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Tucson July 2014
Health & Beauty 2014 Fit After 50 How they got healthy and stayed that way. : : by Sandy Miller
Summer Travel
The Berlin Wall
25 Years Later Finish Line Newsletter starts on page 37
Travel section starts on page 28
Seniors Reveal Life-Changing Effects Of Fitness I
f you are an older adult, exercise is one of the best things you can do for your physical and mental health. According to the Centers for Disease Control, older adults should exercise for 150 minutes a week, with a good mix of cardio and strength training. Unfortunately, many people don’t get enough exercise to keep them healthy and strong as they age. Not only does
exercise help individuals stay healthy and reduce the risk of disability and disease, it has been proven to reduce the cost of care for individuals and their families. The benefits of exercise have been realized by SilverSneakers Fitness members for more than 20 years. SilverSneakers Fitness is the nation’s leading fitness program designed for older
page 2 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : July 2014
adults and has helped thousands of people reach their health goals. For Priscilla Farrell, it was to walk on the beach with her granddaughter and to rely less on an oxygen tank. For George Jacobs, it was to step foot in a gym for the first time to improve his physical and social well-being. For Cecil Daniels, it was to overcome his diabetes and high blood pressure.
“SilverSneakers Fitness members like Priscilla, George and Cecil are not only changing their lives through fitness, they are leading a senior fitness revolution resulting in health improvements, higher quality of life and fulfillment at every age,” said Joy Powell, president of the Senior Solutions Division for Healthways. “Today’s active older adults are extremely dedicated to physical health through fitness, and they are more passionate and dedicated than any previous generation.” Bringing this to life, the 2013 SilverSneakers Fitness Annual Member Survey of more than 35,000 respondents in 50 states revealed that SilverSneakers participants are seeking personalized fitness options in record numbers, with nearly 46 percent joining a fitness center for the first time as a result of their SilverSneakers membership. While many are stepping foot in the gym for the first time, they are not doing it alone. Nearly 60 percent of SilverSneakers members participate in classes with a friend and 41 percent attend class to socialize, which can have a great impact on a person’s mental health and well-being. The annual member survey also showed that today’s older adults are more active than ever before, with four out of five participants doing aerobic activity three or more times per week. Physical fitness is vital to overall health, as 60 percent of SilverSneakers participants rate their health as “excellent” or “very good,” in comparison to only 47 percent of peer respondents to Medicare’s annual Health Outcomes Survey. SilverSneakers Fitness was founded in 1992 and today serves more than 11 million eligible members in more than 11,000 participating fitness and wellness facilities nationwide. For more information, to see if you are eligible for SilverSneakers and to find a class in your area, call (877) 210-1307 or visit www.SilverSneakers.com.
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The Valuable Meaning Of Health Transactions I
n this digital age, the U.S. health care system has also become digital. Every day, millions of people interact with it. During these interactions, data is collected, processed and stored, creating a seemingly infinite amount of information—yet each single data point has meaning. The collection of data for any given individual offers valuable insight into his or her health behavior patterns. This data can be used to support individuals in their efforts to live healthier lives. For example, when a person participates in a health screening, the resulting transaction can generate a response that reinforces this positive activity. The response can be provided in the form of gift cards, co-pay adjustments, even encouraging text messages.
prescription refill his co-pay will be waived and that he can earn $50 in his health savings account if his child is vaccinated. Then there’s a busy sales executive who has not yet had an annual mammogram. The system sends a reminder on her mobile device to schedule the appointment. After the mammography, she gets a reinforc-
ing communication and an incentive. Later, after an unhealthy glucose reading at a biometric screening at work, she is prompted to enroll in a diabetes management program and learns she can earn additional incentives for each program session. Upon completion of all sessions, she is sent a congratulatory e-mail and a reminder of the incentives available in the next quarter if her glucose levels return to a healthy range. For both the steelworker and the
sales executive, the transactions take on real meaning. The data drives a self-monitoring system capable of delivering communications and incentives that support them on a daily basis. Originating from thousands of data sources, millions of health and wellness transactions are processed every day—and every transaction has the potential to improve the health of an individual. Learn more at www.chiprewards. com and www.bmc.com.
Data Can Accelerate Healthier Choices “Data writes a rich story of healthy actions and provides a road map for behavior change. Data transactions trigger a cascade of events that, through technology and behavioral science, can help improve health at the individual and population level. As a result, people are able to become engaged in the process of living healthier,” says Dr. Josh Klapow, Chief Behavioral Scientist at ChipRewards. ChipRewards is a behavioral science− based technology company that uses its proprietary Web-enabled platform to assist health plans, employers, providers and other industry stakeholders in developing and implementing large-scale health incentive and engagement solutions. The company adheres to established privacy standards, and uses technology created by BMC Software to build a secure environment for its data where it processes millions of transactions to reward and encourage healthy behaviors. For example, an aging steelworker had an annual physical for which he earned an insurance premium reduction. He also completed a biometric screening, making him eligible for a disease management program. Because he walked 8,000 steps in a day, he needs just 5,000 more to get a bonus incentive for the week. He also receives a reminder that after one more
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opinion
6 Sound Off 6 The Curmudgeon 7 The Up Side 9 The Widow’s Corner 11 Ask the Old Bag entertainment
10 Trivia Contest 12 Calendar of Events 16 Puzzles 23 Boston Finds ‘Life, Love and Hope’ in New Music 23 Fun & Games Around Tucson 25 Tinseltown Talks 26 Bingo Happenings home improvement
27 Jan D’Atri travel
credits publishers Steve T. Strickbine Steve Fish
executive editor Christina Fuoco-Karasinski features editor Christina Caldwell art director Erica Odello senior account executive Lou Lagrave sales administrator Shannon Fish contributors Sandy Miller, Sam Nalven, Tim Sealy, Drew Alexander, Jan D’Atri, Michael Grady, Terry Ratner, Tracy House, Gayle Lagman-Creswick, Ed Boitano, Andrea Gross, Irv Green
© 2013 by EOS Publishing, LLC. Lovin’ Life After 50 is a monthly publication dedicated to informing, serving and entertaining the active adults of Arizona. It is published by EOS Publishing, LLC, an Arizona limited liability company. Subscriptions are available for $24 per year or $40 for two years. Send check or money order to Lovin’ Life After 50.
28 The 25th Anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall 32 Buffalo, New York arizona senior olympics
37 Finish Line News Pick up your copy of Lovin’ Life at any area page 4 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : July 2014
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Pain Center Participates in a Research Clinical Trial I
: : by Dr. Abram Burgher
t’s no secret that chronic pain is a growing health issue in the United States today. I see chronic pain patients everyday in my practice at The Pain Center of Arizona. Defined as pain lasting longer than six months after an injury has healed, it is estimated that more than 100 million Americans suffer from chronic pain annually. Chronic pain can impact a sufferer’s ability to lead a productive working, social and family life. Many patients undergo years of testing and doctors’ visits without a long-term solution. Neuropathic pain is induced by an injury or disease of the nervous system. A common cause of neuropathic pain is post-surgical nerve damage, which occurs in up to 35 percent of patients who undergo hernia surgery and 50 to 85 percent of patients who undergo amputations, according to the British Journal of Anaesthesia, 2008. Other causes include nerve damage caused by trauma or diseases such as Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS). Neuropathic pain is difficult to treat. Strong medications like opioids can provide relief but may not always be an effective long-term treatment option. For many years, neurostimulation has been a well-accepted, effective and safe method to treat neuropathic pain. Most popular is stimulation of the spinal cord. Leads (small wires) are implanted in the epidural space, an area around the spinal cord. A neurostimulator sends pulses to the leads. It is implanted in the abdominal wall or buttock, and is controlled via an external remote control. My practice in Phoenix is participating in a national study along with nearly two dozen sites across the country to evaluate a potential new therapy for chronic lower limb pain. The investigational Axium Neurostimulator System is the only spinal cord stimulation system that targets a branch of the spinal cord called the dorsal root ganglion (DRG). The dorsal root ganglion plays a critical role in the development and maintenance of chronic pain, as it processes pain signals as they travel to the brain. By stimulating the DRG, the Axium System interrupts pain signals before they travel to the brain. Recently published European data
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from a nonrandomized study found that 78 percent of patients experienced pain relief in the lower limbs. The Pain Center of Arizona is now enrolling patients for the ACCURATE study, a prospective, randomized, multicenter, controlled trial to determine the safety and efficacy of the Axium Neurostimulator System for chronic neuropathic pain affecting their lower limbs (such as the leg, foot or groin).
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For more information, or to see if you qualify for the ACCURATE study, please visit www.ACCURATEstudy. com or call (888) 978-8397. Dr. Abram Burgher is a board certified pain management specialist practicing at The Pain Center of Arizona in Phoenix. CAUTION: The Axium Neurostimulator System is an investigational device and is limited by United States law to investigational use.
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opinion Sound Off
don’t want us to know how much the price goes up, almost every year. We, the public, can’t help it that technology has sunk the popularity of the firstclass letter. I am thinking that the postmaster general will try to sell us a zillion Forever stamps and then “run” to Congress and tell them they need a “bailout” because now they really need help from Washington. Then if the postal service goes “belly up,” then we will have a bunch of worthless Forever stamps, and they will be as worthless as our folding American money may become! I am Ken Unwin...a former (27 years) postal employee. Have a beautiful day!
Drew (Alexander) bemoans the lack of leadership of the U.S. political class, however, our president has been able to lead this country out of the worst financial crisis since the Depression with little cooperation from House Republicans. He achieved the near impossible by making affordable health care available to millions of uninsured Americans, again without Republican cooperation. He also brought swift justice to Bin Laden, something G.W. Bush gave up on. Not a bad leadership record, considering he’s forced to work with a do-nothing Republican majority in the House. No, Drew, lack of leadership is a Republican characteristic.—J. Wilson, Tucson
We sure will be glad when they take that screaming man off the Cox commercials. He’s such a pain in the neck. Who wants to hear that dummy every station you turn on? Cox, get a new commercial please!
I just bought 20 Star-Spangled Banner Forever stamps at my local gas station (postal contract office) and they cost me $9.80. When the Forever stamp first came out, we could buy 20 for $8.20! The reason the post office doesn’t put a per-price amount on each stamp is because they
Remember when all the census and work applicants had to mark “M” or “F” and listed white or other? Then began the division of the “other,” to account for Native Americans, Pacific Islanders, Aleutian Native Islanders, etc., and born different humans. At least they
The Curmudgeon The Phantom President
B
: : by Drew Alexander
eginning with Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Barack Hussein Obama is the 13th president of the United States so far in my lifetime. Of these chief executives, I have never seen one more detached from the nation and its people than Obama. He loves the perks, prestige and power of the presidency but has no taste for the daily challenges of governance and tough decision-making. Obama is missing in dutiful action on so many fronts, it’s hard to determine where to begin looking for him. In his promised government transparency, for one, he has remained appallingly nontransparent regarding the facts behind the Fast and Furious gun running debacle, and the Benghazi and Internal Revenue Service coverups. His response to these and other
mounting scandals is to assume the stance of the outraged bystander, mouthing such twaddle as “this is unacceptable,” instead of actually exhibiting some forthright and consequential leadership. Despite all the sophisticated communications tools and intelligence gathering entities at the president’s disposal, not to mention an ostensibly informed White House staff, Obama is always caught by surprise when something problematic happens, actually telling us with a straight face that he learned about it through the news media. For instance, Obama was surprised that the IRS was furtively targeting conservative groups and dismissively told Fox News’ Bill O’Reilly there was “not even a smidgen of corruption” at
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all walked upright and acted human. How do you like this new cyberworld politically correct created world? How are you doing dad? How are you doing mom? Lots of luck from now on. In Saturday’s Arizona Daily Star under “world issues” was a short article about a woman in Saudi Arabia who received 150 lashes for driving a car and resisting arrest. Those of you who saw the movie “12 Years a Slave” witnessed the brutal whipping of a young black girl for a minor offense. If you did, you were horrified and appalled that such
inhumanity existed back then. This news article reaffirms that atrocities are still occurring in the Muslim world today. Our leaders choose to ignore these happenings as our thirst for their oil resources continues unabated. We spend billions annually maintaining our fleets in the area to assure the free flow of oil without compensation. Only an aroused citizenry can bring this to the table to be ended. There are many options that can be used to get their attention. I particularly ask American women to speak out and demand these ancient barbaric practices be stopped. ...continues on page 8
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the IRS. The president was clueless how his badly conceived Affordable Care Act—which the majority of Americans dislike—was further compromised by the inept rollout by the Health and Human Services Department. Then there was that bloody night in Benghazi and a phantom president who, to this day, has not revealed his whereabouts at the time and why no military action was initiated in response to Ambassador Chris Stevens’ pleas for aid. As a presidential candidate, Obama promised that the care of our veterans would be among his highest priorities. As commander in chief, Obama has failed to keep that pledge. Evidence exists that the Obama administration knew in 2010, and possibly sooner, that the Department of Veterans Affairs was keeping secret lists of veterans waiting for medical treatment; some have died waiting. Yet, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney said the president learned about it from news reports. If we had this so ill-informed president back in the 1930s and ‘40s
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instead of FDR, he would be saying, “The Great what?” and “Adolf who?” The American economy was declining before Obama took office in 2009, and has continued to seriously tank since. Under his watch, the president’s destructive policies, such as not approving the Keystone pipeline, his war on oil and coal, and a weak response to one world crisis after another are all indicative of a man long on political ideology and short on the right stuff to be president. I’ve heard some people use the Titanic as a metaphor for present-day America and Barack Obama as its captain. I disagree. Obama is not the captain of the Titanic. He’s the iceberg. 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
You Say It’s Hot? Hang On, I’ll Get a Pen!
I
: : by Michael Grady
was sitting in a restaurant the other day, when a young woman suddenly bounded through the doorway to join her friends at their table. This is what she said: WOMAN: Oh, my God—it’s so hot! Can you believe this? This heat is just wearing me out! (Drops her purse dramatically and sits.) It’s too early to be this hot! So spring is over, now? It’s going to be like this from here on out? I don’t know how I can take this! And this is what they heard: WOMAN: Oh, my God—I’m so boring! Can you believe this? My whining will just wear you out! (Drops her purse dramatically and sits.) It’s too early to be this boring! So spring is over, now? I’m going to be like this from here on out? I don’t know how you can take this! It’s July as you read this. So you don’t need me to tell you about the weather. If you’re a native Arizonan, you have come to accept the fact that life is a journey, and June through early October is the uphill part of that journey. This time of year, the high desert is populated by three kinds of people: 1. Those who have accepted the high temperatures. 2. Those who have no other place to go. 3. Those who have succumbed to heat stroke and are being eaten by javelinas. So if the temperature comes as a surprise to you, then you need someone to hand you a juice box and read you a story. This column is for that dramatic young woman in the restaurant, and for Arizona newcomers and for all the triple-digit poets who will regale us with details of their discomfort in the months to come: We know. We also live here. And we, too, have nerve endings and sweat glands! We have heard every possible lament about heat, sweating, sunburn, car temperatures, metal surfaces and dehydration. But in all of our collective Arizona summers, none of us have ever heard this: MAN: Wow! Your whining has turned the air frosty! Please continue your rant! We cannot change the temperature. So we try, with the fortitude of our pioneer
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forebears, to soldier on in spite of it. And occasionally during the summer, we achieve that blissful state where our attention rests on something beyond the fact that we all live in an oven. Then you come in, with your stunning declaration that “it is hot.” Thanks! Do you know who the first person eaten in the Donner Party was? This guy: GUY: Wow, I’m starving! Can you believe how starving we all are? Hey, how long has it been since we’ve eaten? I don’t know what we’re going to do! Gosh, I’m so hungry! I’m willing to bet he tasted like chicken. The best approach to this time of high heat is the one Roger Craig took when he became the manager of the San Francisco Giants. At the time, the Giants played in Candlestick Park—a horrible venue that combined cold weather and high humidity with vicious, random crosswinds that could carry a fly ball anywhere. Craig’s first rule: You can’t complain about the home field. Stripped of their primary villain and leading complaint, Craig’s players began to accept the reality of Candlestick and play better because they had to focus on other things. So, rule No. 1 about the heat? Handle it the way Fight Club members handle Fight Club, or Puritans handle sexual tension—Don’t talk about it! Rule No. 2? Don’t try to solve it. The second stage of newcomerism is looking to find a way to minimize, avoid or defuse the heat. When I worked at the newspaper, we all dreaded the annual “Ways to Beat the Heat in Arizona” assignment. Because it always boiled down to this list: 1. Swim 2. Move 3. Die early I write this not to depress you. (If it does, you should try swimming.) I write this because acceptance of the heat is how we separate the natives from the greenhorns out here. Heat acceptance is the secret Masonic handshake of the Arizonan. “Ditat Deus,” Arizona’s state motto, is Latin for “Under God.” But it’s
also an ancient Aztec phrase, meaning, “What’re gonna do?” That’s why, when Arizonans encounter a newcomer, the conversation always runs this way: FIRST ARIZONAN: How long have you been out here? NEWCOMER: We came out in February! SECOND ARIZONAN: So, you haven’t had your first summer yet? NEWCOMER: Not yet! (Knowing glance between ARIZONANS.) See, native Arizonans take a kind of perverse joy in the utter horror newcomers display when they first encounter the heat. It’s like having a practical joke played on you, then getting to see the same joke played on others. If you’re a newcomer, please know that your wide-eyed, outraged stories of scorched skin and damp clothing, your desperate efforts to acquire cooling tips and wisdom and your unanswered questions about “how long can this go on?” are the closest that most of us will ever come to dinner theater. Acceptance is your only hope. Searching for reasons or relief is a draining, useless exercise that distracts the rest of us from lying prone and
waiting for football season. Once you accept the comic book temperatures, you become aware of subtle graces that can be found under God’s own heat lamp: Lower hygiene standards: Do you really think anyone will notice that whiff of Chanel you’re wearing, when we all smell like dead muskrats in a hot metal box? Stop trying so hard! As long as your personal aroma doesn’t chip the surrounding paint, it’s all good. Justified lethargy: The heat is a wonderful catch-all excuse for underperforming in any arena of life. “I’m sorry I (was late for work/forgot our anniversary/robbed a liquor store and pistol-whipped the clerk/ whatever)...it’s just...this heat!” And people will understand. Enjoying the misery of others: Anyone who said joy cannot be found in another’s misfortune has never watched a Wisconsin native try to sit on a vinyl car seat in an Arizona August. It is their brutal rite of passage—and an unofficial dance of our native land. Enjoy! Michael Grady is a Valley-based freelance writer, reporter and playwright.
Do You Have Pain/Numbness/Tingling in the Feet/Legs??? A doctor has moved to Tucson that treats neuropathy (nerve problems), and his name is Dr Trent Freeman DC (Dr T). He has been treating Neuropathy for the last 10 years. Maybe you have seen him interviewed on CBS by Steve Ochoa or during the Dr Oz show, maybe you saw him on NBC. He has brought this new treatment to persons suffering from neuropathy in Tucson. He uses two kinds of Light to stimulate the nerves to function better. He uses pulsed infrared technology that helps reduce the pain, and FDA approved cold lasers that help the cells function better. He offers his consultation for FREE. He looks at the interview time as a time for him to see if you have the type of neuropathy that he treats but more importantly, for you to interview him and see if he is someone that you would like to work with. His clinic is certified with the Neuropathy Treatment Centers of America and he has received advanced training in the treatment of neuropathy. There are fewer than 100 doctors in America that have received this advanced training in this type of therapy. Dr T looks at neuropathy as a thief that comes to your life and starts to steal from you. If you allow neuropathy to continue, it will steal your independence (driving, walking, balance) As Dr T says “Everyday we are having more success relieving neuropathy pain, WHY NOT YOU?” Give his office a call and schedule the FREE consultation and see if you qualify for this new therapy 520-445-6784.
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July 2014 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 7
... from page 6 Oh please, you news hogs, always need to blame someone else. All stop blaming everything they have to do is look in the mirror. that’s wrong on the current president. How about checking out the There’s no money for healthy previous three and all the problems that food for children in schools. were created in their administrations, Then should just serve what or can’t you count back that far, you Congress is served in their cafeteria. poor dummy? I bet it’s not Twinkies, chocolate and potato chips. How about that Mr. More disgusting politics from Smart Politician? the people who don’t know what they’re talking about. Can we just skip Congress like They have to make this president the Obama does and impeach him “Judas goat” for all the others who did as a people? nothing to change the VA. At least this president is working at it. You don’t So the typical naysayers of have to fire Eric Shinseki; they didn’t Congress chopped off his head fire any of the other ones that had the and said, “Oops, we needed same problems. At least he is working those brains. What do we do now? Go on it. Shame on all you stupid, greedy back to trying to hang the president? people who need a “Judas goat.” It’s all his fault, of course.” The Goodbye. dummies don’t do anything but more dumb things. Blaming someone for something they were not made Hello. My name is Joan (leaves aware of and not allowing phone number). I think it would time to fix it when they are as dumb be interesting if since you’re as the troublemakers hiding it in the targeting seniors, if seniors who have first place. Holy moly. The politicians been scammed or cheated and it has
not been resolved, if they could put their stories in the paper. I think that would be a very good idea. I know, myself, I have been cheated by a big auction house. It has not been resolved and chances are it would never be resolved. I would like to contact other people who have cheated by this same company. If you are interested in talking to me call me (leaves phone number again). Well, haste made waste again. What do you, those advisers in the White House, do besides make mistakes and give inadequate information? Who are they working for anyway? They sure aren’t working for the president or America’s best interest. Well, in the present brouhaha give the diplomats enough time to work out the kinks. There will be a Taliban in Afghanistan and other political parties in many countries in Africa, just as there will still be confederate separatists in South Carolina. Understand now, poor lame brainers who complain about everything? Understand the big, big picture?
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Oh put it this way, if you can’t stand politics or understand diplomacy bring your thoughts back to your basic daily life. You have a neighbor, a co-worker or relative you just can’t stand but you have to live with them anyway. That’s diplomacy. That’s applying it everywhere around the world, rather than have a family fight. Even Putin and the Taliban got the message, but they will still be the people to watch, the sneaky uninvited relative at the next wedding party. Can you figure it out now? They’re working for the betterment of everybody that you have to live with whether you like them or not. Well calm down. If our POWs get to go home, so should the enemies. If they go home to fight again, what did you expect? Ours go on TV and make news for the Congress. Common sense died in 9/11. Religions have been fighting for 5,000 years and al-Qaeda is the new modern way. Common sense can also control when people vote and the fight will go on forever. We have to get along with the good, the bad and indifferent. ...continues on page 34
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The Widow’s Corner Dogs, Love and Lumps
Y
: : by Terry Ratner, RN, MFA
ou have to listen real hard to hear anything at all: The sound of tippy toes on wood stairs, the soft tap of a paw on the bedroom door, the digging around in her bed to find a perfect spot for the night, the sound of shuffling cards as she shakes off excess water, and the gentle click from the flap on her dog door. We bought our Bedlington last Memorial Day. We were spending the weekend on my boyfriend’s sailboat in Harbor Island when we scheduled a meeting with a breeder. We talked for months about getting a dog. We’d search the Internet to look at dogs late at night. We called it Internet dog-dating but, just like any kind of Internet dating, we are reduced to making judgments based on physical appearances. As anyone who’s hoping for a lifetime of companionship knows, looks are the least of it. We met her for the first time outside of a Subway restaurant, when a woman standing in a shaded area appeared holding a 9-week-old dog in the palm of her hand. It’s difficult not to fall in love with a puppy that fits perfectly in your arms and whose hair is softer than a favorite stuffed animal. But I didn’t let myself get taken with the “Ah, she’s so cute” routine. I told myself, “It’s just another puppy and along with raising a dog comes extra work.” The holiday weekend fell five days after I found a lump on my right breast. Not sure if I should use “on” or “in” because both words define the characteristics of this lump. I hadn’t told my boyfriend about my discovery, partly out of fear that it might somehow change our direction, and because there was so much about this lump that I didn’t know yet. My hesitation included our relationship as a couple. We had been living together for five months and I seemed to be stuck in the “dating” mode, not wanting to give up the newness of our romance for daily routines. There is something to be said for the beginning of a relationship—it’s fresh, sexy, romantic and exciting. We returned to the boat to think things over. My boyfriend seemed excited to
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bring her home. He kept asking me if I wanted her. I’d reply, “She’s cute and so sweet.” I left out the rest of my thoughts: “Not at this time.” I couldn’t say what I felt to him because I knew he had already fallen for her. I held Gracie in my lap for the entire ride home to Phoenix. We named her “Say Goodnight Gracie” the day we picked her up. When we arrived home, I didn’t let myself get attached. He was the one who set his alarm to go off at 3 a.m. and 6 a.m. to feed her and take her for walks. He taught her to use the dog door and trained her to sit and stay. I kept our relationship at a distance. I lived with Gracie and my lump for the same amount of time before having surgery. After an ultrasound in June, the radiologist told me that it was “probably benign.” That seemed to appease me for a while, but I still needed more scientific proof to ease my mind. During the weeks leading up to surgery, Gracie greeted me each day after work. She was my daily yoga, my meditation and my personal therapy dog. She seemed to know when I needed her to comfort me—the way she rested her long face against my neck. Gracie and my boyfriend stuck by me through the initial surgery, which diagnosed the cancer, and the lymph node biopsy that followed. She allowed me to snatch her up in my arms and tickle her underside after each of my brachytherapy sessions. The bonding between us happened despite my efforts to stay unattached. Even when she ate my favorite pair of slippers, had an accident on the carpet, bit my best friend (very lightly without consequence), I took her side. Sometimes love does not have the most honorable beginnings, and the endings, the endings will break you in half. It’s everything in between we live for. OK, say goodnight Gracie. 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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Boomerish
rivia Contest
: : by Steve Greenberg
W
www.boomerish.com steve@greenbergart.com
ith everything going on in the good ole U.S.A., it’s easy to forget just how good we have it. Between the “us versus them” mentality in the highest levels of government and talking heads on the nightly news blowing fluff stories out of proportion instead of focusing on what really matters, it’s easy to throw your hands up in the air and revert into a perspective of patriotic cynicism. But the fact that we live in a country that fosters free speech—even the dumb kind—is pretty great. We have a whole lot of liberty in this country that we often take for granted. But July is a time to celebrate our independence, both from the British motherland and our own independent spirit; the fact that millions of people from wildly different backgrounds come together to form something really kind of great. We’ve stopped rolling our eyes at the Senate for a second to celebrate America—the idealistic, wide-eyed America we all know and love—in this month’s trivia.
American History Trivia
1
Who said “We must reject the idea that every time a law’s broken, society is guilty rather than the lawbreaker. It is time to restore the American precept that each individual is accountable for his actions?”
2
Who allegedly proposed that the national bird should be a turkey? (This was later disproven by the U.S. Diplomacy Center.)
3
Who is the author and brainchild behind the seminal American pamphlet, “Common Sense.”
4 5
Who was the first European to set foot in America? In what year did John Smith and the Virginia Company found Jamestown?
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). 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@lovinlife.com The deadline for entry is the 15th of each month. Please be sure to have your entry postmarked by that date. If you’re a winner in our drawing we’ll contact you via telephone. Good luck!
Contest Prizes A certificate for a one-night stay at InnSuites, awarded to two winners
June 2014 Winners InnSuites certificate William C. Carson InnSuites certificate Georgette Asay
Last Month’s Answers
1 2 3
B uffalo was the animal Wyatt Earp hunted.
4
Stuart Lake was the author that wrote a mostly fictionalized account of the Gunfight at O.K. Corral.
5 page 10 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : July 2014
1 904 is when Tortilla Flat was founded, according to available records. Manifest Destiny is the term for the belief that settlers of early America were meant to expand west.
1 899 was the incorporated.
year
Jerome
was
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Ask the Old Bag Advice for the Over-50 Crowd
D
Experienced Tree Service and Landscaping with the Best Rates Around • Expert Saguaro Cactus Handlers at Your Service
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ear Old Bag: This year I discovered that many colleges, junior colleges and universities offer noncredit classes in a huge variety of subjects for seniors at very low, affordable prices. I have taken three classes on subjects that I knew very little about. Also I made some new friends! Please tell your readers about this wonderful opportunity! Signed, You can teach an old dog...
D
ear New Learner: (I am not going to call you an “old dog.”) Thank you for the info. It is especially timely with the information that has come to the forefront about how new learning can be a deterrent to Alzheimer’s disease and dementia. It can help to keep your brain from shrinking! Readers, if you are not already taking these classes, call your local learning institutions to see if they have a program you might like, and sign up! Signed, O.B.
D
ear Old Bag: Why is it some who come to vacation with us are so great to have, while others are dreaded? And the ones you enjoy seem to spend such a short time, and the ones you dread want to stay on and on? Because we are older, and my wife is not healthy, we pretty much stay close to home. Most company we enjoy, but what can we do about those we don’t? Signed, Tired
D
ear Tired: What a conundrum! If I were you, I would ask your wife if you may use her poor health as an excuse when the undesirables ask you if they may visit. “My wife is just not up to a visit at this time.” It sounds as if people love to visit you—probably because you see to it that they have a good time? The other thing you might try is to bore them so they won’t want to come back! Good luck. Signed, O.B.
D
ear Old Bag: When I first began reading your column years ago, I didn’t like the name of it. However, after I learned how you got the name
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• Senior Citizen Discount
for it, I chuckle every time I see it. My husband and I look forward to reading it and are not offended. Keep it up! Signed, Loyal Readers
• Emergency storm damaged tree and cactus removals
D
ear Loyal Readers: I am receiving emails from both sides of the aisle on this matter. I will publish some of both next month and make a decision whether to change the name or not. Send in your opinions! Thank you, O.B.
D
ear Old Bag: I have just learned that my dear wife has dementia. I knew something was drastically wrong, but was still not prepared for this. Honestly, I don’t think I can handle it. She was always the strong one, the active one, the one everyone depended on. This is more than I can handle. I think our whole family is in a state of shock. What now? We are in our 60s. Signed, Hopeless
D
ear Hopeless: First of all, as long as there is life, there is hope. And at this time there is nothing you can do to alter the diagnosis, but you can and must change your attitude about it. You need help—help from family, help from a professional, help from a support group and help from God. Please begin with professional help. You will find that you have hidden strength that you didn’t even know you had. Learn as much as you can about the disease. My heart goes out to you. Blessings to you and your family. One little tip: As her disease progresses you must find healthy ways to take care of yourself—which includes regular time away from your wife and her illness to avoid burn out. Signed, O.B.
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ear Readers: To those of you participating in our kindness to humanity program to teach the next generation, our assignment this month is to make time to get to know a veteran and thank him or her for service to our country. You might take him or her to lunch, or listen, if they want to talk.
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Introductions to Computers, 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m., Valencia Branch Library, 202 W. Valencia Rd., free but registration required, 594-5390. In this fun, hands-on course, students will learn all the basic computer skills including using the mouse and keyboard, working in Microsoft Windows, using Microsoft Word, surfing the Internet and using email. July 2 Wednesday Enhanced Fitness, 9 a.m. to 10 a.m., Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, TMC Senior Services, El Dorado Health Campus, 1400 N. Wilmot Rd., $18 for one month, $60 for four months, registration required, 324-4345. This low- to moderate-level exercise class is taught by a certified fitness instructor. Healthy Lifestyle Support, 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., TMC Senior Services, El Dorado Health Campus, 1400 N. Wilmot Rd., free but registration required, 324-4345. Jill Jones leads this group with support and information to help participants stay on track with healthy lifestyle goals. July 3 Thursday Alzheimer’s Caregivers Support Group, 10:30 a.m. to 12 p.m., repeats July 17, TMC Senior Services, El Dorado Health Campus, 1400 N. Wilmot Rd., free but registration required, 324-4345. This ongoing group meets in the classroom and is open to all. July 4 Friday Happy Independence Day from all of us at Lovin’ Life After 50.
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July 5 Saturday Sit and Knit, 9:30 a.m. to 12 p.m., Joyner-Green Valley Branch Library, 601 N. La Canada Dr., Green Valley, free but registration required, 594-5295. July 6 Sunday Bob Kay, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sundays, Cactus Bowl, 3665 S. 16th Ave., $2, 883-5491. The singing drummer/DJ plays “oldies but goodies” at a nonsmoking dance. July 7 Monday Matter of Balance, 2:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., TMC Senior Services, El Dorado Health Campus, 1400 N. Wilmot Rd., $20/single, $30/couple, registration required, 790-7262, www.pcoa.org/arizona-living-well. This two-hour, evidencebased balance and fall awareness class meets twice a week on Monday and Wednesday for four weeks.
Art Talk with Sandy Cord, 1:30 p.m., The Forum at Tucson, 2500 N. Rosemont, free but registration required, 325-4800. Tucson Museum of Art docent Sandy Cord will give an in-depth presentation on the American artists that flocked to Paris after the American Civil War, to study, visit museums and exhibit their own works. July 8 Tuesday The Gardeners of Tucson (TGOT) Meeting, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., Ward 6 City Council Office, 3202 E. First St., free but registration required, 622-0905. The guest, author Bruce Hyland, will discuss “Down and Dirty Gardening.” Hyland will offer a dozen tips for success in desert gardening and landscaping. History Talk with Sue Ward, 10:30 a.m. to 12 p.m., The Forum at Tucson, 2500 N. Rosemont, free but registration required, 325-4800. Sue Ward, international relations specialist, will lead a discussion on “Great Decisions: China’s Foreign Policy.” Tour of Hacienda de la Canoa, 8:30 a.m. to 10 a.m., repeats Saturday, July 19, Historic Hacienda de la Canoa, 5375 S. Interstate 19 Frontage Rd., Green Valley, free but registration required, 877-6004, canoaranch@pima.gov. Venomous and Poisonous Animals of Arizona, 2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m., Joyner-Green Valley Library, 601 N. La Canada Dr., Green Valley, free, 615-7855, eeducation@pima.gov. July 9 Wednesday Elder Circle: The Wisdom Journey, 10:30 a.m. to 12 p.m., TMC Senior Services, El Dorado Health Campus, 1400 N. Wilmot Rd., free but registration is required, 324-4345. Join Marney Farrell for a safe place to share life experiences and celebrate the achievements of aging. Alzheimer’s Association Younger Onset (Early Onset) Caregiver Support Group, 5 p.m. to 6 p.m., TMC Senior Services, El Dorado Health Campus, 1400 N. Wilmot Rd., free but registration required, 322-6601. Sonoran Desert Weedwackers, 6 a.m. to 9 a.m., repeats Saturday, July 19, and Wednesday, July 23, Pima County Tucson Mountain Park, 2020 N. Kinney Rd., free but registration required, 615-7855, eeducation@pima. gov. Join the Sonoran Desert Weedwackers to eradicate buffelgrass and fountain grass in Tucson Mountain Park. July 10 Thursday Green Valley Stroke Support Group, 10 a.m. to 11 a.m., Zuni Room, La Perla at La Posada, 635 S. Park
Center Ave, free but registration required, 626-2901. Facilitated by Leslie Ritter, PhD, RN, and supported by The University of Arizona Medical Center, College of Nursing and Sarver Heart Center. For stroke survivors and caregivers to learn more about stroke, to find positive solutions to shared concerns and to unite in support of each other. Movie Day with “The Philadelphia Experiment,” 12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m., TMC Senior Services, El Dorado Health Campus, 1400 N. Wilmot Rd., free but registration required, 324-4345. July 11 Friday Lizards of Agua Caliente Park, 7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m., Pima County Agua Caliente Park, 12325 E. Roger Rd., free, 615-7855, eeducation@pima.gov. Join the group as it searches for whiptail, spiny, ornate tree and other lizards that roam Agua Caliente Park. July 12 Saturday Tucson Christian Writers Group Meeting, 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Amphitheater Bible Church, 226 W. Prince Rd., free, www.tucsonchristianwriters.org. The guest, Andrea Arthur Owan, will discuss “Overcoming Writer’s Block and Conquering Procrastination: How to Start That Writing Project...and Finish It! (Part 1).” Tucson Arts and Crafts Association’s Christmas in July, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., repeats Sunday, July 13, Tucson Hilton East Hotel, 7600 E. Broadway, 237-7899. Nature Night: Owling Walk, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., Tucson Mountain Park, Ironwood Picnic Area, 1548 S. Kinney Rd., donations accepted, 615-7855, eeducation@ pima.gov. Join this guided walk as the group explores the nighttime world of owls and other nocturnal birds. July 13 Sunday Bob Kay, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sundays, Cactus Bowl, 3665 S. 16th Ave., $2, 883-5491. The singing drummer/DJ plays “oldies but goodies” at a nonsmoking dance. July 14 Monday Tucson Community Stroke Support Group, 10 a.m. to 11 a.m., University of Arizona Medical Center, Cafeteria Dining Room C, 1501 N. Campbell Ave., free but registration required, 626-2901. Facilitated by Leslie Ritter, PhD, RN, and supported by The University of Arizona Medical Center, College of Nursing and Sarver Heart Center. For stroke survivors and caregivers to learn more about stroke, to find positive solutions to shared concerns and to unite in support of each other. Summer Fashion Show and Open House, 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m., The Forum at Tucson, 2500 N. Rosemont, $10 suggested donation goes to the community food bank, registration required, 325-4800. Join the facility for its annual fashion show and open house. Enjoy light refreshments as the Forum models showcase chic and affordable fashions from Draper’s and Damon’s.
Birding at Sweetwater Wetlands, 7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m., Sweetwater Wetlands, 2667 W. Sweetwater Dr., free, 615-7855, eeducation@pima.gov. July 15 Tuesday APDA Parkinson’s Support Groups, 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m., TMC Senior Services, El Dorado Health Campus, 1400 N. Wilmot Rd., free but registration required, 3244345. People with Parkinson’s meet in Resource Center; Caregivers meet in Seniors Conference Room. Butterflies of Agua Caliente Park, 8 a.m. to 10 a.m., Pima County Agua Caliente Park, 12325 E. Roger Rd., free, 615-7855, eeducation@pima.gov. Take a guided walk with naturalist Jeff Babson to look for butterflies and caterpillars and their food plants. July 16 Wednesday Nuts about Nature Preschool Hour, 10:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Pima County Agua Caliente Park, 12325 E. Roger Rd., free, 615-7855, eeducation@pima.gov. Bring the grandkids for a family friendly hour that explores nature through stories, crafts and games. July 17 Thursday Write to Heal Workshops, 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thursdays July 17 through Aug. 14, Northwest Art Center, 7770 N. Shannon Rd., Room 303, $60 for five-part series, $15 for one session, deborah@deborahmayaan.com. Each class focuses on writing exercises for a topic, including “Increasing Resiliency,” “The Body Electric,” “What Am I Living for?,” “My Healing Journey” and “Healing Relationships.” Facilitated by Deborah Mayaan, MA, writer and healing practitioner. Cienega Creek Nature Walk, 7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m., Gabe Zimmerman Davidson Canyon Trailhead at Cienega Creek Natural Preserve, 16000 E. March Station Rd., free but registration required, 615-7855, eeducation@pima.gov. July 18 Friday eReader Drop-in Help, 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., JoynerGreen Valley Branch Library, 601 N. La Canada Dr., Green Valley, free, 594-5295. Wondering how to use your new eReader? Want help downloading free library books. July 19 Saturday Many Hands Artist Cooperative, 4 p.m. to 8 p.m., Many Hands Courtyard, 3054 N. First Ave., free admission, 360-1880, MHArtistCoop@gmail.com. The gallery celebrates “Christmas in July” with courtyard artists as well as visiting artists. Nature Night: Bats and Bugs, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., Pima County Agua Caliente Park, 12325 E. Roger Rd., donations accepted, 615-7855, eeducation@pima.gov. Spend the evening discovering the fascinating lives of nocturnal insects and bats. July 20 Sunday Bob Kay, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sundays, Cactus Bowl, 3665 ...continues on page 14
July 2014 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 13
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www.scan2014.com Heart First (HMO SNP) and SCAN Balance (HMO SNP) are HMO Plans with Medicare contracts. Enrollment in SCAN Health Plan Arizona depends on contract renewal. This plan is available to anyone with Medicare who has been diagnosed with diabetes or certain cardiovascular conditions. The benefit information provided is a brief summary, not a complete description of benefits. Limitations, copayments, and restrictions may apply. Benefits, formulary, pharmacy network, premiums and/or co-payments/co-insurance may change on January 1 of each year. You must continue to pay your Medicare Part B premium. For more information, please contact SCAN Health Plan, or you may visit www.scanhealthplan.com. There is no obligation to enroll. Y0057_SCAN_8182_2013F File & Use Accepted 09162013
page 14 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : July 2014
calendar
... from page 13 S. 16th Ave., $2, 883-5491. The singing drummer/DJ Kinney Rd., donations accepted, 615-7855, eeducation@ plays “oldies but goodies” at a nonsmoking dance. pima.gov. Spend an evening discovering the fascinating lives of nocturnal insets and bats. July 21 Monday July 26 Saturday National Active and Retired Federal Employees (NARFE) Chapter 1874 Meeting, 12 p.m., Golden Outdoor Family Day: Poisonous and Venomous, Corral Restaurant, 6865 N. Thornydale Dr., $7.95 senior 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., Pima County Agua Caliente Park, menu, 400-3456. Jennifer McMenamin will discuss home 12325 E. Roger Rd. free, 615-7855, eeducation@pima. staging prior to putting a house on the market. gov. Bring the grandkids for this program about poisonous and venomous plants. Stroke Support Group, 10:30 a.m. to 12 p.m., TMC Senior Services, El Dorado Health Campus, 1400 N. Mount Lemmon Wildflower Hike, 9 a.m. to Wilmot Rd., free but registration required, 324-4345. 12 p.m., repeats Thursday, July 31, Mount Lemmon Open to stroke survivors and their loved ones. Community Center, 12949 N. Sabino Canyon Pkwy., free but registration required, 615-7855, eeducation@ July 22 Tuesday pima.gov. Join Pima County botanist Meg Quinn for a 3-mile hike on a cool mountain trail to seek out summer Dragons and Damsels of Agua Caliente Park, 8 a.m. to 10 a.m., Pima County Agua Caliente Park, 12325 wildflowers. E. Roger Rd., free, 615-7855, eeducation@pima.gov. Join naturalist Jeff Babson for a close-up look at dragonflies July 27 Sunday and damselflies and learn about their identification, Bob Kay, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Sundays, Cactus Bowl, 3665 biology and conservation. S. 16th Ave., $2, 883-5491. The singing drummer/DJ July 23 Wednesday Cienega Creek Birding Walk, 7:30 a.m. to 9:30 a.m., Gabe Zimmerman Davidson Canyon Trailhead and Cienega Creek Natural Preserve, 16000 E. Marsh Station Rd., free, 615-7855. July 24 Thursday Movie Day with “Mama Mia,” 12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m., TMC Senior Services, El Dorado Health Campus, 1400 N. Wilmot Rd., free but registration required, 3244345. “I Love Books” Group, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., TMC Senior Services, El Dorado Health Campus, 1400 N. Wilmot Rd., free but registration required, 324-4345. Join Virginia Wise for a lively, fun, monthly meeting featuring central themes of wisdom and aging. July 25 Friday Lizards of Agua Caliente Park, 7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m., Pima County Agua Caliente Park, 12325 E. Roger Rd., free, 615-7855, eeducation@pima.gov. Join the group has it searches for whiptail, spiny, ornate tree and other lizards that roam the park. Nature Night: Bats and Bugs, 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., Tucson Mountain Park, Ironwood Picnic Arena, 1548 S.
plays “oldies but goodies” at a nonsmoking dance. July 28 Monday Ask the Expert, 1 p.m. to 2 p.m., The Forum at Tucson, 2500 N. Rosemont, free but registration required, 325-4800. Join Arthur W. Wood, certified specialist in myofascial release (MFR), as he discusses “Relieving Chronic Pain.” July 29 Tuesday Spiders of Aqua Caliente Park, 8 a.m. to 10 a.m., Pima County Agua Caliente Park, 12325 E. Roger Rd., free, 615-7855, eeducation@pima.gov. Spiders are incredibly diverse, beneficial and often colorful creatures. July 30 Wednesday Cienega Creek Nature Walk, 7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m., Gabe Zimmerman Davidson Canyon Trailhead at Cienega Creek Natural Preserve, 16000 E. Marsh Station Rd., free but reservations required, 615-7855, eeducation@pima. gov. Explore the cool, shaded trails at the Cienega Cree Natural Preserve during this guided morning nature walk. July 31 Thursday Sock Knitting Group, 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., JoynerGreen Valley Branch Library, 601 N. La Canada Dr., Green Valley, free but registration required, 594-5295.
Got an Event? Send it to info@lovinlifeafter50.com
Kaboom—Don’t Let the Fireworks Affect Your Hearing
::by Arizona Commission for the Deaf and the Hard of Hearing and Arizona Relay Service
W
Here are some facts and tips to safeguard your hearing over this festive holiday. How do you protect your hearing and enjoy the fireworks? • Use ear plugs. Carrying a pair of ear plugs to use when you’re around loud noises is a great way to ensure the safety of your hearing. The plugs create a barrier between your ear and the noise, allowing you to enjoy your event at a safe noise level. • Hearing protectors are also a great option. Unlike ear plugs, hearing protectors can be made to custom fit your ears so they fit comfortably. • Sit at a comfortable distance from the display. The recommended sitting distance is at least 500 feet from the fireworks. • Leave the fireworks to the professionals. If you set the
Ne w ly Re m od el ed !
hen you think of the Fourth of July, what events come to mind? Planning a family barbecue? Attending a community picnic? Watching the fireworks show? With all of these fun outdoor activities, have you taken a minute to think about the impact the noise can have on your hearing? Possibly not, but it is an important topic that should be addressed. For many people, fireworks are the highlight of the holiday yet many people do not realize the impact that the noisy show can have on your hearing. Most fireworks produce sounds that are more than 125 decibels (dB), well above the safe hearing levels of 85 decibels. In general, a person can safely listen to an 85 decibel sound, which is a normal everyday conversation, for eight hours straight without any hearing damage.
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fireworks off yourself, you will experience the noise first hand. So sit back and enjoy the show! • Watch the fireworks from inside a home or car. You will be far enough away from the loud noise and close enough to still enjoy the beautiful display. Taking precautions to protect your hearing can be very beneficial. Even though aging is the main contributor to hearing loss, noises such as fireworks, loud cars, television volumes and sirens can take its toll over time and lead to accelerated hearing loss. How do I know if I may be damaging my hearing? While you are out enjoying the fireworks and festivities, if you experience any of the following, it might be time to have your hearing checked: • Ringing or buzzing in the ears. • Slight muffling of sounds. Difficulty in understanding speech. You can hear all the words, but you can’t understand them. • Difficulty in hearing conversation in groups of people when there is background noise.
If you experience any of these early warnings signs, your hearing may have been damaged. Have your hearing checked by a hearing health professional or have your ears examined by an ear, nose and throat doctor. So to ensure a safe and healthy holiday this Fourth of July, be sure to take precautions and protect your hearing. For more information visit www. acdhh.org or www.azrelay.org. For more information on the Arizona Commission for the Deaf and the Hard of Hearing visit www.acdhh.org or Arizona Relay Service visit www.azrelay.org.
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... answers on page 32
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.
Across 1. Part of an exchange 4. Capital of Ghana 9. E=mc2 part 13. Stunned 15. Bashes 16. Compound containing a hydroxyl group 17. Phoenix attraction 19. Greek portico 20. Research before buying 21. Calming down, as a tense situation 23. Supplements 26. Unit of electrical resistance 27. It’s near the top of Mount Lemmon 33. Jewish month 37. Oil controllers 38. Serviceable 39. Racing sleds 41. Dot-com’s address 42. “Siddhartha” author 43. Proust title word 44. Fabricator 46. Origin 47. Religious building in Tuscson 50. Bert Bobbsey’s sis 51. Glow 56. The Vulture mine discovery in 1863 started one 61. Desert V.I.P.’s 62. District 63. Religious spot in Phoenix 66. No longer secret 67. Senior 68. Arizona city 69. Array 70. Industrious 71. Hog heaven? Down 1. Bark of the paper mulberry 2. Cy Young, e.g. 3. Not so hot 4. Way back when
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page 16 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : July 2014
Crossword by Myles Mellor
5. Maximum level 6. Decked out 7. Endangered 8. Request 9. Boot camp pals 10. Prefix with septic 11. By and by 12. Smelting waste 14. Freshwater fish 18. Trains, with in 22. ‘Yeah’ 24. Batman is part of one 25. Small glass vials 28. Boy Scout badge 29. Cream-filled pastry 30. Workbench adjunct 31. “Someone ___” (2006 movie) 32. Absolute must 33. Austrian peaks
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Fit After 50
How they got healthy and stayed that way
Sue Pepper has lost 50 pounds since a heart attack at age 42 woke her up and helped her realize that she needed to make some changes.
SAM NALVEN
: : by Sandy Miller
S
ue Pepper, a special education teacher who lives in Chandler, figures she’s gained and lost hundreds of pounds over the years. There wasn’t a fad diet she hadn’t tried. She would lose weight, get back into her clothes and then go right back to her old eating habits. Breakfast was bagels and cream cheese and coffee with cream and sugar. There would be huge lunches with coworkers. Snacks were chocolate bars, chips and sometimes a dozen donuts in one sitting. When she’d get home from her former fabric sales job, she would eat while she was cooking dinner and then sit down and eat dinner. “I always ended up leaving the dinner table full, but there was always room for dessert,” she says. It didn’t take her long to regain the weight she’d lost. Her closet was filled with clothes in a number of sizes. Regaining the weight was always a big blow to her self-esteem. “I was a wreck,” she says. “I felt like a failure and a big disappointment.” Today, at 54, Pepper is in the best shape of her life. She’s just one of many people who are determined to stay as healthy
and physically active as they can be as they age. Pepper’s wake-up call came just days before her 42nd birthday when she had a heart attack. Married and the mother of three small children, the heart attack came as a surprise. After all, her cholesterol and blood pressure were normal. She had no history of heart disease in her family. The only things she had going against her was an unhealthy diet and the 50 extra pounds she was carrying on her 5-foot 3-inch frame. Pepper had battled with her weight since she was a teenager and became what she calls an “emotional eater.” From then on, she was on the gain-lose-gain rollercoaster. The heart attack made her seriously reexamine her eating habits and her sedentary lifestyle. Back then, exercise for her was “chilling out in the park on weekends,” she says. It was time for a change. The Weight Loss Journey Pepper knew from years of experience that a fad diet wasn’t the answer, so she decided to give Weight Watchers a try. ...continues on page 20
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Friday, July 4, 2:30 The Street Minstrels Frank Ross and Jay Vosk play guitar, flute, clarinet and saxophone. The Street Minstrels will entertain with an Independence Day concert. Monday, July 7, 2:00 Armchair Walking Tour Alan Kruse will point out some of the highlights of Main Avenue and the Barrio Viejo. The emphasis will be on Tucson’s history and architecture from 1860 to 1910. Wednesday, July 9, 2:00 ‘Stepping Forward’ Lilly Mees presents ‘Healthy Boundaries’.
Thursday, July 10, 10:30 Border Patrol Presentation Border Patrol Agents will be at Mountain View Village talking about the tasks involved in patrolling 1,100 square miles of rough terrain, including 32 miles of International Border. Thursday, July 17, 7:00 ‘Tribute to Frank Sinatra’ Bobby Myhre sounds like a young Sinatra, ‘Tucson’s own big band singer.’
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Fit After 50 ... from page 18 She remembers her first meeting well. “I just got on the scale and cried,” Pepper says. “I was at my highest weight ever.” Pepper’s journey began by writing down everything she had been putting into her mouth. “I was shocked with how unhealthy the food was,” she says. Pepper says she also had “portion distortion.” When she began measuring everything, she realized she was eating much more than she thought she was. When Pepper lost almost five pounds the first week alone, it inspired her husband, Allan, to join Weight Watchers, too. The food in their refrigerator and pantry is much different today than it was before Weight Watchers. The sugar-laden cereals and high-calorie snacks are gone and have been replaced by lean meats, whole grains, fresh fruits and vegetables, fat-free yogurt, almond milk, baked snacks, nuts, guacamole, salsa, hummus and plenty of water. There’s even room for ice cream, though it’s the nonfat kind. They even enjoy some chocolate and a glass of wine from time to time.
“You could eat food on this program and still lose weight and to me, that was amazing,” Pepper says. Within six months, Pepper lost 50 pounds and her husband lost 60. “We worked together to become a healthier couple,” Pepper says. “We changed what we ate and how much we ate. We’ve learned how to enjoy healthy food.” It’s Not Just a Diet. It’s a Lifestyle Pepper used to hate to sweat. Exercise just wasn’t in her vocabulary. Then one Sunday morning, some of her friends invited her to hike South Mountain with them. “The last time I was breathing heavily, I was having a heart attack,” Pepper says. “I thought, ‘What am I doing out here?’” Her friends cheered her on, telling her she could do it. And she did. “I got to the top and cried,” Pepper says. “It was such an amazing feeling. I couldn’t believe I did it.” Her friends asked her to go with them the following weekend and she did. And she kept coming back. Pepper
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fell in love with hiking and she’s since have to get all of her exercise in at stood on many mountaintops. She once. Sometimes it’s 10 to 15 minutes even hiked the Grand Canyon. Gone two or three times a day. Pepper, now a Weight Watcher’s is the woman who once hated to sweat. “I fell in love with hiking,” Pepper group leader with a clean bill of health says. “I feel so free when I’m hiking from her cardiologist, says people just and I have so much fun with the girls. It beginning their journeys to health and fitness need to find does not even seem like something that works for exercise. What I love them. For her, it was Weight about hiking, besides Watchers, but it isn’t for the beauty, is that it’s everybody. a great workout. I get “Find something that cardio and muscle works for you and make a resistance exercises all small change each week,” in one activity.” she says. “It’s easy, tiny Pepper encourages baby steps which got me to others to try something my goals. It’s about making new. little changes.” “You can always do whatever you put your mind to,” Pepper says. Before Sue Pepper Feeling Good Debbie Huffert, a 63-year“Fear holds us back. started on her fitness journey, she had never old office manager who Don’t be afraid, just do realized how unhealthy lives in Peoria, had always it.” Pepper hikes on the her eating habits were. been active. She went to weekends when the weather is nice, but the gym, taught step aerobics and ran when it isn’t, she still finds ways to fit marathons at age 50. But recently, she exercise into her life six days a week. decided she wanted to get into better She walks and swims with her dog, shape. That’s when she joined Curves, Cayenne, and rides a stationary bike. a fitness center for women best known Sometimes she just runs up and down for its 30-minute circuit training. Huffert joined Curves in August 2013 her stairs. And she says she doesn’t
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and worked out four times a week. She 2011. Back in Minnesota, Braatz went also improved her diet by fixing meals to a dietician and changed his eating with more protein and fresh fruits and habits, cutting down on bread, desserts and pasta and replacing red meat with vegetables. In just five months, Huffert trimmed fish. He started working out at the 20 pounds and more than 18 inches YMCA, but in the winter “I felt cabin bound,” he says. from her frame. When Braatz moved to Sun City “I actually lost fat and contoured my body in places I was never able West, he found himself getting a little to accomplish before by following the more exercise by walking the couple’s easy weekly meal plans and with the dog, Mocha. But he was still tipping the motivation from my weekly coach,” scale at over 200 pounds. When Donna joined Weight Watchers, he decided to Huffert says. Huffert adds she also found a join her. The couple added more fresh fruits community of friendly women who were all there for the same reason—to and vegetables to their diet along with chicken, turkey, salmon and cod. They get healthy. Not only did Huffert lose weight and buy organic whenever they can. Today, inches, she also lowered her cholesterol Braatz has lost more than 45 pounds and strengthened her skeletal system. and has kept it off. He did gain five The aches and pains from sitting at a pounds during a recent trip to Europe, desk eight hours a day have disappeared but got right back on track and lost it and it’s easier for her to keep up with in three days. In addition to walking Mocha, he works out her grandchildren. at the local recreation Huffert continues center. to follow the meal “My blood work is plans and to work in the normal range out three times a for the first time since week. She also gets I was 30,” Braatz her 8,000 steps in says. “I have more every day. energy and a better Huffert, who now mood.” works at Curves and Braatz says the is training to be a secret to success is certified “Curves moderation, having complete coach,” a good attitude and says people need to desire to lose weight find a program that and having a good fits their personal lifestyle. Debbie Huffert has discovered support system like “It’s all up to that having a support system of the one he found at you,” Huffert says. like-minded women has helped Weight Watchers. “You have to have “Start with small her lose weight and maintain a the right frame of goals so you can healthy lifestyle. see success and celebrate the smallest mind,” Braatz says. “If you don’t, you’ll lose some, gain some and never improvements.” Shanda Young says she’s seen many get down.” Deborah Wright, general manager amazing transformations in her 10 years as an owner of a Curves fitness of Weight Watchers of Arizona, who has lost more than 90 pounds herself, center. “I have met some of the strongest, says the perfect time to make healthy nicest, bravest, most inspiring women changes is now. “You cannot lose weight for an event in this club and they continue to amaze in your life, or for someone else,” me every day!” Young says. Wright says. “The perfect time in our lives to lose weight will never come. Like a Yo-Yo Sun City West resident Dean Braatz, The time to take charge of our weight 76, battled with the same pesky 30 loss and physical activity is today.” pounds for years. “I would yo-yo between 190 and Age is Just a Number Sally Pace isn’t 82 years old. She’s 82 220,” Braatz says. Braatz and his wife, Donna, moved years young. to Sun City West from Minnesota in ...continues on page 22
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Fit After 50 ... from page 21 Pace, who lives in Winslow, started competing in bike races on the Navajo Reservation back in 1983 when her youngest child went off to college. Today, she competes in bike races and triathlons with the Arizona Senior Olympics, a program of the Arizona Lifelong Fitness Foundation. Arizona Senior Olympics offers people 50 and older the opportunity to compete in 32 different sports. The program also offers year-round wellness and sports programs. Pace has been competing in Arizona Senior Olympics races for 14 years. Her races have taken her across the state and across the country, from Kentucky to California to Houston and to Cleveland. She has more medals, trophies and ribbons than she can count. To stay in shape, the retired librarian, who still works two jobs, says she rides 10 miles every morning, sticks to a healthy diet and doesn’t smoke. What is Pace’s advice to other seniors just setting out on a fitness regime? “Just go outside and do something for a least 30 minutes,” Pace says. “More
is better. Of course, I recommend a bicycle because it’s easy, but walking is good.” The purpose of the Arizona Senior Olympics is to entice seniors to get active and to stay active, says Irene Stillwell, executive director of the Arizona Lifelong Fitness Foundation. “We’re the carrot in front of the rabbit,” Stillwell says. “With 32 sports, we hope everyone can find something they love to do and will keep doing the rest of their lives. It’s never too late to start and stay with a fitness program.” Donna Hall, 82, of Tucson, is another senior citizen who doesn’t let a little thing like age get in her way. Hall, retired from a career in public relations, loves the spirit of competition and has been involved in sports her entire life. In 1992, she became the senior coordinator for the Senior Olympics in Tucson, and in 1998, she started competing in local, state and national competitions in badminton. She’s competed in Senior Olympics competitions across the country and has a number of gold medals to show for it. In addition to
the competitions, Hall also enjoys the social activities that Senior Olympics offers. There are dinner parties, bowling parties and other get-togethers. “It helps you stay active, it’s good for your social life and it’s just fun,” Hall says. Hall says even seniors who aren’t inclined to do sports can still get out and do something that gets them moving and around other people. For instance, they can volunteer at their local library, hospital or children’s center. “Get off the sofa and get involved in something you’re interested in,” Hall says. “Your social life will improve. You won’t have time to feel bored or Donna Hall of Tucson and fellow Senior Olympian depressed because you’ll Dick Baltimore of Phoenix dance during a postbe involved.” Arizona Senior Olympics dinner in Tucson.
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page 22 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : July 2014
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Entertainment B
Boston Finds ‘Life, Love and Hope’ in New Music ::by Christina Fuoco-Karasinski
oston guitarist/vocalist Gary Pihl doesn’t remember much from his days of living in Phoenix as a sixth grader, but as he’s aged, he’s been able to further explore the Grand Canyon State. When he’s not touring with Boston—who performs Wednesday, July 23, at the AVA Amphitheater in Tucson, and Friday, July 25, at the Comerica Theatre in Phoenix—he indulges in photography. “One of my hobbies is photography,” Pihl says during a recent phone interview. “I love it up there in the northeast corner— Monument Valley, Painted Desert and Canyon de Chelly. “It’s just spectacular country that makes for some spectacular photos. If you’re driving around and you have a rental car, there will be stations in Navajo. I always thought that was interesting, too. It gives you a flavor of the area.” Touring with Boston allows Pihl to explore plenty of the United States. These days, the classic rock band is gigging behind its 2013 album “Life, Love and Hope.” More than a decade in the making, “Life, Love and Hope” features 11 tracks embodying the classic Boston sound, as well as the latest in the evolution of singer-multiinstrumentalist Tom Scholz’s musical artistry. On the road, Scholz and Pihl are joined by Tommy DeCarlo (lead vocals, percussion, keyboards), David Victor (guitar, vocals), Kimberley Dahme (guitar, flute, vocals), Tracy Ferrie (bass guitar, vocals), Jeff Neal (drums, percussion, vocals) and Curly Smith (drums, percussion/vocals). One to eschew modern technology, Scholz recorded “Life, Love and Hope” on analog tape, giving the album a warmer feeling. Pihl says the band admires that fans love to
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Fun & Games Around Tucson July 2014
sing along with hits like “More Than a Feeling” and “Amanda,” even though it has released new tunes. “There’s no better feeling in the world when we’re playing one of the old songs and people are smiling, singing along, waving cellphones—instead of lighters—back and forth,” he says. “There are artists out there who say, ‘Oh my gosh. If I have to play that song one more time, I’ll Boston guitarist/vocalist Gary Pihl is a one-time Phoenix resident. The band returns to the state to shoot myself.’ That’s play shows in Tucson on July 23 and Phoenix on July not the case with us. 25. We’re all just loving performing with December People, a doing it. I appreciate the fact that people still want to hear charity act that, naturally, only plays around the winter holidays. it. How lucky can we be?” “It’s traditional songs but in the style One of his favorite songs to perform is “Walk On,” a tune that he calls of our favorite classic rock bands,” he says with a laugh. “We’ll do ‘Santa “very challenging, musically. “It’s a long song, eight or nine Claus is Coming to Town’ that sounds minutes or something,” he says. “It like ZZ top. Or we’ll start a song with has a lot of pieces to it. There are an acoustic guitar that sounds like some tough guitar playing, but Tom The Who doing ‘Pinball Wizard,” but instead of ‘Pinball Wizard,’ we’ll does a wonderful organ solo.” He says he feels that a lot of Boston’s sing ‘Joy to the World.’ It’s all for fun. My whole career is fun.” music is pretty intricate. “I certainly think there’s a lot of Boston plays the Ava Amphitheater at Casino musicality in there,” Pihl says. “They may sound like simple songs, where del Sol, 5655 W. Valencia Rd., Tucson, at 7 fans may say, ‘Gee, I can sing along p.m. Wednesday, July 23. Tickets are $30 to with that.’ But there’s a lot going on $375. For more information, call (855) 765in the background—the guitar parts, 7829 or visit www.casinodelsolresort.com. Boston and Cheap Trick perform at 8 p.m. the vocal harmonies. All seven of us on stage sing so we can get a pretty Friday, July 25, at the Comerica Theatre, good choral sound when we really try 400 W. Washington St., Phoenix. Tickets are $35 to $95. For more information, call at it.” When Pihl isn’t taking photographs (800) 745-3000 or visit www.ticketmaster. or touring with Boston, he’s com.
Kid Rock WHEN: Thurs., July 3, at 8 p.m. WHERE: AVA Amphitheater at Casino del Sol, 5655 W. Valencia Rd. COST: $61.50 to $151.50 INFO: (855) 765-7829 or www.casinodelsolresort.com Kid Rock is known for such songs as “The Devil Without a Cause,” “Rock ‘N’ Roll Jesus” and “Cowboy.” Kenny Rogers WHEN: Thurs., July 3, at 8:30 p.m. WHERE: Desert Diamond Casino, 1100 W. Pima Mine Rd., Sahuarita COST: $45 INFO: (520) 342-2944 or www.ddcaz.com/index. php/sahuarita/entertainment A groundbreaking recording artist, distinctive vocalist and consummate entertainer, Kenny Rogers is one of the elite few whose voice is instantly recognized the world over. Jeff Dunham WHEN: Sat., July 5, at 8 p.m. WHERE: AVA Amphitheater at Casino del Sol, 5655 W. Valencia Rd. COST: $40 to $85 INFO: (855) 765-7829 or www.casinodelsolresort.com America’s favorite comic and the star of Comedy Central’s highest rated specials, Jeff Dunham and his beloved cast of characters are bringing their “Disorderly Conduct” tour to Tucson. NPC Terminator 2014 WHEN: Sat., July 12, at 10 a.m. WHERE: Fox Tucson Theatre, 17 W. Congress St. COST: $20 INFO: 547-3040 or www.foxtucsontheatre.org The NPC Terminator is a bodybuilding, fitness, figure, bikini and men’s physical competition that is sure to entertain. Espinoza Paz WHEN: Sat., July 12, at 8 p.m. WHERE: AVA Amphitheater at Casino del Sol, 5655 W. Valencia Rd. COST: $40 INFO: (855) 765-7829 or www.casinodelsolresort.com Espinoza Paz is a Latin Grammy Award nominated Mexican musician and composer of Mexican regional music. ...continues on page 26
July 2014 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 23
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VERY QUIET LARGE SINGLE STORY GARDEN APARTMENT Located in a great central location Large rooms, bright open floor plan and great storage. AC, covered parking and beautiful manicured landscape with extensive night lighting throughout grounds and parking area. This property is in great shape with lots of pride of ownership. Full time maintenance man on site. $600 Owner/agent Mick Cluck 520-349-3533
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
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TRAVEL ENOS KING-LEWIS II, AGENT Guide, Producer Fun Trips! Prosperity - Wellness www.Enos4Prosperity.com 800-824-1450 (Call 24/7) enos4homes@hotmail.com ELECTRIC BICYCLES SAVE HUNDREDS TO THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS No gasoline needed Pedal with assist, pedal only or just use motor. No Lic., Ins. or Reg. required Fun to ride with many purposes Bikes contain lithium battery Basic model $750, folding $850, trike $1,200 Free Test Ride Call 520-573-7576 MEDICAL ALARMS/ PENDANTS WHY WAIT UNTIL,
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page 24 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : July 2014
WE BUY LIFE POLICIES For a Cash Settlement Contact Ben The Reliant Group Inc. 1-800-457-2315 MOBILE HOME PARKS
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How do I Answer a Friendship Ad?
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
Compose your response and address it to: Drawer # ________ Lovin’ Life Newspapers 3200 N. Hayden Rd., Suite 210 Scottsdale, AZ 85251
FRIENDSHIP ADS DRAWER LL1375 Widowed, very active. Would like to meet companion for social activities, maybe more. Please include phone number. DRAWER LL1473 High energy gal ISO young at heart guy 60 to 80 for LTR filled with integrity, attention, intellectual stimulation and laughter to explore all that life still has to offer.
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 Call 480-348-0343 520-297-1220 3200 N. Hayden Rd. Suite #210, Scottsdale, AZ 85251 • Call Name: Address: City/State/Zip: Telephone #: Email: Check/Money Order Visa MasterCard American Express Discover Acct# _________________________________________________ Card Exp. ____ / ____ /____ CVV#________________________________ Signature ______________________________________ CLASSIFIEDS INFORMATION Please check desired circulation: Tucson Sun Cities (Metro Phx) East Valley (Metro Phx) Southeast Valley Phoenix & Glendale Scottsdale $25 first 30 words. 50¢ per word thereafter. $10 per additional zone.
FRIENDSHIP AD INFORMATION Standard Abbreviations Used in Friendship Ads
M D W LTR
= = = =
Male Divorced White Long Term Relationship
$15 Check one: Classified Friendship Ad to Read: ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________
F H NS TLC
= Female = Hispanic = Non-smoker = Tender Loving Care
W = B = ND = ISO =
Widowed Black Non-drinker In Search of
first 30 words. 25¢ per word thereafter Start Issue: _______ End Issue: _______ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ ________________ (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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Entertainment Tinseltown Talks
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Marsha Hunt: The Blacklisted Beauty Who Battled Back
E
: : by Nick Thomas
ighty years ago, 16-yearold Marsha Hunt began her professional career with a prominent New York City modeling agency. But her real love since the age of 4 was acting. So, the following year, in May 1935, she headed to Hollywood. Within weeks of arriving on the West Coast her dream was realized with a Paramount contract. “It wasn’t about becoming a famous star,” says Hunt from her Los Marsha Hunt Angeles home. “I just wanted the joy of pretending to be interesting characters and convincing audiences that I was.” She was assigned leading roles in many of her 20 films released during the 1930s, appearing with costars such as John Wayne. “I worked with John Wayne before he was an airport!” says Hunt, referring to the many public locations now named after the legendary actor. The pair costarred in “Born to the West” (reissued as “Hell Town”) in 1937, two years before Wayne became an overnight superstar in “Stagecoach.” Hunt’s own star status continued to rise throughout the 1940s, clocking up another 30 films during the decade. In 1943, she was one of 65 top MGM stars who studio head Louis B. Mayer gathered for a memorable “class photo.” “It was MGM’s 20th anniversary and we were all summoned to a soundstage one day,” recalls Hunt, the last surviving actor in the famous photograph. “I had never met many of the stars, and we weren’t even given a chance to mingle before or after the photo, which was a shame.” Relations between the studios and some actors, including Hunt, took a dramatic dive in the late ‘40s as a wave of anticommunism paranoia swept the nation. When a Congressional
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committee accused a group of writers of communistic affiliations, Hunt and others spoke out but found themselves vilified during the McCarthyera Hollywood blacklisting period. “We called ourselves The Committee for the First Amendment, hired a plane and Hunt worked with John Wayne in “Born to the West” in 1937, flew to Washington before his breakout role in “Stagecoach.” now more aware of my fellow man. I in 1947—the Bogarts, Danny Kaye, Paul Henreid, Ira wound up giving 25 years of my life to Gershwin and other actors, the United Nations to promote peace, writers, producers, directors— progress and unity.” Hunt’s life story is the subject of to defend our industry and the a documentary, “Marsha Hunt’s maligned writers.” Rather than being hailed champions Sweet Adversity,” by Emmy Awardof free speech, Hunt and others who winning director Roger C. Memos www.hollywoodandart.com/ failed to repent their action were (see zeldacandance.html). banned by the Hollywood studios. Because the film is a nonprofit “I was punished by being denied work by the industry I went to defend!” Hunt project through the International says. “While it killed the momentum Documentary Association, funding is of my film career, I was determined still needed to complete the final stages to continue acting. Happily, Broadway of editing so it may be entered in major film festivals this opened up for me, September, a month then television before Hunt’s 97th and eventually birthday. movies. But I was “I’ve had an never again given interesting life film roles as richly with all the highs challenging, or the and lows,” says same billing or Hunt, who would salary. ” love to see the film If any good released this year. emerged from the “I’m touched they blacklisting, it was wanted to tell my when Hunt turned story.” her interests elsewhere. After a Nick Thomas teaches world trip with her at Auburn University husband in 1955, at Montgomery, she was touched by Ala., and has written the hardships and features, columns and poverty of other Marsha Hunt spoke at the Turner Classic interviews for more than nations. 400 magazines and “I came back a Film Festival in 2012. different person,” she admits. “I had newspapers. His website is www.getnickt. been so focused on my acting and was com.
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July 2014 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 25
Entertainment Bingo Happenings- July 2014 Desert Diamond Casino Bingo WHEN: Thursday through Monday. from 1:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. WHERE: Desert Diamond Casino, 7350 S. Nogales Hwy. COST: $4 to $200 INFO: 342-1840 With bingo favorites, new games and levels to buy in, there’s more to win than ever before.
Elks Lodge Tucson East Bingo WHEN: Sundays at 1 p.m.; Monday at 7 p.m.; and Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. WHERE: Elks Lodge Tucson East 2532, 615 S. Pantano Rd. COST: Depends on number of cards purchased. INFO: 886-8120 Open to the public. $1,000 jackpot days the first three bingo days of the month.
Casino del Sol Bingo WHEN: Daily with start times from 12 p.m. to 7:15 p.m. WHERE: Casino del Sol, 5655 W. Valencia Rd. COST: $1 to $95, depending on package INFO: (855) 765-7829 or www.casinodelsolresort.com/ tucson-casino/bingo Casino del Sol’s spacious bingo hall seats up to 600 players with smoking and nonsmoking sections. There is plenty of leg and elbow room for gamers.
DAV Bingo WHEN: 12:45 p.m. every day except Sundays and Wednesdays; and 6:30 p.m. Tuesdays WHERE: Disabled American Veteran, 3455 S. Wilmot Rd. COST: Call for cost INFO: 747-3333 The public is welcome to play bingo at the Disabled American Veteran.
Host a Bingo Event? Send your information to info@lovinlifeafter50.com
Like what you see?
Coming Next Month:
Choices for Better Living
Happy Together WHEN: Tues., July 15, at 7:30 p.m. WHERE: Fox Tucson Theatre, 17 W. Congress St. COST: $34 to $89 INFO: 547-3040 or www.foxtucsontheatre.org Fifth annual tour with The Turtles featuring Flo and Eddie, Chuck Negron, formerly of the Three Dog Night, Mark Farner, formerly of Grand Funk Railroad and Mitch Ryder and The Detroit Wheels, and Gary Lewis and The Playboys bring good times to the masses. Chris Isaak WHEN: Fri., July 18, at 8:30 p.m. WHERE: Desert Diamond Casino, 1100 W. Pima Mine Rd., Sahuarita COST: $32.50 INFO: 342-2944 or www.ddcaz.com/index.php/ sahuarita/entertainment Singer, songwriter and actor Chris Isaak, has released more than a dozen albums and has been nominated for multiple Grammy Awards. Boston WHEN: Wed., July 23, at 7 p.m. WHERE: AVA Amphitheater at Casino del Sol, 5655 W. Valencia Rd. COST: $30 to $375 INFO: (855) 765-7829 or www.casinodelsolresort.com The Heaven on Earth tour will make a stop in Tucson. Counting Crows WEN: Wed., Aug. 6, at 7:30 p.m. WHERE: AVA Amphitheater at Casino del Sol, 5655 W. Valencia Rd. COST: $30 to $260 INFO: (855) 765-7829 or www.casinodelsolresort.com Counting Crows is finalizing its seventh studio album, which is scheduled to be released in the fall. Toad the Wet Sprocket opens the show.
ISSUE
PUBLISHING AUGUST 2014
Advertorial advertising opportunities for any business wanting to provide more details about their company for our readers.
Is your business a fit for the Choices for Better Living issue? Call us at (480) 348-0343 to place an ad today! Delivering qualified, cost-effective leads since 1979 page 26 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : July 2014
Games ... from page 23
Prince Royce WHEN: Sat., Aug. 9, at 8 p.m. WHERE: AVA Amphitheater at Casino del Sol, 5655 W. Valencia Rd. COST: $30 to $375 INFO: (855) 765-7829 or www.casinodelsolresort.com Prince Royce is a bachata singer from New York with an urban style who broke into the Latin pop mainstream in 2010 with a bilingual version of “Stand by Me.”
Got an Event?
Send your information to info@lovinlifeafter50.com
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Watermelon Cake and Strawberry Pie : : by Jan D’Atri I t’s July and we’re looking for ways to stay cool, eat lighter and maybe give the slow cooked oven recipes a rest. The heck if I’m going to give up my sweets, though. So what better way to kick off July than with two scrumptious desserts that require very little effort? Watermelon cake is all the rage online these days. I have to admit that I was not a believer that you could actually frost a real
watermelon and decorate it like an actual cake. But you can, if you follow my instructions, and I think you’re going to love it! The second recipe for strawberry pie is an all-American favorite and this recipe really brings out the true flavor of fresh strawberries. I hope you enjoy both! Stay cool and I’ll see you next month.
Watermelon Cake with Whipped Cream Frosting
1 watermelon Fruit for garnish: (1 pint blueberries, 1 pint strawberries, 6-7 Kiwi, 2 cups grapes, 1 large orange) 2 pints whipping cream (or more for large watermelon) 1 small (3 oz) package Jell-O Instant Vanilla Pudding 2-3 tablespoons powdered sugar
Cut rind off entire watermelon. Make a slice through the bottom to make a base so it will remain steady on a plate. Cut watermelon the size and shape you want your cake. (A flat top cake is easier to garnish with fruit.) Pack paper towels around the entire watermelon to soak up watermelon
juice. (The dryer the watermelon, the easier it will be to frost.)
For the Stabilized Whipped Cream Frosting:
For each cup of whipped cream used, add 1 tablespoon of instant vanilla pudding and 1 tablespoon of powdered sugar. For sweeter frosting, add more powdered sugar. Whip together until stiff peaks form. Frost cake with spatula or place frosting in piping bag with large star tip. (I use a 14- or 16-inch piping bag.) Garnish with fresh fruit and slice in wedges. Serve immediately.
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Strawberry Pie
1 deep dish pie shell plus 2 teaspoons sugar 6 cups fresh strawberries 1 cup white sugar 2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice 3 tablespoons cornstarch 3/4 cup cold water 1 cup heavy whipping cream 1 heaping tablespoon powdered sugar
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Sprinkle 2 teaspoons of sugar over pie shell and bake for about 15 minutes or until lightly golden brown. When done, arrange 4 cups of whole strawberries in pie shell, point up. With a small food processor, fork or potato masher, thoroughly puree
remaining 2 cups strawberries and combine with cup of sugar in a medium saucepan. Add lemon juice. Cook over medium heat and bring to a boil, stirring frequently. In a small bowl or measuring cup, whisk together cornstarch and water. Gradually stir cornstarch mixture into boiling strawberry mixture. Reduce heat and simmer mixture until thickened, about 5-6 minutes, stirring often. Pour mixture over berries in pastry shell. Chill for several hours before serving. In a small bowl, whip cream and powdered sugar until firm peaks form. Serve each slice of pie with a dollop of whipped cream.
Check out www.jandatri.com for great recipes, stories and cool places we’re visiting! Come back often! www.lovinlifeafter50.com
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July 2014 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 27
The 25th Anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall :: by Ed Boitano
I
n 1962, a dozen seniors escaped from East Berlin by way of “Der Seniorentunnel,” the Senior Citizens’ Tunnel. Led by an 81-year-old man, the group spent 16 days digging a 160 foot long by 6 foot tall tunnel from a chicken coop to the other side of the wall in West Berlin. The tunnel was tall because the group wanted to walk to freedom with their wives, proudly and unbowed. This is among the amazing stories of escapes from East Berlin to West Berlin, where several thousand people made it safely across the wall. At least 136 others suffered tragic deaths. Backstory After the Allied powers’ defeat of Germany in World War II, Germany was divided into two countries, with the West occupied by the United States, Great Britain and France, and the East controlled by the Soviet Union. Berlin, situated in the middle of communist East Germany (GDR), was also divided. West Berlin became an enclave of a capitalistic democracy, experiencing rapid economic growth and a high standard of living. In the East, under the thumb of the Soviet Union, the economy dragged and individual freedoms were severely restricted. By 1961, no longer able to tolerate the repressive living conditions, more than 2.5 million East Germans fled to West Berlin. East Germany and East Berlin were losing their labor forces, and desperately needed to stop the mass exodus. The Berlin Wall—coined the “anti-fascist wall”—was erected, preventing East Berliners from fleeing to West Berlin, or even going to their jobs or visiting relatives in the West. The wall stretched more than 100 miles, cutting West Berlin off from East Berlin and the rest of East Germany. A dual inner-wall was built facing the outer
page 28 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : July 2014
wall. The barren strip between was known as “no man’s land” or “the death strip.” Any person found in this stark landscape was shot on sight. On Nov. 9, 1989, following an escalation of massive protests, border crossings were opened. Millions celebrated across Berlin and around the globe. Thousands chipped away at the wall as East and West Berliners embraced each other. Celebrations commenced. German reunification would soon follow. 25 Years Later From Nov. 8 to Nov. 9, Berlin will commemorate the 25th anniversary of the “Fall of the Wall” with events and exhibitions, covering the Berlin Wall, the Cold War and the German reunification—events that have radically changed the course of world history. A light installation will follow the wall’s former path over 7.5 miles with 8,000 illuminated helium-filled balloons. The installation will allegedly be visible from outer space, weather permitting. The emotive theme of the event is to focus on the “Fall of the Wall” as a symbol of hope for a world without walls. Recommended Highlights Berlin Wall Memorial: The commemoration takes place along a mile-long former border strip, showcasing Central Berlin’s last expanse of the wall. A new permanent exhibition, “25 Years Fall of the Wall,” will be unveiled on Nov. 9. East Side Gallery: This is the longest remaining stretch of the Berlin Wall, decorated by 118 artists from 21 countries. A must to visit. Yadegar Asisi’s 360 Degree Berlin Wall: This must be seen to be believed. The artist transports visitors back to the Cold War with a cylindrical steel
WOLFGANG SCHOLVIEN
The East Side Gallery is the longest remaining stretch of the Berlin Wall. It has been decorated by 118 artists from all over the world.
Mahnmal der Mauertoten am MarieElisabeth-Lüders-Haus | Memorial for the Berlin Wall victims.
rotunda that offers a 360-degree panoramic view of East Berlin and the wall in the 1980s. Cycling the Trail of the Wall: Berlin on Bikes specializes in guided tours along the wall’s path. Ask for guide Sascha, who is a cycling encyclopedia on all things Berlin. Palace of Tears: Situated at a former border crossing station, the museum focuses on the border experience and the steps toward reunification. Wall Museum: The museum at Checkpoint Charlie features the Cold War, construction of the wall and the fight for human rights. This is the crossing where United States and Soviet tanks faced off for 16 hours almost creating a third world war. Checkpoint Charlie is worth a visit. East German Watchtower: A memorial to the victims of Berlin’s former division, Memorial Günter Litfin is one of the few remaining authentic watchtowers. In a tribute to the wall’s first victim, the man’s brother generally conducts tours. How to Get There Travelers have been known to say that their favorite part of a trip is flying business class. I would not go that far, but flying in airberlin’s business class certainly made my direct flight from Chicago to Berlin enjoyable. The seats are in private cubicles that adjust to upright, relaxation and completely flat. There’s a private video screen, and the service is impeccable. The flight also features indigenous German food, wine and beer. I spoke to passengers in economy who enjoyed their flight as well—but probably not as much as me. For further information, visit www.visitBerlin.de/en and www.airberlin.com.
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COOL COUNTRY SUMMER ADVENTURES Our Guide to Beat the Arizona Heat
Attention
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July 2014 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 29
DOLPHIN BAY RESORT & SPA - Set along the rugged California Coast, just south of San Luis Obispo on California’s Scenic Highway 1, Dolphin Bay Resort & Spa is centrally located in Pismo Beach. The Dolphin Bay is the ideal hotel for romantic getaways or family vacations where guests stay anywhere from two nights to months at a time. With 60 spacious 1 and 2 bedroom suites featuring all of the amenities of a home, Lido Restaurant, The Spa at Dolphin Bay and an array of activities, guests can experience the best of the Central Coast. (800) 516-0112 or www.thedolphinbay.com LOMPOC VALLEY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND VISITORS BUREAU - Lompoc (pronounced LOM-POKE) is located on scenic Pacific Coast Highway, just 155 miles northwest of Los Angeles. Coined the City of Arts and Flowers, the Lompoc Valley boasts spectacular rolling hills which open at the Pacific Coast Shoreline. Gateway to Santa Rita Hills Vineyards, wineries and the amazing “Wine Ghetto,” visitors enjoy colorful murals, vibrant summer flowers, year-round golf, skydiving, Chumash Indian sites, and recent history in the Lompoc Museum. The restored La Purisima Mission of 1787, now a State Historic Park, marked the earliest European settlement of the Lompoc Valley. (800) 240-0999 or www.lompoc.com TAHOE TRIPS & TRAILS - For 20 years, Tahoe Trips have provided opportunities to experience the awe inspiring beauty of the natural world. Tahoe Trips provide destinations for our guests to really challenge themselves – both mentally and physically. Guests can choose from a wide variety of all-inclusive packages that range from Lodge-Based Trips and Wilderness Backpacking Trips to Tahoe Teasers Day Trips. Our trips can be a catalyst for self-discovery. (800) 581-HIKE or www.tahoetrips.com
HAWAII ASTON WAIKIKI CIRCLE - With Aston’s “Hawaii 5-0” program, qualifying guests age 50 or better receive immediate savings at participating properties. Experience Waikiki’s best value at Aston Waikiki Circle, located directly across from Waikiki Beach This whimsical ocean-themed hotel’s distinctive circular shape offers panoramic views surrounded by shopping, dining and activities. All rooms have private lanais, most with an ocean view. Visit www.AstonHotels.com/seniors or call 866-948-7764 to book your dream vacation today. KAUAI CALLS offers a variety of fully furnished condos and, cottage rentals for your Kauai vacation. The most beautiful and the oldest of all the Hawaiian Islands, Kauai is the island of which dreams are made, the very definition of a tropical paradise. Set your heart free in the quiet majesty of the island’s lush tropical setting and extraordinary natural heritage. Kauai Calls you to discover the legendary Aloha Spirit that abounds in this friendly garden paradise. Contact Michelle or Candace at (888) 822-2403; candace@ kauaicalls.com or www.kauaicalls.com
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WHALERS COVE IN POIPU - Luxury, large, vacation rentals on the ocean. Private small resort located in sunny Poipu. Walking distance to upscale shopping/dining.5-Star of Excellence TripAdvisor 2013, 3012, 2011; oyster.com Editor’s Pick. 1, 2 and 3 bed condos w/full kitchen, washer/dryer, large balcony, hi-speed, daily service provided, personal check-in, and on-site maintenance staff. Personal grocery service available to pre-stock condo before arrival. Stunning location for photography. www.whalerscoveresort.com; (800) 225-2683; (808) 742-7571 or stay@whalerscoveresort.com
activities, breathtaking views and comfortable weather. Enjoy world class golf, kayak or fly-fish, hike or bike moderate trails, enjoy a dine-around, gallery stroll, or cooking class and attend free outdoor concerts. Beat the Heat! Inquire about special senior events and deals: 855-393-8473 or ParkCityLodging.com/seniors
Escape to Logan, Utah a few degrees cooler!
UTAH LOGAN, UTAH is famous for outdoor adventures, hands-on heritage experiences, and performing and fine arts. The city is home to Utah State University, art galleries, specialty shops, Mormon pioneer architecture, and the 1923 Ellen Eccles Theatre. This beautiful high mountain valley is nice and cool. It’s just 90 minutes north of Salt Lake City and 4 hours from Yellowstone National Park. Take a day trip along Logan Canyon National Scenic Byway through dramatic limestone cliffs and forested canopies to the breathtaking turquoise waters of Bear Lake. (435) 882-4433 or www.explorelogan.com
90 minutes north of Salt Lake City • On the edge of Wasatch Cache National Forest • Internationally renowned Utah Festival Opera and Musical Theatre
PARK CITY LODGING - “Cool Mountain Escapes! Park City offers an abundance of
• Free concerts Mon-Fri • Old Lyric Repertory Theatre season
EXPERIENCE THE ADVENURES & SENTIMENT THAT EVOKES THE HEART OF TAHOE
• Farmers Markets • Festivals • So much more
Lodge-Based Trips Wilderness Backpacking Trips Teasers Day Trips
800-581-HIKE | www.tahoetrips.com
Ask about our Summer Citizens extended stay program
1-800-882-4433 explorelogan.com
Available May 15th through August 28th, 2014
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One of Kauai’s Hidden Treasures!
A secluded hideaway overlooking the ocean in Poipu. 1, 2 & 3 bedroom condos, fully-equipped kitchens. 5-Star of Excellence on TripAdvisor Restrictions and blackout dates apply.
800-225-2683 • www.whalerscoveresort.com
City of Arts & Flowers Gateway to Santa Rita Hills Vineyards & Wineries
Wines of Distinction | Colorful Murals Vibrant Summer Flowers LOMPOC VALLEY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Year-Round Golf AND VISITORS BUREAU and a Variety of Outdoor Activities
Fully furnished condos & cottage rentals for your Kauai vacation. (888) 822- 2403 • www.kauaicalls.com True Aloha Spirit
“
Hardest part about golfing in Park City is keeping your eye on the ball
(800) 240-0999 • www.lompoc.com
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parkcitylodging.com/golf
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”
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WAKE UP TO
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866.948.7764 | AstonHotels.com *Room must be occupied by a qualifying individual. Valid picture ID with proof of age required upon check-in. Subject to availability. Some restrictions may apply.
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July 2014 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 31
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Downtown Buffalo offers an array of cultural activities that range from historical sites to museums and performing arts centers.
Buffalo, New York A Stunning City Filled with Lots to Discover
:: by Brian Hayden, Visit Buffalo-Niagara
B
uffalo, New York, is a vibrant city filled with lots to do and discover for persons of all ages. At the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, you can see one of the world’s most impressive collections of modern and contemporary art, including works by Van Gogh, Picasso and Warhol. Across the street, you’ll find the stunning Burchfield Penney Art Center, which is committed to the art of Buffalo and Western New York. As you walk around our city, you’ll come across some of the finest architecture of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, featuring buildings by Frank Lloyd Wright, Louis Sullivan, H.H. Richardson, Richard Upjohn, and Eliel and Eero Saarinen. Buffalo’s emerging Canalside district showcases the city’s waterfront and proud history of shipping along Lake Erie and the Erie Canal. The centerpiece of this district is the commercial slip, the western terminus of the Erie Canal dating from 1825 that has been re-excavated and restored. A system of bike trails, parks and boardwalks comprise Buffalo’s Outer Harbor and offer stunning views of the lake and city skyline.
On the subject of history, you can stand where Teddy Roosevelt took the oath of office at the recently renovated Theodore Roosevelt Inaugural National Historic Site or learn about Buffalo’s Native American, ethnic and industrial heritage at the Buffalo History Museum. Mark Twain spent time in Buffalo in the late 19th century as a newspaper editor; leaves from the original manuscript of the “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” are on display in the Mark Twain Room at downtown’s central library. The city is also filled with African-American heritage; for starters, Duke Ellington, Dizzy Gillespie and other jazz giants performed at the Colored Musicians Club, which is now a museum and still hosts regular gigs by area musicians. If performing arts are your thing, Buffalo has two dozen theaters, anchored by the magnificent Shea’s Performing Arts Center, which hosts an annual Broadway Series. The Grammy Award-winning Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra is led by JoAnn Falletta, who has been hailed by the New York Times as one of the finest conductors of her generation. While Buffalo is justifiably proud
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Entertainment abounds in Buffalo Niagara, which includes professional sports teams, annual festivals and the beautiful Niagara Falls State Park.
of its chicken wings (and no trip to Buffalo is complete without a stop at the Anchor Bar, where wings first took flight 50 years ago this year), we also have 400 independently owned restaurants, delicious local specialties, a pair of wine trails and vibrant farmers markets. Don’t miss some Western New York culinary favorites, including beefon-weck sandwiches, sponge candy and charcoal broiled hot dogs. Buffalo is also home to several breweries, including Flying Bison and Hamburg brewing companies. The first distillery in Buffalo since Prohibition, Lockhouse Distillery, opened in 2013. Shoppers will find everything from hip boutiques in Buffalo’s trendy Elmwood Village, Allentown and Hertel neighborhoods to major department stores at a number of local shopping centers and malls. Buffalo has a wealth of options for sports fans, including the NFL’s Bills, NHL’s Sabres, AAA baseball’s Bisons, world-class fishing, great skiing and fantastic watersports. Kayak through the city’s historic grain elevator district on the Buffalo River or rock climb up those elevators on Silo City Rocks, which is set to open this year. Spend a day in the natural splendor of the Tifft Nature Preserve, only minutes from downtown Buffalo, or admire floral beauty during a stroll in the Buffalo and Erie County Botanical Gardens. A series of parks and parkways throughout Buffalo designed by renowned landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted provides a scenic respite in the heart of our city. Our region also offers a host of family
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friendly activities, from The Buffalo Zoo and Buffalo Museum of Science to the Explore and More Children’s Museum in East Aurora. Military buffs will be amazed at the submarine, destroyer and cruiser permanently docked at the Buffalo harbor, part of the Buffalo and Erie County Naval and Military Park, the largest inland naval park in the country. And Buffalo seems to have a festival for everything, ranging from the National Buffalo Wing Festival to the Allentown Art Festival to the Taste of Buffalo, the largest two-day food festival in the country. GardenWalk Buffalo, the nation’s largest free garden tour, is celebrating its 20th anniversary this year, and the Erie County Fair is celebrating its 175th. Buffalo also offers a host of ethnic celebrations, from two St. Patrick’s Day parades to the Galbani Buffalo Italian Heritage Festival, reflecting the city’s diverse roots. There’s even Dyngus Day, the day after Easter Sunday, when polka bands, Polish food and a parade ring in the end of the Lenten season. If incredible entertainment, dining, art and culture aren’t enough for you, we have one of the wonders of the world—Niagara Falls—just 20 minutes away. At Niagara Falls State Park, you can get up close with the roaring waters at the Cave of the Winds or venture to the base of the falls on a Maid of the Mist boat tour. For more information about events, attractions and things to do in Buffalo Niagara, go to www.visitbuffaloniagara. com or contact Visit Buffalo Niagara at 1-800-BUFFALO.
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July 2014 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 33
Sound Off
... from page 8 Think about the other side. work on resolving some of the present Maybe the freed five have issues. This is appalling. learned their lesson and they want to go home to represent their Good gracious. How do some own Taliban in their own Congress. of you Tea Party fellas look Wouldn’t that be something special? in the mirror while shaving Think about it. Everything is possible without cutting your own throat? under the sun. Interesting, be careful, though. Your wife might bump your elbow one Are the last of the greatest morning. generation’s voters the only ones who remembered it Well, the two-faced war hawks was Reagan who opened the mental of Washington are happy for hospitals and fired the air traffic the surprise third-party attack controllers? and to lay more blame on the president. Of course they will take credit for more Why are all these troubled war supply product jobs. Remember people shooting strangers, it’s a religious war for the other guys. because they’re cowards and The U.S. doesn’t need to fight for oil can’t bear to face the people who create anymore. the problems they think they have? Talk to your kids and make sure they How are all these children are as well as you think they are. You being sent to America on a never know what a teenager is going to plane? Where does it land? think next or be influenced to do. Why can’t they fuel it up and send it back to where it came from? What’s the Did you notice the people of matter with all these stupid people in certain countries that do not Washington? Don’t they know how to understand any rules, except do anything, ever? Just send the people those of revenge, are now forming new back where they came from, stupid. ways to have their own copies of elected government parties? Wonderful. Let Surprise, surprise, some them fight it out with ballots or bullets weather expert named the to quote another fellow, “It’s not my calendar date for the start of problem, man. It’s not my problem, monsoon. What a joke. Every Arizonan man.” knows it’s the weekend before or the first one after Fourth of July. When Surprise, surprise a couple everyone goes up north to camp out of nit-picking-never-give-up for the rest of the season. Right? Right. Republicans who were of the 80 or 90 who were left out of the Oh when these crybaby secret exchange are still crying foul. Republicans remember Iraq Shame on them and their selfish egos. was their big mistake and These stupid people do not belong in start coming up with corrections, Congress. maybe they’ll have a chance in 2016. Meanwhile, shut up and cooperate I’m sick to death of having with diplomacy. Your future’s at stake the VA hospital denigrated. as well as the rest of us. Pay attention, What about all the millions of dummies. people who have been treated in these, many years since these wars began? Sunni, Shiite religious war. It’s Once George Bush started two wars, not a war. It’s an open door there weren’t arrangements made to insane asylum set loose on the take care of the veterans who would be world. coming back. The system was already busy, not overwhelmed, but busy. The It’s about time government vets were receiving wonderful care worked on making up its mind but it wasn’t possible after two wars. of legal maturity. Let’s go back Nobody talks about the wonderful care down from 21 to 18 to drink and drive they do provide. I think more attention and vote, etc. then be told science says ought to be given to that while they your brains aren’t mature until you’re
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19. It’s ridiculous. How about settling on age 20 for everyone. Why don’t you get on that citizen voter? Poor blood-thirsty Benghazi Republicans. They just can’t stand another presidential success. It makes you wonder about their sanity, really. OK, smart aleck Republicans, you don’t like the president’s plans. What’s yours? After all it’s your party in Iraq to begin with. Speak up or shut up. Be careful when the police call you and ask for a donation. It’s a scam again. As usual. Somebody’s always trying it. Police do not ask for donations over the phone. Print it in big letters for people to read: Do not answer the phone solicitors’ calls. Just get the number and the name of where we can catch them. I found the answer to what’s wrong with American education. I needed six 3-inch nails at the hardware store. They were $1.79 a pound. I had a quarter of a pound. The computer could not figure out how much they should be—neither could the new graduate at the register. I had to teach him how to do simple long division. Now we know where the U.S.A. is headed. The caves, the trees. Pitiful, pitiful. A belated Maya Angelou should inspire us all. She communicated with a passion, purpose and soul as few ever have. Indeed, an authentic American icon. I know that the molestation of a child can happen at any time during any day by a family member, friend or stranger, but I have been hearing more and more stories of men and woman complaining of it happening when they were children in their own homes during the night while their mom and dad slept. I’m not saying that parents need to take turns staying up all night if they have guests spending the night but it amazes me of how in a lot of these circumstances the parents knew that the family member or friend was a child molester because a lot of these parents were molested by this same person when they were younger. How stupid can some of these
parents be to let known child molesters sleep under the same roof as their children? If it happened just one time the odds are that it will happen again! I have heard so many stories of children going to bed only to be awoken in the middle of the night by a family member touching them and the parent has no clue! Come on parents, open your eyes! If you have guests spending the night make sure you keep your bedroom door open, have your kids leave their door open and keep your ears open. Why not check on your child during the night? And if you think, “not my uncle, not my dad, not my grandpa” get your head out of the sand and think again because it happens way more than you think and yes, it very well can be your uncle, your dad or your grandpa! Stop assuming that these child molesters are creepy shadows lurking on the street corners! Nine out of 10 times it is someone that you know! They are sick pigs and need treatment! Educate your children as early as you can about these jerks and start paying attention! Looking for a body in the early morning hours? Why isn’t somebody smart enough to at least have a cadaver dog working? They’re everywhere else in the country. What’s the matter with the Phoenix departments? I recently took two of my granddaughters—ages 10 and 12—to a Phoenix Mercury basketball game. The quality of play truly surprised me, as did the number of female couples “making out” throughout the arena. Such behavior in a public venue before impressionable preteen boys and girls is in poor taste. Years ago, I left a message on a similar answer line to a similar newspaper in Tempe. It was tongue in cheek. I talked about how we needed to have comfort stations for all the illegal Mexicans crossing the desert. It was just intended to be sarcastic. We have all these illegals and we’re acting like they’re deserving to be here. Somebody picked up on that, and it wasn’t long before we started hearing about how we needed to provide more comfort as they crossed the desert. I never regretted anything more than calling in that statement. These Mexicans are illegal, as are all the ones who are coming from other
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countries. They don’t belong here. I’m sick to death of deciding how we can best treat them and their children. They need to be shipped back to the country they came from. The United States is overwhelmed financially and we have so many people going to bed hungry at night. We do not need these illegal immigrants. If people want to apply and wait it out, that’s what they ought to do. We do not need illegal people coming into this country and we do not need to worry about how well they are once they got here. It was their choice. It’s sad and unfortunate that a young man is missing and people are looking up the mountain for him. He’s not the first young man to park a car and walk away. I know of three of them myself and it’s something almost every family in the Valley has heard of. You never know what’s behind it all. The current big news story in our state is about the abysmal treatment of our veterans in the VA health care system. Then, we read about the heavy-handed IRS treatment of our citizens, the EPA putting little fish ahead of water needed to grow needed crops and causing our electricity and gasoline bills to rise due to an apparent animosity toward energy production, and finally, the BLM using military force to tell states how to use land that should belong to the states to begin with. These are all federal government agencies regulated and controlled by the administrative branch of our government. Does it not seem apparent that the increase in the number, size, complexity and cost of all of these federal agencies has ballooned to such gigantic proportions that nobody is really in control? At least that is what we hear at all the congressional hearings, “I had no knowledge of that,” or “I don’t remember anything about that,” or, “That wasn’t my department.” There is a way, however, that we, the people of the states, can impose fiscal restraints on the federal government, limit the power and jurisdiction of the federal government, and limit the terms of office of federal government officials. That remedy is an Article V Convention of States. Some folks talk about a Convention of States like it’s some kind of conspiracy, but here’s the truth: A Convention
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of States is more legitimate and less conspiratorial than any other means of curbing Washington’s power. Article V of the Constitution (the Supreme Law of the Land) explicitly describes a “convention for proposing amendments.” This isn’t a conspiracy. This isn’t secession or Snowden or the X-Files. This is a legitimate tool the founders gave the states for stopping an overreaching federal government. A short history lesson might clear things up. The founding fathers included a Convention of States in the Constitution for a specific purpose. George Mason realized the states had no way of proposing amendments. So, he suggested the states be allowed to call an amendments convention, and the motion was carried unanimously. That’s it. You can read it for yourself. The framers wanted the states to call a Convention of States when, like today, the federal government began getting out of control, overstepping its bounds and abusing its power. Toward that end, Citizens for Self-Governance has launched the Convention of States Project. Please get involved by visiting their website, www.conventionofstates. com. If you like what you see there, you can actively further the cause by emailing your state representative and your state senator and urging them to take action on this issue. This is definitely a volunteer and a nonpartisan effort. I believe this is the only way to preserve liberty for future generations. Please join us. Let’s give this country back to the people.—E.L. Goheen, Scottsdale Quite predictably, John McCain, who has consistently voted against any increased funding for the Veterans Administration, is now righteously outraged. Why doesn’t Johnny Mac demonstrate he is a true leader of character by withdrawing from the best health care plan in the world, which he enjoys as a member of Congress, and immediately enroll in the VA system. Go Johnny go! RE: Marine Andrew Tahmooressi in a Mexican prison. If you go to the Internet you will find all the information you need to take action. This Marine who served tours in Afghanistan took a wrong turn at the border of Mexico and was imprisoned April 1, 2014. There
is a petition you can sign to Obama. There are over 100,000 signatures so far requesting him to take action to have Andrew returned. I added my name. I have e-mailed both senators and my congressman and this morning called the three offices asking for their effort to resolve. I am requesting that you add your voice as well. Obama just released five terrorist leaders for a soldier in Afghanistan. Why is it so hard for him to do the same to release this veteran who has served his country well? The only way he will be released is if Americans demand it. Please add your voice. I find it humiliating that Mexico can do this to one of our own. RE: The Up Side: Looking at Life through the A La Carte Menu. I enjoyed Michael Grady’s article on being vegan. My husband and I became vegans early this year. Physically, we feel wonderful with our lifestyle change and wish we had come to the party a lot sooner. We wish everyone could be enlightened with the information that led us to make this change in our lives. We live in a retirement community and do have a few challenges finding appropriate food choices in our dining rooms, but have no problems at home or when dining out. This is for the person who feels the 50 U.S. states shouldn’t solve Africa’s problems. You are correct—there are 50 states. We are united under a constitution, a federal government system, a market economy and a common language. However, to imply simply that we are “united” is what I would call a halftruth (one only has to look at the red versus blue state scenario). To state that 50 countries on the continent of Africa are disunited is inaccurate on two counts. First, there are precisely 54 autonomous countries on the continent, each with a capital city (like our Washington, D.C.) and their own form of government, and some have more than two national languages. America, an autonomous country, is divided into 50 states, then inevitably into counties (parishes or boroughs). Each of the 54 African countries is also divided into either regions, provinces, districts and/or counties. On top of the 54 autonomous countries, there is another 10 nonsovereign states, two partial recognized territories, and
another two as dependent territories. All but two of these 14 have ties to various European countries. To imply that some 68 countries is similar to our 50 states is comparing apples and oranges. If you had said two countries in North America to 50 countries in Africa, then you would be closer to the truth (a unique set of circumstances created the two countries in North America). Second, is there 100 percent unity within North American, let alone all the Americas....Not that I have heard. South America has 13 nations; Latin America and Caribbean equals 29 nations; North America has two nations. I feel that each of these geographic areas is united under various trade agreements, and economic unions/markets (i.e., NAFTA, APTA, COMESA), but to imply that they are united as our 50 states is inaccurate, but could they? Maybe...! I have traveled within most of the East African nations and some of the Southern African nations. I read that there are some 3,000 languages spoken on the continent of Africa. Each of those 68 nations has its own political system, economic and monetary system. On top of that, there is the diverse landscape...all of this and more are contributing to a very beautiful, yet unique set of nations on the continent. If they were to unite, it will be a great accomplishment. The hurdle to get over—historically, some of these nations have only been independent since the 1960s (some before, some after, some haven’t). So ask them the question about unity in another 150 years. But before you ask, be sure to take out all the colonial interests of minerals, timber and other assets mined on the continent; and then remove all boundaries that were set by foreign colonial governments. America was settled over 200 years ago, and over the years we have set our own borders (sometimes due to a war), mined and exhausted our natural resources (my personal opinion)...but we did it ourselves, mostly for ourselves. The continent of Africa did not have that exact opportunity. It would be difficult to duplicate in just 50 years, in our modern era. Lastly, do we have a moral obligation to help those that live on the continent of Africa...go there... see what is happening (the good and the not so good), then make a decision. Personally, we have a moral obligation to help all—which makes everyone better.—Larry, Phoenix
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Constipation: ‘Regular’ Help Constipation is a common complaint among older adults and is generally defined as having fewer than three bowel movements per week, straining to have a bowel movement and/or having hard stools. Although the occurrence of constipation increases with age, it is not a result of normal aging. Constipation may be due to intestine dysfunction or secondary to several factors such as minimal physical activity, poor diet, use of certain medications and other medical conditions. If you have been experiencing symptoms of constipation lasting for more than two weeks, consult your provider to rule out more serious conditions. The following are nonmedication treatments to help relieve constipation. Regular exercise: Inactivity and immobility is associated with an increased risk of constipation. Exercising regularly may help to stimulate the movement of intestinal muscles and decrease the risk of constipation. Diet: Having an inadequate amount of fiber in your diet is a common cause of constipation. Fiber helps to form stool and stimulates intestinal muscle movement. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the recommended dietary fiber intake is 20 to 35 grams per day. Fiber intake should be increased by 5 grams per week until the recommended daily amount is reached to prevent excessive gas and bloating. Fiber-rich foods include bran, whole grains, fresh and dried fruits, vegetables and nuts. Medical conditions: Diabetes, hypothyroidism and hyperparathyroidism may affect the muscles or nerves used for normal bowel movements. Psychological conditions such as anxiety and depression may also contribute to constipation. These conditions should be treated and managed by your provider. The following are some products that can be purchased without a prescription to help relieve the symptoms of constipation. Bulk laxatives: Contain soluble (psyllium or Metamucil) or insoluble (cellulose or Citrucel) ingredients. These agents absorb water from the intestine and causes stool to soften and increase in mass. Those without intestinal dysfunction may benefit from these agents. Stool softeners: Contain docusate (Colace) and act by increasing water entering the intestines. This helps to soften stool, however, it may be ineffective when used in chronically ill adults. Osmotic laxatives: These agents
use osmotic activity to increase the amount of water entering the intestines. Magnesium hydroxide (Milk of Magnesia) and magnesium citrate are generally well tolerated but may cause electrolyte imbalances. They should be used carefully by individuals with congestive heart failure and kidney insufficiency. Lactulose and polyethylene glycol 3350 (MiraLAX) are alternative agents that have a lower risk of causing electrolyte imbal-
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ances but may cause gas and bloating. Stimulant laxatives: Contain senna (Senokot) or bisacodyl (Dulcolax) and work by increasing the motility of the intestines. This action may cause abdominal cramping and should not be used in patients with an intestinal obstruction. As mentioned previously, certain medications may cause constipation. Agents that are commonly associated with constipation include the following: antacids containing aluminum or calcium; iron supplements; agents with anticholinergic
properties such as oxybutynin, scopolamine, and Benadryl; calcium channel blockers such as verapamil; and opioids. If you feel you are experiencing constipation due to a medication, talk to your provider about ways to minimize this side effect. Your local Walgreens pharmacist can help to identify any medications that may cause constipation and can aid in selecting an over-the-counter treatment for constipation. For more information, talk to your Walgreens pharmacist today!
On medicare part B and have diaBetes?
New Medicare changes may limit where you can get your diabetes testing supplies. The good news is that diabetes testing supplies are available at every Walgreens along with: • Easy, direct billing of Medicare Part B and most supplemental insurance • A wide selection of major national brands • Convenient 90-day supplies
It’s easy to switch! Visit your local Walgreens or call 888-380-8051. Walgreens is an accredited Medicare Part B supplier of diabetes testing supplies.
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T HE F INISH L INE Arizona’s Leader in Senior Fitness Turning 65? Know Your Medicare Options By Dr. Mark Kiffer, Arizona Medical Officer for Humana’s Senior Products Approximately 11,000 adults be- that provides the health care coverage come eligible for Medicare every day, you need and maximizes your health reflecting a dramatically increasing care dollars. Your options include senior population, and that number Original Medicare (Parts A and B); is only going to grow. Here in Ari- Medicare Supplement plans; a Medizona, the state’s senior population is care Prescription Drug Plan (PDP), or Medicare Part D; and Medicare estimated to climb to 2.4 Advantage (Part C), which typically million by 2030, accordprovides extra benefits, services and ing to Administration on prescription drug coverage and may Aging, 2005 data. or may not require an additional preNine of 10 older mium. adults are living with at Know Your Enrollment Timeleast one chronic condition, according to the National Coun- frame. This year, during the Annual cil on Aging 2011 fact sheet. Mak- Election Period (AEP) from Oct. 15, ing matters worse, these conditions to Dec. 7, seniors who are eligible for place a significant financial burden Medicare can review Medicare Adon seniors and caregivers. As a result, vantage and Medicare Part D plan there’s a clear need for access to af- options and select health care coverfordable health care that meets the age for 2015. However, people turning 65 before October can enroll earlier. needs of individuals as they age. Arizona seniors should keep an eye They have a seven-month window— out for materials from the Centers the Initial Enrollment Period (IEP)— for Medicare and Medicaid Services to enroll, including the three months (CMS) in the months leading up to before their 65th birthday, the month their 65th birthday. Following are tips of their birthday and the three followto help seniors and their caregivers ing months, says Medicare.gov. Know Your Medical Cost Hislearn about their Medicare options, tory. Review your records to see how including when they can enroll and the types of health plans available, as much you spent on health care durthey begin the Medicare plan selec- ing the past year, including hospital expenses, pharmacy costs and doctor tion process: Know Your Options. Find a plan bills. Then try to calculate your best
Join the Ambassadors! Arizona Lifelong Fitness Foundation (ALFF) needs you! The Arizona Senior Olympics’ parent corporation needs volunteer ambassadors to spread the word about health and fitness to seniors in their area. What does an ambassador do? • Tells the Senior Olympics story • Invites other seniors to participate • Shares brochures, fliers and
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posters in their area • Attends expos and events where seniors gather and represent the ALFF and ASO. Qualified ambassadors must be friendly, outgoing, interested in people, enthusiastic and a good communicator. To sign up for the September ambassador training workshop, call (602) 274-7742.
2014 Sponsors
estimate for health care costs in the year ahead. Know Your Resources. If you are considering a Medicare Advantage plan, research the costs, benefits and network of doctors and hospitals associated with each plan. The government’s Medicare website, www. medicare.gov, is a good resource that lets you find and compare Medicare health and prescription drug plans. CMS makes it easier to navigate the Medicare landscape by rating health plans on a five-star assessment grade. Compare Benefits. Insurers often offer multiple Medicare Advantage plans from which beneficiaries can choose to fit their specific life, income and health situations. Benefits from these plans may include primary care and specialty office visits, routine physical and preventive care and membership in fitness classes and lifestyle enrichment programs. If you’re approaching your 65th birthday, it is important to start considering Medicare options to select the plan that best fits all of your needs. Editor’s Note: This article was submitted by Humana. For more information on Humana’s senior products in Arizona call (602) 760-1700.
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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
July 2014 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : page 37
www.seniorgames.org
National Senior Games in Minneapolis-St. Paul
St. Paul is one beautiful city. Senior Olympic athletes, their families and friends will be heading to this beautiful city where part of the National Senior Games will be held in July 2015. Here are some things you may not know about this great, historic metropolis: • St. Paul has the longest residential Victorian boulevard in the United States, stretching 4.5 miles from the Mississippi River to the Cathedral of St. Paul. • St. Paul boasts more city shoreline on the Mississippi River than any other
in its path (29 miles). • St. Paul was a Prohibition-era hotbed for gangsters, gals and whiskey runners. The city became a haven for notorious names like John Dillinger, Babyface Nelson, Alvin “Creepy” Karpis and the Barker gang. • Founded near historic Native American settlements as a trading and transportation center, St. Paul rose to prominence when it was named the capital of Minnesota Territory in 1849. The area features 104 landmarks listed on the National Register of Historic
Prevention Magazine Lists Three Best New Health Apps A recent article in Prevention Magazine listed three new apps that may be helpful to seniors who have iPads, iPhones or Androids. The app 52 Weeks for Women’s Health is offered for free by the National Institutes of Health. It’s available for download to iPhones or iPads from the App Store or to Android devices via Google Play. ZOCDOC will generate a list of nearby physicians who meet your criteria when you enter your location, insurance and the specialty you need when you are away from home. EPOCRATES RX helps those who are concerned
about medication interactions. The app allows the users to identify prescription and OTC pills based on color and shape. Then you can check interactions and warnings, etc. Seniors can take better care of their health by using the many resources of the Internet.
ASO Launches Essay Contest Senior Olympians are welcome to enter a new essay contest with the theme of “Why Senior Olympics is important to me.” The deadline is Sept. 1. “The purpose in having the contest is to inspire our Senior Olympians to stay fit, based on their own experience and that of their peers,” says Irene Stillwell, director of Arizona Senior Olympics. The rules are: • Essay must be typed, double space • The maximum is 500 to 750 words • The piece must be totally written by the author
• The essay must be written by an active Senior Olympian, someone who has competed within the last two years. Judging will be done by a panel of volunteer and professional writers and will be based upon theme, grammar, style and appeal to reader. Prizes include the opportunity to read the essay at the 2014 ASO opening ceremony; a framed copy of the winning essay displayed at the ALFF office; essay published in The Finish Line and on the ASO website; and lunch with the ALFF board chairman.
page 38 : : Lovin’ Life After 50 : : July 2014
Places, many of which can be seen on local tours. • Free walking tours are available in St. Paul from May through September at 10 a.m. on the first, third and fourth Wednesdays. Tours are “Great River,” “Rice Park” and “Heart of the City.” Senior Olympians planning to compete in the National Senior Games should book early. All are welcome at the National Senior Games, and nonathletes will have a wonderful time as the city rolls out the red carpet for seniors.
T-Shirt Design Contest Still Open Now is the time for you to work on the 2015 Arizona Senior Olympics athlete T-shirt. Keep in mind that these shirts will be purchased by senior athletes to wear throughout the year. The deadline is Aug. 1, so get your pens, pencils or brushes out and start designing.
Rules: 1. Design must include the words: Arizona Senior Olympics 2. No dates. 3. Can be full color or less. 4. Design for front of shirt only. 5. Can be on white or a colored shirt. 6. No obscenities or double entendres. 7. Design must be suitable for screen printing. 8. Design will be digitized for production by screen print artist. 9. Judges’ decisions are final. 10. Designs cannot be returned.
A panel of seniors and volunteers will judge the contest. The winner will be notified by Aug. 10. The prize is free registration in the 2015 ASO Games and a free T-shirt of your own design. Helpful hint: Many seniors like to have an “Arizona” look to the shirt; others prefer a more sports-oriented design. Use your imagination. Search the Internet for ideas—something that everyone will like!
Send entries to: Arizona Senior Olympics, P.O. Box 33278, Phoenix, AZ, 85067-3278. www.lovinlifeafter50.com
www.seniorgames.org
AARP Myth Busters In this society that is highly saturated with marketing, it’s very easy to take things we hear on the radio or see on television as the real thing. “Reality” shows have worn our sensitivities so thin that it’s often difficult to distinguish truth from fiction. AARP to the rescue! In a recent issue of AARP The Magazine, former President Robert Romasco cleared things up for us: Myth: Older people are really a drain on the U.S. economy, leaving the next generation with less. Fact: The economic contribution by older Americans—$7 trillion a year—is expected to double by 2032. Plus, taxes from the economic activity generated by their spending make up half of federal tax revenue and more than half of state and local taxes. Myth: Social Security and Medicare benefit only older Americans.
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Fact: Nearly 1 in 5 Social Security beneficiaries is younger than 60 and more than 4.4 million children get benefits. Seventeen percent of Medicare beneficiaries are younger than 60. Social Security death and disability benefits are lifelines for the millions of young people and their families as well. Myth: The young and old are rivals in the struggle for scarce resources and the old are winning. Fact: One day the young will be old and they will need Social Security and Medicare just as much as older adults today. There are those who would like to do away with Medicare and/or Social Security. The question? Is America ready to face the impoverishment that would accompany the dismantling of these programs which are so vital to the health and well-being of millions of older Americans?
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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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