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pages 2-7 ..................Opinion pages 8, 9........................Weird News pages 22, 23...............Health page 20...............Social Security & You pages 27...........Light for the Journey He Is Risen!! May The Clouds Never Burst & The Son Always Find You! pages 12,13,14,30.......Life Fest 2012 page 10.........SRDA Menu pages 28, 29.............Finances page 26..........Fremont/Salida Menu pages 16, 17...............Travel Senior Beacon SB IF YOU ARE 50 OR OLDER YOU SHOULD READ IT!! APRIL, 2012 Vol. 30: No. 9 Established Aug., 1982 357 Consecutive Months! Choosing A Personal Rep Of Your Estate Legal Lines: Choosing a Personal Representative of Your Estate This is a column the Colorado Bar Association provides as a public service. Question: How do I choose the personal representative of my estate? Answer: A personal representative, also sometimes called an “executor,” is the person in charge of administering your estate when you die. In order to name someone to be your personal representative, you must execute a valid will or written statement naming a personal representative. If you die without a will, Colorado law states who has priority to serve as your personal representative. It is important to know that even if you name someone or someone has priority to be the personal representative of your estate, they may not be available or willing to take on the job, or the probate court may override your decision or a person’s priority for appointment if the court finds that the person to be unfit to serve as the personal representative. A personal representative is a fiduciary, meaning that he or she is held to a very high standard of care when a d ministering t h e estate and is expected to act in the best interests of all of the interested parties in the probate case. A personal representative will likely have to collect, value, preserve, and then distribute assets, and will be responsible for taking care of your final tax issues. Thus, it is important to choose someone who is honest, is comfortable being a leader, is reasonably good at managing property, and that can understand and make fi- nancial decisions that are in the best interests of the estate’s beneficiaries. Many people choose a family member as their personal representative, but you may also name a professional fiduciary, trustee, or other trusted advisor. Whether a family member or a professional, a personal representative is entitled to reasonable compensation, has specific duties to the beneficiaries of the estate, and may or may not be supervised by the probate court. The Colorado Bar Association welcomes your questions on subjects of general interest. This column is meant to be used as general information. Consult your own attorney for specifics. Send questions to the CBA attn: Sara Crocker, 1900 Grant St., Suite 900, Denver, CO 80203 or email scrocker@cobar.org. About Legal Lines Salute to Seniors Celebrates the Maiden Voyage of the Titanic with Molly Brown’s Great Granddaughter Denver, CO. First class passenger with ticket number 17613 belonged to Margaret “Molly” Brown, age 44 when she boarded the maiden voyage of the RMS Titanic as it sailed from Cherbourg, France on April 10, 1912 on its’ way to New York. With more than 2200 people on board – 1,316 passengers and about 900 crew members, the RMS Titanic collided with an iceberg during her maiden voyage on April 15 just three hours after striking an iceberg at 11:40 pm. Molly Brown’s great-granddaughter, Helen Benziger McKinney will appear in person to share first hand impressions and stories with “Tea and Memories of the Titanic” at the 23rd Annual Salute to Seniors on May 11, 2012 at the Colorado Convention Center sponsored by the Colorado Gerontological Society. She will also do a “meet and greet” in the Café Parisian later in the day. The Titanic was the largest ship afloat with some of the most luxurious amenities such as an on-board gymnasium, swimming pool, libraries, high-class restaurants and opulent cabins. The ship featured a powerful wireless telegraph for use by the passengers. Another feature was watertight compartments and remotely activated doors, but the ship only carried enough lifeboats for 1,178 people. Margaret “Molly” Brown, Colorado’s own American socialite, philanthropist, and activist became famous as she helped others board the lifeboats, but was finally convinced to leave the ship in Lifeboat No.6. She became a heroine for efforts to take an oar herself and trying to go back to search for more survivors, which earned her the title “The Unsinkable Molly Brown”. The Titanic Day will feature the theatre group, Laughter as Wellness sponsored by Kaiser Permanente, free food samples by Albertsons, scores of theme music, swing dancing, and “Ballroom Dancing with the Stars” in the Upper Deck Dining Room. A museum exhibition of artifacts from the Molly Brown House Museum will be featured in the State Room. Small memoirs from the gift store will be on sale. Living history performers from the Molly Brown Summer House invite you hear more about the historic second home of Molly Brown, the Avoca Lodge enjoyed by Molly Brown and her husband JJ. The story is preserved by five generations of the Robert Fehlmann family who have labored to preserve this historic home in Lakewood Colorado. Despite all of the class and luxury of the Titanic, those of Irish and Italian descent did not enjoy the same luxuries. The Lower Deck Dining Room will feature music of their own - Irish singers, rebel songs, bag pipers, and dances. Enjoy Colorado’s largest senior resource fair and experience the feeling of the Titanic as you enter the Upper Deck. Dress in Edwardian attire and win prizes, join the fun and gaze at the grand staircase in the lobby. Before you leave, check the Passenger lists to see if you are a “survivor” at the Colorado Gerontologi- swer questions of interest to members of the public for their general information. About the CO Bar Association The Colorado Bar Association is a voluntary bar association with nearly 18,000 members – almost three-quarters of all attorneys in the state – founded in 1897. The bar provides opportunities for continuing education, volunteering and networking for those in the legal profession while upholding the standards of the bar. The bar likewise works to secure the efficient administration of justice, encourage the adoption of proper legislation and perpetuate the history of the profession and the memory of its members. For more information, visit www.cobar.org. Sara Crocker, Communications Specialist - Direct: 303-824-5347 Mobile: 720-937-9771 E-mail: scrocker@cobar.org Colo. & Denver Bar Associations Legal Lines is a question and answer column provided as a public service by the 1900 Grant St., Denver, CO 80203 Colorado Bar Association. Attorneys an- Saluting Titanic’s Molly Brown’s Young Relative DON’T FORGET LIFEFEST 2012 SEE pp.12-14, 30 cal Society booth. Doors open from 8:30 am to 4:00 pm. Tickets are $9 with the second ticket costing $4.50. Tickets are $6 each for groups of ten or more. Lunch is extra. Free parking is available at the Pepsi Center with free shuttle service by Sunrise Assisted Living. To purchase your tickets, call 303-333-3482. Eileen Doherty, M.S. is the Executive Director of Senior Answers and Services and the Colorado Gerontological Society. She has more than 35 years of experience in gerontology in administration, research, training and education, and clinical practice. She can be reached at 303-333-3482 or at doherty001@att.net. Page 2 - Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info Just Another Day At The Races by James R. Grasso, Chief Cook & Bottle Washer 2012 Senior Citizen Of The Year This year’s Senior Citizen of the Year who will presented at the Pueblo Seniors’ Life Festival at the Sangre De Cristo Arts and Conference Center in Pueblo at 11:00am on Friday, April 27, 2012. is Edward A. Rizer. For more information on Mr. Rizer see page 13. Senior Life Festival 2012 Great news everyone!!!!! The 15th annual Senior Life Festival has a new home this year!!!! The Sangre De Cristo Arts and Conference Center!!!!!! We are very excited about our move and hope all of you will join us to Celebrate our annual tribute to Older Americans Month. Don’t forget the date!!!! April 27, 2012. For info please call 719-634-2343. Thanks, Kathilee Champlin for shepherding this wonderful event since its inception fifteen years ago. You’ve certainly made a difference. Observations From The Cave “Amen, amen, I say to you, he who hears my word, and believes him who sent me, has life everlasting, and does not come to judgement, but has passed from death to life.” John 5: 24 Man, it doesn’t get anymore succinct than that! I wish that BHO would run on his record. The first two years he got everything he wanted. From cash stimuli to Obamacare and regulations as far as the eye can see. That is his record. Republicans then gained the House in 2010 and BHO’s records of victories werer stymied. As the overwhelming force of we the people in 2010 shouted from the mountaintops, “We don’t like your ideas, BHO,” the House valiantly has produced bill after bill that would seemingly help stimulate the country to move forward as a team instead of “sharing the wealth” among the hardworkers and the less hardworking and pretend to believe that that kind of government could ever sustain itself. At every turn BHO’s party in the Senate has shunted every single bill brought forward by the lower house and in the meantime BHO has acted the part of King. He makes recess appointments upon recess appointments. He has myriads of czars who are beholding to no one other than BHO himself. He speaks to us like he is the “Dear Leader” of North Korean fame. In other words he says “jump” and we say “how high?” He blew $500,000,000 on the sun-loving Solyndra only to watch it file for bankruptcy. He gave another one-half billion dollars to a battery manufacturer named Fisker that brought many jobs to his Veep Joe Biden’s attention COAL AND URANIUM INDUSTRY WORKERS Do You Have This Card? home state of Delaware and then he dared to dream: “Imagine a world where people pop the hood of their cars, and they see stamped on the battery “Made in America.’” How about a fuel-efficient engine instead? Well, Fisker had the bad taste of pulling most of its workers from Delaware and now the only place these batteries are made is in their home base of Finland. So there goes his dream, it’s now ‘Made in Finland.’ That’s one trillion dollars down the drain. We now find out that Obamacare isn’t going to cost less than $1,000,000,000 nope, not even close. The new CBO numbers (and remember they are non-partisan numbers) show what we all knew to be true in the first place that Obamacare will now cost 1.76 trillion dollars from now until 2022 and then in 2023 it’s “Katie bar the door.” Some estimates are as much as a trillion dollars a year from then on. If they are estimating that now, I wonder just how much it will really be? I got a kick out of BHO slapping down Rush Limbaugh for the latter’s use of some vile language concerning the lady in law school that is so active sexually that it costs her some $3,000 a year for birth control and wants her Catholic insurers to pay for it. He waxed nostalgic about his own two female children and how they should stand firm to Limbaughtypes of rhetoric. I wonder how he explains that he is for late term abortion and worse yet when the abortion is botched how he would stand aside as he watches a doctor bring the innocent into a cold dank room to breathe its last breaths alone and unwanted? And now he tells us how the United States is producing more energy than anytime in the last eight years. Trumpeting like he was responsible for it. Only problem is in 2011 he allowed one, one drilling permit and the reason why we’re doing so well is that WFC and GWB were responsible for the leases allowed that contribute to “our best energy production in the last 8 years.” He’s now moving “full steam ahead” to run an oil pipeline from Oklahoma to Texas that will be a bigtime job maker. But that pipeline was already in the pipeline so to speak. If that little southern part of the Keystome XL pipeline is such a good idea then why isn’t the whole operation from the tar sands in Canada to the refineries in Texas an even better idea. I hope he and his ilk are on the first sun-powered or wind-powered airplane. I wondered just how many of them would give that a go? I’m tired of this man as our President and I can say that because I’m a white man and he’s half white without being prejudicial in any way. His ideas are not consistent within the country I grew up in and have remained true to. Why don’t people like BHO and all his mind-numbed robot followers go to Europe (I hear they are in need of immigrants in the worse way there) and take over the EuroZone and show us how great things can be under Obama-Utopia and leave the United States to the business of being the greatest, most compassionate and caring place on earth. America’s moral compass is consistent with John 5:24. Just look at our laws and our constitution. So leave us to the tasks at hand. Oh yeah and take your $5.6 trillion of debt and dictating to us how we can’t pursue religious freedom with you. Godspeed. If so, you may qualify for free in-home nursing care B Visit Us at http://www.seniorbeacon.info Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 - Page - 3 Saving Money On Your Prescription Drugs by Ron Pollack, Executive Director, Families USA April 2012 It’s that time of year again: Pretty soon, you’ll be sitting down with piles of paper in front of you, getting ready to fill out your f e d eral income tax forms, wishing for some good news, for a change! Cheer up. There actually is some good news. Even if you end up having to pay Uncle Sam, you’re almost certain to save money on your prescription medications this year. That’s partly because more generic drugs will be available, and they’re cheaper than the brand-name drugs they replace. It’s also partly because the “doughnut hole” in Medicare drug coverage is gradually being closed. Starting with generics, sev- eral big-name drugs are scheduled to become available in generic versions this year, including the blood thinner Plavix and the diabetes drug Actos. In fact, generics will have 80 percent of the drug market in 2012. And, since generics cost only 15-20 percent as much as brand-name drugs, this will mean a big savings to seniors. You shouldn’t be afraid of switching to generics. They’re subject to the same rigorous review by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as brand-name drugs. The FDA makes sure the generic and the brand-name drug give you the same amount of the active ingredients. They just cost less because the generic manufacturers didn’t do the original research and devel- by Ann Coulter Any Republican governor of a blue state who manages to balance the budget without raising taxes should be a nominee for Mount Rushmore, to say nothing of president. Mitt Romney was governor of a state so blue, it’s North Korea with more Irish people, and he balanced the budget without raising taxes. Even Ronald Reagan raised taxes as governor of California, imposing a $1 billion tax increase his first year in office. It was the largest tax hike by a governor in the nation’s history, raising income, corporate, sales and inheritance taxes. Five years later, Reagan raised taxes again by another $1.5 billion. To be fair, unlike liberals, he also provided tax rebates that, over his tenure in office, totaled $5.7 billion, including $4 billion in property tax rebates. But even Reagan didn’t stop the growth of state government: While he was governor of California, the budget increased from $4.6 billion to $10.2 billion. Republicans are able to contextualize Reagan’s record -ñ it was California! -- but seem unable to contextualize Mitt Romney’s record, even though he had to govern a state far more liberal than California was half a century ago. When Reagan was governor, the California Assembly was majority Democrat, but the Senate was evenly split between Republicans and Democrats. Gov. Romney had to contend with a 200-person state Legislature that included only 29 Republicans. As Reagan tax guru Arthur Laffer has admitted, Reagan’s specialty was cutting taxes, not spending. Reagan, he said, found “it hard to say no” and cutting spending is a “green-eyeshade budget thing,” that requires poring over budgets, whereas cutting taxes can be done in the abstract. Romney is a green-eyeshade guy. Like Reagan, Romney inherited a huge, Democrat-created budget deficit. The existing Massachu- setts deficit was already more than half a billion dollars when Romney took office halfway through a fiscal year, with a projected deficit of $3 billion for the following fiscal year. And yet, Romney balanced Massachusetts’ budget each year he was in office and left the state with a surplus, without raising taxes. To the contrary, every single budget Romney submitted included income tax cuts -- all of which were rejected by the 85-percent Democratic Legislature. (The last time Massachusetts legislators approved an income tax cut was when it was attached to a bill raising their own salaries by 55 percent.) Romney balanced the budget by slashing spending, eliminating ridiculous corporate tax loopholes and increasing user fees for government services consumed by only some citizens, such as court filings, taking the bar exam, boating, hunting and golf licenses. He cut state spending by $600 million, including reducing his own staff budget by $1.2 million, and hacked the largest government agency, Health and Human Services, down from 13 divisions to four. He did this largely by persuading the Legislature to give him emergency powers his first year in office to cut government programs without their consent. Although Romney was not able to get any income tax cuts past the Democratic Legislature, he won other tax cuts totaling nearly $400 million, including a one-time capital gains tax rebate and a two-day sales tax holiday for all purchases under $2,500. He also vetoed more bills than any other governor in Massachusetts history, before or since. He vetoed bills concerning access to birth control, more spending on state zoos, and the creation of an Asian-American commission -- all of which were reversed by the Legislature. As Barbara Anderson, executive director of Citizens for Limited Taxation, said, “What else could he do?” Romney left his successor, Deval Patrick, Democrat and friend of Obama, with a “rainy day fund” of $2.1 billion, more than tripled from $640 million when Romney took office. (Of course, as soon as Romney was gone, Patrick raided the rainy day fund, increased government spending and raised taxes.) Meanwhile, when he was in Congress, Santorum wouldn’t even vote to eliminate federal funding for the National Endowment for the Arts. Santorum supported all sorts of big-government spending plans -- No Child Left Behind, prescription drug coverage for seniors and the “bridge to nowhere.” But you’d think we would at least have Santorum’s vote against federal funding for pornographers and deviants. Alas, no. The NEA, you will recall, uses federal taxpayer money to subsidize crucifixes submerged in urine, photos of bullwhips up a man’s derriere, poems celebrating the Central Park jogger’s rapists, photos of amputated human genitalia, vomit, SEE “POLLACK” PAGE 19. Send Lizzie Borden To Halls Of Washington SEE “coulter” PAGE 5. Page 4 - Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 Visit Us at http://www.seniorbeacon.info National Perspective: The Writer And The President by David M. Shribman It was a meeting of a gothic genius and a political magus. Nathaniel Hawthorne, the novelist from Salem, Mass., and Abraham Lincoln, the politician from New Salem, Ill., didn’t speak to each other -- one of the great missed opportunities of history -- but Hawthorne did accompany a delegation of businessmen from a Massachusetts whip factory to a White House session with the 16th president in March 1862. That meeting, 150 years ago this month, was nothing remarkable, one of the many sessions a chief executive customarily has with visitors to the capital, and yet it produced remarkable insights about the president. At this event, Lincoln was given what Hawthorne described as “a splendid whip,” a handy tool, perhaps, to keep his Cabinet of rivals together, to move his leading general to action, and by year’s end to overcome the opposition from the South and the skepticism from the North over his Emancipation Proclamation. The 9 a.m. session was late in starting; the president was having breakfast. “His appetite, we were glad to think, must have been a pretty fair one,” Hawthorne wrote, “for we waited about half an hour in one of his antechambers.” Lincoln had a big appetite and he made a big impression, for the group soon glimpsed what Hawthorne described as “the homeliest man I ever saw, yet by no means repulsive or disagreeable.” Hawthorne set forth his observations in a broader essay on his trip to Washington and Virginia that appeared in The Atlantic Monthly. The article is included in the Library of America’s newest volume on the Civil War, an anthology of contemporary accounts, speeches, diary entries and reminiscences covering 1862, the second year of the conflict. As the country observes the sesquicentennial of the war, the observations of one of the nation’s greatest writers on one of the nation’s greatest leaders possess unusual power. Here are some annotated excerpts: -- President Lincoln is the essential representative of all Yankees, and the veritable specimen, physically, of what the world seems determined to regard as our characteristic qualities. In this regard Lincoln seems little different from most American presidents, including the modern ones. Theodore Roosevelt personified American vigor at the turn of the last century, Woodrow Wilson stood for American idealism, Franklin Roosevelt for American determination - and, with the New Deal, American experimentation. Later, Harry Truman stood for American practicality in an age of ideology, John Kennedy for American sophistication at a time when American culture was thought to have come of age, Jimmy Carter for American innocence and Ronald Reagan for American optimism. -- There is no describing his lengthy awkwardness, nor the uncouthness of his movement; and yet it seemed as if I had been in the habit of seeing him daily, and had shaken hands with him a thousand times in some village street; so true was he to the aspect of the pattern American, though with a certain extravagance which, possibly, I ex- Minnequa Medicenter... 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Lincoln was awkward and homely. He was also the greatest American political figure of his time, perhaps of all time. -- A great deal of native sense; no bookish cultivation, no refinement; honest at heart, and thoroughly so, and yet, in some sort, sly -- at least endowed with a sort of tact and wisdom that are akin to craft, and would impel him, I think, to take an antagonist in flank, rather than to make a bull-run at him right in front. But, on the whole, I liked this sallow, queer, sagacious visage, with the homely human sympathies that warmed it ... Lincoln had uncommon common sense, was wise but not pedantic, honest but crafty. The latter is often ignored. There may have been an internal dishonesty to Lincoln’s emancipation plan (it covered territory over which he had no power), or to his assault on civil liberties (declaring martial law and suspending habeas corpus aren’t ordinarily celebrated), but the overall package was more than a sagacious visage. It was virtuosity in action. -- He is evidently a man of keen faculties, and, what is still more to the purpose, of powerful character. As to his integrity, the people have that intuition of it which is never deceived. Make no mistake: Not everyone thought of him as Honest Abe. The rail-splitter was a hair-splitter, too. He was derided by abolitionists and black leaders as too timid, by moderates as too radical, by many as being dishonest not only with the country but also with himself. Was the war to preserve the Union or to free the slaves? Did he believe blacks were equal to or inferior to whites? Should slaves be freed or returned to Africa? Often his answer to questions like this, infuriating to us even 150 years later, was: both. -- But the president is teachable by events, and has now spent a year in a very arduous course of education; he has a flexible mind, capable of much expansion, and convertible towards far loftier studies and activities than those of his early life; and, if he came to Washington as a backwoods humorist, he has already transformed himself into ... a statesman Presidents come to office on a wave of determination: Win the war. Withdraw from the war. Cure poverty, disease, the economy. Reach out to one group, comfort another, put a third in its place. They do a few of these things, often poorly, and then forget about the rest. Reality -- a synonym for the modern presidency -- intrudes. “One of the things about being president,” Barack Obama said last month, “is you get better as time goes on.” There is, however, plenty of evidence to the contrary. As time went on, Woodrow Wilson’s stubbornness divided the country over the League of Nations, Lyndon Johnson’s demons produced the credibility gap and the Vietnam quagmire, Richard Nixon’s lust for power produced Watergate, Ronald Reagan’s hands-off style produced the Iran-Contra affair, Bill Clinton’s lack of discipline led to impeachment. But Obama, who in the past has harnessed the audacity of hope, has chosen the right role model. Abraham Lincoln got better as time went on. From our perspective 150 years after his encounter with Nathaniel Hawthorne, he’s still getting better. (David M. Shribman is executive editor of the Post-Gazette (dshribman@post-gazette. com, 412 263-1890). Follow him on Twitter at ShribmanPG.) Visit Us at http://www.seniorbeacon.info Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 - Page - 5 Case Of Trayvon Martin Hauntingly Familiar by Cynthia Tucker There are few black families who don’t have a personal story about an unsettling encounter with the police, usually one involving male relatives. For all the encouraging -- astonishing, really -- racial progress over the last 50 years, the relationship between black Americans and white law enforcement officers remains fraught with fear, suspicion and, let’s face it, racial prejudice. The deeply troubling case of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed black teenager shot dead by a white Florida man claiming to be part of a neighborhood watch team, has brought those tensions vividly to the surface, reminding black folk that we don’t get the benefit of the doubt in our encounters with the criminal justice system. That remains true even if you’re a kid lying dead in the grass after you’ve done nothing -- nothing -- wrong. That’s because too many law enforcement officers still harbor prejudices that live deep in their subconscious minds, where they record stereotypes, archive bad data and make snap judgments without any conscious thought. Those “implicit biases,” as researchers call them, are not easily dislodged by sensitivity training or diversity guidelines. In the Martin case, many observers, including several Florida lawmakers and prosecutors, have pointed to problems inherent in the state’s notorious “Stand Your Ground” law, which has invited the violence-prone to claim innocence after provoking deadly confrontations. Even though the investigation is continuing, the law’s broad parameters may allow George Zimmerman, Martin’s killer, to go unpunished. But I’m equally disheartened by the failure of the Sanford, Fla., police to even arrest Zimmerman. I don’t know a single black person who believes that a black shooter in identical circumstances would not have been arrested and charged. It would not have mattered if the black shooter were a Ph.D. college professor at a nearby university or a petty criminal well-known to the police. He would have been arrested if he had killed an unarmed white teenager who was returning from a convenience store to the home where his father was visiting. The college professor may not have been convicted if he could afford a good attorney, but he would have been arrested. That’s because police, like prosecutors, have a huge amount of discretion at their disposal, and they don’t treat black citizens with the same deference that they automatically -- perhaps unconsciously -- give to whites. We are troublemakers. We are suspects. We are criminals. See stereotypes, above. Last week, as calls for justice ricocheted around the country, gaining power, the Sanford City Council issued a “no confidence” vote in its police chief, who decided to “temporarily” step down. Meanwhile, however, City Manager Norton Bonaparte Jr., to whom the police report, issued a statement defending them -- and straining credibility. “According to Florida statute, law enforcement was PROHIBITED from making an arrest based on the facts and circumstances they had at the time,” the statement said, according to The Washington Post. The Legacy Commons That interpretation of the law is so far-fetched that it borders on outright dishonesty. As the Orlando Sentinel has reported, police officers in jurisdictions throughout central Florida have made arrests in several cases where the survivor claims selfdefense. Moreover, two of the Florida lawmakers who crafted the law say Zimmerman should be arrested. “Police are not allowed to make an arrest unless they have probable cause. There is supposed to be a legal reason, otherwise it’s an illegal arrest,” Willie Meggs, state attorney (prosecutor) for Florida’s 2nd Judicial Circuit, told me. (His circuit does not include Sanford.) Coulter from page 3. mutilated corpses and dead fetuses. (And that was just the children’s wing of the museum!) But Rick Santorum voted against cutting funding for the NEA every time a vote was taken both as a representative and a senator - in 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1997 and 1998. These weren’t accidental votes. Each one was deemed a key conservative vote on which members of Congress would be graded by the American Conservative Union. There’s your “true conservative,” values voters. Unfortunately, the more time a person spends in Washington, the more likely he is to consider it perfectly reasonable for the federal government to redistribute money from hardworking taxpayers to pornographers, con men, charlatans and thieves. America is on a precipice. Unless we send Lizzie Borden to Washington next January, our coun- But when I asked Meggs if “probable cause” is a subjective judgment, he acknowledged as much: “Every day,” he said. In other words, there is no “prohibition” against arrest in the statute. Prosecutors, too, have wide latitude in the cases they pursue - a discretion that benefits whites much more often than it does blacks. Among criminal justice experts, it’s well-known that prosecutors press cases against black defendants even as they drop similar charges against white defendants. Many of those prosecutors would be gravely offended if they see “tucker” page 7. try will begin an inevitable decline into a useless socialist country, with no money for national defense, no entrepreneurship, no new businesses being created, no new pharmaceuticals or cancer cures -- just the endless redistribution of an everdwindling pool of wealth from the makers to the takers, overseen by career politicians like Rick Santorum. Mitt Romney has spent no time in Washington. He was a rabidly frugal fiscal conservative in a state where cutting government spending was as foreign an idea as it is in Washington today. Do you think a man who slashed government spending in North Korea, put the corrupt and financially bleeding Olympics on solid financial footing and rescued dozens of companies from bankruptcy would consider a photo of a bullwhip stuck in a man’s buttocks a wise investment of the taxpayers’ money? 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The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) last week released a revised estimate of the Obama administration’s spiraling deficit, forecasting it will hit $1.2 trillion in the 2012 fiscal year. This latest revision pushes the deficit up by another $100 billion, and it will likely climb higher before the fiscal year ends, a few weeks before Election Day. This is the fourth straight trillion-dollar-plus deficit under Obama’s presidency and the highest in U.S. history. He came into office in 2009 with thousands of proposals to spend trillions of dollars and has run up annual deficits totaling more than $5.2 trillion, pushing total U.S. debt to more than $15 trillion. This means the entire national debt exceeds our gross domestic product (GDP), the measure of all the goods and services we produce each year. In other words, Obama is spending beyond our means. Obama’s record-shattering deficits are as follows: $1.4 trillion in 2009, $1.3 trillion in 2010, $1.3 trillion in 2011 and an estimated $1.2 trillion in 2012. In 2007, the year before the nation’s economy plunged in the Great Recession, the federal budget deficit was a tame $167 billion. Even in 2008, the first full year of the subprime mortgage debacle and the last year of George W. Bush’s presidency, the deficit was a manageable $438 billion. But it isn’t just the budget deficit that has been climbing at a furious pace under this president. Gas prices, which were around $1.80 for a gallon of regular on Jan. 1, 2009, have on average skyrocketed to nearly $4 for a gallon of regular, according to AAA. The average price was running $3.52 just a month ago. If the pump price on a gallon of gas isn’t shocking enough for you, sharply rising health care costs under the new Obamacare law make the cost The Area Agency on Aging’s Well Over 60 Health Education and exercise program, in partnership with 9Health Fair, has a limited number of full price vouchers available for the Cañon 9Health Fair blood screening tests. Persons age 60 and older are eligible for these vouchers, with priority given to the low-income, frail and elderly. The date for the Cañon City 9Health Fair is Saturday, April 28 from 7 am until 11am at Evangelical Church, 3000 E. Main in Cañon City. There is no preregistration. To apply, or for more information on these vouchers, please call the Area Agency on Aging toll-free 1-877-610-3341. of a gallon of gas look like a bargain in comparison. In 2009, Obama promised the American people that his mandated health insurance plan would cost “around $900 billion over 10 years.” But the CBO reported last week that Obamacare will cost at least twice that much, or $1.76 trillion. And the costs will likely rise in the years to come as the baby boomers grow older. That’s why Republicans have begun to wage a political assault on the unpopular Obamacare law as it nears the two-year anniversary of its enactment. “The president promised, ‘If you like your doctor or health care plan, you can keep it,” Texas Sen. John Cornyn, the chairman of the GOP’s Senate campaign committee, says in an op-ed column for the Austin American-Statesman. “In fact, employers have already started dropping insurance coverage in direct response to Obamacare. The president promised his law would ‘slow the growth of health care costs for our families, our businesses and our government.’ Instead, premiums for family coverage rose by 9 percent last year,” Cornyn writes. Higher costs for gasoline and health care, along with a weak, high-unemployment economy, will be lethal issues in the coming general election, both for Obama and the Democrats generally. A Gallup poll says the lackluster Obama economy and the nation’s persistently high unemployment rate are the two top concerns that Americans say will most influence their vote 4029 Outlook Blvd -Pueblo, CO 81008 for president. But Obama’s record budget deficits and the nation’s growing debt load are at No. 3, with 79 percent of voters saying the issue is either “extremely or very important” in how they will vote in November. Obama is already out on the hustings defending his failed presidency, but he has little, if anything, to say about his budget deficits and the national debt. It’s as if the issue does not exist in his political thinking, or he does not think voters will vote on that issue. Obama’s campaign strategists hardly touch the deficit and debt issues, either, and you rarely hear Democratic leaders in Congress calling for action to bring down the deficit. It is an orphan issue for which no one wants to take responsibility. Democrats are focused on more spending, not cutting. In the past three-plus years of this administration, even when Obama’s party controlled both houses of Congress, Democrats have not passed a budget. The Republican House this week unveiled its budget plan to curb spending and shrink the deficit, but it’s already dead on arrival in the Senate, where Democratic leader Harry Reid wants to spare his party the discomfort of voting against GOP spending cuts in an election year. But this isn’t an issue that’s going away. Instinctively, voters connect growing deficits and debt as the enemy of a prosperous economy and rising employment. Economic analysts have arrived at the same conclusion. “Ultimately, what goes up must come down. In the case of the federal budget, this means that a deficit-financed boost to growth will eventually lead to a drag,” financial analysts Jan Hatzius and Alec Phillips concluded in a study published last year. Writing in the American Economic Review at the end of 2009, economists Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff wrote: “Our main finding is that across both advanced countries and emerging markets, high debt/GDP levels (90 percent and above) are associated with notably lower growth outcomes ...” The budget plan Obama sent to Congress last month is filled with preposterous assumptions, such as a near-4 percent economic growth that he says will sharply cut the deficit by 2017, when he hopes he’ll be leaving office after a second term. If you buy that one, says economist Peter Morici, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg “is selling shares in the Brooklyn Bridge.” e Visit Us at http://www.seniorbeacon.info Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 - Page - 7 Invasion? Let’s Try Something Else For A Change by Georgie Anne Geyer WASHINGTON -- Remember, after the 9/11 attacks, when we went into Afghanistan and then detoured to even greater “glory” in the sandy no-man’s land of Iraq? The first foray, into Afghanistan, where the al-Qaida rebels were supposed to be hiding out, started during the fall of 2001, but that apparent win was then halted when American “statesmen” George Bush, Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld looked out at Baghdad and declared, as one voice, “MINE!” We were to be greeted with flowers and kisses and establish relations with both countries that would serve our stead forever. I can hear the critics already saying, “Oh, that old story again. ... Leave me alone!” TUCKER from page 5. were accused of racism because they believe themselves to be fair and unbiased representatives of the criminal justice system. Despite remarkable societal progress, some things haven’t changed very much at all. Perhaps that’s the most depressing thing. (Cynthia Tucker, winner of the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for commentary, is a visiting professor at the University of Georgia. She can be reached at cynthia@cynthiatucker.com.) Mattresses But only this winter and spring have the details of both invasions truly been reported. Not only did the Iraqis and the Afghans not greet us with joy, but we can now see that, quite to the contrary, we are leaving them with hatred in their hearts toward just about everything American. In Iraq, even with the government that we patched together despite unswerving savagery between factions, we are essentially unacceptable. These “kept” Iraqis, now that they have power, refuse to give the U.S. military the necessary “status of forces” agreement that enables American troops established in any foreign country to be tried for crimes only under American jurisdiction. This is so common as to go unnoticed -- except with our “friend,” Iraq. So now the U.S. has essentially left much of its blood and wealth behind in the desert that has always been Babylon, ever since the father of the three great religions, Abraham, walked out of southern Iraq. We also leave behind our appallingly large embassy in Baghdad. It was to have been the symbol of our lasting friendship with Iraq, but now most of it stands empty. Perhaps worse of all, the great oil and mineral wealth of Iraq has been claimed by countries such as China and the United Kingdom. So much for the American left’s fear that we were invading Iraq to get the oil - BARGAIN BARN - we didn’t even have that much common sense! As for Afghanistan, which virtually all analysts agreed we could have “made do” had we not segued to Iraq because of our ego and pomposity, we are virtually being pushed out after the burning of the Qurans and the one crazed American sergeant’s killing of 16 innocent Afghans. Huge mineral discoveries there have gone to other countries, after we discovered them, and polls show that Americans are the most hated people to the Afghans. Now, if we were the Mongols, who simply wanted to wipe out anyone who passed through their minds that day, it would be one thing. But the neocons behind these policies argued that by relieving these two countries of their radicals, we would be making friends in the Middle East. Relationships that would last! An entirely new strategic balance! So, OK, sweep it all under the rug and let historians cry over it a century from now. But, the Israeli-centric neocons and those Americans with imperial ambitions are at it again. Conservative magazines such as Commentary are now pushing for an invasion of Iran, even before the last American troops have left (or been pushed out of ) Afghanistan. Syria is just behind Iran as the next choice for war. Apparently, it is never to end. Ladies and gentlemen, America is at a serious turning point. We Can this possibly be true? Did you know that admission to most elite universities require Asians to score 140 points higher on the SAT exam than whites, 276 points higher than Hispanics and 450 points higher than African-Americans.....? Your Home Town Discount Center Mattresses Open: 9:30am-5:00pm Mon-Sat.; 10:30am-3:00pm Sunday 2245 Fremont Drive - Cañon City, CO 719-269-3596 Queen Mattresses Starting At SOFAS - LOVESEATS - RECLINERS $269 00 Queen Mattresses Starting At $269 Avaliable 2-Sided 00 Mattresses! Avaliable 2-Sided Mattresses! 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Peasants were impressed by soldiers for brutal labor brigades. The three leading generals (known as No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3) slept together at military headquarters, critics said, each with one eye open for the others. Burma, now inexplicably called Myanmar, was one golden horror. Suddenly this winter, the regime opened up. Elections will actually be held again. Foreign investment is invited in. Burmese now can leave the country. What thrills me is that Rangoon, with its magnificent 1930s buildings, is being revamped by international architects. Why this sudden change? Because miserable Burma was surrounded by the “Asian wonders” -- China, India, Indonesia, countries that were at least starting to “work.” The Burmese generals realized they could not keep Burma in this cruel straightjacket. So, we see that setting an example also becomes a forceful power for change, the kind of change America used to exercise all over the world. It’s something to think about. We Strive For Excellence WestwindCampusofCareisrankedamongthehighestforQUALITYCARE andSERVICESinthePueblocommunity(visitwww.medicare.govtolearn more).WemeetawideͲrangeofcareneedsincluding: x x x x ShortͲtermRehabilitationCare(IncludingRespiratoryCare) Independent&AssistedLivingAccommodations ExtendedCareServices Alzheimer’sandDementiaSpecialtyCare 2515PitmanPlace,Pueblo,CO81004 719.564.0550www.westwindcampus.com WeWelcome: Page 8 - Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 s h i new of t e we rd PeopleOf Faith: GPS Navigation users. In a world of advancing technology and declining map-reading skills, some GPS navigator users blindly over-rely on the devices, and News of the Weird has reported enough of their predicaments to mark the category “no longer weird.” However, three Japanese students on holiday near Brisbane, Australia, in March created a new standard for ignoring common sense. Bound for North Stradbroke Island (about eight miles offshore), the driver (according to authorities cited by the local Bayside Bulletin) apparently put maps and eyesight aside, in favor of the all-powerful Navigator, which had instructed him to proceed. As news spread on the Internet, photographers rushed to capture the car, half-buried in sand. (In the students’ defense, the beach seemed to extend to the horizon at low tide -- although the word “island” might have deserved more respect.) [Bayside Bulletin (Cleveland, Australia), 3-15-2012] The Continuing Crisis -- The entire village (almost!) of Sodeto, Spain, shared the grand prize in the country’s huge Christmas lottery in December, earning each of the 70 households the equivalent of at least $130,000. The joint buy-in of tickets is a town ritual, but one resident missed the canvassing: filmmaker Costis Mitsotakis, who said he was happy that everyone else was happy. (The dark side of winning: Hucksters flooded the town from all over the country.) [New York Times, 1-31-2012] -- The town of Betws-yCoed, Wales, holds the distinction of having its name likely butchered by more misspellings on Internet search inquiries than any other. Website managers told BBC News in February that they have compiled a list of 364 different spellings from All New! people ostensibly looking for the town. The most common references were to “Bwtsy Code” and “Betsy Cowed.” [BBC News, 2-16-2012] -- Anthony McDaniel, 47, voluntarily returned to North Carolina from his new home in Texas in February after being charged with embezzlement by his old employer. The owner of Fayetteville’s Skibo Skillet (now out of business) accused McDaniel of having pocketed meatballs, corn on the cob and anchovy dip while he worked there. [Greensboro News-Record, 2-232012] -- Make Yourselves at Home: (1) Keith Davis, 46, was caught red-handed in Ashley Murray’s house in South Bend, Ind., in February and charged with burglary. Murray, though, said she had mixed feelings because, while there, Davis had folded Murray’s clothes and vacuumed the house. (Police said that some drug or other had made Davis believe he was in his own home.) (2) Officials at the county courthouse in Charlotte, N.C., were startled to learn in January that Paul Frizzell, 30, had commandeered a vacant office in the building and for two months had been running his business out of it (with telephone, copy machine and bulletin board, among other trappings). [WNDUTV (South Bend), 2-10-2012] [Gaston Gazette, 1-12-2012] Family Values -- What Christmas gift would be appropriate for the 7-year-old daughter of Britain’s notorious specimen of plastic surgery known as the “Human Barbie”? For little “Poppy” Burge, it was a gift certificate worth the equivalent of about $11,000 for future liposuction (redeemable beginning at age 18). Mom Sarah had already given her a voucher for breast augmentation. (Poppy, developing her early-onset need for attention: “I can’t wait to be like Mummy Senior Menu For our guests 55 & over Breakfast Duo . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4.79 2 Egg, Ham & Cheese Omelette . . .$6.29 Senior Favorite . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4.49 Chopped Steak Dinner . . . . . . . .$7.49 Liver & Onions . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$7.49 1/4 Lb. Country Fried Steak . . . .$7.49 Steak Dinner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$8.49 Half Sandwich & Soup or Salad . .$5.99 Grilled Chicken Breast . . . . . . . .$7.49 Senior Meatloaf Dinner . . . . . . .$7.29 Senior Turkey Dinner . . . . . . . . .$7.29 Senior Pot Roast Dinner . . . . . . .$7.49 Senior Fish Dinner . .Ask for Details $ 727 E. 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[Daily Mail (London), 1-4-2012] -- Sheriff’s detectives told the Everett, Wash., Daily Herald in January that they had recently tracked down a 21-year-old man who confessed to stealing checks from the Money Tree store in Lynnwood, Wash., and forging signatures. According to the detectives, the man was clear about his motive: “I don’t have an addiction. I don’t need to use drugs. I (was) doing this to show my parents that I can make it on my own, without them.” [Daily Herald, 1-25-2012] Wisconsinites, Doing It the Hard Way In October, Robbie Suhr, 48, of Pleasant Prairie, Wis., sought the affections of the young exchange student living with Suhr and his wife and children, but she had so far declined. According to police, a disguised Suhr snatched the woman one night, intending to tie her up, leave, and then return undisguised to “rescue” her. However, she fought back, sending the masked man fleeing. (Suhr got off easier than Jordan Cardella, 20, of Milwaukee did several months earlier. To win back his girlfriend, Cardella convinced a buddy to shoot him, hoping for the girlfriend’s sympathy and a change of heart. Although he requested three shots in the back, he wisely settled for one in the arm. Alas, the girlfriend continued to ignore him.) [WTMJ-TV (Milwaukee), 10-302011] [Journal Sentinel (Milwaukee), 7-26-2011] It’s Everywhere! (1) Two ministers in the Indian state of Karnataka were pressured into resigning in February after allegedly being spotted watching pornography on a cellphone in the state legislature. Minister Laxman Savadi said he was actually doing research on the dangers of “rave” parties. (2) A 54-year-old court clerk at Inner London Crown Court was caught by his judge looking at pornography during the victim’s testimony at a notorious rape trial. He said he was just “bored” and admitted previously browsing porn in court. [BBC News, 2-8-2012] [Daily Mail, 2-7-2012] People With Issues Now in its third season, the TLC cable channel’s series “My Strange Addiction” continues to raise the bar for News of the Weird stories. This season’s highlights include the man sexually attracted to his car, plus women who surround themselves with mothballs or eat cat food or drink nail polish or dig into their ears or eat adhesive tape. In one episode, “Ayanna,” 54, who has not cut her fingernails in three decades, reports that she has recently been cultivating her toenails, which are now 4 inches long and hampering her use of shoes. Another episode this season features Sheyla Hershey, mentioned in News of the Weird four weeks ago after she credited her gigantic breast implants with cushioning her body during a recent car crash. [ABC News, 2-10-2012; Daily Mail (London), 3-6- 2012] Least Competent Criminals One of the largest methamphetamine busts in U.S. history was made in March by police in Palo Alto, Calif., who used the popular Find-My-iPad app. Apparently, someone at the drug house had stolen the iPad, and police turned on the owner’s global-positioning “app,” pointing to an apartment complex in Santa Clara County. Almost 800 pounds of meth was confiscated, with a street value of about $35 million. Said the father of the iPad owner, “They have $35 million, and they can’t go out and buy an iPad?” [Mercury News (San Jose), 3-32012] Recurring Themes News of the Weird reported in 2006 and 2008 on precocious 5-year-old boys who, according to their parents, were certain they wanted to live the rest of their lives as girls (that is, were not just “going SEE “WEIRD” PAGE 9. Visit Us at http://www.seniorbeacon.info s h i new of t e we rd from page 8. through a phase”). In Essex, England, recently, Zach Avery, then 4, made British medical history when the National Health Service diagnosed him with gender identity disorder and endorsed his desire to live as a girl. Zach was so unhappy as a boy that he once tried to dismember himself. [Daily Telegraph (London), 2-20-2012] The Classic Middle Name (allnew!) Arrested recently and awaiting trial for murder: Justin Wayne Green, 30, Clay County, Texas (March). Kenneth Wayne Thompson, 28, Doniphan, Mo. (March) (arrested in Arizona). Gerald Wayne Little, 60, Princeton, W.Va. (March). Michael Wayne Lindsay, 48, Baileyton, Ala. (March). Keith Wayne Johnson, 19, Buna, Texas (February). Ryan Wayne Koebel, 17, Holts Summit, Mo. (January). Derrick Wayne Hunt Jr., 18, San Antonio (October). Ronald Wayne MacDonald, 50, Reno, Nev. (September) (charged in a 33- year-old cold case). Jeremy Wayne Manieri, 31, Baton Rouge, La. (July) (arrested in Florida). Christopher Wayne Dixon, 25, Sanford, N.C. (August). Indicted for murder: Mark Wayne Thibodeaux, 52, Lake Charles, La. (March). Re-sentenced for murder: Carl Wayne Buntion, Houston (March) (once again sentenced to death). Murder conviction overturned on appeal: Michael Wayne Hash, Richmond, Va. (February). Green: [Times Record News (Wichita Falls, Tex.), 3-20-2012] Thompson: [Associated Press via St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 3-17-2012] Little: [Bluefield Daily Telegraph (Bluefield, W.Va.), 3-21-2012] Lindsay: [The Arab Tribune (Arab, Ala.), 3-22-2012] Johnson: [Beaumont Enterprise, 3-20-2012] Koebel: [Associated Press via Columbia Tribune, 1-22-2012] Hunt: [San Antonio Express-News, 10-16-2011] MacDonald: [Sky Valley Chronicle (Monroe, Wash.), 9-24-2011] Manieri: [New York Daily News, 7-13-2011] Dixon: [Fayetteville Observer, 87-2011] Thibodeaux: [KPLC-TV (Lake Charles, La.), 3-22-2012] Buntion: [KHOU-TV (Houston), 36-2012] Hash: [Associated Press via Washington Post, 2-29-2012] Can’t Possibly Be True -- Louis Helmburg III filed a lawsuit in Huntington, W.Va., in February against the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity and its member Travis Hughes for injuries Helmburg suffered in May 2011 when he fell off a deck at the fraternity house. He had been startled and fallen backward off the rail-less deck after Hughes attempted to fire a bottle rocket “out of his anus” -- and the rocket, instead, exploded in place. (The lawsuit does not refer to Hughes’ injuries.) -- U.S. Immigration agents in a $160,000 Chevy Suburban that had been custom-designed and -armored specifically to protect agents from roadside kidnappings became sitting ducks last year when kidnappers forced the vehicle off the road near San Luis Potosi, Mexico, and got the door open briefly, enabling them to fire 100 rounds and kill one of the two agents inside. According to a Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 - Page - 9 COMPILED BY CHUCK SHEPHERD FOR SENIOR BEACON February Washington Post report, the Department of Homeland Security had failed to modify the vehicle’s factory setting that popped open the door locks automatically whenever the driver shifts into “Park.” -- When Rose Marks and her extended family of RomanianGypsy “psychics” were indicted last year for a 20-year-run of duping South Floridians out of as much as $40 million, victims of the clan were elated that justice might be at hand. (A typical scam, according to prosecutors, was to take a client’s cash, “to pray over it,” promising its return but somehow figuring out how to keep it.) However, in December, the Markses’ attorneys reported that “several” of the so-called victims had begun to work with them to help clear the family, including one who reportedly paid Rose over time $150,000. According to the lawyers, these “victims” call the Markses “friends,” “life coaches” and “confidants,” rather than swindlers. Unclear on the Concept -- Jason Bacon, 41, was arrested in Eureka, Calif., in March after responding to a classified ad for a used motorcycle by offering to trade about $8,000 worth of his home-grown marijuana for it. According to an officer on the scene, Bacon told a deputy, “I know you can’t sell it, but I thought it was OK to trade it.” -- Kathleen Mathews was outraged that the local community could turn on her 26-year-old son, Jesse, who had been charged with capital murder for killing a Chattanooga, Tenn., police officer. She told the judge in a letter that Jesse is a “good man,” and lamented, “You do one little thing that pisses people off, and they want to hold it against you forever.” [Chattanooga Times Free Press, 2-12-2012] Our Dynamic Democracy -- Oklahoma state Sen. Ralph Shortey, a staunch abortion opponent, introduced a bill in January to ban the use of human fetuses in processed food. Although the principal anti-abortion advocacy official in the state said he had never heard of such a practice, Sen. Shortey asserted that it was a problem and that he had been reading up on it on the Internet. -- Kyle Bower, 19, was elected in November to a seat on the Alburtis (Pa.) Borough Council. Before being sworn in, however, he was sentenced to probation for stalking HOURS WEEKDAYS 8:00-5:30 SAT. 8:00-3:00 • ALL TYPES OF MIXED GRAINS • PET FOODS & HEALTH PRODUCTS • SCIENCE DIET • PRO PLAN 719-275-7557 3275 E. Hwy 50 - Cañon City, CO 81212 (Across from McKenzie) an ex-girlfriend and tossing a brick through her window. Now that he is seated, he still must answer to 2010 charges in Kutztown, Pa., of resisting arrest for public drunkenness. In both incidents, he also displayed an uncanny ability to slip out of handcuffs and wander away from arresting officers. Least Competent Criminals Law enforcement officers turn to Facebook nowadays to help solve crimes, knowing that some perpetrators cannot resist bragging about or even showing off things they’ve recently stolen. For example, Steven Mulhall, 21, will be easily prosecuted for stealing the nameplate off the door of Broward County (Fla.) judge Michael Orlando -- since he posted in March a photograph of himself holding it following a courtroom visit. (In other Facebook news, in Tacoma, Wash., in March, corrections officer Alan O’Neill, 41, was charged with bigamy after his long-estranged first wife found out about the second one when Facebook suggested the two be “friends.”) Recurring Themes In February, a 41-year-old man in a pond in Gosport, England, apparently suffered an epileptic seizure while feeding swans in water about three feet deep. Firefighters were called, but the first one to arrive remained on shore, explaining that he had been trained only for “ankle deep” water and would have to await a colleague trained in “chest high” water. In July 2011, a man committed suicide in San Francisco Bay by wading into neck-deep water and remaining until he died of hypothermia. Firefighters from the city of Alameda watched from the shore because they lacked water-rescue “training.” (In neither situation was it proved that the victim would have survived if rescued sooner.) Armed and Clumsy (all new!) Men (almost never a woman) Who Accidentally Shot Themselves Recently: Lee Miars, 30, Myrtle Creek, Ore., while pointing a gun at his head to illustrate a story for friends (January). A 22-yearold Navy SEAL, San Diego, Calif., while pointing a gun at his head to convince friends it was unloaded (January). Riki Ingram, 18, Baker, La., shot his leg while “holstering” his gun to his pocket following a robbery (December). Ethan Bennett, 36, Monroe, Wash., aiming at a squirrel running up his leg, shot his foot (November). Special Deputy Ted Maze, Bedford, Ind., shot his hand while reloading at a training session (June). Kenneth Fortson, 21, Atlanta, was killed in a police chase following a home invasion (by, apparently, holding a gun as his pickup truck hit a tree and jarred his trigger finger) (October). Larry Godwin, 68, Redfield, Iowa, shot himself twice firing at a raccoon in a live trap (February). Page 10 - Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 Visit Us at http://www.seniorbeacon.info Begin Spring Cleaning By Reducing Toxic Stress by Charlene Causey In the day and age we live in stress is unavoidable. It seems that lately worry, anxiety, and overall pressure is mounting. Some would call it the birthing pains of things to come, and others are hopeful that eventually everything will “turn out alright”. Either way you look at it, everyone deals with a tremendous load of stress and it is important to find healthy ways to detoxify this particular health risk. Reducing toxic stress regularly will bring proper focus to what really matters in life. Ever since 911 there has been a heightened awareness that things will never be the same, and ever since then it seems that life is more and HUD Section 8 Independent Apartment Living Three Links 1300 N. 15th St. Cañon City, CO 81212 719-269-9134 • Smoke Free Building for Seniors 62 & over and qualifying disabled • Bright Spacious Apartments • Conference Room & Patio 1st Floor • Coin Operated Laundry 3rd Floor • Close to Hospital, Doctor Offices and Fire Department Independent Order of Odd Fellows And Rebekahs of Colorado TTY Relay Colorado 711 more insane. People who are not firmly grounded in a belief system tend to vacillate between apathy and hopelessness. Others choose to bury their heads in a plethora of multi-media escapism and just accept the “inevitable”. Some, however, desire to be proactive and not only find solutions to the stress in their lives, but be part of a community who seeks to lessen the stress for others. Stress raises the cortisol levels in the blood which is a powerful “fight or flight” hormone. Designed to help when true emergencies occur, cortisol has its place, but with chronic ongoing stress the cortisol levels remain high and can cause various stress-related disorders. Some of those issues include heart disease, cancer, diabetes, digestive troubles, mental disorders and the dreaded accumulation of belly fat. These all tend to create a vicious cycle, which like a carousel in Please Support Our Advertisers. Shop At Their Businesses Or Give Them A Call And Tell Them Thanks For Making Senior Beacon Happen! SRDA MONTHLY MENU APRIL 2: Sloppy Joe/Bun, Sicilian Mixed Veggies, Spinach, Diced Peaches, Potato Leek Soup. april 3: Chicken Fajita, Flour Tortilla, Black Beans, Jello, Garden Vegetable Soup. april 4: Pork Fried Rice, Oriental Veggies, Lima Beans/Carrots, Yogurt, Beef Barley Soup. april 5: Chicken Suyiaki, Carrots Broccoli, Chocolate Ice Cream, Navy Bean Soup. april 6: Pasta Primavera, Spinach, Stewed Tomatoes, Orange Cream of Broccoli Soup. april 9: Beans/Ham, Confetti Rice, Peas/Mushrooms, Fresh Orange, Seafood Gumbo. april 10: Chicken Cacciatore, Orzo Pasta, Spinach, Bananas/ Oranges, Black Bean Soup. april 11: Beef Soft Taco, Mixed Vegetables, Calabacita,Pineapple Tid Bits, Tomato Florentine Soup. april 12: Fish/Pueblo Salsa, Oven Roasted Potatoes, Italian Mixed Veggies, Apricots, Minestrone Soup. april 13: Roast Beef/Au Jus, Parslied Potatoes, Sugar Snap Peas, motion, can be very difficult to stop and get off. Since everyone has different stressors and various ways of dealing with them, there are some general guidelines that will apply to most individuals. Careful introspection is a good place to begin to determine from where the most amount of stress is coming. Once the major areas of stress are identified, then a plan can be formulated to reduce, as much as possible, the causes of that stress. Deep breathing exercises play an important role in slowing the heartbeat, lowering the blood pressure and just relaxing the nerves so that one can think more clearly and gain some perspective about the situation. Taking a break from news, media, and technology in general is recommended for those inundated with those facets of life. Sitting at a computer for long hours causes stress on the back, shoulders, and the eyes. Partaking in a “news fast” as Dr. Weil likes to call it, can be refreshing, freeing up some extra time to do something else more enjoyable. Choosing only one source to receive news from is a good idea, since you avoid being bombarded by repeated negativity. Regular exercise is a great stress reducer as is getting adequate sleep. Having a bedtime routine such as no eating for two hours before bedtime, dimming the lights, drinking some warm tea, and not looking at computers, T.V. or smart phones within an hour of going to bed may promote more restful sleep. Wise eating goes a long way to keeping blood sugar and hormone levels stable. A proper balance between protein, carbohydrates and fats, adequate water and eating at least every four to five hours will ensure that stability. Other suggestions for stress reduction include listening to enjoyable music, having a pet, particularly a cat, journaling, praying and meditating, or joining a group that has a focus of interest in which your participation gives you much pleasure. For some, gardening or just being outdoors brings renewal. Others like cooking and homemaking or spending lots of time with loved ones. Finding something that helps you is the key. For a free stress index test, email me, and I will send it to you so that you can begin ridding yourself of toxic stress. Charlene Causey is a former registered nurse, who has also been a model, nutrition and fitness instructor, and educational consultant. She is currently a Certified Natural Health Professional, a certified personal trainer, and lifestyle developer, whose main focus is a natural approach to health and wellness. She can be reached at (719) 250-0683 or IOHealth@live.com Call SRDA at 545-8900 for congregate meal site and Meals-On-Wheels Info! Mixed Veggies, Orange Chicke, Barley Soup. april 19: Texas BBQ Sandwich, Carrots, Breen Beans, Bananas & Oranges, Veggies, Florentine Soup. april 20: Breaded Fish w/ Lemon, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Mixed Veggies, Cream of Spinach Soup. april 23: Chili Mac, Mexican Corn, Winder Mixed Veggies, Diced Peaches, Navy Bean Soup. april 24: Spaghetti/Meat Sauce, Italian Mixed Veggies, Yellow Squash, Orange Chicken, Noodle Soup. april 25: Pork Green Chili, Garlic Mashed Potatoes, Green Beans, Apple, Tomato Rice Soup. april 26: Lemon Chicken, Mushroom Barley Salad, Mixed Veggies, Banana, Navy Bean Soup. april 27: Tuna Noodle Casserole, Winder Mixed Veggies, Brussel Sprouts, Apricots, Garden Veggie Soup. Diced Peaches, Seafood Gumbo. april 17: Chili Relleno Casserole, april 30: Beef Pot Roast, Baked april 16: Roast Turkey/Gravy, Broccol, Black Eyed Peas, Fruit Sweet Potato, Peas/Carrots, Diced Green Beans, Acorn Squash, Cocktail, Green Chili Soup. Peaches, Minestrone Soup. Strawberry Applesauce, Apricots, april 18: Smothered Pork Chop, 1% MILK With ALL Meals! Split Pea Soup. Peas & Carrots, Scandinavian The Menu This Month Has Been Sponsored By Legacy Bank-Pueblo &Pueblo West. Why Not Stop By Or Give Them A Call And Thank Them? Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 - Page - 11 Senior Community Update Taxpayer Information for 2011 Tax Season The AARP Free tax preparation will begin on February 1, 2012 at 230 N. Union, Joseph Edward Senior Center, (SRDA). There are some very important changes that need to be addressed before taxpayers come to have their returns completed. Every person that is to be listed on a return must have a physical Social Security Card or a letter from the Social Security office giving the complete Social Security number of the individual. Financial institutions and employers are now only required to print the last four numbers of a social security number on any forms sent to taxpayers. A document (card or letter) from the Social Security Office is needed to verify the complete number for an individual. If you do not have, either a card or letter, the taxpayer needs to visit the local Social Security Office to obtain a card or letter. Tax Preparation Volunteers needed The Pueblo VITA Coalition (Volunteer Income Tax Assistance) is looking for volunteers to become IRScertified tax preparers for the upcoming tax season. Training will be on January 7, 2012 in Pueblo and is free of charge. This year the VITA program is funded through Pueblo County United Way. This will be the fifth year this service will be available in Pueblo. Last year we served 800 families and individuals in Pueblo bringing $900K back into the community through refunds which include many tax credits and eliminates the cost of a private tax preparer. Call 296-8768 in Pueblo for more information. TAX PREP SCHEDULE Thank you for all your help in getting the word out about free tax prep for people in the community. Charlene Gardner if you need more information please call me: 719-564-9452 or 719242-8510 or e-mail: cfdg34@msn.com Begin Feb. 1, end April 13, 2012 (Closed Feb. 20) Joseph Edward Senior Center (SRDA), 230 N. Union Avenue Pueblo, CO 81003 Monday - Thursday 9:30 AM to 2:30 PM Friday 9:30 AM to 12 Noon Sign up on Second Floor First come - First served Feb. 4 and 11, end April 7: 10 AM to 3 PM Westminster Presbyterian Church 10 University Circle Pueblo, CO 81005 Feb. 16, Mar. 27 and Apr. 5 Walsenburg Senior Center 928 Russell Street Must call for appointment: 719-7382205. Take your place in History! Become a Volunteer at El Pueblo History Museum Experience unique opportunities while working with museum professionals or interacting with visitors. You will also explore Colorado’s history in a completely new way. History Colorado/ El Pueblo History Museum is currently seeking volunteers for the front desk/gift shop. Volunteers that serve at least 100 hours in a calendar year receive membership to History Colorado, which includes free admission to all State museums and a discount in the gift shops, as well as many other exciting opportunities. For more information, please call Kathleen Byers at 719/583-0453 x102. Thank you for your support. GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY “The Southeastern Colorado Genealogy Society holds regular meetings on the second Saturday of the month beginning at 2:00pm in the Meeting Room “B,” Robert Hoag Rawlings Library, 100 Abriendo Ave., Pueblo. There is a continuing Refresher/Beginners class starting at 1:00PM. Call 250-5782 for details.” Guests welcome and there is no charge. SOCO SENIOR CLUB Southern Colorado Social Club will host a Rootin-Tootin Western dance and dinner. April 14, at the D .A. V. 2850 O’ Neal . Dinner 6:00, dance 7:00-11:00 with music by Sierra Gold. Tickets are $15.00 for club members and $17.00 non-members. For tickets call 948-3986. STROKE SURVIVORS SUPPORT GROUP The Stroke Survivors Support Group has two chapters. The Pueblo West Chapter meets at 2:00 pm the first Thursday of every month at the Pueblo West Library. The Pueblo Chapter meets at 2:00 pm the second Tuesday of each Quality care, Compassionate Touch W hether you need short-term rehabilitation or long-term residential care, Pueblo Care and Rehabilitation Center’s interdisciplinary team offers the specialized healthcare services you deserve in a homelike environment. Contact us today for more information. (719) 564-1735 2611 Jones Ave. • Pueblo, CO www.sunbridgehealthcare.com month at the Joseph Edwards Senior Center in Pueblo On Union Ave. Call Chuck at 583-8498 for all the information. LOU GEHRIG’S DISEASE SUPPORT GROUP Support group for Lou Gehrig’s Disease (ALS). Second Thursday each month, 6-7 PM. Thatcher Bldg. 503 N. Main, Suite 103, Pueblo, CO . Call Peggie at 719-584-3068 for all the info. OWLS MEETING The OWLS (older-wiser-livelier-seniors) invites new members for their social group that has activities including dining out, bowling, movies, picnics and others. For more information please call Joe or Marie @ 545-2803 RIDE TO CHURCH? Looking for a ride to church? Call Wesley United Methodist Church at 561-8746 and we can make arrangements to transport you to worship and fellowship.” SRDA CALENDAR SRDA at 545-8900 has activitites for seniors every weekday of the month. From quilting to bridge and from computer classes to movies with popcorn and exercise classes, SRDA tries have offer something for everyone in terms of activities throughout the month. LIVING WITH OSTEOARTHRITIS? Osteoarthritis does not only strike the knees, hips and hands. In an estimated one million Americans, it also affects the small, vulnerable joints of the neck, and can cause sudden attacks of severe pain that may radiate into the head and arms. How can they ease the pain, deal with the limitations it causes, and support their doctor’s treatment? With the help of some of the world’s leading spine specialists, the American Arthritis Society has compiled twelve practical tips for self-care that are effective and easy to follow. Please visit the Society’s website at: www.americanarthritis.org. AARP Schedule of Activities Pueblo Information Center AARP PHONE: (719) 543-8876, 1117 Prairie Avenue. HOURS: Mon-Sat 103pm Pueblo, Colorado 81005 Safe Driving Classes, Benefits Check-up, exercising, Tai-Chi, eating right, Census Bureau testing, Model T care group, Convergys recruiting, classic cars, Food Share America, Better Breathers, preparing taxes, quilters group, medicare and financial planning assistance and more available this month. TOASTMASTERS What: Pueblo Toastmasters #179 Public Speaking Class Pueblo Senior Safety Triad Safety for seniors is our goal. • Information & Referral • Senior Resource Directory • Senior Safety Kits • Senior Advocates • Provides Educational Programs • Assists Senior Victims & Seniors At Risk • Promotes Safety To Reduce Fear Of Crime Senior Helpline 583-6611 Where: 310 East Abriendo Ave. Next to the Dept. of Revenue/Driver’s License Office (in the Conference Room on the 2nd floor of the Security Service Federal Credit Union’s building) When: 2nd & 4th Mon., of every month, 6:15 - 7:15PM Contact: Robert W. Johnson, 719-251-8841 Alzheimer’s Support The second Tuesday of each month at 7 pm at the Ecumenical Church located at 434 S. Conquistador Room C an Alzheimer’s Caregiver Support Group will meet Call 544-5720. Tom Reyes, Facilitator. COMMUNITY BLOOD DRIVES Please call Julie Scott at (800) 365-0006, press 0. ext. 2873 julie_scott@ bonfils.org for Pueblo and Pueblo West Community Blood Drivesfor info. job seekers Southern Colorado Job Seekers meets the third Tuesday of each month. Contact Bill Smith, 719-583-1837, Patrick Hurley 719-561-1134 or email them at SCJSNETWORK@hotmail.com HOW DO YOU FEEL? Come and join us for C.H.A.N.G.E. Canceling Habits Affirming New Goals Easily at 1:00 P.M. on the 3rd Saturday every month at the Rawlings Library 100 E. Abriendo Ave. Pueblo, Colorado. For more information please contact: Ramona Lombard (719) 5832732 ramonalombard@me.com Ramona Lombard.com Pueblo and Pueblo West Senio/Retirees We would love to have you join us for our Thursday Feb. 9th St Valantine’s Day monthly potluck luncheon, 11:45 to 1:45, at the PW Memorial Recreational Center. Plan your covered dish or dessert to share. For information and directions call 647-8969 or 404-4413. ADULT SURVIVORS OF CHILDHOOD SEXUAL ABUSE WINGS provides therapist facilitated support groups for men and women in which survivors are believed, accepted and no longer alone. There is a women’s group on Tuesday and Thursday evenings. For more information contact the WINGS office at 1-800-373-8671.Visit our website at www.wingsfound.org. THE BREAKFAST CLUB (For Senior Singles) Please come out and enjoy breakfast with with our senior singles (55 plus) group at the Golden Corral here in Pueblo on the 3rd Saturday of each month at 8:30 am. We are a new chapter of “The Breakfast Club” for senior singles which has over 500 members (and growing) in four chapters from Pueblo to Denver. A member of one chapter enjoys the benefits of all chapters. For more information call: 719-242-8762. Hildebrand Care Center Where Quality of Life Always Comes First 1401 Phay Avenue - Cañon City, CO 719-275-8656 OFFERING SINGLE OCCUPANCY ROOMS TO ALL PAY SOURCES. NO ANCILLARY CHARGES • Skilled nursing care • PT, OT and Speech Therapy • Music Therapist • Respite Care - Hospice Care • Special needs unit for Alzheimer’s Disease & Related Disorders • Ice cream parlor-Country store-Library • Chapel-Rec Room-Beauty/Barber Shop Owned and operated by the Independent Order of Odd Fellows & Rebakahs of CO. Page 12 - Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 15th Visit Us at http://www.seniorbeacon.info Friday April, 27 2010 Be There!!! Friday,May April8,27, 2012 --Be There !! Friday 2009 - Be There!!! McCabe Honored As Senior Of The Year 2009 Old “Blue Eyes” Headlines Senior LifeFor Festival My name is Derek Evilsizor I’m a Colorado native, I’ve been a bag boy, a bus boy, a shag boy, a car washer, a MARINE, an emissions control systems specialist, an electricians apprentice, pizza delivery boy, a car salesman, an advertising salesman, a copy-machine repairman, then I started a karaoke business and shortly after I began singing Frank Sinatra to a small crowd at a restaurant-- I’ve been singing for a living ever since. That was ten + years ago. I perform all over the world! From Denver, Keystone and Steam- boat Colorado to Boston, Dallas, Houston, San Francisco, San Diego, Desert Highlands, Sacramento, Palm beach, Kentucky, Kansas, Hawaii, Mexico and even Walla Walla. I’ve been lucky enough to donate some of my time to organizations such as; The battered women’s shelter, Special Olympics, the Griffith center for children, Ovarian Cancer, Children’s Hospital, The good samaritan foundation, Cancer league, and many anonymous events for Seniors, Senior Centers and nursing and Alzheimer’s care centers. Booth Participants For 2012 LifeFest Here is the list of booths for this year’s Life Festival of 2012. Life Care Center, University Park Care Center. Physician’s Choice Medical, Pueblo Transit, Pueblo Chemical Depot, Home Instead, Lincare, Senior Blue Book, United Health Care, AARP, Southern Colorado Better Business Bureau, Argus Home Care, Rocky Mountain Health Plans, Senior Beacon, Sangre De Cristo Hospice, Humana INC, SRDA/ARCH/211, Saunders Implant and Denture Care, Modern Woodmen, Total Longterm Care, Pueblo Athletic Club, State Nursing Home in Florence, Minnequa Medicenter, Legacy Commons, Colorado State Nursing Home Walsenburg, Critical Nurse Staffing, Fesmire Heating and Air Conditioning, Book One/Book Two, Tupperware by Connie, Pueblo Area Agency on Aging, Thirty-One Gifts, Scentsy, MaryKay, Xocai Healthy Chocolate, Home Source Partners, InnovAge Home Care (formerly Seniors Inc.). Parking for the Senior Life Festival is at all parking lots at the Sangre De Cristo Arts and Conference Center and also parking between 3rd and 4th streets on Santa Fe. There is also parking on the street if needed. Kathilee Champlin, Director Boy talk about tooting my own horn huh? Anyhoo... I hope this helps you get to know me a little better. Pretty much all ya need to know is that I’m a Son and a Brother, A Friend and A Father, a Christian and a Sinner, a Husband. At times a genius and an idiot, I’m also a Singer. These things define my past and give you a preview of my future. I am a Dreamer...and I’m willing to share. I’m blessed to be able to do what I love for a living. Dream and Sing, live out dreams in the present, and dream of good times yet to come. God is a great people maker and has made each of us very different. I am thankful that He has given me the opportunity to share with others how different I am. I am equally thankful that I have the opportunity to help others have a great time and share that different side of themselves too. Soooo, All together now, let’s all be as different as we like. Since God has allowed me the opportunity to show you what a great Odds And Ends people maker he is, I’ve been able to extend and receive more “thank you’s” than anyone I know. Thank you for giving me another opportunity to shine! Cleo C. Corsi-Zarr, Community Outreach Specialist, InnovAge Life on Your Terms, 553-0400 Cleo began her career in senior care at S.R.D.A. the Senior Resource Development Agency of Pueblo. While there she began the work with SRDA’s Board of Directors, Senator Abel Tapia, County Commissioners, City Council and Catholic Charities to bring a new non-profit into Pueblo County. Two years later Total Longterm Care (now known as InnovAge) opened its doors to care for our Communities seniors in a completely Innovative Caring way. Cleo will speak about this progressive Federal and State Funded P.A.C.E. Program a Non-Profit Medical Center located at 401 W. Northern Ave, Pueblo. (P.A.C.E., Providing all inclusive Care for the Elderly) Now Accepting New Patients 121 S. 5th St. Cañon City, CO 81212 (719) 275-1101 TO: John Dagnillo 1/17/08 John: Here's the revised ad.... for future ads 807 W. 4th St. Pueblo, CO 81003 (719) 543-2634 From: Jim Grasso 719-406-4539 Jim Grasso - Senior Beacon/ ARGUS ALERT • Complete care - from simple med-minders to full-emergency response • Trained operators standing by 24-hours/day talk to a real person whenever you need help • Daily wellness check-in available for peace of mind Call Today To Get All The Information. CallUs John Dagnillo for more information. 719-543-2634 In Pueblo: 807 W. 4th St. In Cañon City: 121 S. 5th St. From the local team you already know and trust Argus Home Care & Argus Home Health! • Argus Alert • Skilled Nursing • Rehabilitation Services • Personal Care Providers • Homemakers Companions Our company is licensed and insured for the protection of our clients. Visa-Master Care-Discover Air Conditioner Installation and Replacement Furnace Installation and Replacement Duct Work - Custom Sheet Metal Fabrication http:// www. allied air.ne t/irj/g o/km/ docs /lii_ww hc_ald /Static% 20HT ML/Ar mstro Yearly Inspections - Annual Service Agreement Available Service and repairs on all brands Phone: 719-240-5109 Fax: 719-947-4913 www.fesmireheatingandair.com info@fesmireheatingandair.com ngAir _Ad v... 2/9/20 12 Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info 15th Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 - Page - 13 Friday April, 27 2010 Be There!!! Friday,May April8,27, 2012 --Be There !! Friday 2009 - Be There!!! Edward Rizer: LifeFest 2012 Of For The2009 Year McCabeAHonored As Senior OfSenior The Year Edward A. Rizer On March 12, the Senior Citizen of the Year Selection Committee met at the Pueblo County Department of Housing and Human Services Building to evaluate eight nominations for the 2012 Senior Citizen of the Year Award Ceremony to be held as part of the Senior Life Festival at the Sangre de Cristo Arts and Conference Center on April 27, 2012. All the nominees have donated wonderful voluntary contributions to the Pueblo Community in a variety of ways. After careful consideration We’re by your side so your parents can stay at home. Whether you are looking for someone to help an aging parent a few hours a week or need more comprehensive assistance, Home Instead can help. Serving Pueblo and Fremont Counties. Call for a free, no-obligation appointment: Private pay/longterm Care insurance and Medicaid Accepted. 719-545-0293oror866-945-0293 877-945-0293 719-545-0293 www.hisc530.digbro.com Each Home Instead Senior Care ® franchise office is independently owned and operated. © 2009 Home Instead, Inc. InnovAge Home Care formerly (ELPINGPEOPLEMAXIMIZETHEIR Caring and affordable PERSONALINDEPENDENCE Compassion,Trust & Integrity assistance to help seniors Assisting in your home with personal care, and others maintain meal preparation, companionship and light house keeping. Call for your free home assessment. independence at home. Contributions e” for “Gift of Tim Scholarship Welcomed • Personal Care • Light housekeeping • Meal preparation (IGHWAY%&s#A×ON#ITY#OLORADO • Transportation and Errands 269-1524 • Specialized Alzheimer’s care • Recovery after hospitalization or medical procedures • ... and more New Location In Pueblo 401 W. Northern Ave. - Pueblo, CO 81004 719-553-0478 Beth Teem, Program Mgr Helping people maximize their personal independence and discussion of each Candidate’s generous contributions, the Selection Committee chose Edward A. Rizer as Senior Citizen of the Year for his volunteer services over more than a quarter of a century developing various delivery “routes”, packing meals for delivery, fitting in emergency addons and personally delivering meals on several Mesa routes for the Home Delivered Meals Program, with state and federal funding by the Pueblo Area Agency on Aging (PAAA) under a contract with Senior Resources Development Agency (SRDA), as well as, local funding raised through bequests, consumer contributions and persistent fundraising activities. Edward A. Rizer was born in Pueblo to Edward F. and Bess Rizer on December 13, 1920. Ed was married to Berna Else in 1942. Together they were blessed with two sons, George and James and a daughter Effie Fern. He became a US Postal Carrier in 1943 at $.65 an hour, retiring in 1974. From 1974 to 1994, Ed was the owner/operator of a Saint Charles Mesa Hardware store, and another store on Sunset Drive from 1980 to 1990. In 1986, Ed was approached by Darlene Shiflet, the SRDA Meals Supervisor at the time, and asked him to assist with planning the delivery “routes” because of his tremendous knowledge of Pueblo locations and street patterns. “Meals on Wheels”, as this vital program is known, has served 250-300 meals each weekday, with a smaller number on weekends and Holidays. Since that time, Ed has been an irreplaceable key player and Edward A. Rizer, was named the 2012 Senior Citizen of the Year by the Pueblo Area Agency on Aging in conjunction with Senior Resurces Development Agency, and will be feted at the 15th Annual Seniors Life Festival on Friday April 27 at the Sangre De Cristo Arts Center in Pueblo. the backbone of the Meals on Wheels program. Ed has shown tireless dedication to mapping out routes in the most efficient way, with a strong concern for the safety of the volunteer drivers, constantly reworking the routes because of the changing needs of the Home Delivered Meals program. Ed thoughtfully packs lunches in order of delivery. Ed began delivering meals seven days, then five days, then three days a week. Edward A. Rizer truly exemplifies all the wonderful attributes of Pueblo Senior Citizen of the Year 2012. This year’s Older Americans Month theme is “Never Too Old to Play!” Page 14 - Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 Visit Us At http://www.seniorbeacon.info 15th Friday, April 27, 2012 - Be There !! Two Will Receive Community Service Awards Ed. Note: Every year Kathilee Cham- 30 years. I thank the Lord for givplin, the Director of the Life Festi- ing me this opportunity and being blessed with a wonderval for the past 15 years, ful wife and three chilfetes two people as Senior dren who have helped Community leaders. This me throughout as well year C.C. Wood and your as Jan McLaughlin Editor and Chief, Cook and Randy Gottula. and Bottle Washer, James I enjoyed the bowling Grasso, were chosen. As for and golf tournaments my part in being a recipiwe’ve put together as ent I have done what I’ve well as this wonderful loved every month since Life Festival. August 1982 in publishOh yeah and if you ing Senior Beacon. I am think I look bad in the blessed with a great fampicture on this page, ily and I’ve done my very best to inform and entertain the wait until you see me in person Cecilia Wood, affectionately Senior Community over these past MORE LIFEFEST 2012 INFORMATION ON PAGE 30. APRIL 27, 2012 known as C.C., is a retired City of Pueblo Government employee who retired in 2003 after 30 years of service in the public sector. In addition to her responsibilities as Payroll Administrator for the City’s Police, Fire, and General Service, C.C. volunteered her time serving as the Treasurer and Vice President for the City’s Union. C.C., also, served on the negotiating committee for the General Service City Employees. C.C. became actively involved in the Miss America-Colorado Pageant System in the late 1990s as her daughter, Heather Wood, became interested in pageantry. From 1998 thru 2003, C.C. held the franchise for the Miss America Organization and was a Certified Miss America Judge. She also was the director of the Pueblo Jr. Teen/Miss Teen Pageant. C.C. has also donated her services to the Pueblo Youth Hockey Association, from 2000 -2008, and served in the capacity as Tournament Director and Treasurer. CC also served on the Board of the Pueblo Youth Project and CHASE Middle School Program. She is very active in the community and has been involved in Relay for Life, Senior Life Festival, FBLA Judging, and Empty Bowls. CC has been a DECA judge for the area high school competitions and currently serves as the DECA Judges Chair, responsible for recruiting volunteer judges for both the regional and state levels of DECA competition. C.C. is a member of the Southern Colorado Heritage Center and Pueblo Performing Arts Guild. CC is currently the Director of the Miss Pueblo County Scholarship pageant. CC’s passion is working with the girls of her pageant where she strives to teach them selfconfidence. She also teaches the girls to give back to the community by volunteering time and effort to make Pueblo a better place to live. CC has been married to her loving husband, Daryl, for 29 years. They have three children, Aaron, Heather, and Jeremy, and have three grandchildren. In her “spare time”, CC enjoys boating at Pueblo Reservoir, camping, hunting, and fishing. Pueblo County Commissioners Will Be At LifeFest 2012 Ed. Note: Each year the County Commissioners donate coffee and ice tea free of charge for all the seniors at the Life Festival. Here is some info on about the County Commissioners. John B. Cordova Sr. Mr. Cordova Sr. moved to Pueblo from the State of New Mexico in 1952 when his father was hired by CF&I. He was raised in Eastwood Heights, attended schools in the Pueblo City School District, and went on to graduate from the University of Southern Colorado (CSU-Pueblo) with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Civil Engineering Technology. A Vietnam Era Veteran in WKH$LU )RUFH KLV ¿UVW MRE ZDV DW the CF&I as a switchman for C&W Railroad. He became a general contractor, an occupation he still holds. Commissioner Cordova was elected in September 2007; and was re-elected in November 2008 to a four-year term. He is Commissioner Chairman Pro Tem and belongs to numerous boards and organizations. He is president of AFSCME, Colorado Public Employee Retiree Chapter 76, and president of board for Colorado Bluesky Enterprises. He also serves on at least 11 more boards.: Commissioner Cordova, has 2 sons, 1 daughter, 7 grandchildren and 2 great-granddaughters.. Anthony Nuñez Pueblo County Commissioner Anthony Nuñez entered into his second 4-year term LQ RI¿FH RQ -DQXDU\ 13, 2009. Commissioner Nuñez brings many years of experience as a very dedicated Democrat who was actively involved with the political process ORQJEHIRUHEHLQJHOHFWHGLQWRRI¿FH himself. Anthony is also a very successful entrepreneur, owning several businesses in the community. Commissioner Nuñez is a native Puebloan who understands the struggles of the blue collar worker. He possesses excellent public relations and human resource skills and is a dynamic leader who has won WKH FRQ¿GHQFH RI &RXQW\ HPSOR\HHV E\ PDLQWDLQLQJ KLV ³RSHQ GRRU policy”. Anthony and his wife Clara have four grown children and four grandchildren. Colonel Jeff Chostner A native of Pueblo, Colorado, Chostner graduated from East High School in 1969. He was inducted into the East High School Hall of Fame in March 2001. Colonel Chostner graduated SEE SEE “COMMISH” “COMMISH” PAGE PAGE 30. 30. Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 - Page - 15 SENIOR SAFETY Pueblo Police Dept.- 549-1200 • Pueblo County Sheriff’s Dept. - 583-6125 Fremont County Sheriff’s Dept. - 275-2000 • Canon City Police Dept. - 269-9000 BBB: Local Scholarships Offered For Students by Katie Carrol BBB offers college scholarships based on essay about ethics The Better Business Bureau of Southern Colorado Foundation and its accredited businesses are offering two, one-year scholarships in the amount of $2,500. To be eligible, applicants must: • Be a high school senior • Graduate in 2012 • Be enrolled in a college or university in the state of Colorado in the fall. • Have a minimum GPA of 3.0. • Live in one of the 25 counties served by the BBB of SC. Applicants are required to submit a biography or resume, a 1,000 word essay about ethics based on a scenario they are given and a letter of recommendation from a high school counselor, teacher or principal. Interested students may download an application from our website at www.southerncolorado. bbb.org/scholarship, or call Blair Question: How do I name a guardian for my children if something should happen to me? What happens if I don’t name a guardian? Answer: It is important to name a guardian for your children should both you and the child’s other parent be mentally incapacitated, unavailable or unwilling to parent, or pass away. You may appoint a guardian for your children in a will or other signed writing that applies to the children you currently have, as well as those you may have in the future. You may restrict the authority of the guardian or state other specific instructions, and you may change or revoke the nomination at any time before a guardian is appointed. It is important to know that the probate court must approve and appoint the person you name, and the probate court may limit or broaden the guardian’s authority, appoint someone else, or do whatever it deems to be in the child’s best interest. If you do not name a guardian for your children and something happens, making you unable to parent and the children’s other parent is unable to parent, any interested person may ask the probate court to appoint a guardian. If the involved parties cannot agree as to who should be the guard- The fine folks at Argus Home Care and Argus Alert Are Proud To Sponsor the Senior Safety page for all the loyal readers of Senior Beacon. Enjoy this month’s page. Kit Jacobson of Argus Home Care and Argus Alert invites you to drop by their offices in Pueblo or Cañon City or call them at the numbers in their ad below. Reeves at 719-636-5076 ext. 116 to materials may be sent by mail to 25 request an application and get more N. Wahsatch, Colorado Springs, CO 80903 or faxed to 719-636-5078. information. The deadline for entry is 5 PM Friday, June 29. Application Legal Lines: On Naming A Guardian ian, there may be extensive litigation and related expenses. In the end, the court will appoint a guardian that it believes will serve the best interest of the children. The Colorado Bar Association welcomes your questions on subjects of general interest. This column is meant to be used as general information. Consult your own attorney for specifics. Send questions to the CBA attn: Sara Crocker, 1900 Grant St., Suite 900, Denver, CO 80203 or email scrocker@cobar.org. About Legal Lines Legal Lines is a question and answer column provided as a public service by the Colorado Bar Association. Attorneys answer questions of interest to members of the public for their general information. About the Colorado Bar Association The Colorado Bar Association is a voluntary bar association with nearly 18,000 members – almost three-quarters of all attorneys in the state – founded in 1897. The bar provides opportunities for continuing education, volunteering and networking for those in the legal profession while upholding the standards of the bar. The bar likewise works to secure the efficient administration of justice, encourage the adoption of proper legislation and perpetuate the history of the profession and the memory of its members. For more information, visit www.cobar.org. (NAPSI)—Older Americans and the people who care for them can protect their family and finances by learning more about new ways to avoid old scams. What Criminals Do Often, the problem is a scam involving foreign lotteries. Americans have lost millions of dollars to these scams. These crimes can seriously affect the lives of their victims and their families. The criminals tend to talk a good game and the elderly are often the target of foreign lottery scams. The scammers can “spoof ” caller ID to make it look like they’re calling from the U.S. or even a government agency. The criminals may ask you to pay to play—by wire, check, money order or cash. They may try to get you to send money that’s just for “taxes and fees.” Scammers might even provide a check or money order as an advance on the winnings, with instructions to cash and return the proceeds in order to receive the winnings. That’s not a good idea; more than just the odds are against you. Fortunately, The United States Postal Inspection Service is out to stop these criminals—and you can help. What You Can Do If you or a loved one receives an unsolicited offer, Postal Inspec- tors recommend that you: • Hang up the phone or delete the e-mail; • Don’t give out personal or financial information to anyone over the Internet or phone; • Never wire or send money to anyone, anywhere who says you have won a foreign lottery; • Don’t let anyone pressure you into making an immediate decision; • Never purchase anything until you get all information in writing. What The Law Says Foreign lotteries aren’t just a risky proposition for American consumers; under many circumstances, they are also illegal. A federal statute prohibits mailing lottery tickets, advertisements or payments to purchase tickets in a foreign lottery. What’s Being Done Combating foreign lottery fraud is a top priority for The U.S. Postal Inspection Service. Inspector Paul Krenn says if you suspect you’re a victim of a fraud or have received a suspected fraud through the U.S. mail, you should report it to www. deliveringtrust.com. Learn More You can find more information on fraud and how to avoid becoming a victim at that same site. Fighting Foreign Lottery Fraud Now Accepting New Patients 807 W. 4th St. Pueblo, CO 81003 807 W 003 TO: John Dagnillo 1/17/08 (719) 54 John: Here's the revised ad.... for future ads (719) 543-2634 From: Jim Grasso 719-406-4539 Jim Grasso - Senior Beacon/ ARGUS ALERT • Complete care - from simple med-minders to full-emergency response • Trained operators standing by 24-hours/day talk to a real person whenever you need help • Daily wellness check-in available for peace of mind Call John Dagnillo for more information. 719-543-2634 In Pueblo: 807 W. 4th St. In Cañon City: 121 S. 5th St. From the local team you already know and trust Argus Home Care & Argus Home Health! • Argus Alert • Skilled Nursing • Rehabilitation Services • Personal Care Providers • Homemakers Companions Page 16 - Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 Visit Us at http://www.seniorbeacon.info There’s Nothing Like A Holiday Vacation Rentals On The Rise - Book Smart! (NAPSI)—Vacation rentals are gaining in popularity among Americans looking to spend quality time with family and friends. That popularity is due in part to the growing number of properties available online, as well as the many advantages this type of lodging offers. From abundant space and privacy to convenient home amenities such as a washer/dryer and fully equipped kitchens, vacation rentals appeal to the practical-minded traveler. Vacation rentals also offer a more authentic way to experience a destination, and some include such extras as cleaning services and golf course access. Reaching beyond the traditional home or condo offerings, a number of vacation rental companies even fea- Store Hours Mon-Fri 10:30am - 9:30pm Sat. & Sun. 7:30am - 9:30pm Daily Specials 3400 N. Elizabeth St. Pueblo, CO 545-3384 ture castles, houseboats and cottages. For budget-conscious travelers, vacation rentals also provide excellent value, with pricing often lower than other lodging options. But it is important to ask yourself a few questions before booking a vacation rental online: 1. Who do I book with? Book a vacation rental directly with the owner through a listing service site or by opting for a professionally managed rental service that acts on behalf of a rental’s owner. For added security, use a professionally managed rental service that’s backed by a global hospitality brand like Wyndham Vacation Rentals, which owns trusted brands such as ResortQuest, Hoseasons and The Resort Company. With these businesses, you get globally recognized customer service, clearly outlined quality and safety standards applied to each rental, and a local presence well acquainted with the area. 2. Who do you call if there’s a problem? There should be customer service representatives who speak your native language and can dispatch a local team for on-site repair assistance in a timely manner if needed. Look for the terms “professionally managed” or “full-service” when doing your Cañon Lodge Care Center (ARDING!VENUEs#ANON#ITY#/ “A Place That Feels Like Home” s(OUR3KILLED .URSING#ARE s,ONG4ERM#ARE s)N(OUSE2EHABILITATION s0HYSICAL/CCUPATIONAL AND3PEECH4HERAPY s7OUND#ARE s2ESPIRATORY#ARE s2ESPITE#ARE s2ECREATIONAL 4HERAPY s$EMENTIA#ARE !DMISSION(OTLINE /UT0ATIENT4HERAPYAT4,#2EHAB -EDICARE-EDICAID+AISER0ERMANENTEAND0RIVATE)NSURANCE!CCEPTED search. 3 . Is what I see what I get? Professionally managed vacation rental companies consistently provide updated and accurate rental p i c t u r e s and descriptions, which is not always the case with listing services. If you decide to book with an individual property owner through a listing service, be sure to check recent feedback from previous guests. 4. Can you book in real time? Booking with a renowned hospitality brand allows you to enjoy secure book- ing along with competitive, real-time rates within the destination, which avoids haggling with the owner. Now that you have a better idea of what to look for—and how to safeguard your peace of mind—enjoy your vacation rental booking experience. For more information, visit www.wyndhamrentals.com. Travel Ready Dental Care Travel-Ready Dental Care Delivered In Compact Size (NAPSI)—Whether traveling for fun or for work, some of our healthy habits can fall by the way- side when not in the comfort of our own home. To maintain a healthy smile, it’s important to still follow a good oral hygiene routine—even when you are on the go. Thankfully, it doesn’t take much time to properly care for your teeth and gums. Daily brushing and flossing can be a quick and easy task. There are some great travelfocused oral care products out there to make it even easier. The latest is the Waterpik Traveler Water Flosser—the ideal tool to help travelers keep up with a healthy dental hygiene routine while away from home. Fifty percent smaller than other Waterpik models and with global voltage compatibility, the Waterpik Traveler unit is not only great for travel anywhere in the world but it’s also a great option for those who have smaller bathrooms. The Traveler utilizes pulsating water to clean deep between teeth and below the gumline where traditional brushing and flossing cannot reach. It is clinically proven to be twice as effective as traditional string floss and only takes one minute daily to use. With the Waterpik Traveler, even the busiest of travelers have the ability to water floss every day. With its compact size and premium, softsided travel case, it’s a great device to have in your bag to make sure that you keep your smile healthy while on the road. For more information, visit www.waterpik.com. Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 - Page - 17 There’s Nothing Like A Holiday Cruising Safely, Minding The Pleas & Crews 2098084 by David G. Molyneaux TheTravelMavens.com Most of us spend little time thinking about safety on vacation. Yet, the same dangers at home follow us around the world and may sting if we let our guard down just because we are on holiday. Experts say that the key to traveling safely is to manage the risks. That means being aware of your surroundings and the level of seriousness of potential dangers, being prepared for what could happen, and being careful about venturing into the unknown. There’s not a whole lot you can do about natural or unnatural disasters that arrive without warning. You follow instructions, use your common sense, and hope for the best. Such events as airplane crashes, unexpected terrorist attacks or a cruise ship that strikes a rock and sinks off the coast of Italy cannot be anticipated. Without diminishing the impact on passengers and crew of the late Costa Concordia that sunk in January, safety experts point out that such disasters are highly unlikely. Danger is more probable in highway traffic on the road to your home airport. That said, managing risks can make a big difference in saving travelers from cruise injury, including accidents, robbery, and rape. A cruise ship is about as safe a place as you can choose for vacation. The ship is full of security video cameras in all public areas (chances are if you leave your cell phone on deck or drop your wallet in the hallway, security guys are watching), restaurants are as clean as you find anywhere, and you never have to worry about who will drive home after a little too much wine. Most crew members are well trained for emergencies; consider efforts by the crew of Carnival Splendor that brought everybody home safely after an engine fire off the coast of Mexico. U6LlS[º9U0Ț NOTE ANY CORRECTIONS OR MODIFICATIONS. __________________________________________ ER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2098084 ER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CACTUS FLOWER EP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .JORGANNE-3 E . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .FRI. 12/4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CHIEFTAIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 /COMPOSING DEPT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .mg UT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12/1/09 12:00 __________________________________________ SE RETURN ASAP VIA EMAIL OR HARD COPY FOR FINAL APPROVAL 7i V> >à Ûi ÞÕÀ vÕÀÌÕÀi Ü i ÞÕ Ài`i] Vi> V>À«iÌà À >Ûi > yÀ} ÃÌ>>Ì `i° U ÕÃi Ì ÕÃi U "vwVi U *>à 7i vviÀ «VÕ« >` `iÛiÀià VÀÃÃ Ì i , À VÀÃÃ Ì i ÕÌÀÞ *>V U 1>` U /À>ëÀÌ U 1«>V >Þ Üi` E «iÀ>Ìi` ViÃi` E ÃÕÀi` *1 äxxn ÓnÈÎ While cruise lines since the rock climbing, results in accidents. January Costa Concordia sinking Over indulgence in alcohol can lead have begun to emphasize more se- to situations that result in assault or rious lifeboat drills for passengers, worse. cruisers I talk with place little im- Outside of alcohol-related portance on the readiness of passen- incidents, the number one issue for gers. The key is the training of crews, who live onboard and follow frequent training exercises. Their expertise will determine how well passengers pay varying degrees of attention to a Carnival Magic respond to Passengers crew member as he explains how to wear a lifejacket during muster emergencies drill at the beginning of a Mediterranean cruise from Venice in 2011. (a failure that photo: DavidMolyneaux, TheTravelMavens.com has not yet been fully explained in the Concor- cruisers is an accident, such as slipdia disaster). ping, falling, or driving. From there, Yet, not everyone comes cruisers face food and water-borne home safely from a cruise. illnesses, he said. Then comes being Passengers are injured on a victim of crime, theft and scams motorbikes in the Bahamas and Car- both onboard and offboard the ship. ibbean, fall seriously ill from eating “People tend to let their norat dirty restaurants during port stops, mal defenses down on a cruise,” said and are victims of robbery, assault McIndoe, “and assume everyone and rape, on and off cruise ships. there is like them and not a risk.” Safety experts emphasize that just McIndoe says that travelers would because people are on vacation be better off if they hear their mothdoesn’t mean that common sense er talking: goes out the window. Said one se- “Moderate the alcohol, be curity guy who didn’t want to be cautious in your activities, stay in a quoted by name: “Young women group (as opposed to wandering off who get drunk and follow strange alone with a stranger), off the ship men to shadowy areas of a ship are eat only what is cooked or you peel, just as likely to be victims at sea as don’t let your guard down, and if they are on land.” something doesn’t feel right, listen Bruce McIndoe, president of to your body.” iJet, a company that provides risk All this is a valuable lesson management to multinational corpo- to remember: You are not safe from rations and governments, says that harm just because you are on vacamost cruise ship risks are related to tion. David Molyneaux writes monthly about the use of alcohol. He is editor of TheTravelMavens. Mixing drinks with on-board cruising. com activities, such as wave pools and Page 18 - Senior Beacon - Apr, 2012 Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info Home Sweet Home Home Grown: Cool Crops For The Summer Garden by Marty Ross Take your pick. Vegetable gardening is hotter than ever this year, and seed suppliers are tempting novice gardeners and old hands alike with new, healthy and easy crops of every description. Tomatoes lead the pack, as always, but hybridizers are not finished tinkering with squash, peppers, cucumbers and greens, either. All-time favorite vegetables are showing up in new sizes, shapes and colors in seed catalogs this year, alongside interesting crops from around the world. “The great thing about the business is there’s always something new, it’s a non-stop learning curve,” says Lynn Byczynski, the owner of Seeds from Italy and editor of Growing for Market, a newsletter for market gardeners. Byczynski owns a cut-flower farm in Lawrence, Kan., and has been growing for market for 20 years. Fresh vegetables just can’t get any more local than your own backyard, and every new season stimulates gardeners’ appetites to try new varieties. Burpee’s annual seed catalog, for example, lists 150 new varieties for 2012. Seeds are more popular than ever, says George Ball, CEO and chairman of Burpee, but you don’t have to start from seed: All the traditional seed-sellers offer transplants ready to set out in the garden, too. One of Burpee’s biggest introductions this year is the BOOST line of vegetables, developed for their extra-high vitamin and nutritional values and great taste. Three tomatoes, a pepper, a cucumber, and a healthy blend of lettuce and baby greens are all designed to hit “that sweet spot,” Ball says, where taste and nutrition are at their peak. These vegetables have up to five times more of the healthful antioxidants beta-carotene and lycopene than standard varieties. Another new Burpee tomato, Big Daddy, is a hybrid developed from the all-time favorite Big Boy, with even more disease resistance. “Big Daddy can resist the many plagues that a summer can bring,” Ball says. “We went through a lot of tomatoes to find it.” It takes about five years to hybridize and bring a tomato to market, Ball says. Gardeners are looking for crops that will flourish in small spaces, says Josh Kirschenbaum, who works in product development for Territorial Seed. The company’s “urban jungle basket” for tiny, jampacked farms right in town, includes seeds of tomatoes, broccoli, carrots, cucumbers, lettuces, radishes and 10 other vegetables suitable for small gardens, for pots or even for window boxes. A new summer squash, Patio Star, grows on plants half the size of standard zucchini plants but produces full-sized fruit by the bushel. “I’m going to try it,” Like Burpee, she says. “I don’t know Territorial Seed is if it will be successful, introducing quite a but I’m going to try.” few new tomatoes, Taking chances with including the bluenew crops is part of the skinned Indigo Rose, fun of growing your which has a naturally own. You always learn high concentration something, Byczynski of antioxidants. The says: “Every year is difcompany was the ferent, every garden is first to offer gardendifferent.” Even if you ers grafted tomato have an occasional crop plants, with rootstock chosen for vigor and Harvest an abundance of failure, the satisfaction disease resistance, garden-fresh nutrition with of harvesting your own BOOST vegetables. and scions selected Burpee’s Three tomatoes, a sweet pep- tomatoes, fresh kale or for taste. Grafted per, a cucumber and a blend homegrown broccoli tomatoes are aston- of lettuce and greens were all quickly erases the disespecially for their appointment of a crop ishingly productive, hybridized high vitamin and antioxidant that didn’t make it. Kirschenbaum says. values. photo: Burpee The success of the crop Grafted eggplants, new this year, are especially good can’t really be measured in the size for gardeners in cool climates, of the harvest: When you pick them where heat-loving eggplants often yourself, even cherry tomatoes are huge. fail to mature. The growers who sell their IT’S TIME TO PLANT The new crop of seed cataproduce at farmers markets are al- ways looking out for early crops, logs is in full flower. Most mail-orand greens of every description der companies also have impressive fit into what Byczynski calls the racks of seeds at garden shops, and “shoulder seasons” of spring and many offer transplants, ready for the fall. “Greens are so quick,” she garden. Here are some of the best says. You can plant a crop of kale, new introductions this year: -- Burpee (burpee.com): Big arugula or mixed salad greens, and Guy jalapeno pepper; Easy Peasy start picking within weeks. “The whole notion of let- pea; Orange Wellington tomato -- The Cook’s Garden tuce, tomato and cucumber salads is out the window,” she says. “We’re (cooksgarden.com): Cherry Stuffer growing some lettuces, a bunch of pepper; Mole sauce peppers; Delizia chicories, baby spinach and baby tomato -- Territorial Seed (territoarugula.” Byczynski is excited about the new “Flower Sprouts,” rialseed.com): Cute Stuff pepper; which is being sold as a hybrid be- Early Hakucho edamame; Golden tween Brussels sprouts and kale, in Rod squash the Johnny’s Seed catalog. SEE “HOME” PAGE 23. We’re by your side so your parents can stay at home. Whether you are looking for someone to help an aging parent a few hours a week or need more comprehensive assistance, Home Instead can help. Serving Pueblo and Fremont Counties. Call for a free, no-obligation appointment: Private pay/longterm Care insurance and Medicaid Accepted. 719-545-0293or or866-945-0293 877-945-0293 719-545-0293 www.hisc530.digbro.com Each Home Instead Senior Care ® franchise office is independently owned and operated. © 2009 Home Instead, Inc. Visit Us at http://www.seniorbeacon.info Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 - Page - 19 Home Sweet Home Log Cabins And Luxury Get Together by Bill LaHay Little house on the prairie, move over. There’s a new shelter in town. A number of them, actually, and while they share your roughhewn roots, these homes are anything but the crude structures typically associated with rustic construction. The materials might be familiar -- natural stone, rough-sawn or recycled timbers, hand-wrought metals, and massive logs -- but they are worked with an uncommonly high level of artisanship, and on an impressive scale. Think of a log cabin, on steroids, that went to finishing school. These are the homes featured in Ralph Kylloe’s book “Rustic Elegance.” Kylloe has authored other books on cabins and rustic homes, but he’s aimed for something a little different with this volume. For starters, these are mostly upscale properties -- architect-designed, fitted with costly and carefully selected materials, and built by highly skilled teams. They also happen to derive from a Pollack from page 3. opment to come up with the drug (that’s why brand-name drug makers are given exclusive rights to sell a new drug for a period of time - so they can recoup their investment). Nor do they pay for the expensive marketing campaigns, especially all single source -- a Montana-based architect named Larry Pearson and his team of in-house designers. Pearson claims influences ranging from LeCorbusier to Frank Lloyd Wright and the Greene brothers, all of which show up in his respectful use of natural materials and a reliance on well-placed windows to bring daylight into the homes. And like most rustic buildings, these homes make no attempt to hide their engineering features. In fact, large stones, timbers and other structural elements are deliberately highlighted in order to create a feeling of solidity and strength. As much as the inherent warmth of the materials, this display of strength surely accounts for much of the visceral comfort evident in the homes. There’s a reassuring sense of shelter, almost primitive, that derives from it, especially as many of the homes are situated in mountainous northern areas where the outdoor elements can be unfriendly to living things. Being very site-specific in de- sign and located in some magnificent country, most of these homes cannot be duplicated literally elsewhere, but some signature elements would certainly translate to other locations and designs. Here are some key themes: -- Use regional stone: Handworked rock from local sources helps the structure blend more naturally into its surroundings. Feature it prominently in foundations, exterior columns or piers, fireplace surrounds, or chimneys. Include some large stones for an anchoring effect, and keep them low to create a better visual balance. Multiple hearths are ideal; place them prominently as focal points. -- Play with big round logs: Large limbs or even sections of tree trunk make ideal posts and beams. Not every wood member should be this scale, but you need some big bones. Large exterior posts featuring the butt flare of trunk roots can make the home appear to grow out of the ground, like the surrounding forest. -- Use recycled and repurposed materials: Almost any rough or hand-hewn material that’s had a chance to weather can add rustic character. Doors, windows and their frame/trim materials often have to be sawn boards, but try to find old barn siding or hand-hewn beams rather than installing a lot of new wood. -- Get creative with lighting: Pearson favors hand-forged metal and even elk antlers for light fixtures, but he achieves some of the most dramatic effects when the fixtures aren’t seen. Instead, they are recessed or hidden behind beams or trim and only their output is visible. This placement can create beautiful highlights on architectural details. -- Add “civilized” touches: If those TV ads we’ve gotten so used to. Generic drugs may use different fillers, coatings, and colorings, so they may not look like the brand-name version, but there won’t be any difference in how the drug works in your body, which is what really matters. That, and the much lower price. There’s so much money at stake that brand-name drug manufacturers are doing all kinds of things to keep generic drugs off the market. This past year, when the anti-cholesterol brand-name drug Lipitor became available as a generic, Lipitor’s manufacturer cut a deal with insurance companies, letting them offer Lipitor for a lower price. Some insurance companies would not even cover the generic version. That kind of sweetheart deal is not good for consumers in the long run since it interferes with real competition and drives up health care costs. In addition to more options for cheaper generic drugs, there’s also good news about Medicare Part D prescription drug coverage. If you have high drug costs and you hit the “doughnut hole” in Medicare’s drug coverage, Medicare will pay for half the costs of brand-name drugs and 14 percent of the (lower) cost of generics in 2012. In 2013, Medicare will pay a little more for both brand drugs and generics and you’ll pay less of the total cost. Because of these changes in the new health care law, the average Medicare beneficiary who hits the doughnut hole will save $735 in 2012. And, by 2021, the doughnut hole will be closed completely. For good. If you have the chance to use generics instead of brands, do it. This is a rare opportunity to save money and still get the same thing. You can get more information from Consumer Reports Best Buy Drugs website, which has information to help you make sure you’re getting the best deal on a variety of prescription drugs. So talk to your doctor and your pharmacist about your options for generics. And, about those taxes: I have to do mine, too. Maybe I’ll see you in line at the post office on April 17th. 719-568-0970 1-866-568-0970 Proudly serving all of Colorado $30.00 Per Month Lifeline Service Now Available Securing Our Seniors P.O. Box 8383 Pueblo, CO. 81008 SEE “LOG” PAGE 24. Page 20 - Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 Social Security & You from Melinda Minor, District Manager - Pueblo efits on work credits. Anyone born in QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS 1929 or later needs 40 Social Security GENERAL credits to be eligible for retirement benQuestion: I live in a hurricane zone and efits. You can earn up to four credits a there’s always a good chance I’ll have year, so you will need to work at least to evacuate. What should I do if I’m ex- 10 years to become eligible for retirepecting my check and a hurricane dis- ment benefits. Learn more by reading the publication How You Earn Credits rupts the mail? at www.socialsecurity.gov/pubs/10072. Answer: To avoid this situation alto- html. gether, get your payments sent elec- Question: Will my son be eligible to retronically. Direct Deposit and Direct Express are the fast, easy and secure ceive benefits on his retired father’s ways to receive your benefit payment. record while going to college? For more information, see www.social- Answer: No. At one time, Social Secusecurity.gov/deposit. rity did pay benefits to eligible college RETIREMENT students. But the law changed in 1981. Question: How long does a person need We now pay benefits only to students to work to become eligible for retire- taking courses at grade 12 or below. Normally, benefits stop when children ment benefits? reach age 18 unless they are disabled. Answer: We base Social Security ben- However, if children are still full-time students at a secondary (or elementary) school at age 18, benefits generally can continue until they graduate or until two months after they reach age 19, whichever is first. If your child is still going to be in school at age 19, you’ll want to visit www.socialsecurity.gov/schools. DISABILITY Question: • 5 Star Lawn Care • non-lawN weeD control free estimates 543-7910 1017 S. Santa Fe Pueblo, CO BIG BURGER WORLD For The Very Best In The Burger World, Come In And See! Closed Sun & Mon 1205 S. 9th St. Cañon City, CO 81212 275-8079 Ó 7`iÀvÕ ÃÃÃÌi` Û} >VÌiÃ Ì -iÀ -iÀÛi 9ÕÀ ii`à ÕÌÀÞ ÃiÌÌ}à /À>ëÀÌ>Ì i Vi` i>à Ó{ÉÇ ÃiVÕÀÌÞ *ÀÛ>Ìi Àà E L>Ì Ã -i «iÌà >Þ Li >Üi` i`V>` E «ÀÛ>Ìi «>Þ > /`>Þt ÓÈÇään Î{x{Îää Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info My brother had an accident at work last year and is now receiving Social Security disability benefits. His wife and son also receive benefits. Before his accident, he helped support another daughter by a woman he never married. Is the second child entitled to benefits? Answer: The child may qualify for Social Security benefits even though your brother wasn’t married to the second child’s mother. The child’s caretaker should file an application on her behalf. For more information, visit us online at www.socialsecurity.gov. Question: What is the “definition of disability” for children filing for Supplemental Security Income (SSI)? Answer: A child is disabled if he or she: • Has a physical or mental condition (or a combination of conditions) that results in “marked and severe functional limitations.” This means that the condition very seriously limits the child’s activities; and • The condition has lasted, or is expected to last, at least one year or is expected to result in death; and • Is not working at a job that we consider to be substantial work. To determine whether your child meets the definition of disability, we look at medical and other information (such as information from schools and from you) about the child’s condition. We also consider how the condition affects the child’s daily activities. We consider: what activities is your child not able to do, or is limited in doing; the type of extra help and how much extra help your child needs to perform age-appropriate activities for example, special classes at school, medical equipment; and whether the treatment interferes with your child’s day-to-day activities. Remember that SSI is a needsbased program where family income and resources also play a role in determining eligibility for benefits. For more information, read Benefits For A Chilling Statistic In 1965, Daniel Patrick Moynihan published a report on behalf of LBJ about the ‘crisis’ in the black family in that 24 percent of black children were born out of wedlock. Today, 73 percent are! And 41 percent of all children are born to unmarried women. Children With Disabilities at www.socialsecurity.gov/pubs/10026.html. SSI Question: I’m going to visit relatives outside the country for two weeks during the holidays. Can I still get Supplemental Security Insurance (SSI) payments while I’m there? Answer: Your SSI usually will stop if you leave the United States for 30 consecutive days or more. Since you are going to be away for only two weeks, your SSI should not be affected. However, it’s important that you tell Social Security the date you plan to leave and the date you plan to come back. Then we can let you know whether your SSI will be affected. For more information, visit www.socialsecurity.gov or call our toll-free number, 1-800-772-1213 (TTY 1-800-325-0778). Question: Are Supplemental Security Income (SSI) payments paid only to disabled or blind people? Answer: No. In addition to people with disabilities or blindness, SSI payments can be made to people who are age 65 or older and have limited income and financial resources. For more information, read our publication, Supplemental Security Income, at www.socialsecurity.gov/pubs/11000.html. MEDICARE Question: How do I obtain a copy of the form, Application for Help with Medicare Prescription Drug Plan Costs? Answer: If you wish to apply for Extra Help with Medicare prescription drug plan costs, we recommend you use our online application at www.socialsecurity.gov/i1020/. Meanwhile, you can view a sample at www.socialsecurity. gov/prescriptionhelp. There, you also can find instruction sheets in 15 different languages to help you understand the English application. Soon, the online application also will be available in Spanish. If you prefer not to fill out this application on the Internet, you can call our toll-free number, 1-800-772-1213, to ask for a paper application. Also, you can make an appointment at your local Social Security office to apply for Extra Help with Medicare prescription drug plan costs. If you are deaf or hard of hearing, call our toll-free TTY number, 1-800-325-0778. Representatives are available Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Senior Beacon Senior Beacon serves Pueblo & Fremont Counties and reaches the rest of Southeastern Colorado. It is a monthly newspaper dedicated to inform, serve, educate and entertain the Senior Community in these areas. Subscriptions are available, prepaid with order, at $19.95 for one 12-month period. Send your order to the mailing list below. Publication of advertising contained herein does not necessarily constitute endorsement. Signed columns are the opinions of the writers and not necessarily that of the publisher. Senior Beacon is locally owned and operated. Founded in August, 1982. MAILING ADDRESS £n£x 6 1 U £{Óx , 6 1 U !" /9 Beacon Publishing/Senior Beacon -- website: www.seniorbeacon.info Mailing Address: P.O. Box 7215 -Pueblo West, CO 81007-0215 Ph: 719-647-1300 Fax: 719-647-1305 E-mail: srbeacon@gmail.com Publisher/Sales/Production......James R. Grasso/Jeannie Grasso Sales....Jan McLaughlin, Rick Forman IT/Web Master ...Robin Grasso Contributing writers.. B. J. Tucker, Robin Grasso, Universal Press Syndicate, Ann Coulter, Mature Market Editorial Services, NAPS, Jan McLaughlin SUBMISSIONS: Senior Beacon welcomes reader contributions in the form of senior groups’ news, stories, poetry, recipes and happenings. Letter to the Editor must be typed and double spaced, signed with address and phone number submitted. Deadline is the 10th of the month prior to publication. Copyright© 2012-Beacon Publishing Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 - Page - 21 Senior Classifieds two lots for sale at Imperial Cemetery. Two lots in Resthaven section. $4,000 lots for $2,000 - make offer. all 568-1300. #0512 I Buy Old Cameras and Lenses, Modern and Antique, Call Hank at 719-964-1330. #0512 private-home-care Ladies. Will help shampoo your hair style and set. bathings, all daily needs. Clean ovens, refrigerators, whatever needs to be done while you rest. Call 564-7825; cell, 250-8699. #0512available to work as: Companion and/or Tutor: GED; English or Spanish as second language. References. 719-225-6907. #0512 excessively rare: President Nixon’s 1934 Annual from Whittier College, California. He was Student Body President (Large Photo) and Class Valedictorian. Needs Rebinding. Asking $200. Call 564-0550. #0512 for sale: Two oak tables, one coffee table, lamp. $75.00. One Kascal Auto go scooter. $495.00 719-5424955. #0512 pueblo west duplex: Very nice 2/1 with garage, washer/dryer hookups. New paint and flooring. Water sewer paid. $750/#700. 719404-4026/252-6831. #0512 BANKRUPTCY. You have the right to be happy. The Cross Law Firm. We file bankrupcies, 7s and 13s. We are called a Federal Debt Relief Agency and relief from debt is what we do. Colorado Springs 1-800-800-0529 and Pueblo 1-719-542-2007. #0412 active attractive younglooking 69-year-old woman, great sense of humor, searching for guy who loves the outdoors. No drugs. Phone: 225-6892. #0412 experienced cna/caregiver: Able to work overnights. Ask for Peggy at 719-564-7196. #0412 septic problems: Drain cleaning, sewer and septic repair, clean-out & more, insured and licensed. Senior & Military Discounts! Singleton Enterprises, LLC. Call 240-1258. #0912 68-year-old female needing male companionship. Live in Salida. Call Sally at 719-539-4718. #0512 toy poodles for sale: Available March 20. CKC Registered. $600 for females, $500 for males. To request information e-mail poodlepowells@yahoo.com. #0412 soulmate companion needed. Male 60-70 yrs. Non-smoker, drugs. Spiritually, emotionally & financially secure. Marriage minded. Call Diane, 928-713-6608. Leave message. #0412. garage sale march 3: 8am4pm, 1423 Lane 21. Furniture, dishes, cookware, knitting, sewing and craft supplies. Hardware, hand, lawn and garden tools, clothing, jewelry. Call 564-1078 before sale or 289-0549 during sale. #0312 jammin’ cleaners for home or office - 15 yrs experience- Free Estimates. 719-388-6977. #0412 HEALTH CARE IN YOUR HOME Licensed, compassionate, fleible services - please call, 565-0445/406-6718. #0412 for sale: Endeavour Sequal Hearing Aid. Completely in the ear canal (CIC) with batteries. New. $400.00 Call Nancy, 719-994-4211. #0412 no time-use mine! Make Virginia your helpful friend. Run errands, pick-up groceries and prescriptions, transportation assistance, paperwork delivery, here to help you. Call Virginia, your assistant at 719214-6007. #1212 active-petite 79 year-old lady. Neat, classy. Non-smoker, down to earth, honest, active. Searching for soulmate 66-80. fun to be with. No drugs, tatoos. Call Mary at 719-2752235. #0312 FLOORING! Install sub-floor and ceramic tiles. $5.50/sq. ft. Install SENIOR CLASSIFIED AD REQUEST This classified ad section of the Senior Beacon carries advertising of all sorts. The cost is $7.00 for the first 25 words or less and $.25 for each word over 25. TO PLACE AN AD here’s all you need to do: Write your ad in the space provided below. _________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ Please print clearly. Deadline is the 20th of the month. Phone:_________________ Your Name:_______________________ Mail ad & Check (send no cash) to: Senior Beacon P.O. Box 7215 Pueblo West, CO 81007. laminate flooring with underlayment, $1.50/sq. ft.. Prices include pick-up and delivery. Insured. Senior Bill, 565-1143. #0512 Give yourself a ‘Healthy Energy Boost’ with NingXia Red Juice and Essential Oils, • perfect antioxidant food source, • enriched with essential oils - Lavender, Frankincense, Peppermint, Grapefruit -more therapeutic oils available! #0612 YOUNG LIVING ESSENTIAL OILS Independent Distributor, Dolores Candelaria, #10728 Call: 719-6479177 or, dolores.myningxia.com, dolores.vibrantscents.com, dolores. younglivingworld.com #0213 collecting for local and International ministries including Southern Colorado pregnancy centers and Mexico and Haiti. Tax receipts available and we have a truck for furniture. Blessings. Jim at 3691304. #0612 wanted: certain lp record albums, and 45 rpms from 1950’s and 1960’s. Elvis or Beatle collections considered. Private collector. No trash please. 719-566-7975. Tom. #0612 steam clean or dry clean: Truck mounted unit. Certified. Over 30 years of experience. Special rate for rental owners. We also do carpet repairs and installation. Classy Glassy Cleaning Specialists. Senior Discounts. Now accepting credit cards. FREE ESTIMATES! Call 719561-9968. #0612 SHELBY’S MOBILE HAIR STUDIO. Perms, cuts, styles, reasonable prices. Senior Citizens and shut-ins only. For information or to make an appointment call, 404-6195. #0612 homes, offices, rentals: Complete cleaning service. One call does it all. Certified. Over 30 years of experience. We also do carpet repairs and installation. Classy Glassy Cleaning Specialists. Senior Discounts. Now accepting credit cards. FREE ESTIMATES! Call 719-5619968. #0612 MISSION OPPORTUNITY! Lives are changed through prayer. Please consider praying for prisoners with the option of corrrespondence ministry. Go to the website or reply to learn more. www.PrayerForPrisoners.org Jan McLaughlin Forman, PFPI Co-Director Prayer For Prisoners International Remember those in prison.... Heb. 13:3 Ph & Fax 719275-6971 - Cell: 719-649-2937. A Trust Doesn’t Guarantee You Can Avoid Probate Burglary HELPCALLCellular Units (no phone line needed) Personal Emergency Response System 719-269-9777 by Jim Hustad YOU’VE BEEN TERRIBLY MISINFORMED ABOUT YOUR ESTATE IF YOU THINK A WILL AVOIDS PROBATE OR YOU NEED AN EXPENSIVE LIVING TRUST TO AVOID PROBATE! The Colorado Bar Association brochure Probate In Colorado at www. cobar.org tells you why: All Wills require probate. A Trust doesn’t guarantee you can avoid probate. Trusts are being sold to people who don’t need them to avoid probate. Trusts have administration expenses. Contact the Colorado Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Unit if you’re a victim of fraud on a Living Trust! *************************************************************************** YOU CAN AVOID COSTLY PROBATE A WILL REQUIRES WITHOUT A LIVING TRUST! The Colorado Supreme Court’s Instructions For Probate With A Will* tells you how you can do this: “Beneficiary Designations” avoid Probate a Will requires without using an expensive Living Trust. What are “Beneficiary Designations”? They let you name, with no costly Will, Trust or Legal Fees, who you want your assets to go directly to the day you die. There is no costly Probate. Most families can receive your entire Colorado estate with no legal expenses for under $100. It’s Colorado’s new “1 Day Estate Option”. In 2012, Colorado estates up to $5 million now qualify to use this option. *************************************************************************** It takes 30 minutes to learn how to use the “1 Day Estate Option” and the classes are FREE at 10:00 a.m., April 10th at the Rawlings Library and 1:30 p.m. at the Pueblo West Library. Wills are FREE at each class. 719-5317140. Please come if you think 30 minutes of your time is worth saving your family $1,000s in legal fees and months of hassle. The document cost is $175 with Colorado real estate and $135 without it.*Court website: www.courts. state.co.us. -ADVERTISEMENT- Page 22 - Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info For A Healthier You Colorectal Cancer Screening Test Shows Promise (NAPSI)—Colorectal cancer is the second-leading cancer killer in the U.S.1—more than 143,000 people will be diagnosed with the disease and almost 52,000 will die from it this year, according to National Cancer Institute estimates.2 Older adults, especially, are more likely to get colorectal cancer, with about 60 percent of new diagnoses occurring in people 65 and older.3 Despite its high incidence, the disease is often considered the most preventable, but least prevented cancer. Colorectal cancer is highly treatable if found early, but more than 40 percent of adults age 50 and older have not been screened as recommended.4 However, an investigational, noninvasive, in-home screening test, developed by Exact Sciences in collaboration with Mayo Clinic, currently shows promise as a potential addition to other available screening tools for colorectal cancer. “Colorectal cancer is highly treatable if caught early, but most patients are diagnosed with the disease in its late stages, primarily due to poor screening compliance,” said Dr. Robert Hardi, gastroenterologist and principal investigator for a clinical study evaluating the Exact Sciences test. “If approved, this simple, noninvasive test that accurately detects pre-cancer and early-stage colorectal cancer may improve screening participation and help save lives.” Clinical Study Now Enrolling Exact Sciences’ investigational stool DNA test works by detecting altered DNA from precancerous or cancerous polyps in the colon. A nationwide clinical study is underway to further evaluate this screening test. “Early studies have been very promising,” said Dr. Hardi. “Now more research is ongoing to evaluate the test’s performance in a large population, especially among people 65 and older who are more likely to develop colorectal cancer.” Exact Sciences is actively recruiting participants between the ages of 65 and 84 for a pivotal research study called The Multi-Target Colorectal Cancer Screening Test for the Detection of Colorectal Advanced Adenomatous Polyps and Cancer (DeePC). The study is enrolling more than 10,000 participants at approximately 100 sites across the U.S. and Canada. Qualified participants may be eligible for compensation for their time. For more information about participating in the study, call (800) 949-8292 or visit www. exactsciences. com. Note, Mayo Clinic and some of the investigators associated with this research have a financial interest in the technology being studied in this April Is Low Vision Awareness Month Submitted by Kathy-Lyn Allen, PR Coordinator (Rocky Mountain Eye Center) by Courtney Corsentino, COT (Low Vision Specialist) It is very important to bring attention to macular degeneration and other vision problems. When a patient is diagnosed with “low vision”, this means a vision impairment that is not correctable by standard glasses, contact lenses, medicine or surgery. This vision loss can affect an individual’s independence and quality of life, but it doesn’t have CALL TO SCHEDULE YOUR COSMETIC CONSULTATION TODAY WITH MAURICIO R. CHAVEZ, MD Dr. Chavez Upper / Lower Eyelid Surgery Blepharoplasty Brow Lift Midface Lift Eyelid Tumor Excisions Reconstruction Due to Trauma or Disease Latisse® Botox® Restylane® Juvéderm® to. There are many wonderful tools available for these individuals to remain independent and continue to do things they enjoy – like reading, writing, crocheting, etc. Many people with low vision don’t know about the resources that are available to them. Low vision aids keep getting better and better each year with newer technology. Quality low vision aides can only be purchased through low vision specialists and dealers. Magnifiers purchased from the local drug store are meant for people with healthy eyes and good vision. These magnifiers only have a minimal amount of the power that low vision magnifiers provide. A low vision hand-held magnifier comes with or without lights, with or without a base and in many different powers. Hand-held electronics that can be easily taken in a pocket or purse are great for viewing prices, reading a menu, writing checks and viewing the Bible at church. These handy magnifiers have research. Do you qualify for the study? • Are you between the ages of 65 and 84? • Are you scheduled for or do you need to schedule a screening colonoscopy? • Are you willing to provide a stool sample and undergo a colonoscopy within 90 days of enrollment? If you meet these criteria, call (800) 949-8292 for more information. References 1. Basic Information about Color- ectal Cancer. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Link) 2. Colon and Rectal Cancer. National Cancer Institute. (Link) 3. About Colorectal Cancer. New York Department of Health. (Link) 4. Cancer Screening - United States, 2010. Centers for Disease Control. (Link) different contrast adjustments and a variety of powers. Another option is a CCTV. A CCTV is a wonderful device for writing and reading that allows a much larger field of view than hand-held devices. Lighting is also another important factor in low vision. A good light, directed onto what you are reading, can improve what you are able to see. If you have already been diagnosed with low vision and are wondering which piece of equipment would be the best for your, an evaluation with a low vision specialist is the right place to start. Always continue to have routine eye exams and monitor Amsler Grids as instructed by your doctor. Call your eye care provider if you notice any changes in your vision. Courtney can be reached directly at Rocky Mountain Eye Center – 719-545-1530 – for any questions relating to Low Vision. 8 am - 7 pm 3937 Ivywood Pueblo, CO 553-0111 3676 Parker Blvd Pueblo, CO 553-2208 ROCKY MOUNTAIN EYE CENTER 27 Montebello Road PUEBLO 719-545-1530 3954 Sandalwood Lane PUEBLO 719-561-2244 ALAMOSA CAÑON CITY LA JUNTA SALIDA TRINIDAD RATON, NM Most Insurance Plans Accepted VISA, AmEx, MasterCard and Discover Accepted www.rockymountaineyecenter.com 1-800-934-EYES (3937) Two Convenient Locations To Serve You Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 - Page - 23 For A Healthier You Proton Therapy Good For Prostate Patients Proton Therapy Offers Precision Treatment And Fewer Side Effects For Prostate Cancer Patients (NAPSI)—Prostate cancer is the second-leading cause of cancer death in men in the U.S., but if detected early, it has a five-year survival rate of nearly 99 percent. While surgery and radiation therapy may have similar outcomes for early-stage prostate cancer, radiation therapy is the primary option for locally advanced prostate cancer and can also be used for localized prostate cancer. When deciding on a treatment route, the best option is the one that most effectively treats the tumor and spares surrounding healthy tissue and organs, which reduces the risk of side effects. All of this can be accomplished with proton therapy, a treatment option available at the MD Anderson Proton Therapy Center. A Short Comment By Jonah Goldberg When free-trade guru Milton Friedman visited China he was taken to a large canal that was being built. Friedman noted that while there seemed to be many workers with shovels, there didn’t seem to be any bulldozers or earth-moving equipment. The interpreter said that the project created more jobs, to which Friedman replied, “then why don’t they use spoons?” I, for one, could tolerate all of the infrastructure spending the Democrats want to do, if I thought the aim was to actually get it built. The point always seems to be creating the work, not getting the job done. The Pentagon was built in 16 months. The Apollo program lasted 10 years. But Boston’s Big Dig took 20 years - and they didn’t even use spoons. ^p>Pà ^²^§ à ÃÃÃÌi` Û} ,iÃ`iVi Ü } VVi«Ì à ««V>Ì Ûi -«iV> xä¯ "vv Ì i £ÃÌ Ì 7i "vviÀ\ U Ó{ÕÀ V>Ài >` >ÃÃÃÌ>Vi >à ii`i` U 6iÀÞ Ài>Ã>Li «ÀV} É ``i VÃÌà U 1ÌÌià VÕ`i` iÝVi«Ì « i E ÌiÀiÌ U -> «iÌà >Üi` ÜÌ Ãi Ì>Ìî U Ãi Ì Ã«Ì>à >` `VÌÀà U *ÀÛ>Ìi «>Þ >` i`V>`>««ÀÛi` ÃiÀà U *ÀÛ>Ìi L>Ì À iÛiÀÞ À > À ÃÌ« LÞ vÀ > Ì ÌÕÀ ÓÇx U £ÎÎx >ÕiÀ >i U > ÌÞ "Üi` >` "«iÀ>Ìi` LÞ Ì i `i«i`iÌ "À`iÀ v "`` iÜà >` ,iLi> à v À>` Proton therapy is an advanced type of radiation treatment that uses a beam of protons to deliver radiation directly to the tumor, destroying cancer cells while sparing surrounding healthy tissue and vital organs. It is because of the precision of proton radiation and its ability to reduce the risk of short- and long-term side effects that Arkansas resident Terry Lavy decided to come to Houston, Texas to undergo proton therapy treatment at MD Anderson. Terry, a 72-year-old retired University of Arkansas professor, received an alarming phone call from his urologist in March 2008; he had been diagnosed with prostate cancer. “My first reaction was shock and disbelief,” Terry said. He sat down with his local urologist to discuss his treatment options, but before making a decision, Terry decided to talk it over with his friends and family. During this time he spoke to a family friend, who had just received proton therapy at the MD Anderson Proton Therapy Center in Houston. “I was anxious about having surgery and the side effects of the treatment options I had discussed with my doctor,” he said. “But, when my friend told me proton therapy is noninvasive, has fewer side effects and works just as well as other radiation options with no hospitalization, I knew this was the route I wanted to go.” Immediately, Terry called MD Anderson to inquire about proton therapy and scheduled an appointment. In July of 2008, Terry and his wife temporarily relocated to Houston. Terry received proton radiation five days a week for a total of 38 treatments over a two-month period. After his last session, he rang the ceremonial gong symbolizing the end of his cancer treatment. He said he was most impressed with how easy his treatment was. Terry’s physician, Seungtaek Choi, M.D., an assistant professor of radiation oncology, noted that “proton therapy was an excellent treat- department of Department of Orthopedics Urgent care Department ofof Family Medicine department family medicine ortHopaedicS Scott deruiter, md Hanson, MD; FNP-C m.d. Cheryl Cavalli, DO;mark Spencer Walker, MD; rochelle elijah, md charles Hanson, Charles md m.Marisa SusanPhillips, Zickefoose, potzler, Rochelle md & Spencer Walker, 719-553-2208 719-553-2206 Elijah, MD; John Beauman, MD 719-553-2206 md department of Simerville, m.d. DepartmentSteven of Pediatrics 719-553-2201 719-553-2201 pediatricS Kajsa Harris, m.d. Rita Ellsworth, MD; Carla Proctor, MD; Fred Cox, D.O. department of Medicine/Ivywood rita ellsworth, md & 719-553-0117 Department of Family gaStroenterology proctor, md department of 719-553-2204 Opeyemi Banjoko, MD 719-566-0222 carla robert manning, md, phd 719-553-2204 pHySical tHerapy Department of Physical Therapy Department of Occupational Medicine 719-553-2205 dept. of occUpational Joseph ruzich, pt manager department of medicine Joseph Ruzich, PT Director; 719-553-2209 Gwen West, PT 719-553-2207 rHeUmatology nicholas Kurz, d.o. 719-553-2207 denSitometry & 719-553-2209 Department patrick timmsof Rheumatology radiology 719-553-2203 719-553-2210 Patrick Timms, MD 719-553-2203 Deborah Kaufman, PA-C Walk-in Walk-inServices Services No No Appointment AppointmentNecessary Necessary OPEN OPEN EVERY EVERYDAY DAY 8am - -7pm 8:00am 7:00pm ment choice for Terry’s cancer because the reduced risk of side effects would allow him to continue his life and enjoy his pas- time of fishing and spending time with his grandchildren.” He also said that “Terry is doing well and hasn’t experienced adverse side effects.” “I never felt any pain, weakness or other physical effects from the treatment,” Terry said. “The lack of fatigue is evident because one cannot differentiate between those patients receiving their first treatment or their 38th. Some people received treatment while still working a full-time job and others regularly played 18 holes of golf after each treatment. We all felt fine.” Now, more than three years after he completed treatment, Terry is feeling great and his checkups show no evidence of disease. Since receiving proton therapy, Terry has made it his duty to share his story and tell other prostate cancer patients about the option of proton treatment. Over the years, he has referred over 20 people for proton therapy treatment. “I am so fortunate to have heard about proton therapy, so now I want to be sure to pass my knowledge and experience on to others,” he said. “I’m convinced proton radiation is the way to go for men facing prostate cancer.” For more information about the MD Anderson Proton Therapy Center, visit www.MDAndersonProton.com or call (866) 632-4PTC (4782). Home Vegetables from page 18. - Johnny’s Selected Seeds (johnnyseeds.com): Martha Washington tomato; Jester acorn squash -- Osborne Seed Co. (osborneseed.com): colorful Sun series cherry tomatoes -- Suncherry, Sunchocola, Sungold, Sunlemon, Sunpeach and Sunsugar -- Seeds from Italy (growitalian.com): Cima de rapa (similar to broccoli rabe); Padrone peppers -- Renee’s Garden Seeds (reneesgarden.com): Little Jade baby Napa cabbage; Mandarin Cross tomatoes Hot off the press New vegetable gardening books will inspire you and help you along the way. Here are two great titles: -- Grow Cook Eat: a foodlover’s guide to vegetable gardening, by Willi Galloway (Sasquatch Books, $30) -- Vegetable Gardening the Colonial Williamsburg Way, by Wesley Greene (Rodale Books, $30). Page 24 - Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info Doctors Request Medicare Cover Lifesaving Tests (NAPSI)--A new, less invasive way to screen for colorectal cancer could help save thousands of lives—if more people could access it. The test is a virtual colonoscopy, which doctors say is as effective as standard colonoscopy for detecting cancer but often easier on the patient. The problem is, while most major insurance companies cover the proce- dure, Medicare does not. An Answer An American College of Radiology Imaging Network (ACRIN) study, published Feb. 23 in Radiology, found that virtual colonoscopy works as well in those ages 65 and older as it does in adults ages 50−64 and can serve as a frontline colorectal cancer screening tool for seniors. This is Quality Cruises and Travel wants to take you away on an… IRISH ODYSSEY HIGHLIGHTS: ♦ Dinner/Show at Dublin’s Abbey Tavern ♦ Titanic Belfast ♦ Dingle Peninsula Tour ♦ Blarney Castle ♦ Giant’s Causeway ♦ Overnight at Award-Winning Cabra Castle ♦ Superior First Class hotels ♦ Elegant accommodations ♦ 20 Meals ♦ Fully escorted tour $3,995* PER PERSON / DOUBLE OCCUPANCY 12 DAYS 11 NIGHTS Roundtrip airfare from Denver, C0 August 14 - 26, 2012 (Tue - Sun) HOTELS: Stay at the following (or similar): • Davenport Hotel, Dublin (2 nights) • River Lee Hotel, Cork (1 night) • Killarney Plaza Hotel, Killarney (2 nights) • Salthill Hotel, Galway (2 nights) • City Hotel, Derry (2 nights) • Cabra Castle Hotel, Kingscourt (1 night) • Burlington Hotel, Dublin , Dublin (1 night) TOUR INCLUDES: • Airport transfers at start and end of tour • Sightseeing by luxury coach • Professional tour director • 11 nights in hotels listed above • Full breakfast daily except on day 1 • 9 dinners including - Traditional Irish evening with dinner/show at the Abbey Tavern - Dinner and Irish step-dancing display at Cabra Castle Hotel - 7 table d’hote dinners • Welcome get-together drink • Tours of Dublin and Belfast with local guides • “The Quiet Man” walking tour of Cong • Walking tour of Derry with a local guide • Dublin open-top bus tour with a visit and drink at Guinness Storehouse or Old Jameson Distillery • Visits and admissions to Kilmainham Gaol, Boyne Valley Visitor Centre & Newgrange or Knowth Tomb, Dunbrody Emigrant Ship, House of Waterford Crystal, Blarney Castle, Blarney Woollen Mills, Blasket Centre, Foynes Flying Boat Museum, Cliffs of Moher, Kylemore Abbey Visitor Centre, Museum of Country Life, W. B. Yeats’ Grave, Belleek Pottery Factory, Giant’s Causeway, Tower Museum and Titanic Quarter • Deluxe carry-on backpack, ticket wallet, luggage tags & strap • All local taxes, hotel service charges & porterage for one suitcase per person *Price per person, based on double occupancy. Add $634 for single occupancy. Deposit of $300 per person due by 4/30 to secure space as seats are limited. Travel Insurance is highly recommended and available for $179.00 per person. For more information, contact Kris Monroe Quality Cruises and Travel – (719) 685-0544 consistent with the ACRIN National CT Colonography Trial for patients 50 and older, published in The New England Journal of Medicine in 2008. Now that there is proof that virtual colonoscopy works very well, including in those ages 65 and older, Colon Cancer Alliance and other experts say Medicare should cover seniors for this life-saving test. CT colonography employs Xrays and virtual reality technology to produce three-dimensional images of the colon that permit a thorough and minimally invasive evaluation. It also requires no sedation. The Disease Colorectal cancer is the third most frequently diagnosed cancer and second-leading cause of cancer death in the United States. Yet despite the known benefits of screening, studies indicate that millions of Americans age 50 and older are not being screened for the disease. The Centers Log Cabin from page 19. there’s a common criticism of rustic homes it’s that the interiors are often dark or even oppressive and don’t allow for conventional decor. For the most part, these homes defy those limitations and feature plenty of lighter touches -- vivid colored rugs and upholstery fabrics, bright tiles and milled woodwork painted in light colors. These elements introduce contrast and become energetic focal points that counter the heaviness of stones and timbers, and they help personalize the decor. -- Budget for customization: Keep in mind that working with specialized natural materials involves a lot of time in selection and handling, and extensive handwork often follows in order to fit the materials together. This means the building process tends to be very labor-intensive, as much as for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that up to 30,000 colorectal cancer deaths each year could be prevented if all those age 50 and older were screened regularly. Studies at National Military Medical Center have shown that availability of the virtual exam significantly boosted screening rates. The Doctor’s Advice As C. Daniel Johnson, M.D., of the Mayo Clinic, explained, “CT colonography is a perfectly viable colorectal cancer screening tool for the traditional Medicare-age population. Wider availability made possible by Medicare coverage of CT colonography would attract more seniors to be screened for colorectal cancerwhich is so successfully treated when detected early. Making CT colonography more available to seniors ultimately could save lives.” Further Information Learn more at www.acrin.org. if you were building a high-end home with conventional methods. These costs need to be reflected in a final budget. Each of the dozen homes featured here is unique, but having shared geography and a single design source does mean their styles overlap quite a bit. Anyone contemplating an investment this serious will likely want to explore an even wider variety of options, but as a guidebook for the amazing possibilities for rustic home design, Kylloe’s effort delivers more than its share of stunning inspiration. The “rustic elegant” home is not your grandfather’s log cabin, but surely he’d have wanted one if he’d seen it. Book Information “Rustic Elegance” by Ralph Kylloe; Gibbs-Smith Publisher; $60, hardcover; 801-544-9800; www. gibbs-smith.com OPEN HOUSE - Sat. Feb. 11th 1:00pm - 3:00pm Come join us for refreshments including appetizers, sweets, and more. Take a tour and maybe win a Door Prize. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR MOVE-IN SPECIAL! Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 - Page - 25 Fashion: Looooking Gooood! Ilene Pearl Makes The Coats Of Dreams by Patricia McLaughlin ILENE PEARL MAKES THE COATS OF HER DREAMS, AND MAYBE YOURS It has to be her sixth or seventh career so far. There are a million (at least) stories of enthusiastic young fashionistas who decide to turn pro on the apparent assumption that working in fashion design or merchandising will be as much fun as shopping, only better because you get paid. Ilene Pearl’s bio doesn’t really fit the genre. For one thing, she was 57 when she took the plunge. She’d worked as a hotel manager, fundraiser, university administrator, manufacturing executive, etc., and so had developed a range of skills and insights that most 18-year-olds don’t have. She’d also learned more about apparel than most people pick up from shopping. Pearl grew up in St. Louis, where both her grandparents worked in the industry, her grandfather as a tailor, her grandmother as a coat finisher. Shopping with her grandmother was an education: Everything would be turned inside out, each seam and hem and interfacing scrutinized to be sure it was properly executed. So Pearl learned to notice and to judge details of construction. Even better, her grandmother, who could make anything beautifully, was happy to make her any garment that caught her fancy, in any fabric she liked. So she learned to love beautiful fabrics, and learned how different ones behaved, and which ones worked best for which sorts of designs. She also learned what flattered her, what felt right, what worked. But much as she loved the game of putting styles and fabrics together, she says, it never occurred to her to pursue it as a career. People like her grandparents had come from “the old country” -- in their case, a place on the Polish-Russian border that changed hands so often its residents could never be entirely sure for very long what country they lived in -- and had worked in the garment industry so that their children could have better lives, and their grandchildren could go to college and enter a profession. So Pearl got a degree in psychology from Washington University and became a teacher. Then, after a while, she worked in management at the Chase Park Plaza, the city’s grand old ho- tel. Next she worked for the St. Louis United Way, and then for Washington U. She moved to Philadelphia to take a job in development at the University of Pennsylvania and, after several years, moved on to the Philadelphia Orchestra. By now, she was in her 50s, her son was launched and she was ready for a change. What did she want to do with the rest of her life? She says people kept telling her: “What you want to do for your career is find something you absolutely love, and then find a way to make a living doing it.” But what? All along, she’d continued to dress as she always had -- falling in love with a great fabric, finding the perfect style for it, and then finding someone to make it for her -- which is basically what a fashion designer does. But she did it for love. She loved foraging in fabric shops, window-shopping for new ideas, flipping through fashion magazines. It only occurred to her to try doing it for money one day when a good friend came to work in a new jacket. The friend loved it -- it was elegant, it was comfortable, it was versatile, it worked with jeans or work clothes or even for evening. Also, Pearl noticed, it was a simple cut. Wouldn’t be hard to make. Would suit many body types. She went to New York to shop for fabric, and started looking for a small production house within easy reach of her Bucks County, Pa., home. She says nobody told her Pearl in one of her swingy iPEARL jackets. photo: iPEARL that, at 57, she was too old to start a career as a fashion designer. She wouldn’t’ve believed it anyway: She says she’s always been out of phase with her age cohort. “I didn’t marry until I was 38, had my first child when I was 43 ...” She started iPEARL with that first jacket, made in “a wonderful upholstery fabric” that “hangs beautifully and wears like steel.” She took it into an upscale local boutique and got an order on her first try; the jacket sold out immediately. When the recession hit, instead of approaching larger stores, she stayed small, doing trunk shows at small, high-end boutiques and Cañon Lodge Care Center SEE “COATS” PAGE 26. (ARDING!VENUEs#ANON#ITY#/ TLC Rehab provides outpatient therapy services for a variety of diagnoses. Services are individualized by certified and licensed staff to meet the unique needs of each patient. Qualified Ther apists Offer: 0HYSICAL4HERAPYs/CCUPATIONAL4HERAPY 3PEECH,ANGUAGE0ATHOLOGY Call Today To Learn More About The Outpatient Ther apy Services Offered At TLC Rehab: (719) 275-1014 or (719) 275-4106 312 South 9th Street, Suite E Cañon City, Co 81212 “A Place That Feels Like Home” s (OUR3KILLED .URSING#ARE s, ONG4ERM#ARE s) N(OUSE2EHABILITATION s0HYSICAL/CCUPATIONAL AND3PEECH4HERAPY s7OUND#ARE s2ESPIRATORY#ARE s2ESPITE#ARE s2ECREATIONAL 4HERAPY s$EMENTIA#ARE !DMISSION(OTLINE Page 26 - Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 Visit Us at http://www.seniorbeacon.info Fashion: Looooking Gooood! Coats from page 25. galleries, first on the Philadelphia Main Line, then reaching out to St. Louis, Chicago and beyond. For a blissful year, her coats were sold at Takashimaya, the elegant Japanese department store on Fifth Avenue -until the company decided to close its New York store in 2010. She uses luxury fabrics like cashmere, alpaca, boucles and metallic brocades, and loves strong colors -- tangerine, banana, violet, turquoise. Many of her coats -- see for yourself at www.ipearlfashions. com -- are inspired by fabulous coats she remembers: coats her grandparents made for her beautiful mother, coats Grace Kelly wore over her ball From Arthur C. Brooks, Pres. of American Enterprise Inst. The Irish singer Bono tells this anecdote: “Ireland has a very different attitude to success than a lot of places... In the United States, you look ... in the mansion on the hill, and you think ...one day, if I work really hard, I could live in that mansion. In Ireland, people look.... in the mansion on the hill and go, one day, I’m going to get that bastard.” That (seems) to be the spirit of the Democratic Party. It’s the mode of President Barack Obama’s demonization of “Millionaires and billionaires.” If successful, Brooks warns, it will smother the greatest engine for prosperity - especially the poor - in human history. gowns. Some are styles she grew up with: “swing coats and balmacaans, things that were classic, that always stayed in style.” Invariably, they’re lined in colorful silk prints, and the seam allowances are bound in bright contrasting color. She designs them not only for how they look, but for how it feels to be inside one: “When a woman puts on one of my pieces,” she says, “you can almost see the effect in the way she twirls, the way she stands.” Wearing one of her coats, you could sweep into a room if you wanted to, instead of merely walking into it. “I love swing coats,” she says, and when you look at hers you can see that she appreciates their dramatic potential -- and also understands that women with hips like them because, with a swing coat, FREMONT County/SALIDA Menus Penrose(372-3872) - Canon City(345-4112) Florence(784-6493) - Salida (539-3351) april 24: CREAM OF POTATO SOUP, Tuna Salad Wrap, Shredded Lettuce and Tomato, Hardboiled Egg, Grapefruit Half. april 26: BEEF STEW, Whole Kernel Corn, Herbed Green Beans, Diced Pears, Cornbread with Margarine . april 27: SLOPPY JOE ON A BUN, Scalloped Potatoes, Broccoli & Carrots, Apple. FLORENCE 100 Railroad St. - Florence Tues-Thur-Fri april 3: Beef Stroganoff, salad, dessert. april 5: Hamsteak, yams, veggies, desert. april 10:Mac/Cheese, hamburger patty, veggie, dessert. april 12: Soup, ham & cheese sandwich/ lettuce, tomato, dessert. april 17: Pork Roast, rice, casserole, dessert. april 19: Roasted Chicken, cornbread stuffing, green beans, dessert. april24: Stuffed Peppers, mixed veggies, dessert. april 26: Meatloaf, scalloped potatoes, carrots, dessert. april 13th fundraiser $5.00 Spaghetti, garlic bread, salad, dessert. april 28th fundraiser $5.00 French Toast, sausage, eggs, juice, coffee. GOLDEN AGE CENTER 728 N. Main St.-Canon City M-W-F PENROSE CENTER 1405 Broadway-Penrose (Tues/Thur) april 3: AMERICAN LASAGNA, Herbed Green Beans, Seasoned Cabbage, Banana. april 5: CHICKEN/WHITE CHILI, Spinach Salad with Lite Ranch, Cooked Carrots, Apple, Cornbread with Margarine. april6: CHILI RELLENO CASSEROLE, Parslied Carrots, Tossed Vegetable Salad with Lemon. april 10: TURKEY POT PIE, Cut Broccoli, Tossed Salad/French Dressing, Apricot Halves, Drop Biscuit. april 12: CHILI CON CARNE, Whole Wheat Crackers, Cut Broccoli, Raisin Nut Cup, Appl, Cornbread with Margarine. april 13: LENTIL BLACK BEAN SOUP, Egg Salad Sandwich on Whole Wheat Bread, Sliced Tomato on Lettuce, Banana. april 17: PORCUPINE MEATBALL, Whipped Potatoes with Gravy, California Vegetable Medley, Fresh Pear. april 19: TERIYAKI CHICKEN, Steamed Brown Rice, Spinach Mandarin Orange Salad. april 20: SPINACH CHEESE you get to buy a coat that fits you in the shoulders. Which is probably not something your average 20-year-old designer-wannabe would notice right off. The other thing Pearl has going for her as a newcomer to the business of fashion: She isn’t in it for the glitz and glamour and limos and after-parties, isn’t longing to be famous, hoping to hobnob with celebrities, dreaming of going to garden parties at Ralph Lauren’s house and barbecues at Diane von Furstenberg’s. She already has a life, and a husband, and friends. She’s making coats because she likes the work. She loves the process, the doing of it -- even if it took her a long time to discover it. SQUARES, Tossed Salad with Pear, Whipped Hubbard Squash, Citrus Cup. april 24: CREAM OF POTATO SOUP, Tuna Salad Wrap, Shredded Lettuce and Tomato, Hardboiled Egg, Grapefruit Half. april 26: BEEF STEW, Whole Kernel Corn, Herbed Green Beans, Diced Pears, Cornbread with Margarine. april 27: SLOPPY JOE ON A BUN, Scalloped Potatoes, Broccoli & Carrots, Apple. SALIDA MENU 719-539-3351 before 9:30am Tue/Th/Fri april 3: CHILI RELLENO CASSEROLE, Parslied Carrots, Tossed Vegetable Salad with Lemon. april 5: CHICKEN WITH WHITE CHILI, Spinach Salad with Lite Ranc, Cooked Carrots, Apple, Cornbread with Margarine. april 6: AMERICAN LASAGNA, Herbed Green Beans, Seasoned Cabbage, Banana. april 10: TURKEY POT PIE, Cut Broccoli, Tossed Salad with French Dressing, Apricot Halves, Drop Biscuit. april 12: CHILI CON CARNE, Whole Wheat Crackers, Cut Broccoli, Raisin Nut Cup, Apple, Cornbread with Margarine. april 13: LENTIL BLACK BEAN SOUP, Egg Salad Sandwich on Whole Wheat Bread, Sliced Tomato on Lettuce, Banana. april 17: SPINACH CHEESE SQUARES, Tossed Salad with Pear, Whipped Hubbard Squash, Citrus Cup. april 19: TERIYAKI CHICKEN, Steamed Brown Rice, Spinach Mandarin Orange Salad. april 20: PORCUPINE MEATBALL, Whipped Potatoes with Gravy, California Vegetable Medley, Fresh Pear APRIL 2: Combination Burrito/lettuce/tomato/salsa, corn, cilantro lime rice, sliced peaches. april 4: Chicken A La King, whipped potatoes, tossed salad/green peas, apricots. april 6: Tuna Stuffed Tomato, spinach salad/Italian drsg., drop biscuit, peanut butter oatmeal cookie. april 9: Turkey Tetrazzini, Italian green bean, strawberry applesauce, chocolate chip cookies. april 11: Roast Pork/Gravy, oven browned potatoes, parslied carrots, strawberry jello salad. April 13: Spinach Lasagna, tossed veggie salad, green beans, tangerine. april 16: Chicken/White Chili, spinach salad/ranch drsg., carrots, apple, brownie. april 18: Ham/Scalloped Potatoes, spinach salad/egg, mixed veggies, peaches. april 20: Birthday Meal! Meatloaf/ Brown Gravy, cheesy potatoes, green beans, PA tidbits. april 23: Enchilada Pie, sliced tomato/ lettuce, sliced yellow squash, mixed fruit. april 25: Pork Chow Mein, steamed brown rice, cabbage/red pepper, banana/ fortune cookie. april 27: Tuna Salad Wrap, cream of potato soup, shredded lettuce/tomato, hardboiled egg, grapefruit half. april 30: Turkey Potpie, broccoli, tossed salad/french drsg., apricot halves. MOST MEALS SERVED WITH MILK (Coffee or Tea optional) Most meals served/bread/marg. The Menu This Month Has Been Sponsored By Legacy Bank-Cañon City. Why Not Give A Call At 647-1300 And Thank Her? Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 - Page - 27 “Light For The Journey” By Jan McLaughlin - Director of Prayer for Prisoners International APRIL 2012 Lighthouse Journeys Part VIII “PINK COOKIES AND LIGHTHOUSE LESSONS” I lay on the beach with my cheek pressed against the green, blue and yellow striped towel, the sun warm and soothing on my back. Deep in thought, I barely notice the distant sounds of other children but soon hear their rapid approach to my place of solitude. Several children race past, giggling and yelling, accidentally kicking sand over me. Jumping up I brush off the sand and shake the towel, watching the children disappear behind some rocks further down the beach. “They didn’t even notice me.” I smile at their gaiety and part of me yearns to join them allowing the heaviness of my heart caused by people dear to me to evaporate on the sand. Turning toward the Lighthouse, I gaze at the window above me, shading my eyes from the glaring sun. My heart skips a beat as I see you waving, motioning for me. Your love surrounds me and I am reminded of your desire to be with me which is hard to comprehend, but, Jesus, but I love it. I tuck my towel under my arm and race up the path to the Lighthouse door. My heart is warms as I remember your beckoning me to join you – your hands outstretched like a daddy for his beloved child. I love you so much, Jesus. Can I ever tell you how much I love you? Are mere words express my boundless love? Joy tears spill over my cheeks as I climb the steps and push open the door. There you are, arms open with anticipation. “Abba! Abba!” I cry, racing into your arms. You enfold me close as I snuggle to your shoulder. What peace, what joy, what security I find here, Jesus, in your gentle loving arms. Glasses of icy lemonade and a plate of strawberry wafer cookies on a plate beckon me to the table. What a wonderful surprise. “How did you know, Jesus?” I ask, as you sit me in the big chair. [Remember, Jan, I know everything about you. I know you love pink wafer cookies. I know you love the prisoners. I know you are willing to listen and learn in MOST areas. However, one particular area we need “We’re the first society in which a symptom of poverty is obesity; every man his own William Howard Taft.” Mark Steyn in his book ‘After America’ to work on. It concerns your response in the midst of enemy fire. Philippians 2:13 is clearly the answer for you in this situation. Jan, I heard you turn your heartbreak over to me last night, even before you did. I heard your prayer before communion in church yesterday. I know you struggle with this and I know WHY you struggle but you will have to trust me and wait on me to show you what to do. Then, Jan, you must obey quickly. I will take care of the situation. Trust me. I have a plan about this and I am able to work out all situations. This is just a simple thing for me, even though for you it seems an immovable mountain. I move MOUNTAINS, remember? I love you. Can you trust me?] “Lord Jesus, I trust YOU but I don’t trust THEM!” [Listen, my child. If you truly trust ME, you don’t need to trust them. I am able to do in them what needs to be done to accomplish my will for all of you. Can you trust me? Have you forgotten WHO your Source is? “No, Lord.” [Then, trust me! About the children on the beach, you are wondering about them, aren’t you?] “Yes, Jesus. I have from the moment I heard them laughing. They are your children too, aren’t they?” [Yes. They are too busy playing to look up here. I have lemonade and cookies for them but they are too pre-occupied to see my outstretched hands, or to remember my outstretched arms at Calvary. I must rescue them now. They are caught in a sand bog on the other side of the rocks … a trap set by satan. If they only look up I could spare them these heartaches and trials. Pray for them, Jan. They will learn. [The children kicked sand all over you, didn’t they?] “Yes, Lord.” [ Y o u didn’t get angry, did you?] Pausing only slightly, then with amazement, I exclaim, “No, Lord, I didn’t! WOW! I really didn’t!” [Jan, these are your brothers and sisters who kick “sand” on you when you try to help them look UP. They need your prayers. When you get sand on you, remember to pray for the one who did it. When your heart is clouded with anger, you can’t pray. Love them, Jan. Pray for them. You were there not so long ago. Others prayed for you. You are all my dear children and I love you. [You must be alert and on guard constantly – watching for those who need prayer whether they are my children or not. Be alert for your own errors. Quickly realign your heart with mine. Remember, I am here for you always causing you to want to do my will, then helping you do it. I love you, my child, my precious child.] “For God is at work within you, helping you want to obey him, and then helping you do what he wants” (Phil 2:13 TLB). “And pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests. With this in mind, be alert and always keep on praying for all the saints” (Eph 6:18 NIV). Dear Reader, if you are having a difficult time trusting God in a situation, I would love to pray with you if you wish to call me. God will walk with you in your situation. He IS the Mountain Mover! Trust Him. © 2012 Jan McLaughlin, all rights reserved. Jan McLaughlin is Director of Prayer For Prisoners International and can be reached at 719-275-6971 or by e-mail, prayerforprisoners@msn.com. Allowing you or your loved one to receive the care you need in the environment that you love. Allowing you or your loved one to receive the care you need in the environment that they love. Non-Medical Provided Non-MedicalServices Services Provided • Meal Preparation • Errands/Shopping • Light Housekeeping • Assistance with personal needs • Bathing/Hygiene • Respite care for families • Companionship Guardian In Home Services Guardian In 719-583-7870 Home Services 803 W. 4th St. • Suite V - Pueblo, CO 2098255 803 W. 4th St. • Suite V Page 28 - Senior Beacon - Apr., 2012 Visit Us at http://www.seniorbeacon.info Finances: Create And Keep Wealth How To Spot An Overheated Market by Ron Phillips We are having a very nice run in the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The DJIA has finally closed above the 13,000 level. It was last at that point in 2008. Has the market gotten too frothy? THE SHORT ANSWER No. The market is still fairly valued and even under-valued. THE LONG ANSWER You are probably familiar with the P/E ratio. It is a gauge of value for stocks and stock markets based on share price and earnings. The lower the P/E the cheaper the market is. The higher the pricier. According to The Wall Street Journal, both the DJIA and the S&P 500 are at about a twelve to thirteen P/E ratio. This rough number is taking into account the past 12 month’s earnings and the next 12 months’ earnings estimates. Why is this important? We can use the past as a simple comparison. Transamerica Financial states that the market P/E has averaged 15.6 from 1926 to 2010. A market like we have now would be considered under-valued since the P/E is below this historic number. It looks even cheaper when compared to the 44 P/E level we saw in December of 1999. BEWARE THE BEAR AROUND THE CORNER Some investors will be scared out of this market because it has gone up, fearing a new downturn. Well, there is always a new downturn for the market coming soon. That is the nature of the stock market. It is volatile. The majority of the time it is flat or down and always risky. Financial writers Zvi Bodie and Rachelle Taqqu said in a recent article, “The truth is that stocks are risky no matter how long you hold them.” Only a fraction of the time is the market generating “new wealth”, or reaching new highs. PERILS OF MARKET TIMING The temptation in this market is to “sell at the top.” Since the market mainly dips around in volatility, we might sell and see the market drop. This creates a false sense of confidence that we can accurately time the market. I have never heard of any investor that can perfectly time the market for long periods, such as years or decades. What happens when the market is in the “new wealth creating” phase and we are in cash? Those investors lose growth or buy back in extremely high. IS IT TIME TO BUY? Since we know that the market is usually not making new highs, an investor might want to consider buying more stock during the inevitable stumble. If not, the market is still cheap by historic standards. New investments now are still at fair prices. C o n sider the SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average Fund (symbol: DIA). This fund has a current annual income of 2.34 percent. This income is better than a 10-year government bond, yielding only two percent. Also, the stock fund can grow in value and grow the dividend income. “History is a vast early warning system.” Norman Cousins by Glen Vollmecke Sangre De Cristo mountains, and story home on five acres was breath Dwarfed by the glistening dotted by evergreens, the double taking. John’s birth and early childhood on a four hundred acre Iowan farm involved considerable work in harsh weather conditions, yet his intrinsic love of the land, and animals remained with him. The realtor’s voice droned on in the background, while standing on the back porch they stood, silently enNow comes effective relief for a problem suffered by more grossed in the scenery. “We could do than 10 percent of the population: Ringing Ears. something with this property,” whispered John. Glen meanwhile had no Q. Is there a test for tinnitus? It's called Tinnitus, the sensadoubts. “What are we waiting for?” A. Yes. A tone-matching tion of noise or ringing in the She asked. evaluation takes about 20 ear when an external sound Fourteen years ago on a warm minutes. This evaluation will is not present. Those with summer afternoon, John and his replicate the exact frequency tinnitus experience noise in British wife Glen (Glenda) contemand loudness of tinnitus in the form of ringing, buzzing, plated a ‘forever’ move to their new each ear separately. roaring, clicking, whistling, or hissing. The cause in most home, outside Canon City. Colorado Q. What is the solution? cases is damaged hearing Springs, Pueblo, Westcliff, and the inHealthy Hearing Hair A. In most cases a small hair cells in the cochlea. This famous Cripple Creek were barely an Cells stand erect within amount of amplification, may be as a result of a single hours drive away, and the convenience your cochlea and do not usually 15 to 20 percent, will traumatic noise exposure of Canon City was close by. produce ringing sounds. raise the ambient sound just (such as a gunshot), years of The tense prison atmosphere enough to relegate your head moderate noise exposure in a precluded indifference, as conditions career or a hobby, or as a result noise into the background remained unstable: stress was a daily of ototoxic prescription drugs, where you will not notice it. The specific percentage is such as arthritis medications factor, and rising at four am each day easily determined by the tone or chemotherapy. had taken it’s toll. matching evaluation. Soon John’s career in the FedQ. Why do ears ring? eral Prison Complex in Florence dicFree Tinnitus Screening and A. Damaged hearing hair tated a radical change. Glen’s ColoDemonstration Now you can cells send a false signal to rado Springs properties were soon find out for FREE we can help your brain. The frequency of Damaged Hearing Hair managed by a realty company, as Cells are traumatized and the ringing in your ears. Just the sound is determined by send false signals to the call and receive: the location of damaged hair they invested in five splendid alpacas. brain, resulting in a tin1. Free diagnostic tonecells (stereocilia) within the Quickly, (rescue) goats, and a llama nitus sound. matching evaluation. cochlea. The brain hears this joined the ranks, encouraging a siza2. Computer Programming as ringing, hissing, ooo-ing or ble barn construction, as magnificent of hearing devises for your buzzing. blue peacocks strutted freely around specific ringing tone. the property. © 2011 The Wilson Group Their love of animals, was now realized as a working venture, that few people would ever experience. During the next thirteen years, Glen delivered Colorado City t 6685 Highway 165 fifteen crias (baby alpacas) while John studied the art of yarn transformation. La Junta t 417 W. 3rd Street Sadly his preliminary efforts failed, forcing his dogged determination into Lamar t 200 Kendall Dr., Suite 3 high gear, but soon his costly machine investments paid off. He became proTrinidad t 249 N. Commercial St. A+ Rating digicarehearing.com ficient at both spinning and knitting, with a coveted article in the National magazine “Great Americ a n Crafts.” “Real Men do Knit” was their amusing title. Throughout Southern Colorado his warm, elegant, albeit reasonably priced clothing, is displayed in high end galleries and stores, while their farm tours educate and thrill passing tourists, searching for a local ‘hands on’ experience. In England, at fifteen, Glen won a prestigious two year grant to art school, sharing her days with John Lennon, and working close to the ‘Fab Four’ on weekends. Her post World War 11 childhood prompted an autobiography which is almost ready for publication. She says. “It’s taken four years, I now need help editing and publishing.” There’s an air of excitement about the prospect of her first book. Her history is also impressive, having written five psychic ‘help’ columns for various newspapers, while assisting homicide detectives on their investigations. Now in this secluded environment, Glen’s passion for the arts excels, as annually her eclectic pieces including including animal feather paintings with one point diamonds, are accepted into the State Fair Fine Arts Gallery. She is now acknowledged internationally as a multimedia artist in sculpture and painting among other extraordinary pieces. In closing: they promote educational farm tours, so please visit their website at: www.alpacasrus.net E-mail: alpacasrus@q.com or call for an appointment at 1 719 275 0229. A Journey Into Retirement © 2011 The Wilson Group © 2011 The Wilson Group Ringing Ears? DigiCare Hearing Brings Low-Cost Solution Call today to schedule your appointment. 888.347.1817 Ron Phillips is an Independent Financial Advisor and a Pueblo, Colorado native. He and his wife are currently raising their two sons in Pueblo. For a free consultation visit www.RetireIQ.info or leave a message on his prerecorded voicemail at 924-5070. Simply mention Promo Code #1001 when contacting the author. Visit Us at http://www.seniorbeacon.info Senior Beacon - Apr., 2011 Page 29 Finances: Create And Keep Wealth Buy, Forrest, Buy….. Sell, Forrest, Sell.....… spot within the world’s consumers for by Gary Neiens, Raymond James Japans’ Nikkei stock average about 5 years. On January 2, 2009, is now standing at about a quarter of the shares of Apple could be bought its historical high recorded in 1989 at for a bit over $86.00. I also wanted to 39,915.87. I have in this space writ- point out that Forrest Gump got his ten before about Americas lost decade shares in 1994 when they were tradfor investors (and probably the nation ing at about $7.00 per shares (July as a whole). The Japanese have gone 1994). I hope Forrest didn’t sell. The Apple story has resurrectpast two lost decades now since their financial/real estate melt down. The ed the recently battered old theory Here’s your have chance buy and hold for the long term. I Japanese, like ourselves, major ofto structural problems in their economy know I have expressed an almost sinthat have mostly been ignored po- gle minded approach of investing in litically. Remedies would be tough. oil and gold (with a few commodity Robert Samuelson (Washington Post) stocks thrown in), but buying Apple on two fantastic from Quality Cruises would have workedand out Travel! quite well. recently pointed out howtrips the Japanese economy was based on “export Its present market value is currently than any other company. led growth” ours has beenONLY “con- more LASTwhile CHANCE! A FEW SEATS LEFT! Whether an investor or not, sumption led growth”. Neither strat- egy is currently working out well for you probably know the oil story. It either country. Both the U.S. and trades today at $106.0/bbl (March Japan face a very serious public debt 12, 2012). Looking over some* historical prices for crude from the New problem. When this situation exists York Mercantile Exchange shows - 11, 2012 Sun) some of(Sat these -barrel prices: $61.04 you often getMarch stagnant or3 depressed (12/30/05);CO $61.05 (12/9/06); financial markets. And has been Springs, Departing that Colorado at 8 a.m. (12/28/07); $79.36 our lot. Since my last column the $95.98 DowINCREDIBLE Jones IndustrialPRICE averageINCLUDES: (DJIA) (12/30/09); $91.38 (12/31/10); ♦ Motorcoach transportation closed above 13,000 (February 28, $98.83 (12/30/11). ♦ for 8 nights lodging 4 consecutive On December 28, 2011 2012) the first timeincluding since 2008. At about the same National nights in thetime San the Antonio area gold closed, according to the Blanchard Company, at $1,546.00/oz. Association of Securities Dealers ♦ 14 meals: 8 breakfasts andIn6 dinners On March 12, 2012 it traded at dex ♦(NASDAQ composite) closed Guided Tour of San Antonio Stand–where history took up about 10% so about♦ 3,000 (March 1, 2012)) for the Cruise at San Antonio’s famous $1,700.00/oz. place at the Alamo first time since theDistrict turn of the cen- far this year. Raymond James Chief River Walk tury. As Bloomberg pointed out the Economist, Jeff Saut, thinks mining ♦ Visit to the famous ALAMO and “bottoming process” began October stocks are about to play catch up with IMAX Theater presentation: 10, 2008 when 92.6% of all stocks re- the metals surge. They have lagged. Price of Freedom” corded “ALAMO...The new annual lows. About this (Saut Market Strategy Report, March Visit to was the Institute Texan Cultures 12, 2012). time♦everyone running of scared. and San Antonio Real estate home prices con Elsewhere, sinceMissions my last re- Tour of Inc. the LBJ USA Today reports port,♦ Apple hasRanch crossed the tinue to fall. Relax on a cruise at the ♦ and much more famous River Walk $500.00 per share level and closed on prices this past October were down another 3.4%Add from theforprior March*Price 15, 2012 $585.56 peron share. per at person, based double occupancy. $240 singleOctober. Surprisingly home builder stocks The company has been in a sweet occupancy. Get Away… San Antonio, Texas 9 Days & 8 Nights for only $780 Heading West 12 days, 11 nights for only $1,425* June 4 -15, 2012 (Mon - Fri) INCREDIBLE PRICE INCLUDES: ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Round trip in a Deluxe Motorcoach with restroom and VCR. Excellent accommodations for 11 nights. 7 Super Buffet or Sit-down meals & 11 breakfasts Escorted, some luggage handling included, Entertainment on bus ADMISSIONS, TAXES, AND TIPS WILL BE PAID FOR THE FOLLOWING: ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Tour of Salt Lake City & Temple Square with step-on guide. Evening Gambling at Reno Tour San Francisco with step-on guide Visit Charles M. Schulz Museum—Peanuts Comic Strip Drive through the Redwoods of California known as the “Avenue of Giants” Special reserved seating at the Coliseum to view the “Portland Rose Festival” 2nd largest flower parade in North America. Visit the Mount Saint Helen’s Visitor Center Tour of Seattle including The Waterfront with step-on guide Guided tour of The Firefighter’s School at Missoula, Montana Tour Yellowstone Park and Old Faithful Black Hills Jewelry Factory tour Enjoy a Dinner show in the Black Hills Charles M. Schulz Museum The “Avenue of Giants” in California Time And Seats Are Running Out To Be A Part Of This Fabulous Western $250 per person deposit by 4/1/2012. *Per Person, Double Occupancy; Adventure. Contact Kris As Soon As Possible So She Can Get You Booked!! $1,875.00 per Single Occupancy. Final payment is due May 1, 2012. For more information, contact Kris Monroe Quality Cruises and Travel – (719) 685-0544 have recently surged from their hugely depressed levels. Is this because they will be able to clear out old inventory or because the future might hold some brightness? In conclusion, last month’s Barron’s front page indicated that they felt that the DJIA of 15,000 was doable by 2013. Previously, on Tuesday, October 9, 2007 the DJIA closed at a record high of 14,164. Good luck and good investing, Gary Neiens Financial Advisor / Investment Broker Raymond James Financial Services, Inc., Member FINRA/SIPC, 310 S. Victoria Ave, Ste. G - Pueblo, CO 81003; Phone: 719545-2900; E-mail: Gary.Neiens@ RaymondJames.com “Independent solutions from Independent Advisors” The information contained in this report does not purport to be a complete description of the securities, markets, or developments referred to in this material. The information has been obtained from sources considered to be reliable, but we do not guarantee the foregoing material is accurate or complete. Any information is not a complete summary or statement of all available data necessary for making an investment decision and does not constitute a recommendation. Any opinions are those of Gary Neiens and not necessarily those of RJFS or Raymond James. Specific sector investments, where companies engage in business related to a particular industry, like Technology, are subject to fierce competition , the possibility of their products and services being subject to rapid obsolescence and limited diversification. Precious metals and gold, are subject to special risks, including but not limited to : price may be subject to wide fluctuation; the market is relatively limited; the sources are concentrated in countries that have the potential for instability; and the market is unregulated. International investing involved additional risks such as currency fluctuation, differing financial and accounting standards, and possible political and economic instability. Also, investing in emerging markets can be riskier than investing in well-established foreign markets. There is no assurance of the trends mentioned will continue in the future. Investing involves risk and investors may incur a profit or loss, including the loss if all principal. Apple is not closely followed by Raymond James Research. Gary Neiens, Raymond James Financial Services, Inc., its affiliates, officers, directors or branch offices may in the normal course of business have a position in any securities mentioned in this report. Where Are They Now? by Marshall Jay Kaplan GEORGE ‘FOGHORN’ WINSLOW It has been almost fifty years since movie audiences have seen the boywith the voice like a foghorn. Today, the former child actor is a senior citizen and leads a very, very private life in California. George ‘Foghorn’ Winslow was born as George Wenzlaff on May 3, 1946 in Los Angeles, California. The first words that George uttered as a baby was a deep, baritoned ‘dada’. With such a unique voice, at the urging of his uncle, George’s mother took him for a television audition for The Art Linkletter Show. He came on wearing a train conductor’s outfit. When Linkletter asked his name, the fiveyear-old replied (in a very deep voice), “It’s George, but I’d rather be Casey Jones”. The audience broke out in hysterics and George went on to appear on the show twenty more times! Movie star Cary Grant spotted George on one of Linkletter’s shows and signed him on for his film ‘Room For One More’ (1952). Now, a hit with movie audiences, George was given a movie contract with Twentieth Century Fox. He went on to appear again with Cary Grant in ‘Monkey Business’ (1952, also starring Ginger Rogers), in ‘Mister Scoutmaster’ (1953 with Clifton Webb), ‘The Rocket Man’ (1954 with Charles Coburn), ‘Artists and Models’ (1955 with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis) and ‘Rock Pretty Baby’ (1956 with Sal Mineo). However, there is one film that George is most famous for. Cast in the musical-comedy, ‘Gentlemen Prefer Blondes’ (1953), starring Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell, George plays Marilyn’s wealthy admirer, Henry Spofford III. His line to Monroe, “You have a certain animal magnetism” remains a comedy classic. George’s last film was ‘Wild Heritage’ (1955 with Will Rogers Jr.). In total, George made ten films. The foghorn voice gimmick had run its course. After the movies, George completed high school and then spent four years in the United States Navy where he took courses in photography. He spent all of his earnings from the movies and very rarely (if ever) lets his friends and colleagues know of his movie past. George almost never gives interviews and if he does, he will only talk about Marilyn Monroe. “The thing I remember most is working with this beautiful lady from early morning until late at night. As my folks were getting me dressed to go home, she came out of her dressing room without any makeup on. If I hadn’t recognized her voice, I would never have believed that she was the same person.” As an adult, George worked for the Sonoma Council of Aging. He has lived a very private life in a small home/cabin in Occidental, California, where he enjoys life and photography. Page 30 - Senior Beacon - Apr., 2011 15th Visit Us at http://www.seniorbeacon.info Friday April, 27 2010 Be There!!! Friday,May April8,27, 2012 --Be There !! Friday 2009 - Be There!!! McCabe Honored As SeniorDuring Of TheLifeFest Year For 2012 2009 Arts Center Happenings by Niki Hart-Arts Center Recycled Fairy Tales in the Buell Children’s Museum March & April: Slay the Garbage Dragon Be a hometown hero & find new uses for used items with your grandkids! 11 am to 4 pm, Tues.-Sat. Admission is $4 for adults and $3 for children/military. Arts Center members receive free admission. Studio 210 Spotlight feat. Dotsero Enjoy a jazz night out! An intimate setting in the Jackson Conference Center is perfect for sipping cocktails while enjoying the smooth jazz fusion sounds of Dotsero. Bring a friend or make it a date night. Thursday, April 12 from 7-10 pm in the Jackson Conference Center $15 for regular tickets | $10 for Studio 210 Members | at the Arts Center Box Office: 295-7222 Contact...ttyl Join the Sangre de Cristo Ballet and Artistic Director Stephen Wynne for an evening of contemporary ballet followed by a post performance discussion in the Arts Center Theater. Friday, April 20 at 7:30 pm & Saturday, April 21 at 2 pm Tickets: $10 | at the Arts Center Box Office: 2957222 Center Stage Performing Arts Season: Stephanie Bettman/Luke Halpin You’ll be hooked from the first fiddle line to the last sweet harmony. Thurs., May 10, 2012 at 7:30 pm in the Arts Center Theater Tickets: $25 at the Arts Center Box Office: 295-7222. Century Casino, located on the corner of Bennett Avenue and 2nd Street, offers you the excitement of a larger casino with the quaintness of your friendly neighborhood hangout. We have over 435 of your favorite slots, penny and video poker games; plus, craps, roulette, blackjack and 3-card poker. Earn cash back, overnight stays and free meals when you join our (free) Gold Club. Come play, stay and dine with your friends at Century Casino Cripple Creek. Century Casino’s Mid City Grill is home to chef Paul who has put together a menu of classic home cookin’, fine steaks, awesome breakfasts and daily specials that will knock your socks off. Mid City Grill atmosphere is laid back and yet upscale for that special occasion. Come in and enjoy a scrumptious meal. Open daily at 7am. Century Casino-Cripple portion of the 2012 Seniors Life Fes- Arts Center on April 27th. The prizes Creek is proud to sponsor the Bingo tival at 2 pm at the Sangre De Cristo are great. Good Luck! Century Casino-Cripple Creek: ‘THE’ Place To Be Commish charge for all the seniors at the Life Festi- Commissioners. Ed. Note: Each year the County Commis- val. Here is some info on about the County John B. Cordova Sr. sioners donate coffee and ice tea free of Mr. Cordova Sr. moved from page 14. RETIREMENT DECLINING VALUE We provide simple solutions Why Choose HomeSource? No cost property evaluation for our customers Close quickly on your schedule You are in control and not at the whim of a realtor We’ll make you a fair offer and we pay CASH We purchase homes as-is Simple, caring, fast REPAIR PROBLEMS INHERITED PROPERTIES DISTRESSED PROPERTIES DOWNSIZING Need to sell your house fast? We can help! SPECIAL! 55" LCD Flat-Screen TV Gift if we purchase your home! 719-328-0300 We are a local office www.homesourcepartners.net ® ACCREDITED BUSINESS bbb.org REFERRALS ALWAYS APPRECIATED to Pueblo from the State of New Mexico in 1952 when his father was hired by CF&I. He was raised in Eastwood Heights, attended schools in the Pueblo City School District, and went on to graduate from the University of Southern Colorado (CSUPueblo) with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Civil Engineering Technology. A Vietnam Era Veteran in the Air Force, his first job was at the CF&I as a switchman for C&W Railroad. He became a general contractor, an occupation he still holds. Commissioner Cordova was elected in September 2007; and was re-elected in November 2008 to a four-year term. He is Commissioner Chairman Pro Tem and belongs to numerous boards and organizations. He is president of AFSCME, Colorado Public Employee Retiree Chapter 76, and president of board for Colorado Bluesky Enterprises. He also serves on at least 11 more boards.: Commissioner Cordova, has 2 sons, 1 daughter, 7 grandchildren and 2 great-granddaughters.. Anthony Nuñez Pueblo County Commissioner Anthony Nuñez entered into his second 4-year term in office on January 13, 2009. Commissioner Pueblo Athletic Club Commits To Seniors Pueblo Athletic Club offers a variety of equipment and activities for senior citizens. Aside from the cardio machines, pools, and indoor track, many of the fitness classes are tailored towards seniors, providing safe, effective, and fun workouts in a social setting. Among the most popular are the Silver Sneakers® classes which incorporate exercises designed to increase muscular strength, range of movement, balance and activity for daily living skills. Zumba Low classes are gaining popularity with the fusion of Latin and International music with a low impact, dance based workout. For those who enjoy the pool, the Water Aerobic classes provide a stress-free workout, yet the resistance of the water challenges all the large muscles of the body. For overall wellness, Yoga Stretch provides a chair based class of total body stretching. With extra amenities such as the hot tub, steam room, and dry saunas, better health can be both relaxing and fun! More information can be found at www.puebloathleticclub.com or (719) 561-3488. Visit Us at http:// www.seniorbeacon.info Just What Is Beautiful? by Patricia McLaughlin Have you seen Gucci’s new ads -- where the models are wearing so much eye makeup they look like creatures from another planet? It gets your attention, as an ad should, and maybe, if your taste is more advanced than mine, it has a certain edgy appeal. I can’t see it, myself. One look at these exquisitely dressed golden aliens -- small, slick heads with minimal hair; long, sprawling tentacle-y limbs; ultra-pale yellow skin; unnaturally large, staring eyes -- and I’m: “Eeeuuwwww, creepy!” It reminds me of one of the big looks from the Oscars a few weeks ago: lipstick in the alarming shade of red you tend to associate with fresh blood or strawberry Jell-O, as shiny as a thick, newly applied coat of highgloss paint, and just as sticky-looking. Every time another pair of those clown lips showed up on my TV screen, I felt the same involuntary inward recoil you get when you see a little kid with a drippy red Popsicle headed like a heat-seeking missile for your clean white jeans: Eeeeuuww! Don’t get any on me. It’s undeniably dramatic but, like the Gucci space girls’ possum eyes, weirdly gruesome. It makes your lips look even less like actual human lips than those bright red wax lips you used to be able to buy at corner stores Spring Preparation for Lawn & Garden. Trees, shrubs, Annuals & Perennials. Pond supplies, Outdoor Furniture & Spas. Just a short drive to Canon City. Senior Beacon ad:Layout 1 11/18/10 2:57 PM Page 1 Appointments available in Pueblo & Cañon City! prayerforprisoners@msn.com Senior Beacon - Apr., 2011 - Page - 31 that sold penny candy, back when there still was such a thing. It reminds me of a story Phyllis Feldkamp, longtime fashion editor of the long-gone Philadelphia Evening and Sunday Bulletin, told me once: She was on a bus and she smiled at the little girl in the seat in front of her, and the little girl burst into tears. “She’s scared of your lipstick,” the little girl’s mother explained. It must’ve been in the early 1990s when Bobbi Brown’s brownish lipsticks took “the natural look” to a new level. Phyllis, sticking with her signature bright red, hadn’t realized until that moment that it had become unusual enough to frighten small children. They say beauty is in the eye of the beholder, so maybe it shouldn’t surprise us that one person’s idea of beautiful can strike somebody else as the opposite. The history of fashion is littered with examples: spit curls, beehive hairdos, bobby socks, turquoise eye shadow, “Dynasty” shoulder pads, stirrup pants. Still, most of those examples looked fine in their prime -- at least for a few minutes, to some people - and only later revealed themselves to be hideous. We’re used to that: It’s what fashion does. Something new looks fabulous and then, a couple of years later, you look back and wonder, “What was I thinking -- blue jeans with such sharply tapered ankles they needed little zippers?” (Or any of about a million other things.) We’re also used to the idea that some things don’t translate from one culture or subculture to another -- bound feet, tight-laced corsets, fullbody tattoos, scarification, luxuriant underarm hair, multiple piercings, patchwork madras blazers, etc. But how is it that Jell-O lips can look fine (to Angelina Jolie, apparently) and utterly grotesque (at least to me) at the same time, right here in the middle of the same more or less mainstream American pop culture? What explains that? Could it be a side effect of colliding technologies? Maybe the actresses who wear gooey Jell-O lips and the makeup artists who perpetrate them don’t do that much television, and so haven’t figured out how to allow for the differences that HDTV makes. Everybody knows stage makeup has to be exaggerated so that it won’t be washed out by stage lighting, and so the people in the last row can read the actors’ faces. Close up, an actor in stage makeup looks like a caricature. Is it possible that the toored, shiny-vinyl-looking lips that look scary on my high-def TV screen would look better -- or even beautiful -- in Technicolor, or in a digital image made for a fashion magazine? Or am I grasping at straws? After all, think how little consensus there is in this society about other things -- foreign policy, education, health care, taxation, etc. Why should we all expect to agree on what’s beautiful? B�gin Again Love Your Legs! Rocky Mountain Vein Institute provides total vein care in a comfortable setting. Our highly trained and caring staff offers state-of-the art treatments that can help your legs look and feel better. COMMON SIGNS AND SYMPTONS: Aching pain and tiredness Varicose and spider veins Itching, burning and discoloration Restless legs Swelling of feet & ankles Bulging veins Integrity | Empathy | Expertise 719.543.VEIN (8346) • www.rmvein.com 1619 North Greenwood, Suite 308 Pueblo, CO 81003 Gordon F. Gibbs, M.D. Founder & Medical Director 2129084 Board Certified Phlebologist Board Certified/Fellowship Trained Vascular Interventional Radiologist Mayo Clinic Graduate NOTE ANY CORRECTIONS OR MODIFICATIONS. __________________________________________ AD NUMBER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2129084 ADVERTISER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .LIFE CARE CENTER SALES REP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14 KRISTA Page 32 - Senior Beacon -Apr., 2011 Reeling A Message for Steven Spielberg Darn you, Steven Spielberg! You made me cry again -- and I hate to do that in a movie. “War Horse” had me blubbering like a baby. Yes, it’s a wonderful film, but I wish you had toned things down a bit. Although three months have gone by since seeing “War Horse” last Christmas, I still get teary eyed thinking about the terrible suffering of Joey, that magnificent title animal sold to the cavalry in World War One. Thank you, though, for reminding us that war is hell, especially for horses. I have to confess my worries upon hearing of your decision to direct a film treatment of Michael Morpurgo’s novel -- in which Joey narrates his own story -- even though an award-winning play based on the book has been quite successful. I shouldn’t have been concerned, for you picked a cinematographer who knows all the right camera tricks to show us battlefield horrors as well as human behavior at its best and worst. I realize Janusz Kaminski has worked with you before – and won two Oscars (“Saving Private Ryan” and “Schindler’s List”) for his efforts, but he really outdid himself with “War Horse.” There’s one particular scene that ends up on my list of “best camera shots ever.” You must know the one I’m talking about. It’s when Joey’s eye fills Visit Us At http://www.seniorbeacon.info “A Message For Steven Spielberg” practically the entire screen with the image of a young girl entering the barn reflected there. Awesome! And you had to be pleased with Lee Hall (“Billy Elliot”) and Richard Curtis (“Love Actually”) for giving you a screenplay filled with emotionally-charged scenes showing how much Albert (Jeremy Irvine), the British lad who trained Joey, cared for this beautiful horse, as well as the way various soldiers treated him as he made his dangerous way through those bloody European battlegrounds. Cast members didn’t let you down either, did they? Young Irvine (TV’s “Life Bites”) earns our empathy right away with his sensitive behavior toward Joey despite his troubled father’s (Peter Mullan) sometimes misguided interference. Emily Watson (“The Water Horse”) simply couldn’t be better as the long-suffering wife and mother trying to keep things together during extremely hard-scrabble times. Celine Buckens, in her movie debut as a darling French youngster who hides Joey from German troops, simply captivated me. Niels Arestrup (“A Prophet”) as her loving grandfather also delivers a standout performance here. So congratulations, Mr. Spielberg. However, don’t be surprised if you get a bill from me for all the tissues I’ve had to use watching “War Horse” and thinking about it afterwards. You can ask John by Film Critic Betty Jo Tucker, Pueblo Williams to pay half. As always, his background music adds to the emotional weight of what’s happening on screen. But you already knew that, right? (Released by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures and rated “PG-13” for intense sequences of war violence. Available April 3rd on DVD.) Also on DVD This Month. “Contraband,” starring Mark Wahlberg, is scheduled for DVD release on April 24th. Although not happy when panning movies with one of my favorite actors, I have to admit this film is not up to Wahlberg’s standards. He plays a man drawn back into the smuggling racket in order to save his family. Yes, Wahlberg and co-star Ben Foster deliver strong performances here, but the film ends up with too many plot holes and mixed messages. Chris Farraday (Wahlberg) has been trying very hard to be a law abiding citizen after years of involvement with smuggling activities centered in New Orleans. His wife (a practically unrecognizable Kate Beckinsale) and two young children are now the center of his world, so he wants to stay out of trouble. But Andy (Caleb Landry Jones), his brother-in-law, has angered some important people in the smuggling racket and needs help to get off the hook. If things aren’t cleared up for Andy, his life could be in danger. Chris’ wife and kids might also be targets. After Chris agrees to help Andy, he asks his best friend Sebastian (Foster) to take care of his family while he handles a new smuggling assignment. “Contraband” shows how Chris and his “smuggler” pals turn this challenge into something more than expected. There are many action scenes and some suspense ensues - mostly dealing with betrayal -- but the complicated shenanigans and farfetched nature of Chris’ plans become hard to swallow. Also, the ending fails to square with the film’s motif and comes across with a tacked-on kind of feeling. Wahlberg (“The Fighter”) and Foster (“The Mechanic”) display their ability to change from apparently concerned, decent guys into men of violence in the blink of an eye. They are extremely watchable, but both definitely deserve better films than this one. (Released by Universal Pictures and rated “R” for violence, pervasive language and brief drug use.) Read more film reviews by Betty Jo Tucker at ReelTalkReviews.com. Copies of her two books, CONFESSIONS OF A MOVIE ADDICT and SUSAN SARANDON: A TRUE MAVERICK, are available on Amazon.com and at Barnes & Noble in Pueblo. IT HAD TO BE US, the award-winning romantic memoir she and her husband co-wrote under the pen names of Harry & Elizabeth Lawrence, can be ordered at Amazon’s Kindle store, where CONFESSIONS OF A MOVIE ADDICT is also available now.