Post on 03-Mar-2016
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Priscilla Kaufhold, program director for The Iris Club, on the club’s grand staircase. Over hershoulder is a portrait of Alice Nevin, who founded the women’s club in 1895.
Special Section:
Living for the Long Term
page 7
Traveltizers: Agritourism
and Adventure
page 8
Inside:
By Megan Joyce
Our 21st-century dance styles would likely leave the ragtime-dancing,Edwardian-era female founders of The Iris Club confused at best.
But those progressive-for-their-time ladies would be pleased by theirmodern club’s continuing dedication to community service, women’sempowerment, and artistic and enlightened entertainment—spearheaded byits current program director, Priscilla Kaufhold.
“She is always full of great ideas,” said Carol Szutowicz, The Iris Club’sfirst vice president. “While many people have that talent, the difference isPriscilla works to make those ideas happen and sees projects through to theend.”
The Iris Club formed in 1895 when Alice Nevin, daughter of Franklin &Marshall College President John Williamson Nevin, invited 70 women to herhome to initiate a club to encourage women’s socialization and communityinvolvement.
The club’s downtown building was purchased in 1898 and still hosts theclub’s twice-monthly meetings, where members enjoy lunch, entertainment,friendship, and high tea. In October 2013, the club celebrated its 115th
Women’s Club Benefits from ProgramDirector’s Arts Pedigree
Dedication andDance through
the Ages
please see DANCE page 14
Dauphin County Edition March 2014 Vol. 16 No. 3
2 March 2014 50plus SeniorNews www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com
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Colorectal Cancer Screening Rates Remain Low
About one in three adults aged 50 to75 years have not been tested forcolorectal cancer as recommended by theUnited States Preventive Services TaskForce (USPSTF), according to a newVital Signs report from the Centers forDisease Control and Prevention.
Despite research that shows colorectalcancer screening tests save lives, screeningrates remain too low.
“There are more than 20 millionadults in this country who haven’t hadany recommended screening forcolorectal cancer and who may thereforeget cancer and die from a preventabletragedy,” said CDC Director TomFrieden, M.D., M.P.H.
“Screening for colorectal cancer iseffective and can save your life.”
Colorectal cancer is the second-leading cancer killer among men andwomen in the United States, after lungcancer. Screening tests can prevent canceror detect it at an early stage, whentreatment can be highly effective.
Adults aged 50 years and older shouldget tested with one or a combination ofthese screening tests:
• Fecal occult blood test (FOBT) or fecal
immunochemical test (FIT) done athome every year
• Flexiblesigmoidoscopy,done every fiveyears, withFOBT/FITdone everythree years
• Colonoscopydone every 10years
A colon-oscopy candetect cancerearly, and it canfind precancer-ous polyps sothey can beremoved beforethey turn into cancer.
An FOBT/FIT is a simple at-hometest that can detect cancer early byidentifying blood in the stool, a possiblesign of cancer.
People are not always offered a choiceof colorectal cancer tests, but studies
have shown that people who are able tochoose the test they prefer are more likelyto get the test done.
CDCresearchersreviewedcolorectalcancerscreening datafrom CDC’s2012Behavioral RiskFactorSurveillanceSystem toestimate thepercentage ofpeople aged 50to 75 years whoreported gettingscreened asrecommendedby type of test.
Major findings:
• Among adults who were screened asrecommended, colonoscopy was by farthe most common screening test (62percent). Use of the other USPSTF-recommended tests was much lower:
fecal occult blood test, 10 percent, andflexible sigmoidoscopy in combinationwith FOBT/FIT, less than 1 percent.
• The highest percentage of adults whowere up to date with colorectal cancerscreening was in Massachusetts (76percent).
• Blacks and whites had similar screeningrates, but a higher percentage of blacksacross all income and education levelsused FOBT.
The authors noted that increasing useof all tests may increase screening rates.Furthermore, research shows that morepeople may get tested if healthcareproviders use an organized approach toidentify people who need to be screened;contact them at their home orcommunity setting; advise them of eachtest; and carefully monitor to make surethey complete their test.
For more information aboutpreventing colorectal cancer, please visitwww.cdc.gov/cancer/colorectal.
Source: Centers for Disease Control andPrevention
March is NationalColorectal CancerAwareness Month
www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com 50plus SeniorNews March 2014 3
Zimmerman Auer Funeral Home, Inc.4100 Jonestown Road, Harrisburg(717) 545-4001
Central PA Poison Center(800) 521-6110
Dauphin County Area Agency on Aging(717) 780-6130
Gipe Floor & Wall Covering5435 Jonestown Road, Harrisburg(717) 545-6103
Zimmerman Auer Funeral Home, Inc.4100 Jonestown Road, Harrisburg(717) 545-4001
Alzheimer’s Association(717) 651-5020
American Diabetes Association(800) 342-2383
Arthritis Foundation – Central PA Chapter(717) 763-0900
CONTACT Helpline(717) 652-4400
The National Kidney Foundation(717) 757-0604(800) 697-7007
PACE(800) 225-7223
Social Security Information(800) 772-1213
Tri-County Association for the Blind(717) 238-2531
PA Healthcare Cost Containment Council(717) 232-6787
Pennsylvania Office for the Deaf and Hardof Hearing(800) 233-3008 V/TTY
Home Care AssistanceServing Cumberland, Dauphin, Lancaster,Lebanon, and York counties(717) 540-4663
3-D Consultants(717) 651-5133
Homeland Hospice2300 Vartan Way, Suite 115, Harrisburg(717) 221-7890
B’Nai B’rith Apartments130 S. Third St., Harrisburg(717) 232-7516
Dauphin County Housing Authority(717) 939-9301
Property Tax/Rent Rebate(888) 728-2937
Apprise Insurance Counseling(800) 783-7067
Homeland Center1901 N. Fifth St., Harrisburg(717) 221-7902
The Middletown Home999 W. Harrisburg Pike, Middletown(717) 944-3351
Homeland Center1901 N. Fifth St., Harrisburg(717) 221-7902
CVS/pharmacywww.cvs.com
StoneRidge Retirement Living(717) 866-3204
Dauphin County Area Agency on Aging(717) 255-2790
The Salvation ArmyEdgemont Temple Corps(717) 238-8678
American Lung Association(800) LUNG-USA
Bureau of Consumer Protection(800) 441-2555
Meals on Wheels(800) 621-6325
National Council on Aging(800) 424-9046
Social Security Office(800) 772-1213
Veterans Affairs(717) 626-1171 or (800) 827-1000
CAT Share-A-Ride(717) 232-6100
Wheelchair GetawaysServing Pennsylvania, West Virginia,Delaware, and Southern New Jersey(717) 921-2000
Lebanon VA Medical Center1700 S. Lincoln Ave., Lebanon(717) 228-6000 or (800) 409-8771
Veterans Services
Travel
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Toll-Free Numbers
Services
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This Resource Directory recognizes advertisers who have made an extended commitment to your health and well-being.Resource Directory
Not an all-inclusive listof advertisers in your area.
Medicare Manuals Updated
The Center for Medicare Advocacyrecently announced that the Medicarepolicy manuals have been revised as aresult of December’s Jimmo vs. Sebeliussettlement.
Published by the Centers for Medicare& Medicaid Services (CMS) inDecember, the manual revisions clarifythat improvement is not required toobtain Medicare coverage for skillednursing facilities (SNF), home healthcare(HH), or outpatient therapies (OPT).
The manual revisions also improvecoverage for people who require intenserehabilitation in inpatient rehabilitationfacilities (IRF).
Medicare determinations for skillednursing facilities, home health, and
outpatient therapy turn on the need forskilled care—not on the ability of anindividual to improve.
For patients in inpatientrehabilitation facilities, the manualrevisions and CMS education campaignclarify that coverage should never bedenied because a patient cannot beexpected to achieve completeindependence in self-care or to return tohis/her prior level of functioning.
The Jimmo case was brought in 2011by the Center for Medicare Advocacyand Vermont Legal Aid on behalf of anationwide class of Medicarebeneficiaries who were denied Medicarecoverage and access to necessaryhealthcare or therapy because they did
not have sufficient potential forimprovement.
As a result of the Jimmo settlement,Medicare cannot be denied in a nursinghome, home care, or outpatient therapysetting based on an “improvementstandard.”
As CMS states in the transmittalannouncing the Jimmo manual revisions:
No “improvement standard” is to beapplied in determining Medicare coveragefor maintenance claims that require skilledcare. Medicare has long recognized thateven in situations where no improvement ispossible, skilled care may nevertheless beneeded for maintenance purposes (i.e., toprevent or slow a decline in condition).
The Center for Medicare Advocacyencourages people to appeal if they aretold Medicare is not available for skilled-maintenance nursing or therapy becausethey are not improving. Information andself-help material are available on thecenter’s website (www.medicareadvocacy.org).
Patients can also contact the Centerfor Medicare Advocacy or its website toobtain a card with key provisions fromthe new Medicare manuals to show theirhealthcare providers.
More information is available on thecenter’s website (www.medicareadvocacy.org/medicare-info/improvement-standard)or by calling their national office at (860)456-7790.
4 March 2014 50plus SeniorNews www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com
50plus Senior News is published by On-Line Publishers, Inc.and is distributed monthly among senior centers, retirementcommunities, banks, grocers, libraries and other outlets
serving the senior community.On-Line Publishers, Inc. will not knowingly accept or publish
advertising which may be fraudulent or misleading in nature. Views expressed in opinion stories, contributions, articles and letters
are not necessarily the views of the publisher. The appearance ofadvertisements for products or services does not constitute anendorsement of the particular product or service. The publisher will notbe responsible for mistakes in advertisements unless notified within fivedays of publication. On-Line Publishers, Inc. reserves the right to reviseor reject any and all advertising. No part of this publication may bereproduced or reprinted without permission of On-Line Publishers, Inc.
We will not knowingly publish any advertisement or information notin compliance with the Federal Fair Housing Act, Pennsylvania State lawsor other local laws.
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Phone 717.285.1350 • Fax 717.285.1360Chester County:610.675.6240
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EDITORIALVICE PRESIDENT AND MANAGING EDITOR
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When Richard Lawrencegraduated from highschool in 1967, he had
already heard a lot about theMarines.
His father had been a Marine inWorld War II, and his older brotherwas a Marine corporal. So he hadheard many war stories centered onwhat it meant to be a Marine.
He could hardly wait to share insome of that glory himself, so, assoon as he graduated from highschool, he enlisted in the MarineCorps and headed for boot campat Parris Island, S.C. He soonfound that grinding toughnesswas fundamental in becoming aMarine.
Then it was to CampLejeune, N.C., to learn all therewas to know about firing rifles,machine guns, and rockets. Thatwas followed by a flight to CampPendleton, Calif., for trainingspecific to warfare inVietnam.
Ready for combat, inDecember 1967 he was flownto Da Nang, Vietnam, which was thesite of the main U.S. airbase inVietnam, with U.S. Army, Air Force,Navy, and Marine units.
What was it like to find yourselfin Vietnam?
With a thin grin, he says, “It toldus it was going to be rough, since thebase was under rocket attack as wearrived. I remember that a singlerocket killed everyone in two squadsof Marines in one of the barracksthat night.”
He was assigned to HeadquartersCompany, Service Battalion, 1st
Marine Division. And the job of hisunit was to provide protection formilitary vehicles moving back andforth on Highway One, south of DaNang.
Was that dangerous work? “Well,” he says, “it got pretty close
to me when one night I wasn’t ableto pull my duty of guarding the maingate of our camp, and the guy thatreplaced me got killed.”
Then his unit was moved north tohelp recapture Hue, the major city
that was once the capital of Vietnam. “The city was a shambles, and
there was nothing but the mostbrutal, house-to-house fighting,”Lawrence says.
He later was transferred to HCompany, 2nd Battalion, 3rd MarineDivision for frontline fighting as arifleman.
“We had a ton of equipment,” hesays, “and you had to carry it all.
Ammo for your rifle and for amachine gun, one mortar round, c-rations, plastic poncho and liner, gasmask, and four canteens of water.Believe me, it was a load!
“I headed a five-man fire teamthat once got gassed. I don’t knowwhat the gas was, but I rememberhaving seizures. Fortunately, I wasable to get an atropine shot, and thatprobably saved my life.
“Just about everybody got jungle
rot, an infection that came from theinevitable scratches we got. It waseasy to get cut up by the elephantgrass that was just as sharp as a razorblade. And there were bugseverywhere. Believe it or not, therewere centipedes that were a foot long.
“During the monsoon months,the rain and the heat would rot theclothes right off you. So we had toget them replaced all the time.”
In January of 1969, Lawrencegot hepatitis and was medevacuated by C-141 from Saigonto Alaska and then to a hospital inFort Dix, N.J. From there, hespent two months in thePhiladelphia Naval Hospital.
When he recovered, he returnedto Parris Island, where he workedin the brig. Then he wastransferred to the Philippines,where he served for 18 months asa platoon sergeant with the
responsibility of helping tosecure the base.
There, the rebel Hukswould try to steal anything insight. One night, he broke the
arm and a leg of a Huk who wastrying to steal copper wire.
Then his hitch was up, and hewas flown to a hospital in TreasureIsland, San Francisco, where he wastreated for cluster warts that were theresult of an infection he got whileserving in Vietnam. After twomonths, he was discharged from thehospital and from the Marine Corps.
He returned to CentralPennsylvania and worked inconstruction for a while, but he wassuffering from post-traumatic stressand was having recurring nightmares.He received treatment at theHarrisburg Outpatient Center andthen for four years at the LebanonVA Medical Center, where he wasdeemed to have a 100 percentdisability.
It was then he turned to hislifelong interest in art. As a teenager,he had won a Gold Key in theScholastic Art Show in high school.And even during his days inVietnam, he had continuedsketching, as he had time.
He Has a Bullet from the Rifle ofthe First Man He Killed in Combat
Robert D. Wilcox
Salute to a Veteran
Sgt. Richard G. Lawrence with South Vietnamesesoldier and captured enemy flag.
Richard Lawrence recuperatingin Philadelphia Naval Hospital in
January 1969.
www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com 50plus SeniorNews March 2014 5
omen’s xpoE
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Relax and unwind!Women of all ages have
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Now he was able to pursue his art inearnest, and he became an establishedartist, with 20 of his pieces exhibited inthe National Vietnam Veterans ArtMuseum in Chicago.
His work has been displayed at the artmuseums of several states, and he alsoprovided the art for the book, Soldier’sHeart, which told the story of survivors’
views of combat trauma. He says that his time in Vietnam has
led to the use of the very strong colors heuses in his artwork. So those years, asdifficult as they were at the time, are verymuch with him today.
Colonel Wilcox flew a B-17 bomber inEurope in World War II.
Free Tax Assistance Offered
Through April 15 of each year, theAARP Tax-Aide program offers free one-on-one counseling as well as assistanceon the telephone and Internet to helpindividuals prepare basic tax forms,including the 1040, 1040A, 1040EZ,and other standard documents.
The following are locations in yourarea. Please call for an appointment orvisit www.aarp.org/money/taxaide formore information.
Epiphany Lutheran Church1100 Colonial Road, Harrisburg
Mondays and Fridays, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.Wednesdays, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. (717) 418-0080
Mohler Senior Center25 Hope Drive, HersheyMondays and Wednesdays9 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.(717) 533-2002
Swatara Township Building599 Eisenhower Blvd., HarrisburgTuesdays and Thursdays, 9 a.m. to noon(717) 418-0080
Walk to Cure ArthritisLet’s walk to find a cure for arthritis
this spring by participating in theArthritis Foundation Central PA Office’s2014 Central Pennsylvania ArthritisWalk on Saturday, May 17. The walkwill be held at the U.S. Army andHeritage Education Center, 950 SoldiersDrive, Carlisle.
The Walk to Cure Arthritis is a non-competitive, 5-kilometer (3.1-mile), or1-mile course withvarying distanceoptions toaccommodate alllevels of fitness.Come out withyour friends,family members,coworkers, and even your dog.
Individual walkers and teams areencouraged to walk in honor of a lovedone with arthritis, while men, women,and children living with arthritis leadthe way, wearing special blue honoreehats to signify their action in takingcontrol of their condition.
Individuals who raise $100 or morewill receive a t-shirt. There will be a VIPand team tailgate party new this year.Any individual who raises $500 or morewill be invited to the VIP area. Anyteam raising $1,000 or more will beinvited to the team tailgate party.
Arthritis affects more people thanyou might imagine. There are 52million men and women in the United
States with doctor-diagnosed arthritis. Children are also affected.
Nationwide, there are more than300,000 children who suffer from aform of juvenile arthritis, 11,500 ofwhom live in Pennsylvania.
Funds raised from the Walk to CureArthritis support hundreds of programsto help people prevent and controlarthritis. It also funds promising
arthritis researchthat is critical tofinding newtherapies,treatments, andeventually a curefor arthritis.
The ArthritisFoundation is the only nationwide,nonprofit health organization helpingpeople take greater control of arthritisby leading efforts to prevent, control,and cure arthritis and related diseases.The Arthritis Foundation also provides alarge number of community-basedservices located nationwide to make lifewith arthritis easier and less painful.
You may register online atwww.arthritiswalkcentralpa.kintera.org.For more information on the Walk toCure Arthritis, please contact DouglasKnepp at dknepp@arthritis.org or (717)884-7525.
Together we can change lives, and welook forward to seeing you at the Walkto Cure Arthritis in May.
6 March 2014 50plus SeniorNews www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com
Exhibitors • Health Screenings • Seminars
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Limited Sponsorship Opportunities Available
DAUPHIN COUNTY
May 27, 20149 a.m. – 2 p.m.Hershey Lodge
325 University Drive
Hershey
15th Annual
CHESTER COUNTY
June 10, 20149 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Church Farm School1001 East Lincoln Highway
Exton
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May 5, 20149 a.m. – 3 p.m.
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Sept. 17, 20149 a.m. – 2 p.m.
York Expo CenterMemorial Hall East
334 Carlisle Avenue
York
12th Annual
CUMBERLAND COUNTY
Oct. 22, 20149 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Carlisle Expo Center100 K Street
Carlisle
15th Annual
FREE!
LANCASTER COUNTY
Nov. 5, 20149 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Spooky Nook Sports2913 Spooky Nook Road
Manheim(Just off Rt. 283 at the Salunga exit)
18th Annual
FREE!
NEWLOCATION!Spooky Nook Sports
2913 Spooky Nook Road
Manheim(Just off Rt. 283 at the Salunga exit)
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Two of your favorite events, together!
Lancaster
CelebratesSeniors
By John Johnston
If you’ve recently begun receivingSocial Security benefits or plan toapply in the near future, you may be
wondering this tax season: Are SocialSecurity benefits taxable?
The short answer is: sometimes. Some people have to pay federal
income taxes on their Social Securitybenefits. This usually happens only if youhave other substantial income (such aswages, self-employment, interest,dividends, andother taxableincome that mustbe reported onyour tax return) inaddition to yourSocial Securitybenefits.
There is never acase when a personpays tax on morethan 85 percent ofhis or her Social Security benefits, basedon Internal Revenue Service (IRS) rules.Now, let’s get down to the numbers.
• If you file a federal tax return as anindividual and your income is between$25,000 and $34,000, you may have topay income tax on up to 50 percent ofyour benefits.
• If your income is more than$34,000, then up to 85 percent of yourbenefits may be taxable.
• If you are married and you file ajoint return, and you and your spouse
have a combined income that is between$32,000 and $44,000, you may have topay income tax on up to 50 percent ofyour benefits.
• If your combined income is morethan $44,000, then up to 85 percent ofyour benefits may be taxable.
Note that your “income” for thepurpose of determining whether youmust pay taxes on some of your SocialSecurity benefits includes your adjusted
gross income, yournontaxable interest,and one-half ofyour Social Securitybenefits.
In January, youshould havereceived a SocialSecurity benefitstatement showingthe amount ofbenefits you
received last year. You can use thisstatement, or SSA-1099, whencompleting your federal income taxreturn to find out whether some of yourbenefits are subject to federal income tax.
If you didn’t receive yours, you canrequest one at www.socialsecurity.gov/1099.
So, are your Social Security benefitstaxable? Maybe. To learn more, read page14 of our booklet, Retirement Benefits,available at www.socialsecurity.gov/pubs orvisit www.irs.gov to obtain more detailedinformation on the subject.
John Johnston is a Social Security publicaffairs specialist.
Are Your Social SecurityBenefits Taxable?
Social Security News
Happiness May Depend on
Where You LiveAre you happy? The answer may
depend on where you live. The United Nations’ World
Happiness Report measures well-beingacross a range of economic,psychological, and statistical factors.
The United States came in at No. 17in the 2013 report. Here are the top 10:
1. Denmark 2. Norway 3. Switzerland
4. Netherlands 5. Sweden 6. Canada 7. Finland 8. Austria 9. Iceland 10. Australia
At the bottom of the list, the five leasthappy nations are Rwanda, Burundi,Central African Republic, Benin, andTogo.
www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com 50plus SeniorNews March 2014 7
Living for the Long Term A special section featuring some ofCentral Pennsylvania’s many options for long-term care.Living for the Long Term
Have you noticed that Mom is getting more than a little confused? Isyour spouse’s health more than you can safely handle at home?
“Doing the best for your family member isn’t always keeping them athome,’’ says Debbie Haas, Homeland Center’s director of skilled care.“Sometimes, transitioning to a care facility is the best answer.”
Haas recommends enlisting the help of your loved one’s doctor, whoseopinion can go a long way to ease concerns. Then it’s a matter offinding the right facility.
One step inside Homeland Center will instantly dispel the outmodedmental image still conjured by the words, “nursing home.” Take a tourand talk to our residents and staff. See firsthand what sets us apart.
Homeland has met the needs of Central Pennsylvania since 1867 andholds Medicare’s coveted 5-star rating for quality of care. Call us todayat 717-221-7902 and discover all Homeland Center has to offer.
1901 North Fifth St. • Harrisburg, PA 17102
(717) 221-7902www.homelandcenter.org
Living for the Long Term A special section featuring some ofCentral Pennsylvania’s many options for long-term care.Living for the Long Term
Dear Savvy Senior,What are the eligibility requirements to
get Medicaid coverage for nursing-homecare?– Looking Ahead
Dear Looking,The rules and requirements for
Medicaid eligibility for nursing-homecare are somewhat complicated and willvary according to the state you live in.
With that said, here’s a general,simplified rundown of what it takes toqualify, along with some resources youcan turn to for help.
Medicaid Rules Medicaid, the federal and state joint
program that covers healthcare for the
poor, is also thelargest single payerof America’s nursing-home bills forseniors who don’thave the resources topay for their owncare.
Most people whoenter nursing homesdon’t qualify forMedicaid at first butpay for care eitherthrough long-termcare insurance or outof pocket until theydeplete their savingsand become eligiblefor Medicaid.
To qualify forMedicaid, yourincome and assets willneed to be under acertain level that’sdetermined by yourstate. Most statesrequire that a personhave no more thanabout $2,000 incountable assets thatinclude cash, savings,investments, or otherfinancial resourcesthat can be turnedinto cash.
Assets that aren’tcounted for eligibilityinclude your home if
it’s valued under $543,000 (this limit ishigher—up to $814,000—in somestates), your personal possessions andhousehold goods, one vehicle, prepaidfuneral plans, and a small amount of lifeinsurance.
But be aware that while your home isnot considered a countable asset todetermine your eligibility, if you can’treturn to your home, Medicaid can goafter the proceeds of your house to helpreimburse your nursing-home costs,unless your spouse or other dependentrelative lives there. (There are some otherexceptions to this rule.)
After qualifying, all sources of yourincome, such as Social Security andpension checks, must be turned over to
Paying for Nursing-Home Care with Medicaid
Savvy Senior
Jim Miller
please see MEDICAID page 11
8 March 2014 50plus SeniorNews www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com
Traveltizers Travel Appetizers: Stories that Whet the Appetite for Travel
By Andrea Gross
I’m perched atop a bench of hay,which in turn is sitting atop aflatbed wagon.
Our guide, Chris Bunn, owner ofThe Farm, hitches a tractor to thewagon, and we begin our ride along dirtroads bordered by fields of romainelettuce on one side and rows ofstrawberries on the other.
This is the fertile landscape of centralCalifornia’s Salinas Valley.
In this area, just two hours south ofSan Francisco, farmers grow themajority of the nation’s greens,including 80 percent of the lettuce andmost of the spinach, broccoli, andartichokes.
Over the next several days, as wewander through the fields, roadsidestands, and farmers markets, I salivateover gargantuan heads of lettuce,delicate bunches of broccolini, andartichokes that range from 1-poundjumbos to 2-ounce minis.
Per acre, Salinas Valley has the mostvaluable agricultural land on the planet.
Evan Oakes takes us on an Ag
Venture Tour, which helps usunderstand how this produce gets tomarket. At one large farm we watch
men and women cleanse the produce forpackaging.
A few miles down the road, we seethem crate the packages for distribution.They move quickly, as the greens mustreach their destination before the lettucewilts or the artichoke leaves brown.
Oakes explains that the Salinas Valleyis lucky. Much of the Salinas River,which runs north-northwest through thevalley, flows underground, thusproviding abundant water to an areathat gets less than an inch of rainfallbetween May and September.
The river empties into a spot nearMonterey Bay, a few miles north ofSalinas, and it’s here, where the freshwater of the river meets the salt water ofthe bay, that we begin our ride throughElkhorn Slough.
Captain Yohn Gideon greets us as weboard the 27-foot pontoon and explainsthat we’re about to embark on a dualmission. First, we’re going to enjoyourselves (no problem!), and second,we’re going to collect data for the
Agritourism and Adventure in ‘The Valley of the World’
Artichokes with thorns are tastier thanthe thornless variety.
Ana Melissa, owner of The Bakery Station,makes it a point to buy strawberries and
other produce from local farmers.
A sea otter plays with a clamshellin Elkhorn Slough, one ofCalifornia’s largest areas ofundisturbed wetlands.
Does the back 40 seem more like 50? Are small shrubs starting to look like redwoods?
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Whale watching is a favorite activity inMonterey Bay, where folks can spot
humpback whales, gray whales, bluewhales, and sometimes even killer whales.
More than 300 species of birds, 400 speciesof invertebrates, and 100 species of fishhave been spotted in Elkhorn Slough.
Produce is crated and shipped todestinations throughout the
United States.
The National Steinbeck Center features alarge display on East of Eden, one ofPulitzer Prize-winning author John
Steinbeck’s most renowned books. Thebook is set in Salinas Valley, where the
author was born and grew up.
California Department of Fish andWildlife, the Audubon Society, andother respected institutions.
He hands out counters and asks meto keep track of otters and otherpassengers to count sea lions, seals, and avariety of birds. We’ve been out less thanfive minutes when Laura, the on-boardnaturalist, spies an otter. Click.
A minute later we see an entire raft ofthe creatures lounging on a rock. Click,click, click, click.
At the end of our tour, he reads ourtotals. In less than two hours, we’ve seen68 otters, 24 sea lions, 181 harbor seals,and hundreds of birds, including loons,herons, pelicans, cormorants, andshorebirds galore.
“Good job,” says Gideon, and I puffwith pride. Now I can add “researchscientist” to my resume.
We’re equally fortunate the next daywhen we go on a whale-watchingexpedition. By the time our 45-foot boatis 10 miles from shore, we’resurrounded—literally surrounded—bywhales that are as long as, or even longerthan, our boat.
We see the blow, the tail, and thebreach—all at close range. One whalebreaks off from its buddies and divesdeep on the left side of our boat, only tosurface a minute later on the right. He’sso close I can see the sheen of his skin,which is marred by scars and has a patchcovered with barnacles.
Finally, back on dry land, we delve
into the history of Salinas Valley, a placethat’s been well documented, albeit in a“novel” way, by renowned author JohnSteinbeck.
Steinbeck, who was born and grew upin the area, told a friend that his goalwas “to write the story of this wholevalley, of all the little towns and all thefarms and the ranches in the wilder hills… I would like to do it so that it wouldbe the valley of the world.”
To see how Steinbeck achieved hisgoal, we visit the National SteinbeckCenter, where a variety of exhibitsexplore the relationship between theauthor’s life and writings.
One of his books, the Pulitzer Prize-winning Grapes of Wrath, depicts theplight of migrant farmers who, like thegrandparents of many of today’s mostsuccessful producers, came to Californiain the ’30s.
Another, East of Eden, was written forhis sons, partly to teach them aboutgood and evil but also to show them theland in which their father grew up. It is,he said, “a sort of autobiography of theSalinas Valley.”
The Valley has come a long way sinceSteinbeck’s time. But as he wished, itcan, at least agriculturally speaking, becalled “The Valley of the World.”
www.destinationsalinas.com
Photos © Irv Green unless otherwise noted;story by Andrea Gross (www.andreagross.com).
10 March 2014 50plus SeniorNews www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com
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Literacy Tutor Says 90
is Just a Number
Central Pennsylvania LiteracyCouncil tutor John Eichorn took abreak recently in the adult literacyprogram’s Lemoyne office to celebratehis 90th birthday.
“Ninety is just a number,” theNewberry Township resident says. Hetakes a casualapproach to hissenior milestonebut is seriousabout thesuccess of theadult learners hetutors eachweek.
Eichorn, aWorld War IIArmy Air Corpsveteran, is thefather of fiveadult children,grandfather ofeight, and great-grandfather of three.
He majored in marketing at NewYork University and graduated in 1965,after 42 consecutive months of nightstudy.
He retired from AMF BowlingCenters, Inc. in 1975 and spent 20 yearsserving the Pennsylvania Chamber ofBusiness and Industry. His SIX-LUVlicense plate recalls his tennis-playingdays.
“But I just couldn’t sit around after Istopped playing tennis a couple yearsago,” he says. “So I thought I should useall my education to pass it along topeople who need it.”
Because of his experiences as anairman, his deep respect for education,and his understanding of the persistenceit takes to become educated, Eichornremains committed to the educationalgoals adults set for themselves.
He has tutored several people in
English, reading, and math whilevolunteering with the Central PALiteracy Council. They have improvedtheir skills, found jobs, and gone on toschools.
He tutored Brenda on Mondaymornings and found she had a great
love for history.They enjoyedreading aboutPearl HarborDay.
Eichornremembershearing aboutthe invasionwhen he was a17-year-old highschool senior inRamsey, N.J.He later becamean instructorpilot on B-26Martin
Marauder medium bombers atBarksdale Field, La.
Ousmane, Eichorn’s Friday-morningadult learner, is a native of Birkina Fasoin West Africa. Ousmane passed thecitizenship test in Philadelphia on Dec.16, 2013, after he studied the 100citizenship questions, practiced writingsentences in English, and worked onimproving his English pronunciation.
Central PA Literacy Council wasincorporated as a nonprofit adultprogram in 1972 and offers free,individualized tutoring, byappointment, to adults in Cumberland,Dauphin, eastern Perry, and northernYork counties.
For more information, emailcentralpaliteracycouncil@comcast.net orcplc.adultliteracy@gmail.com or callCarole Sawchuck, executive director, at(717) 763-7522.
John Eichorn with Ousmane,one of his adult learners.
Remember to Spring Forward!March 9
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Medicaid to pay for your care, except fora small personal-needs allowance—usually between $30 and $90.
You also need to be aware that youcan’t give away your assets to qualify forMedicaid faster. Medicaid officials willlook at your financial records going backfive years to root out suspicious assettransfers.
If they find one, your Medicaidcoverage will be delayed a certain lengthof time, according to a formula thatdivides the transfer amount by theaverage monthly cost of nursing-homecare in your state.
So if, for example, you live in a statewhere the average monthly nursing-home cost is $5,000 and you gave awaycash or other assets worth $100,000,you would be ineligible for benefits for20 months ($100,000 divided by$5,000 = 20).
Spousal ProtectionMedicaid also has special rules for
married couples when one spouse entersa nursing home and the other spouseremains at home. In these cases, thehealthy spouse can keep one half of thecouple’s assets up to $117,240 (thisamount varies by state), the familyhome, all the furniture and household
goods, and one automobile. The healthy spouse is also entitled to
keep a portion of the couple’s monthlyincome—between $1,938 and $2,931.Any income above that goes toward thecost of the nursing-home recipient’scare.
What about Medicare?Medicare, the federal health insurance
program for seniors 65 and older andsome younger people with disabilities,does not pay for long-term care. It onlyhelps pay up to 100 days of“rehabilitative” nursing-home care,which must occur after a hospital stay.
Get HelpAgain, Medicaid rules are
complicated and vary by state, socontact the local Medicaid office (call(800) 633-4227 for contactinformation) for eligibility details.
You can also get help from your StateHealth Insurance Assistance Program(SHIP), which provides free counselingon all Medicare and Medicaid issues. Tofind a local SHIP counselor, visitwww.shiptalk.org or call (800) 677-1116.
Jim Miller is a regular contributor to theNBC Today show and author of The SavvySenior Book. www.savvysenior.org
Leaving a Tip?
Here’s How Much
How much to tip can seem ascomplicated as calculus. You don’t wantto seem cheap, butyou don’t want tooverdo it—especiallyif money is tight.
Here’s a quick,basic look at what’sexpected in a varietyof everydaysituations:
Waiter/waitress(full service): 10-15percent of the bill,before tax
Bartender: $1-$2 per drink, or 15-20percent of the total tab
Cleaning service: 15-20 percent pervisit
Hairstylist/barber: 15-20 percent
Masseuse: 15-20 percent
Car valet: $2-$10 whenpicking up yourcar
Room service:15-20 percent
Skycap: $2for the first bag,then $1 for eachadditional bag
Hotelhousekeeper:
$2-$3 per night (or more for a high-end hotel, or if you’ve got more thantwo other people staying with you)
Taxi driver: 15 percent (depending onthe city); an extra $1-$2 if the driverhelps with any bags
12 March 2014 50plus SeniorNews www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com
Dauphin County
Calendar of EventsDauphin County Department of Parks and Recreation
March 2, noon to 4 p.m. – Maple Sugar Festival, Fort Hunter ParkMarch 8, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. – Volunteer Workday, Wildwood ParkMarch 11, 7 to 8:30 p.m. – Winter Lecture Series: 12 Months of Beekeeping, Wildwood Park
Programs and Support GroupsDauphin County Library Programs
East Shore Area Library, 4501 Ethel St., Harrisburg,(717) 652-9380March 4, 6 p.m. – 500 Men Reading WeekMarch 25, 9:30 p.m. – Friends of the East Shore Area
Library Meeting
McCormick Riverfront Library, 101 Walnut St.,Harrisburg, (717) 234-4976March 25, 5:15 p.m. – Friends of the McCormick
Riverfront Library Meeting
William H. & Marion C. Alexander Family Library,200 W. Second St., Hummelstown, (717) 566-0949March 4, 6:30 p.m. – Novel Thoughts Book ClubMarch 6 and 20, 6 p.m. – Friends of the Alexander
Family Library Knitting GroupMarch 18, 1 p.m. – Novel Thoughts, Too! Book Club
Free and open to the public.
Senior Center Activities
March 9, 2 p.m.One Book, One CommunityCelebration of ReadersLebanon Valley CollegeZimmerman Recital Hall101 N. College Ave., AnnvilleRSVP to (717) 867-6976 oronebookpa@gmail.com
March 11, 6 to 7 p.m.Alzheimer’s Caregivers SupportGroupGraysonview Personal CareCommunity150 Kempton Ave., Harrisburg(717) 561-8010
March 15, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.Sew Much for Charity EventTrinity United Methodist Church210 Main St., Hummelstown(717) 561-9964
March 19, 1:30 p.m.Parkinson’s Support Group on EastShoreJewish Home of Harrisburg4004 Linglestown Road, Harrisburg(717) 441-8627
March 25, 6 p.m.Susquehanna Rovers VolksmarchWalking Club Gander Mountain5005 Jonestown Road, Harrisburg(717) 991-5232
March 26, 7 p.m.Piecemakers Quilt Guild ofMiddletownSt. Peter’s Evangelical LutheranChurchSpring and Union streetsMiddletown(717) 915-5555gsk1308@gmail.com
If you have an event you wouldlike to include, please email
information to mjoyce@onlinepub.com for
consideration.
Rutherford House – (717) 564-5682,www.rutherfordhouse.orgMondays, 10 a.m. – QuiltingWednesdays, 9 a.m. – Computer AssistanceFridays, 11 a.m. – Zumba
Please contact your local center for scheduled activities.
AARP Driver Safety Programs
For a Safe Driving Class near you, call toll-free (888) 227-7669 or visit www.aarp.org/findacourse.
March 18, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. – Mohler Senior Center, 25 Hope Drive, Hershey, (717) 533-2002
It’s been called one of the mostinfluential programs in the history oftelevision drama. The Twilight Zone,
an anthology series that aired in the early1960s, was created by Rod Serling(1924-1975), a veteran of radio andWorld War II. Both influenced his careeras a writer.
“When he returned from war in thePhilippines, he went to college and wrotefor the campus radio station,” daughterAnne Serling recently recalled to me.“He later wrote plays for commercialradio, then television. He said writingwas a way to get the war trauma ‘out ofhis gut.’”
During the show’s five-year run,Serling was executive producer and chiefwriter, penning more than half theapproximately 150 episodes. But he isbest remembered as the program’s stone-faced host, whose foreboding narrationsintroduced the show each week.
In biographies after his death, themaster storyteller of chilling sci-fi andfantasy tales was often described as darkand depressed, inaccuracies that led Anne“to set the record straight” in her ownbook about her father.
“He was described as a tortured soul,but that wasn’t my father at all,” saidAnne, who published As I Knew Him:
The Real Rod Serling
Tinseltown Talks
Nick Thomas
Photo courtesy of Anne Serling
Anne Serling with her father,Rod Serling, in the early 1970s.
Photo courtesy of Jerry Sroka
Mariette Hartley and Robert Lansing inthe Twilight Zone episode,
“The Long Morrow.”
www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com 50plus SeniorNews March 2014 13
Then nominate them for On-Line Publishers’
2014 Dauphin CountyOutstanding Senior Award!
The Outstanding Senior Award recognizes a 50+ county resident or group for exceptional community service.
On a separate sheet, please type or print in ink:
• Their contributions to the local area—be specific
• How they have impacted the community
• A name, address, and phone number for the nominee(s)—no photos, please
No posthumous selections will be made.
This form must be used for all entries but may be photocopied.
For more information, please call (717) 285-1350.
Mail to: Outstanding Senior
On-Line Publishers, Inc., 3912 Abel Drive, Columbia, PA 17512
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My Dad, Rod Serling in 2013. “Although the war left scars, he was
also a very positive, fun, down-to-earthperson. My friends adored him, and anyapprehension they had about meetinghim would instantly dissolve because hecould make anyone feel at ease. He wasbrilliantly funny at home, a greatpractical joker, and was always at thedinner table each night.”
As a child, Anne had little knowledgeof her father’s career.
“I knew he was a writerbut didn’t know what hewrote about until I wasabout 7. Some mean boy onthe school playground askedif I was ‘something out ofThe Twilight Zone,’ but I hadno idea what that meantbecause I wasn’t allowed towatch much TV during theweek—my mother’s rule!
“A few years later, wewatched ‘Nightmare at20,000 Feet’ together, theepisode where WilliamShatner sees a gremlin onan airplane wing.I rememberlooking at myfather andthinking, ‘This iswhat you write?’It was a bit scary.”
Praised for hisoriginal fictionwriting, Serlingwas also highlyrespected forraising socialissues in someepisodes, althoughcontroversialtopics were subjectto the censors’whim. So hefrequentlyconcealed hisintent in fantasy.
“He famouslyonce said he couldhave aliens saythings that Democrats and Republicanscouldn’t,” Anne recalled.
Several Twilight Zone actors also sharedvivid memories of Serling.
Theodore Bikel is well known to fansof My Fair Lady as Henry Higgins’ rivallinguist, the nosey Zoltan Karpathy.
In July 1960, Austrian-born Bikelappeared on a Hollywood TV talk show,Caucus with Backus, and was verballyassailed by fellow guests: glamoroussilent-film actress Corinne Griffith andbeloved character-actor Adolphe Menjou.
“We were talking politics and they saidI had no right to open my mouth because
I wasn’t born in this country,” recalledBikel.
Appalled, Serling appeared on a laterprogram defending Bikel’s right tofreedom of speech.
“I will never forget how Rod came tomy defense. I later appeared in TheTwilight Zone episode ‘Four O’Clock’ in1962.”
Ann Jillian and Mariette Hartley wereteenagers when they first met Serling.
“I was 13 when I starredin the episode ‘Mute,’” Jillianrecalled. “I was very excitedabout doing the popularshow. Mr. Serling made mefeel at ease and didn’t talkdown to me.”
And after seeing him onTV, a gutsy 14-year-oldMariette Hartley telephonedSerling and asked him tospeak to her Connecticut
high school drama club. “He said he would be
delighted, and I can stillsee him sitting in theteacher’s desk at the front
of the classroomtalking to us,”Hartley said.
“Years later,when I startedworking inHollywood, I methim again whenhis limousinepulled up as I waswalking out thestudio. Herememberedcoming to myclass. I told him Iwas looking forwork, and withina couple ofmonths he gaveme the wonderfulgift of working in‘The LongMorrow’ episode.”
Today, Serlingcontinues to
inspire other moviemakers. J.J. Abrams,director of the new Star Trek films, hascalled The Twilight Zone a big influenceon his career and reportedly has securedthe rights to adapt Serling’s last, never-produced script, The Stops Along the Way.
Until then, Rod Serling’s work is stillavailable for your viewing pleasure,almost nightly, on classic TV cablechannels … in The Twilight Zone.
Thomas’ features and columns have appearedin more than 300 magazines and newspapers,and he is the author of Raised by the Stars,published by McFarland. He can be reachedat his blog: http://getnickt.blogspot.com
The cover of Anne Serling’sbook, As I Knew Him, whichshe wrote to set the recordstraight about her father.
Rod Serling chats with Charlton Hestonon the set of Planet of the Apes with director
Franklin Schaffner.
Serling and the Twilight Zone icon.
anniversary at the same location, greaterthan any other club in the state.
Kaufhold has an extensive career indance, theater, and performancedirection. She runs the MillersvilleCostume Shop, where she began workingshortly after graduating from AmericanUniversity in 1984 with a degree inperformance/dance.
She earned a graduate degree in danceand design at George WashingtonUniversity while starting her family andcontinued to manage the costume shopduring the 15 years she worked asprofessional company director ofKinetics Dance Theatre in Ellicott City,Md.
“The Costume Shop combines all ofmy interests in crafts, sewing, design,theater, dance, etc.,” Kaufhold said.
In 2013, Kaufhold expanded hercreative foothold further when shestarted the Barefoot Dance Company,which includes dancers ranging in agefrom 13 to 55.
Born in Boulder, Colo., with achildhood spent in Williamstown, Mass.,Kaufhold’s family moved to CentralPennsylvania in 1968 when her fatheraccepted a geography-professor positionat Millersville University.
Kaufhold’s artistic genes come
honestly. Her mother directed andchoreographed high-school musicals,operas, Girl Scout jamborees, and showsat the Fulton Opera House. She alsotaught modern dance at the YMCA andas a dance professor at Franklin &Marshall College.
“I grew up going to my mom’s showswith my brothers and father to supportmy mother’s work,” Kaufhold said. “Thishas shaped my goal to create dances andshows that are entertaining—not just topeople who want to attend, but theirbrothers, fathers, sisters, and otherrelations who come to shows becausethey have to.”
Kaufhold connected with The IrisClub four years ago when a memberinvited Kaufhold to perform one of herdance shows, “Dancing through theDecades,” at a club luncheon.
Originally her written thesis projectthat compared women’s fashion withconcurrent dance styles through the firsthalf of the 20th century, the show hassince been expanded to includeadditional decades and renamed“Fashion and Dance through the Ages.”
“It’s turned out to be an entertaininghistory lesson through music, dance, andcostumes,” said Kaufhold, also a talentedseamstress. “[The show] is popular at
retirement villagesas well asschools.”
After her firstIris Clubperformance,Kaufhold said shewas flattered to beasked to become amember. (Unlikea century ago,however,membership is nolonger byinvitation only.)Since then, thehighly popularshow returned inspring 2013 as anIris Clubfundraiser.
“The peopleare great, thebuilding is alovely mansion,and I really enjoymeeting otherartists throughtheir programsand events,” shesaid.
At its height inthe ’50s, the clubhad about 600members. Today,the number iscloser to 90, but itis still a dedicatedand productivegroup of women.
“It makes me feel good to have thechance to work with ladies who careabout their community and give back tothe community,” said Kaufhold. “Theyhave knowledge that I can grow from.”
Now in her second year as programdirector, Kaufhold’s main duty is to findand schedule interesting artists, poets,craftspeople, musicians, historians, anddancers for the club, which offers itsmembers opportunities for communityservice by promoting educationalpursuits and creativity.
In addition to its internalprogramming, which Kaufholdcoordinates, The Iris Club hosts eventsand fundraisers open to the local public.
“I also help plan special weekendevents throughout the year, such asPancakes with Santa, Pancakes with theEaster Bunny, the Fairytale Ball, themeddinners, and dance concert fundraisers,”Kaufhold said.
Kaufhold is also a board member ofThe Iris Club and promotes the arts and
volunteerismthroughpartnerships withothercommunityorganizations.
In 2012,while teaching atthe local schoolof ballet,Kaufhold learnedthat the tenantsof the oldarmory building,which includedthe ballet school,would have torelocate as thebuilding wasgoing up forsale.
“I knew TheIris Club hadlovely woodenfloors, and theclub was lookingfor rentalincome,” shesaid. “I thoughtthe balletcompany andThe Iris Clubwould be a greatfit and benefitmutually.”
The balletcompany nowsplits its classtime between its
nearby studio and The Iris Club.Kaufhold is grateful for the support
of her husband, Jeffrey, and their threechildren, who have followed in theirmother’s volunteer path.
“All three have helped out withcostumes backstage, crafts with camps,and Pancakes with Santa and the EasterBunny over the years,” said Kaufhold.“Other children love them, and I justlike having my kids around while I’mworking on a show or project.”
She also enjoys being around theother members of The Iris Club and isthankful that the women have entrustedher with bringing in entertaining andeducational programming.
“Their energy seems endless, and Irealize I can’t complain around them,”she laughed. “I’m constantly in awe ofthese ladies. I’d be happy to accomplishhalf of what most of these Iris Clubladies have accomplished in their life!”
For more information, contact TheIris Club at (717) 394-7811 or visitwww.irisclublancasterpa.com.
DANCE from page 1
The polyester and disco dance feverof the 1970s
Two dancers truckin’ in the 1940s
Feathered and fringed flappers from the 1920s
Scenes from“Fashion and Dance through the Ages”:
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