Lebanon County 50plus Senior News January 2014
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Laurie Kolanko with several of her handmade tote bags and tie pins.
Strength-Training
Tips for Seniors
page 4
The Gone with the
Wind Trail
page 8
Inside:
By Lori Van Ingen
Laurie Kolanko was just looking for a way to make some Christmas giftswhile caring for her elderly mother.
What she found was a new venture and a new way to help people honortheir departed loved ones.
“I knew someone who made purses out of placemats. I thought thatsounded like fun,” Kolanko said.
She also knew a lot of people used tote bags and wondered if she couldmake them using placemats.
So Kolanko found some online tutorials, purchased some unusual-lookingplacemats and webbing, and she was set to go to work.
“I enjoyed it so much,” Kolanko said, that she went back for more. “I fellin love with the whole process of shopping for them, mixing and matchingcolors and textures.”
Kolanko said she has always liked sewing and making things with herhands.
“I remember making clothes for my trolls out of felt when I was veryyoung. I always had a needle of some sort in my hand when sitting downand relaxing.”
She even made her daughters’ school clothes with matching clothes fortheir Cabbage Patch dolls. She also did counted cross stitch, embroidery,
Fabric Artist Creates Keepsakes fromBelongings of Loved Ones
Wearable
Memories
please see MEMORIES page 15
Lebanon County Edition January 2014 Vol. 9 No. 1
The Squint-Eyed Senior
Theodore Rickard
This happens every New Year’s. It’sa combination, I’ve decided, ofGood Intentions and Fond
Hopes. As we who have already lived alifetime already know, these two virtuesare extremely fragile. Some of us havebegun to suspect that they might not bevirtues at all.
Good Intentions pave the road to hell,I’ve been given to understand. FondHopes, however, help us get to sleep, andthe fonder of the hopes rapidly morphfrom childish fantasies to adultambitions—especially around 4 a.m.
Even with a good night’s rest, we can’toverlook the reality: We just don’t reformvery well. Especially me. For example, Istill have a paperback edition of a bookcalled Budgeting Your Retirement Years. Ibought a used copy two years ago. Notsurprisingly, it arrived postage due.
I never read it, because the next weekour condo fee was raised $50 a monthand the car began making loudcomplaining noises somewhere under therear seat, and how do you budget forthat?
The budgeting book went to the local
library sale. The librarian said theyalready had 40 copies of it in the sale,and did I know about recycling? (She hadthat sweetly frozen manner of speakingthat librarians learn to turn on for thosepatrons who have a dozen books that arefour weeks overdue—each of them—andwho want to complain—loudly—aboutthe fines.)
Also in the area of New Year’s self-improvement, our daughter with thedegree in fine arts sent us a CD recently.It featured “Great Art of the EntireWorld.” I believe she got it as a premiumfor paying her museum dues. Sheapparently figured she didn’t need it—thecollege degree in fine arts being enoughfor anybody—but that her parents coulduse some cultural tuning up.
She showed us where the CD goes toplay on the computer. There are monthlyfollow-up recordings coming, she told us,so we could look forward to a full year ofcultural enhancement. She didn’t noticethat neither her mother nor I had anydifficulty concealing our enthusiasm.
At first I thought that maybe asampling of the digitized lessons would
catch our interest more strongly as theysteeped us in refinement, so I tried toplay the initial CD once again just to see.I found the little panel in the computer,the horizontal gateway that flew open atour daughter’s touch when shedemonstrated it.
But neither I nor her mother couldfind the magic spot to be touched. Weeven tried saying “open, sesame” severaltimes, getting louder and louder until wefelt insane doing it. It was far morepractical, we decided, to await a visitfrom one of the grandkids to show ushow to operate the thing. With a littleluck, the child would swear to lifelongsecrecy and be unwilling to rat out hisown grandparents!
I haven’t really given up on self-improvement in the new year. On the lastlibrary visit I returned the overdue books,so I felt entitled to browse a bit. In themagazine section, I picked up a copy ofArt Today. I did this rather surreptitiouslysince the magazine cover blazoned afeature titled “Modern Nudes.” I found aquiet reading corner and folded over thefront cover while I investigated what was
new in art circles. Frankly, I felt a bit likea preteen punching in s-e-x for a Googlesearch as I hunched down in the chair inthe library’s “quiet corner.”
But if I was expecting prurience, whatI got was geometry. Modern nudes,according to Art Today (and who wouldknow better?), consist of triangles, circles,squares, and what I think areparallelograms—if I remember my high-school geometry.
Another version of the undrapedlooked like a waterfall with orange water,or maybe it was Snapple, for all I know.There were six pages of similar portraits.Nothing approached what I expected tofind, which, now upon reflection, waspretty close to what the eighth-graderexpects to find via Google.
I’m afraid this whole self-improvementthing is beyond me. And heaven knowswhat we’ll find on the CDs, with 11 ofthem yet to come.
A collection of Ted Rickard’s family-fun essaysis titled Anything Worth Knowing I Learnedfrom the Grandkids. It is now available inpaperback on Amazon.com.
Good Intentions
2 January 2014 50plus SeniorNews www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com
Book Review
Unpacking Memories: The Story ofa Suitcase, a Country Doctor, & aCommunity is the story of life in
the 1950s in a tiny town in Missouriwhere Deborah Sweaney, her siblings, hermother, and her country-doctor fatherlived.
She was inspired to write UnpackingMemories when she opened an old,forgotten suitcase stored in her basement.It was filled with newspaper clippings,photographs, cards, and notes packedaway in the summer of 1960.
Frank Sweaney was a doctor in therural community of Oregon, Mo. Hiswelcome to town on the day he arrivedwas an office packed with patients. It
remained that way untilDoc Sweaney got sickand died.
He made house callslate into the night andon weekends, took timeto talk with and listen tohis patients, and, as hisdaughter writes, believedthat healthcare was farmore about care thanabout medicine. But heworked too hard, ignored his own health,and died a young man.
Towns like Oregon, Mo., dotted theAmerican landscape in the yearsfollowing World War II. Unpacking
Memories portrays life before theinterstate highway system, stripmalls, and technology changedAmerica.
The book returns the reader toa time and place that is no more,back to the days of black-and-white television, the March ofDimes, and doctors whoadministered care in place ofdrugs.
Sweaney writes of acommunity that nurtured its youththrough scouting, 4-H, and county fairs.It was a world where kids had thefreedom to run and play unsupervised—climbing trees, playing cowboys and
dress-up, and creating their own games. Unpacking Memories is available from
www.deborahsweaney.com and otheronline sources and can be purchased atWhistlestop Bookshop at 129 W. HighSt. in Carlisle.
About the AuthorDeborah Sweaney lives in
Cumberland County. After residing inWashington, D.C. for 30 years, she andher husband left the Washington area forPennsylvania in 2006. She is a frequentlecturer at the Cumberland CountyHistorical Society, a former adjunctinstructor at Messiah College, and aconsultant for National History Day.
Unpacking Memories: The Story of a Suitcase,a Country Doctor, & a Community
By Deborah Sweaney
www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com 50plus SeniorNews January 2014 3
Poison Control Center(800) 222-1222
Food & Clothing Bank(717) 274-2490
Food Stamps(800) 692-7462
Hope/Christian Ministries(717) 272-4400
Lebanon County Area Agency on AgingMeals on Wheels(717) 273-9262
Salvation Army(717) 273-2655
Alzheimer’s Association(717) 651-5020
American Cancer Society(717) 231-4582
American Diabetes Association(717) 657-4310
American Heart Association/American Stroke Association(717) 207-4265
American Lung Association(717) 541-5864
Arthritis Foundation(717) 274-0754
Bureau of Blindness and Visual Services(717) 787-7500
CONTACT Helpline(717) 652-4400
Kidney Foundation(717) 652-8123
The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society(717) 652-6520
Lupus Foundation(888) 215-8787
Hearing & Ear Care Center, LLC200 Schneider Drive, Suite 1, Lebanon(717) 274-3851
Melnick, Moffitt, and Mesaros927 Russell Drive, Lebanon(717) 274-9775
Pennsylvania Office for the Deaf and Hardof Hearing(800) 233-3008 V/TTY
Good Samaritan Hospital252 S. Fourth St., Lebanon(717) 270-7500
Medical Society of Lebanon County(717) 270-7500
Energy Assistance(800) 692-7462
Environmental Protection AgencyEmergency Hotline(800) 541-2050
IRS Income Tax Assistance(800) 829-1040
Medicaid(800) 692-7462
Medicare(800) 382-1274
PA Crime Stoppers(800) 472-8477
PennDOT(800) 932-4600
Recycling(800) 346-4242
Social Security Information(800) 772-1213
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs(800) 827-1000
Hope (Helping Our People inEmergencies)(717) 272-4400
Housing Assistance & Resources Program(HARP)(717) 273-9328
Lebanon County Housing &Redevelopment Authorities(717) 274-1401
Medicare Hotline(800) 638-6833
Pennsylvania Bar Association(717) 238-6715
Lebanon County Area Agency on Aging(717) 273-9262
CVS/pharmacywww.cvs.com
StoneRidge Retirement Living(717) 866-3204
Annville Senior Community Center(717) 867-1796
Maple Street Senior Community Center(717) 273-1048
Myerstown Senior Community Center(717) 866-6786
Northern Lebanon County SeniorCommunity Center(717) 865-0944
Palmyra Senior Community Center(717) 838-8237
Senior Center of Lebanon Valley(717) 274-3451
Southern Lebanon County SeniorCommunity Center(717) 274-7541
Governor’s Veterans Outreach(717) 234-1681
Lebanon VA Medical Center1700 S. Lincoln Ave., Lebanon(717) 228-6000 or (800) 409-8771
Veterans Services
Senior Centers
Retirement Communities
Pharmacies
Office of Aging
Legal Services
Insurance
Housing Assistance
Hotlines
Hospitals
Hearing Services
Health & Medical Services
Food Resources
Emergency Numbers
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Dear Savvy Senior,Can lifting weights help with age-
related health problems? At age 70, Ihave diabetes, arthritis, andosteoporosis and recently read thatstrength training could improve myconditions. What can you tell me? – Looking for Help
Dear Looking,A growing body of research
shows that strength-trainingexercises can have a profoundimpact on a person’s health asthey age—and you’re never tooold to start.
Regular strength training,done at least two nonconsecutivedays a week, helps you buildmuscle strength, increases yourbone density, and improves yourbalance, coordination, andstamina.
It can also help reduce thesigns and symptoms of manychronic conditions like arthritis,diabetes, high blood pressure,back pain, depression, andobesity. And some studies evenshow that it helps improvecognitive function too.
Safety FirstFor the most part, strength-
training exercises—especially if youstart conservatively and progressslowly—are safe for most seniors,even those with serious healthconditions. But, if you have healthconcerns or if you are currentlyinactive, you should talk to yourdoctor about what may beappropriate for you.
A good self-help resource to helpyou find an appropriate, safe exerciseprogram is the “Exercise andScreening for You” tool at EASY(Exercise and Screening for You,www.easyforyou.info).
Getting StartedIf you’ve never done strength-
training exercises before, you maywant to work with a personal trainerfor a few sessions to help you
develop a safe and effective routineyou can continue on your own.
To find one, ask your healthcareprovider or contact a good healthclub or fitness facility in your area.You can also search for one online atreputable sites like the AmericanCouncil on Exercise
(www.acefitness.org) or the IDEAHealth & Fitness Association(www.ideafit.com).
If personal training isn’t anoption, there are lots of great seniorstrength-training videos you canpurchase to guide you through awide variety of exercises that you cando at home. Collage Video(www.collagevideo.com, (800) 819-7111) sells dozens of age- andfitness-appropriate DVDs.
Also see Go4Life(www.go4life.nia.nih.gov), a resourcecreated by the National Institute onAging that offers a free exerciseDVD and guide that providesillustrated examples of exercises youcan do at home to strengthen yourbody. You can order your free copiesonline or by calling (800) 222-2225.
Senior ClassesIf you don’t like exercising alone
or need some motivation, considerjoining a gym or call your localsenior center to see if they offer anystrength-training exercise classes.
You should also check outSilverSneakers (www.silversneakers.
com, (888) 423-4632) orSilver&Fit (www.silverandfit.com, (877) 427-4788). Theseare fitness programs offered inthousands of fitness centers,gyms, and YMCAs throughoutthe U.S. that offer specialclasses designed for olderadults.
These programs are availableonly to seniors that have certainMedicare supplemental policiesor Medicare Advantage plans.
EquipmentIf you work out at home,
you’ll probably need to investin some equipment. Whilesome strength training can bedone using your own bodyweight (like push-ups, sit-ups,and leg squats), hand weights,ankle weights, medicine balls,resistance bands, or rubbertubing are all great tools forstrength training. You can find
all these products at sporting-goodsstores or online.
Cans of soup, water bottles, orplastic milk containers filled withwater or sand could also be used(like small hand weights) forresistance.
Another strength-training toolyou should know about is theResistance Chair. This is an all-in-one home fitness system that helpsseniors maintain and improve theirstrength from a safe, seated positionwith minimal risk of injury.
To learn more, seewww.vqactioncare.com or call (800)585-4920.
Jim Miller is a regular contributor to theNBC Today show and author of TheSavvy Senior Book. www.savvysenior.org
Strength-Training Tips
for Seniors
Savvy Senior
Jim Miller
www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com 50plus SeniorNews January 2014 5
On-Line Publishers, Inc. has an opening for a highly motivated person with aprofessional attitude to sell print and online advertising as well as niche events. The successful candidate should:• Enjoy building and maintaining your own long-term business relationships.• Be highly motivated, detail oriented, and able to multitask.• Have good communication skills.• Show a willingness to learn and grow in a fast-paced environment.We offer a competitive compensation plan with a benefits package that includeshealth insurance and a 401(k) plan. If you have sales experience and are interested in joining our growing sales team, please send your resume and compensation history/requirements todanderson@onlinepub.com.
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On-Line Publishers, Inc. • 3912 Abel Drive • Columbia, PA 17512 • 717.285.1350www.onlinepub.com
Soda lime glass is basically colorless.Metals and oxides can be added toglass to change its color during the
glassblowing, molding, or machine-production process.
The following additives make thedistinctive colors:
• Red glass: selenium• Ruby/cranberry glass: copper or gold,
depending on the concentration• Amber glass: sulfur, carbon, iron salts• Yellow-green or Vaseline glass: uranium• Yellow glass: cadmium sulfide• Yellow-brown glass: titanium• Dark-green glass: iron oxide and
chromium• Green-blue glass: iron oxide• Turquoise glass: copper oxide• Blue glass: cobalt with potash• Purple or amethyst glass: manganese
• Violet glass: nickel• Black glass: nickel
depending on theconcentration
• White glass: fluorsparor zinc oxide
• Milk glass: tin oxide,arsenic, antimony
Why are wine bottlesgreen? Why are beerbottles brown? Why aremedicine bottles blue?
The answers to thesequestions speak volumes about Americanculture and design. For instance, bottlesfor wine and beer were typically dark incolor, such as green or brown, in order toprotect the wine or beer from the lightthat could change its taste.
Dark-colored wine bottles also hidethe unsightly sediment that accumulates
at the bottom of a winebottle.
Often used for powderjars and bedroom vanitypieces, purple oramethyst glass has a longhistory. Purple oramethyst glass was firstused in ancient Egyptand is a popularcollectible today.
In many 19th-centuryand early 20th-centurygeneral stores and earlypharmacy or apothecary
shops, blue bottles lined the shelves. Bluebottle glass was inexpensive to make,which was of interest to those who weretrying to attract customers to newpotions, tonics, and medicinal products.The cobalt-blue bottles were attractiveand became connected with signs ofgood health.
Ruby glass is associated with itsadditive, gold, making the collecting ofruby glass a high-society status symbol.Ruby glass is often featured in objectssuch as decanter sets, goblets, and vases.
Milk glass was a Venetian invention,the site of a longstanding history ofglassblowing and glassworks. Milk glasswas commonly used for items atweddings, such as bride’s baskets to holdmoney for the newlyweds, since milkglass resembled porcelain.
Color reveals a great deal about thechemistry and history of collecting glass.
Celebrity Ph.D. antiques appraiser, author,and award-winning TV personality, Dr. Lorihosts antiques appraisal events worldwide.Dr. Lori is the star appraiser on Discoverychannel’s Auction Kings. To learn about yourantiques: www.DrLoriV.com,www.Facebook.com/DoctorLori, @DrLori onTwitter, and (888) 431-1010.
Collecting Colored Glass
Art and Antiques by Dr. Lori
Lori Verderame
6 January 2014 50plus SeniorNews www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com
Your key to choosing the rightliving and care options for you
or a loved one.
In print.Online at
onlinepub.com.
18th EditionNow Available!
Call today foryour free copy!
(717) 285-1350
When Walter Jones graduatedfrom high school, he reasonedthat, since it was likely that
he would soon be drafted, he betterenlist in the Army Air Corps. In thatway, he could follow his long-held dreamof becoming a pilot.
So, on Nov. 28, 1942, he enlisted andshipped to Miami for basic training.
After basic, the Air Corps discoveredthat he was color blind, so that was theend of his dream of becoming a pilot.They then put him through a battery oftests and found that he was adept atradio work.
So, he was sent to Scott Field in St.Louis to learn to become a radiooperator. Morse code seemed to come tohim naturally, and he did so well with itthat he was made an instructor, teachingMorse code there for 18 months beforehe was sent to more extensive training to
equip him to be a B-17radio operator.
Jones says there was alot more to that trainingthan he ever imagined.On a B-17, the radiooperator compartmentwas just behind thebomb bay and just infront of the waist sectionof the Flying Fortress.
He had far moreresponsibilities than justmanning the main radiogear for the aircraft,however. He also had a.50 caliber machine gunmounted in the ceiling of hiscompartment. And he primarily assistedthe navigator.
He had a couple of instruments thatduplicated those of the navigator that
gave headinginformation. He couldforward radio fixes,known as positionreports, to the navigator.And as long as thenavigator knew wherethe radio signal wascoming from, basedupon the heading of thesignal from the radiooperator, the navigatorcould get a fix on wherethe aircraft was.
After that training,Jones was assigned to aB-17 crew at Lincoln,
Neb., and they were soon headed forcombat, flying over the northern route,through Goose Bay, Labrador; Reykjavik,Iceland; and Valley, Wales.
In England, he was assigned to the
303rd Bomb Group (called the Hell’sAngels) in Molesworth, England, andflew his first mission on Dec. 6, 1944.
On that and later missions, he foundthat there was a lot to keep the radiooperator busy in combat. He wouldmonitor the group frequencies to findout any changes to the flight plan. If thelead plane decided to switch to asecondary target, or if a plane fell out offormation, he would record the messageover the group channel and pass theinformation on to the pilot.
He logged all radio events and asmuch of what he could see going onaround him as possible. He would notewhich planes went down, when andwhere, along with the number of chutesseen to come from the plane. He checkedwith his crew every 15 minutes onintercom to make sure all were OK. Ifneeded, he would have been one of the
He Flew in 32 B-17 Missions over Germany
and Came Out Without a ScratchRobert D. Wilcox
Salute to a Veteran
Pvt. Walter N. Jones in 1943 atScott Airfield in St. Louis.
Best Wishesfor a Happy
2014!from
www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com 50plus SeniorNews January 2014 7
Are You Reading?Join the 2014 One Book, One Community campaign by reading
The Worst Hard Time by Timothy Egan
93 libraries in Cumberland, Dauphin, Lancaster,Lebanon, Perry, and York counties and theircommunity partners present the regionalreading campaign:
Visit www.oboc.orgor your library to learn more
© Sophie Egan
GGeett aa ccooppyy aattyyoouurr llooccaall lliibbrraarryyoorr aarreeaa bbooookksseelllleerr
Public Vote Selects Book for2014 Reading Campaign
Representatives from libraries inBerks, Dauphin, Lebanon, Lancaster,Perry, and York counties recentlyannounced the selection of The WorstHard Time by Timothy Egan as the 2014One Book, One Community selection.
As part of the campaign’s 10th
anniversary, organizers wanted topromote community involvement in theselection of the title, rather than handingover a single title for the 2014 campaign.
A public vote in October selected abook from a narrowed-down list of threetitles. The vote also established a newtimeline for the community readproject, which previously took place inthe fall.
The Worst Hard Time by TimothyEgan is a non-fiction book that tells the
story of the 1930s Dust Bowl primarilythrough the eyes of those who did notflee but stayed and watched thedisintegration of their homes.
Residents of the six-county region areencouraged to read the book duringJanuary in preparation to attend freeprograms and discussions that will beheld at public libraries during February.
The public will also be invited to apost-read celebration that will be heldthe end of February or early March.
Libraries in the six counties will stockcopies of the book that can be borrowedfree of charge in January. Books will alsobe available for purchase at localbooksellers.
More information is available atwww.oboc.org.
Spacious Apartments1BR 840 Sq. Ft., 2BR 1050 Sq. Ft, 3 BR 1200 Sq. Ft.
Please call 717-273-8559 for more information.Summit Square Apartments • 1201 W. Crestview Dr., Lebanon
Rent includes gas for heating andcooking, sewer, and trash. Centralheat and air. Laundry in each building.Maintenance free. Close to a shoppingcenter, resident manager on premise,24-hour maintenance. Near Hersheyand VA Hospital. Large dog park.
first ones to tendto a woundedcrewmember.
He rememberswell that, on oneof his missions,his ball turretgunner hadn’t yetentered the ballturret, and Jonesfound himflopped over,apparentlyasleep. Jonesexamined him and found that the man’soxygen tube had come loose from themain supply line, and he was getting nooxygen.
He promptly reattached it andbrought him to life. But a few moreminutes at the 28,000 feet that theywere flying, and the man surely wouldhave died.
As all radio operators did, Jones hadflare pistols, so he could signal otheraircraft when formations were forming(when he was in the lead ship) or tosignal that there were wounded on boardwhen the plane was returning to base.He also had a clear view of the bombbay and could check the area for damageor a hung bomb when the aircraft cameoff the target.
It was also his responsibility todispense the chaff that was used toscramble enemy anti-aircraft artilleryradar when over the target area. Hewould unbind the chaff bundles andrelease the chaff out a chute that wasbuilt into the radio room.
On many of his missions, his planewas with 1,000 or more other planes,and his plane often led his group, an
especially dangerousposition. He oftensaw enemy fighterscircling but wasnever attacked,“probably,” he says,“because we flewsuch tightformation.”
He remembershaving lost twoengines more thanonce, and there wasmany a time his
plane was riddled by flak, yet itsomehow always got them home in onepiece.
After his last mission, on April 3,1945, Jones came home to the U.S. onthe luxurious French passenger liner, Ilede France, except that it was now packedwith 10,000 men.
He was discharged from the AirCorps as a tech sergeant in May at FortDix, N.J., and then became a linemanfor Bell Telephone.
Did his getting that job haveanything to do with his World War IIknowledge of electronics?
Laughing, he says, “Not a chance.They told me to forget all that stuff.They wanted me to learn the Bell way.”
Well, he did and, after varying levelsof responsibility, retired from Bell in1983.
He now lives comfortably in aretirement home with Marie, his wife of31 years. But he still has vivid memoriesof those missions high over Germany,with enemy flak bursting everywhere.
Colonel Wilcox flew a B-17 bomber inEurope in World War II.
T/Sgt Walter Jones (far right, front row)with his combat crew in 1945.
8 January 2014 50plus SeniorNews www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com
Spooky Nook Sports2913 Spooky Nook Road, Manheim
(Just off Rt. 283, Salunga exit)
Lancaster Senior Gamesexclusively for
Lancaster County residents 55+
Lancaster County 50plus EXPOBoomers, seniors, caregiversand their families welcome.
MondayMay 5, 2014
Monday thru FridayMay 5–9, 2014New Dates and
Location!
On-Line Publishers, Inc. and the Lancaster County Office of Aging have teamed up to bring you
18th annual 26th annual
Each event will continue to maintain its own identity. Combining these two organizations’ events — each highly recognized in the senior community —together with the dynamic new location, Lancaster Celebrates Seniors will prove to be an enriching experience for the seniors of Lancaster County.
Contact us today about sponsor and exhibitor information! • 717.285.1350 • email info@50plusExpoPA.com
Traveltizers Travel Appetizers: Stories that Whet the Appetite for Travel
By Andrea Gross
Iallow three days to explore theGone with the Wind Trail in andnear Atlanta, but it takes me only
one to become a Windie. A Windieis a die-hard GWTW fan, a personwho is immersed in the history,legends, and legacy surrounding thePulitzer Prize-winning novel andenormously popular film.
Some dream of Rhett; othersdream of Scarlett’s fancy clothes or17-inch waist. As for me, I dream ofpublishing a novel that wins one ofthe world’s most prestigious awardsand is turned into a film that earnsme millions.
On the surface, GWTW is thewildly romantic tale of ScarlettO’Hara, a headstrong Southern belle(played by Vivian Leigh in the movie)and her love-hate relationship with RhettButler, a dashing, successful opportunist(depicted by Clark Gable).
But on a deeper level, GWTW is the
story of the American South during andimmediately after the Civil War, a timewhen an entire society was challengedand ultimately transformed.
The book, written by first-timenovelist Margaret Mitchell, was releasedto the public in 1936 and became an
overnight sensation. David Selznickproduced the movie, which is thehighest-grossing film in box-officehistory, earning an estimated $3.3 billionin today’s dollars.
To capitalize on the public’s interest,the state of Georgia created a GWTW
Trail that leads people to five sitesthat are in some way connected tothe book, the film, or the author.
Our first trail stop is in ClaytonCounty, where Mitchell’s relativeshad a rural home. As a child,Mitchell visited often and listenedintently as her family elders toldstories about their experiencesduring the Civil War.
Many of these tales weretransformed into scenes in her novel,leading her heirs to dub ClaytonCounty the “Official Home of Gonewith the Wind.” (To Mitchell’sdismay, Selznick upgraded thecomfortable farmhouse of Mitchell’smemory into Tara, a much grandermansion that he thought wouldbetter appeal to movie audiences.)
The Road to Tara Museum has apainting of the old farmhouse, inaddition to authentic Civil War itemsand reproductions of many of thecostumes worn in the film, including thegreen “drapery dress” that Leigh wears in
The Gone with the Wind Trail
Gone with the Wind has earnedmore money than any othermovie in box-office history,
adjusted for inflation.
A Tudor Revival mansion had beensubdivided into small apartments
by the time Mitchell and herhusband moved in. One of the most popular
pieces in The Road to TaraMuseum is a replica of the
“drapery dress,” worn byVivian Leigh.
www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com 50plus SeniorNews January 2014 9
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one of the movie’s most memorablescenes. But it’s not until I see the displayof foreign-edition books that I begin tomorph from casual tourist to possibleWindie.
GWTW has been translated into morethan 40 languages and sold in more than50 countries, from Albania and Burmato North Korea and Serbia. Why arepeople all over the world so intrigued bya story about a war that took place inAmerica so long ago?
We learn the answer the next daywhen we visit the Margaret MitchellHouse, where the author lived when shebegan her novel. It takes only a fewminutes to see the small apartment butmuch longer to peruse the exhibits in thenearby hallway. There, on a largesignboard, is a quote by MargaretMitchell: “If the novel has a theme, it isthat of survival.”
Why, of course. GWTW addresses abasic concern: If their old world is “gonewith the wind,” how do people create anew one that will work in their newcircumstances? This is a question askedby everyone who has ever suffered ahardship, be whatever the cause. Whenseen in this light, it’s easy to understandthe story’s universal and enduring appeal.
Our next stop is Atlanta’s PublicLibrary, where there are more than 1,500
of Mitchell’s personal items, includingher old Remington typewriter and 1937Pulitzer Prize certificate.
We’re even more fascinated by the
items on display at the Marietta GWTWMuseum, Scarlett on the Square, whichholds a treasure-trove of photos andephemera. I examine the film contracts.
Gable got $160,000 plus a bonus thatenabled him to divorce his wife andmarry Carole Lombard, the love of hisreal life.
On the other hand, his co-star VivianLeigh got a mere $30,000. Yes, Gablewas a mega-star, but still, I can’t help butwonder what Mitchell, who was quitethe feminist for her time, thought ofthat.
Finally, we double back to Atlanta tovisit Oakland Cemetery, where Mitchellis buried next to her husband. Hertombstone is small compared to manyand gives no hint of her fame. It’s simplyinscribed with her married name,Margaret Mitchell Marsh. Someone, aWindie no doubt, has decorated thegrave with pink flowers, reputedlyMitchell’s favorite color.
I want to extend my stay in Georgia,to delve more deeply into the GWTWphenomenon and to learn more aboutthe era in which the novel is set. But wehave a plane to catch, so I console myselfby remembering Scarlett’s words,“Tomorrow is another day.” I’ll be back.
www.gwtwtrail.com
Photos © Irv Green unless otherwise noted;story by Andrea Gross (www.andreagross.com).
Stately Oaks is an 1839 home inClayton County. Although it bears some
resemblance to Tara, the plantationhome depicted in the movie, it is
much more elegant than the homethat Mitchell described in her book.
The apartment where Mitchell lived whenshe began her novel has been reproduced
as accurately as possible in theMargaret Mitchell House.
Windies from all over the world visitMargaret Mitchell’s grave, which is inOakland Cemetery.
If ever an actor was recognized by onecareer role, it was Donna Douglaswith her portrayal of Elly May in the
highly popular CBS ’60s comedy TheBeverly Hillbillies.
In the four decades since the seriesended its nine-season run in 1971, thedrop-dead gorgeous blonde, a native ofPride, La., is still strongly identified withthe show wherever she goes.
Rather than distancing herself fromthe connection to Jed, Granny, Jethro,and the Clampett clam, Douglas hasembraced her sitcom heritage and stillmakes public appearances as a real-lifeSouthern belle.
“Elly was a slice out of my life,” saysDouglas, whose official website(www.donnadouglasofficialwebsite.com)was launched in 2012.
“I was raised a tomboy, with one olderbrother and all male cousins. So I grewup swinging from vines and playingsoftball. I was getting ready for Jethro
long before we ever met! I still adore Ellyand we have a lot in common, with thesame interests and values.”
After Hillbillies ended, Douglas wasoffered many roles but accepted just ahandful that she felt wouldn’tcompromise her standards.
“I’ve got no regrets about anything Iturned down. I sold real estate for awhile, made a couple of record albums,and speak at churches, ladies groups, andschools around the country. My days arefull and I’m very happy!”
This year, she also published anostalgic cookbook, Southern Favoriteswith a Taste of Hollywood, a collection ofrecipes gathered over the years, manyfrom friends including Debbie Reynolds,Buddy Ebsen, Phyllis Diller, and ValerieHarper.
“The cookbook came about as a wayto share my favorite recipes,” saidDouglas, who recalls homecooked mealsprepared in the rich, Southern traditionthat many will also remember from theirchildhood.
“Homemade dishes are almostunheard of today,” she lamented.“They’re all premade in a box or from adrive-thru. That’s today’s way. But therewas something about the way your mommade dishes with a special touch—with abit of this and a pinch of that.”
Although her own mother never usedGranny’s “possum fat,” her childhoodmeals weren’t exactly lean.
“Lard and bacon grease, especially inthe South, were cooking essentials!”
Interspersed between the book’srecipes are delightful personal anecdotesfrom her Hollywood days.
“I thought fans would enjoy a fewremembrances from my life, along withsome photos from my scrapbook.”
In an effort to remind readers of thelong-lost art of good manners, there’salso a quaint section called “HollywoodSocial Graces.” Advice includes neverusing your fork as a toothpick, chewinggum in someone else’s home, oranswering a cell phone while a dinnerguest.
“Etiquette was taught in the South,but I’m afraid it’s a thing of the past now.Social graces are lacking all around us,people are rushing all the time, and noone sits and visits any longer.”
Not a big fan of today’s televisionprogramming, Douglas says she likes towatch the classics in reruns, such asTouched by an Angel as well as theoccasional Hillbillies episode, whichbrings back memories.
“Elly may not have kissed manyfellows during the show’s run, but shesure did kiss a heap of animals.Somewhere around 500 were usedduring the series, provided by Hollywoodanimal trainer Frank Inn.”
Today, she shows little sign of slowingdown.
“I seldom really rest,” admits Douglas,who turned 80 in September. “I travel allover the U.S. and Canada and have avery busy schedule. But I have to turndown a lot of requests. I also garden,spend time with family and friends, andstill get quite a bit of fan mail.
“My days are full and then some, soI’m always playing catch-up. Life hasbeen very good to me and full ofblessings for a little backwoods girl fromLouisiana who never had any thoughts ofa career in showbiz.”
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
Elly May Offers Up Some Vittles
Tinseltown Talks
Nick Thomas
The cast of The Beverly Hillbillies Donna Douglas today
The cover of Douglas’cookbook, Southern Favorites
with a Taste of Hollywood
10 January 2014 50plus SeniorNews www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com
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www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com 50plus SeniorNews January 2014 11
Lebanon County
Calendar of EventsSenior Center Activities
Give Us the Scoop!Please send us your press releases so we can let our readers know about
free events occurring in Lebanon County!
Email preferred to: mjoyce@onlinepub.com
(717) 285-1350
Let help you get the word out!
What’s Happening?
Annville Senior Community Center – (717) 867-1796200 S. White Oak St., AnnvilleJan. 10, 11:15 a.m. – Trivia and Pizza LunchJan. 16, 10:30 a.m. – “What is Chiropractic?” PresentationJan. 16, 12:30 p.m. – Lunch Club Meeting at New Longhorn Steakhouse
Maple Street Community Center – (717) 273-1048710 Maple St., LebanonJan. 12, 10 a.m. – Snowman Brunch with GamesJan. 15, 11 a.m. – January Birthday Celebration; Carpool to Country Fare
RestaurantJan. 31, 10 a.m. – New Year’s Celebration Game Day
Myerstown Senior Community Center – (717) 866-678651 W. Stoever Ave., MyerstownJan. 10, 1:30 p.m. – Pinochle Card PartyJan. 15, 10:15 a.m. – Card-Making ClassJan. 29, noon – Snowman Luncheon at Country Fare Restaurant
Palmyra Senior Community Center – (717) 838-8237101 S. Railroad St., PalmyraJan. 8, 10:30 a.m. – Birthday SocialJan. 9, 10:15 a.m. – Pinochle GameJan. 10, 11:30 a.m. – New Year Luncheon at Olive Garden
Please contact your local center for scheduled activities.
Lebanon County Library Programs
Annville Free Library, 216 E. Main St., Annville, (717) 867-1802
Lebanon Community Library, 125 N. Seventh St., (717) 273-7624
Matthews Public Library, 102 W. Main St., Fredericksburg, (717) 865-5523
Myerstown Community Library, 199 N. College St., Myerstown, (717) 866-2800
Palmyra Public Library, 325 S. Railroad St., (717) 838-1347
Richland Community Library, 111 E. Main St., Richland, (717) 866-4939
Programs and Support Groups Free and open to the public
Jan. 22, 6 to 7 p.m. – Personal Care Family Support Group, Linden Village,100 Tuck Court, Lebanon, (717) 274-7400
The Beauty in Nature
Clyde McMillan-Gamber
Maturing blue spruce andAmerican holly trees havepyramidal forms, drooping
limbs like half-collapsed umbrellas, anddensely packed needles, or leaves, theyear around.
Blue spruces are native to the RockyMountains, and wild American holliesare barely established in southeasternPennsylvania. But both species arecommonly planted on local lawns, aselsewhere, because of their beauties,including shapes, evergreen leaves, anddecorative cones on the spruces andstrikingly red berries on the hollies.
And both offer year-round shelter, andseasonal food, to the wildlife that addtheir beauties to those of the trees.
Heaps ofsnow push thelimbs of thosetrees downtighter thannormal. Thesnow andfoliage togetherprotectsquirrels,hawks, owls,and small birdsnestled underthem fromcold, winter winds and the keen vision ofpredators. Through that leaf and snowinsulation, and their own fur or feathers,much body heat of those mammals and
birds isretained,keeping themwarm.
In winter,owls shelter inthe sprucesand holliesduring theday, while red-tailed hawks,Cooper’shawks,mourning
doves, dark-eyed juncos, American crows,blue jays, and other kinds of birds snugglein them at night. Those trees are goodnursery sites in early spring because their
evergreen foliage conceals eggs and young. The hawks also hide in those trees to
ambush squirrels and birds. Squirrels, mice, and wintering
American goldfinches, pine siskins,chickadees, and other bird species eatseeds in the spruce cones. The smallbirds cling to the cones to pull seedsfrom between the scales.
Flocks of American robins, cedarwaxwings, and other kinds of birdsconsume berries on the hollies duringwinter. And robins also do so in Marchwhen migrating north.
Look closer at blue spruces andAmerican hollies on lawns. You willenjoy the beauties of those trees and theanimals that benefit from them.
Blue Spruces and American Hollies
12 January 2014 50plus SeniorNews www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com
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celebrate the local eateries
that deserve national fame! y now, most of us are back to ourroutine day to day.
The Christmas tree standslifeless in the corner of the room where,just days ago, it was imbued with acertain seasonal magic—a magicespecially obvious at night when itslights glowed warmly, and the bright,shiny ornaments reflected theillumination in a colorful palette of red,green, blue, silver, and gold throughoutthe room.
The electrical plugnow droops over abottom branch.Nobody notices; thelights remain cold.The tree has seen itsbest days, done itsholiday duty, andwill soon be strippedof its finery.
The townshipmulch pile is thenext stop for sometrees. Others will beenclosed in giantbags and placedcurbside on trash-removal day. Thereare tiring days aheadfor those who mustheave the woody remains onto a truck.
In the meantime, some gifts remainunder the tree. Sweater sleeves appear toslither over the shallow sides of theirboxes to touch the floor, chain-store tagsdangle from bathrobes and slippers, andreturnable items are bagged up andready to go back to the mall at the nextconvenient moment.
The best gifts are already in use.That’s not to say that sweaters, slippers,and bathrobes aren’t great gifts. Theyare. It’s just that most people do not feelcompelled to model slippers and robeswhen they’re outside the home. It wouldjust be odd. There’s not much aboutthose items that elicit admiration andapproval, anyway.
As for sweaters, I haven’t looked goodin one since I was young and almostslim (maybe not slim, but a lot lessbulgy).
Stockings will be taken down, andnot necessarily with the care in whichthey were hung; I yank, and tacks fly.
They land in places where only bare feetcan find them. The small stuffers of pensets, bottles of fragrance, candy bars,shaving razors, and all sorts of otherknickknackery have been whisked away.
I shook my stocking out severaltimes. I’m convinced it was only hungto add symmetry to the lineup; I didn’task.
Listen, it’s all good. I have little usefor pen sets; the ink is nearly dried up inthe ones I already own. My bottle of
Old Spice is almostfull. It’s obvious thatI don’t need candybars. I mostly use anelectric razor, when Iremember to chargeit. And I certainlyhave no use forknickknacks and thedust they collect.
It’s a new year.We embrace hopeand the idea of a do-over for mistakes,poor decisions, andbad habits that havehindered ouraspirations andrelationships. Wevow to be better. We
will lose weight, quit smoking, be morepatient with our spouses and children,unselfishly serve mankind, and makeother resolutions, numerous and diverse.
We will invariably fail to followthrough on some of our loftier aims. Ithappens because we are human. Beinghuman is a good general excuse for whywe often fall short of our grand schemes.
But resilience of spirit is anotheraspect of being human. When we fail,we feel challenged. We back up, take arunning start, and head for the goal,again and again. That’s when goodthings happen, and we become betterhuman beings. Keep at it—you’ll see.
Happy New Year.
Mike Clark writes a regular column for TheGlobe Leader newspaper in NewWilmington, Pa. He has a Bachelor of Sciencedegree in organizational behavior/appliedpsychology from Albright College. Mike livesoutside Columbia, Pa., and can be contactedat mikemac429@aol.com.
The Way I See It
Mike Clark
It’s Over So Soon
B
www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com 50plus SeniorNews January 2014 13
WORD SEARCH
SUDOKU
Solutions for all puzzles can be found on page 14
Your ad could be here on this popular page!Please call (717) 285-1350 for more information.
1. Famed6. Island garlands10. Tempo14. Decrease15. Dwarf buffalo16. Aquatic bird17. Ohio city19. Sharp20. Bristle21. Noblewoman23. Fr. saint (abbr.)24. Merriment25. Bowman
27. Singer Callas31. Lightweight wood33. Remediate34. Witches35. Mouth off39. Fixes40. Beer relative41. Digress42. Wager43. Fastened44. Badger45. Iniquities47. Rounded
48. Alit51. Some53. Japanese capital54. Jeweled headdresses57. Tobacco holder61. Redact63. Building toy65. Deceptive maneuver66. Aspect67. Mason’s Street68. Hurried69. N.M. city70. Fencing swords
1. Negatives2. Double-reed
instrument3. Tense4. Bunsen burner5. Temp. (abbr.)6. Romance language7. Organic compound8. Hawkeye State9. Shoes10. Time zone (abbr.)11. Inundated12. Menu13. Go inside18. So. school inits.
22. Annums (abbr.)24. Crazes26. Fmr. president27. Parent28. Prayer word29. Lease30. So31. Bundles32. Elderly34. Applaud36. Saddle horse37. Flower holder38. Saw41. Pack43. Most kempt
46. Ex-serviceman48. Ogles49. Summate50. Racket51. Confronts52. Time zone (abbr.)55. Solo56. Make over57. Homework58. Cay59. Hawaiian volcano
goddess60. LAX postings62. Turner or Williams64. Lyric poem
Across
Down
CROSSWORD
By John Johnston
Many people ring in the newyear with champagne. Peoplewho receive Social Security or
Supplemental Security Income (SSI) get
to ring it in with a COLA.This year, more than 60 million
Americans are receiving a 1.5 percentcost of living adjustment (COLA) intheir monthly benefit payment.
The 1.5 percent COLA begins with
increased benefits for more than 57million Social Security beneficiaries inJanuary 2014. Payments to more than 8million SSI recipientsbegan in late December2013.
The estimatedaverage monthly SocialSecurity payment to aretired worker is$1,294 (in 2014), upfrom $1,275 (in 2013).The average monthlySocial Securitydisability payment for an individual is$1,148 (in 2014), up from $1,131 (in2013).
The basic monthly federal paymentfor SSI is $721 (in 2014), up from $710(in 2013).
Some other changes that take effect inJanuary of each year are based on theincrease in average wages. For example,the maximum amount of earningssubject to the Social Security payroll tax(taxable maximum) will increase to$117,000, up from $113,700.
Of the estimated 165 million workers
who will pay Social Security taxes in2014, about 10 million will pay highertaxes as a result of the increase in the
taxable maximum.The amount of
earnings needed forone credit of SocialSecurity coverage hasgone up as well, but allworkers can still earnup to four credits in ayear. In 2014, a workerearns a credit afterearning $1,200. In
2013, one credit of coverage was $1,160.It takes 40 credits to be fully insured forretirement benefits.
Information about Medicare changesfor 2014 is available atwww.medicare.gov.
Visit www.socialsecurity.gov/pressofficeto learn more about the COLA andother Social Security changes in 2014.
From everyone at Social Security, havea Happy New Year.
John Johnston is a Social Security publicaffairs specialist.
14 January 2014 50plus SeniorNews www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com
Puzz
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show
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Puzzl
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Front, from left, Rich Burton, director,and Kirk Gibson, president of theCentral PA WWII Roundtable, presentBev Barbe and the WWII HomefrontGuys and Gals Committee anhonorary plaque for their work insupporting Pearl Harbor veterans.
Committee members are, back rowfrom left, Jim Stauffer; Dan Mastos;Bev Barbe, chair; and Dave Newcomer.
Homefront Committee Honored
The Capital Area World War IIRoundtable recently honored Bev Barbeand her WWII Homefront Guys andGals Committee.
For almost 20 years, the committeehas conducted an annual ceremonyhonoring the survivors of Pearl Harborat the Lebanon VA Medical Center.
Honoring Barbe and her committee,the Capital Area WWII Roundtablepresented Barbe with dinner, a plaque,and a donation of $250.
The 2013 ceremony honoring the
survivors of the Pearl Harbor attack washeld on Dec. 8 at the Lebanon VAMedical Center chapel.
For individuals with an interest inlearning more about the WWIIHomefront Guys and GalsCommittee, please contact Barbe atthewwIIhomefrontguysandgals@aol.com.
Individuals with an interest in theCapital Area WWII Roundtable shouldcontact Kirk Gibson, president, atkhgibson@yahoo.com or (717) 514-6778.
If you have local news you’d like considered forAround Town, please email mjoyce@onlinepub.com
Ring in the New Year with a COLA
Social Security News
Older Americans Forsaking
‘Until Death Do Us Part’More older Americans are getting
divorced. The divorce rate forAmericans 50 and older has doubledsince 1990, according to a BowlingGreen University analysis of censusdata.
The U.S. Census Bureau’s AmericanCommunity Survey tracks an upwardtrend as well: In the mid-20th century,
only 2.8 percent of Americans over age50 were divorced, a figure that rose to11.8 percent in 2000.
By 2011, 15.4 percent were divorced,with another 2.1 percent separated. Thismakes 2011 the first time the numberof divorced older Americans exceededthe number of widows and widowers(13.5 percent).
www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com 50plus SeniorNews January 2014 15
Have you photographeda smile that just begsto be shared?
Have you photographeda smile that just begsto be shared?
Send us your favorite smile—your children,grandchildren, friends, even your “smiling” pet!—and it could be 50plus Senior News’ next Smile of the Month!
You can submit your photos (with captions) either digitally tomjoyce@onlinepub.com or by mail to:
50plus Senior NewsSmile of the Month3912 Abel Drive, Columbia, PA 17512
Digital photos must be at least 4x6'' with a resolution of 300 dpi. No professional photos, please.Please include a SASE if you would like to have yourphoto returned.
DAUPHIN COUNTY
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CelebratesSeniors
and pillowcases. “I would sit and watch TV with a
needle in my hand. I liked to do thateven as a child. It was my time to relax.It was very calming,” she said.
Creating tote bags gave her that samefeeling, so she kept making them to giveto family and friends.
Because everyone loved the tote bagsshe made, her husband and daughterthought she could sell them. Theybrainstormed name ideas and came upwith Totelly Unique.
“No two tote bags I make are alike. Inow make three different sizes: a small,purse-type tote; a medium-size tote thatwould carry a laptop; and a large one tocarry more items,” Kolanko said.
She sold her first tote bags to the storewhere she gets her glasses.
“They said, ‘You should bring some inand people will buy them,’” she said.“The first time I walked away with beingpaid for something I made was reallyexciting.”
The 58-year-old was a full-timephysical therapist for VNA for 30 yearsbefore her mother needed her care. Shenow takes her Totelly Unique bags toarea craft shows and would like toexpand the territory she has attended.
“I enjoymeeting peopleand makingcontacts. It’s areally enjoyablebusiness.”
Besides using“beautiful andunusual”placemats,Kolanko nowadds handmadeflowers andotherembellishmentsto her tote bags.
“I’d sit atnight with mymom and makeflowers” for thetote bags, shesaid. She’d makea “poofy” flowerand put something in it like costumejewelry or a button.
Then on other tote bags she’d just usejewelry, like retro pins, from oldfashioned to contemporary.
Kolanko also has added a side branchto her business, Tie Flowers.
“When I had begun making flowers to
embellish thetotes, my bestfriend’s fatherpassed away, and Iwanted to makesomething for heras a keepsake forher dad,” Kolankosaid. “He was apastor and hadmany ties, and Ithought I couldprobably makesome lovelyflowers out of histies. So I asked herfor some andmade her and hermom some flowerbrooches.
“That broughtsuch joy to myheart that I began
to do the same for family and friends,and it spread from there.”
The tie flowers are 99.9 percent handsewn with only a tiny bead of hot glueon the back that can’t be seen, she said.She also uses the tag that comes on theback of the tie, adding beauty to theflower.
“I try to make the back as beautiful asthe front,” she said.
Kolanko also makes flowers out offabrics other than ties.
“If a mom or grandma had a specialdress or scarf, or even a tableclotharound which the family had dinner, Icould make flowers from these,” she said.
She has made pocket squares out ofshirts for a man to remember his dad,hairclips using ties for little girls, andtote bags using pockets, buttons, andbelt loops from a man’s jeans as pocketson the bag.
It gives Kolanko the most pleasurewhen customers see a flower for the firsttime and tears come to their eyes, orwhen the tie is from a very specialoccasion. She recently worked on a tieflower pin from a tie that a man wore tohis daughter’s wedding, and her momgave it to her for Christmas.
Also, in the future when she is able totravel, Kolanko would like to teachwomen in other countries to make totebags and flowers to help them earnmoney.
“A lady from Nicaragua likes to wearbright and colorful flowers in her hair,and she said she would like me to teachher to make them,” Kolanko said.
MEMORIES from page 1
Tie pins, also created from an oxford shirt.
Several memorial tie pins made from neckties.
16 January 2014 50plus SeniorNews www.50plusSeniorNewsPA.com
Good Samaritan aquatic therapy.
Aquatic therapy can provide many health benefits, from reducing recovery timeafter surgery to improving circulation, reducing swelling for those with edema,and easing chronic pain.
Good Samaritan’s trained physical therapists can work with your doctor to createa personalized aquatic therapy program to address your needs.
Our recently renovated pool remains the only dedicated aquatic therapy pool inLebanon County and is conveniently located in the Quentin Circle Mall off ofRoute 72 in Lebanon.
Ask your doctor if Good Samaritan aquatic therapy is right for you.
Powerful medicine and comforting care. Only at Good Samaritan.
Speeding recovery and improving your health.
GSH Outpatient Center | Quentin Circle Mall - Rt. 72 | 950 Isabel Dr. | Lebanon, PA 17042 | 717.270.8841
Now offering PT serviceson Saturdays from
7 a.m. - noon at ourQuentin Circle Center
Aquatic therapy can help:
• Foot, ankle and knee injuries including pre- and post-surgical
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back, arthritis and joint• Stroke• Amputees• Musculoskeletal disorders• Cardiovascular and athletic
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