Senior Center is in

Transcription

Senior Center is in
Famous singer’s legacy lives on
Birthday party honors five
Ruth Etting was a huge star in the 1920s and
‘30s. She sang with the popular orchestras of
the era, was a featured performer in Florenz
Ziegfeld’s Follies, and appeared in several movies and dozens of film shorts.
Five folks age 100 and older had some words
of wisdom for those who attended a combined
birthday celebration.
See Page 7
See Page 12
Vol. 25 No. 4
April 2015
Visit us on the web: www.lifeafter50online.com
Silver Key buys new buildings, expands operations
Thirty-seven years in one place is a long time.
That’s how long Silver Key Senior Services has
occupied its current location at 2250 Bott Ave.
Much has changed since Silver Key opened for
business in 1978, but there’s no longer anywhere for
the organization to grow.
That’s why Silver Key has purchased two
buildings on South Murray Boulevard. The new
buildings will double the square footage Silver Key
currently has, said Lorri Orwig, chief development
officer.
The site also provides better parking and,
importantly, a big, brand new kitchen with the
capacity to provide half a million meals a year.
“We need a much larger kitchen because we are
now preparing meals for both the Golden Circle
Nutrition Program and Meals on Wheels,” Orwig
said.
The one-level buildings and expansive, flat
parking lot will better accommodate both clients and
Silver Key staff.
In addition, Silver Key will be able to provide
community common spaces, which the current
building doesn’t have.
“The community space at our new location will
give us more opportunities to address the issue of
senior isolation,” said Silver Key President and
CEO Pat Ellis.
Silver Key Senior Services has outgrown its current building at 2250 Bott Ave.
Silver Key recently bought the buildings at
1605-1655 S. Murray Blvd. for $1.95 million, using
an initial gift of $1.5 million from the Silver Key
Foundation, and is financing the rest.
“We’re beginning a capital campaign soon for
the purchase and renovations,” Orwig said. Then
renovations, including the new kitchen, community
spaces, office space, updating and adding bathrooms
and other changes within the building will be
accomplished.
The current building will be sold, and proceeds
See SILVER KEY, page 4
Senior Center is in ‘no danger of closing’
Ownership issue could
drag on for a while, city
spokeswoman says
By Jeanne Davant
It will be at least a couple of
months before the city of Colorado
Springs hosts another meeting
regarding possible operation of the
Colorado Springs Senior Center by the
YMCA of the Pikes Peak Region. In
the meantime, the Senior Center will
remain open.
The city is still in the process of
finding answers to questions posed by
a large crowd at the Senior Center in
March, said Aimee Cox, Community
Initiatives Manager for the city of
Colorado Springs.
“We’re planning to come back to
the seniors the first week of May with
better information in response to their
concerns,” Cox said, adding that the
city has not entered into a management contract with the Y.
In the meantime, however, the
center “is in no danger of closing,”
Cox said.
The Colorado Springs Housing
Authority has operated the Senior
Center since the city of Colorado
Springs cut support to the center in
2010. The Housing Authority recently
asked to be relieved of that responsibility, and the city began a search for
another operator.
The Y was the only agency that
responded to the city’s request for
qualifications, Cox said.
Seniors, supporters, instructors
and partners packed the Senior
Center’s large meeting room in March
and hurled questions at Cox and Boyd
Williams, President and CEO of the Y.
“We need to take some additional
time to review some of the information we’ve received,” Cox said.
The city is also exploring issues
that have come to light as the
investigation has proceeded.
For example, Cox said, “We’re
trying to get a handle on things like
how instructors are selected and
See SENIOR CENTER, page 4
Page 2
April 2015
LIFE after 50
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Lamb Library
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Friday, April 24 at 2 p.m.
Barkman Library
1300 Jerry Murphy Rd.
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Thursday, April 23 at 5 p.m.
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April 2015
Page 3
LIFE after 50
From the Editor’s Desk
LIFE after 50 is published on
the first of each month by Pikes Peak
Publishing, LLC.
Deadline for submissions is the
15th of the month prior to publication
date. Deadline for classified advertising is the 20th of the month prior to
publication date.
Publication of advertising does
not necessarily constitute endorsement of the advertiser’s company,
services or products. Bylined columns and articles are the opinions of
the writers, and not necessarily those
of the publisher.
No portion of LIFE after 50,
including advertising, editorial material, artwork or photographs, may be
reproduced in whole or in part without
the written permission of the publisher.
LIFE after 50 is available at
no charge at more than 200 distribution sites in El Paso, Teller, Pueblo and
Fremont Counties, and on the Internet
at www.lifeafter50online.com. Mailed
subscriptions are available, prepaid
with order, at $30 for one year.
LIFE after 50 welcomes letters to the editor and other comments. Please send to:
Pikes Peak Publishing, LLC
P.O. Box 50125
Colorado Springs, CO 80949-0125
Telephone (719) 418-2717
Publisher
Dennis Ingmire
Email: dennis@pikespeakpublishing.com
Editor
Jeanne Davant
Email: jeanne@pikespeakpublishing.com
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Email: anne@pikespeakpublishing.com
Classified Advertising and
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Email: sales@pikespeakpublishing.com
Graphic Design
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Email: don@pikespeakpublishing.com
Candidates pledge to support seniors
nonprofit, business and community
on the list, first published in July
LIFE after 50 typically does not
endorse candidates for office, but we
members.
2012. The Springs moved from a
thought you’d like to know that three
The Milken Institute, a national
score of 54 on the list of 100 large
people who are running for
leader in research and
municipalities in the country to 49.
Colorado Springs mayor in
public policy, has studied
Madison, Wisc., was the No. 1
the April 7 municipal
cities of various sizes and city in the 2014 index, ranked high
election have signed a
developed a metric to rate for quality health care, a strong
pledge to support seniors.
each city based on a
economy and educational environCandidates Amy
standardized set of
ment, healthy lifestyle and plentiful
Lathen, Mary Lou
criteria. The result was an cultural choices.
Makepeace and John
index of the best cities for
Colorado Springs’ 49th ranking
Suthers have signed
successful aging.
was based on an overall score of
pledges making a
The index ranks cities 89.23 out of a possible 100 points.
By Jeanne Davant
commitment to work with
by examining 84 factors
The Springs ranked 43rd among the
LIFE after 50 Editor
the Innovations in Aging
that affect quality of life
top 100 for folks 65 through 79 and
Collaborative to direct
for older adults. These include health 32nd for people 80-plus. It’s a good
focus, energy and leadership on
and wellness, crime rates, weather,
thing that we improved slightly, but
issues that impact older adults living
economic and job conditions,
obviously, we have a ways to go.
in Colorado Springs.
housing, transportation and social
For details of the study, visit
Innovations in Aging tells us that engagement factors that help create
www.milkeninstitute.org/publicathe key components of the pledge are safe, affordable and connected
tions/view/671.
to:
communities. The index also
Innovations in Aging is a unique,
• Ensure that the well-being of our recognizes the new economic and
multidisciplinary team working to
aging population is addressed by social reality that, especially for the
ensure that the Pikes Peak region is a
each department, agency and
65-79 age group, many need and
remarkable place in which to age.
division in city government.
want to continue paid employment.
Hopefully, the next mayor and
• Make our city safe, affordable
In 2014 Colorado Springs
council will join with the collaboraand comfortable for our older
improved from its original position
tive to make it more so.
residents.
• Provide older adults access to
resources promoting health and
wellness.
• Support employment, entrepreneurship, education and other
services to make our older
PerfectCare at Home offers a variety of services tailored specifically to meet the needs
of our clients. We will work with you to evaluate the type and level of care that is
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necessary to maintain and improve you or your loved one’s quality of life.
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• Hourly in-home care (non-medical)
• Companion Services
• Personal care (bathing, bathroom assistance)
• Live-in home care
the varied needs of our older
• Toilet assistance and incontinence care
• Meal preparation
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population
• Assistance with laundry and light housework • Respite care
• Assistance to medical, dental or eye care
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and mobility options for our
older adults
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• Promote the engagement of
102 South Tejon Street, Suite 1100 • Colorado Springs, CO 80903
older residents in volunteer and
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• Call upon higher education and
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programs to help older adults
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Page 4
SILVER KEY/from page 1
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from the sale will go into the capital
campaign.
Getting the commercial kitchen up
and running is the first priority for
Silver Key.
“Our current kitchen is not big
enough to put out both Golden Circle
and Meals on Wheels,” Orwig said,
adding that the organization hopes to
have the kitchen functioning by
October.
The rest of Silver Key probably
will relocate by October 2016. The
timing depends on fundraising.
“We’re trying to stage this so we
are raising money and not financing
anything long-term,” Orwig said.
The current building has “lots of
quirks,” Orwig said – backed-up
sewers and leaky roofs have been
issues.
“It’s going to continue to cost a lot
of money to update and maintain,” she
said. “We may be forced to move
sooner, but that’s not our preference.”
At the new location, Silver Key is
looking to partner with other
organizations, such as the Colorado
Springs Senior Center and YMCA of
the Pikes Peak Region to provide
more services to clients.
“We want people to know that we
are really taking a long, hard look at
senior needs in the community,”
Orwig said. “There has been concern
about our moving away from the west
side of town. We are not abandoning
the west side, just looking at what
makes the best sense for our growth
and the community.”
Silver Key has an outpost on the
east side of town, a church where
Meals on Wheels volunteers pick up
meals to deliver to seniors.
“We are looking at partnering with
Westside Cares,” Orwig said, “and we
will have 21 locations within the
community for Golden Circle. We
may be using those Golden Circle
locations as community hubs. We
want to make sure we are serving
everyone.”
SENIOR CENTER/from page 1
polices regarding partners and room
reservations.”
One concern that has surfaced is
requirements for volunteers, for whom
background checks are not currently
required.
“We’re not sure about current
policies,” Cox said. “We’re trying to
review those now. It is very likely that
a lot more discipline will be required.
There will be new policies. There
likely will be new requirements for
volunteers, new job descriptions and
background checks – we will be
requiring them because seniors are a
vulnerable population. If there are
certain requirements for instructors
now, it might be that certain
instructors aren’t eligible any more.
We have no idea how policy changes
would affect programming, and we
want to know all of that.”
Those policy changes also could
affect the Senior Center’s budget,
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which the city is also closely scrutinizing.
For instance, background checks
cost $60 to $70 per person, a cost that
isn’t budgeted for at present.
“We now believe that certain costs
have been cut that we would have to
add back,” Cox said. The city was to
meet with the staff of the Housing
Authority the week of March 30 to
review financial documents and its
policies.
Cox said she has found answers to
some of the questions the city has
fielded.
“No membership fee will be
required, regardless of who operates
the Senior Center,” she said. “The
name will remain the same, and the
Golden Circle Nutrition Program will
continue.
In addition, she said, “we haven’t
made that final decision” regarding
the Y operating the center. The
Housing Authority still is the official
operator of the Senior Center and will
be until it formally withdraws from
that responsibility.
“I do believe that seniors aren’t
going to see a lot of change in most of
the day-to-day operations,” Cox said.
Asked if there are concerns that
the Y might back away from its
proposal to operate the center, Cox
said, “We continue to communicate
with the Y about our progress, and
they continue to express interest. As
far as I know, the Y remains ready to
provide service.”
April 2015
Page 5
LIFE after 50
New destination for historic Colorado Springs locomotive
The Denver & Rio Grande steam locomotive
No. 168 is headed for a new life as part of a
museum on wheels.
The locomotive, which is on display in Antlers
Park, will be restored to working condition and
operated by the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad.
It will join other vintage steam locomotives and
passenger cars dating back to the 1880s.
The engine will run on the railroad’s 64-mile
stretch of track between Antonito and Chama.
The Colorado Springs City Council approved on
March 10 a lease agreement with the Railroad under
which No. 168 will continue to serve as a memorial
to Colorado Springs’ founder Gen. William Jackson
Palmer.
The locomotive will remain in Antlers Park until
completion of a review and approval process by the
National Register of Historic Places. That decision
is expected by July. Once the locomotive is
removed, the site will be graded and seeded with
turf grass.
The steam locomotive, known as “Old 168,”
was manufactured in Philadelphia in 1883 by
Baldwin Locomotive Works. The Denver & Rio
Grande Western Railroad purchased it the same
year, and it pulled the first Denver & Rio Grande
passenger cars from Colorado Springs to Ogden,
Utah.
With its unusual narrow-gauge design, the
locomotive was able to move through narrow
canyons and rocky precipices. In service for 50
years, it was retired in 1933, when the Great
Depression and the availability of newer, more
powerful steam locomotives reduced demand for
“Old 168,” a steam locomotive on display in Antlers Park, soon will be restored and returned to service on
the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad.
vintage engines.
In 1938, the railroad donated No. 168 to the city
of Colorado Springs as a monument to Palmer, who
founded the Denver & Rio Grande and the Denver
& Rio Grande West railroads. The railroads were the
economic lifeblood of southern Colorado and
beyond.
The engine was one of the first monuments
featuring a steam locomotive, and according to a
1938 Gazette article, it symbolized “progress,
commerce and civilization.”
With the exception of a brief period during the
construction of the current Antlers Hotel in the
1960s, Old 168 has been a fixture since 1938 in
Antlers Park, adjacent to the former Denver & Rio
Grande depot building.
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Page 6
April 2015
LIFE after 50
UCCS Aging Center hosts free caregiver workshops
By Laura Engleman
UCCS Aging Center Project Director
The UCCS Aging Center will host
free workshops to give caregivers
essential resources and skills to help
navigate the challenges of caring for
an aging loved one. The workshops
will be held April 17, 3-6 p.m., and
May 9, 9 a.m.-noon, in the Lane
Center for Academic Health Sciences,
4863 N. Nevada (across from
University Village), in the first-floor
classroom.
The workshops are funded by the
Pikes Peak Area Council of Govern-
ments’ Area Agency on Aging (AAA),
which already helps support the Aging
Center’s Aging Families and
Caregiver Program. This high-demand
program offers counseling and
education for distressed caregiver
families and referrals for supportive
community services. The program can
help reduce caregiver stress and
burnout, increase skill and confidence
in caregiving, engage families to work
together, and balance family roles.
“Due to the critical need for
caregiver services, we unfortunately
have many people on our waiting list,”
said Miranda Shaw, Aging Center
caregiver program coordinator. “These
workshops will equip participants with
resources and skills they can use
immediately.”
Attendees will hear presentations
by caregiver experts, receive a
comprehensive caregiver handbook,
and have an opportunity to ask
questions and connect with caregiving
peers. Refreshments will be served,
and an RSVP is required. To reserve a
spot, contact the UCCS Aging Center
AFFORDABLE
Assisted Living
in a Scenic Setting
at (719) 255-8002 or email Miranda
Shaw at mshaw3@uccs.edu.
The Pikes Peak Area Agency on
Aging provides programs and services
for older adults and their caregivers.
No-fee services are funded through
the federal Older Americans Act and
the State of Colorado for eligible
adults 60 years of age or older. For
more information, visit http://www.
ppacg.org/programs/area-agency-onaging.
The UCCS Aging Center is the
only senior mental health center in El
Paso County offering its services on a
low-fee sliding scale or at no cost to
adults age 55 and older. Under the
direction of Michael Kenny, Psy.D.,
the center also functions as the
primary training site for students in
the UCCS geropsychology doctoral
program. The Aging Center is one of
five clinics that are part of the UCCS
HealthCircle in the new Lane Center,
which also houses Peak Vista’s Lane
Family Health Center. Other
HealthCircle clinics are the Center for
Active Living, Peak Nutrition,
Primary Care Clinic, and the Veterans
Health and Trauma Clinic. For more
information, visit www.uccs.edu/
healthcircle.
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April 2015
Page 7
LIFE after 50
Famous singer’s legacy lives on at local restaurant
By Jeanne Davant
She was known as the queen of
torch singers.
Ruth Etting was a huge star in the
1920s and ‘30s. She sang with the
popular orchestras of the era, was a
featured performer in Florenz
Ziegfeld’s Follies, and appeared in
several movies and dozens of film
shorts.
With her blonde, blue-eyed good
looks and stunning voice, Etting
became America’s sweetheart. Her
tumultuous personal life also
fascinated Americans – as a young
girl, she married a Chicago mobster.
But in 1939, she gave up stardom
and retired, moving with her second
husband to Colorado Springs.
Although she kept a low profile
here, Etting is memorialized in a
display at the Omelette Parlor, 900 E.
Fillmore St., the site of her former
home.
Ruth Etting was born Nov. 23,
1897, on a farm in David City, Neb.
After her mother died when Ruth was
5, she was raised by her grandparents.
As a child, she loved to draw and
enjoyed singing at school and in
church.
At age 17, she left home to attend
art school in Chicago, intending to
Ruth Etting
become a designer. But fate had other
plans for her.
Etting was working as a costume
designer at a Chicago nightclub when
the featured tenor had to pull out of a
show because of illness. Etting was
tapped to fill in for him, because she
was the only employee who could sing
his parts.
Etting was so good that she
became a featured vocalist in the show
and left her design career behind.
A Chicago gangster, Martin “Moe
the Gimp” Snyder, was one of her fans
at the club. He courted Ruth, and in
1922, they were married.
Snyder managed Etting’s career
and helped her to obtain a recording
career with Columbia Records. Her
recordings were instantly popular and
vaulted her to fame.
She made more than 60 hit
records, including “Ten Cents a
Dance” and “Love Me or Leave Me,”
which became one of her signature
songs.
In 1927 she began a successful
run in the Ziegfeld Follies in New
York, appearing with performers like
Eddie Cantor.
She went on to appear in three
feature films, and she and Snyder
moved to Beverly Hills.
The marriage was marred by
abuse and Snyder’s gambling, which
no doubt annoyed Etting, who was
frugal and saved money from each of
her paychecks.
In 1937, she filed for divorce.
Etting had fallen in love with her
accompanist, Myrl Alderman.
Enraged, Snyder cornered Etting and
Alderman at her home in January
1938, holding them at gunpoint, and
shot Alderman. He survived, and after
a sensational trial, Snyder was
convicted of attempted murder.
Alderman’s former wife, to whom he
was still married in 1938, later sued
Etting for alienating her husband’s
affections, which resulted in another
scandalous trial.
The scandal effectively ended
Etting’s career. She made her last
recording in 1937, but she finally
found personal happiness after
marrying Alderman on Dec. 14, 1938.
In 1940, the couple moved to an
eight-acre farm in the Papeton area of
Colorado Springs, where Alderman
had grown up.
They operated the T-Bone
Restaurant at 900 E. Fillmore St.,
which became the Hackney House and
subsequently, today’s Omelette Parlor.
Later she operated Henri’s Restaurant
with Colorado Springs restaurateur
Henri Ruiz.
Etting was rarely seen in public in
Colorado Springs. She and Alderman
did agree to play for the opening of
the Fun Room at the Antlers Hotel in
1949. Alderman performed occasionally as well, appearing at the Pine
Valley Club and the Iron Springs
Chateau in Manitou Springs.
Alderman died in 1966.
Etting made her last public
See SINGER, page 9
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Page 8
April 2015
LIFE after 50
Senior Resource Council salutes those who enrich seniors’ lives
Joe Beltramo, a volunteer at
Silver Key Senior Services,
geropsychologist Dr. Sheri Gibson,
and the Energy Resource center were
honored with Senior Legacy Awards
at the 2015 Joe Henjum Senior
Accolades.
The awards program, sponsored
by the Senior Resource Council, was
held March 18 at the Norris-Penrose
Event Center. The awards pay tribute
to individuals and organizations who
have demonstrated exemplary
commitment toward improving the
quality of life for seniors in the
greater Pikes Peak Region.
Beltramo, who received the award
for Volunteer of the Year, began
serving at Silver Key almost 10 years
ago and has given more than 2,500
hours to the organization.
He first served with the Handyman program, then moved to the
Transportation department. Currently,
Beltramo delivers meals twice a week
for Meals on Wheels.
His nominator says Beltramo is
always friendly, provides companionship and helps meal recipients
maintain independence with safety
and dignity.
Honored as Business Professional
of the Year, Gibson’s commitment
toward improving quality of life for
seniors in the Pikes Peak Region
motivated her to embark on a 10-year
journey to become a geropsychologist.
She completed her studies in
October 2014 but had dedicated
herself to serving seniors long before
finishing the program of study.
Gibson has been a member of the
Elder Abuse Coalition since 2007 and
helped develop materials that have
been used to train more than 1,000
law enforcement officers and an equal
number of community partners. She
serves as co-chair of the Colorado
Coalition for Elder Rights and Abuse
Prevention.
Gibson helped write and
implement a pain management group
at Peak Vista Senior Clinics and is the
course coordinator for the Professional Advancement Certificate in
Gerontology at UCCS.
She also serves as the geropsychologist for the Program of
All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly,
where she conducts comprehensive
psychological and cognitive
assessments and facilitates an
eight-week wellness class focusing on
symptom management and skillbuilding for seniors.
The Business/Organization of the
Year award winner, the Energy
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performing energy
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and, if necessary,
installing insulation,
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and windows, replacing
worn-out furnaces and
water heaters, and
adding carbon monoxide
sensors.
In 2014 the center
provided more than $2
million worth of
energy-saving assistance
to more than 800 homes
in the community.
Approximately 60
percent of the center’s
beneficiaries are seniors.
More than 480 homes
owned by seniors were
provided with $1.5
million worth of
desperately needed energy work.
Their nominator
Joe Beltramo, who has logged more than 1,000 hours
says the center’s
of service to Silver Key Senior Services, received the Joe
intervention not only
Henjum award for Volunteer of the Year.
reduces energy bills
be partnerships and camaraderie
and makes homes
among these business leaders. The
warm and comfortable, but has
probably saved the lives of thousands gathering was so successful that the
of area seniors since it was founded in group decided to get together every
month. Before long, the lunches grew
1979.
so large that the meetings had to be
The Senior Resource Council
held at larger locations around town.
initiated the awards in 2010 in
From these lunches, the Senior
memory of Joe Henjum, one of its
Resource Council was born.
founders.
Before his retirement, he taught at
In the 1980s, retired Air Force
the Air Force Academy. Henjum
colonel and nonprofit leader Joseph
founded Home Front Cares, a
Henjum Jr. invited a group of people
from businesses that served seniors to nonprofit that serves military families,
join him for lunch at Cheyenne Place, and served the Colorado Springs
community in many other ways. He
where he was the manager.
passed away in 2010.
Henjum thought there needed to
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April 2015
SINGER/from page 7
appearance in
March 1977,
when she
participated
in a segment
of a
Performing
Art for Youth
Organization
show at the
Fine Arts
Center.
Before
the performance, she
granted an
interview to
Gazette
Telegraph
reporter
Dorothy
Aldridge, in
which she
looked back
at her career
and gave her
opinions
about modern
performers,
for whom she had little use.
“Today there’s a beat, but not
much in the way of lyrics, which the
singers don’t have a feel for anyway,”
she said. “I can’t understand their
words when they sing. I lived the
lyrics.”
She didn’t think entertainers like
Neil Diamond and Johnny Cash could
sing and decried the lack of mystery
and romance in their performances.
She did enjoy the singing of Lena
Horne, Sarah Vaughn, Ella Fitzgerald
and Barbara Streisand, and the
recordings of Jackie Gleason’s
orchestra.
Etting had recovered from a bout
of illness and surgery by the time she
did the interview, but her health
declined the following year. She died
Sept. 24, 1978.
Etting’s life was the basis for a
1955 film, “Love Me or Leave Me,”
starring Doris Day as Etting, James
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Cagney as Snyder and Cameron
Mitchell as Alderman. Typically,
Etting didn’t much care for the movie,
but it made her famous all over again.
A number of recordings of her
songs on YouTube are testaments to
her enduring popularity. The
granddaughter of one of her cousins
maintains a Web site about Etting at
http://ruthetting.com.
In Colorado Springs, she lives on
at the Omelette Parlor, where
memorabilia including recordings,
photos and posters from her
Hollywood days are displayed.
Sources: Fun-Time in Fun Room
for All at Antlers Hotel This Friday,
Colorado Springs Free Press, June 2,
1949; Dorothy Aldridge, “Queen of
Torch Singers,” Colorado Springs Gazette Telegraph, March 5, 1977; “Ruth
Etting Dead at 80, Colorado Springs
Gazette Telegraph, Sept. 25, 1978.
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LIFE after 50
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April 2015
LIFE after 50
Ask Mr. Modem
Windows XP: Let it go
By Mr. Modem
Q. I know you’re probably sick
of hearing from us XP user/whiners,
but it is such a good operating
system, I just don’t want to move to
something else. I have heard that
Microsoft was losing money on XP,
but why can’t they just charge XP
users and continue supporting it?
A. Microsoft was not losing
money on XP. In fact, it was one of
their most successful products ever.
But as an operating system, it simply
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ran its course and it was time for the
company to move on exactly as it had
announced years in advance. The same
will hold true for Windows 7 and
Windows 8. At the time of each
respective release, it was announced
that extended support would terminate
for Windows 7 on Jan. 14, 2020 and
for Windows 8, Jan. 10, 2023, so mark
your calendars. Technology is destined
to move ahead with us or without us,
whether we want it to or not. That’s
just a harsh reality of computing life.
Q. I have a program that is asking
me to log into Windows 7 as
Administrator. How do I determine if I
am already logged in as such and if
not, how do I do that?
A. To check if you are logged into
Windows 7 as a user with Administrative privileges, go to the Control Panel,
open User Accounts and click Manage
Another Account. (You can also go to
Start > Search and type in User
Account.)
All user accounts will be listed
with each account assigned a status,
such as Administrator, Standard User,
etc. Make sure that you are logged into
Windows under an account with the
status of Administrator. If you are not
sure under which account you are
currently logged in, go to the main
User Accounts page. The current user
will be displayed on the right-hand
side of the page.
Q. What is the red arrow that
shows up on occasion at the top-left
corner of an Excel spreadsheet? The
cells in question are filled in. I can
usually get rid of the arrow if I erase
the cell’s contents, then rewrite it,
but not always.
A. That little arrow is a “formula
error indicator.” In other words, that
arrow indicates that the formula within
that cell contains an error that will
prevent it from calculating properly.
The IRS will not accept that as a
reason for miscalculating your taxes,
by the way. You might have better luck
with, “My dog ate my tax return.”
Q. I use Windows Live Mail.
Some newsletters I receive are
always classified as “Undesirable”
and placed in my Junk folder rather
than in my Inbox where legitimate
email should go. How can I change
this?
A. Open one of the miscategorized
newsletters located in your Junk folder
and select the Not Junk check box in
the upper left. From the drop-down
menu, make sure you mark Add
Sender’s Domain Name and Add
Sender’s Name to Safe Sender list.
Then click the big green check again.
You can also choose to add the
sender’s address as a Contact. Click
the Contact option in the upper left of
the Inbox, then add the address. This
will work for any mail that’s
mistakenly going into the Junk folder.
It may not work the first time, but keep
trying and your persistence will be
rewarded. That’s the theory, anyway.
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Ripe Track
Wouldn’t it be great if you could search by a fruit or vegetable you
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When you arrive on this site, use the Search field to type in a fruit or
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MosaiCulture
Every three years an international competition in horticultural sculpture
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plants. The greatest horticulturalists in the world submit plans a year in
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April 2015
Page 11
LIFE after 50
Concert and jazz
bands schedule
spring performance
Bill Callen, director of the Pikes
Peak New Horizons Band, along with
Mark Israel, the band’s associate
director, have been rehearsing the
Gold Concert Band and the Swingmasters Jazz Band since January in
preparation for this year’s big Spring
Concert.
The concert will be at 2 p.m. April
18 in Strickland Chapel on the campus
of the Nazarene Bible College, 1111
Academy Park Loop (just east of
Freedom Honda and the SAM’s Store
on South Academy Blvd.)
This is a free concert and the
public is welcome to attend.
Selections the Gold Concert Band
will play include a patriotic song, a
march by Karl L. King and a big band
swing number. Other songs include
every thing from a contemporary fast
paced composition to a very lush,
beautiful melodic depiction of the
countryside.
The Swingmasters Jazz Band will
play old standards such as “When I
Fall In Love,” “On Green Dolphin
Street,” “Tangerine” and George and
Ira Gershwin’s “‘S Wonderful.”
The Gold Concert Band currently
has a roster of 59 members ranging in
age from 40 to 94. The median age is
in the early 70s.
All instrumental categories are
represented in the band – brass,
woodwinds and percussion. The
experience level of the musicians runs
the gamut from the very refined to
those who haven’t picked up an
instrument for 45 years.
Callen and Israel direct with an
ear for perfection while at the same
time promoting a casual, friendly
environment.
The Tuesday and Thursday
rehearsals run from 9:45 to 11:45 a.m.
and begin with a short warm-up time
interspersed with some music theory,
rhythmic and scale studies. Part way
through the rehearsal, the band takes a
20-minute break for refreshments and
social time.
Bill Callen’s Pikes Peak New
Horizons Band is always welcoming
new members.
For more information, contact Bill
at 719-598-2373 or visit the band’s
Web site at www.ppiom.org
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Ace Hardware: Tuesdays 10%
off regularly priced items, ages
55+  AMC Theaters: Movies, all shows, discounted Tues,
ages 60+  ANB Bank: Classic 50 Free checking acct, ages
50+  Arby’s: 10% off Food
& 50¢ coffee  ARC: 50% off
most items Tues. for seniors 55+
 Big Train Restaurant: 10%
Off Tuesdays  Briarhurst
Restaurant: Pork Wellington
Early Bird Dinner $19 (see ad)
 Bronco Billy’s: Seniors 50+
get 2X Points in Casino & 1/2
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 Carmike Chapel Hills: Senior movie ticket $7  Carmike 10: Seniors pay $4.50-$5
/tkt  Cinemark Theaters:
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Springs Shuttle to DIA: 10%
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performance for ages 65+ 
Culvers: 5% Off for 60+ 
Current Outlet: Every day 10%
discount, ages 60+  Elephant
Bar: 20% Off Food purchases w/
VIP card  Goodwill: Wed.
10% off entire purchase for 55+
 Greyhound: Ages 62+ get
5% off fares  IHOP: 55-Plus
Menu, smaller portions & lower
prices  International Hair
Salon: 15% Off  Kimball’s
Peak Three: Any show $7, ages
65+  Kohl’s: 15% Discount
Wed. for 60+  Metro Bus:
85¢ Senior Fare  Mason
Jar Restaurant: Lighter Side
Meals discounted (see ad) 
Omelette Parlor & O’Furry’s
on Fillmore: Buy 1 entree, get
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The Pantry, Green Mtn Falls:
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coupon)  Perkins Restaurant & Bakery: $5 Off any $25
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Page 12
April 2015
LIFE after 50
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Celebration
A 100-plus birthday party honors five Medalion residents
Five folks 100 and older had some
words of wisdom for those who
attended a combined birthday
celebration March 6 at Medalion
Retirement Community.
“You have to be active mentally
and physically all the time,” said Bob
Aupperle, 100. “Family is the best part
of my life, and I’m thankful I can still
sing.”
He proved it by leading his fellow
centenarians, residents and guests in
singing patriotic songs after the
birthday celebrants were introduced.
Bob Aupperle, 100
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Aupperle was born on a farm in
Sutherland, Iowa in 1915. He was
delivered by the town doctor – his
father. His mother taught him to play
the piano, which began his lifelong
love for music.
Bob graduated from high school
in 1934, then spent two summers
working in Yellowstone National Park
at Old Faithful Lodge. He met his
future wife there.
They went to the same college and
were married in 1942 after Bob
received his BA in music.
Bob was in the Army but did not
go on active duty because of his
musical talents. Instead he joined the
Air Force Jazz Band and sang in a
Bob Aupperle leads a sing-along at Medalion’s 100-plus birthday party in March.
male swing quartet for 3½ years.
After the military he used his GI
Bill to earn a Master’s Degree in
Music. He taught instrumental and
vocal music in many grade schools.
During this time he and his wife
had three children. Bob and his family
enjoyed traveling and spent many
summer vacations at their cottage in
Canada.
Today Bob still enjoys singing and
entertains Medalion residents with his
sing-alongs. Bob also enjoys exercise.
He rode his bicycle regularly until two
years ago.
Eldon Addy, 100
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“It’s a wonderful experience,”
Eldon Addy said of turning 100. “I
keep looking back on those 100 years,
and I wonder how many more of them
we can stand.”
Eldon was born in McLouth,
Kans., in 1915. He graduated from
high school and continued his studies
at Ottawa University in Kansas.
Eldon was married to his wife,
Cathryn, for 30 years. They had two
children, a son and a daughter.
Eldon worked at a flour mill and
retired with the same company after
32 years. He enjoyed playing golf and
tennis with his family.
He was also an accomplished
clock maker and woodworker.
Eldon has lived at Medalion for
one year. He loves to drink coffee and
share his stories with fellow residents.
Irene Klein, 101
“I’m only 39, like Jack Benny,”
said Irene Klein.
Irene was born in Firth, Neb., in
1913 and lived on a farm. She learned
to play the piano and to cook when
she was young. She said her mother
was an excellent cook and taught her
how to make German food.
When Irene was 21, she married
Norman Klein. They lived on a farm,
and Irene played the piano at the
Presbyterian Church they attended.
Irene enjoyed traveling with her
husband when he went on business
trips.
In 1960 they moved to Colorado
Springs, where her husband opened a
filling station. She has lived here ever
since.
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LIFE after 50
April 2015
Enjoying a 100+ birthday party at Medalion Retirement Community are, from
left, Eldon Addy, Bob Aupperle, Elsa Bailey, Irene Klein and Frank Royal.
CELEBRATION/from page 12
Irene said she most enjoys the
musical entertainment at Medalion.
Frank Royal, 100
Page 13
WE’RE MOVERS
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“I try to maintain a positive
attitude and find ways to help others,”
Elsa Bailey, 101
“I don’t advise anyone to follow it Frank Royal said. “For my own
purposes, although I’m Protestant, I
but I do my own thing,” said Elsa
Bailey. “I do what I want to do. Just go use St. Francis of Assisi’s prayer. I
have a copy on my refrigerator, and I
wherever you want to and enjoy it.”
The youngest of six girls, Elsa was glance at it once a day. That is my
guide. Do the best you can in this life
born in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., in
1913. She graduated from high school we’ve been given.”
Frank was born on a pioneer ranch
and attended college at Sarah
near
Rocky Ford in 1915. He
Lawrence, graduating with a
®
graduated
from high school at the age
Bachelor’s Degree in Social Arts. She
of 16 during the Depression, drought
was married briefly, but the marriage
Call (719) 576-6683 for details
and dust bowl years.
did not work out.
To
find
employment
he
left
the
3220 Fillmore Ridge Heights
During World War II, Elsa
state
and
headed
east.
He
worked
Colorado Springs, CO 80907
accepted paid training in Occupational
many jobs and ate at soup kitchens to
Therapy and living expenses the Army
4 Hour Minimum
survive.
was offering to civilians. After the war,
Not valid with Any Other Discount
After several years, he returned to
she became head of the Occupational
Colorado and attended the University
Therapist
Page 4 Department for the Veterans of Colorado, but World War II LIFE after 50
November 2014
Administration in San Francisco,
interrupted his education.
Calif., where she lived for many years.
Frank, who had a pilot’s license,
When she turned 50, she and her
enlisted in the Army Air Corps and
mother took a boat trip and traveled
became a fighter pilot.
around
the world. 1984,
She has
enjoyed
referral services; medical, food
requirements and has expanded its
visits
during
and
impacted
the
In November
a group
of
After
the 2012,
war, he
married
his wife
sports
of all types, including
clothing, financial and seasonal
services
to
seniors
over
the
years.
lives
of
children
10,197
times,
adults
community-spirited
citizens snow
of the
Renee. They had five children. He
skiing,
hiking,
rock
climbing
and
“We have a senior supplements
assistance; and financial assistance for
11,64130times
seniors
2,904 times.
Tri-Lakes area founded Tri-Lakes
spent
yearsand
in the
Air Force,
program,
designed
to
get
seniors
a
bag
kayaking.
post-secondary education.
It
is
dedicated
to
improving
Cares (TLC).
retiring as a colonel. He and his family
of
items
specially
designed
for
them,”
Eligibility for most
programs
In
1992 Elsa
people’s
lives
through
emergency
Believing
thatdrove
thereher
wasred
strength
Come
enjoy
the
peaceful
living
environment
offered
at is
lived in many countries during his
says
Haley
Chapin,
who
has
been
the
limited to people whose income is185
convertible
to Colorado
and moved
assistance,
self-sufficiency and relief
in a centralized
organization
to help
military
years.
organizations
executive
director
for
percent or less of the federal poverty
into
Sunny
Acres,
which
now to
programs,
education
and
other
social
people
in need,
this
groupisbegan
After retirement Frank and his
• Beautiful
1 andindividual,
2 Bedroomthat
Units
four
and
a
half
years.
level.
For a single
known
as
Medalion.
Elsa
helped
to
services.
keep a small food pantry, some used
wife
spent many years traveling and
•
Located
near
bus-line
Seniors
who
qualify
specify
their
amounts to $21,257 or less per year.
raise
fundsand
to with
buildcash
the garden
and
The organization was recently
clothing,
donations
volunteering.
Come
• Controlled
Access
needs and
wants,see
suchus
as gluten-free
Some
government
programs have a
pool
area
andfinancial
helped design
the on
named
2013 Top-Rated
Award by
helped
with
emergencies
Hisacurrent
hobbies include
for
a tour!
•
Elevator
foods,
pet
foods
and
other
specialty
lower
threshold:
125
percent of the
Labyrinth
Walk
on
the
2nd
floor
writing
books and the
being
with his
Great Nonprofits,
leading
provider
a very limited basis.
•
24-hour
emergency
items.
These
items
are
included
in
the
federal poverty level, ormaintenance
$14,363 for
balcony.
of user reviews about nonprofit
Tri-Lakes Cares, which celebrates family.
th
th
•
Community
Room
with
planned
once-a-month
bags
these
seniors
single-person
households.
She
celebrated
her
special
100
Frank
still
lives
in
the
same
organizations.
its 30 anniversary this month, grew
resident
activities
receive.
About
60
households,
some
Other
housing
situations
are also
birthday
skiing
and
plans
to
go
to
apartment
at Medaliongenerally
he movedserves
into
The organization
from those small beginnings into an
•
Conveniently
located
near
theof four
with
more
than
one
senior,
participate
covered: for example, a family
Yellowstone
her family
next year. in
August
1998.
anyone
who
meets income eligibility
organization with
that had
8,495 service
Broadmoor,
Arena
& two
in the program.
that includes
twoWorld
seniors
raising
Tinseltowncan qualify for
Seniors also can sign up for a holi- grandchildren
day food basket and gift program.
• Attentiveprograms
and Friendly,
Caring
Staff
185-percent
if their
income
“People in the community ‘adopt’ is $43,568
• Friendly
environment
or community
less, or $29,438
for
a senior and try to fulfill their gift
• Refreshments
offered daily
125-percent
programs.
list,” Chapin says.
•“We
Handicap
accessible
will go
through and help
Seniors also are eligible to
• Pets
welcome if they are eligible,”
people
determine
participate in other programs.
• Fitness
Chapin
says.Center, Computer Room
Hours:
- Friday
• 1 - 5 p.m. Seniors
“If theyMonday
are in need
of legal
& Gamecan
Room
register for programs
counsel, we pair them up with a pro
• Walking
to Meadow
Park
by coming
in distance
to the office
on “walk-in
bono attorney,” Chapin says. “If they
and3 Broadmoor
days,”Senior
fromCenter
noon to
p.m. and 6 to 7
– SENIOR SPECIAL –
need assistance filling out a LEAP
Towne Center
p.m. Mondays
and Thursdays, or other
application (for help with winter home days• by
1 bedroom
from $489 to $626* &
Monday before noon,
appointment.
*
heating costs), a volunteer will sit
2 bedroom
$585 to $750
Each
personfrom
is assigned
to a case
green fees and cart only $30.
down and help them.”
manager,
whotoworks
withand
theincome.
* Subject
availability
Offer good through November.
All other Tri-Lakes Cares
individual to determine eligibility and
750except
East Cheyenne
Road assessFor
programs,
those for children,
needs.a personal tour
are open
to seniorsSprings,
who meet CO
income
Colorado
80906
call 520-9400
3525 Tutt Blvd., Colo Spgs • 719-573-4863 • www.springsranchgolfclub.com
See TRI-LAKES, page 5
guidelines. Those programs include
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Page 14
April 2015
LIFE after 50
DENTAL SERVICES
FOR LOW INCOME
SENIORS AGED 60+
Call 719-310-3315 for qualification, location,
scheduling and more information.
Dental services provided
include: Dental Cleanings,
Exams, X-Rays, Dentures,
Fillings and Extractions.
www.SeniorMobileDental.org
BARBER SHOPPE
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3436 W. Colorado Ave.
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Income restrictions apply
The Village at Homewood Point
907 E. Colorado Avenue
Colorado Springs, CO 80903
719-630-2260
Letters to the editor
Concerned about
new management
I would like to respond to the
issue regarding the YMCA potentially
taking over the operations of the
Colorado Springs Senior Center.
There are several concerns that I
have not only as the retired director of
the Center, but as a citizen of
Colorado Springs.
The Y is an expert in serving
Youth. I believe in what they have
done for the youth of our community.
I believe that is what the “Y” stands
for in their name – Youth, Young, etc.
I’m not sure how many of our
citizens know but the Y is the current
operator of not only their own pools,
but also all the City owned pools! The
Y is actually, I do believe, MAKING
MONEY from the City paying them to
operate the pools. The City is not
saving money because the City pays
somewhere around $850,000 to the Y
for the pools, yet when the Park and
Recreation Department operated the
pools and they were “public pools,”
the budget was roughly $650,000.
Plus, the City still provides all the
maintenance and upkeep on those
pools. Not sure why this makes sense?
I see the same arrangement
forming for the Senior Center. The
City has said they will take back the
“ownership,” yet they will also make
up the “shortfall” of funds at the end
of the year. Sounds like “Paying” the
Y to me. It just does not sit right. It
makes no sense.
The City Park and Recreation
Department developed senior
recreation programming back in the
1970’s. It built the current senior
center and operated it just fine for
over 30 years. Just like you said in
your article in the March edition, the
Housing Authority was only a stop
gap. It was intended to return to the
City when the City recovered from its
financial setbacks of 2010. It makes
sense that it goes back to its original
“home” under Park and Recreation.
The Center should not be passed
around like a hot potato.
The most concerning issue about
the transition is that there will be no
guarantee that the current staff will
stay on. The director of the YMCA
said at the March meeting that the
staff would be able to apply for their
current job, but he never has said that
they will be retained.
Additionally, I am concerned
about the YMCA ultimately changing
the “culture” of the Colorado Springs
See LETTERS, page 20
April 2015
Page 15
LIFE after 50
Class helps prepare for retirement
The Pikes Peak Area Council of
Governments’ Area Agency on Aging
and Ent Federal Credit Union are
teaming up to offer six classes
providing an overview of community
resources for older adults who plan to
retire soon.
The classes will provide
information on medical, legal, income
and housing options. Older adults and
their families are encouraged to
attend.
All classes are 6-7:30 p.m. at Ent
Federal Credit Union, 7350 Campus
Dr., and are free of charge. Register at
Ent.com/seminars or call 719-4712096.
April 2: Key Planning Issues –
Learn about medical, legal, financial,
and housing considerations and
available support services. Participants
will come away with knowledge of the
main issues to address in their
retirement planning. Presenter: Kent
Mathews, Family Caregiver Support
Center, PPACG Area Agency on
Aging
April 9: Medical and Emotional
Concerns – Strategies for understanding and living with chronic conditions
as well as techniques for discussing
them with medical personnel.
Caregiver challenges and coping
Subscribe to
LIFE after 50
for only $30
annually
Call 418-2717
today
strategies will also be addressed.
Presenter: Dr. Cassie Faulhaber,
UCCS Aging Center
April 16: Legal/Medicaid Benefits
– Ways to prepare for Medicaid (if
appropriate), to include estate
planning and other medical and legal
documents that are required. Speaker:
Wayna Marshall, Elder Law Attorney
April 23: Social Security and VA
Benefits – Details on how Social
Security and VA benefits work.
Presenter: Monica Ochoa, Public
Affairs Specialist for the Social
Security Administration, and Carl
McDaniel, VA Benefits
April 30: Medicare and Medicaid
– Medicare enrollment choices, how
Medicare works and other options you
have to help pay medical bills,
including Medicaid. Presenter: Lisa
Hietala, PPACG Area Agency on
Aging and State of Colorado State
Health Insurance Plan Counselor
May 7: Housing Options – Details
on the range of housing options to
consider as you age. Accessibility and
costs will be discussed. Presenter:
Scott Bartlett, Lead Ombudsman,
PPACG Area Agency on Aging.
Spanish Peaks Veterans
Community Living Center
1-800-645-VETS
www.sprhc.org
Serving our Veteran heroes, their Spouses or Widows,
and Gold-Star Parents
• Physically connected to Spanish Peaks Hospital – a level IV
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• Secure Care Unit for Alzheimer’s and Dementia patients
• Long term and short term respite care
• 70%-100% service connected vets may have their care paid for
• Meaningful and engaging activities for all residents
• Dialysis and Speciality clinics available on campus
• Restorative therapies available
• Private pay and Medicaid residents welcome
• COLORADO RESIDENCY NOT REQUIRED
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Page 16
April 2015
LIFE after 50
Q. My senior center gave me
information about different services
that can help seniors to save money,
including information relating to
Medicare. One discussed Medicare
Savings Programs. What are
Medicare Savings Programs?
A. Medicare Savings Programs
(MSPs) are assistance programs that
help to pay certain Medicare costs for
people with limited incomes. MSPs
can help to pay your monthly Part B
premium, and possibly other Medicare
costs depending on your income.
To qualify for an MSP, you must
meet certain income and asset
guidelines in your state, and you must
have Medicare Part A, the hospital
insurance part of Medicare. If you do
not already have Part A, you may still
apply for an MSP if you qualify for
the MSP that pays your Part A
premium. To learn more about MSPs
in your state and how to apply, contact
your local Department of Social
Services, or your State Health
Insurance Assistance Program (SHIP).
If you have an MSP, you will also
automatically get Extra Help, the
federal program that helps to pay
certain Part D prescription drug costs.
Q. My Part D plan is no longer
covering a prescription drug that I
have been taking for the past year,
Marci’s Medicare Answers
but my pharmacist told me that I
may be able to get a transition refill
while I talk to my doctor to find
another medication. What is a
transition fill?
A. A transition fill, sometimes
called a transition refill, is a one-time,
30-day supply of a drug that a
Medicare Part D plan must cover
when you are new to a plan, or when
your current plan changes its drug
coverage for the next calendar year.
This transition fill is meant to give
you temporary coverage for a drug
that is not on a plan’s formulary, or
that has a drug restriction. Transition
fills are not for new prescriptions, but
rather for existing ones that you were
already taking before your plan
changed its list of covered drugs.
You can request from your
pharmacist that they provide you with
a transition fill for your drug. All
Medicare Part D drug plans must
cover transition fills. The rules apply
to both Medicare Advantage plans that
include drug coverage and Medicare
stand-alone drug plans. When you use
your transition fill, your plan must
send you a written notice within three
business days. The notice will tell you
that the supply was temporary and that
you should either change to a covered
drug or file a request with the Part D
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including your age, gender, whether
you smoke and where you live. Know
that you can apply for a Medigap
before this enrollment period begins,
so that your Medigap coverage starts
as soon as you are enrolled in Part B.
If you miss this open enrollment
period, you can also buy a Medigap
when you have a guaranteed issue
right. Under federal law, if you are age
65 or older, you have a guaranteed
issue right within 63 days of when you
lose or end certain kinds of health
coverage.
Each state must follow rules that
are no stricter than the federal
guidelines described above regarding
Medigap policies. However, some
states have additional protections that
expand the times when you can
purchase a Medigap. Also, many
states apply enrollment protections to
people with Medicare under age 65.
To learn more about Medigaps in your
state, you can contact your State
Health Insurance Assistance Program
(SHIP).
Marci’s Medicare Answers is a
service of the Medicare Rights Center
(www.medicarerights.org), the
nation’s largest independent source of
information and assistance for people
with Medicare.
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plan (called an exception request) to
ask for coverage. If the plan does not
cover your drug under the exception
request, you can appeal to the plan.
A. I am turning 65 soon and
plan to enroll in Medicare. I am
interested in getting a Medigap to
supplement my Medicare coverage.
What is the best time to purchase a
Medigap?
A. Medigap policies are
supplemental insurance policies sold
by private companies that cover
Medicare costs after Medicare has
paid on a claim. Remember, you can
only have a Medigap with Original
Medicare, not a Medicare Advantage
plan.
Under federal law, there are
specific times during which you have
the right to purchase a Medigap. You
only have this right if you are 65 or
older and enrolled in Medicare, and
you buy your policy during a
protected enrollment period. You have
a six-month protected enrollment
period that begins the month you turn
65 and enroll in Medicare Part B.
During this period, Medigap
companies must sell you a policy at
the best available rate regardless of
your health status, and cannot deny
you coverage. The best available rate
may depend on a number of factors,
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April 2015
Page 17
LIFE after 50
Close Connections After 50
If relationships were computerized
Think about it. If we could use
our computer buttons to do
relationships, wouldn’t life be easier?
We say
something
terrible to our
mate,
something we
didn’t mean.
That’s easily
remedied.
Just highlight
that sentence
By Nancy Norman
and hit the
delete button.
The whole sentence disappears and
we don’t have to live with the
consequences.
What if we get all fumbled up in
our words? Just press the insert
button, say the right word over the
original wrong word – and our
message is delivered accurately.
Or back space those things we wish
we hadn’t said right out of existence.
Then start over and say what we
mean.
What if we want to say
something wonderful to someone, but
we get busy and the words are gone.
If only we could have typed the
words, then copied and pasted to the
front of our brain. When we see them
next, the sweet words would be right
there. No memory problems.
Sometimes we want to get away
from our mate or friend and can’t
find a way to do that gracefully. If we
were computerized, we’d just push
the escape button and we’d be in a
whole different scene.
And then there are times when
we want to be done with a certain
conversation. Just hit “end” and
we’re at the end of our last sentence
– all ready for a new sentence, a new
thought, a new expression.
If we want to take the sting out of
what someone’s saying to us, we
could click on that little underline
mark and what’s said becomes
smaller and less important. We’ve
minimized it!
What if we don’t want to listen to
the same story we’ve heard a dozen
times? We could just hit “page down”
and we’d advance far into the story
without hurting the storyteller’s
feelings.
We get stuck in a conversation.
It’s at a standstill, frozen. Just press
“control, alt, delete” and we’re
unstuck, ready to decide what else to
do.
But alas, words are mightier than
the sword, to paraphrase Lytton. And
when it comes to feelings, once our
words are said, they hang in the air
and can go straight into another’s
heart. Our words represent who we
are. No computer can save us from
ourselves.
And how we say our words isn’t
something a computer button can
help with. Our tone, our facial
expressions, our gestures, how we
position ourselves all convey the true
meaning of our message. We can say
the perfect words with an air of
righteousness and communication
shuts down. We can fumble through a
heartfelt message and the intent
shines through.
Without the computer buttons,
it’s all the more important to say that
loving thought when we think it. By
the time we see our friend again, our
loving feeling may be in cyberspace
and we missed a chance to say
something that would have made the
relationship stronger.
Maybe computerized relationship
remedies wouldn’t be that great after
all. There really aren’t any “undos” in
real life.
Nancy Norman is a Licensed
Clinical Social Worker, musician and
former Intimacy columnist for the
Wichita Eagle. Email her at nancy@
pikespeakpublishing.com.
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Page 18
April 2015
LIFE after 50
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Murder Mystery Dinner Show: “The TIN MAN”
Set in 1934....a retired detective has read about the murder of a wealthy 'pillar of the community' and
the arrest of a down and out 'hobo' for the crime. His instincts tells him that there is much more to the
case. He instigates a big dinner party to bring all the suspects together....with EXPLOSIVE results
Sunday April 19th Presented By Red Herring Productions Seating & Cocktails @ 5pm Dinner @ 6pm
Open For Easter Sunday April 5th & Mother’s Day Sunday May 10th
Buffet Seating Starts At 11:00 Am
(719) 685-1864
404 Manitou Ave., Manitou Springs, CO
(Take the driveway by the big, blue arch.)
Dine-in
or
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for
lunCh &
Dinner
11 a.m. 8:30 p.m.
www.briarhurst.com
Buy any two entrées,
receive one free dessert
Savelli’S
301 Manitou Avenue • Manitou Springs, CO • 719-685-3755
Expires 12/31/14. Must present coupon at time of purchase to
receive offer.
Buy one Specialty pizza,
get one half off
Savelli’S
301 Manitou Avenue • Manitou Springs, CO • 719-685-3755
Expires 12/31/14. Must present coupon at time of purchase to
receive offer.
301 Manitou Ave • Manitou Springs, CO
OPEN: Tues-Sun
11 a.m.-9 p.m.
178 Crystal Park Road, Manitou Springs, CO 80829
719.685.5999 ~ crystalparkcantina.com
BuY one entrée and receive
half off a second entrée
Excluding Chicken Wings. Not valid with any other
discounts or coupons. Expires 5/1/2015.
or
The Omelette Parlor
Entrance on south side
(719) 633-7770
OPEN DAILY from
6 a.m.-2 p.m.
O’Furry’s Irish
Sports Pub & Grill
Entrance on East side
(719) 634-3106
OPEN DAILY from
11 a.m.-2 a.m.
to
p
f
u
l
avor!
e
k
a
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is Back! Wake up to flavor!
719-685-3755
SAVE $5.00
5.00 Off Any $25.00 Purchase*
$
Purchase any regularly priced items totaling $25.00 or
more, and use this coupon for $5.00 off your total bill.
Expires 5/16/2015.
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3295 E Platte Ave – Colo Spgs
(SW Corner of E. Platte and N. Chelton)
(719) 633-8962
900 E Fillmore St – Colo Spgs, CO 80907
The Pantry
R e stau R a n t
Let us welcome you to breakfast, The Pantry style!
We’re here to serve you seven days a week,
7 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Large Portions of Gourmet Homestyle Meals
and Breakfast Served All Day!
A tradition for almost
60 years!
On the west shore of Gazebo Lake in beautiful Green Mountain Falls!
Just 15 miles west of Colorado Springs off US Hwy 24 near Pikes Peak!
Family-Owned
diner
Serving the SpringS
FOr 33 yearS
Mon-Fri 6am - 8pm|
Sat-Sun 6am to 2pm
HoMeMAde SoupS
3050 North Nevada Ave
BreAkFASt All-dAy
active military discount
luNcH ANd diNNer
tueSdAy
WedNeSdAy
(719) 473 8218
SeniOr day
10% OFF
burger night
2-FOr1
2
burgers , fries and drinks
for the price of one
Bacon & Cheese Omelet with sides
of Country Fried Potatoes and
Cinnamon Raisin Bread Toast.
Eggs Over Easy with
sides of Bacon, Country
Fried Potatoes and
Cinnamon Raisin Bread Toast.
6980 Lake Street, Green Mountain Falls, CO 80819
Call 719-684-9018 for reservations and information!
Buy 1 Meal at RegulaR PRice,
get 1 Half Off!
Does not include Blue Plate Specials. Must present Coupon to receive offer. Expires 4/31/2015.
The Pantry Restaurant | 6980 Lake St, Green Mountain Falls, CO 80819 | 719-684-9018 LA50_0315
April 2015
Page 19
LIFE after 50
B
FAMILY FEATURES
righten up your Easter feast with unique flavor twists to refresh traditional
dishes like ham and deviled eggs. And don’t forget the decorations — it’s easy
to create vibrant centerpieces using eggs dyed in the hottest seasonal shades.
“We’ve developed easy tips to dress up your table, from the ham to the
centerpiece,” said Mary Beth Harrington of the McCormick Kitchens. “An orange
glaze can bring new flavor to the classic ham, while food color can be used to make a
variety of spring-inspired egg dyes to feature in Easter table décor.”
For more Easter dinner recipes and egg dyeing ideas, check out www.McCormick.
com and visit McCormick Spice on Facebook
and Pinterest.
Orange Glazed Ham
Prep time: 10 minutes
Cook time: 1 hour 45 minutes
Servings: 24
1 bone-in spiral-cut ham, about 10 pounds
1 cup orange marmalade
1 teaspoon McCormick Mustard, ground
1/2 teaspoon McCormick Garlic Powder
1/4 teaspoon McCormick Black Pepper, Ground
1/4 teaspoon McCormick Cloves, Ground
Preheat oven to 325°F. Place ham on side in roasting pan. Mix marmalade and spices
in small bowl until well blended. Brush 1/2 marmalade mixture over ham, gently
separating slices so mixture can reach middle of ham. Cover loosely with foil.
Bake 1 hour, basting occasionally with pan drippings. Remove foil. Brush with
remaining marmalade mixture. Bake 45 minutes longer. Serve ham with pan
drippings.
Tip: Pair spices like ginger or chipotle with fruity jams and preserves to balance
out saltiness of ham. Cherry Bourbon, Apricot Pineapple Chipotle or Lemon
Ginger are easy flavor combinations your guests will love, and are all available on
McCormick.com.
Smoky Deviled Eggs
Prep time: 10 minutes
Servings: 6
6 hard-cooked eggs, peeled
1/4 cup mayonnaise
1/2 teaspoon McCormick
Mustard, Ground
1/2 teaspoon McCormick
Paprika, Smoked
1/4 teaspoon Lawry’s
Seasoned Salt
2 slices bacon, crisply
cooked and crumbled
Slice eggs in half lengthwise. Remove
yolks; place in small
bowl. Mash yolks with fork or
potato masher.
Stir in mayonnaise, mustard, smoked
paprika and seasoned salt until smooth
and creamy. Spoon
or pipe yolk mixture into egg
white halves. Sprinkle with
crumbled bacon.
Refrigerate 1 hour or until ready
to serve.
Tip: Deviled eggs are a snap to
customize once you create the base of egg
yolks, mayonnaise and ground mustard.
Try adding chili powder, red pepper
and cumin for a Southwest variation or
dill weed and parsley for a Dill Mustard
version.
Easy Lemon Daisy Cupcakes
Prep time: 30 minutes
Cook time: 20 minutes
Servings: 18
1 package (2-layer size) white cake mix
1 tablespoon plus 2 teaspoons
McCormick Pure Lemon Extract, divided
1 package (8 ounces) cream cheese, softened
1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter, softened
2 tablespoons sour cream
1 package (16 ounces) confectioners’ sugar
10 drops McCormick Yellow Food Color
18 large marshmallows
Decorating sugar
Jelly beans
Green sprinkles
Prepare cake mix as directed on package, adding 1
tablespoon of lemon extract. Spoon into 18 paper-lined
muffin cups, filling each cup 2/3 full. Bake as directed for
cupcakes. Cool cupcakes on wire rack.
For frosting, beat cream cheese, butter, sour cream and
remaining 2 teaspoons lemon extract in large bowl until
light and fluffy. Gradually beat in confectioners’ sugar until
smooth. Stir in food color until evenly tinted. Frost cooled
cupcakes.
To decorate cupcakes, cut each marshmallow crosswise
into 5 slices. Sprinkle 1 side of each marshmallow slice with
decorating sugar. Arrange
5 marshmallow petals on top of each cupcake
to resemble daisy, pressing marshmallows into frosting.
Place jelly beans in center of petals.
Garnish with sprinkles.
Page 20
April 2015
LIFE after 50
LETTERS/from page 14
Senior Center. The staff brings the
love, warmth, fun and caring into that
building – it always has. The folks that
go there know that they will be heard,
cared for, and that the staff is there for
them and them alone. Everything they
do is for them. Every idea, class,
event, activity, trip, etc., is because
that staff is thinking of their customers. Will the Y come in and change the
way the instructors teach? Will they
change how the classes are conducted? Will they raise the prices? Will
they replace the instructors that have
worked so hard to develop classes that
meet the needs and desires of their
students? Will they change how
volunteers can work? All of these
aspects are part of the culture that has
made the Colorado Springs Senior
Center successful.
IF the YMCA had come to the
table and had offered money, grants,
financial support for the Center, then
the picture may have been different.
But knowing it was stated to me on
two occasions that the Y will be
PAYED by the City for any shortage
of funds at the end of each year, it just
makes no sense.
Bruce McCandless
State Veterans Home
★ We have a newly expanded memory care area for those with
Alzheimer’s or other types of dementia.
★ Also offering Medicare A Skilled Nursing and Rehab Care,
Hospice Care, Respite Care and general long-term care.
★ Our competitive daily rate includes many medical supplies
and services such as medications and transportation to
medical appointments.
Located in nearby Florence, Colorado.
For more information or to schedule a tour,
call 1-800-283-2668 today.
Let us take care of your American Hero!
“I will teach you
to navigate our
transit system!”
This is a business venture for the
Y. It’s not because they are experts in
serving seniors in our community. The
current staff are the experts. They are
the ones that know the names of the
seniors, they have the relationships,
they have the community contacts, the
partnerships, sponsorships and they
bring in the donations.
Lastly, the concern for what will
happen to the Friends of the Colorado
Springs Senior Center group. They
have worked for four years building
funds under the Pikes Peak Community Foundation with their fundraising
events. At this point in time, they are
trudging forward with their annual
SOS Event on Aug. 21 this summer.
But what becomes of them? What
becomes of all the donations that the
Senior Center receives each year? Will
it all go into a Y fund? The Y is a
registered non-profit and so is the
Friends Group. How does one
non-profit raise money for a program
of another non-profit?
There is just so much that does not
make sense, so much change for no
gain. I repeat again, if the City is
going to make up the shortage of
funding each year, then why is it not
just assuming responsibility for the
operations. The City Park and
Recreation Department was the expert
operator before, why can’t it be again
and save having another 3rd party
involved? Doesn’t that ultimately
make more sense?
It’s become perfectly clear that
our current mayor does not believe in
having our city provide quality of life
programs for our citizens, especially
our most deserving citizens! I am
hoping that a change in mayor will
ultimately bring more sense to the
situation.
Sincerely,
Mendy Putman
Thinking ‘out of the box’
We had a senior commit suicide
last week here in Colorado Springs.
He set his house on fire, called 911
and told them that when he hung up,
he was going outside to shoot himself.
And that’s what he did. He had said he
couldn’t live on Social Security alone
and that he was being evicted.
There’s no reason for this. We’re
doing a great disservice to our seniors
by doing the same old, same old. With
so many baby boomers, we have to
come up with a better plan.
Why don’t we think out of the box
and do something progressive for
seniors? Thousands of people are on
lists for public housing and waiting for
years to get it and struggling to
survive until that day comes. And
sometimes it doesn’t come in time.
There is insufficient public housing.
We can do better.
We have Match.com to find a
mate; why can’t we have a Match.com
to match up seniors with others of
similar lifestyles who of course can
pass a criminal background check and
credit check? They could pool their
resources and have a decent life. This
would also take the burden off the
government to provide even more
public housing. And seniors could live
out their days happy, not worrying
about how they are going to make it.
Patricia Yates
“Like” us on
Facebook.
Go to
www.facebook.com/
LIFEafter50online
Transit Riders Senior Ambassador Program
Free one-on-one travel training for any new rider 50 years of age or older!
Seniors ages 50+ can call on our ambassadors to help plan bus trips and even
accompany them on a ride.
Call or email the Mobility Manager at PPACG Area Agency on Aging to schedule your
appointment!
Ph: (719) 471-7080 ext. 130
Email: mobility@ppacg.org
Save money • Increase mobility • Be independent
April 2015
Page 21
LIFE after 50
Debt and the deceased
How should spouses and heirs proceed?
By Jason Alderman
If your loved one died leaving
significant debt behind, would you
know what to do?
It’s a worrisome question for
everyone. Young or old, based on
particular debt circumstances or
geographic location, death with debt
can provide significant problems for
surviving family members. Depending on state law and the specific
credit relationships involved, they
might be shocked to learn that they
could be legally liable for a deceased
relative’s outstanding debt – anything
from unpaid mortgage balances and
medical debt to unpaid credit card
balances.
Spouses (http://www.practicalmoneyskills.com/unexpecteddeath) who
may share any kind of debt jointly,
particularly credit cards in dual name,
could face greater challenges. It also
may spell problems for co-signers of
any kind of loan.
As with all financial planning, the
best time to act is before an issue
arises. Watching any family deal with
extensive debt problems after a
spouse or relative passes on illustrates
the need for financial transparency
while all parties are alive. No matter
how difficult a family member’s
credit circumstances are, spouses and
adult children should face those
circumstances while options are
available to deal with any problems.
Spouses can begin by requesting
and sharing their three free annual
credit reports (https://www.
annualcreditreport.com/index.action)
from TransUnion, Experian and
Equifax to confirm debt status. Once
that information is out in the open,
it’s time for the couple or family
members to deal with specific
circumstances related to that debt.
For example, a young couple may
have different debt issues than an
older, retired couple, but both should
consider how they would handle the
debts of a spouse or legal partner
after death. It can be helpful to meet
with a qualified financial or estate
expert about ways to extinguish or
manage debt issues as part of current
financial and estate planning.
It is particularly important for
borrowers and their executors to
know what categories of the
deceased’s debts will likely need to
be repaid after their death and other
debts that might be canceled or
forgiven. Generally, certain forms of
unsecured debt held in the deceased’s
name alone – like credit cards or
federal student loans – may likely be
discharged, but check with qualified
experts first.
Any kind of debt held in joint
name should be evaluated. Spouses,
legal partners and family members
who have co-signed loans or joint
credit accounts of any kind risk
payoff responsibility for that debt if
their co-borrower dies. Experts can
advise how to deal with individual
situations.
Experts also may suggest that
co-borrowers without credit in their
own names apply for a credit card in
separate names while their spouse is
still alive. A separate credit account,
if responsibly managed, can help the
survivor qualify for additional credit
in their name after a spouse or legal
partner dies.
Keep in mind that all debt
situations are unique to the individual. For example, a senior who
qualifies for nursing home care under
Medicaid (public aid) may have
family members who will need to sell
the senior’s home to address certain
expenses after he or she has died. It is
best to prepare relatives for that
possibility in advance. Separately, a
healthy senior relative may leave a
home to heirs still under mortgage, or
there could be a significant tax debt.
Airing and reviewing these issues
in advance can either prepare
relatives for certain realities or enable
them to solve problems while the
relative is still alive.
Bottom line: Dealing with a
deceased relative’s debt can add
stress at a particularly worrisome
time for spouses and relatives. The
best option is transparency while relatives are alive so debt issues can be
addressed as part of overall estate
planning.
Jason Alderman directs Visa’s
financial education programs.
Homes starting in the mid $170’s
Landscaped & fenced yards
Lifetime warranty concrete tile
roofs
At Regency Crest
A covenant protected
community featuring low
maintenance homes
designed with your
retirement years in mind.
Stucco exteriors & covered patios
A neighborhood park with
mountain views
Lawn service & snow removal
available
www.domegahomes.com  952 Peachcrest Drive, Pueblo, CO  (719) 566-8245
You’ve worked hard to pay for your home, now let your home pay you. A reverse
mortgage is a loan that converts the equity in your home into cash. If you and/or
your spouse are 62 or older, call today and see what you may qualify for.
Bill Niehus
Reverse Mortgage Consultant
719-650-2620
Serving Southern Colorado
NMLS# 403888
Borrowers must continue to pay their property taxes, hazard insurance, HOA fees (if applicable), maintain the home and live in it as
their primary residence; violation of the loan agreement may result in foreclosure. Costs may vary, less expensive options may be
available. Proceeds from a reverse mortgage may affect some government benefits. A reverse mortgage is a loan that must be re-paid,
the balance of the loan may be greater than the value of the property, a reverse mortgage is a non-recourse loan. NMLS# 7840, 110
Hillcrest St. Orlando, FL 32801
Page 22
April 2015
LIFE after 50
First
Lutheran
Church
1515 N. Cascade Avenue,
Colorado Springs, CO 80907
(719) 632-8836
www.flccsc.org
Worship: 8:00, 9:15, & 10:30 a.m.
Sunday Church School: 9 a.m.
Evening Worship: Saturday, 5 p.m.,
Sunday, 6:30 p.m.
Come join us in celebration.
Words of Life
Connecting in Prayer
By Kay Owen-Larson
“First of all, then, I urge that
entreaties and prayers, petitions and
thanksgiving, be made on behalf of all
men. For kings and all who are in
authority, in order that we may lead a
tranquil and quiet life in all godliness
and dignity.” 1 Timothy 2:2-3
Jesus prayed “very early in the
morning” (Mark 1:35). He had to pray
early before He was rushed with
people and situations needing His
time. Most of us need to do the
same… our schedules are so
demanding, if we do not start early,
we lose this precious time in prayer. In
order to maintain a healthy spiritual
life, we must have a consistent,
focused time in prayer. Without a
disciplined, established time in prayer,
our time of prayer can easily get
pushed away.
Some things you may want to
consider about your time in prayer
with your Heavenly Father:
• Consider it an appointment with
God. Consider it as you would any
Turned down for Social
Security Disability Benefits?
Please don’t give up, call me instead!
The emphasis of my practice is
social security disability and I give
each client my personal attention.
DEDICATED REPRESENTATION
19 yEARS EXPERIENCE
125 Higginbotham Road
Manitou Springs, CO 80829
(719) 685-3520
Allison Tyler
AT TO R N E Y AT
L AW
email:
allisontyler@earthlink.net
phone:
719-520-5690
Member National Organization of Social
Security Claimant’s representatives
other appointment. Don’t let
people or things interfere with this
life-giving time with God.
• Establish the amount of time you
want to commit to your prayer
time with the Lord. Sometimes it
may be difficult to stay focused in
your prayer time, so start with a
few minutes and gradually
increase your time together. This
is not a legalistic time but a time
to communicate with your Father.
• Make an “Intentional Decision.”
Throughout your prayer time (as
we discussed earlier) projects or
people will try to drag you away.
But if you have made an
“intentional decision” it will be
easier to maintain your prayer
time.
If you are looking for a healthier
spiritual life with more peace and joy,
this is the place to find it. Make an
“Intentional Appointment” with your
Heavenly Father.
Kay Owen-Larson is president of
Crossroads Ministries USA, “Serving
those in their Golden years.” If you
would like more information on this
ministry, please email kay@crossroadsusa.org or call 719-635-5767.
What’s for lunch?
SRDA Meals on Wheels
Pueblo - 543-0100
April 1 - Honey mustard chicken, carrots,
cauliflower, biscuit/smart balance,
cranberry apple crumble, milk
April 2 - Turkey Mediterranean, Brussels
sprouts, baked sweet potato,
cinnamon applesauce, milk
April 3 - Vegetable lasagna, spinach,
Oregon mixed vegetables, coconut
fruit salad, milk, minestrone
soup
April 6 - Beef tomato mac, basil green
beans, bread/smart balance,
banana, milk, Washington
chowder
April 7 - Country style spare rib, cheesy
mashed potatoes, Caribbean mixed
vegetables, sweet-n-sour cole slaw,
apple, milk
April 8 - Chicken sukiyaki, broccoli,
zucchini and tomatoes, cottage
cheese and pineapple, chocolate ice
cream, milk
April 9 - Penne and meat sauce, Italian
mixed vegetables, garden salad/
dressing, milk, Italian chicken noodle
soup
April 10 - Citrus herb fish, rice pilaf,
mixed vegetables, strawberries and
pears, milk, cream of asparagus
soup
April 13 - Parmesan chicken, linguini,
Brussels sprouts, garlic bread,
orange, milk
April 14 - Pork green chili, flour tortilla,
Mexican corn, calabacita, garden
salad/dressing, apricots / milk
April 15 - Meatloaf w/gravy, garlic
mashed potatoes, spinach, fruit
cocktail, milk, tomato rice soup
April 16 - Chicken enchiladas, black
beans, carrots, jello, milk, chicken
cilantro
April 17 - Pasta primavera, yellow
squash, Harvard beets, tangerine,
milk, cream of broccoli soup
April 20 - Country style steak, parslied
potatoes, mixed vegetables, creamy
cole slaw, apple, milk
April 21 - Turkey wrap, three bean salad,
tomato cucumber salad, ambrosia,
milk, carrot and sweet potato
soup
April 22 - Italian chicken, cheesy
cauliflower, Scandinavian mixed
vegetables, strawberry applesauce,
milk
April 23 - Baked glazed ham, scalloped
potatoes, capri mixed vegetables,
orange, milk, chicken barley
soup
April 24 - Baked fish w/pueblo salsa,
cilantro rice, Italian mixed vegetables, apricots, milk, garden vegetable
soup
April 27 - Beef shop suey, brown rice,
mixed vegetables, egg roll, grapes,
milk
April 28 - Beans and ham, green beans,
roasted sweet potatoes, orange,
milk, cream of mushroom soup
April 29 - Lemon chicken, rosemary
roasted potatoes, California blend
vegetables, butterscotch pudding,
milk, minestrone soup
April 30 - Hot turkey sandwich, meadow
blend vegetables, peas and onions,
strawberries and peaches, milk
May 1 - Macaroni and cheese, winter
mixed vegetables, sugar snap peas,
spiced plums, milk, navy bean
soup
Menus are subject to change
Don’t forget to call and cancel your meal
when you won’t be home! Call
719-543-0100 as soon as possible,
at the latest, please call by 9 a.m. on
the date being cancelled. You must
be home to receive your meal.
Consumers attending the congregate
meal sites should keep a three-day
supply of non-perishable foods and
bottled water in case of inclement
weather or other emergency that
causes a temporary suspension of
services. If feasible and determined
by the Area Agency on Aging in their
area plan, emergency meal
packages may be provided.
LIFE after 50’s classified ads are also available are online!
Visit www.lifeafter50online.com
April 2015
Page 23
LIFE after 50
What’s for lunch?
Golden Circle Nutrition
104 E. Platte Ave. - Colorado Springs - 387-6758
April 1 - Black bean lentil soup, ham
sandwich, lettuce and sliced tomato,
mandarin oranges, milk
April 2 - Broccoli stuffed chicken breast,
mashed potatoes with gravy, green
beans, pear, cookie, roll, milk
April 3 - Vegetarian lasagna rollup,
carrots, tossed salad with lite
dressing, breadstick, banana,
milk
April 6 - Beef chow mein, brown rice,
winter blend vegetables, orange,
cookie, bread, milk
April 7 - Grilled chicken sandwich with
lettuce and tomato, pinto beans, cole
slaw, banana, milk
April 8 - Beef and bean burrito, black
beans, Mexican corn, low sodium V-8
juice, pineapple tidbits, cookie,
milk
April 9 - Roast beef, mashed potatoes
with gravy, creamed spinach, apple,
trail mix, roll, milk
April 10 - Baked tilapia, scalloped
potatoes, asparagus, mandarin
oranges, cookie, bread, milk
April 13 - Swedish meatballs, brown rice,
lima beans, tropical fruit, yogurt,
bread, milk
April 14 - Sloppy Joe on roll, pinto beans,
cole slaw, mandarin oranges, cookie,
milk
April 15 - Beef taco bowl with lettuce,
tomato, cheese and salsa, black
beans, Spanish rice, orange,
milk
April 16 - Baked ham, sweet potatoes,
broccoli, pear, cookie, roll, milk
April 17 - Pea soup, chicken salad
sandwich, tossed salad with lite
dressing, sweetened strawberries,
yogurt, milk
April 20 - Bratwurst, pinto beans, red
cabbage, applesauce, bread,
Temple Shalom
1523 E. Monument St. - Colorado Springs - 634-5311
April 1 - Chicken matza ball soup,
romaine with raisins, Kashi and
dressing, mandarin oranges and
strawberries, chocolate wafer
cookie
April 6 - Closed for Passover
April 8 - Closed for Passover
April 13 - Spaghetti with meat sauce,
steamed broccoli, spinach salad,
garlic bread, orange
April 15 - Broccoli quiche, romaine with
red peppers, nectarines, peaches,
banana with Kashi, cookie and
milk
April 20 - Roast chicken, rice pilaf, beets,
romaine salad, ww roll, pear
April 22 - Tilapia on baguette bread with
lettuce and tomato, steamed carrots
with almonds, coleslaw, Birthday
cake and milk
April 27 - Hamburger with lettuce and
tomato on bun, baked beans,
romaine salad, plums, nectarines
and mandarin oranges with
almonds
April 29 - Chicken stir-fry served with
brown rice, oriental vegetables,
whole grain roll, orange
All meals are kosher. All meals subject to
change
Meals on Wheels
2250 Bott Ave. - Colorado Springs - 884-2330
April 1 - Soup and turkey sandwich or
macaroni and cheese
April 2 - Pot roast or sausage and
peppers
April 3 - Catfish or pork chops
April 4 - Quiche or chicken parmesan
April 5 - Meatloaf sandwich or chili
April 6 - Meatloaf or chicken Florentine
April 7 - Tortellini and meatballs or BBQ
chicken
April 8 - Country fried steak or macaroni
and cheese
April 9 - Soup and Monte Cristo
sandwich or pork loin
April 10 - Chicken Caesar salad or
salmon
April 11 - Burrito or fried chicken
April 12 - Quiche or pot roast
April 13 - Chicken shepherd’s pie or
pulled pork
April 14 - Ribs or grilled chicken
April 15 - Manicotti or pork chop
April 16 - Soup and turkey sandwich or
brats and kraut
April 17 - Pollack or stuffed peppers
April 18 - Goulash or tuna melt
April 19 - Chile or hot turkey sandwich
April 20 - Chicken parmesan or beef and
broccoli
April 21 - Ravioli and meat sauce or
chicken and waffles
April 22 - Swiss steak or spaghetti and
meatballs
April 23 - Soup and ham sandwich or
country fried steak
April 24 - Sloppy Joe or catfish
April 25 - Eggplant parmesan or
Salisbury steak
April 26 - Kentucky hot brown or
jambalaya
April 27 - Pork loin or macaroni and
cheese
April 28 - Beef stroganoff or sausage and
peppers
April 29 - Pot roast or BBQ chicken
April 30 - Soup and egg salad sandwich
or gumbo
Watch the major news channels on TV,
we will be on their scroll at the bottom
of the screen. If you see Silver Key
Senior Services - Closed to Clients or
2 hour delay, we will not be making
deliveries. All meals are served with
an entrée, fruits, vegetables, bread
product, milk or juice and dessert.
Menu items subject to change due to
availability.
milk
April 21 - Sweet and sour pork with
almonds, brown rice, cauliflower, egg
roll, apricots, milk
April 22 - Chicken parmesan, pasta,
broccoli, apple, breadstick, milk
April 23 - Roast turkey, mashed potatoes
with gravy, Brussels sprouts, banana,
cookie, roll, milk
April 24 - Hamburger on bun with lettuce
and tomato, pinto beans, cole slaw,
pear, milk
April 27 - Chicken pot pie, lima beans,
yogurt, sweetened strawberries
biscuit, milk
April 28 - Stuffed pepper, mashed
potatoes, carrots, orange, bread,
milk
April 29 - beef stroganoff, pasta, broccoli
with cheese, banana, bread, milk
April 30 - Pork chop with gravy, baby
bakers, peas, orange, cookie, roll,
milk
Menu substitutions, may occur without
notice. To make reservations call
387-6758 before 2 p.m. the day prior
to the day you would like to dine and
be sure to state at which site you
would like to dine. Keep a three-day
supply of non-perishable foods and
bottled water in case of inclement
weather or other emergency that
may cause a temporary suspension
of the meal service.
Golden Age Center
728 N. Main St. - Cañon City - 345-4112
April 1 - Pork chow mein, steamed brown
rice, cooked cabbage with red
pepper, banana, fortune cookie,
whole wheat bread
April 3 - Beef barley soup, whole wheat
crackers, sesame broccoli, apricot
pineapple compote, apple, whole
wheat bread
April 7 - Salisbury steak, whipped
potatoes with gravy, California
vegetable medley, seasoned greens,
nectarine, whole wheat bread
April 8 - Baked potato, broccoli with
cheese sauce, tossed salad with lite
French dressing, fresh plum, fruit
cocktail, drop biscuit
April 10 - Taco salad, salsa, tomato,
lettuce garnish, strawberry
applesauce, flan custard, cornbread
April 14 - Sloppy Joe on a bun, scalloped
potatoes, broccoli and carrots,
apple
April 15 - Roast chicken with broth,
scalloped potatoes, seasoned
Brussels sprouts, cinnamon apples,
whole wheat bread
April 17 - Stuffed peppers, chopped
spinach with malt vinegar,
applesauce cake, whole wheat
bread
April 21 - Chili con carne, whole wheat
crackers, cut broccoli, raisin nut cup,
apple, cornbread
April 22 - Macaroni and cheese, tossed
vegetable salad, asparagus, banana,
whole wheat bread
April 24 - Ham and scalloped potatoes,
spinach salad with egg, perfection
salad, peaches, whole wheat
bread
April 28 - Tuna noodle casserole,
spinach salad with egg, perfection
salad, apple, whole wheat roll
April 29 - Enchilada pie, succotash,
sliced yellow squash, mixed fruit,
cornbread
Milk served with all meals. Most meals
served with whole wheat bread and
margarine.
Florence
100 Railroad - Florence - 784-6493
April 2 - Hungarian goulash, California
vegetables medley, chopped spinach
with malt vinegar, banana, whole
wheat bread
April 3 - Arroz con pollo, corn and
zucchini Mexicana, tossed salad,
apricot, whole wheat bread
April 7 - Salisbury steak, whipped
potatoes with gravy, California
vegetable medley, seasoned greens,
nectarine, whole wheat bread
April 9 - Baked potato, broccoli with
cheese sauce, tossed salad with lite
French dressing, fresh plum, fruit
cocktail, drop biscuit
April 10 - Taco salad, salsa, tomato,
lettuce garnish, strawberry
applesauce, flan custard, cornbread
April 14 - Sloppy joe on a bun, scalloped
potatoes, broccoli and carrots,
apple
April 16 - Roast chicken with broth,
scalloped potatoes, seasoned
Brussels sprouts, cinnamon apples,
whole wheat bread
April 17 - Stuffed peppers, chopped
spinach with malt vinegar,
applesauce cake, whole wheat
bread
April 21 - Chili con carne, whole wheat
crackers, cut broccoli, raisin nut cup,
apple, cornbread
April 23 - Macaroni and cheese, tossed
vegetable salad, asparagus, banana,
whole wheat bread
April 24 - Ham and scalloped potatoes,
spinach salad with egg, perfection
salad, peaches, whole wheat
bread
April 28 - Tuna noodle casserole,
spinach salad with egg, perfection
salad, apple, whole wheat roll
April 30 - Enchilada pie, succotash,
sliced yellow squash, mixed fruit,
cornbread
Milk served with all meals. Most meals
served with whole wheat bread and
margarine.
Page 24
April 2015
LIFE after 50
Bulletin Board notices must arrive not later than the 15th of the month.
Please email notices to news@pikespeakpublishing.com or mail to:
LIFE after 50 Bulletin Board
P.O. Box 50125
Colorado Springs, CO 80949
Free Tax Preparation is available for all
who qualify. There are 12 free sites in the Pikes
Peak area. Volunteer Income Tax Assistance
(VITA) is an IRS trained and certified service. To
find a VITA site near you go to ColoradoVITA.
org.
Join the Evergreen Cemetery Benevolent
Society April 14 at Bristol Brewing Company for
Karma Hour from 5 to 9 p.m. The Society will
receive $1 for each pint sold. Since April 14 is an
historic date, we turned it into an event. April 14,
1912, is the evening the Titanic hit the iceberg
and sunk several hours later. We are recreating
the 3rd Class party from the movie. Anam Chara
will provide Celtic Music. Dress in your finest 1st
Class, 2nd Class or 3rd Class costumes or just
come as you are.
Offices” and select the Woodland Park District,
or call (719) 687-2921.
Curiosity Unlimited meets April 10 at
UCCS University Center, Room 116, at 9:30 a.m.
The speaker for the free lecture is Tom
Napierkowski, Professor of English, UCCS.
Tom’s lecture/performance, “Geoffrey Chaucer,
the Man and the Poet” will be spoken in a
‘Chautauqua’ fashion, using verbiage from
medieval literature of Chaucer (1343-1400). Join
us for coffee and goodies and enjoy the
performance and discussion. Parking is free in
Lots 222 and 224. Call 598-6780 for further
information or see www.uccs.edu/curiosity.
Fish for breakfast? The Sons of Norway
annual Frokost, a Norwegian cold-style
breakfast, featuring various meats, fish, cheeses,
sweet breads and side-dishes is April 19, 11
a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at Viking Hall, 1045 Ford St.,
Colorado Springs. Cost is $18 for members, $20
for non-members and $8 for children 12 and
under (no charge for little ones who need no
seat). Reservations are requested by April 15.
Phone early to Kathie at 719-266-9592. Seating
is limited. Velkommen til bords!
The Pikes Peak Posse of the Westerners
host Gayle Gresham who will present the history
of the “Cash Creek” (Cache Creek) mining camp
near Granite and the miners’ connections to the
Lake County War that culminated in the lynching
of Judge Elias Dyer in 1875. Program format is
in a casual, catered dinner setting at a cost of
$17. Reservations are suggested by Friday prior,
10 a.m. Guests are welcome! Membership in the
Pikes Peak Posse of the Westerners is open to
all individuals with an interest in Western history.
Call (719) 473-0330 and ask for Bob DeWitt or
email posse@dewittenterprises.com to make
reservations or for more information.
The Colorado State Forest Service
Woodland Park District is accepting orders for
May pickups of seedling trees. The program
enables landowners to obtain seedling trees at a
nominal cost, to be used for any conservation or
land rehabilitation purpose. Orders made by
April 8 will be available for pickup at the CSFS
Woodland Park District office May 1-2. For more
information or to obtain an order form, go to
csfs.colostate.edu, click on “District & Field
Have you ever wondered just what is
stored in the basement area of the Old Colorado
History Center – the area referred to as the
Collections Department? Recent reorganization
has caused the society to uncover some hidden
treasures. Diane Karlson, local museum
professional and OCCHS volunteer, will present
some of the finds April 10 at the Old Colorado
City History Center, 1 South 24th St. The event
begins at 11 a.m. with doors opening at 10:30
a.m. Seating is limited. Light refreshments will
be served. Members attend for free and
non-members pay $5.
The Pikes Peak Genealogical Society
holds its monthly meeting April 8 from 7-9 p.m.
in the Carnegie Reading Room of Penrose
Library, 20 N. Cascade Ave., Colorado Springs.
This month’s program is “Courthouse Records
Research” presented by Dick Kautt and will
cover what records are generally available and
where to locate them. Programs are free and
open to the public. For more information, visit
www.PPGS.org or call 531-6333, ext. 2252.
The Colorado Gerontological Society’s
26th Annual Salute to Seniors is April 18 from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Colorado Convention
Center, Denver. Admission is free. For a full
schedule of events, visit www.senioranswers.
org. Registration is suggested at www.
senioranswers.org or call 1-855-880-4777 to
ensure adequate seating and food samples.
First Christian Church at 16 East Platte
Ave. is presenting the Rocky Mountain Wind
Symphony, directed by Kenneth Soper, April 26
at 3 p.m. This dynamic ensemble will perform
works from classical to traditional wind band
music by Tchaikovsky, Wagner, Percy Grainger,
local composer Sam Hall, the finale from
Guilmant’s Symphony No. 1 with organist Carol
Wilson, and more. A free will offering will be
taken.
The Chamber Singers of the Colorado
Springs Chorale and the Summit Ensemble of
the Colorado Springs Children’s Chorale will
present Maurice Durufle’s Requiem April 12 at 3
p.m. at the First Presbyterian Church. Under the
direction of Kim Schultz, Requiem is the featured
work in this season’s XVOX Generations in Song.
Each year this unique collaboration brings
together singers both young and old to perform
a significant choral work. Tickets for XVOX are
$10 for adults and $5 for students and are
available through cschorale.org or by calling
634-3737.
The Canyon Winds Concert Band, under
the direction of Maestro Doug Downey, will
present its Annual Spring Concert May 7 at the
Trinity United Methodist Church, 701 N. 20th.
Street (one block west of the Walgreens at the
Uintah Gardens Shopping Center). The Brass
and Clarinet Ensembles will perform at 6:45
p.m., followed by the full band. The Canyon
Winds is a community band made up of
musicians of all ages and abilities who enjoy
creating music in a relaxed and friendly
environment. More information about joining
can be found at www.canyonwindsband.org, on
its Facebook page, or by calling Doug Downey at
719-271-8666. No audition is required to join.
Admission to the concert is free, and your generous contributions will be greatly appreciated.
An Old Fashioned Hymn Sing is May 1 at 7
p.m. at Living Hope Church, 640 Manitou Blvd.
(Colorado Springs) featuring the Vista Grande
Baptist Church Choir with musical tributes to
Andrae Crouch, Lari Goss and Mosie Lister. Visit
www.hymnsing.org or call 719-548-1488 or
719-473-9436 for more information.
The Tri-Lakes Women’s Club presents the
39th annual antiques, home decor and garden
show and sale May 2, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., and May
3, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., at Lewis Palmer High School,
1300 Higby Rd., in Monument. Proceeds benefit
qualified non-profit educational and service
organizations in the Tri-Lakes community.
Support Groups
The Colorado Parkinson Foundation and its Jeanne Taylor
Parkinson’s Support Group meet at the First Presbyterian Weber
St. Annex (105 N. Weber). Visit www.co-parkinson.org for
meeting times and dates.
Man to Man Prostate Cancer Support Group meets at the
Administrative Center, 2420 E. Pikes Peak Ave. For meeting times
and dates or more information, call the American Cancer Society
at 636-5101 or visit www.user.aol.com/SpringsPCa.
American Cancer Society’s Look Good... Feel Better meets
at the Rocky Mountain Cancer Centers, 3027 N. Circle Dr., and
Memorial Hospital, 1400 E. Boulder. The free program is open to
women undergoing cancer treatment. Call 577-2555 or 365-2535
for times and to register.
Widowed Persons Grief Support Groups meets the second
and fourth Fridays of each month, 1 p.m., at the Colorado
Springs Senior Center. Call 594-0276 for more information.
DBSA Later Life Depression Support Group meets every
Wednesday, 12:30 p.m. in the C.D. Smith Room at the Colorado
Springs Senior Center, 1514 N. Hancock. Sponsored by the
Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (DBSA) of Colorado
Springs. For more information, call 477-1515.
The Crohn's & Colitis Foundation of America (CCFA) hosts
a support group for people with Crohn's disease and ulcerative
colitis the second Tuesday of the month at Penrose Library
downtown from 7-9 p.m. Meetings are free and open to the
public. For more information, call 1-866-768-2232.
Pikes Peak Chapter of the Celiac Sprue Association
(PPCSA) support meeting is the second Saturday of each month
at 10 a.m. Contact Lillian Wolf at 635-3720 for dates and location.
Grandparents Raising Grandchildren: Day Group meets
every other Tuesday, 1-3 p.m., at Ascension Lutheran Church,
2505 N. Circle Dr. Call Anne at 578-3209. Evening Group meets
the second and fourth Tuesdays, 6-7:30 p.m., at Head Start, 2330
Robinson St. Call 444-5226 for information.
Multiple Sclerosis Support Group meets at 7:30 p.m. the
second Tuesday of each month at 1322 N. Academy, and at 10:30
a.m. the second Thursday of each month at Our Lady of the
Woods Church in Woodland Park. For more information go to
www.msasoco.org.
Bereavement Support Group for those who have lost a
loved one to death. New groups start throughout the year. Call
Diane Evergreen at 330-6652 for more information.
Adults with Aging Parents with Memory Loss: Support and
education for adult children caring for a parent with dementia,
Alzheimer's disease or any form of memory loss. Meets the fourth
Monday at 6:30 p.m. at Calvary United Methodist Church, 4210
Austin Bluffs Parkway. For information call 266-8773.
Alzheimer’s Association: If you’re caring for someone with
Alzheimer’s disease or other dementia, and are seeking
encouragement and assistance, there’s a group near you that can
help. Various times and locations. Call 266-8773 for more
information.
Epilepsy/seizure disorder support group, meets third
Tuesdays from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at Community of Christ Church,
2502 E. Palmer Park Blvd. For more information call 596-5182.
The Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD) support group for
caregivers of anyone with FTD including Picks Disease,
Progressive Aphasia and other FTDs, meets on the third
Wednesday of each month at the First United Methodist Church,
420 N. Nevada #231 at 7 p.m. For more information call
266-8773.
Survivors of Stroke (SOS) meet the second Tuesday of each
month from 1:30-3 p.m. at Health South Rehab Hospital, 325
Parkside Dr. For information, call 630-2397.
DSC Stroke Club meets the second Wednesday of every
month at the Colorado Springs Senior Center from 10 to 11:30
a.m. Call 574-9002 for more information.
Colorado Springs Polio Survivors Support Group meets the
second Saturday from 10 a.m. to noon. Please call 633-1497 for
more information.
“WOW” Widows or Widowers social support group meets
at 535 Emory Cir. (The Retired Enlisted Association) every
Monday at 9 a.m. for rolls and coffee. Lunch follows the meeting
at one of Colorado Springs many restaurants. Contact Felica at
574-3856 or Pauline at 594-4461.
Take Off Pounds Sensibly Group meets weekly Fridays at
9:30 a.m. at Holy Cross Lutheran Church, Murray and
Constitution. Contact Judy at 598-6621 for more information.
Seeing less doesn’t have to mean doing less. A new
low-vision support group is starting every third Tuesday at the
Colorado Springs Senior Center from 10 to 11:30 a.m. For more
information call Teri at 471-8181 ext. 26.
April 2015
Page 25
LIFE after 50
Clubs
AARP Black Forest Chapter 1100 meets every second
Wednesday at noon at the fellowship hall of the Black Forest
Lutheran Church, at 12355 Black Forest Road. For more
information call 596-6787.
Academy Optimist Club meets each Tuesday, 7:15-8:15
a.m., at Mimi’s on North Academy at Woodmen Rd. Anyone
interested in learning more or attending a meeting can
contact Mary Casey at 590-6101.
American Legion Post 5, Downtown Colorado
Springs, meets every third Thursday of the month at 7
p.m. at 15 Platte Rd., near the corner of Platte and
Cascade. Dues are $40 for the year. For more information
call 632-0960.
American Legion Post 209 meets the second
Saturday of every month at 10 a.m. with breakfast served
at 9 a.m. The Post Home is at 3613 Jeannine Dr. For more
information call 599-8624 or visit our web site at www.
americanlegioncoloradosprings.org.
American Legion Post 2008 in Falcon, Colo., meets the
fourth Thursday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Falcon
Firehouse off of Median Ranch Road. Dues are $40 per year.
Contact Brent Meyer at 495-8171 for more information.
American Legion Tri-Lakes Post 9-11 meets the first
Tuesday of each month at 6:30 p.m. in the Post Home at
the Depot Restaurant, 11 Primrose St., Palmer Lake. For
more information visit our web site www.americanlegiontrilakespost911.com or call 481-8668.
Bill’s Senior Single Lunch Bunch for widows and
widowers meets the last Friday of each month 11:30 a.m.
No dues, just food, fun and prizes. Call Rose Marie at
719-596-3159 for details.
Cheyenne Mountain Poets meets the first and third
Fridays, 2-3:30 p.m. at the Colorado Springs Senior Center.
Call 578-9332 for more information.
Christian Women’s Clubs of Colorado Springs each
have separate meetings, with different programs:
Broadmoor Area Christian Women’s Club: Second
Wednesday at the Broadmoor. Lunch $35; call 597-8099.
Pikes Peak Women’s Connection: Second Thursday at the
Clarion Hotel downtown. Lunch $17; call 495-8304.
Colorado Natives Club meets at 5:45 p.m. the fourth
Thursday of every month, except holidays, at the Inn at
Garden Plaza, 2520 International Cir. Contact Dan Tapio at
632-8117 or Terry Shattuck at 632-6806 for more
information.
Colorado Native Plant Society meets the second
Wednesday of each month at the Pikes Peak Library
District East Library and Information Center, 5550 N.
Union Blvd. Call 357-9427 for information.
Colorado Rockies Cribbage Association meets every
Wednesday at 6 p.m. at Elks Club #309 (Filmore and
Nevada). Want to learn how to play cribbage? Come early,
4-4:30 p.m. We will be glad to work with you.
Colorado Springs Button Club, for those who enjoy
collecting and appreciate the art, history and beauty of
buttons, meets the third Sunday of each month in the
Briargate Police Station community room, 7850 Goddard St.
Meetings begin at 2 p.m. For more information call
633-6026.
Colorado Springs Coin Club meets the fourth Tuesday
of each month at 7 p.m. at Colorado Springs Police
Department, Gold Hill Division (South West), Community
Room, 955 West Moreno Ave. off of 8th St.
Colorado Springs Scrabble Club meets every Thursday
from 6-9 p.m. at Jason’s Deli, 7455 N. Academy Blvd. (in
the shopping center at the northeast corner of the
intersection of Academy and Woodman). For more
information, call Mem Morman at 332-5141 or email
mem@rialto.org.
Colorado Springs Chapter of the Breakfast Club for
Singles 50+ meets the first Saturday of each month at the
Antlers Hotel, 4 S. Cascade, with free parking. Sign in
begins at 8:30 a.m. with a buffet breakfast at 9 a.m. Cost is
$16. Membership is not required for first time guests. The
Colorado Springs chapter has over 200 members. Singles
can meet new people and make new friends in safe,
comfortable settings. For more information go to www.
tbc50plus.org or call our message line at 260-0651.
Colorado Springs Numismatic Society meets the
second Sunday of each month at 2 p.m. at the Colorado
Springs Police Department, Gold Hill Division (South
West), Community Room, 955 West Moreno Ave.
Colorado Springs Stamp Club meets at 7.30 p.m. the
first Tuesday of each month in the Penrose Library, 20 N.
Cascade, in the Children’s Room. Call Art at 633-1153 or
598-2670 for more information.
Colorado Springs Toastmasters Club #555 meetings
are every Monday from 6-7:30 p.m. at the Maggie Mae’s
Restaurant & Pub, 2405 E. Pikes Peak Ave. For more
information, contact Max Borysko at 303-647-0405.
Curiosity Unlimited meets the second Friday of each
month Sept. through May at the UCCS University Center,
Room 116, with coffee at 9:30 a.m. and lecture at 10 a.m.
Park free in Lots 222 and 224. For more information, visit
www.uccs.edu/curiosity or call 598-6780.
Fountain. For more information call 391-7794.
Peak Bridge meets at the Valley High Golf Course
restaurant on the second and fourth Tuesday of the month
starting at 3:30 p.m. with dinner at 5 p.m. Intermediate
bridge players please call Elizabeth Henry at 574-8028.
Pikes Peak Herb Association meets the second
Wednesday of each month at 1900 E. Pikes Peak at 6:30
p.m. For more information email HerbAssociation@pcisys.
net or call 533-0707.
Pikes Peak Miniaturists meets the third Thursday of
every month at 2:30 p.m. Activities and projects revolve
around dollhouse miniatures for the collector as well as
beginning miniaturists. For location and more information
contact Mary Banner at 719-331-8556.
Doll Dreamer’s of Colorado Springs is a non-profit
club for doll lovers to gather, learn and share knowledge
with other doll enthusiasts/collectors. We include all dolls
from vintage to modern and we are members of the Untied
Federation of Doll Clubs. Meetings are the first Thursday
of every month, September through June at 10 a.m. at the
Village at Skyline (near 21st St. and Lower Gold Camp
Rd.). For more information, directions and room location,
contact Gail at 719-599-7513 or Nancy at 719-390-8098.
Downtown Toastmasters Club #5158 meets every
Friday from 12:05-1:05 p.m. in the Academy Room in the
basement of City Hall, 107 N. Nevada St. Use the Kiowa
Street entrance. Contact Ken Guentert at Skype
719-630-0783 for more information.
DSC Bingo is held Thursdays at The Retired Enlisted
Association, 834 Emory Cir., starting at 12:30 p.m. Doors
open at 11 a.m. Call 574-9002 for more information.
Dutch Nelsen Chapter of the Korean War Veterans
Association meets the third Saturday of each month in the
Elks Lodge #309, 3400 N. Nevada Ave., at noon. Contact
Paul Darrow at 237-4461 for more information.
Enzian Club, an American/German speaking social club,
meets the second Tuesday of each month, except July and
August, at Viking Hall, 1045 Ford St. If interested in Austrian/
German cultural events, call Helga at 495-4150.
Falcon Lions Club meets at the old Falcon Middle
School near the intersection of Highway 24 and Meridian
Road and across the street from Farmers State Bank.
Business meetings are the second Tuesday and program
meetings are the fourth Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. For more
information contact Denise Keiley at denisekeiley@hotmail.
com or Joe Boehringer at 495-6540.
Pikes Peak Neighbors meet the second Wednesday of
the month starting at 10 a.m. with a social time, followed
by a meeting at 10:30 and a program at 11 a.m.
Membership is open to all women in the greater Colorado
Springs area. For more information, call Judy at 550-8750.
Flying Deuces chapter of the international Laurel &
Hardy Appreciation Society presents the comedy films of
Laurel & Hardy on the first Sunday of the month from
1:30-4 p.m. at the Pikes Peak Library District East Library,
5550 N. Union Blvd. Meetings are free and open to the
public. For more information, contact Daniel at 719-2381134.
Senior Pilots of Central Colorado meets every fourth
Tuesday from 3 to 4:30 p.m. at Stetson Hills Police
Department, 4110 Tutt Blvd. The meetings are free. Check us
out on the web at www.seniorpilotsofcentralcolorado.com.
GFWC Woman’s Club of Colorado Springs meets at
Slocum Commons on the Colorado College campus the
second Wednesday of every month September through
May at 2 p.m. For more information contact Kathryn at
592-9860.
High Country Newcomers meets the fourth Monday
of the month at 10 a.m. in the Community Room of the
Pikes Peak East Library, 5550 N. Union Blvd. Email
membership chair Diana Knapp, DK0224@aol.com, for
more information.
Little London Stitchers, local chapter of the American
Needlepoint Guild, meets the third Tuesday of every month
at 11:30 a.m. at the Cheyenne Mountain Branch Library,
1791-D, S. 8th St. For more information, call Judy Koren at
636-3677.
Manitou Women’s Club meets at noon the first
Monday of the month at Manitou City Hall, 606 Manitou
Ave., from October through April. All interested in joining
are welcome.
Military Order of the Purple Heart Chapter 423 meets
the third Monday of every month at 1 p.m. with lunch
served at noon. The Chapter is located at 2 Carson Circle in
Pikes Peak Women’s Connection - Luncheon with
special speakers and music, every second Thursday at the
Swan House Manor, 5515 Palmer Park Blvd. Lunch $17.
Call 495-8304.
Pikes Peak Whittlers Woodcarving Club meets at the
Colorado Springs Senior Center, 1514 N. Hancock , the
second Saturday of every month, 7-9 p.m. Woodcarving
classes are every third Saturday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. For details,
contact Dan Noble, 577-9282.
Pikes Peak Genealogical Society meets the second
Wednesday of each month at 7 p.m. at Penrose Library, 20
N. Cascade Ave. Meetings are free and open to the public.
For information visit www.ppgs.org.
Pikes Peak Woodturners meet at the Business of Arts
Center in Manitou Springs every first Wednesday,
beginning at 6:30 p.m. Visit our website, www.ppwoodturners.org, for more information.
Retired Home Economists meet on the first
Wednesday of each month, September through May, in
various locations, for timely programs. For information,
call Marge, 599-5629 or email marge31@q.com.
Want to brush up on or sharpen your Macintosh or
device skills? Let Silicon Mountain Mac User’s Group
(SMMUG) help. We meet at 6 p.m. the first Thursday of
the month and the first Saturday at 10 a.m. Both meetings
are at the Colorado Springs Senior Center, 1513 N.
Hancock.
TREA - The Enlisted Association meets the fourth
Saturday of each month at 9 a.m. in the club house at 834
Emory Cir., Colorado Springs. Membership is open to all
honorably discharged veterans, enlisted retirees and active
duty enlisted personnel. Breakfast is available before the
meetings for $8. For more information contact President
Joe Kluck at 719-596-0927.
Tri-Lakes Lions Club meets the first Thursday of each
month at the Monument Country Club. Contact
GordonReichal@AOL.com for more information.
UCCS Toastmasters is a non-profit group that has a lot
of fun polishing our public speaking skills. Please visit and
be our guest! We meet every Friday at noon on the UCCS
Campus. Call 357-6580 for directions.
Page 26
April 2015
LIFE after 50
Community Centers
Hillside Community Center
Westside Community Center
925 S. Institute - 385-7900
1628 W. Bijou St. - 385-7920
Golden Circle Nutrition Program
– Monday through Thursday 10:30
a.m.-noon. Reservations required
24 hours in advance at (719)
385-6758. $2 per meal suggested
donation.
Games at Hillside - Monday-Friday, 9
a.m.-1 p.m. Chess, checkers,
cards, dominos and scrabble are
free. Billiards cost is $1.
Bingo - First Tuesdays, 12:30-1:30
p.m. Play and win prizes.
Ceramics – Second and third
Wednesdays, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Learn
how to clean green-ware and paint
ceramic pieces. Use of underglazes, decals and mother-ofpearl will be demonstrated. Please
bring your own supplies.
Registration required; $10 per
month (no adjusted fee available).
Table Tennis - Wednesdays, 1-3 p.m.
Free to play, donations welcome
Line Dancing – Wednesdays and
Thursdays, 9-10:30 a.m. Learn
basic as well as more challenging
steps and line dances. Cost is $10
per month.
Thursday Afternoon Cinema - Thursdays, 12:30-2 p.m. Free.
Seniors on Saturday - Third
Saturday, 1:30-4:30 p.m. Iota Beta
Omega Chapter Alpha Sorority,
Inc. Come enjoy activities,
refreshments, games, music and
prizes.
Fountain Valley Senior Center
5745 Southmoor Drive - 520-6470
Hot Noon Meal - Mondays-Fridays,
noon. Suggested donation $2.25.
Home Delivered Meals - (Rural
Area Meal Program) Frozen meals
delivered to homebound seniors
age 60 or older and those not
served by Meals on Wheels.
Phone 520-6471. Suggested Donation $10 for seven frozen meals,
$2.50 each for shelf-stable meals,
thaw and serve sandwiches, and
“Pic-Nik” Meal Baskets.
Transportation - By reservation for
medical appointments, grocery
shopping, to Senior Center, and to
conduct personal business. Transportation’s number is 520-6472.
Two working day advance notice
is required. Vehicles can accommodate wheelchairs. Donations
accepted.
Clinics and Services
Grocery Shopping - Mondays by appointment only. Call 520-6472.
Medical Equipment Loan Closet Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
Free.
Classes and Activities
Basic Computer Class: Fridays,
10:30 a.m. Call Michael Staton at
382-0160 for more info.
Breakfast Corner - Monday-Friday,
8:30-11 a.m.
Birthday Bingo - Fourth Thursdays,
1-2 p.m. Four cards for $2.
Ceramics Class – Fridays, 8:30-11
a.m. Cost: $25 for 4 weeks.
Crochet/Knitting Class - Fridays, 10
a.m. Free.
Dancing For Fun and Fitness Wednesdays, 7 p.m. No charge
(donations are accepted and appreciated).
Rubber Stamp Greeting Cards
- Thursdays 10-11:30 a.m. Cost is
$2 per class, all supplies included.
“Harmonizers” Singing Group Meeting and rehearsal Wednesdays at 2:30 p.m. Call Sandy
Franklin, 392-9202 for info.
Interpretive Dance Class - Mondays,
10:30 a.m. Free.
Let’s Play Cards - Monday-Friday, 1-4
p.m. Free.
Line Dancing Classes - Tuesdays
(Intermediate Level), 1 p.m.; Fridays (All Levels), 1 p.m. $2 per
class.
Oil Painting Class - Wednesdays,
8:30 a.m.
Porcelain Class - Tuesdays: First
class 9:30 a.m. Second class
12:30 p.m.
Senior Bowling at Valley Bowl Mondays and Wednesdays, noon.
Tai-Chi and Chi Kung Classes Wednesdays, 9:30-11 a.m. Cost:
$2. Fridays, 10-11 a.m. Cost: $1.
Travel Club, meets 2nd Tuesday of
each month at 1 p.m. To sign-up
for trips call 520-6470.
“We Care” Sponsored Bingo - First
Thursdays, 1-2 p.m. Four cards for
$2.
Otis Park Community Center
731 North Iowa Ave. - 385-6860
Dominoes - Mondays-Fridays,
10-11:30 a.m.
Golden Circle Nutrition Program Mondays-Fridays, 11:45
a.m.-12:15 p.m. Reservations
must be made 24 hours in
advance. Call 387-6758.
Birthday Party - Last Friday of each
month, noon-1 p.m. Call the
Center if you would like to
recognize a senior on their special
day, includes anniversaries or any
special day.
S.E.T. of Colorado Springs (Service
Empowerment Transformation)
- Well Being Clinic is held the third
Wednesday of each month.
Basic Exercise - This program
combines breathing, slow
movement, stretching, and
meditation to help reduce stress
and increase flexibility. Meets
every Tuesday.
Bridge - Mondays, 1-4 p.m. Men,
women, amateurs, old pros and
masters are all welcome.
Cards and Tables Games - Mondays,
12:30-3:30 p.m. Games start at
12:30 p.m.
Crafts Unlimited - Fridays, 9-11 a.m.
No registration fee. Bring materials
for the project you are working on,
enjoy a beverage, good conversation, and share creative ideas with
other crafters.
Golden Circle Nutrition Program
- Mondays-Fridays, 11:30
a.m.-noon. Reservations must be
made 24 hours in advance by
calling 387-6758 or 385-7920. The
suggested donation is $2.25.
Lively Discussion Book Club - 2nd
Thursdays, 12:30-2 p.m.
Monthly Birthday Bash - 4th
Thursdays, 11:45 a.m.-noon.
Celebrate the birthdays of all our
friends at the Westside Community Center. If you are celebrating
a birthday during the month, call
or drop by the Center to get your
name on the birthday list.
Toenail Trimming - Wednesdays, 9
a.m.-noon. The Visiting Nurse
Association performs foot care
services including: toenail clipping/
trimming/filing, callous and corn
buffing, foot care education, blood
pressure checks, follow-up with
physician as needed. Appointments are required and can be
made by calling 385-7920. Fee:
$25 at the time of service.
Golden Circle Meal Sites
The program provides nutritious meals in a congregate social setting to eligible
diners. You are eligible if you are: 60 years of age or older, married to someone who
is 60+, disabled and residing in the facility where lunch is served or you volunteer at
the lunch site. The suggested donation for eligible diners is $2.25 but no eligible
person is denied lunch because of their inability to pay. The cost of the meal for
ineligible diners is $6.50. Call the Golden Circle Nutrition Program office at 387-6758
to make a reservation for the site you would like to attend one day in advance. No
reservations are required for Acacia Park Apartments, Colorado Springs Senior
Center or Fountain Valley Senior Center.
Central
Colorado Springs Senior Center - 387-6000
1514 N. Hancock Ave., 80903
Serving Times: 11:30-12:30 weekdays
Franklin Square - 387-6758
605 N. Franklin St., 80903
Serving Times: 11:30-noon weekdays
Otis Park - 385-6860
731 N. Iowa Ave., 80909
Serving Times: 11:30-noon weekdays
Temple Shalom - 634-5311
1523 E. Monument St., 80909
Serving Kosher meals
Serving Times: noon-12:30 Monday and
Wednesday
Downtown
Acacia Park Apartments - 387-6758
104 E. Platte Ave., 80903
Serving Times: 11:30-12:45 weekdays
Centennial Plaza Apartments - 387-6758
516 E. Kiowa St., 80903
Serving Times: 11:30-noon weekdays
East
Casa de Cerro Apartments - 387-6758
915 N. Yuma St., 80909
Serving Times: 11:30-12:15 weekdays
Sunny Villa Apartments - 635-9595
2480 E. Dale St., 80909
Serving Times: 11:30-12:15 weekdays
North
Crestview Apartments - 387-6758
3880 Van Teylingen Dr., 80917
Serving Times: noon-12:30 weekdays
Monument - 484-0911
166 2nd St., Monument, 80132
Serving Times: noon- 12:30 Monday and
Thursday
South
Hillside Community Center - 385-7900
925 South Institute St., 80903
Serving Times: 11:30-12:15 Monday-Thursday
Fountain Valley Senior Center - 520-6470
5745 Southmoor Dr., 80817
Serving Times: noon-12:30 weekdays
Grinde Manor - 382-7690
906 Grinde Dr., 80817
Serving Times: 11:30-noon weekdays
Meadows Park Community Center - 385-7940
1943 S. El Paso Ave., 80905
Serving Times: 11:30-noon weekdays
Pikes Peak Towers - 632-1556
1912 Eastlake Blvd., 80910
Serving Times: noon-12:30 weekdays
Southview Plaza Apartments - 387-6758
1462 E. Fountain Blvd., 80910
Serving Times: noon-12:30 weekdays
Villa San Jose - 632-7444
1810 S. Corona Ave., 80905
Serving Times: 11:30-12:15 Tuesday,
Thursday and Friday
Villa Santa Maria - 520-9344
405 St. Elmo Ave., 80905
Serving Times: 11:30-12:15 Monday and
Wednesday.
Village at Homewood Point - 387-6758
907 E. Colorado Ave, 80903
Serving Times: 11:30 Wednesday.
West
Katharine Lee Bates - 387-6758
2660 W. Uintah St., 80904
Serving Times: 11:30- noon weekdays
St. Andrews Church - 685-9259
103 Canon Ave., Manitou Springs 80829
Serving Times: 11:30-noon weekdays
West Center - 385-7920
1628 W. Bijou St., 80904
Serving Times: 11:30-noon weekdays
Woodland Park - 687-3877
312 N. Center St., 80863
Serving Times: 11:30-12:15 weekdays
Aspen Mine Center - 689-3584 ext. 104
166 E. Bennett, Cripple Creek, 80813
Serving Times: 11:30-12:15 Monday and
Friday
Victor Community Center - 689-3584 ext. 104
321 Victor Ave., Victor, 80860
Serving Times: noon-1 Monday, Tuesday and
Thursday
April 2015
Page 27
LIFE after 50
Community Centers
Colorado Springs Senior Center
1514 N. Hancock - 387-6000
The Colorado Springs Senior Center
has a lot of new classes this
Spring. This is not a complete list,
so please stop by or go online to
find the full listing of classes, trips
and special events at www.
csseniorcenter.com. All classes
require registration.
Special Events
Ask A Lawyer Day - April 4, 9
a.m.-noon. Get your legal
questions answered by a lawyer in
a personal one-on-one setting.
Open to the public. Registration is
required for your free appointment
by calling or stopping by the Senior
Center front desk. No personal
injury cases please. Presented by
the El Paso County Bar Association.
Free Document Shredding Day
- April 8, 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Here
is your chance to clean out and get
organized! Fill one banker-sized
box with old bank statements, tax
returns and other important
documents that should not be
thrown out in the trash. Your first
box is free; any additional boxes
shredded are $5 each. No
registration required. Sponsored by
Pat MichelesCLU/ChFC and
FedShred.
Tunes on Tuesday - Spanish Guitar
- April 21, 1:30-3 p.m. Shane
Groothof is a native of Colorado
and has been studying and
performing since 1999. His
repertoire spans from the
Renaissance, Baroque, Classical,
Romantic and Modern periods.
Registration is required at the front
desk.
Meet and Greet - April 30 6:30-8 p.m.
Connect and “friend” others looking
to rejuvenate their social life. Find a
movie partner or a coffee buddy.
This event is designed for you to
get to know others looking to do
the same, all while sharing a
dinner together. Register at the
front desk for $5 per person.
Exercise and Dance
This is not a complete list, so please
stop by or go online to find the full
listing.
• Country 2-Step Part 3 - Wednesdays, April 1-29
Meadows Park Community Center
1943 S. El Paso - 385-7940
Exercise Class - Tuesdays,
Thursdays, and Fridays, July 6-30,
10:45-11:30 a.m. Taught by a
certified instructor, this 45-minute
session will make you feel better
inside and out.
Monthly Senior Trips - Please
contact Michelle Martinez at
385-7940 for more information.
Special Events
Care and Share Food Bank - Third
Fridays, 11 a.m.-2 p.m.; fourth
Fridays, 4:30-7:30 p.m. The
commodities provided by
Emergency Food Assistance
Program (TEFAP) are available to
all eligible persons regardless of
race, color, national origin, sex,
age, or handicap. Please bring a
form of identification
S.E.T. Wellness Clinic - Third
Tuesdays, 10 a.m. Service
Empowerment Transformation
(S.E.T.) Wellness Clinics provide
services to maintain older adult
independence and quality of life.
Woodland Park Senior Center
312 N. Center Street, Woodland Park - 687-3877
Hot Noon Meals: Monday-Friday,
$2.25. Golden Circle. Reservations needed.
Monday: Quilting, 9-11:30 a.m.
Bridge, noon-3 p.m.
Tuesday: Billiards, 9-11:30 a.m.
Potluck & Program, second
Tuesdays 11:45 a.m.-1 p.m.
Catered club luncheon and
program, fourth Tuesdays 11:45
a.m.-1 p.m. Reservations needed.
$6
Wednesday: Exercise Class for
Arthritis, 10:30-11:30 a.m. Bridge,
noon-3 p.m.
Thursday: Tai Chi for Arthritis with
Rip, 9:30-10:30 a.m.
Bingo, 10:30-11:30. Free.
Free Blood Pressure checks,
second Thursdays 11:30
a.m.-12:30 p.m.
Advanced Tai Chi, 12:30-1:30 p.m.
Call 687-3330 to register.
Hearts, 12:30-3 p.m.
Free Legal Assistance for Seniors,
second Thursdays 1:30-4:30 p.m.
Call for appointment.
Friday: Exercise Class for Arthritis,
10:30-11:30 a.m.
Upcoming: Water Color Classes,
12:30-2 p.m. Call Karen at
687-3877 if interested.
Crafts/Jewelry Making/Crochet,
12:30-2 p.m.
Saturday: Pancake Breakfast, third
Saturday s, 7:30-10:30 a.m. All
you can eat, $6! Kids six and
under eat free!
• Cha Cha 1 - Wednesdays, April
1-29
• A variety of Tai Chi classes are
available for varying abilities –
please see program guides for
further descriptions, start dates
and prices.
Lifelong Learning
Here are some of our April classes for
your educational enrichment! This
is not a complete list. Please call or
go online for more detailed descriptions. All require registration by
phone or in person. Some are free,
some with small costs.
• Celtic Psyche - April 7-14
• Probate - April 9
• World Climates and Human History
- April 9-30
• Social Security - April 15
• Starting Your Spring Garden - April
16
Health Education
Free, but please register. A donation of
$1 to the Senior Center is
requested. This is not a complete
list. Please call or go online for
more detailed descriptions. All
require registration by phone or in
person.
• Bucket List - April 10
• Osteoporosis - April 13
• The Heart of Caregiving - April 20
• Healthy Tips for Safe Travel - April
22
• Understanding Hearing Loss - May
6
Art Classes
You do not have to be an artist to take
an art class! Find your creativity
and let it flourish through the
variety that we offer. This is not a
complete list. Check our website or
give us a call for details including
the cost. Some classes have
additional supply costs.
• Wine and Watercolor - April 21
Day Trips
On April 6, we will sign up for the
following trips! Don’t miss out. Call
or come in between 8-10 a.m. to
put your name in the basket for the
trips you want to go on. We will call
you after we do the lottery drawing
that morning at 10 a.m. Each of the
trips this month will also have a
lunch or dinner stop, with payment
on your own.
• Colorado Capitol Tour and
Byer-Evan House Museum - April
17, $20
• Fine Arts Center - John James
Audubon - April 22, $15
• White Fence Farm - April 28, $35
• Camp Shady Brook Senior Center
Three-Day Retreat - May 5-7, $110
Computer Classes
Here are some of our April computer
classes for your educational
enrichment! This is not a complete
list. Please call or go online for
more detailed descriptions. All
require registration by phone or in
person.
• Scan Your Photos - April 14
• Mouse Basics - April 16
• Computer Basics - April 16
• Computer Basics - April 16
• Introduction to the Internet - April
21
• Introduction to Windows 8 Seminar
- April 22
Open Public Dances - Every
Thursday, 1:30-3 p.m. A suggested
donation of $3 to the band is
appreciated. Pick up the schedule
of bands at the front desk.
Sunday Afternoon Dance with the
New Century Big Band - April 19,
3-5 p.m. Cost is $8. Bring a canned
good donation for Care & Share
and receive $2 off admission.
Free Friday Ping Pong - Open play
from 1:30-2:30 p.m.
Free Friday Afternoon Movies - Starts
promptly at 1 p.m.
Tri-Lakes Senior Center
1300 Higby Road, Monument
Open Tuesday through Friday, 1-4
p.m., and other days and times to
accommodate scheduled events.
Monday Movie Matinee - Mondays,
1-4 p.m.
Pinochle - Tuesdays, noon-4 p.m.;
Thursdays, 1-4 p.m.
Line Dancing - Tuesdays, 1:15-2:15
p.m.
Ladies Tea - Third Tuesday of the
Month, 1-3 p.m. Open to everyone.
Each month is a different theme.
Please bring a salad, side or
dessert to share.
Bingo - Third Wednesday of the
Month, 1-3 p.m. Prizes galore!
Bridge - Second and Fourth Thursday
of the Month, 1-4 p.m.
Mah Jong - Fridays 1-4 p.m. Join us
for national Mah Jong.
Foot Care Clinic - Second Wednesday and last Friday, 11:30 a.m.-3
p.m. Thirty minute appointment for
$30. Call 719 577-4448 for an
appointment (please no walk-ins).
Services include callous and corn
buffing; toenail clipping, trimming
and filing; circulation check;
monofilament test; skin condition
check; pulse check in both feet;
and foot care education.
Golden Circle Nutrition Program
Senior Lunch - Monday and
Thursday, 11:45 a.m.-12:45 p.m.
Meal served at 166 Second
Street, Monument. $2 suggested
donation.
Tri-Lakes Health Advocacy
Partnership Seniors Lunch
- Wednesday 11:45 a.m.-12:45
p.m. Meal served at 146 Jefferson
Street, Monument (basement of
the School District 38 Administrative Building). $3 donation
suggested.
Page 28
April 2015
LIFE after 50
LIFE after 50 Classified Advertising
Want to place a classified ad in LIFE after 50 ? You can email* your request to
sales@pikespeakpublishing.com, call (719) 418-2717 or mail** your ad with payment to: Pikes Peak
Publishing, LLC, P.O. Box 50125, Colorado Springs, CO 80949-0125.
All classified ads must be prepaid. Classified advertising deadline is the 20th of the month prior
to publication. Classified ads cancelled after the 20th are non-refundable. Visa and MasterCard
accepted. Online classified ads are posted at the beginning of the issue month and run through the
end of the month.
Individual or
Private Party
75
¢
per word
Commercial
Business
95¢
per word
Minimum of 10 words. No abbreviations. First few words are bold and
*Don’t email credit card numbers, we’ll contact you for billing information. **Check or Money Order only, no cash please. all caps. Phone numbers, email and street addresses count as one word.
adult daY Care
CareGiver
CoMputer serviCes
For sale
UNIQUE, WELCOMING PLACE for
seniors in the old north end, near Penrose Hospital. Providing refreshing respite for caregivers. North End Adult
Day Care, 719-351-8786, www.NorthEndAdultDayCare.com.
QUALITY CAREGIVING and housecleaning services. Personal care and
daily living needs. 23 Years experience. Excellent references. Tracy 719630-8232.
$50 FLAT RATE COMPUTER REPAIR. No hidden charges. Parts extra
if needed. Free pickup and delivery or
up to two hours of on-site tune-up, virus removal, and/or training. 29 years’
experience. Call Richard Sobe with
SOBE I.T. 719-216-8994. Thank you
for reading my ad.
ELECTRIC WHEELCHAIR, JAZZY
Model 1120 with upholstered seat, in
great condition (may need batteries),
(719)633-2346.
CareGiver
MATURE, HONEST COMPANION
Caregiver. Good, insured driver. Will
assist with daily activities, house-sitting, feeding, overnight if needed. Call
Emily anytime 719-322-5956. Please
leave clear name, message, phone
number.
Our Talent is Caring
It is time to Celebrate Aging
2- to 24-hour Care
Skilled & Unskilled
“Leaders in Dementia Care”
PCP, CNA, LPN, RN
Companions, Errands,
Light Housekeeping & Cooking
Hair Stylist, Manicure, Pedicure
To Keep You Safe in Your Home
Licensed - Bonded - Insured
719-368-1695
PERSONAL CAREGIVING. Care with
dignity for different health problems,
including dementia, so you can stay at
home. Friendship, light housekeeping,
etc. Good references. Call Sandie at
864-940-4064.
PERSONALIZED CAREGIVING.
Friendship, appointment and medication management, cooking, transportation, bookkeeping, light housekeeping. Call JoAnn at 719-649-0249 for
compassionate care of you or your
loved ones. Years of service, flexible
hours, references available.
SENIOR CARE BY ANGELS - Our
caring home caregivers help Seniors
stay at home. Personal care, meals,
light housekeeping. Up to 24 hour
care. Top reference and criminal background checks. Call Visiting Angels
719-282-0180.
STAR SENIOR CARE. “The Alternative Choice for Senior Care.” Star Senior Care is a safe and cost effective
approach for the care of the elderly.
Star Senior Care helps care for these
individuals in the comfort of their own
homes which allows them to maintain
their dignity and independence. By
performing tasks for our clients that
have become difficult or impossible,
Star Senior Care helps to make their
lives easier, less stressful, and more
manageable. Dee Dee McEwen MSN
ED, RN, Director, 719-210-5033.
COMPASSION CALLS. Reassurance
and wellness calls. Local, friendly and
affordable. 719-465-2717 www.CompassionCalls.com
ELDER HELPER CARE AVAILABLE.
Shop, meals, errands, medication reminder. Personal hygiene, bathing,
grooming, daily activities, laundry.
Companionship and Care for you or
your elderly loved one. Day/Night. Two
Hours minimum. Compassionate, mature, experienced. Pet-loving, Nonsmoker. Call 719-622-1042.
CeMeterY plots
MEMORIAL GARDENS 2 burial plots,
will sell both or separately, price negotiable. 719-221-2353.
TWO BURIAL PLOTS, Memorial Gardens. An upper and lower burial plot
located in Garden of Victory includes
opening and closing. Now costs
$3,695, yours for $2,000, call 719599-5683.
All real estate advertising is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of
1968, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin, sex, familial
status, disability, creed, ancestry or marital status, or an intention to
make such preference, limitation or discrimination. Advertisements for
real estate which are in violation of the law shall not be accepted. Our
readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available
on an equal opportunity basis.
LIFE after 50 assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions. If
promptly brought to our attention, a correction will be published in the next
edition.
WILL MATCH ANY LOCAL PRICE. A
Senior helping Seniors. Free phone
help after service call. www.jeffscomputerservicecs.com 719-574-8505.
For reNt
Best Price Scooter Rentals
PRIDE JAZZY 614hd
POWER WHEELCHAIR
$45 Day, 2-Day Minimum
$120 Weekend
$160 Week Reserve Now!
Free Local Delivery and Pickup
719-344-4720
Best Price Scooters and
Power Wheelchairs.com
Spitfire EX 4-Wheel
Travel Scooter for
Stability only $869
Includes:
Batteries, Basket, 1 Year
Service Plan, and Free
Delivery
Call for Senior or
Military Discount!
SOUTHWEST - EMERALD
TOWER APARTMENTS
Spacious studios, one and two
bedrooms, adult community, no
smoking, no pets, indoor pool,
exercise equipment, sauna, etc.,
107 West Cheyenne Road
719-635-3272.
Excellent condition, barely used.
Perfect for someone with mobility
issues. Controls are simple and
straight-forward and the chair
maneuvers with ease. Purchased
this chair new for $4000 – asking
$2,500 firm because of its remarkable
condition.
If you or someone you know struggles
with mobility issues this is the chair
for you. Why pay at least $4000 for
a new chair when you can get this
almost-new chair for a fraction of
retail price?
FOR SERIOUS INQUIRIES,
PLEASE CONTACT
M. TRAIL AT (719) 598-4254
NEW ELECTRIC HOSPITAL BED
with mattress, rubber liner, guard rails.
In brand new condition, $700.
(719)633-2346.
GARDEN-LEVEL APARTMENT in my
home near Woodmen and Powers. Private full bath, shared kitchen and
laundry. Desire someone who’s quiet
and likes their privacy. $600/mo. and
$30 non-refundable deposit background check. 719-419-4511 or berylw2014@gmail.com.
Bellavita Bath Lift $568
NEWLY REMODELED 2 bdrm, 1 bath
condo. 1-level end unit, all appliances
and garage. Near Valley Hi Golf
Course. 719-638-2711.
Travel Powerchair
Activecare Cobalt
$1,399
ONE BEDROOM very clean and quiet.
$600/mo. Near Penrose Hospital. No
pets or smokers. Beautiful courtyard.
471-0716.
6′ Multifold
Ramp $318
Best Price Scooters
719-344-4720
April 2015
Page 29
LIFE after 50
LIFE after 50 Classifieds
Hair/Nail Care
Mobile Homes
Services
Services
NAIL CARE. Board certified foot and
nail care RN will trim your toenails, debulk corns, callouses in your home.
Susan, RN, CFCN, 719-392-1253.
MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE in Evergreen Park, Fillmore and Cascade.
55+ community, small yard, and covered parking. 719-636-1900.
BEN’S LANDSCAPE. Tree Removal.
Also tree trimming and stump grinding.
24/7 Emergency service. Call 719492-1671.
QUALITY HAIR CARE in your home. I
do shampoo/sets, cuts, and perms.
Colorado licensed hairdresser. Pedicures and manicures. 719-330-5251.
Personals
A DAY TO REMEMBER. Event Planning for Birthdays - Retirement - Anniversaries - Family Reunions. Call Beryl for a friendly, free consultation. 719419-4511.
Health
REASSURANCE & WELLNESS calls.
Compassion Calls. Local, friendly and
affordable. 719-465-2717 www.CompassionCalls.com
RELAXATION MASSAGE. New client
special: 1 hour massage only $35. Gift
certificates available. Call Janice 719648-4316.
Help Wanted
LIFE AFTER 50 is Expanding! Parttime help wanted in the Pueblo and
Canon City areas: Writer, Salesperson, Delivery. Email resume with cover
letter to: bruce@pikespeakpublishing.
com or mail to: Bruce Schlabaugh,
P.O. Box 50125, Colorado Springs, CO
80949.
Insurance
AARP MEDICARE SUPPLEMENT Insurance Plan, insured by United
Healthcare, to help pay for some outof-pocket expenses not covered by
Medicare. Get the info you need and
the plan that works for you. Call today.
Bruce Schlabaugh 719-237-8530. Licensed Insurance Agent with United
Healthcare.
CHRISTIAN DATING & Friendship
Service. Our 25th Year helping Christian singles meet! Free package for
age 40+. 1-800-814-3359.
COLORADO SPRINGS BREAKFAST
CLUB for Singles 50+ meets first Saturday of each month at Antlers Hotel,
4 S. Cascade, with free parking. Cost
is $16. Singles can meet new people,
make new friends! Call message line
719-260-0651.
HUNTING FOR HYES in the Springs.
Any Armenians out there? Do you
miss the language, company, music
and cuisine as much as I do? If you
can relate, please call Nazelee 719290-6007. Shnorhagal yem.
Pets
LOVING & RELIABLE PET CARE &
house-sitting for you when on vacation. Low rates! Experienced & references. 719-221-2353.
MAGNUS - A HANDSOME TABBY,
brown with green eyes. He’s a sweet
cat looking for his forever home. Call
(719)635-5000.
PIKES PEAK PET PALS Pet & HomeSitting, East Colo. Spgs. Call 6411428 for rates and availability.
SAFE PLACE FOR PETS - Forever
Care, Forever Homes! Our Wellness
Program provides care for the pets of
terminally ill owners. Call 719-3590201 or visit www.safeplacepets.org.
Real Estate
Jan Ingram-Smith, CSA
• MEDICARE SUPPLEMENTS - PLANS A THRU N
• MEDICARE ADVANTAGE PLANS - HMO, PPO
Experienced, Competent,
Professional Services
"With Your Best Interest in Mind"
Call Today for best rate quote!
1-866-611-5888 or 719-330-8931
retirementshop@hotmail.com
Mobile Homes
14X67 MOBILE HOME 2 bedrms, 2
baths, completely remodeled, all appliances, carport and shed, 2 enclosed
patios, in 55+ LaCresta Park. $37,995.
Price negotiable. 719-505-2342.
FOR SENIORS ONLY! Sell your
home, condo, mobile home or other real estate in Life after 50 for
discounted rate of only $9.50 per
month! Write out your 25 word ad
and call 719-418-2717. Ad must
include sales price and be private
par ty. (Extra words 50 cents
each).
CONDO’S FOR SALE. Independent
living in a hi-rise complex. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1156 sq.ft. units. Amenities include exercise rooms, library,
pool, tennis courts and more. Priced
from $68,000 and up. Call GARTIN &
ASSOC. 719-596-5050 for your appointment.
CLEANING BY GERMAN LADY. Experienced, Honest & Reliable. Satisfaction guaranteed. Call Karen 719434-2922.
D & P PROJECTS, INC. Home maintenance and remodeling; carpentry,
electrical, plumbing, drywall, tile,
painting, windows, and doors. Senior
discount. Licensed and insured. 719651-7616, dp-projects@q.com.
Monica Young
719-291-0482
ForgottenBNG@att.net
www.ThingsForgottenLLC.com
SENIOR
MOVE
MANAGERS
DVD’S FROM MOVIE FILM 8mm,
16mm, video cassettes or slides. Records or cassettes onto CD. Reasonable prices. 719-574-4372.
EXTERIOR/INTERIOR PAINTING.
Top quality work at excellent pricing.
Senior and military discounts. Free estimates. Call 719-310-6429.
ANTONIA’S HOUSECLEANING, light
or deep cleaning, to your satisfaction,
always free estimates. Call me today
719-464-1037.
HANDYMAN SERVICES. Mowing,
yard work, odd jobs, plumbing, carpentry, fences, decks, doors, more.
John 471-7471.
Real Estate
“Because Your Greatest
Investment Deserves The
Best Representation”
•Helpingmorethan400Seniorssince1988
•ColoradoSpringsNative
•CallforaFREEMarketAnalysis/Consultation
Ihaveup-to-dateinformationonthe
Springshomemarket,isithotorcold?
Givemeacall!
(719) 536-4445
www.BrentDemos.com
Brent Demos
Owner/Broker
The Tandem Two
Real estate GRoup
Darlene arnold
719-338-3520
Judy trout
719-332-8811
Doing business the
Old-FashiOned Way: yesterday’s Values
tOday’s technOlOgy
We help seniOrs with Real estate decisions.
call for a no-obligation consultation
when you need to sell or buy.
(Senior Real Estate Specialists)
Blue spruce real estate
Page 30
April 2015
LIFE after 50
LIFE after 50 Classifieds
serviCes
serviCes
FEELING DISORGANIZED, overwhelmed, unable to run errands? I organize rooms, paperwork, document
shredding, take items for donation,
shop with/for you, help with daily
chores after injury or illness. Urban
Girl Friday is fully insured. Call Karen
at 719-510-42213.
MISTREATED BY A COMPANY?
PTM Consulting has 35 years experience in helping with contracts, pricing,
performance and problem solving. For
a very reasonable price we can help
you when making a major purchase or
starting home repair/remodelling. Call
Paul Myers at 719-661-0665.
FURNITURE UPHOLSTERY & AUTO
upholstery. Free estimates, low prices,
30 yrs experience. 719-338-6769.
HAVE HAMMER, WILL TRAVEL! Bill
Street, Handyman - light carpentry,
electrical, plumbing, drywall patching,
painting, enclosures, shelves. Senior
discount, licensed and insured. 4719828, cell phone 291-7875.
HOUSECLEANING, 16 years experience, fully insured and bonded, 719477-0679. HAULING also available,
719-761-6730.
HOUSECLEANING, 20 YEARS experience, references, quotes over the
phone. Call Kathy 719-347-0832.
JENSEN REMODELING AND HOME
REPAIRS. 25% senior discount. 38
years in Pikes Peak area. Call 719332-3089.
serviCes
serviCes
WILL SELL YOUR STUFF ONLINE.
Car, truck, camper or anything of value. Will take photos, deal with phone
calls or buyers, post all ads and then
hand you an envelope full of cash.
FREE garage clean out. Call James
719-650-8699.
3130 Boychuk Ave. Ste I
Colorado Springs, CO 80910
Early Bird
LAWN MAINTENANCE
& LANDSCAPE, LLC
Weekly Maintenance ~ Aeration
Power Rake ~ Fertilization
Sprinkler Start-Ups & Repair
Landscaping ~ Fence Repair
Retaining Walls ~ Brick Pavers
Fire Mitigation
Senior & Military Discounts!
Wayne ~ 290-0620
ZAP IT CARPET CLEANING. Three
rooms only $89. Truck-mounted. Call
Ben’s Carpet Cleaning 719-492-1671.
MORE THAN A HANDYMAN. Will organize, do maintenance, clean up.
Household, garage, storage, yard
work. Seniors 65+ Home Rate $12/hr.
Non-Senior Home Rate $15/hr. Call
Mike, also a Senior, at 719-684-6751.
ROCKY WILSON Licensed Journeyman Electrician. Electrical installation
or repair, custom wiring. Call 719-4996223 for estimates and scheduling.
N O W A C C E P T I N G N E W PAT I E N T S
A DU LT S AG E 60 A N D U P
 Medicare
Lisa Foster, NP
 United Healthcare
Beth Allen, NP
SecureHorizons
Brad Bingham, NP
 Anthem BlueCross
Jeffrey Kulp, MD
& BlueShield
Gail Cathey, NP
®
®
Introducing Brad Bingham,
our newest provider!
Proudly recognized by the National Committee
for Quality Assurance (NCQA) as a Level 3
Patient Centered Medical Home.
Please call (719) 475-5065 to schedule an appointment
2350 International Circle, Colorado Springs, CO 80910 – www.agewellmedical.com
Five comfortable floor plans
luxurious accommodations
It’s the place to live for the young at heart.
With friendly management, outstanding features, and prompt, efficient service, Regency Tower offers a relaxing, comfortablelifestyle
for the 55-plus crowd. Regency Tower’s beautifully designed apartment homes and luxurious accommodations include:
• Huge sunny floor plans • Laundry facilities & trash chutes conveniently located on every floor • Sparkling pool / BBQ facilities
• Lounge with TV, VCR, DVD player and piano • Serene garden area • Innovative fitness center with TV • Controlled access entry
• Pool table / Clubroom / Library • 2 elevators / ADA accessible
921 Green Star Drive, Colorado Springs, CO 80905 ~ 719-633-2121
We are unable to advertise our
REALLY LOW PRICE
due to Manufacturer Guidelines,
so call and find out!
WaNted
1950s-1960s LP’s and 45’s. Blues,
jazz, rock and roll, country, Broadway,
movies, TV, R&B, soul, children’s, spoken word, etc. Call me first, I pay the
most for your records. 633-5848.
CASH FOR OLD BANKS and Toys,
presidential pin back buttons, military
insignia and memorabilia. Single items
or entire collections wanted. 632-9904.
I BUY OLD FILM CAMERAS and
lenses, photographic equipment of all
types, entire collections, and estates!
Also buy 1960’s+70’s Stereo Components, working or not! Call Hank at
719-367-1879.
I WILL PAY CASH for your old, broken
or unwanted gold jewelry. Possible interest in undamaged sterling jewelry.
Top prices paid! Call Nancy 719-2386837.
PAYING HIGH PRICES FOR: Antiques, collectibles, watches, jewelry,
cameras, musical instruments, artwork, etc. Will buy single items or entire estates. 719-641-0320.
VINTAGE ITEMS WANTED. Toys,
comic books, magazines, catalogs,
children’s books, dolls, movie and music posters, Halloween, guitars and
amplifiers, bicycles, and plastic model
kits. 1-719-633-5848.
WANTED: OLD PHOTOS, ALBUMS,
scrapbooks and photo postcards from
the late 1800’s to 1930’s. USA or foreign photos of interest! Seeking all
subject matter. Please contact Rebecca at 719-291-7643. CASH paid.
April 2015
Page 31
LIFE after 50
Offer valid in Independent Living Only.
Villa Pueblo is EASY to Find—Located in
the Tallest Building in Pueblo, Residents
(Ages 55+) Enjoy the Spectacular Views
from Our Spacious and Affordable
Apartment Homes!
ONE BEDROOM APARTMENT SALE!






BUNDLED RENT PLANS
Earn 50 “Base” Points on your Premier
Club Card for your chance to win from
$5.00 to $50.00 in CasinoPlay!
5 FLOOR PLANS
FRIENDLY NEIGHBORS
MONTH-TO-MONTH PLANS...TRY US!
PETS WELCOME
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(ONLY 1/2 HOUR AWAY)
Present this coupon at the Premier Club.
VILLA PUEBLO SENIOR LIVING COMMUNITY
SHOP AROUND AND COMPARE!
Must be a Premier Club member. This coupon applies to slot machine play only.
MUST BE PRESENTED ON DAY OF PLAY!
LA0415
Expires April 30, 2015
B ecause
you ’re
never too old to
Look Your Best!
Everyone needs something to smile about. At Guerra Dental we try to
leave every patient smiling. We offer state of the art anti-aging dental
care in a comfortable environment. We provide everything from dental
exams and cleanings to implants and orthodontics.
greAtREASON
reAson to
..
AAGREAT
TO smile
SMILE
Free Sonicare
soniccAre
Free
toothbrush
Toothbrush
$39New
new PPatient
Atient
39
exAm & x-rAys
Exam
& X-rays
$
When you become a new patient at
Guerra
a new
When
you Dental,
become ayou’ll
new reveive
patient at
Guerra
Soniccare Toothbrush (a $120.00 value)
Dental,
receive
a brand
new Sonicare
with a you’ll
regular
priced
NP exam,
x-rays,
Toothbrush
(a $120 Value)
and cleaning.
New patients only. One offer per person, not to be
New patients only. One offer per person, not to be
combined with other offers. Offer expires 4/1/15
combined with other offers. Offer expires 5/1/2015
Call Today
719-596-1230
AANOTHER
REASONtoTO
SMILE
nother reAson
smile
. .
For new patients age 50 and over.
New
only.person,
One offer
pertoperson,
Onepatients
offer per
not
be
not
to
be
combined
with
other
combined with other offers. offers.
Offer
Offer expires 4/1/15
expires 5/1/2015
Highest Ranked Dentist
Frederick Guerra, Jr., DMD
General, Family & Cosmetic Dentistry
www.GuerraDental.com
3208 North Academy Blvd., Suite 100, Colorado Springs, CO 80917
Dr Fred Guerra
Page 32
LIFE after 50
April 2015