II El cict4 lllTin collegian ealities of old age confront local senior By DOUG BELL Daily Collegian Staff Writer . Age is the most universal of concepts Day by day, year by year, each of us is changed by the passing of time. And one day, signaled perhaps by the wrinkling of skin, the graying of hair or the stiff ness of gait, we will come to be known as "elderly." Yet few people realize what it means to he elderly. Few know what it means to live on a fixed income when inflation makes every dollar worth less and less. Few know the frustration of having chronic health problems and being unable to meet rising health care costs. Few know the exasperation of needing to get somewhere and being unable to drive a caror find public transportation. But for many of our elderly, both in Centre County and throughout the United States, this is an accurate pic ture. Sunny pictures of retirement com munities filled with lazy hours on front porch swings have lulled us into believ ing that old age is a time of rest and leisurely reflection -- when, in reality, many of our elderly are involved in a daily battle to survive. About 11,000 elderly people defined as anyone older than 60 live in Centre County. That figure represents approx imately 11' percent of the county's population. According to Joseph Britton,,a Univer sity professor of human deveipment and the chairman of the State College Senior Citizens Commission, Centre County is "farther along than many others in its care of the elderly." • Britton attributed this to "good leader ship, alertness to resources, knowledge of possibilities and a belief that we can better the conditions of living." But Britton, along with many others, agreed that the elderly in Centre County still have problems. •Transportation, housing, health care, finances and loneliness head the list. Lillian Husted, a State College resi dent who was appointed by Gov. Dick Thornburgh to a state regional council on the elderly, does not think the elderly in Centre County are as well off as some might believe. Husted said a lack of funds for care of the elderly makes it difficult to provide help to the elderlywho need it most. ."We are not reaching the people who need to be reached," she said. "As long aswe don't have the money, we can't go out and actively solicit." Cynthia Edvar, the director of Centre Ney By WALT De TREUX Daily Collegian Staff Writer As president of the State College Senior Citizens Club, 82-year-old Amos E. Neyhart has a close-up view of senior citizens and their most pressing problems. "One of the big problems is limited in come," Neyhart said. "The health pro the cost of medication and medical services also ' plague the elderly." Neyhart, originator of driver educa tion in the United States and consultant to the American Automobile Association for 44 years, cited transportation as another obstacle for senior citizens. Getting to the doctor, going to the grocery store and getting .to church all pose difficulties for the elderly, he said. State College Senior Citizens Club President Amos Neyhart checks the winning card at a Tuesday afternoon bingo game. Club president fights problems of aging These elderly men at Mt. Nittany Residences in State College spend an 'afternoon building Jigsaw puzzles:playing cards or talking County's Area Agency on Aging, said the agency's main goal is to serve the elder ly with the greatest need. Among the services provided by the AAA either directly or through sub-contracts are transportation to and from community facilities, home-delivered meals and homemaker services. In addition, the AAA operates five senior citizens centers and two meal sites around the county, provides infor mation about various services available, employs counselors and caseworkers, and provides a friendly visitor service to county elderly. Edvar said one of the biggest pro blems of the elderly in Centre County is transportation, and slightly more than,l4 percent, of the AAA'q,5599,000 budget in 1979 was spent in that area. Edvar said tranportation is a•problem because many of the county's elderly live in rural areas. "You can't receive services if you can't get to them," Edvar said. "State "For our meetings, we have a van," Neyhart said, "but we cannot provide a taxi service. . . .The transportation system (in State College) is very reliable. Ladies tell me they only have to walk half a block or a block to get a bus. "The Secretary of the Department of Aging in Harrisburg is aware of the pro blem," Neyhart said, "so are our representatives in Washington. Reagan has promised to do more in the transpor tation field." • In addition to having transportation difficulties, senior citizens are also af fected by boredom and loneliness, he said. "Some senior citizens have not developed any particular interest area,"said Neyhart, director emeritus of the University's Institute of Public Safety. a look at life in the University community College and now . . . Bellefonte are the only areas that have bus service; they're the only areas that have any public tranportation." Edvar was referring to thd State College-to-Bellefonte bus route, in stituted by the Centre Area Transporta tion Authority last spring. In addition, the Centre Cab Co., operated by the State College Borough, provides public transportation to the State College and Bellefonte areas. But the biggest item on the AAA's budget is funding for the five senior citizens centers in State . College, Bellefonte, Philipsburg, Snow Shoe and Millheim, and the two meal sites in Unionville and Centre Hall. More than 26 percent.., of the, AAA's : yearly allotment in 1979 was spent on the' centers and meal .- sites, which Edvar called "the lifeline" for many of the county's senior citizens. The five center directors agreed that loneliness and isolation are very serious "It takes so little on the part of each one of us to call someone on the telephone and ask them how they are," he said. "Every opportunity weget, we must get them out. As long as they put in long periods alone, they will be lonely." The senior citizens club tries to alleviate some of these problems at its Tuesday afternoon meetings. "We had a girl from the YMCA come in to exericize for 30 minutes,"he said. "And Kay Rossi comes every Tuesday afternoon to rehearse our choir. . . .You have to get the people involved, get the people active," he said. "It's difficult getting people involved doing these things." The club has had a very beneficial ef fect on the elderly, Neyhart said. He has had members come and tell him the meetings are "the biggest thing in my life; it is a social affair." Neyhart said he believes the club has promoted fellowship among the members. "During refreshment period, there they are . with people their own age, talk ing, laughing, and joking," he said. "The sad thing is it's only Tuesday afternoons." Neyhart suggested some other ways of improving the plight of the elderly. "Better communications. We have to do a better job of communicating through the radio, newspapers and television," he said. "We should make things more conve nient for the elderly," he said. "Prac tically everything on campus is at night. They are afraid to go out at night." In response to an election year, Neyhart said the club tried to urge the elderly to vote. At their Election Day meeting, Neyhart said, "We had a big cake and on it, it said, 'Did you vote today?' When I asked, every hand in that room went up." Neyhart, whose most noticeable characteristic is his unflagging op timism, said he has high hopes for the future. "America is the greatest country on earth," he said. "We should not discard, destroy, kick out all that we have; we should take what we have and make it better." "I'm very optimistic," Neyhart said. "My wife will tell you, 'ln 57 years of marriage, never have I found him down in the dumps.' " problems for the elderly, and that the centers are an important chance for the elderly to socialize and get out of the house. "So many people have said to me, 'I wonder what it was like before we had the centers; I wonder what I did with myself,' " said Jennett Wertz, director of the Snow Shoe center. The centers, which operate five days ,a week (except for the State College center, which is open on Monday, Wednesday and Friday), provide a hot, nutritious meal, various activities and, most important, companionship for the elderly. "The meals are very important," said Jenny Conway, director of the Bellefonte .center„ . "especially for men who are widowed and can't cook.'.' The centers also provide different pro grams for the elderly, ranging from lec tures and games to field trips and even a swimming class at the Bellefonte center. For those elderly who cannot attend the centers, mealg are delivered to their homes. In State College, Meals on Wheels provides a hot meal daily for elderly and handicapped people. Elsewhere around the county, meals are prepared and delivered by the AAA to elderly who are unable to make it to the centers. But the centers and the AAA have pro blems of their own mainly a budget that has failed to keep pace with the ris ing need and cost of services. The majority of the AAA's yearly allocation comes from the federal government. The state matches 20 per cent of the federal share, and the rest 10 percent of the AAA's funds comes from the county and from donations by the elderly who use the agency's services. " ' _Edvar said the AAA's funding in 1980 has equaled past levels, but she was not optimistic about increases in the future. Finances are a problem for in dividuals as well as the agencies that =ES Photo by Janis Burger 0 000 .%-c C day, Dec. 11 citi ens t serve them. Inflien has left many fixed pensions worthi a fraction of what they were in the ?t. Many elderly are forced to live one on Social Security c benefits, which, de ite frequent cost-of living increases, w not designed to be a sole source of inc e, Low incomes ine ,ably lead to other problems for the elfrly, namely hous ing and health caredat Casher, Centre County Housing co inator, said 423 „ low-income housin units are now v ii available to county eerly. But Casher said that number is ly about half of : what is needed. "About three or fo identified the need f income elderly unit Casher said. "We're there " In State College, Be vides 18 low-income senior citizens ; and ti Residence complex nez ment Store contains units for the elderly. Mt. Nittany Residencel late last summer, has Bellaire Court has five u Obtaining adequate another major problem Amos Neyhart, presiden College Senior Citizens Cl elderly people neglect because they can't afford "Fear is the elderly'sl blem," Neyhart said. "Thi, what the future holds. A loj ple are neglecting their he, they fear they'll get the something for which they and what little they have away from them." Husted, who is also preside visory council for the Ce, AAA, believes the key to 11 4 j preventive medicine thro education. She also said grandchildren of the elderly a more active role in caril needs. Will Rogers was half right oldis not a crime. But for m 1 citizens, age has become a helped in its battle by infla quate healthcare, sparse tional facilities and shorta inconie''hounng. Many of the elderly's nee are being met, but many still exist.Pntil those needs are met, aging wil still be an enemy -- instead of a natur part of the e: life cycle. A busy college tow by young colleg i poses many obst people in their dt from place to plaCe n, easily na students, acles for lily efforts years ago we about 700 low countywide," bout halfway 10, ire,Court pro-, , , sing units to Mt. Nittany Hills Depart low-income which opened o vacancies; s open. :Ith care is , the elderly. of the State s, said many,.... eir health oper care. iggest pro don't know ►f older peo th because elves into an't pay be taken i t of the ad- e County a i \ t th care is , ( nutrition iiltn and WI ;h Id take r their rowing senior emy inade-4 sporta of low- !gated , (often •denly i ► get Student opinions on calendar gathered By MARK GREEN Daily Collegian Staff Writer A final report on student opinions of the proposed calendar change is scheduled to be presented to the University Council on Dec. 18, the coordinator for the Undergraduate Student Government project said. The report will include results from three workshops which informed - students about the proposed switch to a semester. system, said Mark Berg,, chairman of the USG Executive Council's Committee for Credible Student Input. It will also contain information from, a telephone survey of 400 University Park students and 250 Commonwealth campus students, as well as a section listing the problems unique to 'each student organization, Berg said. The committee ran into several minor problems in the course of its in- Vestigation, including difficulties get ting the survey printed and getting volunteers to conduct the survey, he said. HUB presents John Lennon tribute today • The Hetzel Union Board will present a noontime • The Twirling Club will meet at 9 tonight , in 108 Boucke. New members are invited concert of Bob Sobol doing a memorial to John Lennon White Building at noon today in the HUB Ballroom • The Student Christian Involvement Program will • The Student Health Resource Organization will hold an Advent Communion Breakfast at 7 this morn , • Men's basketball coach Dick Harter will be the meet at 7 tonight in 307 Boucke. ing at the Faith United Church of Christ, 300 E. College quest on Sportstalk at 8 tonight on WDFM, 91 FM.Ave. Student Organization will hold a counseling skills • The Undergraduate Student Government depart present a lecture by James Bostain titled, "Read your Developm • The Office of International Student Affairs will workshop ent Building. at 7 tonight B in the Living Center of Human moucke. ent of women's services will meet at 7 tonight in 306 Neighbor," at 8 tonight in 112 Kern. • Students interested in becoming student • The Agronomy Club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 111 Tyson eunselors, who did not attend last night's meeting should go to 135 Boucke to schedule an interview • The sailing division of the Penn State Outing Club • The Block and Bridle Club will meet at 7:30 tonight will meet at 7:30 tonight in 112 Buckhout in 111 Animal Industries Building -.-- 1 y ~.-~ ~{ ~~ ~~ ~~ M~' ~~ ~.. .~ 1 ~.. $1.25/15 words or less. 10' each ' additional word. 41 4 . LIGHT MY FIRE with a per'sonal - son's Greeting in The Doily Collegian Dec. 10-17 in 126 Carnegie Send us your worm wishes through our Season's Greetings Classified Section on Dec. 19 !_mEzz! The investigation, which began in September, had been scheduled for completion on Dec. 1, but an exten sion was granted by the administra tion until Dec. 19. Berg said his com mittee had not requested theNexten sion but appreciated the extra' time. "We knew it was going to be a long process at the onset," Berg said, "but we didn't go in with the knowledge that it would take longer than the deadline." Fran Kenawell, president of the Association of Residence Halls Students, said the committee started slowly because of confusion over the issues. "No one really had a good idea of what University President John W. Oswald meant with a semester change," he said. "I don't even know if now we can give a good input either way.", Berg agreed, "That's a big problem they don't have the specifics." However, even with this vagueness, most people surveyed had an opinion on the matter, he said. • The Individual and Family Studies Undergraduate • Common Cause Berg said if the committee had worked through term break it could have met the original deadline. "Had the deadline been kept at Dec. 1, we would have had it in by the first," he said. Committee member Andrea Solat said the committee is now waiting for the organizations to turn in their specific concerns and for the results of the telephone survey to be run through the computer for a double check. Ellie Sternberg, a student representative on the University Council, said that after the commit tee's final report is presented, the council will combine it with other in vestigations into one major report on non-academic reactions to the pro posed change. The committee will present the report to Oswald before the new Feb. 1 deadline, Sternberg said. James Dungan, special assistant to the director of planning and budget, said if Oswald decides to change to a semester system, there will be ample • The Student Assistance Center will hold a study skills workshop at 3:45 this afternoon in 317 HUB. meet at 7 tonight in 309 Study habits and test-taking skills will be featured. 130 Heister St., State College 237-0361 Never a better time, never a better place, never a better price for roast prime rib of beef at its tender, juicy best. All prime rib dinners include the fabulous ARENA Salad Buffet . . . •• • • • - • •-. •. • : - •.• • College of Business Administration Core Advising Program ATTENTION: Freshmen and Sophomores Spring Pre-Registration Do you have questions 'a,oout courses, majors, career resources? Come to Rooms: 101 Chambers Tues., Dec. 9 8:00 a.m. - 9:15 a.m 362 Willard Wed., Dec. 10 2:20 p.m. - 3:35 p.m 101 Chambers Thurs., Dec. 11 7:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m 25% the M@• 00 technical technical technical DEC. 11 & 1P ' DVERI I SE , i§ ii,, astlauct room within the four-year planning of the new system for student groups to aid in the planning of the new calendar. Berg refused to comment on whether the report will indicate that the students are in favor of the change or not. He said it would be un fair to the administration if it was not notified first. "I think we hit the major concerns and a lot that no one even thought of," he said. The results of the telephone survey will be made public at Thursday's meeting of the University Student Ad visory Board. Berg was optimistic about the report's effect on the administra tion's decision. "If the students do come out strong ly one way or the other, , we hope the University will look seriously at it," he said. Still, Berg said he doubts the committee will ever know how much the University relied on the report in making its decision. • Persons interested in working with the morale committee at the Interfraternity Dance Marathon will meet at 7 tonight in 102 Forum. g k e ,ARE4I4 iousE OF FIN E B°" "PRIME TIME" every Thursday $l.OO off any prime rib dinner ~~~ STA EDTLER pen points pen sets Penn State Bookstore On Campus pens Audio-visual devices stolen, police report • The Heritage Run Office Center, 3939 S. Atherton St., was burglarized Tuesday, state police from the State Cor rectional Institute at Rockview said. Of fice and audio-visual equipment valued at $16,088 was stolen, police said. • Scott Fogelsanger told the State Col lege Police Department four oriental rugs were stolen from Balfurd Fabric Care Services, 320 W. Beaver Ave., bet ween early September and early December. Police estimated the value of the rugs at $2,000. • A car driven by Janice Mayes, 17, Boalsburg, was forced off the road into a fire hydrant in an accident by an unknown vehicle on Main Street in Boalsburg on Tuesday, state police at Rockview said. Mayes was accompanied by Sharon Mayes, who was taken to Centre County Community Hospital, treated and released for minor injuries, a hospital spokesman said. Police estimated the damage to the Mayes car to be moderate. • Martha Wrye, Milesburg, told state police at Rockview two rings were stolen from her home sometime in the past two months. Police estimated the value of the rings at $5OO. • Robert D. Weaver, 711 W. Foster Ave., told State College police two pine trees were stolen from his property on Sunday. Police said the original cost of the trees was $l6O, but replacement costs would be more. • State College police said approx imately $159 was stolen from the Thom McAn shoe store at the Nittany Mall on Nov. 26 by falsifying monetary return slips. Police said the case is still under investigation. * ***************** 4( I 4( • Take a Chance! * IC come to the * *„ Career Conference and Square Dance - rk JR -4( sponsored by * 4 The PSU Parks and Recreation Society 'fr . , )t -in conjunction with HPEA * \ . * Fri., Dec.l2, 3rd Fir. HUB, regis. at door-$1.50 I t * Workshops and interviews * Square Dance at 7:30 in Walnut Room AK R• 052 *********************** Your life, your words, your music will long live in our hearts Goodbye, John! May you live forever Ralf P. Southard Christopher J. Cefaly You were the Walrus. . . weren't you. Art Print Sale • Full color reproductions of famous works of master artists. • Perfect for decorating your room or apartment. • Huge selection ANY 3 FOR ONLY $7! The Daily Collegian Thursday, Dee. 11, 1980-7 2 DAYS ONLY! 9AM - 6PM HUB Browsing Gallery presented by HUB Gallery • Scott D. Atkinson, senior research technician, told University Police,Ser vices that his.car was broken into while parked in lot Orange E on Tuesday. Police estimated damage to the rear hatch at $2OO. • Bill Tomoschuk (Bth-social welfare) told University police his car window was broken in to and two coats were stolen when it was parked in lot Red E on Tuesday. Police estimated the total damage and loss at $lBO. Police log • Mark Hamstra (2nd-liberal arts) told •University police his bicycle was stolen from a bicycle rack at Snyder Hall on Wednesday. Police said an officer found the bicycle in a picnic area along Park Avenue. Police estimated the damage and loss at $l5O. • Evelyn Hensel, 445 Waupelani Drive, told State College police four hub caps were taken from her vehicle sometime before Saturday. Police estimated the value of the hubcaps at $l3O. • Craig Hutzell (Bth-administration of justice) told State College police tape player and an FM converter were stolen from his car on either Monday or Tues day. Police estimated damage to the car and loss of the items at $llO. • Robert Elison, 20, South Williamsport, was arrested for stealing a pine tree from the State Correctional Institute at Rockview on Tuesday, state police at Rockview said. Police said the value 9f the tree was $2O. —by Becky Jones