Tickets for the May 5 Authentic German Dinner Fundraiser are now on sale, with proceeds going to benefit Relay For Life’s Partylite team.
Tickets may be purchased at the Relay For Life Kick-Off, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. March 10 at the Snoqualmie Valley YMCA, 35018 S.E. Ridge St, Snoqualmie. You may also contact Bev Jorgenson at 922-8645.
Tickets are $15.
The theme for March 2011 is “Eat Right with Color.”
National Nutrition Month® is a nutrition education and information campaign created annually in March by the American Dietetic Association. The campaign focuses attention on the importance of making informed food choices and developing sound eating and physical activity habits.
While the trees may be bare in March, there are still plenty of colorful and nutritious foods to fill your plate. During the 2011 National Nutrition Month®, the American Dietetic Association encourages everyone to add color and nutrients to your meals through this year’s theme: “Eat Right with Color.”
“Adding a splash of colorful seasonal foods to your plate makes for more than just a festive meal. A rainbow of foods creates a palette of nutrients, each with a different bundle of potential benefits for a healthful eating plan,” says registered dietitian and ADA Spokesperson Karen Ansel.
“Healthy eating includes more than counting calories alone. In fact, most children don’t get enough of all the essential nutrients critical to normal growth and development,” says Ansel.
“Food variety supplies different nutrients, so to maximize the nutritional value of your meal, include healthful choices in a variety of colors.” Ansel offers ways to brighten up your plate in every season with this quick color guide. Green produce indicates antioxidant potential and may help promote healthy vision and reduce cancer risks.
Fruits: avocado, apples, grapes, honeydew, kiwi and lime
Vegetables: artichoke, asparagus, broccoli, green beans, green peppers and leafy greens such as spinach
Orange and deep yellow fruits and vegetables contain nutrients that promote healthy vision and immunity, and reduce the risk of some cancers.
Fruits: apricot, cantaloupe, grapefruit, mango, papaya, peach and pineapple
Vegetables: carrots, yellow pepper, yellow corn and sweet potatoes
Purple and blue options may have antioxidant and anti-aging benefits and may help with memory, urinary tract health and reduced cancer risks.
Red indicates produce that may help maintain a healthy heart, vision, immunity and may reduce cancer risks.
Fruits: cherries, cranberries, pomegranate, red/pink grape fruit, red grapes and watermelon
Vegetables: beets, red onions, red peppers, red potatoes, rhubarb and tomatoes
White, tan and brown foods sometimes contain nutrients that may promote heart health and reduce cancer risks.
Fruits: banana, brown pear, dates and white peaches
Vegetables: cauliflower, mushrooms, onions, parsnips, turnips, white-fleshed potato and white corn
Ansel recommends choosing a variety of colors when shopping for seasonal fruits and vegetables. “And for additional options in the color palette, choose frozen or dried fruits and vegetables available throughout the year,” she says.
“Instead of grilled chicken and mashed potatoes, consider painting a more colorful plate, such as grilled chicken topped with salsa, mashed sweet potato, asparagus and spinach salad with orange slices. A colorful meal is not only visually appealing, but it also contains a variety of nutrients and is quite flavorful,” Ansel says.
For more information on how to “Eat Right with Color,” visit ADA’s National Nutrition Month website for a variety of helpful tips, fun games, promotional tools, suggested reading lists, and nutrition education resources.
Now you can make cremation or burial arrangements online on our website. By clicking “Purchase a Plan,” a family member can choose a funeral service that fits their needs—all from home! Feel free to take a look and let us know what you think.
Are you on Yelp? Yelp is a social network, user review, and business search site—all in one. Yelp enables users to connect and follow Facebook friends, share favorite spots, and voice their opinions.
The dog of slain U.S. Navy SEAL Jon Tumilson refused to leave his side during his funeral on Friday.
This heartbreaking photo taken by Tumilson’s cousin, Lisa Pembleton, shows the SEAL’s dog Hawkeye lying by the casket.
Pembleton wrote on Facebook that Hawkeye was Tumilson’s loyal pet who wouldn’t leave his master’s side during the funeral in Rockford, Iowa.
“I felt compelled to take one photo to share with family members that couldn’t make it or couldn’t see what I could from the aisle,” Pembleton wrote.
Tumilson lived in San Diego for eight years before becoming a member of SEAL Team 6.
A memorial fund has been set up in his honor and donations can be sent to Frogman 238 Memorial Fund at:
First Security Bank and Trust
201 West Main Ave.
Rockford, IA 50468
Please join Aegis Gardens & their Alzheimer’s expert
ATHENA VERMA
for “JOURNEY THROUGH ALZHEIMER’S WITH HOPE”
Tuesday, August 2, 2011
9:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.
(Registration & Networking 8:30 a.m.)
Aegis Gardens, 36281 Fremont Boulevard, Fremont, CA
Athena Verma has created and delivered numerous continuing education courses for Social Workers and Nurse Case Managers spanning topics from Navigating Family Dynamics to Person-Centered Care for Those Living with Dementia. In addition to her work within the long-term care field, she is a nationally acclaimed Alzheimer’s expert. She has encountered numerous caregivers who share their struggles to understand and cope with this disease. It is these experiences that have inspired Athena to create Journey Through Alzheimer’s. Ms. Verma currently serves on the National Advisory Board of the National Association for Continence. In addition, she is the Vice-President of the Senior Citizen’s Services Coordination Council.
By the end of this session you will be able to:
1. Rediscover the joy of working with people living with dementia.
2. Identify what it really means to provide person-centered care.
3. Recognize how to enhance the quality of life for persons with
dementia
Two CEU credits available. This program is approved by the Board of Behavioral Sciences (provider #PCE 4898) and Department of Social Services for RCFE (provider #914-0211-17300) for 2 continuing education contact hours.
This is a FREE event – open to the public!
Please RSVP by calling 510/739-0909 or e-mail Lucy Lou, Marketing Director, at lucy.lou@aegisliving.com. Refreshments will be served.
Gen Silent reveals how lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender elders, who fought the first battles for equality now face so much fear about discrimination that they are hiding their lives again.
Thousands are dying earlier than their straight counterparts because they are afraid to ask for help. But there is a growing number of individuals trying to build awareness and wake up the long-term and health care industries to their plight.
The Northshore Senior Center will be hosting a free screening of Gen Silent on June 6, 2011, to be followed by a panel discussion. Please feel free to email Cascade Memorial for more information.
Fragments like these are among the remains discovered at the Upward Sun River site in Alaska Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/02/25/archaeologists-11500-year-old-oldest-grave-north-america/#ixzz1Fg1obcvU
An archaeological dig in Alaska has uncovered the oldest human remains ever found in Arctic or Subarctic North America – the cremated skeleton of a 3-year-old.
The chlid’s burned bone fragments were found in a fire pit in the remains of an ancient house near the Tanana River in central Alaska. Researchers date the cremation to 11,500 years ago. After the child’s body was burned, researchers report in the Feb. 25 issue of the journal Science, the house and hearth were buried and abandoned.
“The fact that the child was cremated within the center of the house … this was an important member of society,” said study author Ben Potter, an archaeologist at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks.
Wednesday on Good Morning America George Stephanopolis spoke with Tracy Culbert, one of the Tucson trauma nurses who has been with the Congresswoman since the shooting earlier this month. Culbert spoke of the special connection she made with Congresswoman because of her Thumbie Heartfelt pendant.
“She grabbed my necklace and she started looking at [it]. My Dad passed away about three years ago and this necklace is a fingerprint impression of his thumb and I was telling her about it. And I started to get tears in my eyes. And she reached up and she was holding my arm and rubbing my arm. And she reached in to pull me forward to hug me. And I said Gabby you’re going to make me cry. And she patted my back like it’s okay, it’s okay.”
There were no words, just touch and a powerful sharing of love for their fathers. Thumbies connect people. Ask your arrangement planner today about Thumbies options for you and your family.
In 2006, Be a Santa to a Senior volunteers visited a local nursing facility and distributed gifts to a number of residents, including one 87-year-old woman whom we’ll call Mary. She was pleased to receive her gift and thanked us profusely, but it wasn’t until we returned to give Mary another gift in 2007 that we recognized the true value of Be a Santa to a Senior.
When we entered Mary’s room for our second visit, we noticed that the only card on her bulletin board was the Be a Santa to a Senior card from the previous year. As we spoke with her caregivers we found out that our Christmas card and gift were the only items she had received throughout the year. Mary re-read the card regularly to help keep that memory alive.
Each year Home Instead Senior Care® offices throughout North America spread holiday cheer to lonely or financially-challenged seniors through the Be a Santa to a Senior program. The program has attracted upwards of 60,000 volunteers over the past six years distributing gifts to deserving seniors. Since introducing the Be a Santa to a Senior program, Home Instead Senior Care has helped provide 1.2 million gifts to more than 700,000 seniors.