get an expertly polished palace, hire an accredited staging professional, who will assess the space and plan a design that will have homebuyers stopping in their tracks. In fact, homes that are professionally staged spend 83 percent less time on the market, according to a survey conducted by The International Association of Home Staging Professionals and StagedHomes.com. The first thing the stager will do is declutter your home. Prospective buyers don’t want to be reminded of the home’s current owners, so removing personal photographs, over-the-top decorative items or oversized furniture is an essential part of the process. They might also reconfigure furniture to improve the home’s flow and function.

Lighting is an important factor when showing a home, as well. Stagers will find a way to warm up the space and highlight focal points of the room using strategic light sources, creating an unforgettable space. And since more than 90 percent of potential buyers are searching online prior to visiting a home in person, professionally staged spaces are better able to communicate through photographs than generic shots. If you’ve already moved out of your house and into your new home, the stager will bring in key furniture and accessories to help house hunters envision themselves living there. Just like a too-cluttered home might turn off some buyers, a blank ho-hum look can give off a lackluster vibe, so staging an empty house can help any buyer see its true potential. By investing some time and money into the right kind of home improvement and staging projects, you can be confident knowing you’re a step ahead of the competition and a step closer to giving a new homebuyer the home of his or her dreams.

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Go-big Upgrades that can Help a Lingering Home Sell at Last S

pring and summer are the best months in which to sell a home. If your house has lingered on the market, you may be eager to find ways to freshen its appeal for potential buyers. Perhaps you’re even ready to go big and invest in upgrades that will improve the home’s value, curb appeal and interior allure so much that potential buyers just won’t be able to walk away from it. If you’re at that point, first figure out how much you can reasonably invest. Will the improvement increase your home value enough to allow you to recoup its cost? Maybe not, but if your priority is a faster sale, return on investment might have a different meaning for you. Next, look at areas of your home where improvements will have the biggest impact—spots that are the least appealing or those that have the most appeal. For example, painting a small bathroom in a bright color could make that cramped space feel bigger. Adding a skylight to your kitchen, bath, or other area in your home however, will really make a splash with abundant natural light and fresh air. Here’s a room-by-room game plan for high-impact upgrades that could make buyers fall in love with your home: Anywhere Buyers are, universally, looking for beauty and value. Any improvement that gives both can directly impact your ability to sell your home. Adding a skylight is a great way to enhance a home’s visual appeal, livability and energy efficiency while improving indoor air quality by introducing much needed fresh air into the home. Natural light can make a small room look bigger and brighter, and create a more healthful environment. Adding a traditional or tubular skylight to any room in the house brings more natural light into your home. Plus, Energy Star-qualified, solar-powered freshair skylights, like those made by Velux America, can provide fresh air through cost-efficient passive ventilation to reduce humidity and stale air, and heating, cooling and lighting costs. Add remote-controlled, solar powered

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blinds, and you can boost a skylight’s energy efficiency by 39 percent, Velux states. Kitchen and bathroom Any Realtor will tell you great kitchens and bathrooms can sell a house. If yours are only so-so, they could be what’s standing in the way of getting an offer. If you’ve already done the basics—cleaning and de-cluttering, repainting and replacing dated cabinet hardware—it may be time to pull out the big guns. New appliances and fixtures will cost you a few thousand, but can go a long way toward wooing buyers. New appliances look great, are more energy-efficient, and provide buyers the peace of mind knowing they won’t face repair or replacement costs any time soon. New fixtures such as rainfall shower heads and touch-free faucets add an element of luxury to the most common bathroom. Adding a tile backsplash or new wood-look laminate flooring in the kitchen, and new tile floor in the bath can also create a big impact—and for less money if you do the work yourself. Replacing lower-quality or older countertops is also an eye-catching upgrade. The trick is to find the improvement that will have the biggest visual impact in your space. Living Room When buyers enter your home, chances are the living room or family room will be one of the first rooms they see. Their impression of that room can set the tone for how they perceive the rest of the house. Again, assuming you’ve done the basics—painting, window treatments and accessories—a major upgrade in this room can have a winning impact. If your home already has a fireplace, take a close look at it. What can you do to make it more appealing? Does it need a new facade? Larger gas logs or a better blower? Can you upgrade the mantel? If your home lacks a fireplace, adding one can be a great selling point. It’s possible to add a gas fireplace for less than $5,000 in most homes. Adding a gas insert to a woodburning fireplace is even cheaper.

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Technology: ‘We No Longer Have Landlines’

Sound Off ... fromourpage 8 president instead of attacking him? Newspaper news is annoying.

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Some can’t help but have sympathy for the poor, kept ignorant Muslim brothers who have no idea how much better off their future will be under a democracy of Egypt. They are only taught revenge, revenge, revenge. It’s equal to the dummies in this country that don’t know what’s going on either.

: : By Lesone Sams, Arizona Relay Service

ook around. We’ve come a long way from Edison’s inventions of the phonograph and telegraph in the 1870s. From snail mail to email and from landline devices to wireless devices. While the need to communicate hasn’t changed, the way we communicate certainly has. But with communication technology improving so rapidly, are the days of using devices like TTY (text telephone) over? Are cell phones, iPads, videophones, and IP-based services like VRS (Video Relay Service) the communication modes of the future? Technology affects many aspects of our lives. Just look how plugged in we are. Thanks to all of the technological gadgetry out there for communicating virtually anything we say can be communicated with the push of a button. As we look at the next generation of technologies, we need to make sure those services are contemplated now so that individuals will be ready to use those services in the future. Goodbye Landlines The once popular landline telephone has gone by the wayside as technology evolution has created more wireless and Internet-based options for individuals to communicate. Even the deaf and the hard-of-hearing community have cut the cord on traditional landlines and have started to move toward more convenient and mobile relay service options. So, what can those who are hard-ofhearing expect? Well, for starters—more accessibility. As technology continues to advance so will Relay Service options. VRS (Video Relay Services) is accessed by contacting the relay service via a videophone or a webcam on a personal computer, laptop, iPad, smartphone or other tablet, together with videophone software or apps. With this service, those with a hearing loss and prefer to use sign language can communicate virtually anywhere there is a Wi-Fi connection. In addition, the evolving abilities of the Internet will provide more Internet Protocol (IP) Relay Service options for individuals. Gone are the days of only

using TTY devices—through the use of the Internet, IP Relay Services give individuals the ability to make calls from their computers through a relay service website or instant messaging. And because IP Relay Services now support various methods of communications, individuals with hearing loss will have greater accessibility with IP Relay Services to communicate with others through the use of Web browsers, mobile phone apps, text messaging, instant messaging and real-time text methods. Things to Consider As humans continue to become more dependent on technology to communicate, improvements will be made to devices and the ways we use to communicate will continue to evolve. And as these changes unfold—be prepared to upgrade to a device and service that will support advancing technology. Devices to consider: • Smartphone with text messaging and video chat capabilities • iPad or tablet enabled with Wi-Fi capability • Internet access via a desktop or laptop computer • Webcam • Mobile apps like Facetime and Skype • Differentiating features from Relay Service providers This new technology has opened many doors for the deaf and hard-of-hearing community, connecting individuals and communities across a broad range of spectrums and improving the ways in which communities and individuals share information. The goal of Arizona Relay Service is to remove the loss of freedom or the feeling of isolation that can be associated with hearing loss. By taking advantage of this free service, Arizonans who are deaf, hard-of-hearing or who have difficulty speaking can continue to stay in touch with their loved ones in the hearing communities, regardless of where they live. For more information about AZRS and the services provided, please visit www.azrelay.org.

page 38 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

To all the Obama supporters who credit the president for the stock market rise, here’s the reason. The federal bank has pumped trillions into the economy, kept interest rates at near zero, and pushed investors away from low-yield bonds to stocks. This does not make for a stable market. Please stop blaming the outspoken of the world for every sick, sad, sorry issue. In case you haven’t noticed, it’s the silent majority’s fault because they just always stay silent. Shame on them. The liberal media and corporations have taken political correctiveness to a new low of absurdity and hypocrisy concerning their treatment of Paula Deen. Major corporations are dropping Deen from their accounts and the media is having a pseudo frenzy because Deen made a derogatory remark about African Americans in her own home 30 years ago. If that’s the case then I find it highly insensitive and derogatory being labeled a “white man.” From now on, I want to be referred to in the PC language as a Caucasian of European descent Italian/Czechoslovakian.—Bill Spotts, Mesa My thanks to Drew Alexander for his reminding us what America’s all about in his “Curmudgeon” article “What Would the Founders Say?” Maybe it’s time for a second American Revolution. ... Your cover story “50 and Fabulous” has given me encouragement about the quality of women, like 56-year-old Raven Valdes, who looks 40ish. It gave me hope that my life as a divorced, single father may someday progress to a better future. ... The Sound Off entries were interesting, too. Why can’t we support

He doesn’t have a crystal ball and can’t control world events, but can only react to them as they unfold. I’m proud of him and his family.—Edwin De Jesus Sr., Tucson

Of course the gun-packing bullies go free when common sense cannot be unscrambled from the mixed up, purposely undecipherable laws of the land. It protects them all. God help the rest of us. One hundred years ago, the U.S. Census recorded its population as white, negro, Oriental or other—whatever “other” is supposed to be. Today, we are all “other.” The 2020 census will show that. E Pluribus Unum. It’s on all the paperwork. E Pluribus Unum. Got it?! Nancy Pelosi claims that “abortion is sacred because of my Catholic religion.” Would someone please explain what this means? I think it’s time for Pelosi to retire. She has said some really weird things. The Rasmussen poll found that 26 percent of Obama supporters view the Tea Party as the nation’s top terror threat! They don’t feel that the radical Muslims are as dangerous. It proves the mentality of those who support Obama. Re: the June 2013 column by Drew Alexander. Drew. it should not surprise a mature gentleman such as yourself that the U.S. government sends millions of our sparkling tax dollars to foreign governments that repress their citizens’ expression of freedom—religious or otherwise. The modern history of the United States is rife with support—be it military, monetary, dark ops—of regimes far from virgin pure. In addition, many of the “bad guy” governments came to power and/or stayed in power thanks to the machinations of the U.S government (with U.S. corporations lurking in the shadows). At the very least, the Morsi government of Egypt that you reference, was duly elected by the citizens of Egypt in free elections in 2012. I get the feeling your column was written in a veiled attempt to paint President Obama as anti-Christian/ anti-Catholic, of which he is neither.

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Your willingness to carry water for the Republican Outrage Machine is apparent every month in your column. Be wary of toadying up to the “thick knobs” that have hijacked your party Drew, they are the same ones destroying it.—James Wilson, Tucson Have you noticed sometimes the ignorant, juvenile level of some adults seen on TV make even uneducated people shake their heads in disbelief. Stupid is just not funny. It’s just not funny. Who are these ignorant, narrow-minded prejudice people who dare to call their TV productions entertainment? Joke’s on them, Mr. Ignoramus. Morning. Of course the gunpacking bullies go free again when common sense cannot be unscrambled from the mixed up, purposely undecipherable law of the land that protects them. Disgusting. Disgusting people in Florida today. We keep hearing that science is helping Americans live longer. As a senior citizen, aged 70 with 20 medical conditions, I’m paying to get there. What bothers me is a lot of preventative care didn’t happen in the ‘90s, even though as someone who was in the workplace for 30-plus years and always covered with medical plans covered by my employer, this didn’t happen. A doctor of mine about to retire leveled with me and explained to me that if I had a nonlife-threatening condition, the insurance company saved money by postponing a diagnosis and delivery of service, such as surgery, for a decade. That just literally flattened me for a while. I’ve been mulling it over ever since. That was in 2004. That is

how health insurance works, folks. I don’t think we’re going to be served any worse by Obamacare. It may seem like things are getting worse, but something has to be done. Health care is not about profit. It’s about delivering health care. Some people are getting rich and others are dying because they’re not getting the health care they paid for. Amen.

Puzzle Answers

...from page 19

Oh yippee. Guess what? I was a winner in the $10 million Publisher’s Clearing House giveaway. They sent me three $400’s worth of vouchers to buy more products I don’t need or want. What a phony rip off. All these years you dumb public. Stop wasting your time in believing in dumb Publisher’s Clearing House advertisers. Poor suckers. Love Sound Off. Love Lovin’ Life, but I’m calling regarding the person’s call about the gay marriage issue. They’re saying they are being pushed down your throat. The gay marriage issue is not being pushed down anybody’s throat. What business is it of yours if a gay couple wants to get married? None. Absolutely none. It’s between the gay couple that wants to get married. They’re not bothering or injuring, going into your church and demanding your minister marry them. They’re in love and they want to get married. Why do you care? Do we care when you got married? Did you ask us if you should get married? No. It’s none of your business. Amnesty makes American citizenship a joke. Reward illegals with our most precious possession? Talk about a slap in the face for Americans. Immigration laws need to be enforced as Americans have to live by the laws of the nation, but illegals do not. NOW A CCEPTING M EDISUN, SCAN, AVESIS EYEMED, UNITED HEALTH CARE, B LUE CROSS B LUE SHIELD, A ETNA, H EALTHNET AND MANY MORE.

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August 2013 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 39


s y e n r u o

J

Sonny Harper

True-life tales from some of Arizona’s most fascinating residents.

: : by Christina Fuoco-Karasinski

S

onny Harper takes the stage at a restaurant in Gilbert. Dressed in a baggy red T-shirt, a tight black skirt and black tights, the former Michigander comes across as shy, but that’s all part of her act as a member of the Outliars improvisation comedy troupe. “Sonny Harper is 70, and she doesn’t hold back,” says Dave Thurston, who leads the Outliars. “She does not care what anyone thinks. I love that. One day she asked me if she was too much, and I said, ‘No one said anything. No one walked out, so you’re probably holding back—so get up there and go for it. If they aren’t complaining you haven’t crossed the line yet.’” After that conversation, Harper created the character “Michelle Balkin,” who hates Barack Obama. It’s a parody of conservative blogger Michelle Malkin. “It’s up to the audience to decide if Balkin is a conservative spouting the truth or a liberal performer making fun of Malkin,” Thurston says. “In Scottsdale we have a liberal audience that really gets behind her. However, our Glendale audiences are very conservative and also get behind

her saying, ‘That’s the truth. It’s really true.’ I’ve never seen someone so onesided bring people together like that.” Harper doesn’t hold back in interviews either. During the course of a three-hour conversation, she eschews talk of the Outliars. Instead, she is open and honest about her awakening during the sexual revolution. “We had a sexual revolution, and we convinced you guys that there was no sex in it,” Harper says emphatically. “You bought it. We partied for a decade. But we got up, took a bath, put our clothes on and got to work on time.” Harper has had a storied life. She teaches manners to youths who have been jailed. Previously, Harper penned two books and worked in car sales, a field dominated by men. “I sold cars for 15 years,” she says. “I loved it. I sold cars with cowboys from Texas, Alabama and Virginia. I wasn’t afraid of them. I went toe to toe with them. They’re fun. “I still go by and talk to the guys I sold with here. I give them a hug and see if they’re dead. I like them, but I don’t want to be like them.”

Sonny Harper Comedienne with the Outliars Age: 70 Why she still works: “At my age, I should have sat down a long time ago, but I’ll never sit down.” She says that she has to show younger generations the ways of the world. “I’ll never be able to retire, because I look at these 40-year-olds, 35-year-olds of all races with doctorate degrees. These women are sitting there in men’s suits thinking they’re women. Nobody can possibly be that stupid.” How women will succeed: “If we ever decide to have a real women’s movement, we should come together as women. Women have to stop hurting other women.” Family: Harper has a son who lives in Scottsdale. Information: www.outliarscc.com

page 40 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

www.lovinlifeafter50.com


home Lovin’ Life is The Tale of Two Rice Dishes; Summer and WinterONLINE! Risotto

Chicks” and Chamillionaire’s “Ridin’ Dirty.” “The first time I performed, I was afraid,” Williams admits. “I sang. I performed. I did all this stuff. But we got through the first one. The music started and it was over. It was such a rush. It was on YouTube. I think every season, the first performance is always the fun one. All the and sharing the practicing his anticipation month I’m two 1 medium onion, chopped fine and beautiful going through tryouts rice dishesandformaking two 4 slices of prosciutto or bacon chopped fine it. It’s likeseasons, ‘Yay! Another year!’” different both from the heart 2 cups rice important being in the 4 cups chicken or vegetable broth of But the more Venato region ofthan Italy. spotlight is providing a good role hotter model 3/4 cup Parmesan cheese, grated fine Although the Valley is still to women 50 and older, Williams than heck in August, it’s the says. time 2 cups shelled fresh or fresh frozen peas (not “I think that it’s inspiring tointo others,” that we begin transitioning fall. in the can) she explains. “We thermometers practice sometimes Still, our outdoor read Salt and pepper to taste in the driveway or in the One summer temperatures. So,garage. it’s risotto SEC Higley & Southern NWC Country Club & Baseline woman came up to us and said, ‘Wow! Easy Deposit Deposit Location Location Easy to the rescue—summer and winter In a large pot over medium Sprouts Market Center Frys Plaza/Fuel Center Tucson heat How old do you have to be? How do sauté garlic and onion in olive oil versions. 480.813.1311 480.964.1001 you try out?’ look at the During theYou springtime in women’s Venice, and butter until translucent, about 10 store3710@theupsstore.com store0039@theupsstore.com lives and feel empowered. Italy, theyou hearty and rich regional minutes. Add chopped prosciutto or “You can grow oldupand sit in25a bacon and cook for about 3 minutes. favorite risotto lightens on April $$ 00 FREE 2 00 OFF rocking chair. But the oldest Granny in celebration of the Fiesta of St. Mark,is (If using bacon and you want to reduce Everyday Price UPS Shipping Shipping UPS Packaging 84 yearspatron old. Women in their it’s the amount of bacon fat, cook bacon Venice’s saint. From that70s, point Over $$15 150000 Over Color @ 35¢ each Free Standard/Nono tr not over for you. You can be out there e M on, Risi Bisi (rice and peas) becomes in microwave B/W @ 5¢ each Phoenixfor approximately 3 Fragile Packaging 00 $$ 00 performing just like we are.” 3 OFF the Venetian Risotto of spring and minutes covered.) Then chop and % when shipping UPS 10 OFF UPS Shipping Shipping UPS summer. add to garlic and onion mixture. Add with us! $ 00 00 Freight $ www.LovinLifeAfter50.com Over 30 30 Over Fans wishing more information, This flavorful main can dishcontact is rice and stir to combine. Slowly add Not valid valid with with other other offers. offers. Not valid valid with with other other offers. offers. Not valid valid with with other other offers. offers. Not Not Not Valid atat Higley Higley && Southern Southern and and Valid at at Higley Higley && Southern Southern and and Valid atat Higley Higley && Southern Southern and and Kip Helt via email at khelt@suns.com by chicken or vegetable broth and bring Valid Valid Valid traditionally made with “new” or or Country Club Club && Baseline Baseline stores stores ONLY. ONLY. Country Club Club && Baseline Baseline stores stores ONLY. ONLY. Country Club Club && Baseline Baseline stores stores ONLY. ONLY. Country Country Country Expires10/31/2013 6/30/2013 Expires10/31/2013 6/30/2013 Expires10/31/2013 6/30/2013 Expires Expires Expires phone at (602) 379-7951. “spring” peas shelled fresh from the to boil. Simmer and cook for about 15 pod. But you can opt for the fresh minutes, stirring often. If rice becomes frozen peas in the bag. (Canned peas too dry, add more broth or water. When experienceD in speciaLizeD care for oVer 20 years. are not an option for Risi Bisi, as they rice is cooked, add 1/2 cup Parmesan would turn to mush.) Risi Bisi can be cheese and peas, stirring very gently made with Arborio or Carnaroli rice, to combine. Add salt and pepper to as in the traditional risotto. However, taste. Serve in a shallow bowl. Sprinkle With Captioned Telephone Service, you Uncle Ben’s Converted Rice (not remainder of Parmesan cheese over + have to worry about missing any don’t instant) was our family’s favorite top. Serves 4. part of your telephone conversations. MAIL TRACKING ISSUE Contact Your Account Services Coordinator, TC- 1016527 Nov-Decmaking 2012 it is has less DATE:starch, NUMBER:because DATE: or cheaper for a lighter consistency. Risi Bisi has My Momma’sLaser CAPTIONED TELEPHONE SERVICE: Wintertime TreaTmenT • “DenTaL Vibe” • TeeTh in a Day (x3884) 00169 - NATIONAL SUPPLEMENT, (N2) drugs, but > Allows you to both listen to and read 01 AZ a slight soupy quality, so have plenty Risotto impLanT pLacemenT • perioDonTaL care telephone conversations ® r drugs is of chicken or vegetable broth on hand 1/2 cup butter Uses voice recognition software to > of dealing to thin as you see fit. The neutral rice display every word the caller says 1 medium onion, minced EMAIL: Erin.Gosik@cmag.com e serious. gives way to pops of sweetness from Well-established in the community! We offer the latest in FAX: 717-509-3980 Captions appear on a bright, > 2 cups Arborio or Carnaroli rice * ® ll contain easy-to-read display screen Office Use Only technology and techniques, including laser treatment, PLEASE YOUR AND COMPLETE THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION theSIGN peas andPROOF the prosciutto or bacon 2 1/2 quarts chicken stock, heated Captioning service is h may beAd is approved > savory saltiness Ad is approved with changes Ad isthis not approved “Dental Vibe” injections, in aCustom Day, 1/2make cupchanges freshindicated grated Parmesan cheese ❑ adds the❑perfect ❑ to RegionalFREE! Sales Office Orderteeth Your Home From a RICK3515 N painless 1 get a bad dish. implant placement, andLocal periodontal care.& Take Advantage of Dealer e hospital. LARGE, 10936 E. Apache Trail The second recipe is a wintertime In a large saucepan4284HK melt 1/4 cup n/a n/a N 9/12 Move-In Dr. scholes is contracted with most Specials dental PPo With Rent Discount. easy-to-read ion could rice dish that needs no introduction. Apache Junction, AZ 85120 display lets butter. Add onion and sauté until be getting SIGNATURE Call for Details! you see what insurances as well dental PPo plans. PAT MULqUEEN Risotto is a classic Italian favorite that translucent. (Do not brown.) Please deliver asap _____________________________________________ Add riceasto:Medicare your caller is SIGNATURE can seem intimidating to make but and stir until butter is EMAIL: SINGERSEWING@YAHOO.COM;DARREN@MULqUEENSEWING.COM ___________________________________________________________ absorbed. Add saying so you pharmacy worth the effort. So, just follow the don’t miss$10K to Over $83K 480-545-0778 480-545-8266 New & Pre-Loved Homes from PHONE:let______________________________________ FAX: _______________ broth, a little at a time. Don’t rice get at all and a thing! recipe below for a winter haven of DATEtoo dry or sticky. Cook 30 to 35 minutes PRINT NAME 00169-06-12_01 Toll ake them. happiness in a bowl! $ over heat, stirring constantly. Add 3 Day/2 Night You now have the option to proof your adslow online! Free h a local uS l P PRINT NAME DATE Free Implant broth as needed. When done, just Please contact your ASC for more information. Guest House Stay ack your Risi Bisi, Summertime Risotto ConsultatIon This adbutter. is the property of Clipper Magazine and may not be reproduced in any other publication. before serving, add 1/4 cup Mix COUPON PLACEMENT PRIOR TO PUBLICATION eractions. Please review your proof carefully. Clipper Magazine is not responsible for any error not marked. Bring this ad to 1 tablespoon oil MAY CHANGE easyolive paTienT well and add Parmesan cheese. Risotto your appointment medicine 2 tablespoons financing butter should be creamy. Serve immediately. re. aVaiLabLe & 2 cloves fresh garlic, minced *Offer only valid for new residents that move a home approved by community management into a Solstice Community located in Mesa or Apache Serves 4. Junction, AZ between June 1, 2013 and December 31, 2013. Consideration will be paid to resident (not to the licensed manufactured home broker/ pharmacy 1.866.259.1768 caSH DiScountS HourS Dr. H. KenDall ScHoleS DMD, Ms, Plc dealer) after the home is placed in a Solstice Community. The total consideration (both cash and/or rent discount) paid under this promotion shall not 1.800.347.1695 TTYnot ed; prices exceed $6,000 per home. Resident is responsible for all applicable taxes. Contact a Sales Counselor for more details and restrictions. This offer may offereD! 595great N. DobsoN suite and b 34cool • chaNDler, tu – th: 7–4 Check out www.jandatri.com for recipes,rD., stories places aZ 85224 be combined with any other discounts or promotions. Program subject to change or cancellation without notice. Solsticeinfo@azrelay.org Communities is a Phone: 480-786-0940 • Fax: 480-786-5694 re in the provider of housing for persons age 55 and Fr: older. 7–3 All permanent residents must be age qualified for occupancy. Void where prohibited by law. we’re visiting! Come back often! Prices and availability subject to change without notice. Convenient location off of the 101 and 202 www.azrelay.org it’s not in licensed. www.lovinlifeafter50.com www.lovinlifeafter50.com March 2013 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 41 39 August put up a

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APARTMENTS FOR RENT AIR-CONDITIONED 1-Bedroom Apartment With Carport Near 24th Street & Camelback 602-952-1977 AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE 2008 CADILLAC CTS SEDAN # 20466C Silver, great fit and finish, 6cyl manual, nav. System, xm satellite, performance package, sun roof, $21,991.00 480-940-6000 or Online at coulter-tempe.com 2009 CADILLAC ESCALADE ESV #20496P Black Raven, super sharp, loaded with extras, 6.2L V8 automatic, AWS, nav. Rear camera, sun roof, 18” wheels, leather, power rear lift gate, 56,874 miles Sale price $45,551.00 480-940-6000 or Online at coulter-tempe.com 2010 BUICK ENCLAVE CX SPORT # 20561P Only 20,635 miles. White, great fit and finish 3.6L V6 automatic; extras include nav. system, remote start, and traction/stability control. $27,551.00 Call for more details: 480-940-6000 or Online at coulter-tempe.com 2011 BUICK LaCROSS CXL PKG # 20483N Red, Certified Pre-owned, automatic, nav. System, sun roof, direct injection, climate control, rear parking 13,211 miles, 27 mpg $26,551.00 480-940-6000 or Online at coulter-tempe.com 2011 CADILLAC ESCALADE AWD #20536P White, ready to impress, luxury designed with finest elements in mind. 6.2L V* 16V automatic 42,666 miles. Sun Roof, nav. System, leather, back up camera. Call for additional options! $51,551.00 480-940-6000 or Online at coulter-tempe.com 2013 CADILLAC ATS 2.5L LUXURY # 20552P Auto, silver, nav. System, rear camera, remote start, direct injection, sun roof, leather, 51,868 miles, $34,991.00 CERTIFIED 6 yr. 100,000 mile warranty! 480-940-6000 or Online at coulter-tempe.com

CARPET CLEANING SERVICES ALOHA Your friendly carpet, tile, furniture and car interior, cleaning service would appreciate your business. That’s ALOHA 480-452-2667 Thank You! FOR LEASE LUXURY HOME AT PROVINCE 55+ IN MARICOPA 2 Bed/2 Bath + Den 1,896sqft. on greenbelt Front yard maintained 5-Star Amenities Fitness center, pools, saunas, steam, tennis, hobby rooms, classes, dances, Golf - 2 minutes, top rated 55+ 6-month lease - $1,550 per month 1-year lease - $1,050 per month 303-594-9512 GARAGE DOOR REPAIR SUN DEVIL GARAGE DOOR REPAIR Stuck Door, Broken Spring, Opener Problems, Etc? Senior Discount AAA Discount 24 Hour Service Free Estimates 480-838-9397 HELP WANTED DOG LOVER? Will you watch a dog in your home while the owner’s away? Home full-time? $17/day and up! Sleepover Rover www.SleepoverRover.com 866-867-5048 HOME IMPROVEMENT/REPAIR

MY FATHER’S TOOLBOX Honest Dependable Quality Workmanship Upgrade your plumbing or electrical fixtures. Solve accessibility needs. Carpentry, drywall and painting. For free consultation call 480-600-0958 We accept major credit cards.

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TERRY’S COMPLETE HOME MAINTENANCE & REMODEL Electrical, Plumbing, Drywall, Carpentry, Paint 25 Years Local References Satisfaction Guaranteed! East Valley Please Call Terry Heyl: 480-213-1366 MATTOX INTERIORS LLC Licensed, Bonded, Insured. Specializing in drywall repairs, remodeling and home maintenance. 34years Experience Warranty on all work Free Estimates 10% Senior Discount ROC#285541 Call Greg 480-392-7879

page 42 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

LEGAL

PERSONAL SERVICES

REAL ESTATE

MUSIC INSTRUCTION

HOUSE-CALL LEGAL SVCS BY EXPERIENCED ATTNY Low Prices – Wills, Trusts, Miller Trusts, Long Term Care, Probate, Medicare FREE estimate call: D’Jean Testa, Esq. at: 480-962-8248

NEED EXTRA TIME IN YOUR DAY? EXPERIENCED HELP WITH PERSONAL CHORES I can drop off your dry cleaning, pick up your groceries, schedule and/ or supervise any services or repairs needed in your home and interview qualified contractors. I can set up an annual maintenance schedule for your home, cars and appliances. I can do the chores that will free up your personal time. References upon request Karen Borowiak 480-440-6297 borowiakv@aol.com

BEST BUY HOT LIST Reveals 10 best buys in your specific price range & neighborhood. Pre-Recorded Message 1-800-611-4781 ID#1040 Realty One Group – not intended to solicit properties already listed for sale.

EAST VALLEY GUITAR LESSONS Start playing songs fast using a common sense guitar instruction for all levels. Customized lessons teaching how to tune a guitar, play chords cleanly, strum in time, learn entire songs, solo at jam sessions and even write your own music. Multiple learning formats for faster results. Flexible scheduling to accommodate busy schedules. Free lesson for new students. Visit: www.EastMesaGuitarLessons.com Or Call 480-600-7349

LAND FOR SALE WHITE MOUNTAINS, VERNON Beautiful, secluded 5.2 acres ready for building your dream home. Septic, water, electric & phone on property. CC&R’s & well agreement in place. $119,000 520-797-9262 or 520-975-3633 PAINTING Arizona Residential Kitchen Cabinets, Vanities, Doors Venetian Plaster, Decorative Faux References Given 50 Years Experience Economical Pricing Owner Does All Work, No Spraying Gary 480-945-4617

MOBILE/MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE WONDERFUL SENIOR COMMUNITY Centrally located in Tucson Quiet neighborhood, close to shopping, hospitals, etc. Recreation Hall, Pool, Laundry One-and-Two Bedroom Mobile Homes available for sale Call 520-850-4763 for Details

RENTAL SERVICES HOMESELLERS Find out what the home down the street sold for. Free computerized list of area home sales & current listings. Free Recorded Message 1-800-611-4781 ID#1041 Realty One Group – not intended to solicit properties already listed for sale. SERVICES ENOS KING-LEWIS II, AGENT Guide, Producer A to Z Businessman Wellness – Prosperity Fun Trips enos4homes@hotmail.com 800-824-1450 (Call 24/7) www.Enos4Prosperity.com

TRANSPORTATION SERVICES JACK’S TRANSPORTATION For Your Transportation Needs In business over 15 years 10 minutes early is “on time” Airports, date night, doctor appointments etc. We Service Mesa Gateway 602-770-4648 www.jackstransportation.com ADVERTISING SPACE AVAILABLE Call Tracey Wilson for more info. 480-348-0343

Classified & Friendship Ad Information Write your ad in the space provided. All ads must be prepaid before each monthly deadline. Deadline for ads is the 16th of each month. Your name, address and telephone number will not be printed in your ad. We will give it a code. All mail we receive with your code will be mailed to you at least once a week. We reserve the right to edit ads. Check your type of payment and mail to: Lovin' Life Newspapers 3200 N. Hayden Rd. Suite #210, Scottsdale, AZ 85251 • Call 480-348-0343 Name: Address: City/State/Zip: Telephone #: Email: o Check/Money Order

o Visa

o MasterCard

o American Express

o Discover

Acct# _________________________________________________ Card Exp. ____ / ____ /____ CVV#________________________________ Signature ______________________________________ ClASSIFIedS InFoRmAtIon Please check desired circulation: o Tucson

o sun Cities (Metro Phx) o East Valley (Metro Phx) o Phoenix & Glendale o scottsdale

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Male divorced white Long Term Relationship

F H ns TLC

= Female = Hispanic = non-smoker = Tender Loving Care

w = b = nd = IsO =

widowed black non-drinker In search of

$15 first 30 words. 25¢ per word thereafter Start Issue: _______ End Issue: _______ Check one: o Classified o Friendship Ad to Read: ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ (30) ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ How do I Answer a Friendship Ad? Compose your response and address it to: Drawer # ________ Lovin’ Life Newspapers, 3200 N. Hayden Rd., Suite 210, Scottsdale, AZ 85251

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Out of Town House Checks Errand Running Pet Sitting Grocery Shopping Meal Ordering & Pick-up Prescription Order & Pick-up Car Service & Maintenance Transportation to/from Appts. Scheduling & Booking Appts.

FRIENDSHIP ADS DRAWER 9791P WIDOWS AND WIDOWERS CLUB Come join us for lunch the last Wednesday of each month. Black Bear, 6039 W. Bell Rd. at 11:30 am Call 602-843-0404 GREAT WAY TO MEET NEW FRIENDS DRAWER LL1070 Diversity Singles Club (age 60 plus); Meets Mondays 8:00am at Golden Corral Restaurant, 1868 N. Power Rd in Mesa for breakfast Prospective Members Welcome!

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DRAWER LL1087 Single white lady, 78 plus and slender. ISO man N/S, N/D who’s looking for a long term relationship. Enjoy activities around AZ and dining out. I live in Glendale. Looking forward to hearing from you.

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WANTED TO BUY CA$H PAID! WE BUY DIABETIC TEST STRIPS Unopened/Unexpired CALL NOW!! 480-269-3289 GOLD & SILVER BUYER I buy all jewelry: Gold & Silver Broken or Not Flatware & Dental I will beat anyone’s prices 480-694-2412 TOY TRAINS WANTED Collector pays cash for toy trains. Call Terry 480-969-6056 WANT TO PURCHASE Minerals and other oil & gas interests Send Details to: PO Box 13557 Denver, CO 80201 WE BUY LIFE POLICIES For a Cash Settlement Contact Ben The Reliant Group Inc. 1-800-457-2315

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DRAWER LL1145 WWF in my 70’s H-5, W-140 Live in Sun City looking for a N/S, N/D I love life but need someone to share it with, someone who is down to earth. Send phone & photo – Thank you! DRAWER LL1223 SWF wants to meet a man who shaves regularly dresses in clean clothes, is fairly intelligent and has a sense of humor. No phone interrogations. Statistics unimportant. Life is short and there is too much to learn, see & enjoy. DRAWER LL1234 Refined lady WWNS 70’s searching for tall gentleman from the N Scottsdale – Cave Creek area to share time with. I enjoy movies, short trips, fine dining, casinos & quiet time at home. Let’s talk. DRAWER LL1348 Petite WWF ISO an honest man 5’6” to 5’8” and around 145-160lbs, age 58-64, non-drinker, non-smoker for LTR, TLC. Please don’t write if you don’t want to relocate to Oregon. No games or lies. Please send phone number and photo.

DRAWER LL1296 SWF, 60 and attractive. I’m honest, romantic and at peace with myself. I enjoy travel, fine dining and I love animals. Looking for SM for LTR. DRAWER LL1301 DWF looking for NS LTR with TLC. I live in Dream Land Villa, Mesa area. Honest and caring. Loveable, seeking 60-70’s, I’m upper 70’s. DRAWER LL1354 The telephone number that you sent in your letter to Wet & Wild in the June paper is not in service. You are an interesting person; send me your new number Lefty. DRAWER LL1396 SWF, 80 in good health. I love AZ – lived there 18 years, now stuck in Oregon, I need a place to live. Do you have a guest house or private room in your home? I can house-sit, baby-sit or pet-sit. DRAWER LL1403 Financially secure Scottsdale widow ISO senior widower or single WM, 5’9” or more to enjoy remaining years doing things seniors do: Birding, star-gazing, moon watching, learning to love again. Life is short; let’s meet for lunch, coffee or whatever. I will anxiously await your reply. DRAWER LL1418 DF, attractive brunette ISO NS, honest male – he should be intelligent, caring, healthy & enjoy tennis, cards, dogs, travel, & quiet times. Must have positive attitude with humor – friendship first, no games – 60-75. DRAWER LL1419 DWF active NS, sense of humor, many interests near Metro Center area. ISO WM 70-75. Phone number please. DRAWER LL1420 DWM, NS, clean cut, 66 looking for friendship or a casual relationship with NS female. Please include phone number. DRAWER LL1425 Single Senior, BF, NS, ND ISO active male senior with same attributes to enjoy life and living. Enjoy travel, music, dancing, movies, concerts, and some sports. Reply with phone number.

DRAWER LL1426 WWM ISO slim WF 75+ for LTR. Dining in or out, quiet times and day trips. Will treat you the oldfashioned way. Photo & phone #, will answer all. DRAWER LL1427 Want a winter romance? I’m looking for a 65+ gentleman to take a chance. Let’s start working on it now. Love, companionship, laughter, NS, hugs, honesty & caring – all are important. DRAWER LL1428 Blonde, NS, WF ISO LTR with NS 55-62 year old male who believes in romance, candlelight, music, humor, movies, traveling, and holding hands. Must like dogs. Please write with your phone number. DRAWER LL1429 Two widows who have been friends for over fifty years are looking for two men in their 70’s who are in the same circumstances that loves to go and have fun and play cards. In the East Mesa area. Let’s meet for coffee. DRAWER LL1430 DWM, 65, H-5’8”, W-145, Phoenix area ISO LTR with a female around 55-65, beautiful inside and out – romantic, has common sense, and is fun to be around. DRAWER LL1431 DWM, 5’8”, 170lbs, gray hair, blue eyes, semi-retired, lives in Sun City. ISO female who likes to enjoy life, N/S, N/D, likes hand in hand walks. No baggage, recent photo, frank, open letter and phone number helps. DRAWER LL1432 Attractive, healthy, active, credible, WWM, Sun City homeowner wishes to provide loving companionship to a similar WF without financial and emotional burden – 5’7”, 170#. DRAWER LL1433 Attractive, athletic, toned, educated, financially secure, very active DWF with healthy lifestyle enjoys biking, hiking, golf, tennis and have many other interests. ISO DWM or WWM with similar interests in their 60’s or 70’s for friendship first, fun and more.

Senior News Line

Keep Your Cool This Summer :: by Matilda Charles

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ow that we’re fast approaching the hottest part of summer, it’s even more important to take steps to guard against becoming overheated. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has released a special report on seniors and the heat. It has suggestions that make sense — especially since we seniors are slower to sense changes in temperature. That means we can become overheated before we realize it. Here are some suggestions: • Drink more water than usual, and don’t wait until you’re actually thirsty before having a drink. By then you’re actually overdue for water. Call your doctor’s nurse to ask how much water you should be drinking, and make a chart to be sure you get as much as you should. • Don’t cook with the stove or oven. It makes the house hotter. • Wear light-colored, lightweight, loose clothing. • Cool down with cool showers or baths. • Avoid alcohol or drinks with lots of sugar. • Check the news for heat alerts. In some cases, cooling stations might be opened in your area, such as in schools. Or call the health department and ask if there are air-conditioned shelters near you. Libraries, movies and malls are good places to go during the heat of the day. • Keep an eye on friends and family, and ask that they do the same for you. • While fans are helpful at lower temperatures, they won’t help in extremely hot weather, and only blow the hot air around. • Watch for heat-related symptoms, such as nausea or vomiting, headaches or muscle cramps. Look for heavy sweating, clammy skin, weakness or fainting, which is heat exhaustion. Those are medical emergencies. For more information, go online to www.cdc. gov/extremeheat/seniors.html and www.cdc.gov/ extremeheat/warning.html. Matilda Charles regrets that she cannot personally answer reader questions, but will incorporate them into her column whenever possible. Send email to columnreply2@gmail.com.

How do I Answer a Friendship Ad? Compose your response and address it to: Drawer # ________ Lovin’ Life Newspapers 3200 N. Hayden Rd., Suite 210 Scottsdale, AZ 85251

August 2013 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 43


Booths Selling Fast for the Expo!

A Partnership of Experience and Value This year, for the first time, Lovin’ Life After 50 and East Valley Adult Resources have joined forces in a partnership designed to bring additional value to companies and organizations with a need to reach the East Valley’s after-50 market. Together, these two organizations will host the 2013 Healthy Living Expo on November 21 at the Mesa Convention Center.

SENIOR EXPO

FIND NEW CUSTOMERS AT OUR EXPO! Booths will sell out... Reserve Yours Today!

EXHIBITORS • HOURLY DRAWINGS • ENTERTAIN MENT

FREE

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21st 8am–Noon MESA CONVENTION CENTER

Presents:

EAST VALLEY

Healthy Living

Arizona’s longest-running expos for the after-50 market Lovin’ Life After 50 • www.lovinlifeafter50.com

Phone: (480) 348-0343 • Fax: (480) 348-2109 3200 N. Hayden Rd. Ste. 210 • Scottsdale, AZ 85251

page 44 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 2013

MESA CONVENTION CENTER 8AM - NOON

www.lovinlifeafter50.com


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

From the Top Prescott Senior Games to Aug. 2-18 of My Desk behe Held Prescott Senior Games, held : : By Irene L. Stillwell, ALFF executive director

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he month of July in 2013 will be a time long remembered by Arizonans for many reasons. It’s been very hot—unusually hot. (Those of us who have lived here for a while are aware of how hot Arizona can be.) That makes it hard to get outside and train for a sport, and our athletes who were getting ready for the National Games were hard pressed to find ways to train in the heat. But train they did, and we look forward to many of them “bringing home the gold” that they will win in recognition of their efforts. What a courageous lot they are! Cleveland will be warm as well, but the athletes have set their goals and every one of them wants to do his or her “personal best” at the games. For them, this is a month of testing and triumph. This July will also be remembered for the terrible fires north of Phoenix and the loss of 19 firefighters. I’m sure that all Arizonans have had lumps in their throats and tears in their eyes as over and over we watched the news that these courageous men had given everything they had and lost their lives. We grieve for their families and we help any way we can. Their heroism will be remembered for years to come. There are all kinds of heroes: Those who strive for impossible goals and win or lose, go on; those who overcome illness with courage and optimism; those who give of their time or treasure to build a better community, a better world; or those who face danger so that others can have a better life. There are many kinds of heroes. And make no mistake, somewhere in there, there is a hero in you.

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2013 Sponsors

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Aug. 2-18, gives athletes the chance to compete in these great sports: bowling, golf, horseshoes, pickleball, racquetball, shooting (13 events), swimming, tennis and track and field. Arizonans head to Prescott in the summer because of the beauty of the area and the cooler weather. Residents are friendly and the city is often referred to as “America’s Favorite Small Town.” The Prescott Senior Games welcome participants from throughout Arizona and other western states. For information on registration or to print a registration book, visit www.cityofprescott.net/services/ parks/olympics/, call (928) 777-1552 or email michelle.stacy-schroeder@ prescott-az.gov.

Follow us!

Moab Senior Games Launched

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any Arizona Senior Olympians have competed in the great Huntsman World Senior Games and, for many years, the Huntsman games were the only games held in Utah. Just recently however, new games have been launched in the beautiful Moab area. The Moab Senior Games, a gold medal event, is the dream and the reality for the organizers, retailers, hoteliers, restaurants and seniors of Grand County, Utah. The Moab Senior Games is a four-day event held

Nov. 6 to Nov. 9. The games will host eight events, including basketball, tennis and more, for adults aged 50 and older in various age groups. You will be welcome in the high deserts of the Moab region and enjoy the hospitality of the friendly community. This beautiful red rocks country is in Southeast Utah and is the home of Arches and Canyonlands national parks. Registration begins Aug. 1. For more information, visit www. moabseniorgames.com.

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

in partnership with the cities of Chandler, Glendale, Mesa, Peoria, Scottsdale, Tempe and the communities of Sun City, Sun City West, Sun City Grand

Arizona Senior Olympics P.O. Box 33278 Phoenix, AZ 85067-3278

602-274-7742

web site: www.seniorgames.org

August 2013 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 45


www.seniorgames.org

Is Lack of Sleep Making You Fat?

: : By Ellie Kallal ou watch what you eat, mostly. You try to get some exercise. You still gain weight. Not a lot but a few pounds a year. Why? Many of us today are overscheduled, overextended or just plain busy. We don’t have enough hours in our days. Even those of us who don’t work a full-time job are scheduled to the max with volunteer activities, social engagements and sports. We rarely have time to go to the movies or read a book. I know because I have that same schedule. I love it. I love the fun that each activity brings. But I often find that I don’t have time for more than six hours of sleep a night. A quick nap mid-morning after my workout helps, but still, I’m tired without those good seven- and eight-hour rests. Turns out that those sleep habits can cause a weight gain over time. With so many other factors to think about, sleep seems to be an easy one to fix. Research shows that those of us who do not get enough rest gain a few pounds a year. In fact, in a recent study, women who slept less than five hours

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a night weighed more than women who slept seven hours. If women got six hours a night, they were 12 percent more likely to gain weight and a 6 percent chance of obesity. Lack of sleep interferes with the body’s ability to metabolize carbohydrates and blood levels of glucose. This means insulin goes up and fat storage increases. Ghrelin is a hormone that tells you when to eat. Sleep-deprived people have more ghrelin and the body receives signals to eat more. Leptin is the hormone that tells you to stop eating. Sleep-deprived bodies produce less leptin, so you continue to eat. Lack of sleep lowers the leptin levels, which increases our desire for carbs. It reduces the levels of the growth hormone, a protein that helps regulate the body’s muscle-tofat ratio. It can also lead to insulin resistance, which can increase the risk of diabetes. Sleep deprivation raises the blood pressure and increases the risk of heart disease. This does not mean that if you usually get eight hours but sleep

seven, you will gain weight. But over time, continuous lack of sleep can be serious. Just how much sleep do we need, anyway? Some people really don’t need as much as others. Some need lots. It’s easy to test your need for sleep. Go to bed and do not set an alarm. Ask your friends to not call in the morning and ask your partner to not wake you. Sleep as much as you want. After a few days, your sleep habit will stabilize and you will wake up after the same amount of sleep. This is how many hours you need. Those who work might try it on a long weekend when you don’t have to go to work. How do you get that many hours of

Walk Your Way to Fitness

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he Arizona Senior Olympics office frequently gets calls from seniors who would like to participate but are not really fit enough for sports. Of course, sports are not the only ways to get fit, but they put the “fun” in fitness. ASO staff recommends that newcomers begin with walking. Although it may sound very elementary, walking is one of the best exercises because it uses the largest muscles in the body. Here is a “walking plan” to help you get started. You can use any of the three methods of accountability—distance, steps (requires pedometer) or time.

Weeks Distance Steps Time 1 – 2

1 mile

2,000 18 min

3–5

1.5.miles 3,000 20 min

6 – 8

2 miles

9 – 10

2.5 miles 4,500 45 min

3,500 35 min

11-plus 3.5 miles 6,000 60 min page 46 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

Begin your program by walking three times per week, counting the distance, steps or time. You don’t need to walk fast, just a “brisk” stroll will do it. Swing your arms to work the muscles in the upper body. Walk to music on your iPod or challenge a friend to walk with you. At the end of 11 weeks you will not only be in much better shape, but you will have established a very healthy habit.

sleep? How do you get quality sleep? Well, we all know how difficult it can be to go to bed early and try to fall asleep. We just aren’t tired. You have to learn how to fall asleep. Some simple things can help. No caffeine after 12 p.m. Be sure to include light exercise during the day, but not right before bedtime. Don’t eat a heavy meal right before bedtime, but a light snack can help. Read something light to get your mind off the cares of the day. If you go to bed and can’t fall asleep, don’t get back up. Lie there and concentrate on your breathing. Sleep will usually come.

HELP WANTED

Arizona Senior Olympics is looking for mentors from each of our sports who would be willing to be a resource to those who are new to the games or the sport. ASO will provide training.

QUALIFICATIONS

Experience in the sport Friendliness Able to share your knowledge Willingness to be a resource

IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN BECOMING AN ASO MENTOR CALL (602) 274-7742, between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tues. through Thurs.

www.lovinlifeafter50.com


www.seniorgames.org

Last Chance T-shirts For Sale

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rizona Senior Olympics is trying to clear out its inventory and is offering a few 2013 shirts for sale. Hurry, there are only a few left! Remaining are four double XLs; one extra large; six mediums and two smalls. The shirts, which originally sold for $18, are on sale for $12 (plus $2 for mailing, unless they are picked up from the office). Those interested in T-shirts should call (602) 274-7742 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays. Please do not leave voicemails.

q Yes, I would like to be a friend of Arizona Senior Olympics Send your tax-deductible contribution by check, money order, credit card or go online to www.seniorgames.org. Amount Enclosed $ I am paying by q Check/Money Order qVisa qMastercard qDiscover qAmerican Express. You will be charged by Senior Games Payment Services if paying by credit card. If paying by check, please make it out to the Arizona Lifelong Fitness Foundation. Credit Card. #: Expiration Date: 3 digit code on back of card: Name as it appears on your credit card: Address: City/State/Zip: Signature:

Mail to: Arizona Lifelong Fitness Association P.O. Box 33278 Phoenix, AZ 85067-3278

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August 2013 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 47


By Collins W. Owens

T

This isn’t Baseball

his isn’t baseball. It’s a good thing, because Americans have had two strikes against us this year, and it’s only August. Unlike baseball, it will take more than 3 strikes to take us out, but (also, unlike baseball) each strike does indeed take it’s toll.

Strike 1: On January 7 the EPA notified Refrigerant manufacturers that they must REDUCE THE AMOUNT of R-22 production to only 72% of 2012 amounts. This accelerated phase out caused an immediate jump in R-22 prices by over 200% We are now paying 300% more for R-22 Refrigerant than we were paying in 2011.† Strike 2: Today the EPA has received notice to make new rules having to do with Coal Fired Power Plants, new and existing. They have also been ordered to make more stringent rules concerning the Key-Stone Pipe Line. Many economists believe todays announcement will result in much higher electric rates across the board, resulting in accelerated inflation. The Good News: The Federal Government has been trying for some time to help us use less electricity. A tax credit is still on the table; up to $450 for qualifying equipment and parties. More Good News: Utilities have long been promoters of energy reducing a/c systems. Both APS and SRP programs change from time to time, but right now SRP is offering up to $400 and APS is offering $270 to customers who purchase qualifying systems. Almost Best News: Lennox has a Summer Promo going on: Up to $1,700 rebate for qualifying energy reducing equipment!

HVAC Contractor 1455 W. Scott Ave. Gilbert, AZ 85233

page 48 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : August 2013

NOW FOR THE BEST AND GREATEST NEWS FOR EVERYONE: (drum roll) During this Lennox Promo, through August 23, you may also choose from our company’s offers: OPTiON A Replace any residential system with a 13 SEER system: a. 2, 2.5 or 3 ton system $4,900(+tax) installed b. 3.5 or 4 ton system $5,250(+tax) installed c. 5 ton system $5,450(+tax) installed OPTiON B Receive 0% 12 month financing for qualified purchasers of Dave Lennox Signature Series equipment. OPTiON C Receive low interest extended terms financing for qualified purchasers of Dave Lennox Signature Series equipment. Options B and C are in conjunction with the Lennox Rebate offer!

Summary: During the Lennox Promotion, for purchasing qualifying a/c equipment you may receive: Lennox Rebate SRP Rebate Fed Tax Credit

$1,700 $400 $500 $2,600* AND affordable financing!

Note: Not any of the above rebates or credits may be applied to the invoice. All must be

480-890-COOL (2665)

Fax: 480-892-8739 ROC #164958

processed and received by the party offering them. No offers in this promotion may be used in conjunction with any other offers or promotions unless expressly stated so in writing. I know it’s hard to replace a working system— I’ve done it. Before I did the job, running my old system I counted how many times the electric meter revolved in 1 minute (11 times). Then, after installing my new system I set it on low stage, where it runs about 90% of the time, and counted revolutions. I didn’t think my a/c was running, but it was! 5.5 times per minute compared to 11 before! Nobody knows what will happen in the future with electric rates or inflation in general. I certainly don’t. But I do know that either way I want to be as efficient as possible; that only makes sense. TAX CREDiT QUALiFiCATiONS2 (Up to $500 tax credit for qualifying equipment) SEER EER HSPF AFUE Roof Top Heat pump 14.0 12.0 8.0 Roof Top A/C 14.0 12.0 Split System Heat Pump 15.0 12.0 8.5 Split System A/C 16.0 13.0 Natural Gas Furnace 95+

† You can read more on this subject online. Today’s article by Michael O’Brien is entitled, “Obama: No time for ‘flat—earth society’ on climate change.” http://firstread.nbcnews.com/_ news/2013/06/25/19135726-obama-no-time-for-flat-earthsociety-on-climate-change?lite *More details at: https://www.acca.org/archives/industryresources/government-affairs/hot-air/8196 1. R-22 has been the staple of air-conditioning refrigerant since the 1950’s. Due to the Montreal Protocol Agreement in 1987, R-22 has been on a scheduled production phase out. The point made in this letter is that the EPA has twice now, without warning, accelerated the scheduled reduction amount, resulting in unexpected price increases due to supply and demand.

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