Cumberland County 50plus LIFE February 2016
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Transcript of Cumberland County 50plus LIFE February 2016
Complimentary | Cumberland County Edition | February 2016 • Vol. 17 No. 2
Finding LovE AFtEr 50page 14
Natural ProtectioN for Your Heartpage 5
2 February 2016 50plus LIFE › www.50plusLifePA.com
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You have to be somewhere today.There’s no hurry or schedule
to follow, but you must get there on time. You don’t have a map or itinerary and the destination might be a surprise, but once you arrive, as happens in the new book Where We Belong by Hoda Kotb (with Jane Lorenzini), you’ll be in exactly the right place.
It’s natural: a turn of the calendar, and you’re feeling some inner restlessness. It’s OK to admit it, says Kotb: You sense that there’s more to life, and you yearn to find it. The good news is that it’s never too late to start working toward that perfect spot in your world; in fact, here, Kotb introduces readers to people who did.
Michelle Hauser grew up in Mason City, Iowa, living sometimes with her mother and sometimes with her
father. By age 10, she
skillfully ran a household; at 12, she landed a paying job because she sensed a need for self-sufficiency; at 14, she worked in a restaurant, where her love of cooking was cemented.
She ultimately became a chef, but throughout her life, she always harbored a dream of being a doctor. It would be even better if her two passions could unite …
Craig Juntenen
never wanted children and had taken steps to ensure that it didn’t happen; his wife, Kathi, had known about his tenets when they were dating, and she accepted them.
She was, therefore, very surprised when Craig came home after a golf outing and announced that he had an idea that ultimately changed their lives and their family, when two became five …
Kay Abrahams
grew up in the lap of luxury with everything she wanted—except parental attention, which she longed for. Her parents loved her, that was a fact, but they were busy with careers and had little time for her.
Eventually, she fell into the same situation, but a move halfway across the country helped her find the “family” she needed.
And for successful businessman Lindley DeGarmo, the move away from a sales career meant moving toward a job closer to his heart—and to his soul.
So where’s your turning point? It won’t be identical to the ones you’ll find inside Where We Belong, but you’ll get a lot of inspiration just the same—you’ll also get a lot of same. Indeed, the stories here are all very similar and, with one exception,
The Bookworm Sez
Where We Belong: Journeys that Show Us the Way
Terri Schlichenmeyer
Where We Belong: Journeys That Show Us the Way
By Hoda Kotb with Jane Lorenzini
c. 2016, Simon & Schuster272 pages
www.50plusLifePA.com 50plus LIFE › February 2016 3
AssistEd Living rEsidEnCEsBrookdale Grandon Farms 1100 Grandon Way, Mechanicsburg (717) 730-4033
EmErgEnCy numbErsAmerican Red Cross (717) 845-2751
Central PA Poison Center (800) 521-6110
Cumberland County Assistance (800) 269-0173
EnErgy AssistAnCECumberland County Board of Assistance (800) 269-0173
EyE CArE sErviCEsKilmore Eye Associates 890 Century Drive, Mechanicsburg (717) 697-1414
FunErAL dirECtorsCocklin Funeral Home, Inc. 30 N. Chestnut St., Dillsburg (717) 432-5312
HEALtH & mEdiCAL sErviCEsAlzheimer’s Association (717) 651-5020
American Diabetes Association (800) 342-2383
Arthritis Foundation (717) 763-0900
CONTACT Helpline (717) 652-4400
The National Kidney Foundation (800) 697-7007
PACE (800) 225-7223
Social Security Administration (Medicare) (800) 302-1274
HEALtHCArE inFormAtionPa. HealthCare Cost Containment Council (717) 232-6787
HEAring sErviCEsDuncan Nulph Hearing Associates 5020 Ritter Road, Suite 10G Mechanicsburg (717) 766-1500
Pennsylvania Office for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing (800) 233-3008 V/TTY
HEAting/AC/PLumbingFarr Tech Heat (717) 889-3960 3537 Hartzdale Drive, Camp Hill
HomE CArE sErviCEsSenior Helpers (717) 920-0707
HomE imProvEmEntGrand Opening Windows & Doors 46 Warwick Circle, Mechanicsburg (717) 691-5670
HosPiCE sErviCEsHomeland Hospice 2300 Vartan Way, Suite 115, Harrisburg (717) 221-7890
HosPitALsCarlisle Regional Medical Center (717) 960-1696
Housing AssistAnCECumberland County Housing Authority 114 N. Hanover St., Carlisle (717) 249-1315
Property Tax/Rent Rebate (888) 728-2937
Salvation Army (717) 249-1411
insurAnCEApprise Insurance Counseling (800) 783-7067
intELLECtuAL disAbiLitiEsKeystone Human Services 124 Pine St., Harrisburg (717) 232-7509
mEdiCAL EquiPmEnt & suPPLiEsMedical Supply (800) 777-6647
nursing/rEHAbHomeland Center 1901 N. Fifth St., Harrisburg (717) 221-7902
nutritionMeals on Wheels Carlisle (717) 245-0707 Mechanicsburg (717) 697-5011Newville (717) 776-5251 Shippensburg (717) 532-4904 West Shore (717) 737-3942
ortHoPEdiCsOSS Health 856 Century Drive, Mechanicsburg (717) 747-8315
PErsonAL CArE HomEsHomeland Center 1901 N. Fifth St., Harrisburg (717) 221-7902
PHArmACiEsCVS/pharmacy www.cvs.com
sErviCEsCumberland County Aging & Community Services (717) 240-6110
toLL-FrEE numbErsBureau of Consumer Protection (800) 441-2555
Cancer Information Service (800) 422-6237
Consumer Information (888) 878-3256
Disease and Health Risk (888) 232-3228
Domestic Violence (800) 799-7233
Drug Information (800) 729-6686
Flu or Influenza (888) 232-3228
Health and Human Services Discrimination (800) 368-1019
Internal Revenue Service (800) 829-1040
Liberty Program (866) 542-3788
Medicare Hotline (800) 638-6833
National Council on Aging (800) 424-9046
Organ Donor Hotline (800) 243-6667
Passport Information (888) 362-8668
Smoking Information (800) 232-1331
Social Security Fraud (800) 269-0217
Social Security Office (800) 772-1213
trAvELAAA Central Penn (717) 657-2244
Journease Travel Specialists (717) 462-4806
vEtErAns sErviCEsAmerican Legion (717) 730-9100
Governor’s Veterans Outreach (717) 234-1681
Lebanon VA Medical Center 1700 S. Lincoln Ave., Lebanon (717) 228-6000 or (800) 409-8771
Veterans Affairs (717) 240-6178 or (717) 697-0371
Helpful numbers, hotlines, and local businesses and organizations eager to serve you—all just a phone call away.
At Your Fingertips
Not an all-inclusive list of advertisers in your area.
preexisting wealth shows up quite often in the tales. That may turn a few readers off.
And yet, who doesn’t struggle with New Year’s resolutions? If you’ve made ’em, then you probably do, and author
Hoda Kotb (with Jane Lorenzini) offers something here that’ll energize you: true, encouraging stories.
If those everyday people can identify, find, and accomplish life-changing goals, surely you can, too.
And so, in the end, I mostly enjoyed Where We Belong. It’s a happy book, perhaps just what’s needed to start a year with myriad possibilities. And if you’re eager for that, then this book belongs in your hands.
The Bookworm is Terri Schlichenmeyer. Terri has been reading since she was 3 years old and she never goes anywhere without a book. She lives on a hill in Wisconsin with two dogs and 14,000 books.
4 February 2016 50plus LIFE › www.50plusLifePA.com
CorporATE oFFICE3912 Abel Drive, Columbia, PA 17512
Phone 717.285.1350 • Fax 717.285.1360Chester County:
610.675.6240Cumberland County/Dauphin County:
717.770.0140Berks County/Lancaster County/Lebanon County/York County:
717.285.1350E-mail address: [email protected]
Website address: www.onlinepub.com
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50plus LIFE is published by On-Line Publishers, Inc. and is distributed monthly among senior centers, retirement communities, banks, grocers, libraries and other outlets serving
the senior community.On-Line Publishers, Inc. will not knowingly accept or publish
advertising which may be fraudulent or misleading in nature. Views expressed in opinion stories, contributions, articles and
letters are not necessarily the views of the publisher. The appearance of advertisements for products or services does not constitute an endorsement of the particular product or service. The publisher will not be responsible for mistakes in advertisements unless notified within five days of publication. On-Line Publishers, Inc. reserves the right to revise or reject any and all advertising. No part of this publication may be reproduced or reprinted without permission of On-Line Publishers, Inc.
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Savvy Senior
How to Protect Your Eyes from Macular Degeneration
Dear Savvy Senior,Is macular degeneration
hereditary? My mother lost her vision from it before she died a few years ago, and now at age 65, I’m worried I may get it. What can you tell me?
– Nearsighted Susan
Dear Susan,Having a parent or
sibling with macular degeneration does indeed increase your risk three to four times.
But the good news is there are things you can do to protect your eyesight and a number of treatments that are available if you do happen to get it. Here’s what you should know.
What is AMD?Macular degeneration,
also known as age-related macular degeneration (or AMD), is the most common cause of vision loss in people over age 50, affecting about 10 million Americans.
AMD is a progressive eye disease that damages the macula, the part of the eye that allows us to see objects clearly, causing vision loss in the center of your vision. This affects the ability to read, drive, watch television, and do routine, daily tasks, but it does not cause total blindness.
There are two types of AMD: wet and dry. Dry AMD, which affects about 90 percent of all people who have it, progresses slowly and painlessly over a period of years, while wet AMD is much more aggressive and can cause severe vision loss in a matter of weeks or months.
Factors that can increase your risk of getting AMD include age (60 and older); smoking; excessive
exposure to sunlight, especially if you have light-colored eyes; certain genetic components; a family history of AMD; high blood pressure; obesity; and being Caucasian.
For anyone over the age of 60, it’s a smart idea to get your eyes examined by an ophthalmologist every year. They can spot early
signs of AMD before vision loss occurs.
Early signs, however, may include shadowy areas in your central vision or unusually fuzzy or distorted vision. The Amsler grid (www.amslergrid.org) is a good tool to check your eyes for AMD.
Preventing AMD While there’s currently no cure
for AMD, there are some things you can do if you’re high risk.
One option is to talk to your doctor about taking a daily dose of antioxidant vitamins and minerals known as AREDS: vitamins C and E, plus copper, lutein, zeaxanthin, and zinc. Studies by the National Eye Institute have shown that AREDS can reduce the risk by about 25 percent that dry AMD will progress.
Most drugstores sell these eye
supplements in tablet or soft gel form over the counter for around $20 to $30, but be aware that not all eye supplements contain the proper formulation. Choose either the PreserVision Eye Vitamin AREDS Formula, PreserVision Eye Vitamin Lutein Formula, PreserVision AREDS2 Formula, or ICAPS AREDS. These four
options contain the right formula mix.
Other lifestyle adjustments that may help prevent or delay AMD include eating antioxidant-rich foods, such as dark-green, leafy vegetables and cold-water fish for their omega-3 fatty acids; protecting your eyes from the sun by wearing UV-protective sunglasses; controlling high blood pressure; exercising regularly; and if you smoke, quit.
Wet AMD Treatments
For wet AMD, there are several effective medications (Lucentis, Avastin, and Eylea) available that can stop vision loss and may even restore it. These medications are given by injection into the eye and repeated every month or two, perhaps indefinitely.
Note that each of these three drugs works equally in treating wet AMD, but there’s a big cost difference. Avastin costs just $50 per month, compared with $2,000 for the other two. So experts recommend Avastin as the first choice for most people with wet AMD, especially if you don’t have supplemental Medicare coverage.
Jim Miller is a regular contributor to the NBC Today show and author of The Savvy Senior Book. www.savvysenior.org
Jim Miller
February is Age-Related Macular Degeneration Month
www.50plusLifePA.com 50plus LIFE › February 2016 5
Dear Pharmacist, Both my father and brother have
suffered a heart attack. I’m worried because I’m 52 years old and my blood pressure is slightly elevated, but other than that, I am pretty healthy. All my tests are OK, but I am scared. Any suggestions?
– P.A.
Just because your relatives have suffered a heart attack, doesn’t mean you will, so realize that in this moment, you are still healthy. Positive thoughts reduce stress hormones like cortisol, which damage the heart.
Because you have a family history of heart disease, remain vigilant about eating a healthy, well-balanced diet; doing aerobic exercise; and taking essential nutrients that help maintain normal blood pressure and cholesterol.
Most Americans take blood pressure drugs. Pharmaceutically speaking, there are more than 100 different pills to tackle high blood pressure. In some instances, these are helpful, but they relax blood vessels temporarily, while the disease process continues.
Many drugs used to lower blood pressure just so happen to be drug muggers of magnesium, zinc, calcium, and iron, so taking a multi-mineral supplement or a trace-mineral supplement a few hours after you take your medicine can mitigate side effects.
While blood pressure or cholesterol medications, beta blockers, calcium-channel blockers, and digoxin may
be prescribed by your physician, it’s important to realize that their effect on your body is only temporary.
The under–lying disease and inflammation will continue to destroy the delicate pipeline: your blood vessels, arteries, and capillaries. This is why vitamin C, lysine, and proline help, because they keep your blood vessels flexible and help reduce plaquing.
I wrote a whole chapter on heart disease in my diabetes book, and right now, I’d like to share some of the most important supplements that could help a person reduce their risk of heart attack.
Obviously, ask your physician which supplement(s) are right for your individual condition:
Arginine – It’s an amino acid that the body makes on its own. You can buy it too. In 2009, researchers at the University of Virginia found that it could help people with heart failure.
Ribose – It’s a naturally occurring sugar that the body uses to make ATP, your energy molecule. Ribose improves blood flow and provides much-needed oxygen to the heart.
Hawthorn – It’s an herb that increases the amount of blood your
heart pumps, and it lowers blood pressure over time. Hawthorne turns on an anti-aging switch in your body (a gene called PGC-1 alpha), which helps you burn fat more efficiently.
Fish Oils – They improve cholesterol ratios and reduce risk of blood clot formation.
Taurine – It’s an amino acid that helps regulate heart rhythm, regulate blood pressure, and lower blood pressure.
Sometimes potassium deficiency contributes to heart problems. If your doctor has told you that you’re low in this mineral, check in your medicine cabinet because some medications are drug muggers and can actually reduce potassium levels.
This information is not intended to diagnose, prevent, or treat your disease. For more information about the author, visit SuzyCohen.com
Dear Pharmacist
Natural Protection for Your HeartSuzy Cohen
February is American Heart Month
Did You Know? Certain antidepressants, decongestants, and pain-relieving narcotics can alter heart rhythm.
LANCASTER COUNTY
17th
Ann
ual
DAUPHIN COUNTY
17th
Ann
ual
CHESTER COUNTY
13th
Ann
ual
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6 February 2016 50plus LIFE › www.50plusLifePA.com
You can’t see or touch the merchandise, so what makes online shopping so appealing?
Well, the following three aspects, for starters:
1. Comforts of Home: You don’t need to leave your home (or office) to shop. Therefore, no parking hassles, no waiting in long lines, and no fighting for the last iPhone on the shelf.
2. Global Access: Stores all over the world are at your fingertips.
3. Savings: Online retailers save on personnel and other overhead costs. They often pass the savings on to you.
Start with the Familiar Get your feet wet with a visit to the
website of a “brick-and mortar” store you frequent in your area. If you shop at Home Depot, visit their website: www.homedepot.com. Is Macy’s one of your shopping spots? Visit www.macys.com.
Or you could pop into the website of a catalog that you patronize. Perhaps you are a Crate & Barrel (www.crateandbarrel.com) fan or a Harriet Carter (www.harrietcarter.com) loyalist.
Be On the Lookout If, at any time, you see a customer-
service number, jot it down. Websites are notorious for
concealing their contact numbers. For reasons of cost, most sites prefer all correspondence to be by email. I may be old fashioned, but when I have a complaint or question, I’d like the option to speak to a human being.
If you return to the website seeking out their telephone number,
look for Contact Us, Customer Service, or About Us. Scroll to the bottom of the page. Sometimes, what you seek (and they hide) is in very small letters at the end of the webpage.
Satisfaction & Safety Guaranteed To ensure that your credit card
information is safe, most websites encrypt the page where you enter your credit card, making it safer for transmission. You’ll know the page is protected when http at the start of the website address has an added s (https) for security.
A closed padlock might appear at the bottom of the browser window. An open padlock or a broken key at the bottom of the window indicates you are not on an encrypted page.
If the unfortunate happens and someone abuses your credit card (and, remember, the Internet may not have even played a role in the event), under federal law your liability is limited to $50.
If a breach of security on the part of the website revealed your credit card information, the website should pay this amount for you.
The American Bar Association has an informative website: www.safeshopping.org. (Note: It is .org, not .com.) Visit their site for more information before you start shopping on the Internet.
If something happens that warrants you bringing in the big guns, contact the Better Business Bureau at www.bbbonline.org. You could also fill out a complaint form with the Federal Trade Commission at www.ftc.gov. Type “complaint” in the internal search engine.
You Are in Control If a website is really confusing
or poorly designed, feel free to abandon the mission at any time. In most cases, you can find the same item being sold on several different websites.
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Tips for Safely Shopping onlineAbby Stokes
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Visit us at SeniorHelpers.com/harrisburg, e-mail us at [email protected] or call us at 717-920-0707.
Emmy® award-winning broadcaster Leeza Gibbons knows that when you trust your loved ones in the care of professionals, you want to know they will treat them like family. When families need to trust someone like family, trust Senior Helpers®.
www.50plusLifePA.com 50plus LIFE › February 2016 7
No one can save you from your own bad shopping habits, online or otherwise. Step away from the mouse when considering the 1980s sweater that glows under black lights. It wasn’t a good idea back then, and it certainly isn’t a good idea now.
Do you really need another circular saw? Aren’t two enough? Yes, I know it was a great deal, but stand firm. The convenience of the Internet can definitely feed the
impulse shopper in all of us. Practice restraint and enjoy your
purchases!
Abby Stokes, author of “Is This Thing On?” A Friendly Guide to Everything Digital for Newbies, Technophobes, and the Kicking & Screaming and its companion website, AskAbbyStokes.com, is the Johnny Appleseed of Technology, singlehandedly helping more than 300,000 people cross the digital divide.
volunteerspotlight
Do you know a 50+ volunteer who gives selflessly to others? Tell us what makes him or her so special and we will consider them for 50plus Senior News’ Volunteer Spotlight! Submissions should be 200 words or fewer and photos are encouraged. Email preferred to [email protected] or mail nominations to 50plus Senior News, Volunteer Spotlight, 3912 Abel Drive, Columbia, PA 17512.
UCP Helpers Named Volunteersof the Month
Each week, four fresh faces from UCP join the RSVP office staff to sort donations, prepare a bulk mailing, label donated books, or create cards for area veterans. Their presence always cheers the office, and of course their help is invaluable.
That’s why the UCP volunteers are some of our favorites and our pick for Volunteers of the Month.
Consumers of the UCP program in Colonial Park are big on volunteering. In fact, RSVP is just one of their regular projects. Others include the packing of boxes with the food bank, sorting at the recycling center, office help at WITF, working with Meals on Wheels in Colonial Park, and various duties at Swatara Church of God.
They also regularly help dust
cars at the Antique Auto Club of America Museum and help with mailings at a local domestic-violence charity.
Volunteer efforts are one part of the program for adults with disabilities, where clients choose their activities. Options range from recreational outings and educational trips to volunteering in the community.
The group is out in the community at least once a week and is always looking for more good works to do.
For further information about RSVP volunteer opportunities in the Capital Region, please contact Michelle Jones, Cumberland County development coordinator, at (717) 541-9521 or [email protected].
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8 February 2016 50plus LIFE › www.50plusLifePA.com
Art & Antiques by Dr. Lori
Loving our Collections
Love is one of the most common reasons why we collect objects or hand down objects.
Objects come with emotions. Most people will not part with a particular item or group of items if they were handed down or amassed by a loved one, family member, or friend.
I feel this way about my father’s nutcracker collection and my mother’s canister set. I wouldn’t part with them no matter what!
And when someone stops collecting or is no longer able to collect, some-times the collection is handed down.
If you can retain a collection for the long term, historically, that collection will increase in value over time. So, hold on to the collection if you can.
And, add to the collection when you can and start to familiarize your-self with the collection by learning
about its history and market value. For many, the love of collecting
is not only commonplace, but also comforting. At other times, a collec-tion can be a burden and present new problems. When a collection comes
to you from a deceased loved one, the situation may prove difficult.
For instance, when Frank, a long-time collector of duck decoys, passed away, his collection became the prop-erty and project of his widow.
Like most widows of collectors, Irene was happy that Frank enjoyed the process of collecting throughout their marriage. Now, with no chil-dren or interested relatives to take over the collection, Irene is left in a quandary.
She doesn’t want the duck decoys. Reason No. 1 is that she can’t bear to display the duck decoys as they prompt heartache. The emotional collection reminds Irene of Frank’s passing.
Reason No. 2 is the overwhelming number of duck decoys now stacked in the basement.
Also, the vast collection is unfamil-iar to Irene, a non-collector. She can’t identify the decoys’ sculptors, she can’t identify the regional character-istics of each decoy, and she is unin-formed and at the mercy of anyone
Lori Verderame
A vast collection of duck decoys becomes a late collector’s passion and his widow’s problem.
Take a quick survey on issues important to people over 50. You will be entered into
a drawing for a $100 gift card to Giant. You benefit and so does the Central Pennsylvania
Food Bank. They too will receive a $100 gift card. The drawing will be held on March 31, 2016.
You’re a Sageage and we want to hear from you ... and your friends,
family, and coworkers!
Go to www.SageAgeToday.com to enter!
The winner will be selected at random. You may enter no more than once a day. The winner will be emailed and called.
LIFEContest sponsored by:
www.50plusLifePA.com 50plus LIFE › February 2016 9
We owe much of our greater understanding of black history to Carter G. Woodson.
Born to former slaves, Woodson worked hard and against the tide of prejudice to obtain his own education.
In earning his doctorate from Harvard, Woodson was disturbed to find that during his studies, history books virtually ignored the black American population. So he decided to take on the challenge of writing black Americans into the history books.
He established the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History (now called the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and
History) in 1915, and a year later founded the widely respected Journal of Negro History.
Then in 1926, he launched Negro History Week, the precursor to Black History Month, as an initiative to bring national attention to the contributions of black people throughout American history.
February was chosen as Black History Month for the significant events and people who figured prominently in black American history.
For example:
Feb. 23, 1868: W.E.B. DuBois, civil rights leader and co-founder of the NAACP, was born.
Feb. 3, 1870: The 15th Amendment was passed, granting blacks the right to vote.
Feb. 25, 1870: The first black U.S. senator, Hiram R. Revels (1822-1901), took his oath of office. Feb. 12, 1909: The National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People was founded by a group of concerned black and white citizens in New York City. Feb. 1, 1960: A group of black Greensboro, N.C., college students began a sit-in at a segregated Woolworth’s lunch counter. The event marks a watershed moment in the civil-rights movement.
with information about decoys and their market value. She knows these buyers may take advantage of her.
She realizes that auctions may not be the best place to sell the collection because Frank got many of his best decoy bargains by buying at auctions. If a buyer at an auction is getting a bargain, then the person selling the decoy at auction must have lost money on the transaction.
Since Irene can’t tell one wooden duck from another, she begins to worry. She doesn’t like the idea of
having strangers come into the house to make her an offer on the decoys.
She doesn’t know what a good offer looks like, either. If someone wants to make a killing on this col-lection and buy it for a song, she is in a vulnerable position.
Now, Irene doesn’t know how or if she should get into the market, and she doesn’t want to keep the collec-tion. Like many other families of collectors, Irene never thought she’d be left alone with this vast collection.
Tips for this common collecting
problem include choosing one or two favorite decoys to keep as a remem-brance in honor of Frank’s years of collecting.
Get an appraisal from an appraiser who does not have any financial in-terest in the decoys—doesn’t want to sell them, doesn’t want to buy them. Be prepared to pay that appraiser for their expertise and time.
Ask the appraiser to tell you the re-tail value of the decoy collection, not an auction value or insurance value of the collection.
Take some time to consider the market information and then make a decision about how you will act. Don’t be hasty. Get information so you can make a good decision.
Celebrity Ph.D. antiques appraiser, author, and former museum director, Dr. Lori hosts antiques appraisal events worldwide. Dr. Lori is the star ap-praiser on Discovery channel. Visit www.DrLoriV.com/Events, www.Facebook.com/DoctorLori, or call (888) 431-1010.
Celebrating the History of Black History Month
Carter G. Woodson
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10 February 2016 50plus LIFE › www.50plusLifePA.com
Salute to a Veteran
In World War II He Flew for the Yanks … and for the Brits
At age 94, Richard Boyd is a clear reminder of Hollywood’s handsome Errol Flynn. And he has a dashing past to match, virtually all of which was devoted to aviation.
The exploits started for him in 1941 in his native England, when he was 19 and volunteered for service with the Royal Air Force (RAF) as a crewmember. He was selected for pilot training and began flying the Tiger Moth single-engine biplane. And just before he was to solo, his whole world changed.
The chief of the U.S. Army Air Corps, “Hap” Arnold, had proposed that a limited number of British young men be trained in our aviation cadet program. Boyd was one of five picked from his group and soon was on his way to the U.S. via a holding base in New Brunswick, where a
group of soon-to-be cadets was being assembled.
Then, in 1942 he was sent to
Albany, Ga., to join the aviation cadet class of 42-I, flying the Stearman PT-17. Did he wear an American uniform?
“All but the forage cap, which earmarked me as a Brit,” he says.
In succession then followed basic flying at Macon, Ga., and advanced flying at Valdosta, Ga., where he
got his U.S. wings and RAF rank of pilot officer (the equivalent of our 2nd lieutenant).
He then shipped to Toronto in 1943, where he most memorably met and dated the winsome Rita Mary O’Gorman (more on that later).
It was there that he also was unexpectedly picked to be one of five pilots from his group of 60 to go to Texas to attend the Army Air Corps Central Instructors School at Kelly Field. Having completed that instructor training, he was assigned to Ellington Field in Houston, where he served as an instructor pilot in AT-9s and AT-10s.
In December, he was called back to the RAF, and he shipped from New York for Europe aboard the Queen Mary. What was that like?
With a chuckle, he says, “It was
Robert D. Wilcox
The Lancaster bomber in which Boyd flew his missions.
Flying Officer Richard E. Boyd in 1945.
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a madhouse. With 16,000 troops aboard, there were bunks stacked everywhere. Mine was actually on the bridge of the vessel.”
The Queen Mary was the largest and fastest troopship during World War II. In her seven years of wartime service, she ran an unescorted, zigzag course for 569,429 miles as she carried 765,429 troops across the Atlantic to England.
Arriving in Liverpool, Boyd was sent to Scotland to train to fly the British way. He laughs at the way a sergeant pilot said, “I understand that you trained in the American Air Force.” When Boyd agreed that he had, the sergeant said briskly, “Ah … we’ll soon correct that.”
That was followed by flying the twin-engine Wellington, then the four-engine Stirling, and finally the formidable, four-engine Lancaster. That amazing bomber could carry almost its own weight with 33,000 pounds of fuel and bombs. It was the only plane that could handle the RAF’s giant, 22,000-pound, special-purpose bomb, the Grand Slam.
While we think of the Brits as bombing in the night while we bombed by day, the RAF bombed a lot by day, as well. Boyd, for example, flew 11 missions by day and 22 at night.
At night, he was four times picked to be “marker crew,” which dropped flares to light up the target. He remembers one night when he had a problem with his radar over Dresden and had to face the flak during three runs over the target to hit it.
He also recalls a daylight mission when they were to bomb German troops at the east end of the Remagen Bridge over the Rheine, only to be called away at the very last minute upon learning that the Yanks had now crossed the bridge and actually were the troops below them.
For his wartime service, Boyd was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross.
On V-E Day, Boyd was at home on leave and was assigned to transport
command, where he flew Stirling bombers that had been converted to carry troops and equipment to Karachi, India, to fight the Japanese. What was the closest he ever came to buying the farm?
Scratching his chin, he says, “That has to be the time after the war when I was flying in a York transport plane as an observer. We crashed on landing, and I spent six months in the hospital in a full-body cast. That’s a time I don’t even want to think about.”
Leaving the RAF in 1947, Boyd worked as a flight operations officer for British Overseas Airways. He had been corresponding regularly with Rita, that girl in Toronto, and only then when he had a real job did he feel that he could send the letter that said, “Will you marry me?” along with a one-way ticket to England on the Queen Mary.
Even though they hadn’t been together in person in four years, she came, they quickly married, and for 68 years have never regretted the decision.
In 1951, Boyd joined the Dutch airline KLM for five years before Swissair asked him to work for them and open a New York City office. To do that, he and Rita came to New York, where they lived on Long Island.
Boyd became operations manager, North America, in 1969 and retired in 1986 after 30 years with the company. With his complimentary airline tickets, he and Rita have literally traveled the world.
They came to Central Pennsylvania in 2013 to live in one of its retirement communities. And Boyd is proud of the space it gives him for a “war room” in which he keeps a treasure trove of aviation books, pictures, documents, and awards … all that reminds him of the lifetime he’s been privileged to spend in the cutting-edge world of aviation.
Colonel Wilcox flew a B-17 bomber in Europe in World War II.
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Woodcrest VillaMennonite Home Communities2001 Harrisburg PikeLancaster, PA 17601Connie BuckwalterDirector of Marketing(717) 390-4126www.woodcrestvilla.org
St. Anne’sretirement Community3952 Columbia AvenueWest Hempfield Township, PA 17512Mary Jo DiffendallDirector of Marketing(717) [email protected]
Willow Valley Communities600 Willow Valley SquareLancaster, PA 17602Kristin HambletonDirector of Sales(717) 464-6800(800) 770-5445www.willowvalleycommunities.org
CCRCs offer a tiered approach to the aging process, accommodating residents’ unique and often changing needs. Healthy adults entering a CRCC are able to live independently in a home, apartment, or condominium of their own within the community.
When assistance with everyday activities becomes necessary, they can move into personal care, assisted living, rehabilitation, or nursing care facilities. Some CCRCs have designated dementia areas within the community. These units address the progressing needs of people who have any form of dementia.
With a wealth of available resources, these communities give older adults the option to live in one location for the duration of their lives, with much of their future care already figured out — which equals both comfort and peace of mind.
Bethany Village325 Wesley DriveMechanicsburg, PA 17055Stephanie LightfootDirector of Sales & Marketing(717) 766-0279www.bethanyvillage.org
Chapel pointeat Carlisle770 South Hanover StreetCarlisle, PA 17013Linda AmsleyDirector of Marketing/Admissions(717) [email protected]
Cornwall Manor1 Boyd Street, P.O. Box 125Cornwall, PA 17016Jennifer MargutDirector of Marketing(717) [email protected]
The CCRC Communities listed are sponsoring this message. This is not an all-inclusive list.
Homeland Center1901 North Fifth StreetHarrisburg, PA 17102-1598Barry S. Ramper II, N.H.A.President/CEO(717) 221-7902www.homelandcenter.org
Cross Keys VillageThe Brethren Home Community2990 Carlisle PikeNew Oxford, PA 17350Amy BesteSenior Retirement Counselor(717) [email protected]
Homestead Village Enhanced Senior Living1800 Marietta AvenueP.O. Box 3227Lancaster, PA 17604-3227Christina GallagherDirector of Marketing(717) 397-4831 ext. 158www.homesteadvillage.org
The Middletown Home999 West Harrisburg PikeMiddletown, PA 17057Andrea HenneyDirector of Residential Services(717) 944-3351 www.MiddletownHome.org
Serving from theHeart in the Spirit of
Friendship, Love,and Truth
Pleasant Viewretirement Community544 North Penryn RoadManheim, PA 17545Amanda HallSales & Marketing Manager(717) [email protected]
The listings with a shaded background have additional information about their center in a display advertisement in this edition.
CCRCContinuing Care
Retirement Communities
Calvary FellowshipHomes502 Elizabeth DriveLancaster, PA 17601Marlene MorrisMarketing Director(717) 393-0711www.calvaryhomes.org
www.50plusLifePA.com 50plus LIFE › February 2016 13
Calendar of EventsCumberland County
suPPort grouPs Free and open to the public
Feb. 1, 4 to 5 p.m.Caregivers Support GroupMessiah Lifeways Meetinghouse1155 Walnut Bottom Road, Carlisle(717) 243-0447
Feb. 2, 6 p.m.CanSurmount Cancer Support GroupHealthSouth Acute Rehab Hospital175 Lancaster Blvd., Mechanicsburg(717) 691-6786
Feb. 2, 6 to 7 p.m.Alzheimer’s Support GroupSenior Helpers3806 Market St., Suite 3, Camp Hill(717) 920-0707
Feb. 4, 6:30 p.m.Too Sweet: Diabetes Support GroupChapel Hill United Church of Christ701 Poplar Church Road, Camp Hill(717) 557-9041
Feb. 9, 6:30 to 8 p.m.Carlisle Area Men’s Cancer Support GroupThe Live Well Center3 Alexandria Court, Carlisle(717) [email protected]
Feb. 10, 1:30 p.m.Parkinson’s Support GroupBethany Village West – Springfield Room325 Asbury Drive, Mechanicsburg(717) 877-0624
Feb. 16, 1 p.m.Caregiver Support GroupMechanicsburg Church of the Brethren501 Gale St., Mechanicsburg(717) 766-8880
Feb. 23, 6 p.m.Multiple Sclerosis Support GroupHealthSouth Rehabilitation Hospital175 Lancaster Blvd., Mechanicsburg(717) [email protected]
Community ProgrAms Free and open to the public
sEnior CEntEr ACtivitiEsBig Spring Senior Center – (717) 776-447891 Doubling Gap Road, Suite 1, NewvilleFeb. 5, 8:30 a.m. – Men’s BreakfastFeb. 12, 12:30 to 3:30 p.m. – Manicures and
Makeup SocialFeb. 12, 6 p.m. – Jack Frost/Valentine’s Potluck
Dinner at First United Presbyterian Church
Branch Creek Place – (717) 300-3563115 N. Fayette St., Shippensburg
Carlisle Senior Action Center – (717) 249-500720 E. Pomfret St., Carlisle
Mary Schaner Senior Citizens Center – (717) 732-391598 S. Enola Drive, Enola
Mechanicsburg Place – (717) 697-594797 W. Portland St., Mechanicsburg
West Shore Senior Citizens Center – (717) 774-0409122 Geary St., New Cumberland
Just a snippet of what you may be missing … please call or visit their website for more information.
LibrAry ProgrAmsBosler Memorial Library, 158 W. High St., Carlisle, (717) 243-4642Feb. 2, 9, 23, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. – Upstairs
Stitchers Embroidery GroupFeb. 5, 7 p.m. – Music at BoslerFeb. 26, 1 to 2 p.m. – Just Mysteries! Book Club
New Cumberland Public Library, 1 Benjamin Plaza, New Cumberland, (717) 774-7820Feb. 4, 10:15 a.m. to noon – Ruth’s Mystery
Discussion Group: Mystery Books Made into Movies
Feb. 9, 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. – Book Review: Killing Lincoln by Bill O’Reilly
Feb. 13, 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. – Write-On Writers’ Workshop
Mondays and Wednesdays, noon to 12:45 p.m.SilverSneakers and Silver and Fit ClassesLiving Well Fitness Center207 House Ave., Suite 107, Camp Hill(717) 439-4070
Feb. 6, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.HeartCaring SymposiumHoly Spirit Hospital Auditorium503 N. 21st St., Camp Hill(717) 972-4149
Feb. 10, 11:30 a.m.NARFE West Shore Chapter 1465VFW Post 75304545 Westport Drive, Mechanicsburg(717) 737-1486www.narfe1465.orgVisitors welcome; meeting is free but fee for food.
Feb. 11, noonMass of Healing and Anointing of the SickHoly Spirit Hospital Chapel503 N. 21st St., Camp Hill(717) 763-2118
If you have an event you would like to include, please email information
to [email protected] for consideration.
The answer to “What’s for dinner?” frequently depends on who’s doing the cooking.
A survey by consumer research organization GfK looked at cooking habits around the world, gathering data from more than 27,000 people in 22 countries.
Here’s how much time is spent weekly on meal preparation in different parts of the world:
• India: 13 hours• Ukraine: 13 hours• South Africa: nine hours• Indonesia: eight hours• Italy: seven hours• United States: five hours• South Korea: four hours
Cooking Habits across the Globe
14 February 2016 50plus LIFE › www.50plusLifePA.com
Cover Story:On Life and Love after 50
Greetings, Introductions, and 10 Tips for Finding Love
I am honored, especially on Valentine’s Day, to be introduced to your newspaper. I have a warm spot in my heart for Pennsylvania. My mother was born in Erie.
My column started when two female editors in Dana Point, Calif., gave me my first writing assignment. I had just gone through a divorce and thought dating would be easy. It turned out to be difficult, and I wrote about the frustrations of a single guy in his early 50s trying to date again.
I complained and whined that younger women wouldn’t go out with me and women my age expected me to pay for dates.
The editors felt that the single women in Southern California would have a field day taking potshots at my woe-is-me message.
They were right. When my first column ran, a woman said: “Who is this sniveling puke?” Another said, “Get the boy a crying towel.”
Women told me my writing became less controversial when I started dating my life partner, Greta.
I’ve written approximately 3,500 articles and newsletters on finding love in the later years, and writing on this topic has been good to me. I’ve published three books and have
been interviewed by Matt Lauer on the Today show and Diane Sawyer
on Good Morning America—very humbling.
My writing scope has broadened to: “On life and love after 50,” as older singles deal
with life issues often beyond the scope of just dating.
My advice is applicable to anyone age 50 to 90. Yes, I know people in their 90s who have found love.
While my articles target singles,
approximately 35 percent of my readers are married. Many tell me that reading about the hardships singles endure encourages them to appreciate their spouses more. My advice to married couples is usually pretty simple: Stay together and work out any issues.
Let’s have fun together. Maybe we can help some older singles find love. But to continue writing about senior dating, I need input from readers—your questions, comments, and stories about life and love after 50.
Email me at [email protected] and I will respond within a day or two, unless I’m traveling overseas. Who knows? We might include you in a column.
One thing is certain: As more and more people become single later
Tom Blake
Account representative
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in life, there are always new and challenging issues.
People often tell me, “I never thought I’d be single at this stage in my life.” My hope is to help as many of them as possible.
Tom’s 10 Tips for Finding a Mate
My life partner, Greta, and I had dinner with a widower friend of ours after Christmas. As we were leaving the restaurant, he said, “I don’t want to be alone anymore. But I don’t know how to meet a potential mate. What do you advise?”
I put together a list that would help him get started. I call it Tom’s 10 Tips for Finding a Mate. The tips apply to both men and women.
1. Let friends, family, and acquaintances know that you’d like to meet other singles. That’s what Ken did with me. He let me know that he was rejoining the human race and wanted to meet new people.
The more people he gets the word out to, the better his chances of finding someone. It’s called networking. And it works.
A week after Ken asked for advice, I received an email from a single woman in his city. I asked each one of them separately if they’d like to correspond. They said yes. Had Ken not mentioned his situation to me, I wouldn’t have thought about introducing them.
2. Get off the couch and out of the house. You won’t meet anybody sitting at home. You need to be where you will meet new people.
Sure, it takes energy and time, but it will give you a purpose. Attend weddings, reunions, church activities, dances, and accept all invitations to events.
Volunteer. Another widower I know volunteers at a nearby hospital twice a week and helps feed the homeless at his brother’s church twice a month. He’s met single women at both places.
3. Go out to enrich your life and meet new people. Do not go out solely to find a mate.
People looking too hard come off as desperate and end up turning off the opposite sex. Often, it’s when we
aren’t looking that we meet someone special.
4. Pursue activities you enjoy where both sexes are involved. For guys repairing old cars, you likely won’t meet a potential mate. Ditto for women who are quilting.
5. Get the body moving. Walk and exercise. Be friendly to folks you see along the way. Offer to walk with them if appropriate.
6. Keep expectations in check. Meeting a potential mate won’t be easy, but don’t give up. It takes time.
7. Internet dating is one method of meeting potential mates. For people living in remote areas, online dating may be a necessity to meet new people.
For people 50-plus, online dating is risky. There are scammers and evil people looking for vulnerable and lonely singles. However, it has worked for lots of couples.
If a guy online sounds too good to be true, he is. Trust your instincts. Don’t be naïve.
8. Smile and be friendly, positive,
and upbeat. If you are in a post-office line, or a grocery-store line, be assertive by striking up a conversation—but don’t be overly pushy about it.
9. Check out the website Meetup (www.meetup.com). There is no cost and they have clubs and groups across the U.S. that cover all kinds of special interests.
Pick some different ones and attend them. You will be enriching your life and making new friends.
10. Subscribe to my weekly On Life and Love after 50 e-newsletter at www.FindingLoveAfter60.com. There is no cost. More than 1,000 singles ages 50 to 90 from across the country share their experiences, frustrations, and successes.
Above all, recharge your batteries and get out and meet new people. I’m betting our friend Ken will be up and running in no time.
For dating information, previous articles, or to sign up for Tom’s complimentary, weekly e-newsletter, go to www.findingloveafter60.com.
#GreatPla ceToLive#GreatPla ceToWork
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WELCOME TO THE FAMILYImagine a place where the only things on your “To Do” list are the things you enjoy most: spending time with your family, entertaining friends or taking in a movie. Imagine yourself living at The Woods at Cedar Run without all the worries and hassles of home ownership. The Woods at Cedar Run offers residents an active social life combined with first class amenities including scenic walking paths, a movie theatre, a pool room, a pub and much more. It’s not only a wonderful place to live, it’s also an inviting destination for friends and family.
INDEPENDENT LIVING • SENIOR LIVING • MEMORY CARE
824 Lisburn Road, Camp Hill, PA 17011
An Community
“I’m not offended by all the dumb blonde jokes, because I know I’m not dumb ... and I also know that I’m not blond.” – Dolly Parton
“The scientific theory I like best is that the rings of Saturn are composed entirely of lost airline luggage.” – Mark Russell
The Last Laugh
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